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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, Issue 1</text>
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            <text>Harris and McKinney Resign</text>
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            <text>Harris and McKinney Resigrr;:o'&#13;
Morrow .1.0. Replace Harris By MARC EISEN&#13;
ViCe-Chancellor for Academic A~fairs&#13;
John Harris and Dean Arthur MacKmney&#13;
of the College of Science and Society, the&#13;
two apparent instigators of December's&#13;
bortive faculty purge, have resigned&#13;
~eirpositions, the Board of Regents&#13;
announced last Friday. To replace them&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie told the Regents he has&#13;
appointed William Morrow, Prof. of&#13;
Psychology at Parkside, as the acting&#13;
Dean \0 replace MacKinney, and that the&#13;
Vice-Chancelorship will not be filled on an&#13;
acting basis, but that temporary staff&#13;
adjustments may be made to handle the&#13;
situation until a successor can be named.&#13;
The immediate resignations of the two&#13;
was one of a number of demands made of&#13;
Chancellor Irvin Wyllie hy both the&#13;
University Committee and the Parkside&#13;
Faculty Association. The C~ancellor has&#13;
indicated his willingness to follow the&#13;
faculty's wishes.&#13;
John Harbeson, a member of the&#13;
University Committee and one of the 'Xl on&#13;
the administration's ax list, said of the&#13;
Chancellor's reaction, "I would "describe&#13;
the Chancellor's attitude as being very&#13;
receptive to the recommendation that the&#13;
two resign."&#13;
Because Harris and MacK.ioney are&#13;
tenured members of the faculty they will&#13;
assume pew duties as Director of&#13;
Resource Development and Institutional&#13;
Reporting, and as Director of Institutional&#13;
Studies respectively. Both men were&#13;
unavailable for comment.&#13;
They began their duties as ViceChancellor&#13;
and Dean only this past fall,&#13;
but within a few months of this became the&#13;
centers of controversy. The Dean with the&#13;
giving of a speech that called for Parkside&#13;
attaining "instant greatness", and the&#13;
Vice-Chancellor with this issuing of&#13;
criteria for faculty evaluation.&#13;
In retrospect it is seen that the Dean's&#13;
speech was a portent of the coming purge,&#13;
and the Vice-Chancellor's criteria the&#13;
.basls on which it was attempted. What is&#13;
unclear is the role Chancellor Wyllie had in&#13;
the faculty review process.&#13;
Harbeson, who was as closely involved&#13;
in the crisis as any faculty member was,&#13;
said, "In all honesty I think the Chancellor&#13;
in this whole process was enigmatic at the&#13;
hest. And I'm not. to this day really sure&#13;
just what his role was in all this.&#13;
"t do know he approved some of the&#13;
criteria that were employed. I do know he&#13;
approved the Dean's review process. I&#13;
don't know if he approved in advance all&#13;
the terminations that were made. Really,&#13;
overall, 1just don't know if he really knew&#13;
what they were doing, and if their actions&#13;
were the result of his instructions," he&#13;
said.&#13;
The change in the status of the two is&#13;
seen as an indication of the Chancellor's&#13;
desire to follow the faculty's lead in rectifying&#13;
the controversy over faculty&#13;
personnel reviews, and as part of the&#13;
implementation of the Chancellor's ten&#13;
point policy statement.&#13;
Leon Applebaum, the Chairman of the&#13;
Social Science Division, revealed in an&#13;
impromptu speech at the school rally in&#13;
December, that the ten points themselves&#13;
originated from the University Committee,&#13;
and were accepted by the Chancellor.&#13;
Another indication of the Chancellor's&#13;
willingness to listen to the faculty comes&#13;
from the Parkside Faculty Association&#13;
which told the ewscope it made four&#13;
Volume 3 - Number 1&#13;
[anuary 12, 1971&#13;
Tallent to Replace Krivan&#13;
realized in the establishment of Parkside.&#13;
She received her bachelor's degree at&#13;
the Madison campus. where she was&#13;
elected to Phi Beta Kappa, and taught&#13;
English in the UW Center System both 10&#13;
Wausau and Kenosha.&#13;
After her husband's death, she continued&#13;
her studies, receiving a master's d~ree ~n&#13;
guidance and counseling from Cahforrua&#13;
State College of Los Angeles. prior to&#13;
assuming her initial post at Parkside ".&#13;
Active in a wide range of community&#13;
activities in southeastern Wisconsin, Mrs.&#13;
Tallent was named Kenosha's Woman of&#13;
the Year in 1969.&#13;
ceeded enrollment projections. .&#13;
Mrs. Tallent also has been in~olved. rn&#13;
other key campus activities, including&#13;
service as Parkside's repres~ntative on&#13;
the all·University human r-ights co~·&#13;
mittee and principal campus agent 10&#13;
reporting aspects of ~rogram~ relate~ to&#13;
that committee to vaTlOUSpublic agencies.&#13;
In her new post, Mrs. Tallent will sen:e&#13;
as a representative of the ~hancellor s&#13;
office in special commumty.rel3:ted&#13;
projects and activities and at vaTlOUS&#13;
meetings both on and off campus. She also&#13;
'11 handle a variety of IO-offlce adM&#13;
k'd' ministrative tasks and ac~ as Par S? e s&#13;
liaison with various public and private&#13;
groups. .&#13;
Mrs. Tallent has long-standmg personal&#13;
d professional ties to southeastern&#13;
~isconsin. She came to Kenosha with her&#13;
late husband, Bernard, when he became&#13;
Director of the University.'s ~(&gt;.year&#13;
program in 1948,and shared 10 hl~ efforts&#13;
to obtain the [our-year campus which were&#13;
The appointment of Rita Tallent as&#13;
special assistant to the chancellor and&#13;
coordinator of community services at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside was&#13;
approved Friday by the University Board&#13;
of Regents. The appointment is effectIVe&#13;
Feb. 1.&#13;
Mrs. Tallent replaces David C. Kr~van,&#13;
who had indicated to Chancellor Irvm G.&#13;
Wyllie several.months ago that he planned&#13;
to resign to enter private business .. The&#13;
Regents accepted his resignation Fnday.&#13;
Mrs. Tallent has been director of school&#13;
and campus relations at Parkside since&#13;
September, 1968, and wiu c~ntinue to&#13;
provide direction for that office 10 her new&#13;
post.&#13;
In proposing the appointment, Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie cited the energetic and effective&#13;
manner in which Mrs. Tallent has&#13;
rela ted the Parkside academic program to&#13;
high school and college coun~el?rs,&#13;
teachers and students. Since its begmmngs&#13;
in 1968, Parkside has consistently exNewscope&#13;
Wants Help&#13;
demands of the Chancellor, all of which&#13;
have apparently been mel.&#13;
The demands were'&#13;
1 Because confidence rn the administration&#13;
has eroded. the Dean and&#13;
Vice-Chancellor must immtdialel) resign&#13;
2, Because the University IS in a crucial&#13;
growth period, the Dean and ViceChanceUor&#13;
must be replaced 10 mterrm by&#13;
senior memhers of the faculty sugge ted&#13;
by the Uruversity Committee.&#13;
3. aecruument must be 10 the hancb or&#13;
the divisions with the adrmm trauon&#13;
having review power.&#13;
4. The Dean's Ad Hoc Advisory Com·&#13;
mittee must be abolished.&#13;
Reportedly the seven facully membe&#13;
recommended by the University Cornmittee&#13;
to replace Harris and 1acKIOn )' In&#13;
the interim were James bea, Leon A~&#13;
plebaum, Albert May, Wilham Morrow.&#13;
John Buenker, Herhert Kubly and Eugene&#13;
Gasciorkiewicz..&#13;
The Chancellor told the RegenlS too thaI&#13;
he would soon appoint a screening com.&#13;
mittee to seek a new Dean and ViceChancellor.&#13;
William Morrow&#13;
John S, Harris&#13;
INSIDE ...&#13;
Faculty Interviews&#13;
Book Reviews&#13;
Record Reviews&#13;
Movie Reviews&#13;
Harr:is. and McKinney Resign~/&#13;
Morrow to Replace Harris&#13;
By MARC EISEN&#13;
Vice-Chancellor for Academic A~fairs&#13;
John Harris and Dean Arthur MacKmney&#13;
f the College of Science and Society, the&#13;
~o apparent instigators of Decem_ber's&#13;
abortive faculty purge, have resigned&#13;
their positions, the Board of Regents&#13;
nnounced last Friday. To replace them&#13;
~hancellor Wyllie told the Reg~nts he has&#13;
appointed William Morrow. Prof. of&#13;
Psychology at Parkside, as the acting&#13;
oean to replace MacKinney, and that the&#13;
Vice-Chancelorship will not be filled on an&#13;
acting basis, but that temporary staff&#13;
adjustments may be made to handle the&#13;
situation until a successor can be named.&#13;
The immediate resignations of the two&#13;
was one of a number of demands made of&#13;
Chancellor Irvin Wyllie by both the&#13;
University Committee and the Parkside&#13;
Faculty Association. The Chancellor has&#13;
indicated his willingness to follow the&#13;
faculty's wishes. John Harbeson, a member of the&#13;
University Committee and one of the Zl on&#13;
the administration's ax list, said of the&#13;
Chancellor's reaction, "I would describe&#13;
the Chancellor's attitude as being very&#13;
receptive to the recommendation that the&#13;
two resign."&#13;
Because Harris and MacKinney are tenured members of the faculty they will&#13;
assume pew duties as Director of&#13;
Resource Development and Institutional&#13;
Reporting, and as Director of Institutional&#13;
Studies respectively. Both men were unavailable for comment.&#13;
They began their duties as Vice- ·&#13;
Chancellor and Dean only this past fall,&#13;
but within a few months of this became the&#13;
centers of controversy. The Dean with the&#13;
giving of a speech that called for Parkside&#13;
attaining "instant greatness", and the&#13;
Vice-Chancellor with this issuing of&#13;
criteria for faculty evaluation.&#13;
In retrospect it is seen that the Dean's&#13;
speech was a portent of the coming purge,&#13;
and the Vice-Chancellor's criteria the&#13;
basis on which it was attempted. What is&#13;
unclear is the role Chancellor Wyllie had in&#13;
the faculty review process.&#13;
Harbeson, who was as closely involved&#13;
in the crisis as any faculty member was,&#13;
said, "In all honesty I think the Chancellor&#13;
in this whole process was enigmatic at the&#13;
best. And I'm not to this day really sure&#13;
just what hi role wa in all thi . "I do know he approved ome of the&#13;
criteria that were employed. I do knov.· he&#13;
approved the Dean's revi~ proc ·. I&#13;
don't know if he approved in advance all&#13;
the termination that were made. Really,&#13;
overall, I just don't kn if he really knew&#13;
what they v.-ere doing, and if their actions&#13;
were the result o( his instructions " h&#13;
said. The change in the tat us of the l"- o i&#13;
seen as an indication of the Chane llor·_&#13;
desire to follow the facultv' lead in rec· tifying the controver ·y· O\'er faculty&#13;
personnel reviews. and a part of the&#13;
implementation of the Chancellor' ten&#13;
point policy statement.&#13;
Leon Applebaum, the Chairman of th&#13;
Social Science Divi ion, re\'ealed in an&#13;
impromptu speech at the school ran: in&#13;
December, that the ten points them eh· originated from the niversity Committee,&#13;
and were accepted by the Chan·&#13;
cellor.&#13;
Another indication of the Chancellor'&#13;
willingness to listen to the faculty comes&#13;
from the Parkside Faculty Association&#13;
which told the ·~·scope it made four&#13;
Tanuary 12, 1971&#13;
Tallent to · ·Replace Krivan&#13;
The appointment of Rita Tallent as special assistant to the chancellor and&#13;
coordinator of community services at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside was approved Friday by the University Bo~rd&#13;
of Regents. The appointment is effective&#13;
Feb. 1.&#13;
Mrs. Tallent replaces David C. Kr!van,&#13;
who had indicated to Chancellor Irvm G.&#13;
Wyllie several.months ago that he planned&#13;
to resign to enter private business .. The&#13;
Regents accepted his resignation Friday·&#13;
Mrs. Tallent has been director of school&#13;
and campus relations at Parkside since&#13;
September 1968 and will continue to&#13;
provide dir,ection1&#13;
for that office in her new&#13;
post.&#13;
In proposing the appointme:"t, Chan·&#13;
cellor .Wyllie cited the energetic and effective&#13;
manner in which Mrs. Tallent has&#13;
related the Parkside academic program to&#13;
high school and college coun~el?rs,&#13;
teachers and students. Since its begmmngs&#13;
in 1968, Parkside has consistently ex·&#13;
ceeded enrollment projections: . Mrs. Tallent also has been m~olved_ m other key campus activities, mc_ludmg&#13;
service as Parkside's repres~ntallve on the all-University human rights committee&#13;
and principal campus agent m&#13;
reporting aspects of program~ relate~ to&#13;
that committee to various public a~enc1es.&#13;
In her new post, Mrs. Tallent will ser~e as a representative of the ~hancellor s office in special commumty-related&#13;
projects and activities and at various&#13;
meetings both on and off cam~us ~he also&#13;
·11 handle a variety of m-ofhce ad- wi k .d. ministrative tasks and act as Par s1 e s liaison with various public and private&#13;
groups. . Mrs. Tallent has Jong-standmg personal&#13;
and professional ties to southt:3stern&#13;
Wisconsin. She came to Kenosha with her&#13;
late husbana, Bernard, when he became&#13;
Director of the University_'s ~o-year&#13;
program in 1948, and shared m h1~ efforts&#13;
to obtain the four-year campus which were&#13;
realized in the establLhment of Park id•&#13;
he recei\·ed her bachelor·. degree t&#13;
the • tadi on campu . wh re . h wa&#13;
elected to Phi Beta Kappa, and taug~t&#13;
English in the W Center y tein both m&#13;
Wau au and Kenosha. After her husband's death, he continuf:d&#13;
her studies, receiving a master· d~ree !n&#13;
guidance and coun.eling from Cah_forma&#13;
State College of Los Angeles p~1or to&#13;
assuming her irutial post at Park 1de . Acli'-,e in a wide range of community&#13;
activities in outhea tern Wi con in, . lr ·.&#13;
Tallent was named Kenosha' Woman of&#13;
the Year in 1969.&#13;
Newscope&#13;
W'ants Help&#13;
om·&#13;
INSIDE .&#13;
Faculty Interviews&#13;
Book Reviews&#13;
Record Reviews&#13;
Movie Reviews &#13;
RETROSPECT&#13;
F.DITOR· :\OTE John Harbeson rs an&#13;
\ssistant Prores- or in the polillcal science&#13;
department 10 his fourth year at Parkside.&#13;
He received his bachelor's degree from&#13;
Swarthmore College and his doctorate&#13;
from the Cnn ersuy of Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
He 1!'la member of thr JUnior faculty and a&#13;
member of the Lruver-sity Committee. HIS&#13;
field I African pohll and at the present&#13;
time has a book In the mitral stages or&#13;
publication&#13;
... ... ...&#13;
\\hat (acton influ n tel your choice \0&#13;
ecme i Park iM"!&#13;
I" attracted to Park ide and came for&#13;
a number of very specific reasons. 1&#13;
naturally wanted to be an errech\'e teacher&#13;
nd to be a prcducuve scholar I think both&#13;
can done and be remforclng and must&#13;
tX" I"e'IOfr lOR I con ider Parkside to be a&#13;
pot 01lall) excillng environment In which&#13;
to ("~ag 10 all form of acuvuy. I&#13;
hI) In coming to parkstde. that I would&#13;
ha\:(' a rot to pia)' 10 the building of a new&#13;
In.,lItUI,nn (h,gh&lt;'r I armng I hoped thai&#13;
orne of the thing. that ate very hard to&#13;
(;h nR In 8 I rg 10 utuucn. where there&#13;
are ve t~d mrer ts and encrusted&#13;
tradition .• could be changed much more&#13;
(' slly on a n('\o\ocampus, Here there can be&#13;
upportumtl arrordcd for real Innovation,&#13;
(' IX"rlmt'ntahon. and de,,·clopment of&#13;
IX pI '. educational Idea 10 a relallvely&#13;
Ir and opt'" environment I also was&#13;
;:Iltract d to Parkslde because: it i part of&#13;
lhl' Un"..erslt)" of WlsconslO, which stands'&#13;
for thloR-S I believe In, hke academic&#13;
Ir dl:~m nd a strong role of facuJlies in&#13;
tht' K0\"ernlOg of the IOslltuhon. And&#13;
\\ IsconslO IS a great an ttlution&#13;
\\hal ""as )OUr reaction to l~ firings'!&#13;
I krK"'AthaI the Jltlngs were coming&#13;
The)' "Io(.'r('o'tany surprise to mc. I feel&#13;
'ory· ",rry for some people who. (thought,&#13;
\\:('r caught completely flatfooted by this&#13;
"hole thlOR The nivcrsll)" Committee&#13;
oil) led as slrongly as "e poss,bly could&#13;
and :aid that things were not right. We&#13;
3. kt"das forcefully as we could to have this&#13;
\\ holt- process reconsidered, begun again&#13;
from scratch, and done right. But we&#13;
\\:('ren't hstene&lt;!to. The only thing we were&#13;
abl to achlc,,·e 10 that prOlest was the&#13;
pre~.. release between the University&#13;
CommIttee and the Chancellor that apprared&#13;
earlier 10 New5Cope.So all we ever&#13;
a 'hle\"cd was simply that we expressed&#13;
our \'lCWPOlOt,which was very strongly&#13;
felt, and we turned out to be right. The&#13;
Chancellor responded with his reading of&#13;
the Situation, which differed from ours,&#13;
and thal's how mallers stood on the eve of&#13;
lhe rtrlngs&#13;
110\0,did the firings affect )'ou per-&#13;
...ooall) '!&#13;
I was dJsillusloned because this kind of&#13;
thm&amp; could happen 10 the University of&#13;
WI consin. but I must say that I was not&#13;
d,. enchanted personally. Th&lt;'y chose to&#13;
release me, not because of my teaching,&#13;
not because of my research. but because I&#13;
\\'l~ not rele"'ent to the miSSion,Frankly, I&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
was contemptous of the reasons that Dr.&#13;
Harris gave me for saying I was not&#13;
relevant to the mission. So personally I&#13;
wasn't touched bv it at all. I was bothered&#13;
in an institutional sense becatlSe I was&#13;
distressed, having given more time to ~e&#13;
institution than was really advisable an&#13;
terms of my professional advancement" to&#13;
see this kind of thing happen to the 10-&#13;
stitution with all its necessary bad effects,&#13;
The revi'ew process very badly weakened&#13;
Parkside and set back the progress that all&#13;
or us had been trying to achieve for the&#13;
past three years. So I was distressed in&#13;
that sense. I'm also concerned for the U of&#13;
W because ef the effect that our nounde'rlOg&#13;
last semester might have on the&#13;
well-being or the system as a whole. But&#13;
personally it didn't bother me at all,&#13;
because again, it apparenUy didn't reflect&#13;
on my ability or my achievements. Also, I&#13;
was in my fourth year and had an extra&#13;
year in addition to this year to look for a&#13;
job I was, to be frank, confident that I&#13;
could do a great deal of work in that period&#13;
of lime and lind a good job.&#13;
\\ hat about your future at Parkside in&#13;
light of the recent administrative&#13;
c:hanges!&#13;
That depends on two or three things. I&#13;
am not committed either to stay or to go, If&#13;
the mission continues to be defined in the&#13;
narrow, inappropriate sense as it was&#13;
defined to me when I was terminated, then&#13;
[ have no choice but to look elsewhere. But&#13;
the racuIty has taken the initiative in&#13;
appolOting a committee which will soon be&#13;
at work to review and discuss the application&#13;
of the mission and what it should&#13;
mean in terms or coW"Sesand personnel.&#13;
I'm confident that the committee will&#13;
come forth with an intelligent set of&#13;
recommendations which will enhance&#13;
rather than curtail our committment to&#13;
liberal arts education. Will these faculty&#13;
recommendations be considered? I have&#13;
no reason to believe that they won't be.&#13;
The appointing of this mission committee&#13;
and also the personnel criterion committee&#13;
might be received wen by the administration&#13;
and then again they mighl.not&#13;
be. I just don't know. I almost have to&#13;
hope, trust, work to ensure that they will&#13;
be recei\'ed and acted upon favorably.&#13;
University or Wisconsin-Madison law&#13;
students voted Prof. J. Willard Hurst 3'S&#13;
"Outstanding Professor of 1970,"&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Volume 3 - Number 1&#13;
January 12, 1971&#13;
Bill Rolbiecke&#13;
WarrenNectry&#13;
Jerry Owens&#13;
Marsha Owens&#13;
Marc Eisen&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
. Mark Barnhill&#13;
John }(oloen&#13;
Bill Sorenson&#13;
Bill Jacoby; John Potente&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Production Manager&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Artist, Movie Reviews&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Advisor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, D~n ~?umps. D. H, Post, l?on Marjala,&#13;
Mike Kurth, Jim Smith, Bob Borchardt, Walt Breach,&#13;
Narees Socha, Jerry Socha, Ken Konkol, .&#13;
Sven Tarrs, Diane Haney&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the University o! WiscollSioParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, wtsconsio, 5314~.Mailing a~dr~ss ISParkside s Newscope,&#13;
3700Washington Rd" Kenosha. Busmess and editcrial telephone number is_&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
Nuclear Technology Course&#13;
A new interdisciplinary course titled&#13;
"Social Problems in Nuclear Technology"&#13;
has been added to the timetable for second·&#13;
semester.&#13;
The course will be taught by Bernard I.&#13;
Spinrad, a distinguished scientist ~ho&#13;
presently is senior physicist in the ApplIed&#13;
Physics Division at Argonne Natio~al&#13;
Laboratory. fmmediately before takmg&#13;
the post last August, he was director of the&#13;
Division of Nuclear power and Reactors of&#13;
the International Atomic Energy Agency&#13;
in Vienna.&#13;
The course, which carries two cr~dits for&#13;
Applied Science and Technology, Physics&#13;
or Social Science, will deal with elementary&#13;
principles of nuclear reactors·, applications,&#13;
including power generation and&#13;
propulsion systems, environmental,&#13;
economic, political and ethical considerations.&#13;
Dr. Spinrad had major responsibility for&#13;
invention and design of the Savannah&#13;
River Production Reactors and of the&#13;
Argonaut Reactor, the first designed for&#13;
use as an educational system.&#13;
His professional interests are wideranging&#13;
and include fundamental&#13;
technology of urban planning, design of&#13;
space e?,plorati~n missions usingDlIdsr&#13;
propulsion, ethics of science and,&#13;
ticularly, engineering and fast ~&#13;
reactor concepts.&#13;
Dr. Spinrad received his B.S.,M S iii&#13;
Ph.D. degrees at Yale, where he a'~ old&#13;
post-doctoral research as a Sterlilc&#13;
Fellow in Chemistry,&#13;
New Traffic law&#13;
Two new traffic regulations for lilt&#13;
Umverslty of Wlsconsm-Parkside WOld&#13;
Road Campus were approved Friday iIJ&#13;
. the University Regents.&#13;
The regulations establish a ma,"-&#13;
speed limit of 15miles per hour for.....&#13;
vehicles on all roadways oncampuseltllll&#13;
in areas otherwise posted by signHI&#13;
require all vehicle traffic to cometo I&#13;
complete stop at all marked intersectia&#13;
on campus and at all intersectimsII&#13;
campus roads with ~oun~yor town.&#13;
. ways.&#13;
NEWSCOPE-Page2&#13;
Tuesday, January 19,197i&#13;
3stees&#13;
Supper Club&#13;
1040&#13;
Sheridan It&#13;
Ph. 65401375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
-with Almond.ine Sau.c.&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIME IlIB&#13;
RETROSPECT&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KE1&#13;
NOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
(triple decker}&#13;
55(&#13;
" -. cont mptou of the reasons that Dr.&#13;
Harri gave me for sa)ing I was not&#13;
r levant to the mi ·,ion. o per onaJly I&#13;
" n't touched by it at all. I was bothered&#13;
in an in titutional sen ·e because I was&#13;
di tres ed, ha\•ing gi\'en more ti~e to ~e&#13;
institution than was really advisable m term of my prof es ·ional ad\•ancement,. to&#13;
thi · kind of thing happen to the m-&#13;
·utution, with all its necessary bad effects.&#13;
The r vie · proce \'ery badly weakened&#13;
P r · ide and set back the progress that all&#13;
of u had been trymg to achieve for ~e&#13;
pa t three years. So I was distressed m&#13;
that. nse. I'm al o concerned for the U of&#13;
W becau of the effect that our floun-&#13;
'ring la ·t em~ter might have on the&#13;
11-being of the y tern as a whole. But&#13;
per. Uy it didn't bother ~e. at all,&#13;
caus again, it apparently d1dn t reflect&#13;
on my abilit\" or my achievements. Also, I&#13;
· m mv fourth year and had an extra&#13;
, 0 ar in addition to this year to look for a&#13;
job. I w , to be frank. confident that I&#13;
could do a great deal of work in that period&#13;
of tim and find a good job. \\ h l a ut ) ur future al Parkside in&#13;
ti ht or th recent admini trative&#13;
han '!&#13;
That d pends on two or three things. I&#13;
m not committed ither to stay or to go. If&#13;
th mi· i n continue · to be defined in the&#13;
narrow, inappropriate ense as it was&#13;
defined to me wh n I wa terminated, then&#13;
l have no choic but to loo el ewhere. But&#13;
th f ultv ha taken the initiative in&#13;
ppointing· a committee which will oon be&#13;
at \\Or to review and discuss the application&#13;
of the mi ion and what it should&#13;
mean in term of coun;e - and personnel.&#13;
1 m confid nt that the committee will&#13;
come forth with an intelligent et of&#13;
r mm ndatioru which will enhance&#13;
rather than curtail our committment to&#13;
liberal ar education. Will these faculty&#13;
re(."Ommendations be con idered? I have&#13;
no rea on to believe that thev won't be.&#13;
The appointing of this missio; committee&#13;
and aL o the personnel criterion committee&#13;
might be recei\'ed well by the admini&#13;
tration and then again they might.not&#13;
be. I just don't know. I almost ha\'e to&#13;
ho , tru ·t. wor - to en ·ure that they will&#13;
be received and acted upon favorably.&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
''Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
volume 3 - Number 1&#13;
January 12, 1971&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Production Manager&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Feature Editor_ . Artist, Movie Reviews&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Bill Rolbiecke&#13;
Warren Nedry&#13;
Jerry Owens&#13;
Marsha Owens&#13;
Marc Eisen&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
John Koloen&#13;
Bill Sorenson&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Potente&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, Dean L?umos, D. H. Post, Don Marj ala,&#13;
Mike Kurth, Jim Smith, Bob Borchardt, WaltBreach,&#13;
Narees Socha, Jerry ~cha, Ken Konkol, ·&#13;
Sven Taffs, Diane Haney&#13;
Published weekly by the studen~ of the U~iversity_ o! Wisconsin.&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin, 5314?- Ma1hng a~dr:5s 1s Parkside s Newscope,&#13;
3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha. Business and editorial telephone number is 653-&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
Nuclear Technology Course&#13;
A new interdisciplinary course titled&#13;
"Social Problems in Nuclear Technology"&#13;
has been added to the timetable for second ·&#13;
semester.&#13;
The course will be taught by Bernard I.&#13;
Spinrad, a distinguished scientist ~ho&#13;
presently is senior physicist in the Applied&#13;
Physics Division at Argonne Nallo?al&#13;
Laboratory. Immediately before takmg&#13;
the post last August, he was director of the&#13;
Division of Nuclear Power and Reactors of&#13;
the International Atomic Energy Agency&#13;
in Vienna . The course, which carries two cre_dits for&#13;
Applied Science and Technology, Physics&#13;
or Social Science, will deal with elementary&#13;
principles of nuclear reactors, applications,&#13;
including power generation and&#13;
propulsion systems, environmental,&#13;
economic, political and ethical considerations.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Spinrad had major responsibility for&#13;
invention and design of the Savannah&#13;
River Production Reactors and of the&#13;
Argonaut Reactor, the first designed for&#13;
use as an educational system.&#13;
His professional interests are wideranging&#13;
and include fundamental&#13;
technology of urban planning, design of&#13;
space e_xplorati~n missions using nud&#13;
propulsion, ethics of science and&#13;
ticularly, engineering and fast tx'.e&#13;
reactor concepts.&#13;
Dr. Spinrad received his B.S., M.S 1&#13;
Ph.D. degrees at Yale, where he al 0&#13;
post-doctoral research as a Sterl&#13;
Fellow in Chemistry.&#13;
New Traffic Law&#13;
Two new traffic regulations for&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside w&#13;
Road Campus were approved Friday&#13;
the University Regents.&#13;
The regulations establish a ma&#13;
speed limit of 15 miles per hour for miter&#13;
vehicles on all roadways on campus exc&#13;
in areas otherwise posted by sign a&#13;
require all vehicle traffic to come to 1&#13;
complete stop at all marked intersecll&#13;
on campus and at all intersections ci&#13;
campus roads with county or town&#13;
ways.&#13;
NEWSCOPE- Page 2&#13;
Tuesday, January 19, 197i&#13;
asters 1040&#13;
Sheridan ld.&#13;
Supper Club Ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
with Almondine Sau_ce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIME lllB &#13;
January Commencement Set&#13;
University President John C. Weaver. The&#13;
Rev. Roy D. Phillips 0/ the Unitarian&#13;
Universalist church will con&lt;kJct the invocation&#13;
and benediction lor the no cap&#13;
and gown informal ceremony.&#13;
Following the ceremony will he a&#13;
reception in the South concourse. 48&#13;
candidates are scheduled for graduation&#13;
Faculty and administrative staff ar~&#13;
cordially invited to attend.&#13;
Universityof Wisconsin President John&#13;
C.weaver will be the principal speaker at&#13;
mid-year commencement. exercises at&#13;
uw_parkside.&#13;
Fifty candidates lor graduation are to&#13;
receive degrees at the 8 p.m. ceremony&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 31, in the Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
~~~_eve~t will be Weaver's first visit to&#13;
the Parkaide Campus since assuming the&#13;
pres~dency of the University Jan. 1. As&#13;
presIdent-elect, he made a brief stop at&#13;
Parkslde as part of a two-day tour 01 the&#13;
lour degree-granting UW campuses plus&#13;
the two-year campus at West Bend.&#13;
The commencement will be the second&#13;
for the new UW campus. Parkside&#13;
graduated its first 35 students last June&#13;
Parkside's mid-year commencement&#13;
will be infor~~ - without caps and gowns&#13;
and the traditional academic procession.&#13;
The event will be open to the public.&#13;
Twenty-six of the candidates are from&#13;
Kenosha, ~ from Racine, and one each&#13;
from Burlington and Salem.&#13;
Candidates for the bachelor of arts&#13;
degree are:&#13;
Diane M. Balestrieri, 3334 Ruby Ave.,&#13;
Racine; Willie E. Box, 1033 Pearl Sl&#13;
Racine; Linda C. Campeau, 1501 Illinoi~&#13;
St.,.' Racine; Suzanne R. Chernik, 142'h&#13;
Grand Ave., Racine; Jonathan P.&#13;
Christiansen, 1437 Florence Ave., Racine;&#13;
Kathleen Cippola, 7011 26th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; Jerome K, Dombrask 4711&#13;
Sheridan Road, Kenosha; Jeanne Driver,&#13;
1315 Wisconsin Ave., Racine; Ellen M.&#13;
Eklund, 6108Seventh Ave., Kenosha; Fern&#13;
D. Haley, 302 Wind Point School Road,&#13;
Racine; Lester J. Halkowitz, 440 Blue&#13;
River Ave., Raclne. Dcnald L. Harris, 4046&#13;
31st Ave., Kenosha; Beverly Coleman&#13;
Heys, 3535 N. Newman Road, Racine;&#13;
Lillie M. ~ackson, 1318 Grand Ave.,&#13;
Racine; Marjorie Ann Jorgensen, 3532&#13;
Republic Ave., Racine; Ralph N. Kassel,&#13;
7846 33rd Ave., Kenosha; Dolores Kovera,&#13;
3910 Fourt St., Kenosba; Kathleen R.&#13;
Ladousa, 4914 36th Ave., Kenosba; Terry&#13;
LaDousa, 5412 41st Ave., Kenosha; Mary&#13;
S. Langendorf, 5027 24th Ave., Kenosba;&#13;
John H.lPwman, 491121stAve., Kenosba;&#13;
Terry F. Ludeman, 2015 S. Green Bay&#13;
Road, Racine; Susan Might, 815 49th st.,&#13;
Kenosha; Julia Ann Olson, 347 56th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; Alfred Preiss, 6535 Fifth Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; June Reilly, 7550 26th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; Veronica Rose Roscioli, 5412&#13;
23rd Ave., Kenosha; Joseph Rudolph, 134&#13;
Sheffield Dr., Ra&lt;!ine; Patricia Salituro,&#13;
272225th Ave., Kenosha; Kathryn Skow, 39&#13;
S. Summerset Dr., Racine; Irene Smith,&#13;
7109 23rd Ave., Kenosha; Conrad&#13;
Targonski, St. Francis Friary, Burlington;&#13;
Rosemarie Thompson, 961 Green Bay&#13;
Road, Kenosba; Elizabeth N. Weber, 2307&#13;
Four Mile Road, Racine; and Betty J.&#13;
Yankee, Salem.&#13;
Candidates for the bachelor of science&#13;
degree are:&#13;
Frederick J. Bruch, 2022 57th st.,&#13;
Kenosha; Richard K. Bruno, 4026 60th&#13;
Place, Kenosha; Kenneth Cullen, .6411&#13;
Greenridge Drive, Racine; Keren Meister&#13;
Davis, 4045 18th St., Kenosha; Susan K.&#13;
Griffiths, 1602 43rd St., Kenosha; Brent&#13;
Harrison, 725 Perry Ave., RaclOej&#13;
Lawrence Hartman, 1719 Johnson Ave.,&#13;
Racinej Barbara Jean Kral, 21 S. Green&#13;
Bay Road, Racine; Robert Moebrke, 2004&#13;
45thSt., Kenosha; LouisC. Noto, 210753rd&#13;
St Kenosba' Donald G. Peterson, 41)14&#13;
560, St., Ke~osha; Susan C. Piehl, 7602&#13;
32nd Ave., Kenosha; Stephen W.&#13;
Schneider, 4207Olive St.;Raclne;Bruno A.&#13;
Schrader, 2515 Erie St., Racme; and&#13;
Donald P. Smith, 1916 Deane Blvd.,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Mid-year graduation will take place&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 31, 1971, at 8 p.m. m&#13;
Greenquist Hall Concourse. The mam&#13;
speaker for tbe graduation will be&#13;
NEWSCOPE-Page3&#13;
Tuesday, January 19,1971&#13;
ByGEORGE METESKY&#13;
The question of Luddite's survival and&#13;
ultiJOateform is now. one of critical imparlance.A&#13;
Luddite victory, a victory of&#13;
pleasure over pain, of -truth over&#13;
falsehood, is now at hand, if we dare to&#13;
struggle,dare to win. Luddite is not an&#13;
enemyof the people.&#13;
'!'hI$! forces of counter-insurgency who&#13;
threaten, "It can't. happen here," are&#13;
simply mistaken. Since its inception,&#13;
.Luddite has been 'growing in size and&#13;
strength, and this is before we began&#13;
slwOtingektachrome.&#13;
In this first Luddite column (part seven&#13;
ri a series of (iveY.it is important to set&#13;
l&lt;Irthsome of the precepts tha t were apperentin&#13;
the Luddite confrontation of the&#13;
IiIteenth 01 December of last year.&#13;
Inasmuch as Luddite is primarily nonverbal,any&#13;
verbal description or analysis&#13;
riLuddite, i.e, the Luddite organization, or&#13;
any Luddite will seem at best crude and&#13;
jRlentiollS. It Is for this reason that&#13;
Luddite is only accessible to those who&#13;
havebeen Luddites for some time. Even&#13;
the conceptof being a member of Luddite&#13;
is misleading. Luddite does not exist in&#13;
limeand space. Thus, a Luddite "member"&#13;
has no private but rather only a tribal&#13;
MSentity. There are no solutions to be had&#13;
wilh larger swastikas.&#13;
This column is also an opportunity to&#13;
"""tion the ultimate utility of Luddite.&#13;
LuOIite is not in lavor of providing utility.&#13;
LuOIite will not usurp the power of those&#13;
who wish to engage in such monopolistic&#13;
ICtivities. Luddite is not a common&#13;
carrier.&#13;
When the metaphor of territoriality is in&#13;
vogue, we would be wise to ask for the&#13;
boundariesof Luddite. Like the universe,&#13;
Luddite, while finite, is not definable.&#13;
Some 01 the chief problems in transmitling&#13;
information about Luddite are&#13;
problems with the media themselves.&#13;
Communicationsmedia, assumed to be&#13;
passivepurveyors of information, when&#13;
their large scale effects are analyzed, are&#13;
Ioond to bave a greater effect than their&#13;
","tent. In presenting Luddite concepts,&#13;
the printed page is inadequate, hopelessly&#13;
weriorto the electronic media. It is hoped&#13;
lhat what can be accomplished by a .&#13;
columnof Luddites is equal to that ac-&#13;
_plished by a battalion of regular&#13;
soldiers.McLuhan notes that we seldom&#13;
communicate we often share en·&#13;
vironments. ' .&#13;
It is unfortunate that our educational&#13;
ioItitutions train us only in critical&#13;
evaluation of the obsolescent media. The&#13;
~nt media work us over without our =ous awareness. This works to make&#13;
.... te take on mythic as well as ob-&#13;
"",live Jl'oporlions.&#13;
You wonder how these things begin.&#13;
~ Which seemingly springs quickly&#13;
"WI the background noise often IS =:::in the subconscious yearnings and&#13;
of years past. We have begin to&#13;
l1IlnIeture the primordial feelings from&#13;
~ 2,000years of literacy divorced ua.&#13;
lime is a lime for crossing barriers, :...a~old categories, for probing&#13;
~ ~ be expected tbat any column of&#13;
Ie ISto be a probe as well as an ar- :=-~llInmentary. a mime of events in&#13;
N- k- , ,e,e s&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
ACROS5 FROM THE cAYTON HOTEL&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
$75 Sportcoats $45&#13;
$100 Fur Coats&#13;
(Men's) $57.50&#13;
$35 ladies Jump&#13;
Suits $14.95&#13;
Always Wholesale Prices at&#13;
•&#13;
MEN'S &amp; YOUNG&#13;
MEN'S SHOP&#13;
5720 6th Ave.&#13;
K-enosha&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NORTH l SOUTH SHEI'IDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHA -&#13;
FAMOUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
THE ROCKER!&#13;
- - -&#13;
....&#13;
100-FM!&#13;
Ratine Kenosha Radio!&#13;
- - -&#13;
24 HOURS!&#13;
RIGHT ON!&#13;
January Commencement set NORTIH&#13;
and&#13;
university of Wisconsin President John SOUTH&#13;
C weaver will be the principal s~ker at&#13;
·(I.year commencement exercises at&#13;
1?11 'de UW-Parkst . Fifty candidates for graduation are to&#13;
By GEORGE METESKY&#13;
The question of Luddite's survival and&#13;
ultimate form is now one of critical importance.&#13;
A Luddite victory, a victory of&#13;
pleasure over pain, of truth over&#13;
falsehood, is now at hand, if we dare to&#13;
struggle, dare to win. Luddite is not an&#13;
enemY of the people.&#13;
Th~e forces of counter-insurgency who&#13;
threaten, "It can't happen here," are&#13;
simply mistaken. Since its inception,&#13;
.LUddite has been growing in size and&#13;
strength, and this is before we began&#13;
shooting ektachrome.&#13;
In this first Luddite column (part seven&#13;
&lt;i a series of five) it is important to set&#13;
forth some of the precepts that were apparent&#13;
in the Luddite confrontation of the&#13;
fifteenth of December of last year.&#13;
Inasmuch as Luddite is primarily nonverbal,&#13;
any verbal description or analysis&#13;
of Luddite, i.e. the Luddite organization, or&#13;
any Luddite will seem at best crude and&#13;
iretentious. It js for this reason that&#13;
LUddite is only accessible to those who&#13;
have been Luddites for some time. Even&#13;
the concept of being a member of Luddite&#13;
is misleading. Luddite does not exist in&#13;
lime and space. Thus, a Luddite "member"&#13;
has no private but rather only a tribal&#13;
identity. There are no solutions to be had&#13;
with larger swastikas.&#13;
This column is also an opportunity to&#13;
question the ultimate utility of Luddite.&#13;
LUddite is not in favor of providing utility.&#13;
LUddite will not usurp the power of those&#13;
who wish to engage in such monopolistic&#13;
activities. Luddite is not a common&#13;
carrier.&#13;
When the metaphor of territoriality is in&#13;
vogue, we would be wise to ask for the&#13;
boundaries of Luddite. Like the universe,&#13;
Luddite, while finite, is not definable.&#13;
Some of the chief problems in tranmitting&#13;
information about Luddite are&#13;
JX'Oblems with the media themselves.&#13;
Communications media, assumed to be&#13;
passive purveyors of information, when&#13;
their large scale effects are analyzed, are&#13;
found to have a greater effect than their&#13;
content. In presenting Luddite concepts,&#13;
the printed page is inadequate, hopelessly&#13;
inferior to the electronic media. It is hoped&#13;
that what can be accomplished by a&#13;
column of Luddites is equal to that accomplished&#13;
by a battalion of regular&#13;
soldiers. McLuhan notes that we seldom&#13;
communicate we often share en- \irorunents. '&#13;
rt is unfortunate that our educational&#13;
Institutions train us only in critical&#13;
evaluation of the obsolescent media. The&#13;
&amp;scendent media work us over without our&#13;
COllscious awareness. This works to make&#13;
~~ite take on mythic as well as ob-&#13;
~tive proportions.&#13;
You wonder how these things begin.&#13;
r,at which seemingly springs quickly&#13;
,rorn ~e background noise often is&#13;
::ded m the subconscious yearnings a~d&#13;
ires of years past. .We have begin to&#13;
1tructure the primordial feelings from&#13;
" c~ 2,000 years of literacy divorced us.&#13;
~r lim~ is a time for crossing barrie_rs,&#13;
or erasmg old categories for probing lll'Ound. '&#13;
~~ t~ be expected that any column of&#13;
ti 1 le 15 to be a probe as well as an ar1~.&#13;
e of commentary a mime of events in&#13;
"~ mind. '&#13;
MEN'S &amp; YOUNG&#13;
MEN'S SHOP&#13;
5720 6th Ave.&#13;
K-enosha&#13;
receive degrees at the 8 p.m. ceremony&#13;
SundaY, Jan. 31, in the Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
1.:~e eve?t will be Weaver's first visit to&#13;
th~ ~arkside Campus since assuming the&#13;
pres~dency of the University Jan. 1. As&#13;
pres1d~nt-elect, he made a brief stop at&#13;
Parkside as part of a two-day tour of the&#13;
four degree-granting UW campuses plus&#13;
the two-year campus at West Bencl.&#13;
The commencement will be the second&#13;
for the new UW campus. Parkside&#13;
graduated its first 35 students last June&#13;
_Park~ide's mid-year commencement&#13;
will be mfor~~ - without caps and gowns&#13;
and the traditional academic procession.&#13;
The event ~ill be open to the public.&#13;
Twenty-six of the candidates are from&#13;
Kenosha, 22 from Racine and one each&#13;
from Burlington and Sale~.&#13;
Candidates for the bachelor of arts&#13;
degree are:&#13;
Diane M. Balestrieri, 3334 Ruby Ave.&#13;
Racine; Willie E . Box, 1033 Pearl Sl 1&#13;
Racine; Linda C. Campeau, 1501 Illino~&#13;
St., Racine; Suzanne R. Chernik, 1421,2&#13;
Grand Ave. , Racine; Jonathan P .&#13;
Christiansen, 1437 Florence Ave., Racine;&#13;
Kathleen Cippola, 7011 26th Ave.,&#13;
Kem~ha; Jerome K, Dombrask, 4711&#13;
Sheridan Road, Kenosha ; Jeanne Driver,&#13;
1315 Wisconsin Ave., Racine; Ellen M.&#13;
Eklund, 6108 Seventh Ave., Kenosha ; Fern&#13;
D. Haley, 302 Wind Point School Road,&#13;
Racine; Lester J. Halkowitz, 440 Blue&#13;
River Ave., Racine; DonaldL. Harris, 4046&#13;
31st Ave., Kenosha ; Beverly Coleman&#13;
Heys, 3535 N. Newman Road, Racine;&#13;
Lillie M. .:(ackson, 1318 Grand Ave.,&#13;
Racine; Marjorie Ann Jorgensen, 3532&#13;
Republic Ave. , Racine; Ralph N. Kassel,&#13;
7846 33rd Ave., Kenosha ; Dolores Kovera,&#13;
3910 Fourt St., Kenosha ; Kathleen R.&#13;
Ladousa, 4914 36th Ave. , Kenosha ; Terry&#13;
LaDousa, 5412 41st Ave., Kenosha ; Mary&#13;
S. Langendorf, 5027 24th Ave., Kenosha ;&#13;
John H. L&lt;&gt;wman, 49112lstAve., Kenosha ;&#13;
Terry F. Ludeman, 2015 S. Green Bay&#13;
Road, Racine; Susan Might, 815 49th Sl,&#13;
Kenosha ; Julia Ann Olson, 347 56th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha ; Alfred Preiss, 6535 Fifth Ave. ,&#13;
Kenosha ; June Reilly, 7550 26th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha ; Veronica Rose Roscioli, 5412&#13;
23rd Ave. , Kenosha ; Joseph Rudolph, 134&#13;
Sheffield Dr., Racine ; Patricia Salituro,&#13;
2722 25th Ave., Kenosha ; Kathryn Skow, 39&#13;
S. Summerset Dr., Racine; Irene Smith,&#13;
7109 23rd Ave., Kenosha ; Conrad&#13;
Targonski, St. Francis Friary, Burlington;&#13;
Rosemarie Thompson, 961 Green Bay&#13;
Road, Kenosha ; Elizabeth N. Weber, 2307&#13;
Four Mile Road, Racine; and Betty J.&#13;
Yankee, Salem. Candidates for the bachelor of science&#13;
degree are : Frederick J. Bruch, 2022 57th St.,&#13;
Kenosha ; Richard K. Bruno, 4026 60th&#13;
Place, Kenosha ; Kenneth Cullen, _6411&#13;
Greenridge Drive, Racine ; Keren Meister&#13;
Davis, 4045 18th St. , Kenosha ; Susan K.&#13;
Griffiths, 1602 43rd St., Kenosha ; B~ent&#13;
Harrison, 725 Perry Ave., Racme ;&#13;
Lawrence Hartman, 1719 Johnson Ave.,&#13;
Racine; Barbara Jean Kral, 21 S. Green&#13;
Bay Road, Racine; Robert Moehrke, 2004&#13;
45thSt. , Kenosha ; LouisC. Noto, 2107 53rd&#13;
St Kenosha · Donald G. Peterson, 4014&#13;
S6tb St. , Ke~osha ; Susan C. Piehl, 7602&#13;
32nd Ave., Kenosha ; ~tephen W.&#13;
Schneider, 4207 Olive St. , Racme ;_Bruno A.&#13;
Schrader, 2515 Erie St., Racme; and&#13;
Donald P. Smith, 1916 Deane Blvd. ,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Mid-year graduation will take pla~e&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 31, 1971, at 8 p.m. ~n&#13;
Greenquist Hall Concours~. The. mam&#13;
speaker for the graduation will be&#13;
$75 Sportcoats $45&#13;
$100 Fur Coats&#13;
(Men's) $57.50&#13;
$35 Ladies Jump&#13;
Suits $14. 95&#13;
Always Wholesale Prices at&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
ACROSS FROM THE DAYTON HOTEL&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
University President John C. Weav r. The&#13;
Rey. Roy_ D. Phillips of the nlt.arian&#13;
Uruversalist church "'ill conduct the invocation&#13;
and benediction for the no cap&#13;
and gown informal cerernonv&#13;
Following the ceremony° · will be a&#13;
reception in the South concOtll"Se.&#13;
candidates are scheduled for gradua tion.&#13;
Faculty and admini trative taff are&#13;
cordially invited to attend.&#13;
i'o'EWSCOPE - Page 3&#13;
Tuesday, January 19, 1971&#13;
ORTH &amp; SOUTI1 SHE~ID ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHA&#13;
FAMOUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED·&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
THE ROCKER!&#13;
- - -&#13;
100-FM!&#13;
Racine Kenosha Radio! - - -&#13;
24 HOURS!&#13;
RIGHT ON! &#13;
This university has, in its few years of existence, experienced more than&#13;
its share of difliculty. We've gone from Ockham's Razor to instant greatness to&#13;
the Parkside mission and have recently endured the Parkside shaft.&#13;
The shaft has been weilded by the administration directed at limes at the&#13;
faculty. at times at the studnets, and at times even at the administration itself.&#13;
The r ult of this has been a lack of communication between all factions of the&#13;
univer ity Arter two years there is no student government, no clearly defined&#13;
