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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, Issue 7</text>
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            <text>Chancellor Comments on Merger</text>
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            <text>Volume 3 - Number 7&#13;
H lBA"&#13;
U P, kENO HA C PU&#13;
700 ASHINGTO 0&#13;
By MarcEisen&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie's reaction to GOvernor&#13;
Luce~'s pr~posal to merge the University&#13;
of Wlsconsm system with the Wisconsin&#13;
State University system is one of "some&#13;
eririal skepticism."&#13;
The Chancellor told NEWSCOPE that if&#13;
the Governor's proposed budget for the&#13;
University of Wisconsin is passed as is, the&#13;
,ffects would be "very damaging" to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Chancellor left the impression that&#13;
the budgetary aspects of the Governor's&#13;
address to the state legislature were of&#13;
more vital consequence to Parks ide that the&#13;
proposal for merger.&#13;
The Governor's proposed budget funds&#13;
few of the programs and plans proposed by&#13;
Parkside, He recommends that UWP&#13;
received only $612,100. out of the&#13;
$5,439,400 requested. In addition the base&#13;
budget itself will be cut.&#13;
Among those items not budgeted by the&#13;
Governor are: four new majors, three of&#13;
which pertain to Parkside's industrial&#13;
mission, space rental cost incurred when the&#13;
Racine campus is lost, placement problems,&#13;
and vocational and psychological counseling,&#13;
Lucey's merger proposal would establish&#13;
a single Board of Regents to replace the&#13;
present tW? boards. The board would&#13;
consist of SIX members from the UW Board&#13;
of Regents, the superintendent of public&#13;
tDstructlon, four members from the WSU&#13;
Board of Regents, four citizens appointed&#13;
by Lucey, and the Chairman of the State&#13;
Vocational, Technical and Adult Education&#13;
Board.&#13;
This new board would handle the&#13;
responsibilities of the Coordinating Counsel&#13;
of Htgher Education, which would be&#13;
abolished. The chief function of the CCHE&#13;
has been budget and program review for&#13;
the two systems.&#13;
Lucey feels this single system would&#13;
strea.mline central administration by&#13;
reducmg the number of administrative&#13;
positions. He would have the President of&#13;
UW, John Weaver, develop the plans for&#13;
this new adm inistration.&#13;
He expects a savings of about $4 miUion&#13;
during the biennium if the merger is passed.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie commented, "My&#13;
reaction to the proposal of merger is 'wait&#13;
and see', and one of some initial&#13;
skepticism. Those who have done such&#13;
financial analyses are not at all convinced&#13;
that there will be long run savings in the&#13;
merger. (continlled on Page 4)&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
Comments&#13;
On Merger&#13;
Lucey Defends Budget Cuts&#13;
ByMarcEisen&#13;
of the NewscopeStaff&#13;
GovernorPatrick Lucey doubts Ibe&#13;
cats be recommended for the&#13;
\lnhoersity of Wisconsinbudget will be&#13;
... Oftd by the state legislature.&#13;
In a brief interview before he&#13;
addressed an audience at Kenosha's&#13;
local 72 union han Sunday morning,&#13;
he toldNEWSCOPE"I doubt the cuts&#13;
"ill be restored. But I'm willing to&#13;
negohateon that if we can find the&#13;
money."&#13;
• "I cut pretty deep," he stated,&#13;
'more deeplythan Iwould like to on b:Y worthwhile programs simply&#13;
.... the dollarsaren't there .."&#13;
The Governor, along with Rep.Les&#13;
Aspin, Lt. Governor Martin Shreiber,&#13;
State Treasurer Charles Smith,&#13;
Kenosha and Racine assemblymen,&#13;
George Molinaro, Eugene Dorff,&#13;
Manny Brown, and Michael Ferral, and&#13;
State Senator Joseph Lourigan were at&#13;
Local 72 as participants in the UAW's&#13;
"Know Your Legislator" program.&#13;
In his speech Governor Lucey&#13;
defended the severe budget cuts he&#13;
presented to the Legislature and his&#13;
proposal to merge the University.of&#13;
Wisconsin system of higher education&#13;
with the Wisconsin State University&#13;
system.&#13;
(continued on Page J)&#13;
Govern .. Pa&amp;riek Lucey. I'IloII IIr loll _.&#13;
MlsslOll Committee meeting with Cbancellor.&#13;
,., IIr loll&#13;
'Mission' Deli itiol Elusive&#13;
ByJohn KoloeD&#13;
of the ewscope Scaff&#13;
On wednesday, March 11 the Mission' Committee mel 10 Racine&#13;
with Chancellor Wyllie to discuss their progre in defining Parksrde"&#13;
purpose.. Scattered in the rwo hour discussion were phrase like.&#13;
"Kafkaesque", "Working Class". and "first generation students."&#13;
"Kafkaesque" refers to the committee's task of promoting Parkside as&#13;
a saleable institution.&#13;
The basic purpose of the committee is to present a concise,&#13;
neady-worded package thar can be sold to the state legislature, the&#13;
people of the stare and, most of all, those select individuals who will&#13;
either drop the axe or pave the way for Parkside's institutional future.&#13;
On Feb. 18 Chancellor Wyllie and the di isional chairmen went to&#13;
Madison for a Ten Vear Academic Program Review. At the Review&#13;
Vice-President Percy characterized the proposed document as&#13;
Hsubstantial", a "roral campus document" representing all the&#13;
constituent elements of the campus, and that it "be addressed (0&#13;
persons who might make decisions of league status and levels of&#13;
funding." In short, to be persuasive to laymen.&#13;
(COlOn if on Page 6)&#13;
Volume 3 · Number 7&#13;
By Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie's reaction to Governor&#13;
Luce(s pr~posal to me~ge the University&#13;
of W1sconsm system with the Wisconsin&#13;
State University system is one of "some&#13;
irtitial skepticism."&#13;
The Chancellor told NEWSCOPE that if&#13;
the Governor's proposed budget for the&#13;
