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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, Issue 6</text>
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            <text>McGovern Begins Campaign</text>
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            <text>McGovern Begins Campaign&#13;
By Marc Eisen&#13;
SenatorGeorge McGovern has begun an&#13;
unprecedented presidential campaign by&#13;
entering the Wisconsin Democratic&#13;
presidential primary more than a full&#13;
yearbefore it will be held.&#13;
The South Dakota democrat spoke&#13;
and listened to a group of supporters in&#13;
RacineSunday afternoon to conclude a&#13;
three day campaign swing through the&#13;
state that brought him to six out of the&#13;
ten congressional districts in the state,&#13;
The Senate dove acknowledged it was&#13;
unprecedented for a candidate to&#13;
declare his presidential aspirations so&#13;
early, but said, "I feel these are&#13;
unprecedented times, that the issues&#13;
need to be addressed now, and that the&#13;
kind of campaign I wanted to wage&#13;
requiresa considerable amount of time.&#13;
"I want to do more than simply&#13;
participate in a television blitz in the&#13;
closing weeks of these primary&#13;
elections," the Senator said.&#13;
McGovem emphasized he was in the .&#13;
prtmary to stay and he would not&#13;
withdraw. "My committment to come&#13;
into Wisconsin is definite. There is no&#13;
circumstance I can conceive of arising,&#13;
no combination of competing&#13;
candidates that would cause me to&#13;
changemy decision to make Wisconsin a&#13;
majortesting ground for my views.&#13;
"I consider Wisconsin absolutely&#13;
cnscial to my campaign," he said. The&#13;
Senatos: said too he was committed to&#13;
run 1st. primaries in New Hampshire,&#13;
New York, California, and Oregon.&#13;
McGovernis one of the Senate's more&#13;
,",tspoken opponents to the war, and&#13;
was an unsuccessful candidate for the&#13;
Democratic presidential nomination in&#13;
1965. He became a candidate after the&#13;
usaislnation of Robert Kennedy,and his&#13;
SUpport came mostly from' Kennedy&#13;
followers.&#13;
The Senator began his talk to about&#13;
200 supporters by decrying the&#13;
credibiUtygap that has grown between&#13;
the presidency and the people. "Ithink,&#13;
perhaps, the most shameful and painful&#13;
problemthat we have here in the United&#13;
States today is the credibility gap," he&#13;
reduced level of Amencan ground forces&#13;
indefmitely. It's going 10 fall, and u's&#13;
ridiculous 10 believe Hanoi will release&#13;
American POW's if we maintain support&#13;
troops inde finitely and continue&#13;
bombing."&#13;
McGovern asked the audience "WIt.1&#13;
goes through the minds of the reSl of&#13;
lI¥:world when rJw:yread that this gr.,1&#13;
country has dropped twice 3IS man&#13;
bombs on those tiny little coonmes in&#13;
South East Asia as were dropped on .11&#13;
the connnents of the world In the&#13;
second World War?&#13;
Concerning the President's family&#13;
assistance 'plan, McGovern said, "Lthink&#13;
the plan IS a sound one. But I d n't&#13;
think it is adequat e. I don 'I think you&#13;
can support a family of four on SI600 •&#13;
year. AI the very least I think we ought&#13;
to attach to the President's proposal a&#13;
generous food stamp allowance.&#13;
"If we're going to have the principle&#13;
of a guaranteed inoome then II ought 10&#13;
be on an adequate level:' he said "not&#13;
one that simply perpetuates people In&#13;
poverty."&#13;
When asked about the President's&#13;
plan to reduce welfare, McGovern&#13;
replied, "When the President says we&#13;
must go from welfare to workfare the&#13;
question I want to ask him is 'Whe;e do&#13;
those people who leave welfare gu to gel&#13;
jobs when we already have 6% of our&#13;
work force unemployment?"&#13;
Exploring The World Of E.S.P.&#13;
said.&#13;
"Unfortunately, this is a bipartisan&#13;
gap. It i~ one that wasn't born&#13;
&gt;:este~?ay; It'S been with us too long a&#13;
~ ... he said. tJ-&#13;
~&#13;
N£lISCOP! pho"'''' 8oII1I.i,land&#13;
senator GeorgeMcGove~spe~g at the&#13;
Golden Lantern inRacine Sunday.&#13;
. "Reduc~ to its simplest terms what&#13;
It means IS that millions of citizens in&#13;
this country no longer believe their&#13;
government is telling them the truth "&#13;
he said. '&#13;
"What a shocking thing it is in a free&#13;
society that a few days after the&#13;
By John Koloen&#13;
This is the concluding part of an&#13;
article begun last week in which I ended&#13;
on the verge of a session with Norman&#13;
Slater E.S.P.&#13;
Let it suffice to know that we were&#13;
gathering at a small apartment in&#13;
Kenosha and after emptying the living&#13;
room of all moveable furniture there&#13;
wasn't quite enough room to sit; one&#13;
person had to stand in the doorway&#13;
Exchange Student Returns&#13;
by Marc Ei;'n&#13;
The Parkside student' who was to&#13;
att.nd a black university in North&#13;
Carolrna under the auspices of the&#13;
North·South Student Exchange Program&#13;
has returned to Parkside after spending&#13;
only a week at the schoof.&#13;
David Krausse, cited a variety of&#13;
reasons for his return to UW-P; most&#13;
notably loneliness and the fact he&#13;
cbo&#13;
l&#13;
uldo't make any true friends with&#13;
ack students there.&#13;
His reactions are similar but not as&#13;
strong as those of Ron Williams last&#13;
year~s exchange student. In a letter&#13;
~ubhshed in the January 12, 1971&#13;
EWSCOPE, William's wrote, "My&#13;
expenences at NCCU (North Carolina&#13;
Central University), for the most part,&#13;
were ruled with abuse name calling and&#13;
a constant reminde; that I was a&#13;
-bon-black in a situation where I didn't&#13;
;~ong . and was not wanted. .&#13;
'" nendships were few and meaningless ..&#13;
Williams spent the entire 1970 spring&#13;
SOmesterat NCCU.&#13;
S! The program, sends white college&#13;
..;:tents from the midwest to black&#13;
ba .eges in the south, on an exchange&#13;
usn. However, none of these students&#13;
~ end UW·p because of the lack of&#13;
UWOrmltories, and instead go to&#13;
,Madison.&#13;
'rh. program at Parkside is&#13;
coordinated through the Student Affairs&#13;
Office by Jewel Echelbarger. The&#13;
selection of Krausse as the Parkside&#13;
representative was made jointly by Miss&#13;
Echelbarger and students who had gone&#13;
to NCCU in past semesters.&#13;
Dave Krausse is not bitter about his&#13;
experiences in the program, and wishes,&#13;
in fact, he had stuck it out.&#13;
He said. of his experiences, "I would&#13;
put 50% of the blame for my return on&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, and a good 50% on&#13;
myself. I don't think I received enough&#13;
preparation prior to my leaving. I&#13;
attended a meeting in Madison with&#13;
people involved in the program before I&#13;
left.&#13;
"But the meeting was so informal,"&#13;
he said, "that I couldn't ask the gully&#13;
questions I wanted to. I warned more&#13;
about making a good 'party inpression'&#13;
than abou' gelling good information.&#13;
"Before I left, Miss Echelbarger and I&#13;
decided that I should have an option;&#13;
that if after the fust week of school&#13;
(classes started there a week before&#13;
Parkside's ) if I didn't like the school I&#13;
could come back to Parkside withou t&#13;
missing any classes," he said. .&#13;
"I liked about 40% of my expenences&#13;
and really disliked about 60%," he said.&#13;
"lbe thing is that when you're in a&#13;
strange situation like that you tend 10&#13;
look at all things as. bad. But probablv&#13;
:IContlnu.d on pa.. 6\&#13;
President of the United States&#13;
announced before massive media&#13;
coverage that there were no American&#13;
forces in Laos," McGovern said, "That&#13;
the NBC television network conducted a&#13;
telephone poll and discovered 46'11&gt; of&#13;
the American people said they didn't&#13;
believe the President.&#13;
"I think this is a dangerous oondition&#13;
in. a free society when the leadership has&#13;
nusled us so many times that even when&#13;
they may be telling the truth about half&#13;
of the American people say they don 't&#13;
believe it."&#13;
HIt's to this problem above aU else&#13;
our political leaders must address&#13;
themselves," he stressed ... l have no&#13;
doubt the American people can find&#13;
their, way through the problems that&#13;
face us both in foreign policy and&#13;
domestic policy if we are honest with&#13;
each other."&#13;
"Above all else I pledge thai whatever&#13;
I say in th!s wisconsm campaign;'&#13;
McGovern said, "will be convictions'&#13;
hold deeply."&#13;
He said he has been labelled a one&#13;
issue candidate not· because he is&#13;
uninterested in other issues but becauSO&#13;
he felt the war to be the first order of&#13;
business for a new president.&#13;
The Senator staled "I do not accept&#13;
the view Mr. ixon's formula will end&#13;
the war. I think Vietnamization is a&#13;
formula to continue the war with a&#13;
watching .,d listening as&#13;
talked.&#13;
There were eighteen peOple,.logether&#13;
for the first time, all presumably curious&#13;
enough 10 struggle through a cold&#13;
midnight on short notice in order to see&#13;
Norman do his thing.&#13;
The fact that all these people,&#13;
married couples, unmarried couples,&#13;
slraights~ a wailress, and freaks gOI&#13;
together for the same reason struck me&#13;
ralher presumptively. Geqerally, I&#13;
'Would avoid such messes because. there&#13;
isn"t much I've got to say· 10 a stranger&#13;
when there are a million other things to&#13;
do. Yet we were all together, ready to&#13;
~ndure each other" to see orman.&#13;
Afrer the usual knolling in Ihe&#13;
kitchen when the women talk of little&#13;
boys at home and the men split botUes&#13;
of coke (alcohol and dope were stncUy&#13;
forbidden), we scrunched ourselves into&#13;
a circle in the living room. Everyone&#13;
except for three people on the couch&#13;
struggled for niches where muscles&#13;
wouldn't tighlen and necks wouldn't&#13;
sag.&#13;
onnan 'orman began, "usually at thin like&#13;
this the psychic will lell you about&#13;
!;.S.P. and answer a few que 11 ns for&#13;
flfly dollars. I read that when Jean&#13;
DIxon was in Racine a thousand pe pie&#13;
paid for rickets and all she dod wa talk&#13;
about her books and things. I'm nOI&#13;
saying anything against books and&#13;
things like this bUI I believe Ih. only&#13;
way to talk about E.SP " '0&#13;
demonstrate It. ....&#13;
He continued for st\leral mlOule 10&#13;
this vein and then asked If anyone had&#13;
ever had a psychiC expenence or what&#13;
they chose to caU a psychic expenence&#13;
Faces turned to their n.oghb r and&#13;
eyes shOI 10 the Ooor, anuclpallnl •&#13;
reply, fearful that they had not been&#13;
put on the spot. The room wa Sllenl&#13;
and orman chIded, "This sure I a&#13;
quiet group."&#13;
Then a man near orman saidt nl&#13;
don'l know if this is a psychic&#13;
experience Or what, but omelLmtS&#13;
when I go someplace where I haven',&#13;
be.n I gel the feehns tha' I've been&#13;
{Continued on pace 61&#13;
N_u S1a1er wilII_ 01blo ro.t~""llIalllei o'CbrIoI. --."..&#13;
-&#13;
McGovern Begins Campaign&#13;
By Marc Eisen&#13;
Senator George McGovern has begun an&#13;
unprecedented presidential campaign by&#13;
entering the Wisconsin Democratic&#13;
presidential primary more than a full&#13;
year before it will be held.&#13;
The South Dakota democrat spoke&#13;
and listened to a group of supporters in&#13;
Racine Sunday afternoon to conclude a&#13;
three day campaign swing through the&#13;
state that brought him to six out of the&#13;
ten congressional districts in the sta,te.&#13;
The Senate dove acknowledged it was&#13;
unprecedented for a candidate to&#13;
declare his president(al aspirations so&#13;
early, but said, "I feel these are&#13;
unprecedented times, that the issues&#13;
need to be addressed now, and that the&#13;
kind of campaign I wanted to wage&#13;
requires a considerable amount of time.&#13;
"I want to do more than simply&#13;
participate in a television blitz in the&#13;
closing weeks_ of these primary&#13;
elections," the Senator said.&#13;
McGovern emphasized he was in the ·&#13;
primary to stay and he would not&#13;
withdraw. "My committment to come&#13;
Into Wisconsin is definite. There is no circumstance I can conceive of arising,&#13;
no combination of competing&#13;
candidates that would cause me to&#13;
change my decision to make Wisconsin a&#13;
major testing ground for my views.&#13;
"I consider Wisconsin absolutely&#13;
crucial to my campaign," he said. The&#13;
Senator said too he w s coir.~itted to&#13;
run ht- primaries in New Hampshire,&#13;
New York, California, and Oregon.&#13;
McGovern is one of the Senate's more&#13;
outspoken opponents to the war, and&#13;
was an unsuccessful candidate for the&#13;
Democratic presidential nomination in&#13;
1968. He became a candidate after the&#13;
assassination of Robert Kennedy,and his&#13;
support came mostly from · Kennedy&#13;
followers.&#13;
The Senator began his talk to about&#13;
2 00 supporters by decrying the&#13;
credibility gap that has grown between&#13;
the presidency and the people. "I think,&#13;
perhaps, the most shameful and painful&#13;
problem that we have here in the United&#13;
States today is the credibility gap," he&#13;
said.&#13;
"Unfort~nately, this is a bipartisan&#13;
gap. It ts one that wasn't born&#13;
~este~?ay; it's been with us too long a tune .. he said.&#13;
President of the nited State&#13;
announced before m · e media&#13;
coverage that there v.ere no Amen n&#13;
forces in Laos," 1cGo em said. "Tiut&#13;
the BC television network conducted a&#13;
telephone poll and di ered 46% of&#13;
the American people said the didn't&#13;
believe the Pre ident.&#13;
" I think this · a dangero condition&#13;
in_ a free society when the leader ·p ha&#13;
rrusled u so many time that even when&#13;
they may be telling the truth about half&#13;
of the Ameri an people s.a)'. the ·don't&#13;
believe it."&#13;
"It's to this problem above all el&#13;
our political leader must ddre&#13;
them elves, ' he tre d. "J have no&#13;
d u_bt the American people can find&#13;
their. way through the problem that&#13;
face us both in foreign polic and&#13;
domestic policy if v.e are honest v.ith&#13;
each other."&#13;
"Above all e I pledge that whate er&#13;
I say in thi \ 1 on m campaign, ..&#13;
NEWSCOPE pboliliry Bob Mainland McGovern said. 'will be onviction I&#13;
Senator George McGovern speaking at the hold deeply·.,&#13;
Golden Lantern in Racfue Sunday. He said he ha been labelled a one issue candidate not · because he i&#13;
. "Redu~ to its irnplest terms what uninterested in other i e but be auso&#13;
1t means 1s that millions of citizens in he felt the war to be the first order of&#13;
this country no longer believe their busine for a new pre ident.&#13;
government is telling them the truth " The Senator tated 'l do not cept&#13;
he said. ' the view Mr. 1&#13;
i: on·s formula ·11 end&#13;
"What a shocking thing it is in a free the war. l thin · Vietna.miz.ation is a&#13;
society that a few days after the __ ______:cfo_-'--=mula to con inue the war "th&#13;
By John Koloen&#13;
This is the concluding part of an&#13;
article begun last week in which I ended&#13;
on the verge of a session with orman&#13;
Slater E.S.P.&#13;