faculty review procedures, no organized faculty recruiting procedures, no&#13;
drmmstration-Iaculty exchange, no faculty-student exchange, and no studentdmmistrallon&#13;
exchange. In these areas there exist formal channels of&#13;
commumcation. but these have been effectively obscured, misinterpreted, or&#13;
mi used a to render them ineffective. Recently, steps have been taken to&#13;
remov some of th ob tacles and construct effective, efficient channels. It&#13;
rem 'n! to be n If this is a genuine attempt at reconstruction or another&#13;
v rsron of th Parkside haft.&#13;
It, a time for guarded opumism, but not inaction.&#13;
A uruv r ity 10 its youth has to be strengthened before its benefits can be&#13;
enjoyed It i. time for construction and establishment of this university&#13;
through co-operauon It WIll require administration involvement, faculty involv&#13;
m nt, nd tudent involvement An important initial step is a redefinition&#13;
of OCkham' . razor, instant greatness, the Parks ide mission, and the Parkside&#13;
haft Let'. co-operate and pull it all together.&#13;
The r rgnation of Vice Chancellor Harris and Dean Mac Kinney might&#13;
"ell be tak n a. a step toward academic manhood for Parkside.&#13;
What ha . been learned at Park ide by the 17 firings and the resignations&#13;
f Harri. ·MacK,nney is what can happen to any immature university torn by&#13;
mt rnal aeadermc chaos. Tlu . 'f unchecked, creates almost certain external&#13;
eestrucuo»&#13;
Why not demand the resignation of the Chief Administrator himself?&#13;
nlortunately to command such an act is to call for certain destruction of this&#13;
Univ r Ity&#13;
we have learned that the underlying faculty response, a feeling of downtrodden&#13;
mdlfference, aimed at saving their own necks, is an attitude somewhat&#13;
dI couraging further teaching and research, leaving a bitler taste and not so&#13;
fond memory. We have learned that the University can be the subject of&#13;
ndlcule and degradation locally and even nationally. We lbe students should&#13;
learn that further chaos certainly would crush the already wavering walls of&#13;
Park ide.&#13;
Super construction seems to be the word at Parkside, with its instant&#13;
greatness and Parks ide mission: reconstruction should be the word. Observing&#13;
our mistakes and conscientiously applying the result should build not only a&#13;
brick and mortar niversity but one in which the faculty and the students can&#13;
contmue to operate as efficient creative learners without fear of further unrest.&#13;
Umte students. UnIte faculty, unite administration and fuse together, in&#13;
channels of communication, to build a university which radlales respect and&#13;
Understanding. It can be done. It must be done.&#13;
UWP Receives Federal Grant&#13;
A rederal grant of $18.000 1n support of&#13;
thc College Work-Study Program at the&#13;
University of \\'isconsin·Parkside was&#13;
aCCl'pted frIday by the W Board of&#13;
Regenb&#13;
The grant is for the period Jan. 1, 1971,&#13;
lhrougl1 Dec. 31. 1971&#13;
Jan K. Ocker, UWP's Director of&#13;
Financial Aids and Placement, said the&#13;
grant brings to S40,OOOthe amount of&#13;
federal funds allocated for the work-study&#13;
program at Parkside during the current&#13;
academic year.&#13;
RIlS'OE&#13;
IHOUSTRln&#13;
significant change. I think man&#13;
do.n't realize how significant it is. i,~~}...&#13;
this stage we have to take the C~-l\&#13;
at his word. celb&#13;
There are some points or WyUi '&#13;
point statement that did not come f e. too&#13;
chancellor, but came from the r;-n the&#13;
which the chancellor has accepl&lt;d ~l)&#13;
was no consultation with the c~~&#13;
prior to this. The University Com .Dar&#13;
did not go to the chancellor and sa~~&#13;
want your approval for the raJ W.&#13;
points. We told HIM we were gOing.....&#13;
this." IS. ,an d h id "G e sal, 0 ahead and do' " 10010&#13;
I lbink if you continue to battle thi... ~&#13;
out now and try to tear this place -.&#13;
you're going to he successful. alllrt,&#13;
1think this is not the lime for this Tlia'&#13;
the lime to try to pull this .chool ,;",.~&#13;
and see if we can be successful. '&#13;
REMEMBE.R NOVEMBER&#13;
APPLEBAUM'S DECEMBER SPEACH&#13;
If the administration thinks thi.s ~ampus&#13;
is going to run business as usual It 1S sadly&#13;
mistaken. There has been a tre~endous&#13;
battle on this campus, and 1 think the&#13;
administration has come forth. with. at&#13;
least a first step, to make up for It. Ithink&#13;
it hehooves the faculty, the students, a~d&#13;
the administration to see if we can pull th~s&#13;
campus together again. Beeaus: th~s&#13;
campus cannot continue to ex~st. If this&#13;
ever happens again. Because if It ever&#13;
does this campus will collapse. .&#13;
What we should do nOWis try to bring the&#13;
campus together. I don't think we ~ve&#13;
heard the end of this anyway. But 1 think&#13;
we have to try to bring it together. Ithink It&#13;
is a job for the administration, the faculty,&#13;
and for the students.&#13;
Having been closely involved .with .wh~t&#13;
has been happening at this Urnverslty 10&#13;
the past three years, I think. this is a&#13;
December 9, 1970&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
This is in reference to an article in the&#13;
Dee. 3 1970 issue of NEWSCOPE titled.&#13;
, , II&#13;
"Consider the North-South Program .&#13;
Last year at this time, there was a&#13;
similar article in Parkside's newspaper to&#13;
which'l responded. 1 was 'subsequently&#13;
chosen as Parkside's only repres"entative&#13;
and spent second semester of the school&#13;
year 1969-1970 at North Carolina Central&#13;
University. Itis for this reason that Iwish&#13;
to let my comments be known to others&#13;
who may be interested.&#13;
My experiences at NCCU, for the most&#13;
part, were filled with abuse, name-calling&#13;
and a constant reminder that Iwa:::.a nonblack&#13;
outsider in a situation where I didn't&#13;
belong and was not wanted.&#13;
Friendships were few and meaningless&#13;
and I came away not knowing who my&#13;
friends really were and who I could or&#13;
could not trust. You see, my room was&#13;
broken into twice and Iwas ripped off both&#13;
limes. A third attempt was made on lbe&#13;
last day of the semester, but it was unsuccessful.&#13;
Only my closest associates&#13;
could have known on both occasions that 1&#13;
was exactly "ripe for the picking".&#13;
The few opportunities afforded me fDr&#13;
participating in student oriented functions&#13;
were all but choked off because Iwas nonblack.&#13;
People who may have wanted to be&#13;
friendly toward me avoided lbe issue&#13;
because of outside pressure from the&#13;
majority of other students.&#13;
My advice to anyone considerinj1 the&#13;
North-South program is to forget it!&#13;
Females, however, usually are n0t subjected&#13;
to a hard time and may find·it more&#13;
worthwhile than Idid. Also, studoots there&#13;
were more receptive to a black from&#13;
Parkside attending their institntion and I&#13;
promised that 1 would recbmmend it.&#13;
R. E. Williams&#13;
Do You need the&#13;
Newscope?&#13;
Of COURSE you&#13;
do, to find our what's&#13;
happening around&#13;
our Campus" Because&#13;
we "tell it as it is."&#13;
-&#13;
Editor&#13;
Parkside's Newscope&#13;
We strongly commend Ken K....... ~&#13;
ongoing investigation of the Psycbolao&#13;
Department, an interest we find the IDIlIt&#13;
interesting since he has reportedlyDMI'&#13;
taken a course in Psychology. l1li&#13;
methodologically impeccahle polltae&#13;
procedures have, to .date, borne IDlIIt&#13;
impressive fr\.lils. We !ljkethe almost'"&#13;
lack of response on the part or his ..&#13;
stituency as presumptive evidenceIIIIt&#13;
Psychology, in toto. has earned a WUII&#13;
spot in the hearts. of that great siIlII&#13;
majority of w/lich he is the moStvocdJ&#13;
inarticulate member.&#13;
- To settle any latently lingeringdoubtI.&#13;
we are calling for a peaceful raUyat&#13;
Greenquist Hall, 1 P.M., Tuesday&#13;
January 19, to protest (I) the ret",.&#13;
and probable promotion to tenure,(j die&#13;
Eichmann of Psych 203, and (21 IIle&#13;
department's, at present, overbalarlmd&#13;
research emphasis.&#13;
We will lake the absence of ""&#13;
resounding turnout as an overwheImiC&#13;
gesture of confidence in PsycholaCl"l&#13;
present personnel. In such an eventua!itJ,&#13;
we suggest you direct Thorn's admitted&#13;
ability - born of the "arrogance" ~&#13;
"nearly twenty-two years of expen-&#13;
- to the remediation of such prfSSIIC&#13;
problems as "What's wrong with tbt&#13;
weather?"&#13;
Yours inFreIfl.&#13;
MarkTimpaIIY&#13;
uddi~ Apostolic Prothonatary. theL&#13;
Fa.clion and poilus _.....w&#13;
GeorgeM...,..,&#13;
DavidWe!J«&#13;
La IT)' 1biel/ll&#13;
GerrieSo&lt;""""&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
-&#13;
\&#13;
,~,&#13;
underlying facuJt. r ·ponse, a feeling of down- , is an attitude somewhat&#13;
UWP Receives Federal Grant&#13;
Jan K. Ocker, 1' P's Director of&#13;
Financial Aids and Placement, said the&#13;
grant brings to $40,000 the amount of&#13;
federal funds allocated for the work-study&#13;
program a t Park ide during the current&#13;
academic year&#13;
REMEMBE.R NOVEMBER&#13;
APPLEBAUM'S DECEMBER SPEACH&#13;
If the administration thinks th~s ~ampus&#13;
is going to run business as usual it is sadly&#13;
mistaken. There has been a tre"'.endous&#13;
battle on this campus, and I thi~ the&#13;
administration has come forth_ with. at&#13;
least a first step, to make up for it. I thmk&#13;
it hehooves the faculty, !he students, a~d&#13;
the administration to see if we can pull th~s&#13;
campus together again. B~us~ th~s campus cannot continue to e~st. if this&#13;
ever happens again. Because if it ever&#13;
does this campus will collapse. . What we should do now is try to brmg the&#13;
campus together. I don't think we ~ve&#13;
beard the end of this anyway. But 1 ~ we have to try to bring it together. I think it&#13;
is a job for the administration, the faculty,&#13;
and for the students. Having been closely involved _with. wh~t&#13;
has been happening at this Uruvers1ty m&#13;
the past three years, I think this is a&#13;
December 9, 1970&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
This is in reference to an article in the&#13;
Dec. 3, 1970, issue of NEWSCOPE titled,&#13;
"Consider the North-South Program".&#13;
Last year at this time, there was a&#13;
similar article in Parkside's newspaper to&#13;
which I responded. I was ·subsequently&#13;
chosen as Parkside's only representative&#13;
and spent second semester of the school&#13;
year 1969-1970 at North Carolina Central&#13;
University. It is for this reason that I wish&#13;
to let my comments be known to others&#13;
who may be interested.&#13;
My experiences at NCCU, for the most&#13;
part, were filled with abuse, name-calling&#13;
and a constant reminder that I war. a nonblack&#13;
outsider in a situation where I didn't&#13;
belong and was not wanted.&#13;
Friendships were few and meaningless&#13;
and I came away not knowing who my&#13;
friends really were and who I could or&#13;
could not trust. You see, my room was&#13;
broken into twice and I was ripped off both&#13;
times. A third attempt was made on the&#13;
last day of the semester, but it was unsuccessful.&#13;
Only my closest associates&#13;
could have known on both occasions that I&#13;
was exactly "ripe for the picking".&#13;
The few opportunities afforded me- for&#13;
participating in student oriented functions&#13;
were all but choked off because I was nonblack.&#13;
People who may have wanted to be&#13;
friendly toward me avoided the issue&#13;
because of outside pressure from the&#13;
majority of other students.&#13;
My advice to anyone considerin~ the&#13;
North-South program is to forget it!&#13;
Females, however, usually are njt subjected&#13;
to a hard time and may find-it more&#13;
worthwhile than I did. Also, students there&#13;
were more receptive to a black from&#13;
Parkside attending their instibltion and I&#13;
promised that I would recommend it.&#13;
R. E. Williams&#13;
Do You need the&#13;
Newscope?&#13;
Of COURSE you&#13;
do, to find our what's&#13;
happening around&#13;
significant change. I think man&#13;
don't realize how significant it is i ~-r YoU&#13;
this stage we have to take the Ch 1&#13;
nk a1&#13;
at his word. anceu~&#13;
There are some points of Wyn· ,&#13;
point s_tatement that did not come f~~ ten&#13;
chancellor, but came from the f lnlhe&#13;
which the chancellor has accepted ;cu1~&#13;
was no consultation with the cha here&#13;
prior to this. The University Comnc~~&#13;
did not go to the chancellor and sa rn:ttee&#13;
want your approval for the foliow W&#13;
points. We told HIM we were going ,A&#13;
th. " d h 'd "G "' d 1s. , an e sa1 , o ahead and d .&#13;
I think if you continue to battle this ~"\:'.&#13;
out now and try to tear this place -""11&#13;
you're going to be successful. apart,&#13;
I ll?ink this is not the time for this. This&#13;
the time ~ try to pull this school together&#13;
and see if we can be successful. '&#13;
Editor&#13;
Parkside's Newscope&#13;
We strongly commend Ken Konkol·,&#13;
ongoing investigation of the Psychology&#13;
Department, an interest we find the men&#13;
interesting since he has reportedly never&#13;
taken a course in Psychology. His&#13;
methodologically impeccable polling&#13;
procedures have, to date, borne most&#13;
impressive fruits. We 1¥e the almost tdal&#13;
lack of response on the part of his Clllstituency&#13;
as presumptive evidence that&#13;
Psychology, in toto, has earned a wann&#13;
spot in the hearts_ of that great 1lent&#13;
majority of wpich he is the most vocal!}&#13;
inarticulate member.&#13;
· To settle any latently lingering doubts,&#13;
we are calling for a peaceful rally at&#13;
Greenquist Hall, 1 P.M., Tuesday&#13;
January 19, to protest (1) the retentioo.&#13;
and probable promotion to tenure, of lhe&#13;
Eichmann of Psych 203, and (2) lhe&#13;
department's, at present, overbalanced&#13;
research emphasis.&#13;
We will take the absence of 811)'&#13;
resounding turnout as an overwhelmq&#13;
gesture of confidence in Psychology s&#13;
present personnel. In such an eventualil.,&#13;
we suggest you direct Thorn's admitted&#13;
ability - born of the "arrogance·• 1 " nearly twenty-two years of exper1e~&#13;
- to the remediation of such pr&#13;
problems as "What's wrong with lhe&#13;
weather?'' Yours in Frein&#13;
Mark Timpalll&#13;
Apostolic Prothonatary, the Luddi:e&#13;
Faction and poilus · George Mete&#13;
David Weber&#13;
Larry Thielen&#13;
Gerrie Soren&#13;
our Campusll Because&#13;
we "tell it as it is." &#13;
FACULTY REACTION&#13;
The immediate faculty reaction to the&#13;
resignations. of Vice-Chancellor Harris and&#13;
Dean MacKmney seems to be that it is a&#13;
necessary first step in pulling the&#13;
University hack together, but by itself is&#13;
not seen as being sufficient to heal the&#13;
wounds.&#13;
A junior faculty member who was one of&#13;
the'll to have his contract terminated said,&#13;
Hit removes the most ObVIOUS obstacle&#13;
between the administration and the&#13;
faculty.Never!hele~s, t?cre is a pressing&#13;
question at this POint III regards to the&#13;
relationship between the Chancellor and&#13;
the faculty. There is a large question in the&#13;
area of trust and administrative&#13;
responsibility which has yet to be answered.&#13;
"There are still several Questions that&#13;
the administration has not answered, It&#13;
would be interesting to know what instructions&#13;
were given to Harris and&#13;
MacKinney upon their arrival at this&#13;
campus by Chancellor Wyllie." he said.&#13;
"It would also be interesting to know&#13;
who autonomously Harris and MacKinney&#13;
haveacted throughout the entire situation.&#13;
A nwnber of faculty suspect that what&#13;
Harrisand MacKinney did was in essence&#13;
directed by the Chancellor himself.&#13;
"But their bungling incompetence, '.' he&#13;
continued,"and extreme behavior in this&#13;
matter however does not smack of the&#13;
Chancellor's cleverness and adroitness in&#13;
the handling of delica te rna tters of this&#13;
nature."&#13;
JOMHarbeson of Political Science said,&#13;
"Things will not be undone immediately.&#13;
That the alienation, distrust, and the lack&#13;
c:i confidence in the competence of our&#13;
administralion will continue in a grea t&#13;
amount of faculty for a long while. I think&#13;
it can be repaired, but not overnight.&#13;
"[ think the faculty is simply exhausted&#13;
c:i the whole thing right now," he con~&#13;
linood, "but I think its morale will im- I&#13;
prove knowing the Vice-Chancellor and&#13;
Dean are resigning. But whether it continues&#13;
to improve will depend on whether&#13;
the new acting D~an, .and the new ad~&#13;
rninistrativ~ procedures and leadership&#13;
justifies that faith .."&#13;
Speaking of the faculty role in decision&#13;
making, Harbeson said, "I would say at&#13;
,the pr~sent time it appears that there is&#13;
much more responsiveness on the part of&#13;
the administration to the faculty.&#13;
"But it's too early to tell if it will be a&#13;
longterm phenomenon, and if it will result&#13;
in concrete changes," he said. "It's quite&#13;
possible right now the faculty is being&#13;
listened to because it has been proved&#13;
rightin the immediate circumstances, but&#13;
OIlcethey recede in the background, the&#13;
old relationship may re-emerge.&#13;
"There is no reason to believe the ad~&#13;
ministration trusts any more the junior&#13;
faculty than it did before" he continued.&#13;
"That has never been tak~n hack. By lack&#13;
of trust I mean the basic view the junior&#13;
Flying Club&#13;
Formed&#13;
, ParkSide Flying Club is to become activenext&#13;
term. This Flying Club is for both&#13;
~tudents and faculty. It can be contacted&#13;
thrOUghthe Athletic Office and would like&#13;
th e stude~ts, faculty, and staff to answer&#13;
e follOWingquestions.&#13;
Fl. Do ~ou have ~r are you working on a&#13;
.A.A, pilot or mechanic's license?'&#13;
Yes No&#13;
2. Wouldyou be interested in a Division&#13;
: Aeron.auticsat Parkside, offering a B.S.&#13;
gree In aeronautical management or&#13;
~~er phases of aeronautics? Yes&#13;
F13..Would you be interested in joining a&#13;
thYIngClub at Parkside, probably using&#13;
~ KenOSha Airport? Yes No&#13;
lease mail answers and give your&#13;
~rne, address, and phone number to&#13;
arkside Athletic Office.&#13;
Thanks.&#13;
Foster Hannaford, Jr.&#13;
President Pro tern.&#13;
-&#13;
~cuthltyis simply not qualified in the .&#13;
e admlrustration t View&#13;
role in policy makin ot take. a decisive&#13;
CUrs in Mad' g the k1lld that ocS&#13;
. rson and Milwaukee."&#13;
. peakmg of the senior faculty's roJe in&#13;
James Shea&#13;
the controversey, he said, "The senior&#13;
faculty with a few notable exceptions has&#13;
not stood up as well in this crisis as they&#13;
should have.&#13;
"I think tbey weakened the faith of some&#13;
junior faculty in the wisdom of tenure" he&#13;
said: "It seems tenure makes ~ople&#13;
afraid to speak out, when it should give the&#13;
security and courage to speak up."&#13;
Business&#13;
Contrary to popular belief, there is in~&#13;
deed a business major at Parkside, such as&#13;
it is. Although the discipline has no full&#13;
time staff and virtually no program, the&#13;
major is included in the catalog.&#13;
In an interview with Mr. Keehn,&#13;
Assistant Professor of Economics, it was&#13;
determined that the curriculum as it now&#13;
stands is inadequate to such an extreme&#13;
that a business degree (rom Parkside is&#13;
almost worthless. There is support, both&#13;
from students and staff, for revision of the&#13;
discipline.&#13;
The business program, as it stands, is&#13;
inadequate. Essential courses are Jeft out&#13;
and there is no advanced training&#13;
available. Furthermore, there is no full&#13;
time staff, and only one visiting professor.&#13;
The Parkside program is like that of no&#13;
other major university. Consequent.Jy,&#13;
graduates from other" universities are&#13;
preferred over Parkside graduates in&#13;
industry. Parkside's program must be&#13;
built and revised.&#13;
To build an effective business major at&#13;
Parkside, a full time staIf is needed. It was&#13;
admitted by Mr. Keehn that such a staff is&#13;
often hard to find since qualified in~&#13;
dividuals often prefer business to&#13;
teaching. However, the present staff have&#13;
most of the qualifications to teach some of&#13;
the core courses in the major.&#13;
The central problem however, remains&#13;
the question of revision of ~e major. H?w&#13;
can a more effective curflculum be m·&#13;
stituted, and what changes should be&#13;
made? By investigating what other&#13;
schools offer, this problem could be&#13;
overcome. Evidently, however, this is&#13;
V&#13;
F °G Ad U&#13;
p~ E&#13;
'e&#13;
FABRICS FOR S&#13;
ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
- 658-861&gt; -&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
By MARC ElSE~&#13;
Jam~ Shea. a member of the Cniversity&#13;
Committee,. said, ." think it .....as the right&#13;
ste~. and WIth the appointment of the new&#13;
acting Dean. Parks ide nO\' has the opportunity&#13;
to do what it should have been&#13;
doing all along: building a lop qualil)&#13;
teaching and researching Iacultv ..&#13;
He went on to say, "The Crisis'may turn&#13;
OUllo be a good tlung In tbat tbe faCuII,.·s&#13;
role has now been recognized 10 \I, riting·b\&#13;
the admimstratloo. and the Iacultv noV.'&#13;
~s the opportunity to assess the type of&#13;
Influence it ought to have been asSerting&#13;
all along."&#13;
Asked 1/ there has been a change In the&#13;
P,hilosop!1yof the administration. he said.&#13;
The~e s been a recogrution or reality that&#13;
wasn t there before. but as the views or the&#13;
admjnistration changing, no. I don't think&#13;
so. I think it's up to faculty to protect irs&#13;
own role. If it doesn'l the administration&#13;
will probably take the initiative again"&#13;
Speaking of the University Committee's&#13;
meeting with the Chancellor Shea said&#13;
"The meetings were frank a'nd friendly:&#13;
The committee spoke forcefully about&#13;
what il thought had to be done. The&#13;
~ceUOl' seemed to receive tJus advice&#13;
m the spirit it was given. •&#13;
"The Chancellor did admit freely to us&#13;
that he did make some mislakes," Shea&#13;
said. "I think that's the hasis you can go&#13;
ahead to correct the mistakes. Before you&#13;
do anything about righting a wrong,&#13;
somebody has to acknowledge there has&#13;
been, indeed, mistakes.&#13;
"And the Chancellor," Shea said,&#13;
"acknowledged this, and has taken some&#13;
steps to rectify the sibJtation ..&#13;
aior Offered&#13;
contrary to the Parkside innovative elhic.&#13;
Perhaps a more preferable solution from&#13;
an administrative standpoint wouJd be (0&#13;
allow those professors qualified to teach&#13;
business a greater voice in designing&#13;
requirements for a degree.&#13;
It is ironic that the business diSCiplineis&#13;
so undernourished in this industrial&#13;
society, particularly in a universlly With&#13;
an industrial mission. It would seem that a&#13;
business program at such a university&#13;
would be emphasiz.ed rather than circumscribed.&#13;
Parkside, by improVing lts&#13;
school of business. would belter fulftll its&#13;
mission, could conceivably mcrease Hs&#13;