University of Wisconsin is passed as is, the&#13;
effects would be "very damaging" to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Chancellor left the impression that&#13;
the budgetary aspects of the Governor's&#13;
address to the state legislature were of&#13;
more vital consequence to Parkside that the&#13;
proposal for merger.&#13;
The Governor's proposed budget funds&#13;
few of the programs and plans proposed by&#13;
Parkside. He recommends that UWP&#13;
received only $612,100 . out of the&#13;
SS,439,400 requested. In addition the base&#13;
budget itself will be cut.&#13;
Among those items not budgeted by the&#13;
Governor are: four new majors, three of&#13;
which pertain to Parkside's industrial&#13;
mission, space rental cost incurred when the&#13;
Racine campus is lost, placement problems,&#13;
and vocational and psychological co4nseling.&#13;
Lucey's merger proposal would establish&#13;
a single Board of Regents to replace the&#13;
pres~nt tw? boards. The board would&#13;
consist of sue members from the ' Board&#13;
?f Reg~nts, the superintendent of publt&#13;
mstructton, four members from the \\, C&#13;
B6oard of Regents, four citizen appotnted&#13;
y Lu_cey' and the Chairman of the tate&#13;
Vocational, Technical and Adult Education&#13;
Board.&#13;
This new board would handle the&#13;
respo~sibilities of the Coordinating Coun el&#13;
of Higher Education, which would be&#13;
abolished. The chief function of the CCHE&#13;
has been budget and program review for&#13;
the two systems.&#13;
Lucey feels this single s • tern would&#13;
streamline central administration bv&#13;
reducing the number of admini trath-'&#13;
positions. He would have the Pre ident of&#13;
~, John Weaver, develop the plan for&#13;
this new administration.&#13;
He expects a savings of about 4 million&#13;
during the biennium if the merger is pa d.&#13;
Chancellor WyUie commented ..&#13;
reaction to the proposal of merger 1 'wait&#13;
and see', and one of ome initial&#13;
skepticism. Those who have done uch&#13;
financial analyses are not at all convinced&#13;
that there will be long run saving in the&#13;
merger. (continued on Page 4)&#13;
Lucey Defends Budget Cuts&#13;
By Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Governor Patrick Lucey doubts the&#13;
cut he recommended for the&#13;
University of Wisconsin budget will be&#13;
restored by the state legislature. In a brief interview before he&#13;
addre sed an audience at Kenosha's&#13;
local 72 union hall Sunday morning,&#13;
he told NEWSC0PE "I doubt the cuts&#13;
1¥111 ~e restored. But I'm willing to&#13;
negotiate on that if we can find the&#13;
money."&#13;
"I cut pretty deep," he stated,&#13;
more deeply than I would like to on&#13;
many worthwhile programs simply&#13;
because the dollars aren't there .. "&#13;
The Governor, along with Rep.Le&#13;
Aspin, Lt. Governor Marttn Shreiber,&#13;
State Treasurer Charles Smith,&#13;
Kenosha and Racine a semblymen,&#13;
George Molinaro, Eugene Dorff,&#13;
Manny Brown, and Michael Ferra!, and&#13;
State Senator Joseph Lourigan were at&#13;
Local 72 as participants in the UA\ '&#13;
"Know Your Legislator" program. In his speech Governor Lu ey&#13;
defended the severe budget cut he&#13;
presented to the Legi lature and hi&#13;
proposal to merge th~ Univer ity _ of&#13;
Wisconsin system of higher education&#13;
with the Wisconsin State Univer ity&#13;
system. ( continued on Page 3)&#13;
Mis ion Commit&#13;
Chancel/or&#13;
Comment&#13;
On Merger&#13;
m tin th&#13;
'Mission' Definition Elusive&#13;
Govern• Patrick Lucey.&#13;
On Wednes.cb , 1arch 11 th&#13;
with Chancellor \\ ·Iii to di u&#13;
purpo .. Scattered in the two&#13;
'Kafkaesque", "\\'or ing Cl " and '' 1r t enc tion tudent ."&#13;
·Kafkaesque" refer to the committee' t le of promotin&#13;
a saleable institution.&#13;
The ba ic purpo of the committee i to pre nt on ,&#13;
neatly-worded package th t can be old to the tate le · lature, th&#13;
people of the tate and, mo t of all. tho le t individual ho lill&#13;
either drop the a. e or pave the •ay for Par ide' in itutional futur .&#13;
On Feb. 18 Chancellor W Ilic nd the divi ional ch irmen went to&#13;
Madi on for a Ten Year Academic Program Re ·ew. At the Re ie&#13;
Vice-President Pere ' characterized the propo ed do ument a&#13;
"substantial", a "total campus document" repre nting all the&#13;
con tituent elements of the campu . and that it · addre d to&#13;
persons who might ma e deci ions of league status and le el of&#13;
funding." In hort, to be per asive to la men.&#13;
(.CXMrlinawed on Pag 6} &#13;
Constitution Ratified&#13;
Last week S2 students out of I&#13;
total exceeding 4.000 took the time to&#13;
ratify the Student Constitution. The&#13;
br •• kdown of vot es is as follows: 434&#13;
voted m favor of the Consuturion 93&#13;
In I, \trIm one vote thai was thrown&#13;
out&#13;
R..:,ne took the honors for student&#13;
parlK;1 lion with I total of 206 votes&#13;
while enoYt2 campus registered 1 I&#13;
t.. and GreenqulSt mad. up the&#13;
d,ff.",,,,, e w ,th 141 vote&#13;
tha. the Consmuucn is&#13;
ofll II) pproved the next step&#13;
I rd the re hutlon of real student&#13;
p.mm.nt is to begin Students&#13;
interested in running for office, should&#13;
pick up petitions .1 the stud.nt&#13;
activities office on any of the&#13;
campuses. The deadline for the&#13;
petitions will probably be sooner than&#13;
you think so if you're int.r.sted in&#13;
making it into the big tunes it would&#13;
be advisable to have your petition&#13;
filled by the end of the wee k.&#13;
Also, there will b. a public debate&#13;
on March 24 at Greenquist Hall in&#13;
room 103 II 7:30 p.m. At this time&#13;
the various candidates will be given the&#13;
opportunity to present their&#13;
platforms.&#13;
The Pub Loses Licence&#13;
by Kn-in McKay&#13;
of dw EWSCOPE S.. "&#13;
The Pub IS no'" a thlOg of the past.&#13;
Th. K.no ha Ctty CouncIl&#13;
unanomou\ly VOted to revoke the&#13;