Let it suffice to know that we were&#13;
gathering at a small apartment in&#13;
Kenosha and after emptying the living&#13;
room of all moveable furniture there&#13;
wasn't quite enough room to it; one&#13;
person had to stand in the doorway&#13;
watching :ind Ii tening a orman&#13;
talked .&#13;
There were eighteen people,_ t ther&#13;
for the fir t time. all pre mabl curl u&#13;
enough to truggle thtough a cold&#13;
midnight on short noti e in order to see , orrnan do hi thing.&#13;
The fact that all the pe pie,&#13;
married couple • unmarr"ed couple .&#13;
traights~ a waitre • nd fre t&#13;
together for the same rea on tru me&#13;
rat her pre umpt1 el . Generali\', I&#13;
Exchange Student Returns&#13;
would avoid uch me · cause ·th re&#13;
isn't much I've g t to : to a tran r&#13;
when there are a milli n other thin to&#13;
do. Yet we were all together. read to&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
The Parkside student · who was to&#13;
atten? a black university in North&#13;
Carolma under the auspices of the&#13;
North-South Student Exchange Program&#13;
has returned to Parkside after spending&#13;
only a week at the school.&#13;
David Krausse, cited a variety of&#13;
reasons for his return to UW-P; most&#13;
notably loneliness and the fact he&#13;
cbol uldn't make any true friends with&#13;
ack students there.&#13;
His reactions are similar but not as&#13;
lrong as those of Ron Williams last&#13;
Year'_s exchange student. In a letter&#13;
pubbshed in the January 12, I 971&#13;
EW~COPE, William's wrote, "My&#13;
~xpenences at NCCU (North Carolina&#13;
entral University), for the most part,&#13;
were filled with abuse name calling and&#13;
a constant reminde; that I was a&#13;
hon-black in a situation where I didn't&#13;
e~ong and was not wanted. . ·f.nendships were few and meaningless ..&#13;
Williams spent the entire 1970 spring&#13;
semester at NCCU.&#13;
The program, sends white college students from the midwest to black&#13;
b°l~eges in the south on an exchange a:tts. However, none 'of these students&#13;
d end_ ~-P because of the lack of&#13;
1~~mitones, and instead go to v "·Madison.&#13;
The program at Parkside is&#13;
coordinated through the Student Affairs&#13;
Office by Jewel Echelbarger. The&#13;
selection of Krausse as the Park ide&#13;
representative was made jointly by Mi&#13;
Echelbarger and students who had gone&#13;
to NCCU in past semesters.&#13;
Dave Krausse is not bitter about his&#13;
experiences in the program, and wishes,&#13;
in fact, he had stuck it out.&#13;
He said, of his experiences, "I would&#13;
put 50% of the blame for my return on&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, and a good 50% on&#13;
myself. I don't think I received enough&#13;
preparation prior to my leaving. I&#13;
attended a meeting in Madison with&#13;
people involved in the program before I&#13;
left.&#13;
"But the meeting was so informal,"&#13;
he said, "that I couldn't ask the gutty&#13;
questions I wanted to. I worried more about making a good 'party inpression'&#13;
than about getting good information.&#13;
"Before I left, Miss Echelbarger and I&#13;
decided that I should have an option;&#13;
that if after the first week of school&#13;
( classes started there a week before&#13;
Parkside's ) if I didn't like the school I&#13;
could come back to Parkside without&#13;
missing any classes," he said.&#13;
"I liked about 40% of my experiences&#13;
and really disliked about 60%," he said.&#13;
"The thing is that when you're in a&#13;
strange situation like that you tend lo&#13;
look at all things as bad. But probably&#13;
(Continued on paae 6)&#13;
ndure each other. to e mun.&#13;
After the u uaJ knotting in the&#13;
kitchen when the women ta!· of little&#13;
boy at home and the men split bottle&#13;
of coke {alcohol and d pe were tri ti&#13;
forbidden). we scrunched ourselve ·nto&#13;
a circle in the living room. ·very e ex ept for three pe pie on the couch&#13;
truggled for ni he where mu le&#13;
wouldn't tighten and nee w uldn't&#13;
sag.&#13;
IDSCOPE ,._ IIIJ M&#13;
Nonnu Slalu with one ol b.Js foarty-elglat statues of Christ. &#13;
,;p.:ag~e~2 .. N!!I\IO~~lO~~"~!4~OD~da~Yll,.:!4=:arch~~8,:.1:;97;;1~""""""""""""••••••••••••••••••••• :&#13;
.&#13;
Also while duck is roasting, remove:&#13;
by Prof. Kook • d&#13;
• This IS not a gourmet column. It does the skin from the second orange an :&#13;
:.." deal wuh exotic cuisine. It offers parboil skin (drop it in boiling water for:&#13;
: l§t uon for economical cooking, a few minutes). Scrape out the Inner:&#13;
:esp.dally for mrdents and novice white lining of the boiled skin. Keep the :&#13;
:&lt;ooks. It assumes you are lost in the peel and discard this white. stufr. New:&#13;
:.,,&lt;hen and you pamc when il comes cut skin into very thin stnps and add.&#13;
: '10" 10 cook I subslantial meal. them to the sauce in the roasting pan:&#13;
: When you gel the mon for your shortly before the dock is done. , :&#13;
: n,one) snd do not waste Iny food. you Cut your orange pulp into sectIOns. :&#13;
: Ire cooktngeconomically. This does not Ready to serve: Remove ducklin~ 10:&#13;
: -an you hive to fill up on rice. pliller' garnish with the orange secll°thns.:&#13;
..~ Add t'o the sauce in the pan e :&#13;
: potatoes and noodles. Fat example, remainin ~ cup of vermouth and lemon:&#13;
:here is I recelpe for I lovely roast duck juice. Helt ~ntly (low helt.). stir to:&#13;
: dtnner for four. It costs under S 1.00 per .- II :hud. Whit you need blend ingredients and then pour a sma : amount over the duck. Put remauung :&#13;
:Iduckling Sluce in grlvy boal. :&#13;
: ~ ranges Serve your favorite vegetables with : :2 ,ablespoons lemon Juice this. How 10 prepare some mee:&#13;
;ltlblespoons 0 ur! vegetables will appear soon. :&#13;
: ~cup sweet vermouth P.S. If you are wondering whit to do :&#13;
: sah with the rest of the sweet vermouth, :&#13;
: r 'anB P n With cO'fCt make a mahatlan for you and company:&#13;
: (or use alumJRum foil) to enjoy before dinner. Ijigger Bourbon:&#13;
to ~ oz. vermouth. Dash of Angostura:&#13;
. How 10 beg,n Defrost uuck billers (optional). Mix over rocks but;&#13;
:oyerOlghl ,f bought frozen; wash Ind serve without them and add a cherry' :&#13;
:dry duck with paper towel. Rub :&#13;
:duckhng with sail ,nside and out. Truss; ..&#13;
:(Ih' mean you secure the legs and:&#13;
:.. lOg and close open body cavity: use:&#13;
:Slrtng or small skewers). RoaSl a' 400:&#13;
:degrees for 30 mlOultS. Remove from:&#13;
:pan. Pour off III but about 2:&#13;
: table poonful of pan drtppings. :&#13;
: Add Oour to drtpplOgs lef, 10 the pan:&#13;
:sltr o"er mtd,um hea' (place pan on top:&#13;
; of slove for this) unltl a well.browneeli&#13;
:pa 'e IS formed. Add ju,ce from I:&#13;
:orange plus enou~ wlter to measure;&#13;
: one cupful. Add Iiiis 10 Sluce and cooki&#13;
: un,i1 sauce IS smooth. Now add ~ cup:&#13;
: of vermouth to sauce. Pul duckling bac,"&#13;
: in Ihe pan; baste du k with this sauc':&#13;
: (spoon up Sluce and cover the duc~&#13;
: wi,h the Sluce). Cover pan and roast ire popularity during the past year which&#13;
: oven al 350 degrees for I to I ~ hours: even exceeds the heights of acclaim&#13;
: (WhIle duck roasts. prepare youf. enjoyedl by Rich during the past 30&#13;
:\iegetllbles Ind remember that you have: years while he was winning every major&#13;
:In hour or so before duck is ready). : jazz poil and recording some 25 alb"",,&#13;
!.....•......... ~ r•..,~ ••••••&#13;
~ UW-PARKSIDE SPECIAL ~&#13;
. 10% off on any pizza&#13;
Must bTlng 10 cards&#13;
by Dave Weber and Mark Timpany&#13;
Luddite is an acronym for the League&#13;
for the Unification of DIverse. ~nd&#13;
DiscontinuouS Items of' Th.eoretlcal&#13;
E&#13;
. We've changed since the&#13;
nterpnse. . we&#13;
nineleenth centurysh·T~er~f~r~~:Ycivil&#13;
can be stopped, or 0 . I&#13;
war The surrealist movement IS cl~s~ y&#13;
ali .ed with Marxism and cogDlt~Ve&#13;
p.rchOIOgy. Being a.Luddite at parkside&#13;
Is like operating a kibbutz in the middle,&#13;
of Arabs., shi Th This has been a long ~pace ip, . e&#13;
student is put in the position of asl,d~g&#13;
people who do not exist for facllttleS&#13;
which are his own.' In the .fu!ure. thl}&#13;
will cease to be the case. Is this part 0&#13;
the movie or is this real life?&#13;
Luddite is an accident. It was a jok~.&#13;
It Is a response to the total el~ctromc&#13;
environment. It is a label applted to a&#13;
total, surrealistic, McLu~nes9-ue,.&#13;
existential, cognitive, psycholog1~al,&#13;
communistic, inclusive, lais~z falre,&#13;
anarchistic conspiratorial phtlosophy.&#13;
Luddite is agnostic. Every Luddite (or&#13;
Buddy Rich In Concert&#13;
Drummer Buddy Rich. conceded to&#13;
be the world's greatest drummer, will&#13;
play a one·night engagement on&#13;
Saturday. March 20, in Kenosha's&#13;
Tremper High School Auditorium at 8&#13;
p.m. under sponsorship of The&#13;
Uniyersily of Wisconsin·Parkside&#13;
Sludenl Activities Office.&#13;
The Buddy Rich 1970 Big Band. a 16&#13;
piece aggregation. has enjoyed a wave of&#13;
TUDE TS 0 LV!&#13;
Good Tues - Thurs&#13;
Mar 9-11&#13;
ICE COLD&#13;
BEER&#13;
Frosty 12 01. Mug&#13;
JumboPitcher&#13;
PlZZAHUT&#13;
~~E:::~~",,(:l 2801 30th&#13;
lZZA&#13;
Ave.• Kenosha&#13;
DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
Chicken Snack 99c&#13;
99c&#13;
99c&#13;
.99c&#13;
99c&#13;
99c&#13;
.. 99c&#13;
' ..: ....&#13;
.-' TUESDAY&#13;
"Big Pete" Spec'lal H•• bo .. ~.&#13;
Comb, ... " .. "&#13;
.......IIIlW.. ~~ WEDNESDAY&#13;
Mini·Pizzo Yo", Cho,,~&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
Gli Chicken Snack&#13;
ri:i&#13;
II&#13;
fRIDAY&#13;
lake Perch Plate All ~., Spec!.1&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
"Big Pete" Spec' I H•• bo .... 10 Comb,nll'O"&#13;
SUNDAY&#13;
After Church Special&#13;
Plus OUf Regular Mellu Featuring Our&#13;
FAMOUS PIZZAS ~ •&#13;
:' 0-".5U". !I1lI ~- Ihru Thurs. 11 I.m.· 1 '.m., ,., ... Fr"· t. 11 I.m.• 2 '.m. ~~I\:~ ;.~ ~/r.,!&#13;
............ :&#13;
II ~ ~~~ l:&#13;
with such jazz greats as Dizzy Gillespie,&#13;
Count Basie and Charlie Parker.&#13;
Rich's new band. featuring young&#13;
musicians, recently concluded stands at&#13;
Fillmore West. which drew over 15,000,&#13;
mostly under 30, as well as ~ell-out&#13;
appearances at Fillmore East, the&#13;
Tropicana in Las Vegas, and a command&#13;
performance at the London Palladium&#13;
for Queen Elizabeth. His is easily the&#13;
most popular big band sound going&#13;
among young people who. before Rich,&#13;
were thought to be attuned only to the&#13;
amplified sounds of small groups.&#13;
All seats will be reserved. Tickets are&#13;
52 and 53 and are available at the&#13;
Parkside Student Activities Office on&#13;
the Wood. Road Campus. Gook-Gere&#13;
Company in Racine and Bidingers&#13;
House of Music in Kenosha. Mail orders&#13;
should be sent to the Student Activities&#13;
Office.&#13;
repressed Luddite) should think&#13;
believe unhindered by intimida' and&#13;
coercion. Everyone is either ty~Or&#13;
(Luddite) or a represse/ ylPPi'&#13;
(repressed Luddite). IPpi,&#13;
Work is performing a sub.hum&#13;
monotonous act at a specified tim:~'&#13;
exchange for food, clothing shell ill&#13;
status. Work is obsolete. Work fr and&#13;
necessary. No one will War S not&#13;
Luddite. Luddite will work for n~ fo,&#13;
It is not a big step' from declarinone.&#13;
state of national emergency fo g t&#13;
purposes to creating new myths ~t"t&#13;
the enemy. within by a mo out&#13;
Reichstag fire. Luddite was dem&#13;
responsible for last week's explOSl'not&#13;
th tion' 'f 1 I f on It e na ton s capt a .' n act. WeqUelti&#13;
the bombers' ,ilrtistic effecl. S on&#13;
Sontag notes that effect, not inlen~&#13;
the relevant matter for consideration'=&#13;
analyzUl;g any ~rtistic presentlli&#13;
• Everything we do IS music. on.&#13;
The pun Is the lowest form of hum&#13;
except to a Luddite. The liter or&#13;
industrial, mechanical establishment~te.&#13;
rigid set of cate&amp;ories that gavecomf:':&#13;
to Itterate, tndustrial. mechanical&#13;
peopl~, DISh11St sad people, tit&lt;&#13;
revolutton IS JOY. We are in a&#13;
:literate electric environment. No:~&#13;
need fit into a category to enjoy lif,.&#13;
OUf new enVIronment compel&#13;
commitment, participation. The expe~&#13;
is the man who stays put. I'd ratlt&lt;r&#13;
have my country die for me.&#13;
If you think your're a Luddite&#13;
there's an easy way to find out. Malee;&#13;
poster which expresses an idea of youn,&#13;
On the poster. put the Luddite star and&#13;
write, "Luddite, official". Once y~u've&#13;
come this far, you have accepted many&#13;
of the precepts of Luddite. Place tit&lt;&#13;
poster in a place where it will be&#13;
conspicuous.&#13;
Get Involved&#13;
The Education Advisory Commilltl&#13;
is looking for students who wouldbe&#13;
interested in meeting with and&#13;
interviewing prospective Educatioo&#13;
Division faculty members. This is your&#13;
chance to participate in the faculty&#13;
hiring process. Students who wish to&#13;
. participate should contact:&#13;
James Dean· English&#13;
Wayne Johnson· Philosophy&#13;
Steve Stephens· Physical Education&#13;
Homer Knight· Chemistry&#13;
Donald Piele . Mathemalics&#13;
John Campbell· Geography&#13;
Marilyn Scamman - Education&#13;
William J. Murin· Political Science&#13;
\ · while duck i roasting, remove :&#13;
the ·in from the secon~. orange and :&#13;
parboil skin (drop it m bo1hng wat~r for :&#13;
a few minutes). Scrape out the inner :&#13;
white lining of the boiled skin. Keep the :&#13;
peel and discard this :,vhite_ stuff. New :&#13;
cut kin into very thin stnps and add •&#13;
them to the sauce in the roasting pan :&#13;
shortly before the duck is done. . :&#13;
Cut your orange pulp into se&lt;:ttons. :&#13;
Ready to serve· Remove duckhn~ to :&#13;
platter- g mish with the orange sections. : Add t'o the sauce in the pan the :&#13;
remainin cup of vermouth and le_mon :&#13;
jui e. Heat gently (low hea!), stir to :&#13;
blend ingredients and then pour a ~all :&#13;
amount over the duck. Put remaining :&#13;
uce in gravy boat. . : Serve your favorite vegetables ~th :&#13;
thi How to prepare some mce :&#13;
\.'egetables will appear soon. :&#13;
P.S. If you are wondering what to do :&#13;
with the rest of the weet vermouth, :&#13;
make a mahattan for you and company :&#13;
to enjoy before dinner. l jigger Bourbon :&#13;
to ½ oz. •.ermouth. Dash of Angostura :&#13;
bitter (optional). Mix over rocks but1 · rve without them and add a cherry!&#13;
.... ,11A'1 M5PEAIC&#13;
Gtf~z:J&#13;
b Dave Weber and Mark Timpany&#13;
rJ:ddite is an acronym for ~he League&#13;
f the Unification of Diverse . ~nd&#13;
~~ontinuous Items of dT~eo~et~~;&#13;
Enter rise. We've chang~ sine&#13;
ninet!nth cendturshy.T~erf ;~r~c;:yc;~&#13;
can be stoppe , or O • 1&#13;
war The surrealist movement is cl~s~ y&#13;
ali~ed with Marxism ~nd cogmt~ve&#13;
h logy Being a Luddite at Parkside&#13;
psyc O • • th · ddle&#13;
is like operating a kibbutz m e mi&#13;
of Arabs.· shi ·1·he&#13;
This has been a long ~p_ace P· . student is put in the position of a~~~g people who do not exist for facibti~s&#13;
which are his own. In the fu~ure, this&#13;
will cease to be the case_. Is this part of&#13;
the movie or is this real bfe?&#13;
Luddite is an accident. It was a jok~.&#13;
It is a response to the total el~ctromc&#13;
environment. It is a label apphed to a&#13;