enrollment, and would be or greater&#13;
service to the student and the community&#13;
NEWSCOPE- PageS&#13;
Tuesday, January 19,1971&#13;
Artist to&#13;
Exhibit Works&#13;
'Il:RPII\, TO OI~PL.\\' \RT&#13;
John Satre :\lurphy a member of Ih,' art&#13;
faculty al the tm\1"r"S11) of \\ isco In&#13;
Park. ide. IS parhclpatmg In OJ two-man&#13;
show 01 Ceramic. and Fiber which \'111&#13;
ccntmue thr~h February at : aul("&#13;
Pacinc College, eaute. II'" h&#13;
1\1urph)' ha '28 \\ork. m the tx)\o\ 10&#13;
eluding two large. tcneware lu Ired Ilocr&#13;
bowls. eight porcelain ....all rdlt ..r with&#13;
rutile stain and gold metalhc he-ire, ("IKht&#13;
metalhc Iu Ired wall relu:r \ulh&#13;
plexigla transitional area, rum 'Small&#13;
World" 00'" Is and one . Ilk recn bann -r&#13;
Allot the cerami uuhze ooth Ih prt:&#13;
moldIng of clay In molds 0( pia. ter and lh.&#13;
application, in many flrln~. of tran~11X'nl&#13;
lustre and metalliC lustre&#13;
The Parkside cerami I ha exhlblt&lt;'d&#13;
widely Ihr0U8houl the nHed tates and&#13;
during December recel\:e&lt;t a merll&#13;
achievement award 10 IhP inVitational&#13;
Craft Commllmenl how '" hlch began a&#13;
Nrc-year tour allhe Rochester (. Itnn.) Arl&#13;
&lt;;enter and an a.....ard In the WiSCO~lO&#13;
Craft Invitallonal NO.3 Travehng ExhIbIt&#13;
at L'Aleher Gallery In Milwaukee.&#13;
YOUNG MElt&#13;
BOYS&#13;
100's of BELLS&#13;
~::!~b207 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 53'03&#13;
leu' ,(d/e'1 Olle&#13;
503 t\!(/ill ',.&#13;
R"cine&#13;
lO% SI:ldml DlSCounl&#13;
011 ,,/I Posll'l &amp; Fran/t·t&#13;
eu' Call1'll &gt;/ U'O&#13;
5036 i.\/h A/I',&#13;
Kmosh"&#13;
FACULTY REACTION s&#13;
.),J nu ry 1 , 1971&#13;
Artist to&#13;
Exhibit Works&#13;
The immediate faculty reaction to the&#13;
resignations of Vice-Chancellor Harris and&#13;
oean MacKinney seems to be that it is a&#13;
necessary first step in pulling the&#13;
university back together, but by itself is&#13;
not seen as being sufficient to heal the&#13;
wounds.&#13;
A junior faculty member who was one of&#13;
the27 to have his contract terminated said,&#13;
"It removes the most obvious obstacle&#13;
between the administration and the&#13;
faculty. Nevertheless, there is a pressing&#13;
question at this point in regards to the&#13;
relationship between the Chancellor and&#13;
the faculty. There is a large question in the&#13;
area of trust and administrative&#13;
responsibility which has yet to be answered.&#13;
&#13;
"There are still several auestions that&#13;
the administration has not auswered. It&#13;
would be interesting to know what instructioJl.S&#13;
were given to Harris and&#13;
MacKinney upon their arrival at this&#13;
campus by Chancellor Wyllie." he said.&#13;
"It would also be interesting to know&#13;
who autonomously Harris and MacKinney&#13;
have acted throughout the entire situation.&#13;
A nwnber of faculty suspect that what&#13;
Harris and MacKinney did was in essence&#13;
directed by the Chancellor himself.&#13;
"But their bungling incompetence," he&#13;
continued, "and extreme behavior in this&#13;
matter however does not smack of the&#13;
Chancellor's cleverness and adroitness in&#13;
the handling of delicate matters of this&#13;
nature.''&#13;
John Harbeson of Political Science said,&#13;
"Things will not be undone immediately.&#13;
That the alienation, distrust, and the lack&#13;
of confidence in the competence of our&#13;
administration will continue in a great&#13;
amount of faculty for a long while. I think&#13;
it can be repaired, but not overnight.&#13;
"I think the faculty is simply exhausted&#13;
of the whole thing right now," he continued,&#13;
"but I think its morale will im- 1&#13;
prove knowing the Vice-Chancellor and&#13;
Dean are resigning. But whether it continues&#13;
to improve will depend on whether&#13;
the new acting Dean, and the new administrative&#13;
procedures and leadership&#13;
justifies that faith .. "&#13;
Speaking of the faculty role in decision&#13;
making, Harbeson said, "I would say at&#13;
, the present time it appears that there is&#13;
much more responsiveness on the part of&#13;
the administration to the faculty.&#13;
"But it's too early to tell if it will be a&#13;
long term phenomenon, and if it will result&#13;
in concrete changes," he said. "It's quite&#13;
possible right now the faculty is being&#13;
listened to because it has been proved&#13;
right in the immediate circumstances, but&#13;
once they recede in the background, the&#13;
old relationship may re-emerge.&#13;
"There is no reason to believe the administration&#13;
trusts any more the junior&#13;
faculty than it did before " he continued.&#13;
"That has never been tak~n back. By lack&#13;
of trust I mean the basic view the junior&#13;
Flying Club&#13;
Formed . Parkside Flying Club is to become active&#13;
next term. This Flying Club is for both&#13;
students and faculty. It can be contacted&#13;
~rough the Athletic Office and would like&#13;
the stude~ts, faculty, and staff to answer e following questions.&#13;
F 1. Do ~ou have or are you working on a&#13;
.A.A. pilot or mechanic's license1&#13;
Yes No&#13;
2- Would you be interested in a Division ! Aeron_autics at Parkside, offering a B.S.&#13;
0fee m aeronautical manageme!}t or&#13;
No er Phases of aeronautics? Yes&#13;
3·. Would you be interested in joining a&#13;
~Ytng Club at Parkside, probably using&#13;
e Kenosha Airport? Yes No&#13;
Please mail answers and give your&#13;
;;irne,_ address, and phone number to&#13;
arkside Athletic Office.&#13;
Thanks.&#13;
Foster Hannaford, Jr.&#13;
President Pro tern.&#13;
faculty is simply not Ii . . of the ad · · . qua fied m the view m1rustration to tak .. role in policy makin f e_ a dec1s1ve&#13;
curs in Madison andgMo ·1the kmd that oc- S k" 1waukee." . pea mg of the senior faculty's role in&#13;
James Shea&#13;
the controversey, he said, "The senior&#13;
faculty with a few notable exceptions has&#13;
not stood up as well in this crisis as they should have.&#13;
"I think they weakened the faith of some&#13;
junior faculty in the wisdom of tenure " he&#13;
said: "It seems tenure makes ~ople&#13;
afraid to speak out, when it should give the&#13;
security and courage to speak up."&#13;
Busin M&#13;
Contrary to popular belief, there is indeed&#13;
a business major at Parkside, such as&#13;
it is. Although the discipline has no full&#13;
time staff and virtually no program, the&#13;
major is included in the catalog.&#13;
In an interview with Mr. Keehn,&#13;
Assistant Professor of Economics, it was&#13;
determined that the curriculum as it now&#13;
stands is inadequate to such an extreme&#13;
that a business degree from Parkside is&#13;
almost worthless. There is support, both&#13;
from students and staff, for revision or the&#13;
discipline. The business program, as it stands, is&#13;
inadequate. Essential courses are left out&#13;
and there is no advanced training&#13;
available. Furthermore, there is no full&#13;
time staff, and only one visiting professor.&#13;
The Parkside program is like that of no other major university. Consequently,&#13;
graduates from other- universities are&#13;
preferred over Parkside graduates in&#13;
industry. Parkside's program must be&#13;
built and revised.&#13;
To build an effective business major at&#13;
Parkside, a full time staff is needed. It w~s&#13;
admitted by Mr. Keehn that such a tarr 1s&#13;
often hard to find since qualified individuals&#13;
often prefer business to&#13;
teaching. However, the present staff have&#13;
most of !he qualifications to teach some of&#13;
the core courses in the major. The central problem however. remain&#13;
the question of revision of ~e major. H~w&#13;
can a more effective curriculum be instituted,&#13;
and what changes should be&#13;
made? By investigating what other&#13;
schools offer, this problem coul~ ~&#13;
overcome. Evidently, however. this 1s&#13;
VO&#13;
FA GU&#13;
&amp;R E&#13;
'c&#13;
FABRICS FOR S&#13;
ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
- 658-861:.! -&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
B~ , J.\R El&#13;
,:'sked if there h~ be n a cha m th&#13;
philosophy or the administratio h id&#13;
"There's been a rec nition of ~hty that&#13;
wasn't there before. but a the \i e". of th&#13;
adm}ni tration changing. no, I don'l thi so. I think it' up to faculty to protect ii!&#13;
~n role. If it doesn't, the dmini. tration&#13;
will probably take the initJati,e ai?ain."&#13;
Speaking of the ni\'ersity Cr,mmittee·&#13;
meeting with the Chancellor Shea said&#13;
"The meetings were frank and Cri ndh :&#13;
The committee spoke forcefull aboot&#13;
what it thought had to be do'i-ie. The&#13;
~ncellor seemed to receive tlus advice m the spirit it was given. •&#13;
"The Chancellor did admit freely lo u&#13;
that he did make some mistakes," hea&#13;
said. "I think that's the basis you can go&#13;
ahead to correct the mistakes. Before ,·ou&#13;
do anything about righting a wrong,&#13;
somebody has to acknowledge there ha&#13;
been, indeed, mistakes.&#13;
"And the Chance11or." hea aid, "acknowledged this, and has taken ome&#13;
steps to rectify the situtati~ ..&#13;
• Offered&#13;
contrary to the Park id innovative ethic.&#13;
Perhaps a more preferable . olution from an administrative standpoint would be to&#13;
allow those professors qualified to t ac-h&#13;
business a greater \'Oice in d igni&#13;
requirements for a d ree.&#13;
It is ironic that the busin&#13;
so undernouri hed in thi indu trial&#13;
society, particularli, in a uni,er.;ily \\ilh&#13;
an industrial mi ion. It \\OUld · em that&#13;
busin program at uch a univ rsity&#13;
would be empha ized rather than circum&#13;
cribed. Parkside, by improvu~ ii!&#13;
school of bu in · , would belt r fulfill i&#13;
mission, could conceivabli, increa i&#13;
enrollment, and would be of RJ' tcr&#13;
service to the tud nt and th communit ·.&#13;
Exploring the&#13;
1 IU HY l I I. Pl.\ Y Jl'r&#13;
YOUNG MEN&#13;
BOYS&#13;
IOO's of BELLS&#13;
World of ESP&#13;
Clairvoyancy• T eletype•Power of prayer&#13;
Spiritual Reincarnation•Ghost Hunting&#13;
(NORMA HAS PREDICTED TE ORLD- l_DE PREOICTIO S FOR 1969)&#13;
"KNOCK ON THE DOOR, ANO THE I ER LIGHT iHICH IS GOD HAS THE A&#13;
N orm Slater 654-2375 &#13;
A look at Indications&#13;
\uthor· Chri l) Brow n&#13;
Publi\he'r·. tein and Oa~. '.Y.&#13;
Bl JI\I KOLOE'&#13;
Chr~t~ Brown ha. wruten a boo that is&#13;
lon~ enough 2h7 pa es to be a novel. and&#13;
It hu \"'0 hard covers and maybe&#13;
mll'da) It will have two soft covers \\'hen&#13;
I IIr. t heard aboul this erippled&#13;
bPt tyll"T, Ithought oh boy, I'd really&#13;
hke to re d a novel written from the point&#13;
01" w of a paraplegIc" ho can 'I talk and&#13;
ho t) pel ",th tu big toe, But alas,&#13;
t'hrl t) Bro1il.-nd not choose to v.rite&#13;
from the v.h ·Idtalr. no. he ....rite outside&#13;
urlt hke \erybnd) el and produces a&#13;
book lhal I, hke everybody el' HIS&#13;
narr tor I obJect".. though at time I got&#13;
tht~ Impr tOO th I th 'arratlon was a&#13;
v~rtl , Impres Ion of the cripple's&#13;
lho"gIll and perceplloo • ho,,~'er, be that&#13;
It rna). lhr n \ell not fir 1 person and&#13;
Viol' ~f.'l gllm of charae-lers that&#13;
Jo nd La"HC·nc."(' (parh utarl) DHL 10&#13;
IIh tid 1.0\ I I perf "ted 1010typE'S 1be&#13;
muthl"l' "nd fath('r ar the In'h count&#13;
I part or 1h., LaIAreo Ian mother and&#13;
futher In S I. It' almost a If the)' ,",cre&#13;
nUt." Irom the me Dutilnt'" The father&#13;
,rth). t~pi all) In. h drlOkinR classorkln~&#13;
m n·former vettran \\Ilh definite&#13;
I rtl line \l 00 hI the mother I the&#13;
.. arm co\\, protecting her herd from the&#13;
hngs and "rro~, or the bull by absorbing&#13;
them bt'1"M"IC \1.lth a 511 ot grimace, per·&#13;
Slitlu n~pn ..&gt;gnant. a "1 lim of the In to&#13;
prt' 'nanc~ ) ndrome, the father saYIr\{&#13;
,I' hI god gl\' n duly to makc Inds&#13;
TIwre are other characters an the book,&#13;
Ih old titer who runs awal to the&#13;
, r It \lohorchouse of Albion ( (nsh pomt of&#13;
'Ie~) to t(et herself Isurprlsel) a hubby&#13;
"hu . J&gt;'."a good English and converts to&#13;
In hi. m, gets baptised IOto' pub life and&#13;
Ullcmplolmcnl and loses a matching set of&#13;
t'410· 10 the lumshack and his wife call&#13;
home The characters outside the ramih&#13;
are IJS{"d as counterpoints to show other&#13;
thtud and degredations of the Irish&#13;
lal Cf'SSpooi An example is that of a&#13;
m,ddl .....dgod hom)' toad "ho lays a&#13;
S('nllmental whore dunng a wake, or&#13;
l'OUr~e the whore is from England and one&#13;
old wrinkle times the lay with his gold&#13;
'Aateh, do lour ovon thing.&#13;
The themes run the lrish gamut: the.&#13;
('nmlty bet".,.een the Catholics and&#13;
Prote tants, the hatred of England,&#13;
Parnell. local politics and interestingly the&#13;
ptlilosophical quesllon of Ireland's role in&#13;
the upcomlOg "A,ar of TY.'0: the men. the&#13;
r hred veterans, are still unsure as to&#13;
"hether they should lighl with England or&#13;
\loIth the Germans. the youth ha\'e decided&#13;
to,)01Oup with the Green and fight with the&#13;
allte.'s If necessar)', a lot of them desert.&#13;
The crappie is an enigma, his last name&#13;
I BrO\\n, he has wet dreams and like most&#13;
(If the olher kids occasionally pisses in his&#13;
pant. He I. entenng puberty and fails to&#13;
ff."{"1gUilt after confessing the great sin of&#13;
Ja klO~ off which is about the only moral&#13;
ISSue Ihl. novel unexamine::». He is subject&#13;
to th' IOdJgnlh~ and snide remarks of&#13;
r\ M' one and anyone lx-causc he is chained&#13;
dn\lon ·'b~ InVisible chams" He spends a&#13;
l'OUplt' of \H~k~ In a children's hospital&#13;
"hert&gt; t'40 nurs&lt;"~ gig~le when the)" see his&#13;
public bu. h and say to themselves he&#13;
u1dn'l In a children's hosp,lal. The&#13;
cnppl I. ObvlOUSl) seOSltiH' to such barbs&#13;
bulthere' nothlOg he can door say. he can&#13;
onl) grunl and so mdulges In mghts of&#13;
fanta~} \Io.lth sexual symbolism. The&#13;
narrator lends to become overpoetic -&#13;
place reg hng m euphony pro,;ng the&#13;
adage that too man)' prelty words in the&#13;
pol poils the page,&#13;
l( there IS a plot or slory In thlS book I&#13;
rnl cd It. the book is concerned with the&#13;
VAl.EO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN OINNERS ond&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p,m,&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave,&#13;
.' Here is your chance to read the literary&#13;
works 01 your lellow students; hot 011 the&#13;
comes Parkside's hterary&#13;
orrset, INDICATIONS, This winter&#13;
magazme, I' ti edition contains 48 pages of short IC on,&#13;
poetry, photographs and o~~~r~&#13;
illustrations. From an aesthetic P&#13;
view this issue is much improved over last&#13;
year's' for one thing it has a plethora.of&#13;
photog'raphic and illustrated ~rtralts&#13;
which serve to balance the magazme&#13;
an~&#13;
afford a visual respite from the sma I&#13;
rint. The photographs were tak~n b~ Art&#13;
bulan David Christensen, David Bmder&#13;
and J~ Rudolph. The story and co~er&#13;
illustrations were created by the 10-&#13;
terpretative freehand ~f Ji~ Madura. ,&#13;
The opening piece IS Diane Lawler s&#13;
poem, "Blues". Itis as fine a poe~ as you&#13;
are likely to find in poetry magazines and&#13;
anthologies anywhere in America. Dia,ne&#13;
has descriptive eyes and bombards us Wlth&#13;
images, piling them on top o~ each other&#13;
until we can feel an impresslOn that en·&#13;
compasses all the senses .. If you read&#13;
"Blues" sensitively you Will hear and&#13;
smell the Chicago adventure and will know&#13;
why when "i was young when i met you&#13;
Id II "BI es"&#13;
now Iam dying of your a age.. u&#13;
alone is worth the rather exorbitant admission&#13;
price ($1.00) to this coUeetion of&#13;
poems and stories.&#13;
Also included in INDICATIONS are&#13;
short poems by Bill Rolbiecki, PatNelson,&#13;
Jerry Socha Walt Breach and Jim&#13;
Hanlon; all deserve your consideration.&#13;
In the short fiction category INDICATIONS&#13;
oilers a generally well&#13;
written variety of stories. "ExPeriment"&#13;
by yours truly is an experiment in point of&#13;
view and characterization. The story&#13;
concerns a schizophrenic whose world you&#13;
see through his eyes, it is a complex story&#13;
which needs a close reading. '&#13;
lev. years preceding WWII and the author&#13;
paints portraits 01 the tatber, mother,&#13;
sister, crippled brother and the old&#13;
alcoholic widow next door. His portraits&#13;
have other faces in the background, cloudy&#13;
faces that become clear for a few&#13;
moments. a few pages, and then recede&#13;
back IOtOthe background, It is obviously a&#13;
book with maturation motif but it really&#13;
isn't utilized firmly because the author is&#13;
continually concerning himself with&#13;
peripheral characters thai the youth&#13;
doesn't even come into contact with.&#13;
Where does this all lead us, well, the last&#13;
hoe of the book says the cripple is meeting&#13;
a nsing sun; either he's found himself as&#13;
the sa)'lng goes or he's decidod to join the&#13;
Japanese. 1 don't know, the crippl.e is ~&#13;
enigma, laybe it is because the cnpple IS&#13;
only an observer, that he is a bwnpon a log&#13;
that no one notices til they sit on him and&#13;
say sorry pal didn'l see ya, chuckle,&#13;
chuckle, that he is an enigma. One&#13;
memorable scene occurs when a young&#13;
bwcom l~ sits doYt'11in the boxcar with&#13;
the cnpple and fondles his sexual parts, he&#13;
gelS horny and she tells him he's like aU&#13;
the rest, bit of irony, a whaL&#13;
More than anything else this is a book of&#13;
sex, earthy sex, £Wlctional dutiful sex. Sex&#13;
i seen through the eyes 01 adolescents,&#13;
through the eyes or lechers and whores and&#13;
Widows and husbands and mothers and&#13;
fathers. The sex theme, which forms a&#13;
core of the boom. along with Irish drinking&#13;
habits, and the Irish way 01 death, is well&#13;
done, but it's oot enougllto make this book&#13;
a novel&#13;
OK, what do it all lack, it lacks a plot, a&#13;
story, a real climax and resolution( instead&#13;
of jusl. snipping 011 olloose ends), it lacks&#13;
c1arily, though the diatogue is well down it&#13;
is sometimes difficult to find out who is&#13;
saying what and to whom. The book is a&#13;
jumble of impressions which reaBy don't&#13;
seem to lead to anyone point, everybody&#13;
goes their 0\\'11 way and cross paths and&#13;
say hello and tell dirty stories and continue&#13;
on lhelr way separately. And maybe that's&#13;
the author's point, that we are all going our&#13;
ovm way and never really get to know each&#13;
other, nor even ourselves, but the lack of a&#13;
clear purpose, 01 delinity and clarity hurts&#13;
more than it could help even this point.&#13;
But I am most disappointed by what&#13;
Brown didn't do lban by what he did do, his&#13;
point of view is everybody's point of viewj&#13;
the author has an unique view of the world&#13;
because he can't talk and walk in real life&#13;
and yet he fails to use it to its full extent,&#13;
the wheelchair view is only one of a&#13;
number of views and anotber novel about&#13;
Dubtin's social tile we don't need,&#13;
If you like enigmas you'll love this&#13;
novel, if you like to see the· drab side of&#13;
Irish life, then this book is £or- you, but if&#13;
)'ou've read Sons and Lovers and Ulysses&#13;
you really don't need this book in your&#13;
library.&#13;
IIThree Girls Within" by Jerry Socha is&#13;
actually a series of vignettes linked by the&#13;
young girl protagonists and by the lact&#13;
that they are not "normal". One girl isn't&#13;
aware of others, another girl knew she was&#13;
a bitch and the third vignette portrays the&#13;
beautilul haretippod Jane who askod lbe&#13;
question" Am I nor~al,?11&#13;
"Fleming for Congress" is Esther&#13;
Burnett's rather sledgehammered story&#13;
.bout a young long hair who attempts to&#13;
destroy the political campaign or&#13;
order Congressman. It relies a la" 'l1li&#13;
pearance-reality theme as a on ~ ....&#13;
carry the story, but illalters ~evl""&#13;
It's not badly written; it just a Uio 'lilt&#13;
it's not worth writing, 5eetns 1htt&#13;
"The Cycle" by David Binder ' .&#13;
-myth and contrasts civilization ~tililta&#13;
simple, mystical life 01 Abr With IIot&#13;
company. Abraxas "hast the axas &amp;ad&#13;
cohabit with the elements" and:" "&#13;
missionary of divine foods a dru orn.,&#13;
when ingested "opens 'u,. dg 'OIucI,&#13;
preception." The author gets ca 00rs ar&#13;
the beauty 01 words, in eUPhony'rtllh&#13;
very easy to do and typical of m~'&#13;
we get the idea, J; bat&#13;
"Willard" by Marc Eisen is the&#13;
a high s~hoo~. student Who, as skty If&#13;
says to hIm, could dis.ppear t~&#13;
and nobndy would notice," "Sorn-;'-;::'"&#13;
mSlde me dOl~~ thiS to' me, trying ~.&#13;
m~, I know It, expresses the invo1 bin&#13;
alienation he is the avatar of. A girl'"&#13;
up to him and tells him he's mys~&#13;
sort of dark figure, nobody knows~&#13;
about him. At the end he gels19....&#13;
leaves. lid&#13;
Undoubtedly, my briel look at&#13;
stones does not do them justice I~&#13;
over-simplified and I may e~ batt&#13;
missod the point. The only "'ay you'D&#13;
know ISto buy INDICATIONSandread':&#13;
stories yourself.&#13;
All in all, a fine production,&#13;
Sunnysial' 'Jlorisls&#13;
&amp;0 Srl'l'n~OUSI'S&#13;
R .. ,,- Fnai1 ....... - ..&#13;
Phone: "9-67l1li&#13;
VI and FRANK WDIIS1lIClt&#13;
3021· 75TH n.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONIIN iJl.a&#13;
/I&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
Brot or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
French FrI •. s or Onion Rings&#13;
or Pototo Salad&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or Bottl,e or Glo •• of Beer&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
Avoilable For Partie.&#13;
Including Froternity and Sorority Partie.&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
"~~BRAT-STOP&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:0Q-1:3.0&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Jim Holoen&#13;
..&#13;
·"0..... .. . . '.&#13;
- - ._..~ .&#13;
~ - . ,&#13;
. ,&#13;
, ' ,&#13;
- '&#13;
3M ,.&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NATlONRLBRNK&#13;
.........&#13;
\ . /' .;'\{- -&#13;
. i~,,';.1&#13;
, ~~,~-&#13;
~/'&#13;
~-'''~&#13;
,~~~,&#13;
FREE DELIVERY 4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Northwe.t Corner 1:"94 and Highway 50 ___&#13;
Is&#13;
7 t&#13;
8 p,"', p.m. 0&#13;
__ sd&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed ondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
f years prec ding ·wwn and the author&#13;
pnmti portrai of the father, mother,&#13;
i ter, crippled brother and the ~Id&#13;
alcoholic idow ne. t door. His portraits&#13;
ha,eother ac in the background, cloudy&#13;
f that become dear for a few&#13;
momen a fe pages and then recede&#13;
c into th bac ground. It i obviously a&#13;
· \\1th maturation motif but it really&#13;
n't utilized f1rmlv because the author is&#13;
continually concerning him elf with&#13;
r1pher I characters q,at the youth&#13;
n't even come into contact with.&#13;
Where thi all lead us, well, the last&#13;
tin or the say · the cripple is meeting&#13;
ns1 un ; either he' found himself as&#13;
th · )in or he' decid d to join the&#13;
J pan . 1 don't no\\ , the crippl_e is ~&#13;
emgm . t ybe it i. because the cripple 1s&#13;