tI.ern II·.nw on the Pub, 4500 11th&#13;
v., I t Tuesd Y night aft.r 3~&#13;
hours of t. um ny by 7 Wltn. s for&#13;
the rr.nw nd on. for the d.f.nse.&#13;
The revOCItlon was blsed on 139&#13;
calb to the Polic. SIOC. the Pub&#13;
optned la t summer; tlaht conYiclions&#13;
t for belOg open aft.r hours Ind&#13;
, for permitting nunors to 10It.r.&#13;
Oth.r evld.nc. Included a bIB&#13;
rOwn b full of... . some THC.&#13;
and ",me huh p,ck.d up off the noor&#13;
dunna polIce "check" F'b. 20 In&#13;
which S6 persons ".r. bust.d for&#13;
belOg too young.&#13;
Id Pel.r ·.d.... . the pnnclp.J&#13;
complamtanl for the city. testified&#13;
that the Pub was I .•. d.ng.r to&#13;
chlldr.n. H. r.ported seeong p.trons of&#13;
the Pub peltlOg old I.d.es ...lth&#13;
.. bills and on. m.l. palron I.t. at&#13;
nIght actu.lly ••. ",xpoSing hunself&#13;
nd usmg our public sid .... lks as a&#13;
lavatory f.c,lIty" H. testlfi.d a to&#13;
tt,ng on his "old f.shlOn.d porch:&#13;
but thought it sadd.ning to sit th.r.&#13;
(he bves across the street) due 10 the&#13;
"vulprily that went on in the cars ... "&#13;
Part of his consternation involved a&#13;
SIgll on the .ntrance to the Pub thaI&#13;
bopn. "Peac. broth ... and sist.rs ... "&#13;
He testified to witnessing massive&#13;
10llenng outside the Pub on the public&#13;
Sld.... a1k. "they like to come out and&#13;
smoke some."&#13;
Th. h.arlng. fill.d with I.gal&#13;
h.ggllng by the Cily Atty. Mich •• l&#13;
Flsh.r and the Pub's Atty. T.rry Rose.&#13;
.... s It t.nded by inl.r.st.d long hair.d&#13;
youth and off duty p.trolm.n.&#13;
Mrs. Barbara Capozza. own.r of the&#13;
ta\'em license and sole witness for the&#13;
d.f.nse I.stifi.d that she consid.r.d&#13;
lhe Pub more of a restaurant than a&#13;
tavern; that minors can frequent them&#13;
and th~t th.y can run 24 hours. day.&#13;
Sh. Slid that Mr. .d .... ski holl.r.d&#13;
and made a lot of noise and on one&#13;
occasion "d,dn't seem to b. hims.lf."&#13;
Th. 17 to 0 vol. of the council .....&#13;
2~ecipitated by requests from Police&#13;
Ol,.f Robert Bosman and Inspector&#13;
Joeseph Trotta to revoke the&#13;
license.&#13;
,&#13;
LETTERS TO THE ED1TOn&#13;
&amp;J.dJ~&#13;
St. Patrick's&#13;
Day&#13;
all week (we are)&#13;
~!!!EE 1.00OFF&#13;
IRISH BUTTONS&#13;
GREEN CARNATIONS&#13;
SHAMROCKS&#13;
IRISH FLAGS&#13;
on any giant&#13;
Shakey's Pizza with&#13;
this ad, until&#13;
March 31&#13;
Green&#13;
Beer&#13;
Pizza - Chicken&#13;
Mo·Jo Potatoes -Live Music&#13;
Open Daily 4:00 p.m. to 1:00 am&#13;
~ Saturday &amp; Sunday 11:00 a.·m.·&#13;
~ to 1:00 a.m.&#13;
SHAKEY'S H~t~·'Zr~:t.at&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
PIZZA PARLOR &amp;&#13;
11e ublie 'ltouse&#13;
To the editor.&#13;
It is my impression since I came to&#13;
parkside, that there. seems 10 be a g~e~1&#13;
striving for excellence going on. This IS&#13;
fine but how about if we slraighlen&#13;
our;"lves out a little bit first.&#13;
As a student, I am required by most&#13;
instructors, to take tests or hand ~n&#13;
papers on a certain day. at a certain&#13;
time. Fine! How about, the&#13;
instructors'! Where are their rules?&#13;
Why aren't they required 10 hand&#13;
these back. graded within a reasonable&#13;
time?&#13;
To obtain exc.llency. you need&#13;
.fficiency; without it. where Ihe hell&#13;
are we? I take pride in my work on&#13;
pap.rs and arlicl.s. as well as my&#13;
att.mpts at tests. I Iry to be efficienl.&#13;
If I'm not, I and only I will pay Ihe&#13;
price. However, if the instructor takes&#13;
his or her sweet time on grading and&#13;
assignment return. so what? That&#13;
seems to b. the attitude. W.Il. thaI&#13;
.ttitud. affects .veryone. We as&#13;
stud.nls w.il and wonder, while the&#13;
inslructors paychecks keep&#13;
coming--",n time. I wonder how they&#13;
...ould like il if th.y were lold. "I&#13;
hav.n'l gol your paychecks r.ady, I&#13;
was out of lown and didn'l r.ally have&#13;
tim •. " W.ll. d.ar faculty, those grades&#13;
and papers are part of our paycheck.&#13;
They are just as important.&#13;
I have had some excellenl&#13;
instructors both last semester as wellas&#13;
the pr.sent one. I'm nol knocking&#13;
those who may be ill or have&#13;
emergency commitments, but when&#13;
these excuses become everyday&#13;
matl.rs. that's a diff.rent story.&#13;
How about it, let's get it together.&#13;
David Dworak&#13;
To the .ditor,&#13;
Everyone seems to be concerned&#13;
with air pollution and the effecls on&#13;
our health. We are trying to do&#13;
something aboul it. Well my question&#13;
is, '\Y~en is someone going to do&#13;
something about the air pollution in&#13;
the classrooms at Greenquist Hall?"&#13;
Back at the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
~ampuses there is a "no smoking" rulf&#13;
m eff.cls, but at Greenquist there is&#13;
no such rule (and if there is it's nol&#13;
enforced). Ipersonally an affected by&#13;
those Ignoranl people who smoke in a&#13;
closed classroom with 20 or more&#13;
people in it (where the air is close&#13;
anyway). After awhile my eyes&#13;
redden, my throat gets sore, and I get&#13;
a headache. I cannot concentrate on&#13;
what matters are being discussed so I&#13;
get nothing out of the dass. I am not&#13;
paymg over $20 per credit for this. I&#13;
suggest that a uno smoking" ordinance&#13;
be ,enforced at Greenquisl Hall. If it&#13;
IS!1 t, sooner or later I am going to get&#13;
dlSl·urbed enough to slug the&#13;
19noramous that is smoking.&#13;
Norman B. Pietras&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
.&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS,&#13;
11 A.M, TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI, " SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24~&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55~&#13;
To the editor&#13;
I am writing in the ho&#13;
dear what is commOnlpes of !nakina&#13;
amon&amp;. ~any people. II 6.,understOOd&#13;