total, surrealistic, McLu~nes9ue,&#13;
existential, cognitive, psrchologi&lt;:al,&#13;
communistic, inclusive, lais~z faire,&#13;
anarchistic conspiratorial philo~ophy.&#13;
Luddite is agnostic. Every Luddite (or&#13;
Buddy· Rich In Concert&#13;
Drummer Buddy Rich, conceded to&#13;
be the world's greatest drwnmer, will&#13;
play a one-night engagement on&#13;
Saturday, Mar h 20, in Kenosha's&#13;
Tremper High School Auditorium at 8&#13;
p.m. under sponsorship of The&#13;
Univer ity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Student Acti\-itie Office.&#13;
The Buddy Rich 1970 Big Band, a 16&#13;
piece aggregation, has enjoyed a wave of&#13;
popularity during the past year which&#13;
even exceeds the heights of acclaim&#13;
enjoyed by Rich during the past 30&#13;
years while he was winning every major&#13;
10% Off on an pizza&#13;
Mu t bnnsz ID card&#13;
M r 9-11&#13;
ICE COLD&#13;
BEER&#13;
Frosty 12 oz. Mug 1 Qc&#13;
Jumbo Pitcher 5 Qc&#13;
DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS&#13;
Chicken Snack&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
99c&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
"Big Pete" Special ~:::~.:. 99,&#13;
WEDNESDAY&#13;
Mini-Pizza Yoo, Cho,,. 99,&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
Chicken Snack . 99,&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
Lake Perch Plate ::.~.~r 99,&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
"Big Pete" Spec',al H•mbu,vo,&#13;
Col"'bin•hon 99c&#13;
........ 99&lt;&#13;
SUNDAY&#13;
After Church Special&#13;
Plus Our R,gular M,nu F,aturing Our&#13;
FAMOUS PIZZAS&#13;
with such jazz greats as Dizzy Gillespie,&#13;
Count Basie and Charlie Parker.&#13;
Rich's new band, featuring young&#13;
musicians, recently concluded stands at&#13;
Fillmore West, which drew over 15,000, mostly under 30, as well as ~ell-out&#13;
appearances at Fillmore East, the&#13;
Tropicana in Las Vegas, and a command&#13;
performance at the London Palladium&#13;
for Queen Elizabeth. His is easily the&#13;
most popular big band sound going&#13;
among young people who, before Rich,&#13;
were thought to be attuned only to the&#13;
amplified sounds of small groups.&#13;
All seats will be reserved. Tickets are&#13;
$2 and $3 and are available at the&#13;
Parkside Student Activities Office on&#13;
the Wood- Road Campus, Gook-Gere&#13;
Company in Racine and Bidingers&#13;
House of Music in Kenosha. Mail orders&#13;
should be sent to the Student Activities&#13;
Office.&#13;
rep:essed ~uddite) should think&#13;
beheve unhindered by intimidar and&#13;
coercion. Everyone is either a y~ or&#13;
(Luddite) or a repressed y!PPie (re.e_ressed Luddite). 1PPie&#13;
Work is performing a sub-liu&#13;
monotonous act at a specified timma~,&#13;
exchange for food, clothing shelt e II\&#13;
status. Work is obsolete. Work fr and&#13;
necessary. No one will works not&#13;
Luddite. Luddite will work for no for&#13;
I . t b" one&#13;
t 1s no a Jg step from decla . · state of national emergency f;ing a&#13;
purposes to creating new myths :btest&#13;
the enemy within by a mo out&#13;
Reichstag fire. Luddite was dcrn&#13;
responsible for last week's explosio not&#13;
the nation's capital. In fact, we quesf· at&#13;
the bombers' · artistic effect. su'00&#13;
Sontag notes that effect, not intent~&#13;
the rel~vant matter for consideration' .&#13;
11&#13;
analyzmg any artistic present t· 111&#13;
E thi d .. a1on&#13;
very ng we o 1s music. ·&#13;
The pun is the lowest form of hu&#13;
except to a Luddite. The lite:r't&#13;
industrial, mechanical establishment~ e. . "d t f t . h IS l ngi se o ca egones t at gave comr&#13;
l . t t · d . 1ort&#13;
to i era e, m ustnal, mechanical&#13;
people, Distrust · sad people th&#13;
revolution is joy. We are in ~ ~&#13;
literate e~ectric environment. No ~;e&#13;
need fit into a c~tegory to enjoy life.&#13;
Our new envuonment compel&#13;
~ommitment, participation. The exper:&#13;
is the man who stays put. I'd rather&#13;
have my country die for me.&#13;
If you think your're a Luddite&#13;
there's an easy way to find out. Make ~&#13;
poster which expresses an idea of yours.&#13;
On the poster, put the Luddite star and&#13;
write, "Luddite, official". Once y~u've&#13;
come this far, you have accepted many&#13;
of the precepts of Luddite. Place the&#13;
poster in a place where it will be&#13;
conspicuous.&#13;
Get Involved&#13;
The Education Advisory Committee&#13;
is looking for students who would ht&#13;
interested in meeting with and&#13;
interviewing prospective Education&#13;
Division faculty members. This is your&#13;
chance to participate in the faculty&#13;
hiring process. Students who wish to&#13;
participate should contact:&#13;
James Dean· English&#13;
Wayne Johnson . Philosophy&#13;
Steve Stephens - Physical Education&#13;
Homer Knight - Chemistry&#13;
Donald Piele - Mathematics&#13;
John Campbell - Geography&#13;
Marilyn Scamman - Education&#13;
William J. Murin. Political Science &#13;
library learning Cent p&#13;
, er rogresses&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
James Galbraith, the Director of&#13;
Planning and Construction, recently sat&#13;
downwith a NEWSCOPE reporter and&#13;
discussedhisjob and the past and future&#13;
development of Parkside as he foresees&#13;
il.He told NEWSCOPE, "When the&#13;
campus was orig.inal~y selected, a freeze&#13;
waS put on zomng 10 an. area one mile&#13;
around the proposed sight. Working&#13;
with the communities of Somers and&#13;
Kenosha,we indicated to them how we&#13;
would like to see the surrounding'&#13;
oeighborhood.developed for utilization&#13;
of soil, unlities, and topography and&#13;
this coincided with the general plan of&#13;
thecommunity. For instance, south of&#13;
theactivitiesbiulding, we hope to see a&#13;
campus oriented commercial district."&#13;
Concerning the overall scope of the&#13;
programhe said, "In our Master Plan for&#13;
the campus we capitalized on the&#13;
beauty of the natural sight. Parking is&#13;
remote so as not to infringe on this.&#13;
Circulationis one of the first basics we&#13;
workedout and was firmly established&#13;
in theplan endorsed by the Regents.&#13;
"Our building program was first&#13;
submitted as a written specification&#13;
tailored to students and activities. Since&#13;
the program funs on a biennium, getting&#13;
thebuildingtook awhile.&#13;
Explaining the aims of the&#13;
commissionhe added, "It is the concern&#13;
of the building commission tha t we have&#13;
sensiblebuildings that are well designed&#13;
10 meet the needs of an academic&#13;
institution. Our elected officials&#13;
concentrated hard on how to get the&#13;
mostfrom our construction dollar."&#13;
Presently under construction is the&#13;
Ubr~ry. Learning Center. He explained&#13;
~ initial stages of planning, "For the&#13;
Ubrary Learning Center, the first&#13;
sessinnbegan in January of '69. The&#13;
buildingbill was heid up by normal red&#13;
tape and finally approved in late '69.&#13;
But in the meantime some planning&#13;
money waa released and we had the&#13;
architectsworking on the plans."&#13;
He continued, ''The Library Learning&#13;
Center was programmed in 1968 with&#13;
plans for 67-68 biennium but was axed&#13;
for lack of funds. In June of '69 the&#13;
forward planning began again and was&#13;
modtfiedto a projected cost of $6 1/2&#13;
milhonand 15 months completion time.&#13;
Governmental aid and red tape added&#13;
to the difficulties. "The center acheived&#13;
110. I priority for federal funds, ITitle&#13;
One grant from HEW. This meant we&#13;
~ another review agency to contend&#13;
WIthand so another three month delay&#13;
OCCUred, He said&#13;
Construction at library learning center site.&#13;
Action came in nid 1970, "We finally&#13;
got the all clear from the appropriate&#13;
s~ur~es and went ahead with the&#13;
bidding. These bids were opened on&#13;
:~~y 30, 1970. Contracts were awarded&#13;
General Construction&#13;
Nelson Inc. ofWisconsin$3,725,OOO.00&#13;
Plumbing .&#13;
Superior-Kuetemeyer269,440.00&#13;
Electrical Dave Speaker Company613,384.00&#13;
Elevator&#13;
Annor Elevator Co., Inc.IH ,784.00&#13;
Bookshelving&#13;
Estey Corporation79,026.00&#13;
Carpet&#13;
Ed Turnquist Co., Inc. 193,873.00&#13;
$5,830,307.00&#13;
Anticipated planning difficulties were&#13;
minimal, "We weren't held up too much&#13;
since the architect had just finished with&#13;
the final plans in June of 1970 after 16&#13;
months of work-which is par for the&#13;
course.&#13;
Construction finally began in&#13;
September of 1970. Then the rains&#13;
came-and winter, and the com laints&#13;
why couldn't we have bid it t~"e&#13;
months earlier:'&#13;
Future Psrkside students can look&#13;
.forward to improved fadliue:).&#13;
''Completion for the Library Learrung&#13;
Center is scheduled for September&#13;
1972. The Architect is Hellmuth. Obara&#13;
&amp; Kassabaum of S.. Louis. Fmal&#13;
construction cost is esumared Jt&#13;
57,759.583.00.&#13;
This facility provided full library :md&#13;
learning center space, study areas.&#13;
administration ofli c'ts. food service 3":3.&#13;
student affairs rooms and bookstores.&#13;
The central feature of this biutding is&#13;
"Main PlaL"C," a tri·lnel open are (hal&#13;
will serve as the campus ""ub" as other&#13;
facilities are connected to the east and&#13;
west.&#13;
NEXT WEEK:&#13;
Procedures and Future Pianmng&#13;
Congo Les Aspm (D-Wis.) will meet&#13;
informally with students from 1130&#13;
a.m. 10 I p.m. on Friday. M3r~h I:!. 10&#13;
the Parkside SlUdent Acti.t"'s Building&#13;
A HEAVY OU 0&#13;
125&#13;
AM·FMS'.~&#13;
Music:eem.r&#13;
Hen d .;I aood .ay 10cia&#13;
eceer _hat .Fdher lOUDer&#13;
IS like Pl,;ay .. r ord on 1M&#13;
Flwr I~5. P1.y the: I.1n\t&#13;
record on .lnolhtr makC'&#13;
Loren for the ddrer-C'f1C:c.&#13;
'-'Sp«~1I)' In lhe ~cry &amp;ow&#13;
and vet") hlCh rrcqll('nc~&#13;
A' ""lSh~, Jlmp/, IOIlItlb&#13;
}""" And the Fowr 12S&#13;
IS the firsl comptC'IC AM·&#13;
FM Srerec tUSIC (('"leI&#13;
to lou 011 Ircat od 111OtIndt.&#13;
SHand H•• r&#13;
FWMrS .. reol&#13;
I' alllll 0rtiIR&#13;
...... afK_&#13;
3215 6OtI. St.&#13;
6.5&amp;-1301&#13;
SPIOI&amp;L .IOLIIU&#13;
, ... Fan 1100•• '&#13;
BARDEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
(f~,&#13;
~---=-&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN and WOMEN&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
BOOKS - NOVELS&#13;
MON. and Fri.&#13;
9:30 a. rn. to 9:00 p. m.&#13;
TUES. rhru TH R .&#13;
9:30 a. m. to 5:30 p. m.&#13;
SAT. - 9:30 a. rn. to 5:30 p. rn.&#13;
SensuouS Woman by "J n&#13;
Everything You Always Wanled to&#13;
Know about Sex by Dr. Reuben&#13;
Love Story by Erich Segal&#13;
Inheritors by Harold Robins&#13;
French Lieutenant's Woman&#13;
by Jo~ Fowles cShip'r(Jhore&#13;
Slashy print pantop $8. SPORTS&#13;
Ball Four by Bouton&#13;
R.K NEWS AGENCY&#13;
Newspapers' Poperbacks • Magazines&#13;
5816 siXth Ave. &amp; Pershing Ploza&#13;
3&#13;
Library Learning Cent p · er rogresses&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
James Galbraith, the Director of&#13;
Planning and Construction, recently sat&#13;
down with a NEWSCOPE reporter and&#13;
discussed his job and the past and future&#13;
development of Parkside as he foresees&#13;
it.He told NEWSCOPE, "When the&#13;
ampus was orig~nall_y selected, a freeze&#13;
was put on zoning m an area one mile&#13;
around the prop~s~d sight. Working&#13;
with the communities of Somers and&#13;
Kenosha, we indicated to them how we&#13;
would like to see the surrounding ·&#13;
neighborho??. developed for utilization&#13;
of soil, ut1ht1es, and topography and&#13;
this coincided with the general plan of&#13;
the community. For instance, south of&#13;
the activities biulding, we hope to see a&#13;
ampus oriented commercial district."&#13;
Concerning the overall scope of the&#13;
program he said, "In our Master Plan for&#13;
the campus we capitalized on the&#13;
beauty of the natural sight. Parking is&#13;
remote so as not to infringe on this.&#13;
Circulation is one of the first basics we&#13;
worked out and was firmly established&#13;
in the plan endorsed by the Regents.&#13;
125&#13;
AM-FM St reo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
"Our building program was first&#13;
submitted as a written specification&#13;
tailored to students and activities. Since&#13;
the program runs on a biennium, getting&#13;
the building took awhile. Construction at library learning cmter ite.&#13;
Explaining the aims of the&#13;
ommission he added, "It is the concern&#13;
of the building commission that we have&#13;
sensible buildings that are well designed&#13;
to meet the needs of an academic&#13;
institution. Our elected officials&#13;
concentrated hard on how to get the&#13;
most from our construction dollar."&#13;
Presently under construction is the&#13;
Libr~ry. Learning Center. He explained&#13;
the mittal stages of planning "For the&#13;
Library Learning Center ' the first&#13;
session began in January ~f '69. The&#13;
building bill was held up by normal red&#13;
tape and finally approved in late '69.&#13;
But in the meantime some planning&#13;
money was released and we had the&#13;
architects working on the plans."&#13;
He continued, "The Library Learning&#13;
Center was programmed in 1968 with&#13;
plans for 67-68 biennium but was axed&#13;
for lack of funds. In June of '69 the&#13;
forw~rd planning began again and was&#13;
Ri?dtfied to a projected cost of $6 I /2&#13;
lllllhon and 15 months completion time.&#13;
Gover_nmental aid and red tape added&#13;
to the difficulties. "The center acheived&#13;
no. I priority for federal funds, l Title&#13;
One grant from HEW. This meant we&#13;
~d another review agency to contend&#13;
with and so another three month delay occured, He said&#13;
Action came in nid 1970, "We finally&#13;
got the all clear from the appropriate&#13;
s~un~es and went ahead with the&#13;
b1ddmg. These bids were opened on&#13;
July 30, 1970. Contracts were awarded&#13;
to: ·&#13;
General Construction&#13;
Nelson Inc. of Wisconsin$3,725,000.00&#13;
Plumbing&#13;
Superior-Kuetemeyer269 ,440.00&#13;
Electrical Dave Speaker Company6 l 3,3 4.00&#13;
Elevator&#13;
Armor Elevator Co., lnc.15 It ,784.00&#13;
Bookshelving&#13;
Estey Corporation79,026.00&#13;
Carpet&#13;
Ed Turnquist Co., Inc.193,873.00&#13;
$5,830,307.00&#13;
Anticipated planning difficulties were&#13;
minimal, "We weren't held up too mu h&#13;
since the architect had just finished with&#13;
the final plans in June of 1970 after 16&#13;
months of work- which is par for the&#13;
course.&#13;
Construction finally began in&#13;
September of 1970. Then the r in&#13;
came- and winter, and the com 1 int&#13;
/11/anagemenf&#13;
Can Pull You&#13;
Togetl,e,&#13;
BOOKS - NOVELS&#13;
Sensuous Woman by "J"&#13;
Everything You Always Wanted to&#13;
Know about Sex by Dr. Reuben&#13;
Love Story by Erich Segal&#13;
Inheritors by Harold Robins&#13;
French Lieutenant's Woman&#13;
by Jo~ Fowle&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
Ball Four by Bouton&#13;
R-K NEWS AGENCY&#13;
Newspape~s - Paperbacks · Magazines&#13;
5816 Sixth Ave. &amp; Pershing Pima&#13;
Procedure d Future Pl nm&#13;
SPICIAL IICLUDU&#13;
,, .. ,au !lCDllDS&#13;
BARDEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
LAT BT f ASH IONS&#13;
FOR MEN and WOMEN&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
10 . and Fri.&#13;