onl o n r, that he is a bwnpon a log&#13;
that no ori notic til they it on him and&#13;
y rry pal didn't ·ee ya, chuckle.&#13;
chuc e, that he 1 an enigma . One&#13;
m morabl _ ne occur· when a young&#13;
bu m I ~ down in the boxcar with&#13;
th cripple nd fondle · hi exual parts. he&#13;
t horn\' nd h tell him he's like all&#13;
th r , bit of ir y, a what.&#13;
! r than anything el. e thi · i a book of&#13;
, arthy . , runcttonal dutiful sex. ex&#13;
i thro h the eyes or adolescents,&#13;
through the ey of lecher· and whores and&#13;
ido\\ nd h b nd and mothers and&#13;
f th r. . The . x theme, which forms a&#13;
cor of th boom. along "ith Irish drinking&#13;
bi , and the lri·h way of death, is well&#13;
done, but it' not enough to make this book&#13;
novel&#13;
K, hat do it all lack, it lacks a plot, a&#13;
tory, a real clima and resolution( instead&#13;
r ju ta nipping off of loose ends&gt;. it Jacks&#13;
clarity, tho h the dialogue is well down it&#13;
metim difficult to find out who is&#13;
saying what and to whom. The book is a&#13;
jumble of impre ions which really don't&#13;
eem to lead to any one point, everybody&#13;
go · their own way and cross paths and&#13;
say hello and tell dirty stories and continue&#13;
their w ; separat ly. And maybe that's&#13;
th author point, that we are all going our&#13;
own way and never really get to know each&#13;
other. nor even ourselves. but the lack of a&#13;
clear purpose, of definity and clarity hurts&#13;
more than it could help even this point.&#13;
But I am most disappointed by what&#13;
Brown didn't do than by what he did do, his&#13;
point of \iev. is everybody's point of view;&#13;
the author has an unique \iew of the world&#13;
because he can't talk and walk in real life&#13;
and yet he fails to use it to its full extent,&#13;
the wh elchair view is only one of a&#13;
number of views and another novel about&#13;
Dublin' social life we don't need.&#13;
If you like enigmas you'll love this&#13;
novel, if you like to see the· drab side of&#13;
Irish life, then this book is for you, but if&#13;
you've read ons and Lovers and Ulysses&#13;
you really don't need this book in your&#13;
library.&#13;
JimHoloen&#13;
3h&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NRTIONRLBANK&#13;
e, IIIOIU&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KI.TCHEN&#13;
FREE DalVERY 4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
KENOSHA 657-5191&#13;
A Look at Indications&#13;
Here is your chance to read the liter~:?&#13;
works of your fellow students; ho~ off e&#13;
offset comes Parkside's . hte~ary . INDICATIONS. This winter&#13;
magazine, t f' ti&#13;
edition contains 48 pages of shor ic on,&#13;
poetry, photographs an_d ~~~;r illustrations. From an aesthetic poi&#13;
view this issue is much improved over last&#13;
year's· for one thing it has a plethora _of&#13;
photog'raphic and illustrated ~rtra1ts&#13;
which serve to balance the magazine and&#13;
afford a visual respite from the small&#13;
print. The photographs were tak~n b~ Art&#13;
Dulan David Christensen, David Binder&#13;
and J~ Rudolph. The story and co~er&#13;
illustrations were created by the mterpretative&#13;
freehand ?f Ji'? Madura. , The opening piece is Diane Lawler s&#13;
poem, "Blues". It is as fine a poe~ as you&#13;
are likely to find in poetry magazmes and&#13;
anthologies anywhere in America. Dia_ne&#13;
has descriptive eyes and bombards us with&#13;
images, piling them on top o~ each other&#13;
until we can feel an impress10n that encompasses&#13;
all the senses. _!f you read&#13;
"Blues" sensitively you will hear and&#13;
smell the Chicago adventure and will know&#13;
why when "i was young when i met you&#13;
now i am dying of your old age." _"Blues"&#13;
alone is worth the rather exorbitant admission&#13;
price ($1.00) to this collection of&#13;
poems and stories.&#13;
Also included in INDICATIONS are&#13;
short poems by Bill Rolbiecki, Pat.Nelson,&#13;
Jerry Socha Walt Breach and Jim&#13;
Hanlon; all deserve your consideration.&#13;
In the short fiction category INDICATIONS&#13;
offers a generally well&#13;
written variety of stories. "Experiment"&#13;
by yours truly is an experiment in point of&#13;
view and characterization. The story&#13;
concerns a schizophrenic whose world you&#13;
see through his eyes, it is a complex story&#13;
which needs a close reading. ·&#13;
"Three Girls Within" by Jerry Socha is&#13;
actually a series of vignettes linked by the&#13;
young girl protagonists and by the fact&#13;
that they are not "normal". One girl isn't&#13;
aware of others, another girl knew she was .&#13;
a bitch and the third vignette portrays the&#13;
beautiful harelipped Jane who asked the&#13;
question "Am I normal?"&#13;
"Fleming for Congress" is Esther&#13;
Burnett's rather sledgehammered story&#13;
about a young long hair who attempts to&#13;
destroy the political campaign r&#13;
order Congressman. It relies O a law&#13;
pearance-reality theme as a on ~e&#13;
carry the story, but it falters ~e\·ice&#13;
It's not badly written; it just a {he&#13;
it's not wor:th writing. seetns Iha&#13;
"The Cycle" by David Bind&#13;
-myth and contrasts civilizatio er -~t&#13;
simple1 mystical life of Ab; "1th&#13;
company. Abraxas "hast the aicas&#13;
cohabit with the elements" and i:\\er&#13;
missionary of divine foods a dru Oln 1&#13;
when ingested "opens 'the d g \l"h&#13;
preccption." The author gets ca ~rs Of&#13;
the beauty of words, in euphony i~-up&#13;
very easy to do and typical of myths 1&#13;
we get the idea. :&#13;
"Willard" by Marc Eisen is the a high school student who as lory Gf&#13;
to h. " uld , som&#13;
says 1m, co disappear to&#13;
and nobody would notice." "Some:&#13;
inside me doing this to me trying t n I kn ·t" ' o&#13;
me, ow 1 , expresses the invol&#13;
alienation he is the avatar of. A gi I u~&#13;
up to him and tells him he's myst!r, co&#13;
sort of dark figure, nobody knows an Olis 1&#13;
about him. At the end he gets up&gt; a leaves.&#13;
U~doubte_dly, my brief look at&#13;
stone~ do~. not do them justice. 1 ha&#13;
over-s1mphf1ed and I may even ha&#13;
missed the point. The only way you'll&#13;
know is to buy INDICATIONS and read"'&#13;
stories yourself.&#13;
All in all, a fine production.&#13;
Sunnyside Jloris~&#13;
~ Sreenhot1ses&#13;
fl111N11 - Frait ... Ill - Citll&#13;
Phone: 649-6700&#13;
YI and FRANK WEINSTOC•&#13;
3021 • 7!1TH ST.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN til"O&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:0Q-l:3.0&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
Fr&amp;nch Fr1e.s or Onion Rin9s&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or 8ottl_e or Glass of B•er&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 8 p.rn.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity and Sor.ority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.-M.&#13;
,~i BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1:...94 and Highway 50 &#13;
Water Pollution Control&#13;
By JOHN KOLOEN out to sea at a depth 0130 feet, discha i&#13;
BILL ROLBJEUKI atrpproXImately 5,975,111,000 gaUo~ ';:;&#13;
ealed water (em n&#13;
I t 01 talk is heard about water Racine the' r uen each year. In&#13;
AUti°onand what we can do to stop it and to 20 leetpel res t&#13;
500 leet oIl shore in 10&#13;
po u h d d 11 th 0 wa er. discharging Iter all t e war 5 an a e proximately 24 "U' apye\~onies&#13;
the most the average citizen per day. Efnuen~l Ion gallons ~feffluent&#13;
1eS~ldOto stop pollution is ~ocarry his beer the lake after th~Str~:t~a~~ which enters&#13;
ca toa garbage can during the fourth of water as it enters th 1 ~rocess. T~e&#13;
~: picnic.Eve~ if every?ne treated ~he fluent. e p ant IS called mlake&#13;
as something ,special, something Several crtterra are considered in the&#13;
trreplaceable and priceless ther~ wouJ.,d treatment process by which the&#13;
suUbe polluting ~Olng on on a dally baSI.S measure their efficiency. One of th~~n~&#13;
eeular as a live dollar walch. And It the amount 01 suspe ded lid as r.. OHNSON . n so s removed 'lAmerican Motors or J Wax (rom thewaler TheR' I . j,sn . acme p ant IS able to&#13;
that paint the !ake brown, no~ any mor~. remove 57 per cent of the suspended solids&#13;
TtIOligh we don t mean to, .eacti 0l!e of us IS fr0t:ll the influent before piping it into the&#13;
ponsiblelor the pollutIOn which !loats lake In Kenosha the I' .&#13;
res . h B' Igure IS apasborecolormgthe&#13;
beac es grey. eca~se proximately the same, which means that&#13;
we have Sewa.geTreatn:ent Plants whl~h for every 13.8 tons of sludge (solid&#13;
disChargetheir water mt~ the lake via mat~rial) removed from the influent 5.8&#13;
'pe1ine we have a contmuous source tons IS still in the water whe't t th P ked ·th t' 't' n I en erg e whichcannot~e chec WI Oll my I l~g a lake.&#13;
mass epidemICof three day constipation. A second criteria, considered to be one of&#13;
The pipe in Kenosha stretches 1,200 feet the most important in terms of lake&#13;
TOBACCONIST grRC£ 19U&#13;
2,401- 60!!! ST K£N~SKA,WI Be. 53140&#13;
pollution. IS the BOD (Blochemical&#13;
Demand). BOD has to do "ith the amount&#13;
of org.ruc matter wtuch enters the lake.&#13;
Since organic material uses oxygen. the&#13;
amount of it pumped into the lake 15 important&#13;
because whatever orgamc mauer&#13;
is added to the lake .. ill use up ox&gt;gen&#13;
which the lake ilseU needs to maintain Its&#13;
ecological balance It I therefore&#13;
necessary to remove as much ci the&#13;
organic matter from the sewage a&#13;
possible in order to Insure a sufficient&#13;
oxygen supply for the lake to survive&#13;
In Kenosha and Racine the plants, "hen&#13;
operating at peak efficienc)", removed&#13;
enough sludge and orgamc matenal to&#13;
make the effluent as clean. If not cleaner.&#13;
than the lake Itself. A i.gnificant c0ntributing&#13;
factor for this lies in the fact that&#13;
neither plant is equipped to remO\:e&#13;
phosphates from the water&#13;
In Racine. for example., only lvlent)' per&#13;
cent of the phosphates are removed Th&#13;
is not due to laulty admInIStration or Incompetent&#13;
handling., but to insuffiCient&#13;
facilities. The staffs cj the two plants are&#13;
extremely conscientious about theIr "ork&#13;
They run their plants with mechanical&#13;
efficiency and try to keep prepared lor any&#13;
emergency. They even use by-produclS 01&#13;
the treatment process (.lethane gas) to&#13;
drive their machinery. But there's a limit&#13;
to how well a plant can operate if it doesn't&#13;
have the equipment to do a good job.&#13;
RecenUya new lederal order demanding&#13;
that phosphates be removed lrom the&#13;
inlluent belore entenng the lake has&#13;
helped to appropriate additional lacililles&#13;
The Kenosha plant is currently coostructing&#13;
$2,830,000 of new facilities that&#13;
are expected to be put into operation by&#13;
1972. These new lacilities will aU"" the&#13;
Kenosha plant to remove as per cent of the&#13;
phosphates nOWbeing pumped Into the&#13;
lake and to impro....e their capacity to&#13;
handle oil and grease. In Racine plans are&#13;
ready to begin construction of a plant&#13;
which is expected to be completed by 1974&#13;
with 80 per cent of the cost coming from&#13;
the federal govenunent.&#13;
Even though the plants in the area are&#13;
not models of effectiveness they are I&#13;
among the best on the lake short'- For&#13;
example, the treatment process In both&#13;
Kenosha and Racine include decontamination&#13;
by chlorine in order to kill all&#13;
disease causing bacteria before it enters&#13;
the lake. This process takes only fifteen&#13;
minutes longer and is done just before the&#13;
water is pumped out, but in IiIwaukee&#13;
there is no chlorination process, the lack of&#13;
which has been speculated to be the cause&#13;
of a recent outbreak 01 typhoid.&#13;
The staffs in Racine and Kenosha claim&#13;
that no industry in the area pollutes the&#13;
lake direcUy, thal, in shor~ they are the&#13;
only consistent polluters. But this need not&#13;
be so. There are plants i.n the country&#13;
which operate at as tugh as 95 per cent&#13;
efficiency. One of these is in Lake Tahoe&#13;
where, because 01 the high degree 01&#13;
community responsibility and a desire to&#13;
, EWSCOPE-P ... 7&#13;
Tuesday, J ...... ry 19, 1971&#13;
preserve their ".ter 5\lPply lor dronk'&#13;
and rOC..... uoe. the I .1go",,,,mtnt ha&#13;
seen to II that·DO! ven th • e p1anl&#13;
pellutes Of COU~ th not to . that&#13;
people at Lake Ta "or hardff .rt'&#13;
more C'OO5C1entlou~.pte The'&gt; are Ibi to&#13;
mamtam a high tandard lmpl~ a&#13;
tbe\ M\:e more furm a\lllabl to&#13;
lth. When Ra "'" ad I planned&#13;
Iaciltues It is e: peeled 10 boost thetr d&#13;
ficlency for remo\ Ing ...-uspendtod to&#13;
81 per cent as compared to the pr n 51&#13;
per cent AI • the) e peet to • bJe 10&#13;
treat torm .. att.1"",hl('hl 00'0' of&#13;
Inadequate lacilItI ,poured dlrecll&gt; Into&#13;
the lake ",thout treatment K ha&#13;
expects to maintain a per nt (Or&#13;
recU\~ In remm:,n pended I&#13;
85 per ~nt in remo\"lng pho6phat and&#13;
per cent err tJ\e 10 malntalnm thfo D&#13;
level&#13;
I hear tell that someone ha. "' erload&#13;
of stock and' selling S cent ba 'Dd lids&#13;
al rock-boHom pnce!' Conts Fun!&#13;
BurfaU&#13;
+ +&#13;
Dol' Jon report lor th "&#13;
" 10 per cent.. '1 down 2' i5&#13;
Merage "eed eamod 51 2S&#13;
Ud p&#13;
r Cl"!'ll&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
I. F.... Saat 9'"..lr U· ..1''"&#13;
AlSO&#13;
.. RII1 .. S'ACttml .. '"ICUM&#13;
.. C"OCCHt .. U'VIOU .. l.A S.AcaHA&#13;
.. stA fOOD .. SANOWI'HU&#13;
CAUYOUTS • OElIVllY&#13;
-YOU aJHC wE "'He'&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
S1.tO "" AV( _&#13;
HAM to&#13;
'Tradition o[ E c:&#13;
Kl,'G of ORG "&#13;
~~~&#13;
'/&#13;
SH Jim Merrick "Mr, H...... nd" For Guar.nteed Service' n.dO-In V.I.o&#13;
OUI of To.lI-C.11 colltct&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
14~~~~n~~n II) ~~~613~~~3&#13;
"Jf B.rtu Organs are Buill, JIammond Kill Budd ThM'"&#13;
ORG&#13;
Water Pollution Control&#13;
By JOHN KOLOEN out to s~ at a depth of 30 feet., discharging&#13;
BILL ROLBIEUKI ~proximately 5,975,111,000 gallons of&#13;
1 t of talk is heard about water&#13;
A t? n and what we can do to stop it and&#13;
PollU tO d fter all the wor s and all the&#13;
ye_l. aonies the most the average citizen&#13;
iesllf to stop pollution is to carry his beer&#13;
can ~ a garbage can during the fourth of&#13;
ca~ icnic. Even if everyone treated the&#13;
Ju &gt; pas something special, something&#13;
lake laceable and priceless there would&#13;
1rrep · d ·1 ba · .&#13;
11 be polluting gomg on on a a1 y sis&#13;
Li regular as a five dollar watch. And it&#13;
·n't American Motors or JOHNSON Wax&#13;
th t paint the lake brown, not any more.&#13;
,; gh we don't mean to, each one of us is&#13;
res~nsible for the pollution which floats&#13;
ashOre coloring the beaches grey. Because . have Sewage Treatment Plants which&#13;
::charge their water int~ the lake via . line we have a continuous source&#13;
~fuch cannot be checked without in~iti~g a&#13;
mass epidemic of three day constipation.&#13;
The pipe in Kenosha stretches 1,200 feet&#13;
ea~d water (effluent) each year In&#13;
~cme the pipe lies 500 feet off shore in 10&#13;
2~ feet of water, discharging a&#13;
proximately 24 million gallons of efflue~&#13;
per day. Effluent is the water which enters&#13;
the lake after the treatment process Th&#13;
water as it enters the plant is calle·d . ~ fluent. m&#13;
Several criteria are considered in the&#13;
treatment process by which the plants&#13;
measure their efficiency. One of them is&#13;
the amount of suspended solids removed&#13;
from the water. The Racine plant is able to&#13;
remove 5~ per cent of the suspended olid ·&#13;
from the influent before piping it into the&#13;
lake._ In Kenosha the figure is approximately&#13;
the same, which means that&#13;
for e~ery 13.8 tons of sludge (solid&#13;
material) removed from the influent 5.8&#13;
tons is still in the water when it enters the&#13;
lake.&#13;
A second criteria, considered to be one of&#13;
the most important in terms of lake&#13;
zz&#13;
6S7-9843 or 6S8-4922 SI&#13;
Se Jim errick ,, r. Ha ond" For Guaranteed Senice I Trad1-1n Val&#13;
Out of To n-0111 Coll ct&#13;
HAMMOND ORGA&#13;
m~T-~~~~.-ml !~~~~~ 3&#13;
"If Bmer Orgam ar~ .Bui/J, llammond ill Build Thr " &#13;
~e,'l, \,,\&#13;
'\~~ ~~\,: 1001'&#13;
~'\\) /0&#13;
~ Courtesy Discount&#13;
to&#13;
Students &amp; Faculty&#13;
(MUST SHOWIDENTIFICATION)&#13;
.. \T II 22"&#13;
fa tottharaet.t'r5&#13;
AJanArkm&#13;
• tarun Balsam&#13;
Richard Benjamin&#13;
Arthur Garfunkel&#13;
Jack Gillord&#13;
Buck Henry&#13;
Bob •.....harl&#13;
Anthony Perlun&#13;
Paula Prenu&#13;
MarlIn been&#13;
John VOIght&#13;
OnonWelles&#13;
Bob Balaban&#13;
usanne Benton&#13;
GUll Revere&#13;
Marcel Daloo&#13;
\ n n&#13;
~olonel .theart&#13;
I lOr Danby&#13;
. h&#13;
lloo:'" , a&#13;
Culonel Korn&#13;
\.)Or tajor&#13;
hapl InTappm n&#13;
ur OU k II&#13;
!lob&#13;
III IIn~erblnder&#13;
eet,.r 10feedl&#13;
Orr&#13;
Dr I' W&#13;
at Iy' Whore&#13;
Old Man&#13;
+ + +&#13;
John Calley&#13;
Mark Ransonholl&#13;
Buck Henry&#13;
Mike Nichols&#13;
Andrew Martin&#13;
John Jordon&#13;
Alan McCabe&#13;
10 malOirapher David Watkm&#13;
am ra Operalor Alan McCabe&#13;
Filmed in Panavision&#13;
Color by Technicolor&#13;
Thai' some calch! (he had to whisUe&gt;.&#13;
~eedless to say, so was the movie.&#13;
Yossarian wa carzy. but not crazy&#13;
enough to want to die He was held by a&#13;
unIVersal Catch. one thaI Mike Nichols and&#13;
Bu k Henry saw go beyond the embatUed&#13;
kif of Y{W 11 and perhaps even into OUT&#13;
pre ot lime&#13;
• Poor Youanan. he was real. he was&#13;
afraid. he was crazy. but most of all he was&#13;
Inherently true to himself. The character&#13;
"as porlrayed to near perlection by Alan&#13;
Arkin. With a madness of a special kind.&#13;
Yossanan was surrounded'by a nearly&#13;
urreal envtronment created by the&#13;
grotesquely satl1'lstic Black Humor of&#13;
Henry and Nichols. Colonel Cathcart&#13;
tMartin Balsam&gt;. the rude flagrant&#13;
commander as true to himself as a used&#13;
car ~1 man selling a lemon. Milo Min·&#13;
derblnder (John Voight) an operator who&#13;
deSIgn a syndic ale as corrupt as the&#13;
enem)"s losclsm. His M&amp;1I1 engulfed&#13;
Yo sarisn in its human dealings;&#13;
de lroY'lng ately (Arthur Garfunkel) his&#13;
}oung friend who was too innocent to&#13;
. Uf\'lve.&#13;
General Dreedle. performed in token by&#13;
Orson Welles, looks at "crazy" Yossarian&#13;
....00 I tanding nude awaiting a contrived&#13;
medal, and says "You are a very weird&#13;
person Yossarian," ... and he was&#13;
Within the General's institution.&#13;
.~~amYossarian's cowardice slands as hIS&#13;
0\\ n herOt m.&#13;
Produced by&#13;
reenplay&#13;
DIrection by&#13;
2nd nil Direction&#13;
.DOWNTOWN&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
N ed Students The new cbairman-ele t - e Univ~rsity 01 Wiscol\sin Facul~yC:f&#13;
,tb.&#13;
chemistry Prof. Margaret I LeonUnciI ~&#13;
to Help Les the Marshfield-Wood Co~nty C~~l:&#13;
The sex. the pain. the confusion, the&#13;
heartbreak were all inevitable ... "War&#13;
makes this so . . The film made it so,&#13;
too. 11115 is why I must give the film my&#13;
highest. recommendation. It was&#13;
technlcall)' superb with the talented and&#13;
lcilllul help 01 David Watlcin and Alan&#13;
McCabe. cinemalographers, It would be&#13;
advisable for those who have read the book&#13;
to be prepared lor somelhing slighUy&#13;
different. The film became an interesting&#13;
extension or the book, making the&#13;
pothellcaUy lunny the grotesquely lunny&#13;
. turning laughter into reflection.&#13;
Tames have changed since the&#13;
copyrighting or "Catch 22" and since the&#13;
well received film "MASH" appeared on&#13;
the screens a new mood bas arisen far&#13;
above the heads or the grey flannel experts&#13;
.... It is made of more human stuff ..&#13;
and ... I think this is good.&#13;
In the end Yossarian escapes through a&#13;
seeming insanity alter he linds that Orr&#13;
tRobert Balaban) has escaped,&#13;
AIter much practice at crash landing his&#13;
plane at sea he has floated to Sweden via&#13;
lileboal. Yossarian tries it too .. , ' the&#13;
final scene reveals Yossarian paddling&#13;
madly toward a momentary freedom. He&#13;
escapes lrom more !ban juslthe confusior&#13;
and lci\ling he also escapes lrom selling&#13;
himseU out. Or shall I say his SELF out.&#13;
One scene that has layed heavily on my&#13;
mind since 1 saw the film is the point&#13;
where ately is speaking to an old man&#13;
(Marcel Dalio) who haunts an Italian&#13;
whore house, In responding 10 the innocenl&#13;
ethnocentric comments that the boy puts&#13;
forth the old man says ... lilt is better to&#13;
live on your feet and die on your knees than&#13;
to live on your kees and die on your feet."&#13;
Amen.&#13;
M I lell the theater I heard comments&#13;
like "That's not entertainment" and "Hell,&#13;
it wasn't even funny." Perhaps those&#13;
viewers have missed the poinl Entertainment&#13;
has ceased to be the name of&#13;
the game, and a special a':Yareness .of&#13;
reality has replaced it. This kind 01 liIm&#13;
can only open eyes . not close them.&#13;
SEE IT,&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
Any Newscope readers who might like to&#13;
recommend a film or make comment or&#13;
criticism concerning this or any other&#13;
article may drop their suggestions off at&#13;
the Newscopy ollice. Thank ydIJ.&#13;
WATCHES .fPAIR DtPT.=t&#13;
Wltellu - .te-lry&#13;
Dilmortd SeHi" ..&#13;
COrllpkh aep.ir&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Desioailt9&#13;
MahY students of Parkside are aware, 1&#13;
am sure tnat several of their fellow&#13;
students' carry out their daily class&#13;
schedules despite serious handica~s they&#13;
possess. One of these students IS L~S&#13;
Barden, who has lost a major part of hIS&#13;
vision.&#13;
This, of course, poses speci&amp;! proble~s&#13;
for Les in carrying out his reading .&#13;
assignments. In overcoming tllis. problem&#13;
Les, has his text books copied onto&#13;
magnetic tape recordings. While the Blind&#13;
Association helps Les WIth the text&#13;
materials they have in stock, many of the&#13;
newer or special texts "and articles ar~n?t&#13;
available to him. For this reason Les IS 10&#13;
need of help and is asking for volunteer&#13;
readers. Les is not too particular 01 the&#13;
reader's voice quality or expressive&#13;
reading ability.&#13;
This semester Les will be needing&#13;
volunteer readers for two. sociology&#13;
courses which he will be taking. Tbose&#13;
students wbo feel that they could belp -&#13;
even for a few hours - please contact Les&#13;
Barden or contact Steve Bangert in the,&#13;
Kenosha Student Allairs Ollice. Room 135,&#13;
telepllone 658-4861 - Extension 42.&#13;
Did You Know - a column of little&#13;
known, but not widely cared about, facts.&#13;
1. Vivian "Sailor Joe" Summons, a&#13;
canadian tattoo artist, had 4,831 tattoos on&#13;
his bOdy. He died in Toronto on D~c.2~,&#13;
1965. age 77. -&#13;
2, All You Flea Fans - The long jump&#13;
record is 13 inches by a Californian Rodent&#13;
Flea. The high jump record is 7 inches.&#13;
3. The greatest alimony ever paid was&#13;
11.550.000 dollars. paid by Reuben H. Heet •&#13;
the U.S. millionaire aircraft manufacturer,&#13;