thepusstIli· system we ha to do With&#13;
Racine. . ve here ~&#13;
It seems to be well kn&#13;
the Racine studenn OWnamo"!&#13;
Greenquist or Kenosha b g0Ulg to&#13;
U.W.-Parksid. 'buses thaYIwray&#13;
of Iho&#13;
the bus b ·'yoU· e us ya moment. it isstill I1lIII&#13;
to catch It by going to th PO"Die&#13;
Main SI. and -" . Toda \COrner or&#13;
was riding the bus to Gt.1n oWev" I&#13;
we sped past a good fri.na&#13;
U&#13;
,,} Illlea&#13;
whQ had missed the bus and 0 mu10&#13;
hail it at the corn.r. wa't'Yi"l&#13;
I don't know if it is 1&#13;
buses to pick up on the: ICyof Iho&#13;
But I do think it couldm~ or nOl.&#13;
pohcy. or praclic. more oft. .11lIde&#13;
sludenls are there II n 'f Iatt . must ,-&#13;
happened before if not man -&#13;
befor.. y tinter&#13;
So, maybe if it Wouldn't be&#13;
much IroubI. Ih. buses could ton&#13;
mom.nl and pick th ... peopl stop a&#13;
only one stop and is nec.s~ up. Ib&#13;
people are lale.&#13;
"'*&#13;
GaryVanK~&#13;
PS-Congratulation, on an ..&#13;
publication (March I 1971) Th:1Ieot&#13;
feature articles were 8reat. ";e Iwt&#13;
the Tallenl Hall library. nW:: to&#13;
.llmes and curt.nt PlIlybo or&#13;
National Lampoon' are ~ IIlII&#13;
non-exlSlenl. I und.rsland thyDl:UtJ&#13;
aboul 3 days to a w •• k. lac&#13;
Hostesses Needed&#13;
Young. ladies who .r. 18 Ita...&#13;
opporlumly for community service .&#13;
the Kenosha Servic.men's Cenler:&#13;
the KYF. In spit. of the slowdowD .&#13;
Ihe lroop commitm.nls in Viet ~&#13;
Kenosha is visited .ach w•• bod by&#13;
150:200 young m.n in miJilaly&#13;
semce. Most of these young men rntd&#13;
then way down to the SenicemeD"&#13;
Center where attractive young ladies&#13;
help Ihem learn more about Ken.&#13;
be good listeners, dane. or play CII4l&#13;
The Servicemen's Cent.r is in need or&#13;
more hostesses to work .t the Celll&lt;l.&#13;
smce a weekend requires as many II&#13;
45 hostesses to staff the three bOIl!&#13;
shifls.&#13;
Young ladies inler.sled in lIus&#13;
community service project shouldcall&#13;
Mrs. Sam Od.lberg at 657·9350 IX&#13;
Mrs. Paul S.bastian at 694·3555 fIX&#13;
more information.&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Volume 3, Number 7 •&#13;
Monday, March 15. 1971&#13;
Warren Nedry EiIIII&#13;
Marc Eisen NewsEillll&#13;
John Koloen Copy EiIIII&#13;
Jim Nolan Business M...-&#13;
John Leighton Advertisinl M...-&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, Bill Sorensen, Bill JItIbI&#13;
Darrell Borger. Bob MainJand, ()oil&#13;
Loumos. Mike Kurth, Bob ~&#13;
Ken Konkol, Kevin McKay. J_&#13;
Casper, Paul Lomartire. Svell Ta1ll&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Narees Socha, Don Marjala, JoIaI Grty&#13;
Published weekly by theNt ~s(l1£&#13;
ORGANIZATION at rhe Unio'''''0&#13;
Wisconsin~ Parkside. 3700 waJlWCl"&#13;
Road, Kenosha. WisconsinEdlare&#13;
the opinion of the EdilorilJi ~&#13;
and are not to be conridtnd&#13;
opinions of the University. its snJtfIL&#13;
[acuity, or administration.&#13;
TELEPHONES: Business 652.-11&#13;
EdiloriaI658--4861 •• xt. 36&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; GreenhoUSes&#13;
1'lMooe: 1!l4~71l1&#13;
~I.nd FRAIl!1lEI~1OCI&#13;
302107bnt ••.&#13;
K.N08"A, WIKOfISI" .t'-&#13;
2 h IS, 19 I&#13;
Constitution Ratified&#13;
mtere 1ed in rurming for office, should&#13;
pi · up petition at the student&#13;
ti "tie office on any of the&#13;
ampu . The deadline for the&#13;
petitions Ytill probably be sooner than&#13;
you thin if you're interested in&#13;
ma it into the big times it would&#13;
be · ble to have your petition&#13;
fiiled by the end of the week.&#13;
l . there will be a public debate&#13;
on far h 24 at Greenquist Hall in&#13;
room 103 at :30 p.m. At this time&#13;
the , riou ndidates v.ill be given the&#13;
opportunity to present their&#13;
platfonn".&#13;
T1he Pub Loses Licence&#13;
but thought it ddening to it there&#13;
(he live r the treet due to the&#13;
' rut rity that went on in the cars . . . "&#13;
P rt of h" con temation involved a&#13;
on the entrance to the Pub that&#13;
be n, "Pea e brothers and isters ... "&#13;
H te tifted to witne ing ma ive&#13;
I. itering out "de the Pub on the public&#13;
de 1 , "they like to come out and&#13;
e me."&#13;
The hearing, filled with legal ha mg b the City Atty. Michael&#13;
Fi er d the Pub's Atty, Terry Rose,&#13;
ttended b&gt; in1ere ted long haired&#13;
th doff duty patrolmen. 1 . Barbara Capozza, oYtner of the&#13;
ta em Ii en nd le witne for the&#13;
defense te tified that she considered&#13;
the Pub more of a re taurant than a&#13;
ta,ern: that minor can frequent them&#13;
and th~t the • can run ~4 hour a day. e d that 1r. • 'edweski hollered&#13;
d m de a lot of noise and on one&#13;
oc · n 'didn't m to be himself."&#13;
The l to O te of the council was&#13;
(&gt;re. ·pitated b · reque t from Police&#13;
Ouet Robert Bosman and In pector&#13;
J_oe ph Trotta to revoke the&#13;
license.&#13;
eddiw.t&#13;
St. Patrick's&#13;
Day&#13;
aU week (we are)&#13;
F~~E 1.00 OFF&#13;
on any giant&#13;
hakey's Pizza with&#13;
IRISH BUTT S&#13;
GREE CAA ATIO s&#13;
SHA ROCKS&#13;
IRISH FL GS&#13;
Green&#13;
Beer&#13;
Pizza - Chicken&#13;
this ad, until&#13;
March 31&#13;
o-Jo Potatoes -Live Music&#13;
Open Daily 4:00 p.m. to 1:00&#13;
~ Saturday &amp; Sunday 11:00 a.m.&#13;
~ to 1:00 a.m.&#13;
S A Highua) 31 at KE 'S ~O;h Str!el, Kenosha&#13;
PIZZA PARLOR &amp;&#13;
ubli ou·e&#13;
,&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITon&#13;
To the editor. It is my impression since I came to&#13;
Parkside that there_ seems to be a great&#13;
striving for excellence going on. This is&#13;
fine but how about if we straighten&#13;
our~lves out a little bit first.&#13;
As a student, I am required by most&#13;
instructors, to take tests or hand ~ papers on a certain day, at a certain&#13;
time. Fine! How about the&#13;
instructors? Where are their rules?&#13;
Why aren't they required to hand&#13;
these back, graded within a reasonable&#13;