9:30 a. m. to :00 p. m.&#13;
T E . thru TH R .&#13;
9:30 a. m. to 5: 0 p. m.&#13;
AT. - 9:30 a. m. to - :30 p. m.&#13;
e)hip~hore&#13;
Slashy print pantop $8.&#13;
High-curve collar, arro ing into a shirt cut o pants&#13;
proportions. The print? Bold abs ractions on crisp&#13;
65 % Dacron polyester, 35 cotton. Sizes 30-38 &#13;
.;&#13;
DIAR Y OF A MAD HOUSEWIFE&#13;
cast&#13;
Richard Benjamin Jonathan Balser&#13;
Frank Langella ., George Prager&#13;
Carrie Snodgre Tina Balser&#13;
arne nodgre i young. married,&#13;
middle-class. en laved. neurotic, bored,&#13;
compartmentalized and very female in&#13;
thl\ him he I someone who i looking&#13;
fur wOlcthlO&amp; that will replace ideah m:&#13;
me thing un ported and impetuous so&#13;
'" mal , d' rover her y urh.&#13;
Al1 sh ha already stagnated mro a&#13;
hcu -wrfe who obeys a nondescript&#13;
cliche' ndden hu band that enjoys being&#13;
around b,g "names". Alcohol has&#13;
becorn the buzz nece ry for all of he'&#13;
life uppon sy terns to conunue&#13;
funcuonmg. he finally gets the theme&#13;
underway with an u urped love affail&#13;
with a p udo groory dry look write,&#13;
who e Impression is Lawrence&#13;
lIa"ey·llke.&#13;
fte, a photogrnphically impressi,e&#13;
I 'e scene and an equally well outlined&#13;
affim. she find out her younp, writer&#13;
doesn't really want her as a lo,e,. but&#13;
merely as an ornament on his&#13;
misdlre led Imagmary virility. . .she&#13;
discovers he is a homosexual.&#13;
on fronting him wilh the news she has&#13;
brought. he throws her out, showing&#13;
more of hi blistering neurosis.&#13;
She goes back home to he' lOy&#13;
hu band and ,milarly unbelie'table&#13;
"",Id,en and find lhem all aninute&#13;
agarn. II seem the old boy was out&#13;
get ling a lillie too. His affair turns out&#13;
to be an anticlimax as well, and he&#13;
praISes her for her being so&#13;
understanding. She says she is only&#13;
human. thinking to herself that a great&#13;
insight into life is in her possission, but&#13;
she won't let on to Mr. Machine that she&#13;
tOO had been on the balling boal.&#13;
Suddenly the scene changes. We find&#13;
our Carrie Snodgress-Mary Pickford&#13;
mentally cliff hanging with a&#13;
sensitivity group and everyone is calling&#13;
her a fool for what she had done. So,&#13;
the entire story turns out to be a&#13;
narrative confession. AU I could think&#13;
of was that it was certainly simple to&#13;
call what looks simple ...S.I.M.P.L.E.&#13;
ow. about the acting ...Something&#13;
tells me that our soft-husky voiced&#13;
young academy award nominee is a&#13;
character actor who has played her one&#13;
role. but Iwon't be sure until I've seen&#13;
more of her. She probably is a&#13;
interesting person in real life, but I&#13;
think that I have already met her&#13;
two-dimensionally.&#13;
The gUm's structure was most&#13;
innovative, reminiscent of Fellini's&#13;
earlier works- minimal social comment&#13;
with high character study and&#13;
naturalistic approach. This will remain&#13;
in my mind, one of the better films I've&#13;
seen this year because it left a kind of&#13;
afte,.imp,ession. Yes ...A dynamic film&#13;
even though I suspect we won't be&#13;
seeing mucn of Miss Snodgress around.&#13;
Richard Benjamin was his usual&#13;
reasonable self ...a good actOr.&#13;
No doubt, a couple of Academy&#13;
Awards will drop onto this film, a&#13;
definite competition for our popularity&#13;
laden "Love Story" oscars.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
Bridge Players&#13;
Parkside Open Pairs Invitational&#13;
Duplicate Bridge Tournament&#13;
(A.C.B.L. Supervised)&#13;
TOURNAMENT LIMITED TO&#13;
AREA STUDENTS, FACULTY &amp; STAFF&#13;
Saturday, March 13 -&#13;
2 p.m. starting time at&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
- Parkside Campus.&#13;
Sign up at your respective&#13;
student activity centers&#13;
before Wed., March 10.&#13;
LaFollette's course proposal .&#13;
four major objectives: mclUded&#13;
I. Understanding the . I .&#13;
b t&#13;
re aliO",L'&#13;
e w~en energy, populati ~up&#13;
pollution problems; on, and&#13;
2. Comprehension of chan .&#13;
eco-system which have res r:sd In the&#13;
man's inability or unwill~ e from&#13;
consider the future consequ:&#13;
ngness&#13;
to&#13;
actions. flees of his&#13;
3 .. Realization of the f&#13;
technology and life style e fects of&#13;
. s On 0&#13;
enYI.roilment and development of Ur&#13;
ability to relate man to th the&#13;
eco-system; e eotlIe&#13;
4. Understanding of the magn·t d I U e of·&#13;
the present problem and examination&#13;
the .possible alternative solutions t th°l&#13;
CrISIS. 0 e&#13;
.Ecology, and Its Inherant relation""&#13;
With economics and techn I '''l'&#13;
. . 0 ogy, are&#13;
Im~ortant In a. modern industrial&#13;
society. A course In ecology theref&#13;
fits well within the limitations o~&#13;
Parkside's industrial mission. 0&#13;
~~4~~~~'~$~_~~_·8~~~~.~~~~~.~~-~~~ •&#13;
Ecology Course Proposed&#13;
By LaFollette&#13;
Douglas LaFollette, Assistant&#13;
professor of Chemistry at Parkstde, has&#13;
subrui tted to the Division of SCle'nces a&#13;
proposal for a course entitled "'Ecology:&#13;
The Science of Survival." The three&#13;
credit course, if appro,ed, may be&#13;
taught next fall. . . .&#13;
For some time now, vanous petItI,::ms&#13;
have been circulated by students asking&#13;
for just such a course. No introductory&#13;
ecology courses have been offered at&#13;
Parkside although interest is great.&#13;
Since instructors are willing to teach&#13;
ecology courses, and since student&#13;
interest is high, it is unfortunate that no&#13;
ecology courses are offered. Students&#13;
interested in ecology as a major have&#13;
been forced to transfer to other&#13;
institutions or to major in other fields.&#13;
Dr. LaFollette'S course, if approved,&#13;
might in part offer an alternative&#13;
solution. His course would expose&#13;
students to the fundamentals of&#13;
ecology, or, as LaFollette puts it, "to&#13;
the fundamental population-resourcesenvironment&#13;
dilemma."&#13;
Student Teaching&#13;
Applications Available&#13;
by Keven McKay&#13;
The Parkside Director of Admissions,&#13;
John Elmo,e, is now accepting student&#13;
teaching applications, and internship&#13;
applications. In order to be eligible for&#13;
either program, a student must have a&#13;
minimum of 70 credits and should have&#13;
completed at least 2/3 of their major&#13;
and 2/3 of the education courses and&#13;
the related courses required for teacher&#13;
certification.&#13;
There are a limited number of&#13;
internships available throughout&#13;
Wisconsin and Illinois. The internship&#13;
satisfies .the student teaching&#13;
requirement and is for a full day, one&#13;
full semester. Interns are licenses by the&#13;
Wisconsin State Department of Public&#13;
Instruction and are paid $1,767 per&#13;
semester by their particular school&#13;
district.&#13;
Students not accepted for internship&#13;
would be placed in the student teaching&#13;
program. The student teaching program&#13;
offers more leeway in that a student has&#13;
more contro.l over the location, grade&#13;
level, and time. He is given a choice&#13;
between eight weeks, full days or&#13;
s!Xteen weeks half da s.&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE.&#13;
presents&#13;
IN CONCERT&#13;
BUDDY RICH&#13;
AND HIS BIG BAND&#13;
SA T., MARCH 20&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
Kenosha Tremper Aud.&#13;
Reserved Seat Tickets&#13;
$3.00 &amp; $2.00&#13;
Tax Included&#13;
Available now in Student&#13;
Acti'ities Office Talent Hall&#13;
Student Teaching or Internship i'&#13;
considered the most critical factor in&#13;
teacher preparation and student,&#13;
involved are given eight credits for the&#13;
program which may be in eithe' a public&#13;
or private school.&#13;
Students planning to file applicatiOlll&#13;
are urged to do so now by Elmore.&#13;
Further information is available at&#13;
admissions.&#13;
Constitution&#13;
Vote&#13;
This Week&#13;
\ The referendum lor ratification of the&#13;
Constitution will be held March 10 and 11&#13;
Polling places will be located at the maiO&#13;
entrances of each campus.&#13;
Polling places shall be open from 1:01&#13;
a.m. to 8:00 p.m. both Wednesday, MardI&#13;
10, and Thursday, March 11.&#13;
All UW·Parkside students are eligibielD&#13;
vote in this referendum, upon preseotatilll&#13;
of their current J.D. card.&#13;
This Constitution shall be eoosidlred&#13;
ratified, and is ratified, when approvedbJ&#13;
a simple majority of votes cast. '!be v«a&#13;
shall be by secret ballot.&#13;
~.&#13;
EXqUtsite French ~repe ~&#13;
delicately touched Wlth ettl bef&#13;
-erect French· roses (rernem de&#13;
those?) exquisite, han~ m~~.&#13;
French lace--satin f1b~&#13;
French crepe braid!lIl(. ~~ttle ..&#13;
by Llise, these gowns gran-&#13;
. all lengths: shirt, shortie or igOOr&#13;
nie, and there are some pe&#13;
sptc:- tbe&#13;
Llise creations are ideal ror&#13;
bride or would· make a welcQl'llI!&#13;
gift lor her. K..,ooII'&#13;
6207 • 22ndA"-&#13;
Phone' 652.26.1&#13;
DI RY OF A MAD HOUSEk'IFE&#13;
insight into life i in her po i ion, but&#13;
e w n 't let on to fr. fachine that she&#13;
too had been on the balling boat.&#13;
uddenly the . ene change . We find&#13;
our C3rrie nodgre -. fary Pickford&#13;
mentallr cliff hanging , with a&#13;
n iti it)' gr up 3nd everyone i calling&#13;
h r a fool for what she had done. So,&#13;
the entire tO!)' turn out to be a&#13;
narr tive onfe ion . All I could think&#13;
of " that it wa certainly simple to&#13;
all what loo· imple ... S.I.M.P.L.E .&#13;
• 'ow, bout the acting ... Something&#13;
me that our oft-husky voiced&#13;
young 1.: demy award nominee is a&#13;
h racter actor who ha played her one&#13;
role, but I won't be ure until I've seen&#13;
more of her She probably is a&#13;
intere ting per on m real life, but I&#13;
think that I have already met her&#13;
two-0imen ionally.&#13;
The gilm' structure was most&#13;
innovative, reminiscent of Fellini's&#13;
earlier works- minimal social comment&#13;
ith high character study and&#13;
naturalistic approach. This will remain&#13;
in my mind, one of the better films I've&#13;
seen this year because it left a kind of&#13;
after-impre ion. Yes ... A dynamic film&#13;
even though I suspect we won't be&#13;
eing mu :h of Miss Snodgress around.&#13;
Richard Benjamin was his usual&#13;
reasonable self...a good actor.&#13;
o doubt, a couple of Academy&#13;
Awards will drop onto this film, a&#13;
definite competition for our popularity&#13;
laden "Love Story' oscars.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
Bridge Players&#13;
Parkside Open Pairs Invitational&#13;
Duplicate Bridge Tournament&#13;
(A.C.B.L. Supervised)&#13;
TOURNAMENT LIMITED TO&#13;
AREA STUDENTS, FACULTY &amp; STAFF&#13;
Saturday, March 13&#13;
2 p.m. starting time at&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
- Parkside Campus.&#13;
Sign up at your respective&#13;
student activity centers&#13;
before Wed., March 10.&#13;
I&#13;
,. .. ,.. ... .. _ • .,, A --.. ·-o&#13;
Ecology Course Proposed&#13;
By LaFollette&#13;
Douglas Lafollette, A~sistant&#13;
Professor of Chemistry at Parks!de, has&#13;
submitted to the Division of Sciences a&#13;
proposal for a course entitled "Ecology:&#13;
The Science of Survival." The three&#13;
credit course, if approved, may be&#13;
taught next fall. . . . For some time now, vanous petltl~ms&#13;
have been circulated by students asking&#13;
for just such a course. No introductory&#13;
ecology courses have been offered at&#13;
Parkside although interest is great.&#13;
Since instructors are willing to teach&#13;
ecology courses, and since stud~nt&#13;
interest is high, it is unfortunate that no&#13;
ecology courses are offered. ~tudents&#13;
interested in ecology as a ma1or have&#13;
been forced to transfer to other&#13;
institutions or to major in other fields.&#13;
Dr. LaFollette's course, if approved,&#13;
might in part offer an alternative&#13;
solution. His course would expose&#13;
students to the fundamentals of&#13;
ecology, or, as Lafollette puts it, "to&#13;
the fundamental population-resourcesenvironment&#13;
dilemma."&#13;
LaFollette's course propos 1. four major objectives: a mc]uded&#13;
1. Understanding the 1 . b t re a !JonoL, e ween energy popul r "'up&#13;
pollution problems;' a ion, and&#13;
2. Comprehension of chan e .&#13;
eco-system which have res ft~ tn the&#13;
man's inability or unwiJI~ e from&#13;
consider the future consequ:°gness to&#13;
actions; nces of his&#13;
3. · Realization of the rn&#13;
technology and life style e ects of&#13;
enviro11ment and developmes ton our b·1· n of th a i ity to relate man to th . e&#13;
eco-system; e entire&#13;
4. Understanding of the magn·t d 1 u e of·&#13;
the pres~nt problem and examination&#13;
th~ _possible alternative solutions t tho{&#13;
cns1s. o e&#13;
. Ecology, an_d its inherant relationslu&#13;
with economics and technol P&#13;
. t t . ogy, are&#13;
impor an m a modern indust al . t A · n soc1e y. c~mz:se m ecology therefore&#13;
fits ~e\l . w1thm_ the limitations f&#13;
Parkside s mdustnal mission. 0&#13;
Student Teaching&#13;
Applications Available&#13;
by Keven McKay&#13;
The Parkside Director of Admissions,&#13;
John Elmore, is now accepting student&#13;
teaching applications, and internship&#13;
applications. In order to be eligible for&#13;
either program, a student must have a&#13;
minimum of 70 credits and should have&#13;
completed at least 2/3 of their major&#13;
and 2/3 of the education courses and&#13;
the related courses required for teacher&#13;
certification.&#13;
There are a limited number of&#13;
internships available throughout&#13;
Wisconsin and Illinois. The internship&#13;
satisfies .the student teaching&#13;
requirement and is for a full day, one&#13;
full semester. Interns are licenses by the&#13;
Wisconsin State Department of Public&#13;
Instruction and are paid $1,767 per&#13;
semester by their particular school&#13;
district.&#13;
Students not a_ccepted for internship&#13;
would be placed m the student teaching&#13;
program. The student teaching program&#13;
offers more leeway in that a student has&#13;
more contro_l over the location, grade&#13;
level, and time. He is given a choice&#13;
b_etween eight weeks, full days or&#13;
sixteen weeks half da s.&#13;
presents.&#13;
IN CONCERT&#13;
BUDDY RICH&#13;
AND HIS BIG BAND&#13;
SAT., MARCH 20&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
Kenosha Tremper Aud.&#13;
Reserved Seat Tickets&#13;
$3.00 &amp; $2.00&#13;
T ox Included&#13;
Available now in Student&#13;
Activities Office Talent Holl&#13;
St~dent Teaching or Internship u&#13;
considered the most critical factor in&#13;
teacher preparation and students&#13;
involved _are given eight credits for the&#13;
program which may be in either a pubbc&#13;
or private school.&#13;
Students planning to file applications are urged to do so now by Elmore.&#13;
Further information is available at&#13;
admissions.&#13;
Constitution&#13;
Vote&#13;
This Week&#13;
The referendum for ratification of the&#13;
Constitution will be held March 10 and 11&#13;
• Polling places will be located at the main&#13;
entrances of each campus.&#13;
Polling places shall be open from 9:&#13;
a.m. to 8:00 p.m. both Wednesday, Marcil&#13;
10, and Thursday, March 11.&#13;
All UW-Parkside students are eligible lo&#13;