to his second wafe.&#13;
IF YOU HAVE ANY LITTLE KNOWN&#13;
FACTS ABOUT SOMETHING WE&#13;
SHOULD ALL KNOW ABOUT. SEND&#13;
THEM TO THE NEWSCOPE.&#13;
Mich III &amp; Worlds Records.&#13;
MARGURIITE'S&#13;
ROBES-Regular $15.00,&#13;
Speciol, $10.00.&#13;
Enjoy these cool&#13;
eveni'!9s in cozy&#13;
comfort!&#13;
Short qui Ited; velvet&#13;
toned ribbon d~w~ ~:&#13;
- - _.&#13;
the front, lined with&#13;
sottest nylon&#13;
peach or&#13;
lavender.&#13;
Smoll&#13;
Morgueritte'·s is open·&#13;
9 unti I 9 Mondays and&#13;
. ridays, other weekdays&#13;
, 9 'til 5:30, Sundays&#13;
from 10 a.m. until&#13;
5 p.m.&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
Vl__ .... ·~'- .~.,,-- -_._- e:.-._II •. Ti .... "&#13;
L~...ltr.&#13;
CHINA I&#13;
«i!!'=..:::::.....ItlDAl ....=-*' lECISTlY&#13;
FA.lR TRADE ACCEPTEr.&#13;
CradlYte CemolOllst.tntified Diamollltoloaist&#13;
NEWSCOPE - PageS&#13;
Tuesday. January 19.11111&#13;
tIw&#13;
LEADER&#13;
Moie&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KEIIOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PLUA/lACIIII&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~w&#13;
g/alian ~&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or banquet,&#13;
no party too smalL&#13;
Call 654-9123&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53148&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654-0774 e~&#13;
~. I&#13;
......... ~&#13;
Anchorlnn&#13;
AJryou Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
Monday-thursday SUS&#13;
Friday.Sunday $2.25&#13;
Chlld ....n $1.10&#13;
PlUI TAll AND UWJAII&#13;
LADlESNlTE&#13;
. Mon. &amp; Tues - 8:30 lo 10:30&#13;
Buy the first drink, seconddrink for lie&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits and J'travy&#13;
SERVING: J'r\. • sat. I ,..,U ...&#13;
, aoa;.ft1In. s p.•..I. p."&#13;
.... UN- ..... ;&#13;
9006 Shariden ad.&#13;
PhD'" .. 4-1733&#13;
....&#13;
, the pain, the confu ion, the&#13;
rtb r all m \ itable .. . . War&#13;
m thi • . . . . The film made it o,&#13;
t . Th i hy I mu t give the film my&#13;
h1 h t r ommendation. It wa&#13;
t hm lly _ perb with the talented and&#13;
illful h Ip or Da,·id Watkin and Alan&#13;
I , cinematographers. It would be&#13;
dvi bl for th who ha\'e r ad the book&#13;
to be pr red for omething lightly&#13;
diff nt. The film became an interesting&#13;
. i n the book, making the&#13;
th ticallv funny the grotesquely funny&#13;
.. . turnin·g laughter into reflection.&#13;
Time ha\'e changed since the&#13;
) righhn of "Catch 22" and ince the&#13;
w 11 r h·ed film " lASH" appeared on&#13;
th r a new mood ha arisen far&#13;
bove the heads of the grey flannel experts&#13;
. . • • It i mad of more human stuff . . .&#13;
and • .. I thin this i good.&#13;
In th end Yossarian escapes through a&#13;
ming 1nsanit · after he finds that Orr&#13;
&lt;Robert Bala ban) ha escaped.&#13;
Aft r much practice at crash landing his&#13;
plane at a he has floated to Sweden via&#13;
lifeboat. Yossarian tries it too .. . the&#13;
final ene reveals Yossarian paddling&#13;
madly toward a momentary freedom. He&#13;
escapes Crom more than just the confusior&#13;
and killing he also escapes from selling&#13;
him elf out. Or hall I say his SELF out.&#13;
One cene that has layed heavily on my&#13;
mind ince I saw the film is the point&#13;
h re ·ately is peaking to an old man&#13;
&lt;. tarcel Dalio) who haunts an Italian&#13;
whor hou e. In r ·ponding to the innocent&#13;
ethnocentric comments that the boy puts&#13;
forth the old man savs . .• " It is better to&#13;
live on your feet and die on your knees than&#13;
to live on your kees and die on your feel. "&#13;
Amen.&#13;
As I left the theater I heard comments&#13;
like "That's not entertainment" and " Hell,&#13;
it wasn't even funny." Perhaps those&#13;
viewers have missed the point. Entertainment&#13;
has ceased to be the name of&#13;
the game. and a special a~areness of&#13;
reality ha replaced it. This kind of film&#13;
can only open eyes . . . not close them.&#13;
SEE IT.&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
Any 'ew cope readers who might like to&#13;
recommend a film or make comment or&#13;
critici m concerning this or any other&#13;
art icle may drop their suggestions off at&#13;
the ·ew copy office. Thank yd\J..&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
..... . . CC11ft ....&#13;
u,.....,~ - l..'9n1'•"• ....... . ..., ... cw ........ . 'Ti"'••&#13;
--CHl-'-'- HA-'----'I&#13;
REPAIR DEPT. 7&#13;
Watchs - Jewelry&#13;
Dumond S.ttiRg&#13;
Con,plete a.pair&#13;
Dept. RiRg Designi1111&#13;
C, ')_ ~ \ -£.:'J.:f_.=-- ll~~~~STllY&#13;
'\~'Q..~ ~\..\.. . l 0%&#13;
~~'Q.. 0&#13;
~~ Courtesy Discount&#13;
to&#13;
DW60MD COH5UlTANTS Students &amp; Faculty&#13;
.DOWNTOWN&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
{MUST SHOW IDENTIFICATION)&#13;
FAIR TRAD E ACCEP TEI:&#13;
Cr,dune Gemologist-Certified Dr,montologist&#13;
~C.86-rU&#13;
It .. a,A:e , ,iffe,e1c:e where you sliop!&#13;
Need Students&#13;
to Help Les&#13;
Many students of Parkside a re aware, I&#13;
am sure that several of their fellow&#13;
students ' carry out their ~ily cla ss&#13;
schedules despite serious handica~s they&#13;
possess. One of these students 1s L~&#13;
Barden, who has lost a major part of his&#13;
vision .&#13;
This, of course, poses special proble?1s&#13;
for Les in carrying out his reading&#13;
assignments. In overcoming this_ problem&#13;
Les has his text books copied onto&#13;
magnetic tape recordings. Yt'.hile the Blind&#13;
As ociation helps Les with the text&#13;
materials they have in stock, many of the&#13;
newer or special texts ·and articles ar~ n?t&#13;
available to him. For this reason Les 1s m&#13;
need of help and is asking for volunteer&#13;
readers. Les is not too particular of the&#13;
reader's voice quality or expressive&#13;
reading a bility .&#13;
This semester Les will be needing&#13;
volunteer r eaders for two sociology&#13;
courses which he will be taking. Those&#13;
students who feel that they could help -&#13;
even for a few hours - please contact Les&#13;
Barden or contact Steve Bangert in the&#13;
Kenosha Student Affairs Office, Room 135,&#13;
telephone 658-4861 - Extension 42.&#13;
Did You Know - a column of little&#13;
known, but not widely cared about, facts.&#13;
1. Vivian "Sailor Joe" Summons, a&#13;
Canadian tattoo artist, had 4,831 tattoos on&#13;
his b&lt;&gt;dy. He died in Toronto on Dec. ~ .&#13;
1965, age 77. -&#13;
2. All You Flea Fans - The long jump&#13;
record is 13 inches by a Californian Rodent&#13;
Flea. The high jump record is 7 inches.&#13;
3. The greatest alimony ever paid was&#13;
11,550,000 dollars, paid by Reuben H. Heet,&#13;
the U.S. millionaire aircraft manufacturer,&#13;
to his second wife.&#13;
IF YOU HA VE ANY LITTLE KNOWN&#13;
FACTS ABOUT SOMETHING WE&#13;
SHOULD ALL KNOW ABOUT, SEND&#13;
THEM TO THE NEWSCOPE.&#13;
Mich Ill &amp; Worlds Records.&#13;
MARGURITIE'S&#13;
ROBc S-Regular $15.00,&#13;
Spec ia l, $10.00.&#13;
En joy these cool&#13;
eveni'!gs in cozy&#13;
comfort!&#13;
Short qu ilted; velvet&#13;
toned ribbon d~w~ • - . . . the fr ont, lined with&#13;
sottest ny lon&#13;
pe ach or&#13;
Marguer itte'·s is open ·&#13;
9 until 9 Mondays and&#13;
ridays, other weekdays&#13;
: 9 'ti I 5:30, Sundays&#13;
from 10 a.m. until&#13;
5 p.m.&#13;
6207 • 22nd Avenue .&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
NEWSCOPE- Page 8&#13;
Tuesday, January 19, 1971&#13;
1:he _new ~hairman-elec-;-:--&#13;
Uruvers1ty of Wisconsin Facuit Co f the&#13;
chemistry Prof. Margaret I i.eo llntiJ&#13;
the Marshfield-Wood Co~nt nard r&#13;
r----------Y_ Center&#13;
~&#13;
LEADER ~ DOWNTOWN/ KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PlAZA/ ltACINE&#13;
UPTOWN REST AU RANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~w&#13;
#laliam~&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or banquet,&#13;
no party too small&#13;
Call 654-9123&#13;
4437 • 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 531 40&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
Anchor Inn&#13;
AlfYou Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
Monday-Thursday $1,95&#13;
Friday-Sunday $2,25&#13;
ChlldNn $1.10&#13;
PlUI TU AND IIVIIAII&#13;
LADIESNITE&#13;
Mon. &amp; Tues -8:30 to 10:30&#13;
Buy the first drink, second drink for lk&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits and gravy&#13;
SEllVING: I'd. A Sat. I ,_.,.tt ,_ .. 8on;-flnln. 5 p.m.-ll •·•·&#13;
8aL 1% Nooa·t , .•. ;&#13;
9006 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Phone 694-1733 &#13;
Placement Services Offered&#13;
actions" Th fr tit ese statements were taken&#13;
om. • e summary sheet at Chancellor&#13;
WY,lhe s. Press Conference, Dec. 7 19'70&#13;
which directly contradicts the statement&#13;
reported by the Associated Press dated&#13;
D~. 3 ,~hich quoted Chan. Wyllie as&#13;
saymg, The school will not be influenced&#13;
by students when it comes to dismissing&#13;
teachers:" when Student Government is&#13;
formed It should afford the present Adml!Ustration&#13;
all the credibility it deserves&#13;
This scbool has bee~ ruo under a policy oi lies. for 2 years ano there is no reason to&#13;
believe. l.he present administration will&#13;
ever willingly change its attitude&#13;
,1 rece,ived indication of the seriousness&#13;
"":lth WhICh the Administration purports to&#13;
VIew student commi~ent on Tuesday.&#13;
Dec. 8. We were getting the constitution&#13;
ready for mailing, when it occurred to us&#13;
th~t. we :,-,ere being used by the administration&#13;
to implement its own&#13;
propaganda. The job we faced would have&#13;
taken us at least an 8·hour day, and there&#13;
are payed workers available for these&#13;
duti~s .. Being late,. near 6:00, the only&#13;
adminIstrators left m the building were in&#13;
the Chancellor's office. We knocked on his&#13;
door and Assistant Chancellor Clarence&#13;
"Book Store" Brockman peeked out at us&#13;
through the slightly opened door. I asked&#13;
to see the Chancellor and explained to Mr_&#13;
Wyllie that we felt we should be paid for&#13;
our work. His reply was, "Hey, Brock,&#13;
come here, Ithink we've got a problem." I&#13;
explained the "problem" to Brockman and&#13;
also added that I had been forced to miss a&#13;
class that afternoon, in deference to this&#13;
work. Gathering all of his intellectual&#13;
prowess, Brockman sneered, "Aw, that's&#13;
too had!" and shook his head. At this, we&#13;
qUietly left them with a mountain of paper&#13;
to be mailed. In response to their plight, I&#13;
only shook my head and said, "Aw, that's&#13;
too bad!"&#13;
This little comedy is an .example of how&#13;
serious student efforts and contri6utions&#13;
are recognized by the administration.&#13;
What happened to the Constitution&#13;
Committee and previous student govern·&#13;
ment attempts are probable indications of&#13;
what our new student Government is in&#13;
for. I repeat my warning and urge the&#13;
cooperation of all students, for the only&#13;
way we can have any influence is if we all&#13;
remain active and keep the pressure on&#13;
them.&#13;
The lanagemenl Club in conjunction&#13;
with the Placement Office has ennoceced&#13;
it wi~lbegin. providmg a new service to job&#13;
seeking seniors Plans have been finalized&#13;
to assemble catalogues of one page data&#13;
sheets and distribute them to numerous&#13;
employment agencies throughout the&#13;
Chicago-Milwaukee area&#13;
Recognizing the difficulty oi obtaining&#13;
employment in today's job market, club&#13;
members feel it is wise for the job seeker&#13;
to present his qualifications to as man)'&#13;
employers as possible. This, In fact 15 the&#13;
purpose of the clubs catalogue. It IS fell&#13;
utilization oi the clubs catalogue will&#13;
expose the qualifica tions oi the job seeker&#13;
Whereby Dennis Cashion brought to the&#13;
Committee's attention that Mr. Krenn&#13;
was lea~g the University as of Jan, IS.&#13;
and that hISmotives were solely In lines of&#13;
establishing a good. workable student&#13;
government.&#13;
One of the questions raised was why 1r&#13;
Krevan approached Dennis and Tim in-&#13;
~teau of the Committee. His reply was that&#13;
In student meetings with the Chancellor&#13;
a~t the firings- of the professors, he&#13;
Singled out Dennis aod Tim as two&#13;
students who seemed interested.&#13;
Tom Kreul, a Con-eomm member&#13;
answered that "it is only logical that if&#13;
someone wanted somethi.ng changed in the&#13;
constitution he should talk to the committee&#13;
members. Since you (Mr. Krevan)&#13;
didn't, and you are no\\!presenting us with&#13;
a totally new constitution, we have to&#13;
regard this with suspicion."&#13;
Asked why the Committee hadn't sought&#13;
help from people in the University ex·&#13;
perienced in constitutional law, such as&#13;
PolioScL ProL John Harbeson, Bev Noble,&#13;
Comm. Cbairwoman, replied. "We ",ere&#13;
told that a faculty committee would be&#13;
appointed by the Chancellor to review our&#13;
constitution and to advise us on&#13;
technicalities, but this Committee was&#13;
never appointed."&#13;
Jim Smith, a student present at the&#13;
meeting, seemed to best swn up the&#13;
situation by saying, Hthis is a good&#13;
example of how the administration's&#13;
policies have fostered mistrust among the&#13;
students towards the administration."&#13;
The proposed constitution wasn't even&#13;
voted on, but changes have been made in&#13;
the existing constitution. (The entire&#13;
constitution with the changes underlined is&#13;
printed in this issue, and copies are&#13;
available to read in the libraries, Student&#13;
Activities Building, and Racine and&#13;
Kenosha lounges.)&#13;
The ratification referendum will be held&#13;
during registration for the spring semester&#13;
in the Student Go,emment booth Only&#13;
students enrolled in the Fall semester 19i0&#13;
are eligible to vote.&#13;
Con-Com Report&#13;
ISERMANN&#13;
BROTHERS&#13;
614-616 56th St.&#13;
&lt;Y'Innual $U/JUI;U/I/jf &lt;&amp;leuIUMUX3&#13;
·SALE&#13;
Continues _ SAVE 20 to 30% on&#13;
. h· f&#13;
Two floors of Fine Men '5 Fur",s mgs.&#13;
l_~ ----~&#13;
oecember 10, t9iO •&#13;
As a member of the Constitutional&#13;
C&lt;J!I1mitteeI would like to give my constituencyone&#13;
final report. Having completedthe&#13;
constitution by Sept. t4 we&#13;
p-esentl!d it to Dean Dearborn's office so&#13;
the necessary arrangements could be&#13;
madeto get it printed up and sent out to&#13;
studentsfor ratification.&#13;
Next came a series of rneeunas with&#13;
DeanDearborn, Bill Neihbur, and John&#13;
Hubor.It was during these meetings that&#13;
the administration'S plan of total&#13;
harassment and uncooperation with&#13;
sbldentsbecame evident t9 me. (I only&#13;
suspectedit was so bef'ore.) The constitution&#13;
was subjected to a very close&#13;
scrutinyand nit-picking, as were members&#13;
of the committee. You may also have&#13;
noticedin several areas of the Student's&#13;
Rights section the word "should" where&#13;
manystudents, including members of the&#13;
committee. preferred the word "shall".&#13;
Believingthe constitution to be only a&#13;
formality and placing more im}X&gt;rtance&#13;
upon getting a student government&#13;
ocganizedwe agreed with these word&#13;
changes.Since then the constitution has&#13;
beenchanged ba.ckagain, along with some&#13;
otherchanges.&#13;
Afterthe November 3rd elections, Dean&#13;
Dearborn's attitude changed to a more&#13;
cooperative stance. Politics, obviously,&#13;
plays a big part in the running of our&#13;
lIIiversity. Rumor also bad it that the&#13;
administration had received orders ~from&#13;
Madisontq establish a student Government&#13;
by December.&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee was&#13;
thenappointed by Chancellor Wyllie and&#13;
wernetwith them. At this meeting, 3 of the&#13;
7 committee members showed up, along&#13;
with Deao Dearborn. The faculty members&#13;
had little to say so we bartered with&#13;
tile Deao. We wen~ thl'ough the constitution&#13;
and very cooperatively made&#13;
slightwording changes, which could have&#13;
been donea month earlier. The "meeting"&#13;
adjournedand we were told that we could&#13;
get the constitution printed.&#13;
Following a predictable bureaucratic&#13;
delay tbe constitutions were printed up_&#13;
During this delay. however, the administration&#13;
made a big mistake - the&#13;
ParksidePurge. As a result the Chancellor&#13;
received favorable publicity by saying&#13;
thatStudent Government is being formed&#13;
and that "more formal channels of student&#13;
advisement would be instituted." This&#13;
should be taken as seriously as the&#13;
preceding statement that claimed,&#13;
"student opinion and concern for good&#13;
teaching was considered in the review&#13;
u,.M'-1IriII/~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
~40thAVE&#13;
NOSH" WI$. OL7-11174&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Candy&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Adam and Eve Special&#13;
Boneless Top irloin for 2 S12 9S&#13;
Lobster Tail for 2 S18's&#13;
Included with the above-&#13;
· Bottle of Champagne&#13;
· Lazy Susan&#13;
·Brandy-Ice for Dessert&#13;
° Complete Dinner&#13;
Dean Loumos&#13;
Con-Camm Member&#13;
Final Con·Comm Meeting&#13;
On Tuesday, Dec. 22, the Constitutional&#13;
Committee met with interested students to&#13;
discuss the constitution, its weak points,&#13;
and to hear and make possible changes.&#13;
Also attending was Mr. David Krevan,&#13;
Special Assistant to the Chancellor.&#13;
Mr. Krevan had approached two&#13;
students, Dennis Cashion and Tim Ocker I&#13;
about the constitution and questioned its&#13;
workability. The three of them had drawn&#13;
up a whole new constitution and presented&#13;
it to the Committee as an alternative.&#13;
During the meeting questions were&#13;
raised about Mr. Krevan's motives. Some&#13;
of the members or the Constitutional&#13;
Committee were reluctant to cooperate.&#13;
Dean Loumos called Krevan's sudden&#13;
interest "another Administration trick".&#13;
to a much larger number of employ",&#13;
Lhan would be Ible 00 an mdi\ldUlil&#13;
baSIS InclUSion 10 thr carate&#13;
available to all January, June and A\Ill I&#13;
graduates oi Parksrde. The catalogue I' ,11&#13;
beor-garutedmto.tajorarea of tud, and&#13;
will be accomparued by a W i\. P&#13;
catatogue. Orgaruzed in thIS manner, club&#13;
members feel the catalogue will pr nt to&#13;
employers an attracuv e. easily utilized&#13;
reference oi available talent&#13;
To be Included ,n the catalogue, a _,or&#13;
needs only to p.clt up the nec ry forms&#13;
at the Placement Office on County Trunk&#13;
A. complete aod return them md.ca~ng he&#13;
or she would hke to be Included 10 the&#13;
catalogue Inqulfles from the "nOWl&#13;
firms will be directed to Ir Ocker. Ihe&#13;
Placement Dlreclor, who 1',11then no~f&#13;
the studenl In qu bon.&#13;
A mall fee ma~ be required to CQ'\:eJ"&#13;
binder, poslal and duphca~ng CO!i&#13;
Project committeemen. Jim . ·ol.n. SIU&#13;
luzenski and Tim Leberman polO' out&#13;
that the Uni\·erslt) 1$ m no ....ay COM led&#13;
w,th thIS fee. They also remtnd Sf'nlors&#13;
that registration at the Placement O£rlceIS&#13;
a prerequisite tc mtervie ·ulg.and that Ole&#13;
oomber of registrants bears hea\ II} on the&#13;
decision 01 many campus rec:::nut~ on&#13;
whether or not 10 come to a perUC'ular&#13;
campus The)' also Indicated lht",r&#13;
gratitude to. Ir. Ocker and hi tarc at the&#13;
Placement Office for the-IT a lane to&#13;
malung thl sernee possible.&#13;
The .Ianagemenl Club I a ~t1)&#13;
formed campus organllallon advISed by&#13;
Mr. Roy Cougle.. Iembersbip ISopen to all&#13;
students Interested In a more complet&#13;
understanding of the function and&#13;
responsibilities or management.&#13;
EWSCOPE-Page9&#13;
Tuesday, January 19,1971&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
6d'o&#13;
u- C· . __V.onm&#13;
HipwlY 21 It 1-94&#13;
R1CIIlE&#13;
FII Ruernti' .. CIII&#13;
11&amp;-4411&#13;
Con-Com Report&#13;
oecember 10, 1970&#13;
As a member of the Constitutional&#13;
C mmittee I would like to give my consti~encY&#13;
one final report. Having completed&#13;
the constitution by Sept. 14 we&#13;
presented it to Dean Dearborn's office so&#13;
the necessary arrangements could t)e&#13;
made to get it printed up and sent out to&#13;
·tudents for ratification.&#13;
Next came a series of .meetings with&#13;
oean Dearborn, Bill Neihbur, and John&#13;
Hubor. It was during these meetings that&#13;
the administration's plan of total&#13;
harassment and uncooperation with&#13;
·tudents became evident t9 me. (I only&#13;
·ll'ipected it was _so before.) The contitution&#13;
was subJected to a very close&#13;
scrutiny and nit-picking, as were members&#13;
of the committee. You may also have&#13;
noticed in several areas of the Student's&#13;
Rights section the word "should" where&#13;
many students, including members of the&#13;
committee, preferred the word "shall".&#13;
Believing the constitution to be only a&#13;
formality and placing more importance&#13;
upon getting a student government&#13;
ocganized we agreed with these word&#13;
changes. Since then the constitution has&#13;
been changed back again, along with some&#13;
other changes.&#13;
After the November 3rd elections, Dean&#13;
Dearborn's attitude changed to a more&#13;
cooperative stance. Politics, obviously,&#13;
plays a big part in the running of our&#13;
university. Rumor also had it that the&#13;
administration had received orders from&#13;
fadison to establish a student Government&#13;
by December.&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee was&#13;
then appointed by Chancellor Wyllie and&#13;
we met with them. At this meeting, 3 of the&#13;
7 committee members showed up, along&#13;
with Dean Dearborn. The faculty members&#13;
had little to say so we bartered with&#13;
the Dean. We went through the contitution&#13;
and very cooperatively made&#13;
light wording changes, which could have&#13;
been done a month earlier. The "meeting"&#13;
adjourned and we were told that we could&#13;
get the constitution printed.&#13;
Following a predictable bureaucratic&#13;
delay the constitutions were printed up.&#13;
During this delay, however, the administration&#13;
made a big mistake - the&#13;
Parkside Purge. As a result the Chancellor&#13;
received favorable publicity by saying&#13;
that Student Government is being formed&#13;
and that "more formal channels of student&#13;
advisement would be instituted." This&#13;
hould be taken as seriously as the&#13;
preceding statement that claimed,&#13;
"stud~n~ opinion and concern for good&#13;
leaching was considered in the review&#13;
rtrr K lid/I/~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
~-40thAVE&#13;
KENOSHA WIS. 0L7-'5t74&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Candy&#13;
Corsages&#13;
afctionsth." These statements were taken&#13;
rom e summar h t Wyll" , p Y s ee at Chancellor . ie s. ress Conference, Dec. 7, 1970&#13;
which directly contradicts the statement&#13;
~ported b)'. the Associated Press dated&#13;
~ - 3 ,:,Vhich quoted Chan. Wyllie as saymg, The school will not be influenced&#13;
by students when it comes to dis . . teach " Wh m1ssmg ers. en Student Governme t ·&#13;
fo:n:ied i~ should afford the present" A~~ m1!11strabon all the credibility it deserves&#13;
~1s school has been run under a policy of&#13;
lie~ for 2 years and there is no reason to&#13;