time?&#13;
To obtain excellency, you need&#13;
efficiency; without it, where the hell&#13;
are we? I take pride in my work on&#13;
papers and articles, as well as my&#13;
attempts at tests. I try to be efficient.&#13;
If I'm not, I and only I will pay the&#13;
price. However, if the instructor takes&#13;
his or her sweet time on grading and&#13;
assignment return, so what? That&#13;
seems to be the attitude. Well, that&#13;
attitude affects everyone. We as&#13;
students wait and wonder, while the&#13;
instructors paychecks keep&#13;
coming---on time. I wonder how they&#13;
would like it if they were told, "I&#13;
haven't got your paychecks ready, I&#13;
was out of town and didn't really have&#13;
time." Well, dear faculty, those grades&#13;
and papers are part of our paycheck.&#13;
They are just as important.&#13;
I have had some excellent&#13;
instructors both last semester as wellas&#13;
the present one. I'm not knocking&#13;
those who may be ill or have&#13;
emergency commitments, but when&#13;
these excuses become everyday&#13;
matters, that's a different story.&#13;
How about it, let's get it together. David Dworak&#13;
To the editor,&#13;
Everyone seems to be concerned&#13;
with air pollution and the effects on&#13;
our health. We are trying to do&#13;
~m~thing a~out it. Well my question&#13;
1s, "w~en 1s someone going to do&#13;
something about the air pollution in&#13;
the classrooms at Greenquist Hall?"&#13;
Back at the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
~puses there is a "no smoking" rule&#13;
in effects, but at Greenquist there is&#13;
no such rule (and if there is, it's not&#13;
enforced). I personally an affected by&#13;
those ignorant people who smoke in a closed classroom with 20 or more&#13;
people in it (where the air is close&#13;
anyway). After awhile my eyes&#13;
redden, my throat gets sore, and I get&#13;
a headache. I carmot concentrate on&#13;
what ma!ters are being discussed so I&#13;
get _nothing out of the class. I am not&#13;
paymg over $~0 per credit for this. I&#13;
suggest that a no smoking" ordinance&#13;
~ , enforced at Greenquist Hall. If it&#13;
is~ t, sooner or later I am going to get&#13;
~1sturbed enough to slug the&#13;
ignoramous that is smoking.&#13;
Norman B. Pietras&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
.&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
1l A,M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI. I SAT. Till 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
{triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
To the edi~qr, I am wntmg in the ho&#13;
clear what is commonlpes of making&#13;
amon&amp;_ ~any people. It ?asunderstOOd&#13;
the 6usSlll&amp;· system we h to do IVith&#13;
Racine. · · ave here in&#13;
It seems to be well kn&#13;
the Racine students own_ among&#13;
Greenquist or Kenosha b gomg to&#13;
U.W.-Parkside buses, tha~ ~ay of the&#13;
the bus b}'.' .a moment, it is stuiou rn· to catch 1t by going to th possib~&#13;
Main St. and ........ Toda e hcorner of&#13;
was riding the bus to Grein ~Wever I&#13;
we sped p~st a good frienau~} ~en&#13;
who had mISsed the bus and nu~&#13;
to hail it, at the corner. was IIYing&#13;
I don t know if it is I'&#13;
buses to pick up on the fi icy of the&#13;
But_ I do think it couitte or not. pohcy, or practice more oft . made&#13;
students are there It en tf late&#13;
happened before i not :uSl ha e&#13;
before. any tune,&#13;
So, maybe if it wouldn't be&#13;
much trouble the buses could too&#13;
moment and pick these peopl stop .a&#13;
only one stop and is necessae u~~ people are late. ry "'ltll&#13;
Gary Van Konin d&#13;
PS-Congratulations on an ex gsv d&#13;
publicatio~ (March I, 197 I). Th~lltnt&#13;
feature articles were great I've th Tll H . · gone . e a ent all library a number .times and current Playbo ci&#13;
Natio7:al Lampoon, are :Yn ~ non-existent. I understand th earl}&#13;
about 3 days to a week. ey Ill&#13;
Hostesses Needed&#13;
Young ladies who are I g have&#13;
opportunity for community service .&#13;
the Kenosha Servicemen's Center at&#13;
the KYF. In spite of the slowdown ·&#13;
the troop commitments in Viet ,&#13;
Kenosha is visited each weekend&#13;
I 50~200 young men in miliury&#13;
sen:'1ce. Most of these young men fmd&#13;
theu way down to the Servicemen's&#13;
Center where attractive young lad&#13;
help them learn more about Kenoslu&#13;
be good ~isteners, dance or play cards:&#13;
The Servicemen's Center is in need of&#13;
n:iore hostesses to work at the Center&#13;
since a weekend requires as many as&#13;
45 hostesses to staff the three Iii&#13;
shifts.&#13;
Young ladies interested in&#13;
community service project should&#13;
_Mrs. Sam Odelberg at 657-9350 or&#13;
Mrs. Paul Sebastian at 694-3555 fix&#13;
more information.&#13;
Newscape&#13;
Volume 3, Number 7&#13;
Monday, March 15, 1971&#13;
Warren Nedry&#13;
Marc Eisen&#13;
JohnKoloen&#13;
Jim Nolan&#13;
John Leighton Advertising.&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, Bill Sorensen, Bill Ja •&#13;
Darrell Borger, Bob Mainland,&#13;
Ken&#13;
Loumos,&#13;
Konkol,&#13;
Mike&#13;
Kevin&#13;
Kurth,&#13;
McKay&#13;
Bob ~&#13;
, J&#13;
Casper, Paul Lomartire, Sven Taffs.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Narees Socha, Don Marjala, John Grl&#13;
Published weekly by the M, II&#13;
ORGANIZATION at the Universm&#13;
Wisconsin- Parkside 3700 1111&#13;
Road, Kenosha, wfsconsin. Edi,&#13;
are the opinion of the Editorial&#13;
and are not to be consider&#13;
opinions of the University, its sn&#13;
faculty, or administration&#13;
TELEPHONES: Busine 6S2 , •.&#13;
Editorial 658-4861, ext.&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
Ranrs - Fnlit WIii - &amp;1111&#13;
Phone: 6fl4-6700&#13;
'ti ind FRANK WEIN~fOCK&#13;
S021 •7!1Tpj II, &#13;
Mucb 15,1971&#13;
AS~~~K~?eaks To Students On Draft, War&#13;
of Ille NeWllcope Staff&#13;
congressmen Les A~~n met with&#13;
dents in the Activities Bldg. on&#13;