vote in this referendum, upon presentatir.cl&#13;
of their current I.D. card.&#13;
This Constitution shall be considered&#13;
ratified, and is ratified, when approved by&#13;
a simple majority of votes cast. The rotes&#13;
shall be by secret ballot.&#13;
Ex~isite French ~repe g~&#13;
delicately touched with erobr t,er&#13;
ered French roses (reroelll de&#13;
those?) exquisite, band ma&#13;
Fr enc b lace--satin ribbOns··&#13;
French crepe braidilllt. D~~~ by Llise, these gowns c an·&#13;
all lengths: shirt, sbortie or f gnor&#13;
nie, and there are some pe&#13;
sptc&#13;
Llise creations are ideal for e&#13;
bride or would make a welco!TI&#13;
gift for hP.r. l(enc»"° 6207 ~ 22nd Avenue&#13;
Phone: 652-2681 &#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
I nlUredinto McDonald's Drive-In&#13;
veuth Sheridan Road to see for&#13;
'" ~ why this fried·food wonderland lI1Yj\ecome so well entrenched in the&#13;
bomachsof so many Americans. _&#13;
51 One of the first reasons for their&#13;
ularity at this specific McDonald's&#13;
chise is the high rate of efficiency&#13;
r the e~ployees. People will travel· off&#13;
beatenpath, or to the other side of&#13;
wn if they can depend of fast, clean,&#13;
ndlyservice.It is neglected at many&#13;
ting establishments, reducing the&#13;
useess to the minority of customers&#13;
ho haveabsolutely no time barriers.&#13;
I wasalso impressed when 1learned&#13;
lhat the management stands firmly&#13;
ind their products, If the customer&#13;
eelsthat anything. he buys is not up to&#13;
uff his hamburgers, or whatever, will&#13;
r'aedtss c'&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
The 60's saw the demise of many&#13;
American musical institutions; The&#13;
Lucky Strike Hit Parade, Eddie Fischer,&#13;
Name That Tune, Snooky Lanson and&#13;
Ricky Ricardo. However, I find it&#13;
difficultto believe that the loss of these&#13;
was of any serious consequence to&#13;
musicas an art form. In fact, it makes&#13;
me believe that there still is some justice&#13;
~fl in this world. Unfortunately, the&#13;
60'scame frighteningly close to putting&#13;
In end to something decent and good,&#13;
.In· ·end which would have left this&#13;
country without a musical form&#13;
completelyits own. It almost killed&#13;
Americanjazz.&#13;
But dry your tears America, today&#13;
jazz is alive and well living in your juke&#13;
boxes, night clubs and even at the&#13;
Fill~ores, Just exactly who gets the&#13;
creditfor rushing in with the miracle&#13;
ttru~, I couldn't say. It was, I suppose,&#13;
• snople awakening of the musical&#13;
cultu.e to what it had forgotten. A&#13;
abostfrom the past came back to rattle&#13;
Itsehainsand demand its due credit for&#13;
whatAmericawas listening to.&#13;
~~terviews with the currect rock stars&#13;
~ .. n revealing people like Monk and&#13;
Budas the reasons behind it all. BS&amp;T&#13;
explodedwith a popular sound, b_ut a&#13;
!&lt;lUndadmittedly based on the ideas of&#13;
men like Gil Evans and Maynard&#13;
Furgllson.As the echoes of the Blue&#13;
Cheerand Vanilla Fudge began to fade,&#13;
:: lynclSm of Miles Davis began to be&#13;
ard. Pretty soon the money men&#13;
teed backward and found something&#13;
t could satisfy the newly acquired&#13;
~Il~ctual ta!ltes of a large section of&#13;
l.._ encan people. Jazz was welcomed lIume. .&#13;
However, it wasn't exactly a full&#13;
an aesarewel e e&#13;
ser;ed'dto insure equal proportions&#13;
or ered a fish sandwich t: ~~:te~ sa,ro'~re~~~~rliesM'and ::h~P ~f&#13;
h bii . awe ad a&#13;
am urger, (she ate my french fries b&#13;
contmually distracting me) and a smar;&#13;
Coke. Neither of us could lod e a&#13;
legitunate .complaint about the fO;d or&#13;
the service. Ithought that the grill man&#13;
got a little heavy with the ketch b that was all. up, ut&#13;
Suggestive selling by the employees is&#13;
ver~ mteresting and also effective I&#13;
not1ce~ th,at most individuals come U;to&#13;
the drive-in not knowing exactly what&#13;
the~want, u!11e~s.they are ordering for a&#13;
family. The individual will, for example,&#13;
decide that he wants "a hamburger fries&#13;
and a Coke." The alert employe; will&#13;
then ask "is that a large french&#13;
fries.sir?" or "will that be a large Coke&#13;
, ?" These uut ' rna am: ese quick suggestions may&#13;
result tn the maximum size and those&#13;
pennies, nickels, and dimes 'do add up.&#13;
The few things that bother me about&#13;
the McDonald's chain don't really&#13;
amount to much. One is the obvious ego&#13;
trip they are on when they boldiy state&#13;
that there have been "billions and&#13;
billions" of their hamburgers sold to the&#13;
public. I remind myself that the&#13;
American public isn't always right with&#13;
~ass decisions of any kind. In this&#13;
recovery. For one thing we haven't&#13;
gotten back a lot of our expatriated&#13;
talent that left for Europe where they&#13;
were ap.E.reciated, and probably never&#13;
will. (WhO could blame them for&#13;
staying?) Secondly, during the&#13;
depression of the 60's there were a lot&#13;
of fme things recorded that for the most&#13;
part were left of the shelves. Whiclt&#13;
brin~s me to .the. p.m.nt of this -,yhole&#13;
article. My purpose is or should, be to&#13;
let you know 0'[ good records to listen&#13;
to. So, as far as these forgotten albums&#13;
to, here are a few tQ look for.&#13;
Miles Davis:&#13;
"In a Silent Way"&#13;
"Seven Steps to He(1l1enIt&#13;
"Kind of Blue"&#13;
Terry Gibbs "Explosion" .&#13;
Maynard Furgeson -Any of his&#13;
annual albums, Maynard '61; Maynard&#13;
&lt;62,etc. h "&#13;
Modern Jazz QuaTtet- "Light ouse&#13;
If you're really not up to looking for&#13;
any of these older cuts, there is also a&#13;
fme group of new releases readily&#13;
available: . "s· Les McAnn and Eddie Harns- WISS&#13;
Movement"&#13;
Thad Jones and Mel&#13;
Lewis- "Consummation"&#13;
Tim Buckley-"Starsailor" .&#13;
Charles Uoyd- "Charles Lloyd J1I the&#13;
. Soviet Union OJ ..&#13;
Wayne Marsh-"NE PLUS ULTRA&#13;
Irene Reid-"The World Needs What I&#13;
NeC~;ford Brown-"The Clifford Brown&#13;
Quartet in Paris"&#13;
Phil Woods- "Phil Woods and his&#13;
European Rhythm Machine al the&#13;
Montreax Jazz,Festival"&#13;
. c .ona s a vert ISing IS&#13;
mterestmg as their food. I think tIley'&#13;
kept up a fine tradition of Ippt&gt;ling I&#13;
the family, and the hardhat. Promouo&#13;
thai come to my mmd include&#13;
television ad that states an mdlvidu&#13;
wiU receive a meal, and change from&#13;
dollar.&#13;
The McDonald's people also jumped&#13;
on the patriotic bandwagon awhJ&#13;
back, along with such notable a&#13;
"Reader's Digest", when the) gave '\loa&#13;
stick 'em yourself Old Clones, A lund&#13;
nag to put in your window, ....a th&#13;
reward for eating a meal at 'kDonJld's&#13;
Recently the employee wore lriangl&#13;
hats to mark rhe arrival of cherry shake&#13;
and George Washington's birthday ;n,&#13;
cherry shakes were obviousl&#13;
descendents of that famous tree George&#13;
never chopped down.&#13;
All this just shows rhat the bu ne&#13;
of selling hamburgers In thIS country ,&#13;
booming, as all the dnve-ins stnve fo&#13;
super burgers, the sky is the limit&#13;
Psychology is used on the customer&#13;
even in ordering, coupled with the USlJ&#13;
advertising. Even with these: draw backs&#13;
drive-ins are still the places to get a fas&#13;
bite to eat, although the quality "aries.&#13;
As for McDonald's on South Slterida&#13;
Road, I think back to those f,ee nags&#13;
and tell you thaI the only real choic&#13;
involving their hamburge" and otllt&#13;
goods is that you can ei!her love 'em 0&#13;
v '&#13;
Faculty&#13;
Nominations&#13;
Wanted&#13;
A toral of $2,000 in leaching "' ....ds&#13;
($ 1,000 presented by Srandard Oil&#13;
Company and $ 1,000 by the Johnson&#13;
Foundation) will be made this spring.&#13;
For this, the awards commiuee&#13;
desires student nominal ions with a&#13;
statement of supporting evidence for&#13;
the nomination, not to exceed a page in&#13;
length. The letters of SUppall should&#13;
emphasize teaching effecu",eness and&#13;
success, and how the professor&#13;
contributed to the student's learning&#13;
experience.&#13;
The awards are not meanl to be J&#13;
"popularity contest" based on the&#13;
charisma of instruclOrs.&#13;
ext week nomination forms will be&#13;
available to students in lhe three&#13;
student affairs offIces, In the libra'},&#13;
and in divisional offices. AU&#13;
nominations must be corned in b&#13;
Monday, April 5 at.&#13;
Student AffaIrS offIces m Tallen. full.&#13;
Racine, Kenosha. or in the HumaniUt'S&#13;
Division office. 210 Greenqui IThe&#13;
nomlllallon WIll be ...·aluated&#13;
and tabulated and the award selecllon&#13;
made by a committee of twehe which&#13;
includes six faculty members and &lt;i&#13;
student representh'es. Profe r Herbert&#13;
Kubly is chairman&#13;
HUXHOLO'S&#13;
COUNTRY STORE&#13;
SO. Green Ba) Rd,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
634-9 16&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
MoadI . Nard&gt; " 1'71PeS&#13;
For&#13;
Rtstn:ations&#13;
Phont&#13;
69-HJ455&#13;
{Ray {Radigan;&#13;
OJ)cmkr!ul 9ood&#13;
.., -&#13;
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
............... " ,., ,&#13;
ART and CRAFT&#13;
MART&#13;
5811 6th An, Kenosha&#13;
ART SUPPLIES&#13;
AND HANDICRAFT&#13;
~ SUi&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 ..... till 11 p ••• 7 d.y.&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phon. 657-9747&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
Students let red c.,pel '1lvlce&#13;
(SO does evelyone ehl'.&#13;
Uf'~~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/a-r Sia _&#13;
eoee 409l AVf.&#13;
KlON06HA - Ol.T-lJ174&#13;
Fruit Basket&#13;
Corsage&#13;
Candy&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
-----&#13;
YOUR COMPLETE "ON CAMPUS" BOOK &amp; SUPPLY CENTER&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
COMING SOON&#13;
ANNUAL SPRING&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
walch lor il&#13;
lOc OFF&#13;
On Any Order Of&#13;
BEll'S FRIED&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
with this coupon&#13;
Good Wed., March 3&#13;
Ibru Tues., March 16&#13;
7601 Sheridon Rd.&#13;
........~....,&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
lured into McDonald's Drive-In&#13;
I ven . R d f S uth Shendan oa to see or&#13;
11 why this fried-food wonderland&#13;
m}d become so well entre~ched in the&#13;
tlomachs of so many Americans.&#13;
Jt One of the first reasons for their&#13;
ularity at this specific McDonald's • p ·hise is the high rate of efficiency f~e e~ployees. People will travel- off&#13;
e beaten path, or to the other side of&#13;
own if they can depend of fast, clean,&#13;
·iendly service. It is neglected at many&#13;
1 ting establishments, reducing the&#13;
usmess to the minority of customers&#13;
who have absolutely no time barriers.&#13;
I was also impressed when I learned&#13;
that the management stands firmly&#13;
hind their products: If the customer&#13;
ieel that any~hing he buys is not up to&#13;
uff, his hamburgers, or whatever, will&#13;
r a ed t s s c ·&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
The 60's saw the demise of many&#13;
American musical institutions; The&#13;
Lucky Strike Hit Parade, Eddie Fischer,&#13;
'ame That Tune, Snooky Lanson and&#13;
Ricky Ricardo. However, I fmd it&#13;
difficult to believe that the loss of these&#13;
wa of any serious consequence to&#13;
music as an art form. In fact, it makes&#13;
me believe that there still is some justice&#13;
left in this world. Unfortunately, the&#13;
60's came frighteningly close to putting&#13;
an end to something decent and good,&#13;
.an· -end which would have left this&#13;
country without a musical form&#13;
completely its own. It almost killed&#13;
American jazz.&#13;
But dry your tears America, today&#13;
Jazz is alive and well living in your juke&#13;
boJte , night clubs and even at the&#13;
Fillmores. Just exactly who gets the&#13;
credit for rushing in with the miracle&#13;
terum, I couldn't say. It was, I suppose,&#13;
a imple awakening of the musical&#13;
cultu,e to what it had forgotten. A&#13;
gho t from the past came back to rattle&#13;
Its chains and demand its due credit for&#13;
what America was listening to.&#13;
Interviews with the currect rock stars&#13;
began revealing people like Monk and&#13;
Btrd a the reasons behind it all. BS&amp;T&#13;
exploded with a popular sound, b_µt a&#13;
nd admittedly based on the ideas of&#13;
men like Gil Evans and Maynard&#13;
furgu on. As the echoes of the Blue&#13;
Oieer ~? Vanilla Fudge began to fade,&#13;
:e lync1 m of Miles Davis began to be&#13;
ard, Pretty soon the money men&#13;
tnced backward and found something&#13;
I could satisfy the newly acquired&#13;
:llectual 4'i39tes of a large section of&#13;
h encan people. Jazz was welcomed&#13;
ome. ·&#13;
~&#13;
However, it wasn't exactly a full&#13;
served t · I o, do ir:isure equal proportions.&#13;
tartar r ere a fish sandwich with no&#13;
n sa.rse, french fries, and a cup of&#13;
co ee. or a nickel. Maggie had a&#13;
ham?urger, (~e ate my french fries b&#13;
~ontmuall)'. distracting me) and a ma~&#13;
o~~- Neither of us could lod e a&#13;
leg1ttma~e complaint about the fo;d or&#13;
the sei:i1ce. I thought that the grill man&#13;
ghot a ltttle heavy with the ketchup but&#13;
t at was all. ·&#13;
Sug~estive selling by the employee i&#13;
ve11: interesting and also effective. I&#13;
notice~ th_at most individual come into&#13;
the dnve-m not knowing exactly what&#13;
the)'. want, u?le~-they are ordering for a&#13;
fam_ily. The md1v1dual will, for example,&#13;
decide that he wants "a hamburger fries&#13;
and a Coke." The alert employe; will&#13;
then ask "is that a large french&#13;
fries,sir?" or "will that be a large Coke&#13;
ma 'am?" These quick suggestions ma):&#13;
result m the maximum size and those&#13;
pennies, nickels, and dimes 'do add up.&#13;
The few things that bother me about&#13;
the McDonald's chain don't really&#13;
amount to much. One is the obviou ego&#13;
trip they are on when they boldly state&#13;
that there have been "billion and&#13;
billions" of their hamburgers old to the&#13;
public. I remind myself that the&#13;
American public isn't always right with&#13;
mass decisions of any kind. In thi&#13;
recovery. For one thing we haven't&#13;
gotten back a lot of our expatriated&#13;
talent that left for Europe where they&#13;
were ap_ereciated, and probably never&#13;
will. lWho could blame them for&#13;
staying?) Secondly , during the&#13;
depression of the 60's there were a lot&#13;
of fine things recorded that for the m t&#13;
part were left of the shelves. Which&#13;
brin~s me to the point of thi 'Yhole&#13;
article. M:y purpose is or should be to&#13;
let you know oi good records to listen&#13;
to. So, as far as these forgotten album&#13;
to, here are a few tq look for.&#13;
Miles Davis:&#13;
"In a Silent Way"&#13;
"Seven Steps to Heaven"&#13;
"Kind of Blue"&#13;
Terry Gibbs"Explosion"&#13;
Maynard Of hi Furge on - Any&#13;
annual albums, Maynard '61 : faynard&#13;
'62, etc. 1 .. Modern Jazz Quartet- "Light ,ou e&#13;
If you're really not up to loo~ng for&#13;
any of these older cut • there I al . 8&#13;
fine group of new releases readily&#13;
available:&#13;
Les McAnn and Eddie Harri "Sw1s&#13;
Movement"&#13;
Thad Jones and Mel&#13;