believe_ t_he present administration will&#13;
ever wd_hngly change its attitude.&#13;
_I rece_1ved indication of the seriousness&#13;
"":th which the Administration purports to&#13;
VIew student commit~ent on Tuesday,&#13;
Dec. 8. We were getting the constitution&#13;
ready for mailing, when it occurred to us&#13;
th~t. we ~ere being used by the admm1&#13;
stra hon to implement its own&#13;
propaganda. The job we faced would have&#13;
taken us at least an 8-hour day, and there&#13;
are payed workers available for these&#13;
duti~s._ Being late, near 6:00, the only&#13;
admm1strators left in the building were in&#13;
the Chancellor's office. We knocked on his&#13;
door and Assistant Chancellor Clarence&#13;
"Book Store" Brockman peeked out at us&#13;
through the slightly opened door. I asked&#13;
to see the Chancellor and explained to Mr.&#13;
Wyllie that we felt we should be paid for&#13;
our work. His reply was, "Hey, Brock,&#13;
come here, l think we've got a problem.'' I&#13;
explained the " problem" to Brockman and&#13;
also added that I had been forced to miss a&#13;
class that afternoon, in deference to this&#13;
work. Gathering all of his intellectual&#13;
prowess, Brockman sneered, "Aw, that's&#13;
too bad!" and shook his head. At this, we&#13;
quietly left them with a mountain of paper&#13;
to be mailed. In response to their plight, I&#13;
only shook my head and said, "Aw, that's&#13;
too bad! "&#13;
This little comedy is an example of how&#13;
serious student efforts and contributions&#13;
are recognized by the administration.&#13;
What happened to the Constitution&#13;
Committee and previous student government&#13;
attempts are probable indications of&#13;
what our new student Government is in&#13;
for. I repeat my warning and urge the&#13;
cooperation of all students, for the only&#13;
way we can have any influence is if we all&#13;
remain active and keep the pressure on&#13;
them. DeanLoumos&#13;
Con-Comm Member&#13;
Final Con-Comm Meeting&#13;
On Tuesday, Dec. 22, the Constitutional&#13;
Committee met with interested students to&#13;
discuss the constitution, its weak points,&#13;
and to hear and make possible changes.&#13;
Also attending was Mr. David Krevan,&#13;
Special Assistant to the Chancellor. Mr. Krevan had approached two&#13;
students Dennis Cashion and Tim Ocker,&#13;
about th~ constitution and questioned its&#13;
workability. The three of them had drawn&#13;
up a whole new constitution and pre_sented&#13;
it to the Committee as an alternative.&#13;
During the meeting questions we ·e&#13;
raised about Mr. Krevan's motives. Some&#13;
of the members or the Constitutional&#13;
Committee were reluctant to cooperate.&#13;
Dean Loumos called Krevan's sudden&#13;
interest "another Administration trick' '.&#13;
ISERMANN&#13;
BROTHERS&#13;
614-616 56th St.&#13;
Jinnua/ Janua/1//f ~/eaJtance&#13;
·sALE&#13;
Continues - SAVE 20 to 30% on&#13;
Two Floors of Fine Men's Furnishings!&#13;
~~·-------------&#13;
Placement Services Offered&#13;
·whereby Dennis Ca hion bro ht to th&#13;
Committee·- attention that lr. Kre\•&#13;
_was lea,ing the ni, ·ty as o Ja 15,&#13;
and that hi motiv · v. er !ely in lin of&#13;
establishing a good, :-ork ble . udent&#13;
government.&#13;
One of the questions ra i · hy 1r.&#13;
Krevan approached Denn.u; and T-1m in-&#13;
. leac. vf the Committ _ Ht reply that&#13;
Jn student meetings with the Olan II&#13;
about the firing of the prof&#13;
singled out Denni and Tim&#13;
students who seemed inter ted.&#13;
Tom Kreul, a Con-Comm member,&#13;
an wered that " it i onlv I ical that if&#13;
someone wanted something chan ed -nth&#13;
constitution he hould talk to the committee&#13;
members. Since you (. !r. Kr ·an)&#13;
didn't. and you are no"" prest&gt;nting · i th&#13;
a totally ne\\ con titution, we have to&#13;
regard thi with uspicion."&#13;
Asked why the Committee hadn't . ught&#13;
help from people in the niversitv --&#13;
perienced in con titutional law, uch a&#13;
Poli. Sci. Prof. John Harbeson, Bev • 'obi .&#13;
Comm. Chairwoman, replied. " 'i ·e \I.ere&#13;
told that a faculty committee would be&#13;
appointed by the Chancellor to re\"leW our&#13;
constitution and to advi e u on&#13;
technicalities, but this Committee wa&#13;
never appointed."&#13;
Jim Smith, a student present at the&#13;
meeting, seemed to best um up the&#13;
situation by saying. "this i a good&#13;
example of how the admini tralion'&#13;
policies have fostered mistrust among the&#13;
students towards the administration."&#13;
The proposed constitution w~Ln't e,·en&#13;
voted on, but changes ha\'e been mad in&#13;
the existing con titution. (Th entire&#13;
constitution with the chan underlined i&#13;
printed in thi i ue, and copi re&#13;
available to read in the librari tudent&#13;
Activitie Building, and Racin and&#13;
Kenosha lounge·.)&#13;
The ratification referendum \I.i ll be h d&#13;
during regi tration for the p ·&#13;
in the tudent Go,ernment&#13;
students enrolled in the Fall&#13;
are eligible to \'Ole.&#13;
Adam&#13;
Bon le Top irloin for 2&#13;
Lob t r Tn1l for 2&#13;
H igflway 20 at 1-94&#13;
RACINE&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
S 12 9S&#13;
s1s s&#13;
F r Reserntio s Call&#13;
886-4418 &#13;
Gymnasts Open Season&#13;
Parltside's greatest asset will be its&#13;
dynamic young coach. Bill Ballester. 33.&#13;
who came to UWP Uus laU Irom&#13;
Waukegan. Ill., where hJS high school&#13;
teams were 63-13 over eight years and&#13;
10 re ranked tn the top 10 in UJinois each&#13;
year&#13;
Coaching In the Suburban conference.&#13;
t'Ol\S,d red by many to be the top prep&#13;
gymnastics league in the country,&#13;
Ball I r de, loped lour 8)mnasts who&#13;
WMt on to AII-Amencan honors, including&#13;
one OlympIan&#13;
H has Judged NCAA and AAU champlonshi&#13;
• coached the U team thIS&#13;
summ r in a meet agamsl Bulgana a well&#13;
rdJnating training 01 the US team&#13;
In preparation lor the World Games&#13;
champiOn hip jn Yugoslavia, B.nd&#13;
CUrrMtly Is president or the national high&#13;
hool g)mna ti alation.&#13;
Ball ler's Itrst cempeuuve team al&#13;
'P w,lI I atur lour I"'0mlslllg lreshmen&#13;
and a highl) regarded JUnior coUege&#13;
transler lrom Calilornia&#13;
Th We t C. t junior is Warren&#13;
McGillivray 01 Burbank. who was aUaround.&#13;
ring and long horse champion 01&#13;
the Los Angeles Invitational while a star at&#13;
Pterce Junior College In Los Angeles.&#13;
Others are; Warren Vogel, Wisconsin&#13;
high school ring champ'oo at Homestead&#13;
high In Mequon last year&#13;
Dan Boswem. state finalist in high bar&#13;
and tumbling at Mllwaukee Madison high&#13;
school&#13;
Doug Anderson. Jlltnois slate finalist in&#13;
aII.around at Thornr,dge high in Doltoo.&#13;
III&#13;
AI EM'S, state meet finalist in side horse&#13;
(rom Kenosha Tr-emper.&#13;
Vogel 10 still rings and EMis in side&#13;
horse wl1J be UWP's only specialists. The&#13;
olhers are aU-around men who can perform&#13;
in.n ix events - rings, side horse,&#13;
IuIh bar. peraUeI bars, lree exercise and&#13;
long horse&#13;
Doug Anderson&#13;
An active gymnastics club at UWP ~&#13;
expected to provide a leeder system lor&#13;
the varsity in the luture. .&#13;
Parkside will have no home meets this&#13;
season, but the schedule includes some 01&#13;
the country's lop learns: NCAA contender&#13;
Indiana State, Big Eighl I"'wer Kansas&#13;
State, NCAA small college title contender&#13;
Illinois-Circle Campus, and Eastern&#13;
Illinois&#13;
The schedule:&#13;
Jan. 2 - at Stevens Point, 3 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 30 - at U. 01Chicago, 2 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 5 - Merquette, Chicago at Marquette,&#13;
7 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 6 _ Wisconsin Open, Milwaukee, 10&#13;
Fe:·~· - Illinois Circle Campus, George&#13;
Williams at George Williams, 2 p.rr:t.&#13;
Feb. 19 -Illinois State, SI. Cloud alllhnols&#13;
State, 7 p.m. '11' •&#13;
Feb. 20 - Eastern Illinois, George WI lams&#13;
at Eastern, 2 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 26 - Indiana State, Kansas St.te at&#13;
Indiana State, 7 p.m.&#13;
F3b. 'Z7 - Triton Invitational, Northlake,&#13;
III., 1 p.m. .&#13;
Mar. 12-13 - NAIA District 14, SUJl"rIor.&#13;
. Mar. 19-20-NAIANalionals, NatchItoches,&#13;
La.&#13;
Dan Boswein&#13;
NEWSCOPE - Page 10&#13;
Tuesday, January 19,1971&#13;
--.&#13;
Notes of Interest&#13;
The Racine Branch of the Am .&#13;
Association of University Wornen.......&#13;
announced that applications noware be~&#13;
accepted lor the $400 scholarship ~&#13;
AAUW awards annually to a Ra'&#13;
County girl."'"&#13;
The scholarship award, which is bo..,.&#13;
on academic achievement and flDlDciaI&#13;
need, is awarded each year to alia'&#13;
County girl beginning the first Or ...:::&#13;
semester of her junior year at any&#13;
credited, degree·granting CollegeItuniversity&#13;
the lall after the grant ~&#13;
awarded.&#13;
Deadline lor filing .pplications is Aprjj&#13;
1. The scholarship will be awarded&#13;
AAUW's annual banquet in May. It&#13;
Application blanks may be 0btainod&#13;
from Mrs. W. R. Dollase, 333S Ascot Sl&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53406, the scholantlP&#13;
committee chairman, or from deans or&#13;
student affairs directors at a s.... _.&#13;
"t '~I college or urnversi y.&#13;
Application blanks should berelunlodlo&#13;
Mrs. Dollase along with atranscriptolille&#13;
student's credits lor her college Work Ia&#13;
date.&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 19:&#13;
BASKETBALL - UWP at DoI1linltao&#13;
College.&#13;
Wednesday. Jan. 20:&#13;
STUDY PERIOD - Also Jan. 21.&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 21:&#13;
FACULTY SENATE - UWP F•...,&#13;
Senate will meet at3:30 p.rn. inGreetquiI&#13;
Hall, Room 103.&#13;
Friday, Jan. 22:&#13;
FINAL EXAMS - Through Jan ~.&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 30:&#13;
BASKETBALL - UWP v. Hope CoIJeeeIl&#13;
Holland, Mich. 8 p.m. at Salem Cealnl&#13;
High School.&#13;
FENCING - UWP v. Purdue, UnivtIIiIJ&#13;
01 Indiana and Bowling Green SIaIt&#13;
University al Lafayette, Incl.&#13;
GYMNASTICS - UWP at University II&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Coming SpecialEvent&#13;
Foreign Travel:&#13;
Holiday in Spain - Spring Break, Apd&#13;
lo-I8. Torremolinos (Spanish Rivlenl&#13;
Includes round trip jet Irom Milw••&#13;
lodging in modern new apartments a1aII&#13;
the Mediterranean and use of a rental.&#13;
(lor each group of four). Cost: $219.l1lip.&#13;
tax. Information and application blllD&#13;
available in the Student Affairs orr.... ·d&#13;
campuses, or contact Mr. WiUilm&#13;
Niebuhr, 658-4861, Ext. 225.&#13;
New Semester Brings Improved Tallent&#13;
Tu'" strengths. Weaknesses and Outlook&#13;
(Of" the Upcoming ea5on:&#13;
Steve Norman, 6'1". 175 pounds,&#13;
nlverslty 01 Maryland, on Maryland's&#13;
traveling squad last year as a sophomore,&#13;
should provide solid strength at guard&#13;
when he becomes eligible secane&#13;
semester. Norman and Rick Davis, 6'3",&#13;
170 pounds, University of West Virginia, a&#13;
guard who started for West Virginia's&#13;
freshman last season, and who also will be&#13;
eligible second semester, were teammates&#13;
ff BARDEN'S&#13;
~ DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
i[g' e:.Men's Famous Name&#13;
Shirts • Woman's&#13;
Sportswear, Lingerie,&#13;
Domestic&#13;
Items&#13;
#~ ," ~.&#13;
"O~ O\) ~,.C\\&#13;
at Parkersburg, West Virginia.. high&#13;
school, where Norman made all·state and&#13;
all American. Depth will be a problem&#13;
until second semester; rebounding, a&#13;
weakness !,ast 'year, sliould be improved.&#13;
Slaughter, Hogan, Findreng and Madsen&#13;
should provide gooo scoring punch, with&#13;
Norman helping out in that department&#13;
second semester.&#13;
Ri'ck Davis and Steve Norman will join&#13;
team lor game Feb. 9 againsl University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Green Bay - eligible second&#13;
semester.&#13;
q~~&#13;
5160 6th AVE.&#13;
Student Bowling&#13;
Headquarters&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
46 BrunswicklUll&#13;
STUDENT SUMMER ·EMPLOYMENT&#13;
For next summer's job, check now the SUMMER EMPLOYMENT&#13;
DIRECTORY OF THE UNITED STATES, The&#13;
latest edition is fresh off the press. It has just arrived in the&#13;
• - US516 Library, and we have it on the reference shelf (HF 5382.5&#13;
. Get the 1971). Ninety thousand summer jobs are listed for I97J.&#13;
jump on the competition!&#13;
NEWSCOPE- Page 10&#13;
Tuesday, January 19, 1971&#13;
Gymnasts Open Season Notes of Interest&#13;
The Ra~e Branch of the Arnen&#13;
Association of U~versity Women c&#13;
announced that applications now are be has&#13;
accepted for the $400 scholarship Wh~&#13;
AAUW awards annually to a Ra . County girl. cine&#13;
The scholarship award, Which is ~&#13;
on academic achievement and fin3!1cia)&#13;
need, is awarded each year to a Ra . County girl beginning the first or seco~&#13;
semester of her junior year at apy&#13;
credited, degree-granting college a·&#13;
university the fall after the grant or&#13;
awarded.&#13;
Deadline for filing applications is Ap&#13;
1. The scholarship will be awarded ,&#13;
AAUW's annual banquet in May. at&#13;
Application blanks may be oblai~&#13;
from Mrs. W. R. Dollase, 3335 Ascot&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53406, the schola&#13;
committee chairman, or from deans&#13;
Doug Anderson student affairs directors at a stud .... ~ . ·t ..... , college or umvers1 y.&#13;
n ctive gymna tics club at UWP is&#13;
d to provide a feeder system for&#13;
th \ . ity in the future. . Par : de .... m have no home meets this&#13;
but the chedule includes some of&#13;
th ~tr;, top team : , 'CAA contender&#13;
Indiana tale Big Eight power Kansas&#13;
t , · A 'mall college title contender&#13;
Illinoi ·Circle Campu , and Eastern&#13;
Illin · .&#13;
Th hedule&#13;
Jan. 2 - at tevens Point, 3 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 30- at U of Chicago, 2 p.m.&#13;
Feb. s -. larquette, Chicago at 1arquette,&#13;
7 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 6 - Wisconsin Open, Milwaukee, 10&#13;
Feba.~. - Illinois Circle Campus, George&#13;
Williams at George Williams, 2 P·".1·&#13;
Feb. 19 - Illinois State, St. Cloud at Illinois&#13;
State, 7 p.m. w·ir ·ms Feb. 20 - Eastern Illinois, George i ia&#13;
at Eastern, 2 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 26 - Indiana State, Kansas State at&#13;
Indiana State, 7 p.m. F3b. 27 - Triton Invitational, Northlake,&#13;
Ill., 1 p.m. . Mar. 12-13 - NAIA District 14, SuJ?E!nor.&#13;
Mar. 19-20- NAIA Nationals, Natchitoches,&#13;
La.&#13;
Application blanks should be returned to&#13;
Mrs. Dollase along with a transcript or the&#13;
student's credits for her college work to&#13;
date.&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 19:&#13;
BASKETBALL - UWP at Dominic&#13;
·college.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 20:&#13;
STUDY PERIOD - Also Jan. 21.&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 21:&#13;
FACULTY SENATE - UWP Facu!&#13;
Senate will meet at 3:30 p.m. in GreelVjUISI&#13;
Hall, Room 103.&#13;
Friday, Jan. 22:&#13;
FINAL EXAMS - Through Jan. 30.&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 30:&#13;
BASKETBALL- UWP v. Hope College of&#13;
Holland, Mich. 8 p.m. at Salem Central&#13;
High School.&#13;
FENCING - UWP v. Purdue, Univemty&#13;
of Indiana and Bowling Green State&#13;
University at Lafayette, Ind&#13;
GYMNASTICS - UWP at University of&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Coming Special Event&#13;
Foreign Travel:&#13;
Dan Boswein&#13;
Holiday in Spain - Spring Break, April&#13;
10-18. Torremolinos (Spanish Riviera)&#13;
Includes round trip jet from Milwauket,&#13;
lodging in modern new apartments alQII&#13;
the Mediterranean and use of a rental car&#13;
(for each group of four). Cost: $219.00 plus&#13;
tax. Information and application _blaiis&#13;
available in the Student Affairs Office· all&#13;
campuses, or contact Mr. William&#13;
Niebuhr, 658-4861, Ext. 225.&#13;
New Semester Brings Improved Tallent&#13;
and Outlook when he becomes eligible secona&#13;
a .on: semester. Norman and Rick Davis, 6'3",&#13;
170 pounds, University of West Virginia, a&#13;
guard who started for West Virginia's&#13;
freshman last season, and who also will be&#13;
eligible second semester, were teammates&#13;
BARDEN'S ~ DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
i(g··· e,,. Men's Famous Name&#13;
TREMENDOUS&#13;
SAVINGS!&#13;
Shirts • Woman 1s&#13;
Sportswear, Lingerie,&#13;
Domestic&#13;
Items&#13;
~ ~"" '" ~- "yo~ 0 &lt;) ~~rJ;I&#13;
at Parkersburg, West Virginia, high&#13;
school, where Norman made all-state and&#13;
all American. Depth will be a problem&#13;
until second semester; rebounding, a&#13;
weakness last ·year, sliould be improved.&#13;
Slaughter, Hogan, Findreng and Madsen&#13;
should provide good scoring punch, with&#13;
Norman helping out in that department&#13;
second semester.&#13;
Rick Davis and Steve Norman will join&#13;
team for game Feb. 9 against University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Green Bay - eligible second&#13;
semester.&#13;
Q~~ 5160 6th AVE.&#13;
Student Bowling&#13;
Headquarters&#13;
BOWLING I&#13;
46 Brunswick lall8S&#13;
STUDENT ·suMMER -EMPLOYMENl&#13;
For next summer's job, check now the SUMMER EM·&#13;
PLOYMENT DIRECTORY OF THE UNITED STATES, The&#13;
latest edition Is fresh off the press. It has just arrived in the&#13;
Library, and we hav~ it on the reference shelf (HF 5382-5 u5576&#13;
1971). Ninety thousand summer jobs are listed for 197l. Get the&#13;
jump on the competition! &#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
T;pewri.ter - manual $55.00. 652-7482. 3&#13;
; Boots - Dunham. Size 10'h $15.00. 654-&#13;
6496. 3&#13;
Wig - Short, Brown. $12.00. 652-5977 after&#13;
3&#13;
7p.m,&#13;
;;ooe Coat size 42, light brown $30. 657-&#13;
5992, 3&#13;
SkUs. Hart Javelin 210 em $150. Kneisse&#13;
Ilfd Stars 205 em $140. Hart Camern Giant&#13;
Slalom 190 em $140. Reigble Boots Size 9&#13;
.\110,110. Call ext 395. 3&#13;
Slti Boots, size 8 $10.00; ski pants size 16&#13;
$ll.IIO,886-4008after4p.m. '3&#13;
Slide Rule$12.50. information center. 3&#13;
TyperwrilersandAdders, Gene639-8636./&#13;
Camera - Polaroid 180 $85.00. Information&#13;
center 3&#13;
Nobel 12 Guage Deer Slayer, shot gun&#13;
175,110 or trade for 20 Guage auto, 658-3491. 3&#13;
Book - Want to Buy. The Elizabethean&#13;
W...ld Piclure by Tillyard. 632-7945 after&#13;
5:30p.m. 3&#13;
SkiJacket- Medium $40. Mu((y 532-7700. 3&#13;
PoolQue 18 oz. 694-5823.&#13;
TheTomainePalace "Where Gormets Eat&#13;
For a Real Eal T-ieat". Try our Filet of&#13;
Murcury. Only75 cenls. 3&#13;
For Evenings of fun contact Bill 652-8230.&#13;
Be Descreet!. 3&#13;
GolfBalls - W (lOxlO) 3 for $1.00 or 20 for&#13;
16.110. Jerry 654-8716. from 5 p.m,-7 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday or Thursdays. 3&#13;
Ski Boots - Kollach size 8'h. $35,00. 657-&#13;
6316, 3&#13;
Aquarium 50 Gal. with stand. 657-6602. 3&#13;
Wanted -' Light weigbt bicycle frame.&#13;
Fork incl, 27" mus! have pin type&#13;
sprockel. 657·7683 Steve Monday and&#13;
Wednesday after 9 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday,&#13;
Friday, after 6 p.m. 3&#13;
Wanted- 35 rom. single lens reflex with&#13;
electric eye under $100. Bill 639-1485. 3&#13;
Honda Scrambler "69" 450 cc. 652-5977&#13;
aller 7 p. m. 3&#13;
MUSICAL&#13;
Bass Guitar - Gibson and Eko call Ed 633-&#13;
4648 3&#13;
Bass &amp; Guitar-Eko. Tom 633-7603. 3&#13;
Guitar &amp; Amp- Gibson $150.654-8030. 3&#13;
Violin &amp; two Bows $50.00 or best offer. Bob&#13;
Seitz. 639-5297. 3&#13;
Harmony Stella 12 String Guitar and Case.&#13;
150.00. 633-ClO42. 3&#13;
Knabe Piano. Parlor Grand 6'4".639-0464.&#13;
3&#13;
Guitar - Epithone, Classical. must sell.&#13;
$60.694-6168,. 3&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
Male. Mon,-Fri, 11:30 a.m.'1:3O p.m. Spot&#13;
Dnve 10 Apply in Person. 2117-75th street,&#13;
KenOSha. 3&#13;
Peoplelowork on Ads for Newscope - and&#13;
anYlhing else. Will train. 3&#13;
-&#13;
SITUATIONS WANTED&#13;
Will tutor. French and German. Frank&#13;
KUitschen.63!Hl346. 3&#13;
Typing 50 cents per sheet. Paper supplied&#13;
658-2203.12-1,4:30-5:30. 3&#13;
Term papers typed - 40 cents per sheel.&#13;
654-&amp;191. 3&#13;
Typing - all kinds. 633-0304.&#13;
Typing. 652-0418.&#13;
Backbreaking work wanted - call Samson&#13;
652-8791. 3&#13;
WANTED TO BUY&#13;
Pidgeon Hole desk. 654-3447. 3&#13;
Used Viola Standard size. 639-6164. 3&#13;
Gas stove - cheap Rita's mother. 6M3170,&#13;
3&#13;
ANTIQUES - Depression Glass (BP&#13;
green or red) will pay reasonable prices&#13;
652-5133. 3&#13;
ROOMMATES WANTED&#13;
3&#13;
To share furnished house near downtown&#13;
Kenosha. $45 plus utilities. Immediate&#13;
occupancy, 694-0171. 3&#13;
To share 2 bedroom apt. $50.00 per month.&#13;
Heat and electricity and phone. 652-9720.&#13;
Before 10 a.m, or after 4 p.m. occupancy&#13;
Feb. 71.&#13;
Basement apt. 1232 Marquette St. $40 per&#13;
month. contact Ken Konkol at Newscope&#13;
o((ice. 3&#13;
20 Vol. Encyclopedia. Contact Ken Konkol&#13;
at Newscope office. 3&#13;
RIDES NEEDED&#13;
To Denver during semester break. Warren&#13;
652-4177. or 652-5200. 3&#13;
To Hanoi - after war .. Contact Dick Nixon&#13;
or Lyndon Johnson or hoth. 3&#13;
CARS&#13;
vw -68 Auto, Radio. 654-£536.&#13;
Chevelle - 64. $190. 654-2615.&#13;
Ford - 65 Van. Pat 632-1750. Mornings or&#13;
3&#13;
after 5.&#13;
Hornet-I970, $1975. 652-3732.&#13;
Chev.lmpala - "65". isJ, automatic. $6OOj&#13;
658-4861. Ext. 211.&#13;
V&#13;
"65" Tom Lafave 658·3491. Metro an - .&#13;
CamPer, Delivery, service. 3&#13;
b d r&#13;
"65" $325 Tom Leafave. 658- Am assa o· 3&#13;
3491.&#13;
. t "64" $300 G58--8043. 3 PontIac - Tempes .&#13;
I&#13;
"59" $7500 632-£490. Needs Chrys er - .' . 3&#13;
power Steering repaIr.&#13;
. "65" 4 sp. auto, $125 or best pontIac - . 3&#13;
0((er.694-1434.&#13;
T&#13;
"67" 343-4BBL. 4sp. Mags.&#13;
Rebel SS - 3&#13;
694-2407.&#13;
Bee "69" 363-4BBL. Auto Trans. :i,:. Inquire Super America. 370HO~&#13;
St.&#13;
bl "64" wagon, stick $200. 694·&#13;
Ramer- 3&#13;
0714.&#13;
World Affairs Course Offering Finalized&#13;
Plans are 00.... compleh for tI' I~:&#13;
program of the l'TER \TlO' \1.&#13;
COLLEGE " COPE, .. \GE' and Ibe&#13;
course offerings have been finalized The&#13;
program has been divided up mto three&#13;
separate entities, the prmg semester. the&#13;
Summer Sessions. and the Fall Semester&#13;
Full credit courses 10 World AHairs at&#13;
ICC in prihg 1971 include: Afncan&#13;
History. Modern Russian HI hX)' w'lh a&#13;
two week tour in Leningrad included. All&#13;
World Seminar, and Individual Tutona!.&#13;
Camaro - "69" 327 hp. Auto. Trans 6S4~&#13;
8411. afler4:3O. 3&#13;
Chev. - "60". SliD. 1m Shimkus 639-&#13;
6849. 3&#13;
3&#13;
Wanted - Fronl end for '61 Che''Y Call&#13;
634-7800 after 6 p.m, 3&#13;
8-Track car Stereo S45.oo. Buz639-1655. 3&#13;
3 Mags - MIC. 4-6"xI4". $75 or o((er 654-&#13;
8517. 3&#13;
-- Snow Tires - Used. 2 Firestone 6.95x14_&#13;
$15; 2 Firestooe6.95x14. $10. Call Ext. 395.3&#13;
Snow tires - Used. 6.50xt3. $:;. 632-£678&#13;
~~L 3&#13;
2 tires - 825-15. ew: Jerry Gnmes 654-&#13;
2309. 3&#13;
Tires for Ramb. or Ford. Rims Too. 'f!!W.&#13;
652-7553. 3&#13;
Tires: 2-8.25Xl4, SIS; 2-J-7D-14, $70. 694-0714&#13;