~udaYMarch 12. At approx. 12:30&#13;
n began an informal speech&#13;
he cerning two issues which he felt to&#13;
:nc!osestto students: Ihe war an,d Ihe&#13;
draft. .&#13;
Heexplained that the focal point of&#13;
the Vietnamese situation is not a&#13;
·thdrawldale bUI Ihe nature of the&#13;
:thdrawI. As he saw it, the difference&#13;
between the date set by the&#13;
McGovern.Hatfieldproposal of Dec.&#13;
20 1971 (the bill has been&#13;
,~t,oduced) and the date which the&#13;
;residentneeds to fulfill his campaign&#13;
promise,which would be July of 1972&#13;
in order to effect the election is&#13;
negligible.The real issue is just who&#13;
will be withdrawn and what will be the&#13;
functions and duties of those left&#13;
behind.&#13;
He then moved to the draft. He&#13;
thinksthat the real alternatives to the&#13;
present draft are either a reformed&#13;
draft0' a volunteer army. At any rate&#13;
befeelsthe Old System will be junked.&#13;
Heexplained that the chances of the&#13;
draft law, which expires June 30,&#13;
beingabolished are slim indeed. He&#13;
statedthat the most change will center&#13;
on deferments-·they will be dropped.&#13;
At the close of his speech he&#13;
describedwhat he felt to be the three&#13;
paramont issues before the Congress.&#13;
These were revenue sharing, welfare&#13;
reform and some form of national&#13;
health care. He then solicited&#13;
questions from students&#13;
The first question concerned his&#13;
voleon Ihe SST. He stated that he was&#13;
opposed for reasons of ecology and&#13;
economics. "&#13;
Lucey&#13;
(continued from Page 1)&#13;
H. argued the merger made sound&#13;
fISCalsense. "I looked at the budget&#13;
and saw $1.5 million for the&#13;
Coordina ting Council of Higher&#13;
Education (CCHE), $3.5 million for&#13;
!he cent,a1administration of the WSU&#13;
system, and $11.5 million for the&#13;
central administration of the UW&#13;
system.&#13;
"Here's $16 million of central&#13;
administration costs before a single&#13;
studentreceives a single lecture from a&#13;
.ngle professor," he said. "I do not&#13;
lIunkyou can justify three educational&#13;
bureaucracies atop of our 13&#13;
campuses,"&#13;
"I can tell you I will not sign a&#13;
budget bill Ihal provides money for&#13;
the CCHE and the two board of&#13;
.... nts," he declared.&#13;
''We can save at least fOUf Of five&#13;
lIillion dollars in central&#13;
Ilbninistration costs alone by the&#13;
IIItIJer, and we can also eliminate&#13;
",ch costly duplication of programs&#13;
IIId the unseemly competition that&#13;
tllsts between the two systems.H&#13;
The Governor acknowiedged the&#13;
""enty of his cuts has brought him&#13;
criticism. "r don't think there are&#13;
tende,toes we failed to step on in the&#13;
process of pUlling together the&#13;
budget."&#13;
H•. explained that during the :"~"gnhe anticipated a revenue gap&#13;
300 million between budget&#13;
retjuests and money yielded from&#13;
taxes, but after the election he&#13;
When questioned about the S ce&#13;
~~ogra"l' Aspm replied that he favl::ed&#13;
,e ex~ oration of space but not as a&#13;
race WIth the Soviet Union He felt&#13;
.money could be saved by sl~wing the&#13;
tempo of the U.S.-Soviet Space race&#13;
kA~tehseveral more questions he wa~&#13;
~ e ow he landed his seat on The&#13;
rm~d Servtces Committee, He&#13;
explamed that he sent his people to&#13;
the members of the election&#13;
committee to feel out their response&#13;
Photo by Bob Mainland.&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin at UWp,&#13;
to certain government officials that he .&#13;
worked for. He mentioned Robert&#13;
MacNamara as one of these, If he&#13;
received a favorable reaction by&#13;
committee members to his former&#13;
employers, he had those employers&#13;
give that member a cali.&#13;
He also mentioned that the death of&#13;
Mendel Rivers opened the door for his&#13;
appointment. Had Rep. Rivers still&#13;
been in power he felt he would never&#13;
have made it. By way of illumination&#13;
he mentioned that only 2 doves&#13;
discovered that taxes produced Sioo&#13;
million less than expected and that&#13;
budget requests exceeded more than&#13;
$100 million expected.&#13;
He said,"1 was not about to go back&#13;
to the people of Wisconsin with a&#13;
proposal for $500 million in new&#13;
taxes ...&#13;
Lucey said then a thoroudl review&#13;
of the budget began and f,om the&#13;
originai requests of $2,202,000 over&#13;
$280 million were cut. "We have a&#13;
very good budget bureau, and budget&#13;
requests are worked out in close&#13;
cooperation with it and are made just&#13;
about as tight as they can."&#13;
"So when you cut $280 million out&#13;
of the requests you're not just shaVing&#13;
off fat, you're also cutting into the&#13;
lean" he emphasized.&#13;
"You might say," he continued,&#13;
"Well fine but don't cut into&#13;
programs that affect us. Cut into the&#13;
programs we're not concerned ab?ut.&#13;
Don't cut into Welfare and educatIOn.&#13;
cut into something else."&#13;
"The fact is of course, that 2{3 of&#13;
, d' the budget is for education, an you re&#13;
going to have to do something about&#13;
welfare requests because they amount&#13;
to $500 million.&#13;
"So when you take away welfare&#13;
and education there's only a f~w&#13;
hundred million dollars left, whIch&#13;
prOVides the costs of all other state&#13;
service "It was not easy to mak.e&#13;
these cuts," he declared. ','Every. one&#13;
was painful. Every one dlsappomted&#13;
somebody, and when you have $280&#13;
million worth you can be sure yo~&#13;
disappointed just about everybody.&#13;
(Michael Harrington and lumself) were&#13;
on the committee, that the majority of&#13;
members were Southern Democrats&#13;
and that th~iI median age was 59&#13;
The sessoon ended on a Liaht note.&#13;
The last question concerned the resent&#13;
appointment of former represenuuve&#13;
Shadeburg as a presidenual advisor&#13;