Lewis- "Consummation"&#13;
Tim Buckley- "Starsailor" . Charles Uoyd- "Charles Lloyd m the&#13;
. Soviet Union" " U.S ULTRA .. Wayne Marsh- 'E PL&#13;
Irene Reid- "The World eed What I&#13;
Ne~~;ford Brown-"The Gifford Brown&#13;
Quartet in Paris"&#13;
Phil Woods- "Phil Wo~s and his&#13;
European Rhythm Machine at the&#13;
Montreax Jazz Festival"&#13;
YOUR COMPLETE "ON CAMPUS" BOOK &amp; SUPPLY CENTER&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
COMING SOON&#13;
ANNUAL SPRING&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
watch for it&#13;
Facu&#13;
omin&#13;
-Want d&#13;
0&#13;
HUXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY STORE&#13;
So. Gre 11 Ba Rd.&#13;
Keno hu&#13;
634--9 16&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
10c OFF&#13;
On Any Order Of&#13;
BELL'S FRIED&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
is c.oopon&#13;
arch 3&#13;
thru Tues., arch 16&#13;
7601&#13;
A ..&#13;
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
ART and CRAFT&#13;
MART&#13;
11 6th i ..&#13;
5&#13;
ART SUPPLIES&#13;
AND HANDICRAFT&#13;
~&#13;
.&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60 St.&#13;
6 o. . ill 11 p. . 1 cloys&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
P one 657-97 7&#13;
Bank&#13;
Elm&#13;
f&#13;
,,&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses &#13;
things. \ lit a cigarette in defia&#13;
seeming monopoly and befonce.of th4.&#13;
out he had told her that he re 1\ WOnt&#13;
to read the others in the gro:oUld ha..&#13;
if she wanted to know mor/ andthat&#13;
the remainder of her questions :::d ha..&#13;
she could arrange an appoint ....ered&#13;
him. ment 'Oith&#13;
When he had finished he a&#13;
person to estimate the accuraskedeacIl&#13;
disclosures. cy of his&#13;
. Her answer to this quest"&#13;
"About 85%." IOn Was,&#13;
To the next person in the .&#13;
said, "\ see that you are a n~fcle he&#13;
motorcycles. . . you also drink ~t&#13;
fish. \ see that in the near fut ike I&#13;
will have an accident with a mo~reYOll&#13;
much like the one you had abo~tCYcJe&#13;
years ago when you bruised you 1 ITto&#13;
a country road. This time you ~ egOIl&#13;
careful because it is worse 'f e more&#13;
f 1&#13;
'11 ... 1 you·-&#13;
care u you get by this crisis " ..."&#13;
accuracy estimation was, "eighty'.fl' ilk&#13;
ninety per cent:' lVeto&#13;
"Good, I'm starting to tune int&#13;
vibrations." 0 YOUr&#13;
He continued around the r&#13;
telhng each person eight or nine "'fl'&#13;
incidents or characteristics Whi:~~&#13;
they would know. He told them ~&#13;
date and even the time of da&#13;
incidents happened and each y the&#13;
. responded with the same excl':t~'"&#13;
of their amazement. I0OI&#13;
As the readings approached me 1&#13;
began to feel that Norman was indeed&#13;
telling things which, regardlessof what&#13;
I'd like. to believe, were unknowlb~&#13;
except If someone had an insidelinet&#13;
the person's thoughts. 0&#13;
He came to me and rattled off&#13;
disclosures from my past that 1hadto&#13;
thlOk .to remember and had touched&#13;
upon my future bofme movingon to&#13;
the next person. I weakly announced&#13;
that he had been ninety five percent&#13;
correct.&#13;
It seemed a matter of cornman fact&#13;
when he said, to the next in line,"J.&#13;
that someone close to you has diedof&#13;
liver problems and I see someone close&#13;
to you is also suffering from this.....&#13;
When Norman had finished, themao&#13;
being read replied, ''Yes, my fatherdied&#13;
a month ago from a liver allinentII1II&#13;
my mother is in the hospital with tho&#13;
same thing."&#13;
Everything after that wu a&#13;
anti-climax up to and includilll tile&#13;
comment by the last man in the 1lDI,&#13;
"Stop! You're too accurate."&#13;
When he had finished with tho&#13;
readings he looked exhaused andaW4&#13;
for a glass of water.&#13;
It was then a young girl asked,"What&#13;
do you expect as repayment for your&#13;
services?"&#13;
"I only ask that you say a prayerfor&#13;
me ... that's enougll."&#13;
At the end \ was ready lD beIifII&#13;
anything.&#13;
SEWSCOPE Monday. March 8, 1971 (Continued from Page 1) page 6&#13;
there before and that it's all familiar."&#13;
"Yes this is not unusual, as a matter&#13;
of fact it happens to most people about&#13;
twenty times a year. It is defimtely&#13;
linked with E.S.P. but because most&#13;
eople never develop their gifts in this&#13;
~rea they choose to ignore it when this .&#13;
happens. I believe very much th~t&#13;
everyone has a gift in E.S.P. but that It&#13;
has to be cultivated in order to be&#13;
used."· .&#13;
Norman looked up at the circle of&#13;
people waiting for the next questIOn.&#13;
For a'moment no question came but&#13;
then an older woman, dressed as a&#13;
waitress, asked, "Where does this gift&#13;
come from?" ~&#13;
"This gift is god-given. but it must be&#13;
cultivated. You see, man only used&#13;
about ten percent of his mind, but&#13;
through E.S.P. he can use up to eighty&#13;
percent of it. I've been able to develop&#13;
my memory so that all \ have to do is&#13;
close my eyes and think about&#13;
something and the answer shoots across&#13;
a screen like a movie. I can see the&#13;
words. But this ali has to be developed."&#13;
"You said when I came in that my&#13;
aura was light blue. Could you tell m e&#13;
about this," the waitress asked.&#13;
AU faces turned expectantly because&#13;
everyone had been told they had a&#13;
distinct aura.&#13;
H is curious what attracts a person's&#13;
attention. To be told something of&#13;
yourself is undoubtedly more&#13;
interesting than a lecture in Greenquist&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Norman began to explain her aura, "I&#13;
see that there is someone very close to&#13;
you who has had an illness recently in&#13;
the area of the heart; near th~ right&#13;
ventricle.&#13;
As he paused, the woman blurted&#13;
Qut, "That's right, my .... "&#13;
"Don't tell me, you don't say&#13;
anything. When ]'Ou're with a psychic&#13;
never say anything about yourself unless&#13;
you want to hear them tell you what&#13;
you told them. \ don't mean to be rude&#13;
or anything, it's just that I'm the&#13;
psychic ... Iet me teU you.&#13;
"I see:' he continued, "that you .have&#13;
a ring which means a great deal. to&#13;
someone very near to you. She is&#13;
constantly taking it and this sort of&#13;
thing ... \ see that there was a fire in the&#13;
past that did a lot of damage to a&#13;
building owned by someone you know&#13;
well, Isee also that someone was injured&#13;
in the fire."&#13;
He continued reading her while the&#13;
rest of us waited a~iously for our tur-n.&#13;
The waitress interrupted Nonnan several&#13;
times exclaiming "Right, \ was .. ." but&#13;
Norman stopped her short each time of&#13;
teIling her past.&#13;
It seemed as.if he would never fInish&#13;
reading her as he kept on "seeing"&#13;
(Continued from Page n&#13;
90"1 of the campus was indifferent to&#13;
bother me. Nothing hke 'hat happened.&#13;
It's 'he kind of wound' you ger Within.&#13;
The kind of things you couldn't keep&#13;
enduring. There was no one to talk to."&#13;
He is working now with Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger in hope of strengthening&#13;
rhe program so thai the poor&#13;
preparauon and the experiences he fell&#13;
won't happen again.&#13;
.onh Carohna Central Universuy has&#13;
an enrollment about the size of&#13;
Park 'de's. Krausse says 'he chool is a&#13;
vicum of the double tandard 'hat sull&#13;
applies '0 black and white schools in the&#13;
urh ubsequently the school is short&#13;
of funds nd is at a disadvantage in&#13;
h apmg on bla k people for the past&#13;
400 year&#13;
"People who know about the&#13;
program tel! me I really had a head start&#13;
over people who had gone previously,"&#13;
he aid "I broke through the race&#13;
barrier 10 my d rm During the eight&#13;
day' I wa 'here Italked with tudents&#13;
In 'he dorm four nIght&lt; We weren't&#13;
really friends, but at least it was a&#13;
foothold.&#13;
"It's strange, but , found that the&#13;
other three white guys at the sch~ol&#13;
avoided me more than black people did.&#13;
There was one white guy who didn't&#13;
like me because Iwas from the North!&#13;
It makes it really tough. You get&#13;
depressed about things like that:'&#13;
"There was probably 5% who wanted&#13;
me to stay and 5% who didn't. And&#13;
they let me know about it too. For&#13;
example:' he said, "if' sat at a lunch&#13;
table and there were four guys sitting at&#13;
the end of it, the four would get up and&#13;
move to another table. But none of&#13;
these hassles really endangered me in&#13;
any way:' .&#13;
"1 wasn't hassled that much," he said.&#13;
"To be really truthful l wish I had stuck&#13;
it our. Ilearned more in one week than&#13;
Ilearned in the past two years about the&#13;
black man in America.&#13;
"'Bul 10 leave was a foolish decision,"&#13;
he said, ""hink now 1 could have made&#13;
ia. It's funnY bUI I miss it."&#13;
UW PABKSIDE&#13;
FI.tlrl Film Sirles&#13;
PRESENTS:&#13;
.... Z••• TH&#13;
... V....&#13;
•• CH.R.&#13;
Bu.a •••&#13;
tN fRtlIUT LlHMAWS PROOUCT1OflI&#13;
0# fOWARO AlRFS .F..... "B._DF&#13;
VlRa ••••&#13;
"UULF' •&#13;
...~&#13;
ORGE SEGAL' $AHOY DENNIS Ow.- lOr ..u! NICHOLS PRf5eNTED BY WARNER BROS.&#13;
Friday, March 12&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
ACTIVITI ES BUILDIN G&#13;
Admission 1SC'&#13;
1/&#13;
Is&#13;
Where It Is At! BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS&#13;
....... LI K E . •• the brands youknow&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000Albums&#13;
and 45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, nol yrJJ'&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, rJJ'&#13;
Department Manager, who is a pa,ksl~&#13;
.....-:::::::::::,.student and will talk your language, bOlh,n&#13;
eqUipment purchases, records and moneY·&#13;
~~~:::::J&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30 •&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Btat .. 5_11 .. 800"""'"&#13;
.....&#13;
F.... ck ,,_ « Onl Rift' •&#13;
.. Potofo $al ...&#13;
an"&#13;
Schoono' .. '0"10" GI... of 8 .. ,&#13;
H'PPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday 1 p.m. to 8&#13;
PITCHEI.S $1.00 GLASS 20e&#13;
A".lIoW. ,. P... Io•&#13;
...cl...... '-lif ... SoNrltjP... Io.&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
,,,, BRAT-STOP&#13;
.........e-~__H .......&#13;
p.m.&#13;
p e :-.E\\&#13;
(Continued from Page l )&#13;
.&#13;
really friends, but at least it was a&#13;
foothold.&#13;
"It's trange. but I found that the&#13;
other three white guys at the sch&lt;?ol&#13;
avoided me more than black people did.&#13;
There wa one white guy who didn't&#13;
Ii e me because I was from the North!&#13;
It make it really tough. You get&#13;
depre sed about things like that."&#13;
"There wa probably 5% who wanted&#13;
me to tay and s~ who didn't. And&#13;
they let me know about it too. For&#13;
e ample," he said, "if I sat at a lunch&#13;
table and there were four guys sitting at&#13;
the end of it, the four would get up and&#13;
move to another table. But none of&#13;
the ha le really endangered me in&#13;
ny w y." .&#13;
"I wa n 't ha sled that much," he said.&#13;
"To be re lly truthful I wish I had stuck&#13;
11 out. I learned more in one week than&#13;
I learned in the pa t two years about the&#13;
bl · man in America.&#13;
··sut to leave was a foolish decision,"&#13;
he 1d . ··1 think now I could have made&#13;
it. It' funnv but I mi it."&#13;
UW PARKSIDE&#13;
F ature Film Series&#13;
PRESENTS:&#13;
EILIZaBETH&#13;
.. AYLOR&#13;
RICHIIIAD&#13;
BUNTDN&#13;
H fR UT U!HMAKS PftOOUCTION&#13;
0, fOWARD AJ.Uf'S&#13;
WND&#13;
IIFAIIIID DF&#13;
VIRCINIIII&#13;
WDDLF,&#13;
EORGE SEGAL· SANDY DEN IS ..,..,&#13;
-.-e NIC&gt;tOlS&#13;
Friday, March 12&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUil.DiNG&#13;
Admission 1sc·&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30 .&#13;
$1el5&#13;
rat Of $teak , Beefburger&#13;
on4&#13;
F,.nch F nH ., Onion Rln9a&#13;
Of' Potato Salocl&#13;
anti&#13;
Sch oner w Bottle w Glau of 8",&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
II&#13;
Is&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 8&#13;
PITCHE1tS $1.00 GLASS 20C&#13;
Available Fw PertlH&#13;
lncllHII .. f,._,.lty -4 S-.ity Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
'"'- BRAT-STOP&#13;
......... c ..... ·~~ - " ...... .&#13;
p.m.&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
there before and that it's all familiar."&#13;
"Yes this is not unusual, as a matter&#13;
of fact it happens to most ~eople a~out&#13;
twenty times a year. It is definitely&#13;
linked with E.S.P. but ?ec~use_ mo~t&#13;
people never develop their gifts m th!s&#13;
area they choose to ignore it when this&#13;
happens. I believe very much th~t&#13;
everyone has a gift in E.S.P. but that it&#13;
has tG be cultivated in order to be&#13;
used." . Norman looked up at the circle_ of&#13;
people waiting for the next question.&#13;
For a 'moment no question came but&#13;
then an older woman, dressed. as. a&#13;
waitress, asked, "Where does this gift&#13;
come from?" . "This gift is god-given, but it must be&#13;
cultivated. You see, man only used&#13;
about ten percent of his mind, but&#13;
through E.S.P. he can use up to eighty&#13;
percent of it. I've been able to develop&#13;
my memory so that all I have to do is&#13;
close my eyes and think about&#13;
something and the answer shoots across&#13;
a screen like a movie. I can see the&#13;
words. But this all has to be developed."&#13;
"You said when I came in that my&#13;
aura was light blue. Could you tell m e&#13;
about this," the waitress asked.&#13;
All faces turned expectantly because&#13;
everyone had been told they had a&#13;
distinct aura.&#13;
It is curious what attracts a person's&#13;
attention. To be told something of&#13;
yourself is undoubtedly more&#13;
interesting than a lecture in Greenquist&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Norman began to explain her aura, "I&#13;
see that there is someone very close to&#13;
you who has had an illness recently in&#13;
the area of the heart; near the right&#13;
ventricle.&#13;
As he paused, the woman blurted&#13;
out, "That's right , my .... "&#13;
"Don't tell me, you don't say&#13;
anything. When y,ou 're with a psychic&#13;
never say anything about yourself unless&#13;
you want to hear them tell you what&#13;
you told them. I don't mean to be rude&#13;
or anything, it's just that I'm the&#13;
psychic ... let me tell you.&#13;
"I see," he continued, "that you _have&#13;
a ring which means a great deal to&#13;
someone very near to you. She is&#13;
constantly taking it and this sort of&#13;
thing ... I see that there was a fire in the&#13;
past that did a lot of damage to a&#13;
building owned by someone you know&#13;
well, I see also that someone was injured&#13;
in the fire."&#13;
He continued reading her while the&#13;
rest of us waited anxiously for our turn.&#13;
The waitress interrupted Norman several&#13;
times exclaiming "Right, I was ... " but&#13;
Norman stopped her short each time of&#13;
telling her past.&#13;
It seemed as,if he would never finish&#13;
reading her as he kept on "seeing"&#13;
things. 1 a cigarette in defi&#13;
seeming monopoly and bef~~ce_ of !hi~&#13;
out he had told her that he we It Went&#13;