or 2516-82 SI. Kenos~a. 3&#13;
Snowtires - studded for Mustang $30. 657-&#13;
5660 after5. 3&#13;
Wanted - G(H;5 Falcon, 1 have engme Ed&#13;
Carey 877-3220. 3&#13;
APARTMENTS FOR RENT&#13;
OR HOUSES FOR SALE&#13;
Wanted i.n nice area for young married&#13;
couple. 1 Bed. furnished or 2 bed. un·&#13;
furnished. Bill 633-0724. 3&#13;
Mobile Home - 2 bedroom partially&#13;
furnished. 10'x55'. 652-0075. $2.500.00. 3&#13;
STEREO EQUIPMENT&#13;
. hjslor') pohli or e . i'&#13;
Danish SOCial or pohu at IIf&#13;
In Ihe summer of 197\ ICC 1'.11 aller&#13;
SUmmrr Tour of rth('rn and I:- a 'I'm&#13;
EurolM' a t....o month portunlt to&#13;
plore life In thE&gt; . an navsan weltar&#13;
states. the socialist countrt or F' n&#13;
Europe. the t: 'R Poland Itomam&#13;
HunRar~ Czecnoslo\'akl3 and tht'" dl' d&#13;
cnv of Berlin A . horter tour I a,alabh:&#13;
for Lhose ....ho " I.h (0 e the highli hf 01&#13;
, 'orthern Europe out .de Copen&#13;
And finally, for those inter 'l'd 10 1 r&#13;
rung about Darush 11ft' "I: offer Ih&#13;
Stamm""... ion i.n Ot-nmark.&#13;
The Fall Semester or .971 1',11 orrer \11&#13;
World minar. a course 10 ~orld&#13;
Re\.'oluuonary .Io,·emen . and thp tn.&#13;
dh idul Stminar. Dam. h tudtes ~dI81\&#13;
an mu-odecucn to Dam. h life and culture&#13;
Dtscessiees about lndJ8 1',11 arrartlled&#13;
m preparation (or an optional lud~ Tour&#13;
0/ India planned for the seven-w k penod&#13;
between Fall and pnng m 1,." The&#13;
Dani mi.nar meludes lOten \ 10&#13;
strUction In lhe Dam language nd I&#13;
talon a Dam h Folkschool I' rt' onll&#13;
Dani h 1S spoken Danl h lan((ual&#13;
courses are available In Lh lhe Fall and&#13;
Spring Semesters and dunng the ummft'&#13;
Session and art open lo all Int~ ted&#13;
students VanaliOIb on these progr.m~.&#13;
mcludmg a (arm sta)'. are descnbed m th&#13;
brochure.&#13;
ICC comblnes lectur . ('mmar and&#13;
d1scussions. field tnps and tXCW".IO \\ lth&#13;
lhe opporluruty or gath('nn~ 'lall~\\lib&#13;
students from Denmark and odwl' fOn"ltul&#13;
countnes. all In an e((orl to .."t"illllplt h Ihr&#13;
desired goals of ICC In"- rnallonal&#13;
knowledge, understandlng .• nd lnrod 'lip&#13;
ICC uses the Informal approa"'h In ord&lt;r 10&#13;
create a more t1mulal1n alm ptwrr&#13;
Interesled students are encouragt."C1 10&#13;
~Tile for further information 10 Ie.&#13;
Henntng enS Aile 68. 2900 H IIcrup,&#13;
Copenhagen, Denmark Or contacl lh&#13;
XEWSCOPE&#13;
and&#13;
tl'd&#13;
that 2.203 students (rom 103 nattar. aN"&#13;
currently enrolled on Ibe 'adiSOO campu&#13;
TRIAD&#13;
10&amp;&#13;
WXFM FM&#13;
8-12 P.M.&#13;
Weekdays&#13;
(IT'S GOOD)&#13;
3&#13;
Are Beillg&#13;
$Ell YOUR BOOK&#13;
The Week of JlIlI, 25-2&lt;)tb (rilllll,)&#13;
3&#13;
3 Jr!"e If'ill BII) Blick ThOle Book, W'bitb&#13;
sed \ ext emolt r.&#13;
Top Prices Paid - Cash&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
;;--wri.ter - manual $55.00. 652-7482. 3&#13;
Ski Boots_ Dunham. Size 101/2 $15.00, 654-&#13;
6495- 3&#13;
Wig- Short, Brown. $12.00. 652-5977 after&#13;
7p.m. 3&#13;
suede coat size 42, light brown $30. 657-&#13;
5992. 3&#13;
iis. Hart Javelin 210 cm $150. Kneisse&#13;
Red Stars 205 cm $140. Hart Camero Giant&#13;
Slalom 190 ·cm $140. Reighle Boots Size 9&#13;
.$90.00. Call ext 395. 3&#13;
Ski Boots, size 8 $10.00; ski pants size 16&#13;
$1! oo. 886-4008 after 4 p.m. 3&#13;
Slide Rule $12.50. information center. 3&#13;
ryperwriters and Adders. Gene 639-8636. /&#13;
' Camera - Polaroid 180 $85.00. Information&#13;
center 3&#13;
obel 12 Guage Deer Slayer, shot gun&#13;
$75.00 or trade for 20 Guage auto. 658-3491. 3&#13;
Book - Want to Buy. The Elizabethean&#13;
World Picture by Tillyard. 632-7945 after&#13;
5:30p.m. 3&#13;
Ski Jacket-Medium $40. Muffy 532-7700. 3&#13;
Pool Que 18 oz. 694-5823. 3&#13;
TheTomaine Palace "Where Gormets Eat&#13;
For a Real Eat Treat". Try our Filet of&#13;
Murcury. Only 75 cents. 3&#13;
For Evenings of fun contact Bill 652-8230.&#13;
Be Descreet ! . 3&#13;
Golf Balls - 20 (l0xlO) 3 for $1.00 or 20 for&#13;
$6.00. Jerry 654-8716. from 5 p.m.-7 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday or Thursdays. 3&#13;
ki Boots - Koflach size 8½. $35.00. 657-&#13;
6316. 3&#13;
Aquarium 50 Gal. with stand. 657-6602. 3&#13;
Wanted - Light weight bicycle frame.&#13;
Fork incl. 27" must have pin type&#13;
procket. 657-7683 Steve Monday and&#13;
Wednesday after 9 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday,&#13;
Friday, after6 p.m. 3&#13;
Wanted - 35 mm. single lens reflex with&#13;
electric eye under $100. Bill 639-1485. 3&#13;
Honda Scrambler "69" 450 cc. 652-5977&#13;
after 7 p.m. 3&#13;
MUSICAL&#13;
Bass Guitar - Gibson and Eko call Ed 633-&#13;
4648 3&#13;
Ba &amp; Guitar - Eko. Tom 633-7603. 3&#13;
Guitar &amp; Amp- Gibson $150. 654-8030. 3&#13;
Violin &amp; two Bows $50.00 or best offer. Bob&#13;
Seitz. 639-5297. 3&#13;
Harmony Stella 12 String Guitar and Case.&#13;
$50.oo. 633-0042. 3&#13;
Knabe Piano. Parlor Grand 6'4" . 639-0464.&#13;
3&#13;
Guitar - Epithone, Classical. must sell.&#13;
$60. 694-6168. 3&#13;
HELP WANTE-D&#13;
M3;Ie. '.'1on.-Fri, 11 :30 a .m.-1 :30 p.m. Spot&#13;
Drive in Apply in Person. 2117-75th street,&#13;
Kenosha. 3&#13;
People to work on Ads for Newscope - and&#13;
anything else. Will train. 3&#13;
SITUATIONS WANTED&#13;
Will tutor. French and German. Frank&#13;
Kuitschen. 639-0346. 3&#13;
Typing 50 cents per sheet. Paper ·supplied&#13;
658-2203.12-1,4:30-5:30. 3&#13;
Term papers· typed - 40 cents per sheet.&#13;
654-6491. 3&#13;
World Affairs Course Offering Finalized&#13;
Camaro - " " 327 hp. Auto. Tra&#13;
8411. after-t:30.&#13;
Chev. - "60". $110 . . tark&#13;
6849.&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
Wanted - Front end for '61 Che\'y. C 11&#13;
634-7860 after6 p.m. 3&#13;
Typing- all kinds. 633--0304. 3 8-Track carStereoS45 .. Buz63!H65S. 3&#13;
Typing. 652-0418. 3&#13;
Backbreaking work wanted- call Samson&#13;
652-8791. 3&#13;
WANTED TO BUY&#13;
fags - A! IC. 4-6' xH". S.5 or offer. •&#13;
85i7. 3&#13;
Snow tires - Used. 6.S(l."13. $5. 632~&#13;
Pidgeon Hole desk. 654-3447. 3 after 5. 3&#13;
Used Viola Standard size. 639-6164. 3&#13;
Gas stove - cheap Rita's mother. 654-&#13;
3170. 3&#13;
ANTIQUES - Depression Glass (BP&#13;
green or red) will pay reasonable prices&#13;
652-5133. 3&#13;
ROOMMATES WANTED&#13;
To share furnished house near downtown&#13;
Kenosha. $45 plus utilities. Immediate&#13;
occupancy. 694-0171. 3&#13;
To share 2 bedroom apt. $50.00 per month.&#13;
Heat and electricity and phone. 652-9720.&#13;
Before 10 a .m. or after 4 p.m. occupancy&#13;
Feb. 71.&#13;
Basement apt. 1232 Marquette St. $40 per&#13;
month. contact Ken Konkol at ewscope&#13;
office. 3&#13;
20 Vol. Encyclopedia. Contact Ken Konkol&#13;
at Newscope office. 3&#13;
RIDES NEEDED&#13;
2 tires - 825-15. , ·ew: Jerry Grim . 654-&#13;
2309. S&#13;
Tires for Ramb. or Ford. Rims Too . . '&#13;
652-7553. 3&#13;
Tires: 2-8.25X14. $15; 2-J-i0-14, $70. 694--0714&#13;
or 2516-82 St. Kenos~a . 3&#13;
Snowtires - studded for . 1ustang . 657-&#13;
5660 after 5. 3&#13;
Wanted - 60-65 Falcon. I have engin Ed&#13;
Carey 877-3220. 3&#13;
Wanted in nice area for young married&#13;
couple. 1 Bed. furni hed or 2 bed. unfurnished.&#13;
Bill633-0i2-t. 3&#13;
Mobile Home - 2 bedroom partially&#13;
furnished. 10'x55'. 652--0075. 2,500. 3&#13;
3&#13;
106&#13;
WXFMFM&#13;
B-12 P.M.&#13;
Every Thursday, 10:45 a .m. Kenosha to Wanted - Free Stereo mu l ha\'e G rrard&#13;
Sturtevant. Willing to share expenses. 886- turn-table, Fischer tun r-amp, El tro Weekdays&#13;
(IT'S GOOD 2523 after 5 p.m. Sue Kasparek. 3 voice peakers. Will no ccept u ed _______________ .. equipment. Contact Bill Cippola. 3&#13;
To Denver during semester break. Warren&#13;
652-4177. or 652-5200. 3&#13;
To Hanoi . after war .. Contact Dick Nixon&#13;
or Lyndon Johnson or hoth. 3&#13;
CARS&#13;
VW - 68Auto, Radio. 654-6536. 3&#13;
Chevelle - 64. $190. 654-2615. 3&#13;
Ford - 65 Van. Pat 632-1750. Mornings or&#13;
3 after 5.&#13;
Hornet - 1970. $1975. 652-3732. 3&#13;
Chev. Impala - "65" . 283, automatic. $6003&#13;
658-4861. Ext. 211.&#13;
tr V .. 65.. Tom Lafave 658-3491. Me o an - · Camper, Delivery, service. 3&#13;
b dor .. 65 .. $325 Tom Leafave. 658- Am assa · 3&#13;
3491.&#13;
Pontiac -Tempest "64" $300. 658-8043. 3&#13;
1 "59" $75 00 632-6490 .• 'eeds Chrys er - . · · 3&#13;
Power Steering repair.&#13;
. ..65.. 4 sp auto. $125 or be t Pontiac - · · 3&#13;
offer. 694-1434.&#13;
SST "67" 343-4BBL. 4sp. lags. Rebel - 3&#13;
694-2407.&#13;
B .. 69.. 3S3-4BBL. Auto Trans. Super ee A erlca 370HiOth $2·,100. Inquire Super m · .3&#13;
St.&#13;
.. 64 .. wagon stick $200. 694· Rambler - ' 3&#13;
0714.&#13;
$ELL YOUR BOOK&#13;
Th Jr e k oj.J 111 .... -... &lt;Jib (l·iu ,I)&#13;
Jt' lJ''i/1811 B1 Tho Boo II bi l&#13;
,. B ,,,,, . d xi m Jer.&#13;
Top Prices Paid - Cash&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE &#13;
Whose Southern Strategy?&#13;
Taken SImply. the apporntmenl 01 John&#13;
Connall~ Secrelary or the Treasury is&#13;
an mpl 01 the "Soulllem Strateg)'" as&#13;
... bod b~ Ke\ln PllIlllp" Conally is a&#13;
ron 1*\ all\ ~mocrat ..rho represents&#13;
th ue bl polillcal advantages ollered&#13;
b) III tat 01 Tex Moreover, he is&#13;
L~ndon Johnson' proteg and L)'lldon is&#13;
th r ,t ader of the conservati\'e faction&#13;
.,r OemocUtlC politi Ob\1ously a deal&#13;
Im,l r to III tram Thurmond courtship&#13;
lik I)' Is Conally a pos illle V'C.,.&#13;
Pr Id nllal eandidate lor the&#13;
R Ii n' The pro t I tntrtgumg&#13;
ould n out k n hlleral receIVe lIle '72&#13;
£'&gt;tom r lie nomlOahon lhere i a deftrutt&#13;
.btlil) III I L B J may bolt hi part)'&#13;
dId hI ror to Ntxon Thl, 01&#13;
COO ... oold gwe J hnson 8 direct hne to&#13;
III \\hlt H • nd Irom a much safer&#13;
'III '" Ol Il&#13;
125&#13;
AM-FM Stereo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
Ileft' 'v. Itl d"&#13;
1,;1 .. 1,1 I I hI; !lund'&#13;
ll"~1'1..1) Ih,'I..lnt ,'n the&#13;
he 1_ '"1.1) lh~ .J1lI\..'&#13;
t rtl un nul her nuke&#13;
*l I th lhtrcr~nl,;C'.&#13;
Ih l th-: \l:r\ 1010'&#13;
t\'nhh111lt:rKIC&#13;
A I ,,/1(", '1m I \tJlUuh&#13;
", 'no lhe- II her 125&#13;
Ill.: III I \:t1mpkh.' \ \1&#13;
l l:f ',l 1u I (coh,:,&#13;
It ,l. ., grl,.·,II.1 II tlnnd ...&#13;
See and Hear&#13;
Fisher Stereo'&#13;
M a:t' \,.&#13;
f I \1 n.1 I \1&#13;
.: 1111 II I ,n,1 Ie In&#13;
, nl-tnd .... II "'oJCC" • 4&#13;
hi \&gt;11 m2lh. T'HnlOlblc&#13;
w h l (nlful \nlt'Loll&#13;
\ I I 'lil ,II _ I"",&#13;
h ,11 111y\I,ul,;hrJ T....o&#13;
\\ 01) ... ;Il..('r .....'u·m .. _ Full&#13;
\ (olnr ""llh T.re' :In'"&#13;
P '11 I XI ""&#13;
Hammond Organ&#13;
StudIOS of Kenosha&#13;
Ill; 1&gt;1/,11\/&#13;
1&gt;511IiWI&#13;
position (health wrise} than that he would&#13;
have sbould he consider running himself&#13;
las hIS brolher Sam Houston Johnson has&#13;
s~ested).&#13;
There is also an aspect to Conally's&#13;
appointment which seems 01 Iittle, but at&#13;
least some significance, In light 01 Mr.&#13;
Nixon's admitted conversion to Keynesian&#13;
Economics. and the nature of government&#13;
spending during the Johnson Admmistration&#13;
(50 billion dollar deficit), the&#13;
move can be seen as ixon's act of&#13;
..tokenism" to Democratic criticism of his&#13;
economic policies. Alter all, Cortnally IS a&#13;
Democrat, albeit Southern and conservative.&#13;
but -more important&#13;
representative 01 lIle "good old days"&#13;
under I.BJ. Illlle economy does improve&#13;
Nixon can extole Conally's role to conservalive&#13;
Oemocrats. oller him the V,P.&#13;
job and lurther his standing in lIle con·&#13;
servative Democratic opinion. On the&#13;
olher hand, il the economy does not&#13;
rebound. he can diplomatically admit that&#13;
the problem was bigger than bolll parties&#13;
and lhereby attempl 10 quiet liberal&#13;
Democratic criticism.&#13;
There is, however, a fly that may loom in&#13;
lIle proverbial ~inlment. That fly is Ed·&#13;
mWld Muskie, At the moment Muskie&#13;
enjo)'s a pr-ecarious position in the&#13;
Democratic Party. He represents both a&#13;
part of Lheconservative Johnson faction of&#13;
the party, primarily because of his&#13;
position on the last ticket, and a part of the&#13;
liberal lachon associated with liberal New&#13;
England pohlics represenled best by Ted&#13;
Kennedy His ability 10 please both sides&#13;
rna)' pave lIle .. a) lor a presidential nod in&#13;
1972 Should HE choose John Connally lor&#13;
V.P. as Kennedy chose Johnsoo. in 1960,&#13;
thereby reconciling the factions of his&#13;
party. Richard 'lxon could be in big&#13;
trouble. The simplicity of the "Southern&#13;
Stralegy" may be severely disrupted by&#13;
northern Democratic utilization of the&#13;
same lheme.&#13;
FORUM&#13;
Let me make an initial assumption -&#13;
Parkside is a physical structure. It can be&#13;
visualized; the symbol for which it stands&#13;
can be felt. The attitudes it generates&#13;
verge on the provincial, the obscure, the&#13;
absurd&#13;
Isolated between lwo lunch·bucket&#13;
towns is an institution which creates instant&#13;
greatness to ensure its status' emphasizes&#13;
creativity and originality ~ith a&#13;
curriclJlum designed to mass produce&#13;
programmed machines; and which&#13;
stresses the values and standards that&#13;
exemplify its depravity.&#13;
Parkside, to be sure, was conceived in a&#13;
drunken nightmare by the greatest intellects&#13;
~vailable - in the 13th century.&#13;
These wily old men have assumed that&#13;
what w,\s good enough for lIlem is good&#13;
enough for all,&#13;
Dennis Cashion&#13;
Save a little bread each week and&#13;
your fortune will be fair.&#13;
RACINE SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOaATION&#13;
Oownjown Office&#13;
400 WISCONSIN AVENUE&#13;
West Side Office&#13;
5100 WASHINGTON AVENUE&#13;
furlller ahead of most of hi&#13;
contemporary rock, Slylelisti~!leers ill&#13;
.potpourri of musical tastes ~, it iI.&#13;
purist jazz to Sha-Na.Na b~tr~tng IrOQ,&#13;
genius of Zappa, ' retain Iltt&#13;
A lew highlights, , ,&#13;
"Would you go all the w&#13;
U,S,A,)" - pure Reuhen and:;; ?or Iltt&#13;
predictable lyrics, e ets With&#13;
In "Rudy Wants' to Buy Ye&#13;
Zappa. b~tows a very large s~~ Drink"&#13;
musicians muon-very artist] t to the&#13;
produced, c and "oil&#13;
"Transylvania Boogie" is an&#13;
Zappa's distinctive style il itc"xamJlit"&#13;
that he has a distinctive ~tyle at".:hbe Slid&#13;
good song, but not great. ' It q.&#13;
II"Twenty SmaU Cigars" w , asthe ......&#13;
song on the album, It would still be -~,&#13;
the price. w&lt;Wth&#13;
The purpose of this article w&#13;
talk of a particular album but as notto&#13;
talk of a particular man It rath.,. 10&#13;
misWlderstood, misinterpr~ted e l8 vel}&#13;
derrated. Think about that whe~ and ....&#13;
to "Chunga's Revenge," YlMl -&#13;
BY Bob Borchardt&#13;
Chunga's Revenge- Frank Zappa&#13;
It's been said that Frank Zappa lulfills a&#13;
social purpose; a sort of musical Lenny&#13;
Bruce, Many people undoubtedly feel that&#13;
if they were to order a Zappa album from&#13;
the Record-oC.the-month club, it would&#13;
arrive in a plain brown wrapper along with&#13;
an order blank for PLAYBOY magazine, II&#13;
we are to be completely honest about it,&#13;
we'd have to admit that lor aU you poeple&#13;
who like to sit around and snicker at his&#13;
lyriCS, Zappa's latest album, "Chunla'S&#13;
Revenge" won't disappoint you.&#13;
But keeping with this same honest&#13;
policy, we would also have to point out a&#13;
few things that may surprise all you obsenily&#13;
fans, When lIle 1970 Down Beat&#13;
Readers Poll came. out last month, Frank&#13;
zappa;&#13;
1. Was named Pop musician of the year.&#13;
2, Ranked among the top five in both&#13;
arranging and composing.&#13;
3, Had 3 albums among the top ten.&#13;
4, Was well up in the guitar listings,&#13;
5. Led the Mothers of Invention to a&#13;
ranking in the top rock category.&#13;
Maybe they know something you don't.&#13;
Maybe lIley know what to listen to,&#13;
Believe it or not, some people actually&#13;
listen to Zappa's music. They take his&#13;
satire for what it is; a condemnation of&#13;
tasteless, mindless, musical trash and&#13;
then take his music for what it is: a successful&#13;
attempt at creating just plain&#13;
beautiful sounds,&#13;
Zappa, above all else, is a serious&#13;
musician. Anyone that can write an entire&#13;
movie score at age 18, doesn't spend all his&#13;
time sitting around thinking up ribald&#13;
limericks and it certainly wasn't limericks&#13;
lIlat Zubin Metha, conductor 01 the L, A.&#13;
Symphony orchestra, had in mind when he&#13;
praised him as "one of the greatest&#13;
musical geniuses of our time."&#13;
With this in mind, listen to "Chunga's&#13;
Revenge." Don't try to convince yourself&#13;
that it's just a comedy album. Zappa has&#13;
never been a comedian. For once listen to&#13;
him as he intended. Listen to his guitar&#13;
work on "Road Ladies". Surprise yourself&#13;
with the artistry on "20 Small Cigars."&#13;
You can't help but appreciate it. Although&#13;
as ~ ~hol~, "Revenge" isn't as great an&#13;
arhstic triumph as his first three albums&#13;
it still contains innovations which ar~ eBank&#13;
of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 Lathrop A¥ •. ; .'odne. Wi,e.nlt.&#13;
Students get red carpet servict&#13;
(SO does everyone else')&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHO&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 day.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-9747&#13;
[Ray [Radigan ~&#13;
OJ)onk!J 900J&#13;
For&#13;
ReservatiollS&#13;
Phone&#13;
694-0455&#13;
NOW SERVING&#13;
TACOS • ENCHILADAS·. TAMALES&#13;
COMPLETE MENU Of • • •&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARRY OUT&#13;
"Mexican'fOOfl ;s fun food&#13;
so Ta~o Kings are fun p'ade~';&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11&#13;
6829 39th Avenue&#13;
HAT 1ME SIGN OF 1ME CACTUS"&#13;
Phone 6SH7lT&#13;
Whose Southern Strategy?&#13;
111&#13;
A&#13;
25&#13;
-FM Stereo&#13;
usic Center&#13;
H mmond Organ&#13;
Studios of Kenosha&#13;
1 / 1 f&gt;(Jr/1 ·,.&#13;
b58 I OJ&#13;
FORUM&#13;
Let me make an initial assumption -&#13;
P_ar . ide is a phy ical tructure. It can be&#13;
v1. ualized; the ymbol for which it stands&#13;
can be felt. The attitude it generates&#13;
verge on the pro,·incial. the obscure, the&#13;
ab ·urd.&#13;
I olated between two lunch-bucket&#13;
town. i an in titut1on which creates intant&#13;
greatnes. to ensure its tatus· empha&#13;
izes creativity and originality ;ith a&#13;
curricylum designed to mass produce&#13;
programmed machines; and which&#13;
tr the values and standards that&#13;
e. emplify its depra\;tv.&#13;
Park ide, to be ure, ·was conceh·ed in a&#13;
drunken nightmare by the greatest intell&#13;
cts ~vailable - in the 13th century.&#13;
Th · \\1ly old men have as urned that&#13;
what • good enough for them is good&#13;
enough for all.&#13;
Dennis Cashion&#13;
Save a little bread each week and&#13;
your fortune will be fair.&#13;
RACINE SAVINGS&#13;
ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
Downtown Office&#13;
400 WISCONSIN AVENUE&#13;
West Side Office&#13;
5100 WASHINGTON AVENUE&#13;
1,c.&#13;
BY Bob Borchardt&#13;
Chunga's Rev~nge-Frank Zapp~&#13;
It's been said that Frank Zappa fulfills a&#13;
social purpose; a sort of musical Lenny&#13;
Bruce. Many people undoubtedly feel that&#13;
if they were to order a Zappa album from&#13;
the Record-of-th~month club, it would&#13;
arrive in a plain brown wrapper along with&#13;
an order blank for PLAYBOY magazine. If&#13;
we are to be completely honest about it,&#13;
we'd have to admit that for all you poeple&#13;
who like to sit around and snicker at his&#13;
lyrics, Zappa's latest album, "Chunta's&#13;
Revenge" won't disappoint you.&#13;
But keeping with this same honest&#13;
policy, we would also have to point out a&#13;
few things that may surprise all you obsenity&#13;
fans. When the 1970 Down Beat&#13;
Readers Poll came out last month, Frank&#13;
Zappa;&#13;
1. Was named Pop musician of the year.&#13;
2. Ranked among the top five in both&#13;
arranging and composing.&#13;
3. Had 3 albums among the top ten.&#13;
4. Was well up in the guitar listings.&#13;
5. Led the Mothers of Invention to a&#13;
ranking in the top rock category.&#13;
faybe they know something you don't.&#13;
Maybe they know what to listen to.&#13;
Believe it or not, some people actually&#13;
listen to Zappa's music. They take his&#13;
satire for what it is; a condemnation of&#13;
tasteless, mindless, musical trash and&#13;
then take his music for what it is: a successful&#13;
attempt at creating just plain&#13;
beautiful sounds.&#13;
Zappa, above all else, is a serious&#13;
musician. Anyone that can write an entire&#13;
movie score at age 18, doesn't spend all his&#13;
time sitting around thinking up ribald&#13;
limericks and it certainly wasn't limericks&#13;
that Zubin Metha, conductor of the L. A.&#13;
Symphony orchestra, had in mind when he&#13;
praised him as "one of the greatest&#13;
musical geniuses of our time."&#13;
further ahead of most of his&#13;
contemporary rock. Stylelisrcan!&gt;e~rs&#13;
potpourri of musical tastes I r, It is a&#13;
purist jazz to Sha-Na-Na b~t r~?ing frotn&#13;
genius of Zappa. ' a retain the&#13;
A few highlights ...&#13;
"Would you go all the w&#13;
U.S.A.)" - pure Reuben and~ &lt;for the&#13;
predictable lyrics. . e Jets v.i&#13;
In "Rudy Wants to Buy y&#13;
Zappa bestows a very largeezha DriJt,. . . ' . s aft lo&#13;
mus1c1ans uruon-very artist" the&#13;
produced. IC and v.&#13;
"Transylvania Boogie" is an Zappa's distinctive style if it cexarnp1e0f&#13;
that he has a distinctive ~tyle at~ be&#13;
good song, but not great. · It a&#13;
If "Twenty Small Cigars" wa t&#13;
song o~ the album, it would stills behe On!)&#13;
the price. v.&#13;
The purpose of this article w talk of a particular album but as not to&#13;
talk f . , rather&#13;
o a particular man H . to . d · elS\&#13;
m1sun erstood, misinterpreted ery&#13;
derrated. Think about that whe~ aoo_&#13;
to "Chunga's Revenge." YOU h&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
270-4 Lot/,rop AYe., lto&lt;ine, Wi,cont/n&#13;
Students get red carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone else'}&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHO&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-9747&#13;
rR.ay rR.adt·gan ~&#13;
With this in mind, listen to "Chunga's @ onder/ul 9 ooJ&#13;
Revenge." Don't try to convince yourself&#13;
that it's just a comedy album. Zappa has&#13;
never been a comedian. For once listen to&#13;
him as he intended. Listen to his guitar&#13;
work on "Road Ladies". Surprise yourself&#13;
with the artistry on "20 Small Cigars."&#13;
You can't help but appreciate it. Although&#13;
as ~ "."hol~, "Revenge" isn't as great an artistic triumph as his first three albums&#13;
it still contains innovations which ar~ •&#13;
.,.._ ____________ ,,,&#13;
NOW SERVING&#13;
TACOS • ENCHILADAS . • TAMALES&#13;
COMPLETE MENU OF&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARR-Y OUT&#13;
,, Mexican food is fun food&#13;
so Taco Kings are fun pla;e;,;&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11&#13;
6829 39th Avenue&#13;
•Ar THE SIGN OF THE CACTUS"&#13;
Phone 6S4-S'117&#13;
• • • </text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 1, January 12, 1971</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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