Aspin felt that there were I&#13;
significant aspects to this event. The&#13;
first was proof thai "there's still a lot&#13;
of fat in the defense department&#13;
budget" and the second "\1,&#13;
Shadeburg has proved that he ';'pport~&#13;
at least some form of welfare."&#13;
. After the discussion. , E COPE&#13;
interviewed the Congressman.&#13;
Concerning the Lucey budge.&#13;
propo~ Aspin explained, "1 reall)&#13;
haven t had a chance to look at the&#13;
Lucey budget. 1 received a copy tn the&#13;
mail and I JUSl haven't had a chance 10&#13;
!ook. at it. I don't really have any&#13;
influence on the thing at all."&#13;
This prompted the question of his&#13;
relationship with the governor and his&#13;
ability to Influence him. He said thai&#13;
he and the governor were good friends.&#13;
but as far as exerting any influence.&#13;
"It's hard to say, I hav.. n't tned and I&#13;
just don't know." He also felt that h.&#13;
wasn't able to comment on the&#13;
proposed merger of the University&#13;
system.&#13;
On the third parry issue he suggesled&#13;
that McCarthy's. forces are now&#13;
considerably smaller than they "ere tn&#13;
'68.&#13;
The last question covered Welfare&#13;
reform. He supports the 'ixon Plan&#13;
with some alteration, He did not&#13;
elaborate.&#13;
Army Recruiter Here&#13;
An army officer selection learn will&#13;
answer questions about officer&#13;
candidate school on March 1 th, from&#13;
10:00 ·3:00. The tearn woll m lude&#13;
WAC representative and ",,11 be&#13;
located in room :!09 at Tallent Hall&#13;
rRa!j rRadigan ~&#13;
OOcmJ-/.J 9&#13;
For&#13;
Rt's~'alio"s&#13;
Pho"t'&#13;
....~.694-04S'&#13;
SOUf11: IIM-Ql:lDoUl JIlICtoU) MOIITM01 nAft L'"&#13;
XIHOSHA. WI8COHa.t"&#13;
0037 • 22nd A nu.&#13;
kenou"o, Wi1'Ol"l n 53140&#13;
f~o.lk&lt;ry _&#13;
6'4~ 4 -, ___&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
\n~\ &lt;&#13;
t ~ STUDENT ACTIVITY ~t&#13;
BUILDING ONLY&#13;
MALT SPECIAL&#13;
WED.· FRI.&#13;
MARCH 17-19&#13;
AT&#13;
/&#13;
00&#13;
Two chocolate malts for the&#13;
25(&#13;
price of one ---&#13;
... ...-....-- .&#13;
I , I l&#13;
As~i~K~?eaks To Students On Draft, War&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
congressmen Les ~~~n met with&#13;
dents in the Act!Vlhes Bldg. on&#13;
~udaY March 12. At approx. 12:30&#13;
n b~gan an informal speech&#13;
he cerning two issues which he felt to&#13;
:"ctosest to students: the war an.d the&#13;
draft. h h c 1 . He explained t a_t t e. 1oca_ pomt of&#13;
the Vietnamese situation 1s not a&#13;
·thdrawl date but the nature of the&#13;
:~thdrawl. As he saw it, the difference&#13;
between the date set by the&#13;
\lcGovern-Hatfield proposal of Dec.&#13;
2o 1971 (the bill has been&#13;
e~troduced) and the date which the&#13;
~resident needs to fulfill his campaign&#13;
promise, which would be July of 1972&#13;
in order to effect the election is&#13;
negligible. The real issue is just who&#13;
11;11 be withdrawn and what will be the&#13;
functions and duties of those left&#13;
behind.&#13;
He then moved to the draft. He&#13;
thinks that the real alternatives to the&#13;
present draft are either a reformed&#13;
draft or a V(?lunteer army. At any rate&#13;
he feels the Old System will be junked.&#13;
He explained that the chances of the&#13;
draft law, which expires June 30,&#13;
being abolished are slim indeed. He&#13;
tated that the most change will center&#13;
on deferments--they will be dropped.&#13;
At the close of his speech he&#13;
described what he felt to be the three&#13;
paramont issues before the Congress.&#13;
These were revenue sharing, welfare&#13;
reform and some form of national&#13;
health care. He then solicited&#13;
questions from students&#13;
The first question concerned his&#13;
rnte on the SST. He stated that he was&#13;
opposed for reasons of ecology and&#13;
economics."&#13;
Lucey&#13;
(continued from Page 1)&#13;
He argued the merger made sound&#13;
fiscal sense. "I looked at the budget&#13;
and saw $1.5 million for the&#13;
Coordinating Council of Higher&#13;
Education (CCHE), $3.5 million for&#13;
the central administration of the WSU&#13;
ystem, and $11.5 million for the&#13;
central administration of the UW&#13;
sy tern.&#13;
"Here's $16 million of central&#13;
administration costs before a single&#13;
tudent receives a single lecture from a&#13;
gle professor," he said. "I do not&#13;
trunk you can justify three educational&#13;
bureaucracies atop of our 13&#13;
campuses."&#13;
' I can tell you I will not sign a&#13;
budget bill that provides money for&#13;
tilt CCHE and the two board of&#13;
regents," he declared.&#13;
"We can save at least four or five&#13;
million dollars in central&#13;
admini !ration costs alone by the&#13;
merger, and we can also eliminate&#13;
much co tly duplication of programs&#13;
~ the unseemly competition that ' 1 t between the two systems."&#13;
The Governor acknowledged the&#13;
JeVeray of his cuts has brought him&#13;
criticism. "I don't think there are&#13;
tender toes we failed to step on in the&#13;
process of putting together the&#13;
budget."&#13;
He . explained that during the&#13;
1paign he anticipated a revenue gap&#13;
0 300 million between budget&#13;
requests and money yielded from&#13;
\axe , but after the election he&#13;
When ques_tioned about the Space&#13;
f~ogram, As~m replied that he favored _e ex~loration of space but not as a&#13;
race with the Soviet Union. He felt&#13;
money could be saved by slowing the&#13;
tempo of the U.S.-Soviet Space race.&#13;
After several more questions he was&#13;
asked how he landed his seat on The&#13;
Arm~d Services Committee. He&#13;
explamed that he sent his people to&#13;
the !llembers of the election&#13;
committee to feel out their response&#13;
Photo by Bob Main d.&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin at UWP.&#13;
to certain government officials that he&#13;
worked for. He mentioned Robert&#13;
MacNamara as one of these. If he&#13;