to read the others in the grou ould have&#13;
if she wanted to know mor/ and that&#13;
the remainder of her question and have&#13;
she could arrange an appoin/ answered&#13;
him. ment With&#13;
When he had finished he a person to estimate the accur sked each&#13;
disclosures. acy of his&#13;
· Her answer to this quest·&#13;
"About 85%." Ion Was,&#13;
To the next person in the . 'd "I h cucle h sa1 , see t at you are a nut e&#13;
motorcycles. . . you also drink ~bout&#13;
fish. I see that in the near fut Ike a&#13;
will have an accident with a mote You&#13;
much like the one you had aboorcycle&#13;
years ago when you bruised ut two&#13;
a country road. This time y6ibr leg on&#13;
careful because it is worse if e more&#13;
careful you'll get by this ~rtsis yo~ are&#13;
accuracy estimation was "eighty. 11 Ha&#13;
ninety per cent." ' · ive to&#13;
"Good, I'm starting to tune int&#13;
vibrations." 0 Your&#13;
He continued around the&#13;
telling each person eight or nine s r~~·&#13;
incidents Or characteristics whicr Cl :c&#13;
they would know. He told them o;y&#13;
date and even the time of da e&#13;
incidents happened and each y the&#13;
· responded with the same excl~~~son&#13;
of their amazement. ions&#13;
As the readings approached me 1&#13;
began to feel that Norman was inde d&#13;
telling things which, regardless of w: 1&#13;
I'd like_ to believe, were unknowab~e&#13;
except 1f someone had an inside line to&#13;
the person's thoughts.&#13;
He came to me and rattled off&#13;
disclosures from my past that I had to&#13;
think to remember and had touched&#13;
upon my future bofore moving on to&#13;
the next person. I weakly announced&#13;
that he had been ninety five percent&#13;
correct.&#13;
It seemed a matter of common fact&#13;
when he said, to the next in line, "I see&#13;
that someone close to you has died of&#13;
liver problems and I see someone close&#13;
to you is also suffering from this ... "&#13;
When Norman had fi11ished, the man&#13;
being read replied, "Yes, my father died a month ago from a liver ailment and&#13;
my mother is in the hospital with the&#13;
same thing."&#13;
Everything after that was an&#13;
anti-climax up to and including tht&#13;
comment by the last man in the line,&#13;
"Stop! You're too accurate."&#13;
When he had finished with the&#13;
readings he looked exhaused and asked&#13;
for a glass of water.&#13;
It was then a young girl asked, "What&#13;
do you expect as repayment for your&#13;
services?"&#13;
"I only ask that you say a prayer (Of&#13;
me ... that's enougp."&#13;
At the end I was ready to beliert&#13;
anything.&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS&#13;
LIKE ... the brands you know&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
and 45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, not yoor&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, our&#13;
Department Manager, who is a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk your language, both 111&#13;
--~ equipment purchases, records and money.&#13;
~~:~-Tape record~rs,. Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
KOSS SONIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players - Headsets&#13;
~~:~~~D - Rec~ivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
AZTEC ZS- Receivers, Speakers, Record players - peakers&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntables&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While yoO&#13;
are here shop f G'fts a&#13;
s ' or Jewelry Sporting goods and 1&#13;
outheastern Wisconsin's low:st prices.&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS&#13;
S12 MAIN STREET&#13;
on the west side of Monument Square&#13;
RACINE'S&#13;
GREAT&#13;
DOWNTOWN ousE&#13;
DISCOUNT H &#13;
Trackmen Defeat Marquette&#13;
by Jim Cape&lt;&#13;
Winning II of 14 events, the IUnger&#13;
lrackrnen defeated Marquetle 7 -43 10 •&#13;
meet held at Racine C....&#13;
Tim McGilsky and Jim McFadden&#13;
were double winners for Parbide, while.&#13;
Keith Merritt scored 9 points.&#13;
McGilsky picked up victor in 10 the&#13;
880 and 1000, with McF.dden laIun&amp;&#13;
the mile and the two nule. Memll&#13;
scored hu point b Winn the u e&#13;
jump, placlna ...,.,nd 10 the pole vault .t&#13;
12 feet,and thud 10 the 10111jump.&#13;
The MII.... u ee Ttac u n e&#13;
,. Women's InYl~tional .. th J5&#13;
pomts. Parlwde finilhed third, 10t.11In&amp;&#13;
10 points&#13;
Mary uDal 011 the 440. '"'" e 8ev&#13;
Cra...fo&lt;d s thud ,n 60, as as&#13;
M.ureen strich In the&#13;
Fencers, Bowlers&#13;
Park.Dd. bo...lers ..,,11 be compelml&#13;
.... tnSt AlA runner-up UCro and&#13;
other W,teOlIStn college and urmerstue,&#13;
Apnl 3 10 M.dIson for the nabl 10&#13;
represent llus d.SIrict In the . AlA&#13;
clwnp,OlMips III Kansas Cuy In tol. ,&#13;
AU bowl.rs ,"",0 are interested In&#13;
repruonlllli Pa.rlwde should ccetecr&#13;
Coaches Dick Freeka III lUc,ne Or Jun&#13;
Koch in Kenosha. Bowlers should ha ve&#13;
an "erage of 175 POints or beuer Five&#13;
to .!&amp;hl bowlers "",II repre.. nt Parkllde&#13;
Th. final nwnb.r ...,11 depend on the&#13;
nwnb.r of high .. era camed b&#13;
Pa.rde studenll.&#13;
Gymnasts&#13;
Ranger '5' Close Season Win&#13;
Parkside's fencers defeated Big Ten&#13;
champion Ohio State, while the&#13;
'iYffinasts won the Triton Invitanonal.&#13;
The ~nasts, scored 127 points.&#13;
putpointing Triton College, C1uCOlo,&#13;
Marquette, Wheaton, DuPa.ge, and&#13;
Milwaukee Tech. Parkside upped ilS&#13;
record to 13-5 in dual competll1on.&#13;
Ranger gymansts will oompete In the&#13;
AIAJ&gt;jslricl 14 meel March 13·14.&#13;
The fencers edged Ohio State for the&#13;
second time this season 14-13. Keith&#13;
Herbrechtsmeier's flllli victory proved&#13;
to be the winning edge.&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
""ksidedropped its final games on a 1&#13;
_kend road trip,losing to Missouri-St.&#13;
Louis 94-66, and Southern&#13;
lIbnois.Edwardsville95-87.&#13;
Friday night the Rangers were&#13;
IllUlIdlyoutplayed as Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
buill up a 13 point halftime lead and&#13;
continued to extend it in the second&#13;
boiL&#13;
Ell Slaughterand Ken Rick paced the&#13;
Ranger attack with 22 and 19 points&#13;
mpectively.&#13;
The following night at 'Edwardsville,&#13;
lltinois,the Rangers turned in what&#13;
eood&gt; Steve Stevens said was one 'of&#13;
their best efforts, yet still absorbed a&#13;
95-87 loss to SID-Edwardsville.&#13;
Leading 45-44 at half, the Rangers&#13;
began to show the effects of having&#13;
played the previous night. SIU tied the&#13;
score at 75 and then took a three point&#13;
lead, whIch was the result of a disputed&#13;
call and subsequent technical foul called&#13;
on the Rangers.&#13;
Parkside stayed within three points&#13;
until forced to foul in the final minute.&#13;
Slaughter once again paced Ranger&#13;
scoring with 28, willi Stan White addmg&#13;
20, and Mike Madsen 19. WjIite scored&#13;
his 20 points despite !laving a bad ankle&#13;
which he said was, "still very sore."&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th A"e.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SU •• THIIU THUIIS.&#13;
U 1.I1. TILL IO.ITE&#13;
fill. I lAT. TILL I A•••&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
Ranger Hockey Falls Short&#13;
strong wrist shot at 12:29. At 14:03&#13;
George Georgacopulas drew a penalty&#13;
for illegal checking in the offensi.e&#13;
zone. Twenty seconds later Harper&#13;
scored, making it 4-3 Parkside. Harper&#13;
tied the score with only 15 seconds left&#13;
in the first period.&#13;
The second period was all Harper as&#13;
they scored tWIce, taking a 6-4 lead.&#13;
The third period was one of sheer&#13;
frustration for Parkside as they battled&#13;
to get back in the game. Despite the fact&#13;
that the Rangers thoroughly outplayed&#13;
Harper, outshooting them 12-6, they&#13;
were unable to dent the net.&#13;
Several Ranger shots had the goalie&#13;
beat only to end up hitting the post. It&#13;
was 'a scoreless third period, thus leaving&#13;
Parkside on the short end of a 6-4&#13;
count.&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
lluper College defeated the Ranger'&#13;
bocby team 6-4 at the Rolling&#13;
IIadoWl Spo&lt;tsComplex.&#13;
The fint petiod saw each team score&#13;
fIlIIs. Pukside opened the scoring lIt&#13;
2:10of the first period with a 40 foot&#13;
IIop Ibot by Tom Krimmel.&#13;
lluper qUickly tied the score at I-I,&#13;
but at 6:30 of the period Krimmel&#13;
deflected in a slap shot by Marc&#13;
Tutlewskito again give Parkside the&#13;
lad. Thislead was short lived as Harper&#13;
lied the scoreat 8:20.&#13;
BiU Westerland gave Parkside a 3-2&#13;
lad at 11: 10 with a 60 foot slap shot&#13;
alter Krimmel won the face off and&#13;
ill", the puck back to Westedand for&#13;
!he shot.&#13;
TUllewskimade it 4-2 Parkside with a&#13;
THOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
207 SlXTl1 5TIEfT&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSlN 53403&#13;
'r:" I&#13;
VAI..EO'S PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN HAM 10 IDORG ,&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657 -5191&#13;
'Tradition o( E. cellencf'&#13;
KI G ofORG&#13;
FREE DELIVERY ':00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
FERRARO'S&#13;
~" IC ·~Ch· ken Pizza&#13;
\&#13;
s.. Jim Menlek "Mr. HI_1M" Fer G.~rltlhl~ S,"let , TrHI-In VII..&#13;
OlltIt Tln-elll CIUle!&#13;
'Try the Pizza everyon~is talking about"&#13;
CARRY OUTS ONLY&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
THREE MILE ROAD AND ERIE STREET&#13;
PH. 639-5305&#13;
Ranger '5' Close Season&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Parkside dropped its final games on a 1&#13;
,eekend road trip, losing to Missouri-St.&#13;
Louis 94-66, and Southern&#13;
Illinois-Edwardsville 9 5-87.&#13;
Friday night the Rangers were&#13;
soundly outplayed as Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
uUt up a 13 point halftime lead and&#13;
continued to extend it in the second&#13;
half. . Eli Slaughter and Ken Rick paced the&#13;
lunger attack with 22 and 19 points&#13;
respectively.&#13;
The following night at Edwardsville,&#13;
minois, the Rangers t~rned in .what&#13;
Coach Steve Stevens said was one ·of&#13;
their best efforts, yet still absorbed a 95-87 loss to SIU-Edwardsville&#13;
Leading 45-44 at half, th~ Rangers&#13;
began to show the effects of having&#13;
played the previous night. SIU tied the&#13;
score at 7s and then took a three point&#13;
lead, which was the result of a disputed&#13;
call and subsequent technical foul called&#13;
on the Rangers.&#13;
Parkside stayed within three points&#13;
until forced to foul in the final minute.&#13;
Slaughter once again paced Ranger&#13;
scoring with 28, with Stan White addmg&#13;
20, and Mike Madsen 19. W)lite scored&#13;
his 20 points despite ltaving a bad ankle&#13;
which he said was, "still very sore."&#13;
Ranger Hockey Falls Short&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Harper College defeated the Ranger·&#13;
hockey team 6-4 at the Rolling&#13;
Meadows Sports Complex.&#13;
The first period saw each team score&#13;
goals. Parkside opened- the scoring 1tt&#13;
• ·JO of the first p_eriod with a 40 foot&#13;
sap shot by Tom Krimmel. ·&#13;
Harper quickly tied the score at 1-1,&#13;
but at 6:30 of the period Krimmel&#13;
deflected in a slap shot by Marc&#13;
Tutlewski to again give Parkside the&#13;
ad. This lead was short lived as Harper&#13;
tied the score at 8:20.&#13;
Bill Westerland gave Parkside a 3-2&#13;
d at 11: 10 with a 60 foot slap shot&#13;
after Krimmel won the face off and&#13;
ew the puck back to Westerland for&#13;
the shot.&#13;
Tutlewski made it 4-2 Parkside with a&#13;
strong wrist shot at 12:29. At 14:03&#13;
George Georgacopulas drew a penalty&#13;
for illegal checking in the offensive&#13;
zone. Twenty seconds later Harper&#13;
scored, making it 4-3 Parkside. Harper&#13;
tied the score with only 15 second left&#13;
in the first period. The second period was all Harper as&#13;
they scored twice, taking a 6-4 leaa.&#13;
The third period was one of sheer&#13;
frustration for Parkside as they battled&#13;
to get back in the game. Despite the fact&#13;
that the Rangers thoroughly outplayed&#13;
Harper, outshooting them 12-6, they&#13;
were unable to dent the net.&#13;
Several Ranger shots had the goalie&#13;
beat, only to end up hitting the po t: It&#13;
was a scoreless third period, thus leaving&#13;
Parkside on the short end of a 6-4&#13;
count.&#13;
VALEO'$ PIZZA&#13;
ALSO KITCHEN&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30th Ave. FREE DELIVERY 4 :00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
KENOSHA Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
657-5191 Closed Mondays&#13;
FERRARO'S&#13;
Pizza&#13;
, .....&#13;
'Try the Pizza everyon~ is talking about"&#13;
CARRY OUTS ONLY&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
THREE MILE ROAD AND ERfE STREET&#13;
PH. 639-5305&#13;
Trac km en Def eat&#13;
b Jim&#13;
Winning 11 of 14 e ent , the Ran r&#13;
trackrnen defeated larquette -43 1n a&#13;
meet held at Racine ase . Tim kG ilsky and Jim&#13;
were double winner for Par&#13;
Keith !erritt ored 9 point .&#13;
McGilsky picked up i tor es&#13;
880 and 1000, v.ith kF den t&#13;
the mile and the t 'O mile. ferritt&#13;
Fencers,&#13;
Gymnasts&#13;
Win&#13;
Parkside's fencers defeated Big Ten&#13;
champion Ohio State, wltl e the&#13;
'n'Jl}nasts won the Tnton lmiUtional.&#13;
The gymnasts, scored I~ . point . putpoinhng Triton College, Chic .&#13;
Marquette, 1:ieaton. DuP , and&#13;
~ilwaukee Tech. Par ide upped t&#13;
record to 13-5 in du I competition .&#13;
Ranger gyman t will compete in the 'AIAJ)istrict 14 meet !arc 13-14. The fencer edged Otuo S te for the&#13;
second time thi ason 14-13. Keith&#13;
Herbrechtsmeier' final vt tory pro d&#13;
to be the winning edge.&#13;
THOUSA OS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
207 SIXTH STREfl&#13;
Tr&#13;
arque t&#13;
Bowlers&#13;
CHAT&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
E OS A&#13;
SU • THll T URS,&#13;
U A. , TILL ID TE&#13;
FIii. &amp; SAT, TILL 2 A . .&#13;
HAMBURGE S&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
{triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
'7&#13;
see Jim Menlck" r. Ha ond" For Guar n1eed S ,ice &amp; Tradt- Yalu&#13;
Out of To -ci11 Collect&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
STUDIO II) RACIME .. 1429 lli,h~oa · Pit• e 634,.,ZS6.S&#13;
"IJ BtUer Orp,u areBuill.,. HtunlN&gt;lld will B · 1'u-l" &#13;
-Ne'JR:¥&amp; IS1==-" ............, awn ~&#13;
G.WEISS INC.&#13;
313 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 53q&#13;
637.3200 3&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
Tille: 0/ a Fire on tne Moon&#13;
uthor: orman Mailer&#13;
Publisher: Little, Brown&#13;
Hemingway wa dead the world's&#13;
"greate t 1i"lOg romantic writer was&#13;
dead." dread was 100 and technology&#13;
would fill the gap. Pre ideru Kennedy&#13;
would cay that Amenca must put a man&#13;
on the moon b~ 1970. and Aquarius&#13;
would be there to wnte about it.&#13;
orman (Aquanu ) Mailer has chosen to&#13;
wrue about I subject no less staggering&#13;
than the spa e program. epItomized in&#13;
the night of Apoll II, the landing of&#13;
the fir I men on the moon, marlang an&#13;
end r the begrnnmg of a new era in&#13;
hi tory, te ding u closer to god or the&#13;
dev II, the tan or apocalypse.&#13;
S In ArmIes O/Ihe Nighl Mailer uses&#13;
the external uabject matter (in this case&#13;
the night of polio II) as a point of&#13;
departure from which Aquanus drifts&#13;
r n tom &lt;laphyslCal orbits and&#13;
pS~'chologlcal quasars, politics and&#13;
poetic, baseball and ixon, confronting&#13;
the hzard of technology in us essential&#13;
I ir Though not the Inurnate 9: ruc.::lp3lnt he was in Armies 0/ the&#13;
N"ht, Maller I an observer whose&#13;
• mtere t In the ubject is Intensified by&#13;
the ommccs presence of technology and&#13;
II po .ble emergence as a new (un) hfe&#13;
tyle, He notice that the layout of the&#13;
Hou I n Manned pace Center allows&#13;
no room for such Utlngs as art and was&#13;
done by computer, that the language&#13;
poken there I technologese and&#13;
ttut every technician is expendable,&#13;
that It I a point of p t r d e&#13;
to be 'SO much like the next man that&#13;
ev en when they speak you aren't able to&#13;
tetl who said what because their voices&#13;
are Identlcat' interchangeability. and&#13;
then computerese, the computer&#13;
language where the nuances the&#13;
emotive meanings of words. are st~ained&#13;
through the ..Iter of the binary system.&#13;
Cape Kennedy and Houston, huge&#13;
sterilized complexes in which work the&#13;
most advanced forjftof WASP the&#13;
vmdicators fo the American way ~flife,&#13;
where ev en echoes are up for analysis&#13;
and from which the dream of ages of&#13;
men, the moon, will be conquered or&#13;
unleashed.&#13;
quasius is judge and advocate of&#13;
magic in rhts "history as novel/novel&#13;
history. He presents us with a&#13;
psychology of stronauts and a&#13;
psychology of machines. Machines&#13;
aren't Sl:Ipposedto ~alfunction yet they&#13;
do, vallou, phases of the Apollo II&#13;
flight (and of past flights) incur&#13;
malfunctions, wit( no naswer from the&#13;
engineering section. Aquarius, advocate&#13;
of magic and fallibility presents us with&#13;
an answer. the machine has the will to&#13;
malf~nction, it has a psychology.&#13;
Aquasius cannot speak the language&#13;
of technology, he can grasp bits and&#13;
pleces and th~n f?rmulate questions,&#13;
discover new tmpllcations, draw new&#13;
hypotheses. HIS speculations encompass&#13;
everythong from the fact that physics&#13;
has yet to define what sound waves&#13;
leally are. to the magical connection&#13;
between his wife and the full moon. Ah&#13;
lunacy. AquariUS is being devorced fOl&#13;
the fourth tlllte.&#13;
Have we d~stroyed the mystery of&#13;
the moon or have we extended it; hav(&#13;
we made a pact with the devil or are we&#13;
r.achlng out loward God? How do you&#13;
.Neu. Gallery One&#13;
503 Main St.&#13;
Racine&#13;
·10% Student Discou&#13;
on all Posters &amp; Fra~~&#13;
New Gallery, Two&#13;
5/136 Sixth Ave,&#13;
• . Kenosha&#13;
the stars only to be burned. Smell is&#13;
where he begins and leaves us, the sense&#13;
of smell, the fact that an apple is more&#13;
than the sum of its parts, the fact that&#13;
we can identif): things by smell, that fOI&#13;
a computer to identify an apple it must&#13;
learn to smell; I smell therfore I am&#13;
human. While looking at a vacuum&#13;
packed lunar rock Aquarius feels&#13;
confident that in an eon or two he WIll&#13;
break through the bell jars 01 the smell&#13;
of the lunar rock will break through to&#13;
him, and that it will be man who will&#13;
smell the rock, and the moon, "new&#13;
mistress:' will remain in the realm of&#13;
the dream. He is waiting for the time&#13;
when men who fly in spaceships will&#13;
speak the language of Shakespeal~ once&#13;
again, when men will stop adapting to&#13;
machines.&#13;
The decade began with the suidide of&#13;
Hemtngway and "One might as well&#13;
judge the event from an armchair, for .a&#13;
species of apocalypse was upon us. This&#13;
was, after all, repeat, the year in which a&#13;
couple had fornicated on the stage&#13;
(Che) and we had landed on the moon,&#13;
this was the decade in which we had&#13;
probed through space, and who knew&#13;
which belts of protection had been'&#13;
voided and what precisely they had&#13;
protected.' A beginning 01 an end of an&#13;
era, Aquarius feels as if 1968 is the end&#13;
of the century, and that the dream has&#13;
its analogue in the emptiness and stars&#13;
of space. "AU worship the science of&#13;
smell." \&#13;
0/ a Fire on the Moon is a difficult&#13;
book to deal with in a critical sense.&#13;
First of ali Mailer never writes badly; he&#13;
seems to be sloppy at times, as if he is&#13;
not reflecting on what he is writing but&#13;
just (I hate to say it) reporting what is&#13;
going on around him and his immediate&#13;
reactions. The sloppiness, I think,&#13;
affords us a sense of immediacy which is&#13;
why 0/ a Fire on the Moon is not&#13;
merely a history. His overuse of&#13;
exclamation points is the only&#13;
complaint I have in so far as the writing&#13;
is concerned.&#13;
Secondly, Mailel the writel is also&#13;
Mailel the philosopher, still the&#13;
existentialist of An American Dream&#13;
but mellowed. The existential delemmas&#13;
which technology presents us is his&#13;
sphere and there are no put·ons; this&#13;
book and the hypothese presented ale if&#13;
nothing else quite serious.&#13;
Am I copping out on criticism? I&#13;
haldly think so. Mailel is probably the&#13;
~ost difficult. contemporary writer to&#13;
Judge because he has avioded the&#13;
conventional statdards of writing by&#13;
developing his own genre, history as.&#13;
novel/novel as history. No standards&#13;
have yet been set for this geme and I&#13;
think. it is ridiculous to apply&#13;
conventional standards to it. It is an&#13;
island in the sea and we must swim to it&#13;
before we can walk all over it.&#13;
OF A FIRE ON THE MOON&#13;
COURTESY OF THE BOOK&#13;
MAR T 622 59TH STREET&#13;
KENOSHA, IS AVAILABLE FOR&#13;
$6,95,&#13;
put that in computerese; how do you&#13;
program a computer to smell; what is&#13;
the word for shit in computerese?&#13;
0/ Q Fire on the Moon is not Mailer's&#13;
best work, in Armies 0/ the Night he&#13;
was much closer to his subject, in this,&#13;
his latest work, he early tells us that&#13;
technologese and computerese are&#13;
barriers for anyone but those WASPs&#13;
weaned on computers. He is an alien in&#13;
a windowless world of concrete and&#13;
steel where vast dinensions are measured&#13;
to the miUimeter, where efficiency is&#13;
the watchword and system redundancies&#13;
are a built- in feature, leading us again to&#13;
a psychology of machines. What stlikes&#13;
him is the apparent fact that none of&#13;
the technicians nor astronauts are awed&#13;
by what, they are doing. He feels that&#13;
they must harbor an unspoken dread, he&#13;
feels that they have re pressed and&#13;
sublimated their desires and dreauntil&#13;
they are unable to recognize them for&#13;
what they are.&#13;
IIOIl11tlo $OUTIt stt!1I1lIAII _&#13;
-KE.NOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
. SANDWICHES&#13;
CH-ARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
its •&#13;
real thing&#13;
\ Mailer delves into the minds of the&#13;
astronauts and leaves us unconvinced by&#13;
his portlaits of them. Through the&#13;
appearances and actions· of the ghree&#13;
as tron au t s, Mailer speculates and&#13;
rambles on about then motivations&#13;
which is to say that he puts himself ;,;&#13;
the . astronauts places and caUs his&#13;
feelongs and pelceptions theirs. Thele is&#13;
just too much Mailer in them so much&#13;
.~ that I found myself resisting them:&#13;
Mailer is obviously not in control of&#13;
his subject, he is the humanities man in&#13;
the. ste~ile cir~us of Cape Kennedy,&#13;
taking It. all In and spewing forth&#13;
speculations, a man in a machine world&#13;
spinning. He finds consolation in the&#13;
fact that the maybe enemy technology&#13;
cannot explam what light leally is.&#13;
~ere are still mysteries: ':Ves. we&#13;
nught have to go out into space until&#13;
the mystery of new discovery would&#13;
force us to regard the world once again&#13;
as p~ts, beho~d it as savages who knew&#13;
that lf the uruverse was a lock its key&#13;
was metaphor rather than measure."&#13;
In the end we must still discover who&#13;
we are reaching for, or who is guiding&#13;
us, God or Satan; are we reaching for,&#13;
4437 • 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenos.ho, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Free Delivery a&#13;
654-0774 .,&#13;
"' -. ~ - , ;•........._ ~&#13;
_&#13;
-&#13;
o&#13;
STEAKS _ CHOPS _ CHICKEN - SEAfOO :&#13;
WE CATER TO PARTIE$&#13;
H'h ~I:&#13;
: .g way 32, Kenoaha, I mile N. af Carthoge College, phone ,,)&#13;
.................. - ..... . . .&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
put that in computerese; how do yo~&#13;
program a omputer to smell; what is&#13;
the ord for shit in computerese? . '&#13;
Of a Fire on the ~loon is not ~faller s&#13;
be t work. in Anmes of t~e ~ht ~e wa much closer to his sub1ect, m this,&#13;
his late t work, he early tells us that&#13;
technologese and computerese are&#13;
barrier for anyone but those \\'.AS~s&#13;
weaned on computers. He is an ahen m a windowless world of concrete and&#13;
teel where va t dinensions are measure?&#13;
to the millimeter' where efficiency . is&#13;
the watchword and sy tern redund~c1es&#13;
are a built·in feature, leading us agau:i to&#13;
a p ychology of machines. What strikes&#13;
him i the apparent fact that none of&#13;
the technicians nor astronauts are awed&#13;
by what they are doing. He feels that&#13;
they must harbor an unspoken dread , he&#13;
feel that they have repressed an~&#13;
ublimated their desires and dreauntil&#13;
they are unable to recognize them for&#13;
what they are.&#13;
I Mailer delves into the minds of the&#13;
astronauts and leaves us unconvinced by&#13;
his portraits of them. Through the&#13;
appearances and actions- of the ghree&#13;
astronauts Mailer speculates and&#13;
rambles on' about therr motivations,&#13;
which is to say that he puts himself in&#13;
the astronauts places and calls his&#13;
feelings and perceptions theirs. There is&#13;
just too much Mailer in them, so much&#13;
·so that I found myself resisting them.&#13;
· Mailer is obviously not in control of&#13;
his subject, he is the humanities man in&#13;
the sterile circus of Cape Kennedy,&#13;
taking it all in and spewing forth&#13;
speculations, a man in a machine world&#13;
spinning. He fmds consolation in the&#13;
fact that the maybe enemy technology&#13;
cannot explain what light really is.&#13;
There are still mysteries: ·:Yes, we&#13;
might have to go out into space until&#13;
the mystery of new discovery would&#13;
force us to regard the world once again&#13;
as poets, behold it as savages who knew&#13;
that if the universe was a lock its key&#13;
was metaphor rather than measure."&#13;
In the end we must still discover who&#13;
we are reaching for, or who is guiding&#13;
us, God or Satan; are we reaching for.&#13;
stars only to be burned . Smell is&#13;
th\re he begins and leaves us, ~e sense ~r smell the fact that an appleflS m~r~ than th; sum of its parts, the act a . ·dentify, things by smell, that for&#13;
:~i:~ter to identify an ap~le it rust&#13;
learn to smell; I ~ell theriore am&#13;
While looking at a vacuum human. A · feels acked lunar rock quanus ·u&#13;
~onfident that in an eol_l or two he w1&#13;
b ak through the bell 1ars or the smell&#13;
or the lunar rock will break through ~o&#13;
him and that it will be man who will&#13;
smeil the rock, and the moon, "new . t s " will remain in the realm of&#13;
rrus res . h . the dream. He is waiting for t. e t~e&#13;
when men who fly in spaceships will&#13;
speak the language of Shakespear: once&#13;
again, when men will stop adapting to&#13;
machines. ' 'd' d f The decade began with the sm t e o&#13;
Hemingway and "One might ~s well&#13;
judge the event from an armchatr' for _a&#13;
species of apocalypse was up~n us. -~s&#13;
was, after all, repeat, the year in wh1c a&#13;
couple had fornicated on the stage&#13;
(Che) and we had landed on the moon,&#13;
this was the decade in which we had&#13;
robed through space, and who knew&#13;
thich belts of protection had been ,&#13;
voided and what precisely they had&#13;
protected ." A beginnil_lg or an ~nd of an&#13;
era Aquarius feels as if 1968 is the end&#13;
of the century' and that the dream has&#13;
its analogue in the emptiness and stars&#13;
of space. "All worship the science of&#13;
~mell." . . Of a Fire on the. Moon ~s. a difficult&#13;
book to deal with in a cnttcal sense.&#13;
First of all Mailer never writes ba?lY; ~e&#13;
seems to be sloppy at times, a~ 1f he 1s&#13;
not reflecting on what he is writing b~t&#13;
just (I hate to say_ it) repo~ti~g wh~t 1s&#13;
going on around hun aI_1-d his unmed~ate&#13;
reactions. The sloppiness, I t~~.&#13;
affords us a sense of immediacy which ts&#13;
why Of a Fire on the Moon is not&#13;
merely a history. His overuse of&#13;
exclamation points is the ?'.1-1Y&#13;
complaint I have in so far as the wnting&#13;
is concerned. . . Secondly, Mailer the wnter . 1s also&#13;
Mailer the philosopher, still the&#13;
existentialist of An American Dream&#13;
but mellowed. The existential delelllll_las&#13;
which technology presents us is ~s&#13;
sphere and there are no put-ons; this&#13;
book and the hypothese presented are if&#13;
nothing else quite serious. . . . Am I copping out on cnttc1sm? I&#13;
hardly think so. Mailer is proba~ly the&#13;
most difficult contemporary wnter to&#13;
judge because he has avio~~d the&#13;
conventional statdards of wnting by&#13;
developing his own genre, history as.&#13;
novel/novel as history. No standards&#13;
have yet been set for this genre and I&#13;
think it is ridiculous to apply&#13;
conventional standards to it. It is an&#13;
island in the sea and we must swim to it&#13;
before we can walk all over it.&#13;
OF A FIRE ON THE MOON&#13;
COURTESY OF THE BOOK&#13;
MART 622 59TH STREET,&#13;
KENOSHA, IS AVAILABLE FOR&#13;
G ... WEISS INC.&#13;
313 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACINE. WISCONSIN s3403&#13;
637-3200&#13;
\New (;allery One&#13;
503 Main St.&#13;
Racine&#13;
· iO% Student Discount&#13;
on all Posters &amp; Fra,ni!f&#13;
New Gallery Two&#13;
51136 Sixth Ave.&#13;
•• Kenosha&#13;
~ an ~- ~ - ~v&#13;
~0 RAKOI \&#13;
ltORTH I, $CUTli SM!fttDAN ROAD&#13;
~KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CH-ARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
4437 • 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenos~a, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
$6.95 .&#13;
. ., ................................................................. .-.. ...................................... ...,.;&#13;
.&#13;
. .&#13;
~&#13;
.&#13;
STEAKS CHOPS - CHICKEN -&#13;
WE CATER TO PARTIES&#13;
SEAFOOD . •&#13;
' I&#13;
0451 :&#13;
H. I phon• 65'.. )&#13;
: ighway 32, Kenosha, 1 mile N. of Carthage Col et•, ......... .&#13;
:, ........... ~································~---····················· </text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 6, March 8, 1971</text>
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              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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