received a favorable reaction by&#13;
committee members to his former&#13;
employers, he had those employers&#13;
give that member a call.&#13;
He also mentioned that the death of&#13;
Mendel Rivers opened the door for his&#13;
appointment. Had Rep. Rivers still&#13;
been in power he felt he would never&#13;
have made it. By way of illumination&#13;
he mentioned that only 2 dove&#13;
discovered that taxes produced I 00&#13;
million less than expected and that&#13;
budget requests exceeded more than&#13;
$100 million expected.&#13;
He said,"I was not about to go back&#13;
to the people of Wisconsin with&#13;
proposal for $500 million in new&#13;
taxes."&#13;
Lucey said then a thorough review&#13;
of the budget began and irom the&#13;
original requests of $2,202,000 over&#13;
$280 million were cut. "We have a&#13;
very good budget bureau, and budget&#13;
requests are worked out in close&#13;
cooperatinn with it and are made ju t&#13;
about as tight as they can."&#13;
"So when you cut $280 million out&#13;
of the requests you 're not ju t shaving&#13;
off fat, you're also cutting into the&#13;
lean " he emphasized. "You might say," he continued,&#13;
"Well fine but don't cut into&#13;
programs that affect us .. Cut into the&#13;
programs we're not concerned ab?ut.&#13;
Don't cut into Welfare and education.&#13;
cut into something else."&#13;
"The fact is, of course, that 2/3 .of&#13;
the budget is for education, and you re&#13;
going to have to do omethmg about&#13;
welfare requests because they amount&#13;
to $500 million. "So when you take away welfare&#13;
and education there's only a f~w&#13;
hundred million dollars left, which&#13;
provides the costs of all other tate&#13;
service "It was not easy to make&#13;
these cuts,, he declared. "Every one&#13;
was painf~l. Every one disappointed somebody, and when you have $280&#13;
million worth you can be sure yo~&#13;
disappointed just about everybody.&#13;
The last que ti n CO\Cred&#13;
reform. He upport th 'i. n Pl n&#13;
with ome alteration. He did not&#13;
elaborate.&#13;
Army Recruiter Here&#13;
An arm · officer&#13;
an wer&#13;
Fr&#13;
a , !\CO 531 0&#13;
• .&#13;
. ~&#13;
it's the&#13;
rea thing&#13;
\nl\J \&#13;
'),. ~ STUDE&#13;
&lt;&#13;
T ACT V TY tfet /&#13;
BUILDING 0&#13;
MALT SPEC Al&#13;
T&#13;
7-&#13;
Two chocolate malts for the&#13;
price of one ---&#13;
25( &#13;
March 15, 1971&#13;
'CGotinued "un Paae Il&#13;
"The gains Weuld come more from&#13;
control of prognm development than&#13;
control of unified admilllStration. But&#13;
the ulumate co ts of merger are not&#13;
hkely to gen.rat. huge savmgs for the&#13;
lal e." he said.&#13;
The Chanc.lIor went on to say.&#13;
"The k.y 10 tM whole thmg. as I see&#13;
II. are the budgetary Implications.&#13;
"''hat seem clear is that If the merger&#13;
'SUcceed in \ing money It will be at&#13;
the e pense of presen; funding 1evels&#13;
10 educanon, nd In retauon to u,&#13;
"",'ibl at the expen of educalion&#13;
quahty That I where ""e have to&#13;
foe sour pnncrple concern ••&#13;
"The 10.... nor' b~1 fund none&#13;
,f Ih. new progr m sought for&#13;
In trucHon, tudent servh ..'t. the&#13;
hbr ry. 10 lNCtlOnal computing.&#13;
t tpt 1 0"er for pn",-e In rease an&#13;
e I ImS r~ 10 1nstrucHon and the&#13;
h r&#13;
The Park. de 3dmIOIstration sought&#13;
10 C 1 bit h f ur ne.... majors:&#13;
amputer ..tenct. Indu Hiat&#13;
Re lion. Graph. Art. and the&#13;
Ih tor uf I nee and Tt&lt;hnolog)&#13;
lhot ,,"ould h.. e I 334.000&#13;
G v loor LU&lt;. rc·omm.nded th.~&#13;
not be fund d "'" SOUghlw.r. n.w&#13;
tudent I , tabhshmcnt of a&#13;
IItf Intern tcachm&amp; program. credit&#13;
bv c amU\3t1 n. an I "tant Dean of&#13;
Iud nl. ltd a drug abuse program.&#13;
(i\,,)'.C'rnor Luce&gt; recommended none&#13;
be lund.d&#13;
Th hbrar). once housed ,n Ihe&#13;
ubI I) Learnmg ('.nt.r w uld no' be&#13;
bl' 10 mol&lt; It book to th. new&#13;
bUild"'! be 'au th. moVIng would&#13;
n I be funded under Lu«y's budg.1.&#13;
Ihe L "self wouldb. WIthOUt it&#13;
pi nn.d faclllti.s b ... use the&#13;
~~lQ,OOO \Ought to Implement Lhem is&#13;
I o&lt;&gt;tbudgeted.&#13;
n I,emlzed budg.' as SOUghlby&#13;
P rk ,d. and the ubs.quenl&#13;
rt ommemt:luon of the Regents. the&#13;
('( liE and Ih. Governor is a follows:&#13;
Th. Chancellor' response to the&#13;
Governor' proposed budg.t was. "It&#13;
'ftlll be a ...ery serious blow to the&#13;
development of the campus if the&#13;
luce) budget prevail .&#13;
·'In the farst pla..:e, he 15 proposing&#13;
u ·tlon '" r UW bud er&#13;
DECUIIO J'ft:M: (B.. • .. I~)&#13;
_ '., .' ~ MajorS:&#13;
LamIDI C8J~, Word ProceSI1Illl. Pri;:'pbi Arts Hist. of&#13;
Ccmpule' Sclenoe. 1DCkJIlJi'1 ReI., G C ,&#13;
Scle&gt;c:e and Tec:bDOIotlY - IPrice uerea."&gt;&#13;
mJDENT SERVICES: Dean of&#13;
Intern Teod1ID&amp; Credit by Exam. Grad. CbeCk, Assl&#13;
Studenla Placement, Info Office. PsydJ. eounsel·. DrUll&#13;
Abuae, vocalioDa1 C"""",ullll·&#13;
LIBRARY: . P 'odicals Foreign&#13;
Move to lLC, G&lt;lft. Pub., Maps. MUSIC, en •&#13;
Pub!. OUl-&lt;li·Print,Auto. eire. System, - IPrice Iaer ... es)&#13;
PHYSICAL PLANT: . hillin' V hicle Fuel Power" Ligbt, CUStodial. Healinll-C g, e&#13;
~. " Fleet, Grounda Maintenance&#13;
PROft:cnON" SECURITY:&#13;
TNSmucnONAL COMPUTING:&#13;
Ope!1ltiooa, Systems, Time. Applicatiooa, Consult.&#13;
GRANT MATCHING FUNDS:&#13;
FACILITIES MANAGEMENT AND PLANNING AND CON·&#13;
STRUCTION:&#13;
SPACE RENTAL:&#13;
BUSINESS SERVICES: Purcbaaing, Payroll. per.;onnel. Bursar. Risk Management.&#13;
Centrex. Mail. Duplicating&#13;
ADMiNTSTRATIVE DATA PROCESSING:&#13;
Student Recorda. Library, Financial Aids, Space, Personnel.&#13;
Simulation. Reporting&#13;
F1NA CE PART YEAR POSITIONS:&#13;
PHY. ED.·AmLETICS:&#13;
Aquatics. Women's P.E., Physical 'Therapy&#13;
PUBLICATIONS AND PUBLIC INFORMATION:&#13;
TOTAL&#13;
Regents&#13;
(inCludes added&#13;
fringes and&#13;
Class. Merit) UW·Parkside&#13;
$ 948.400&#13;
279,400&#13;
425.500&#13;
375,000&#13;
100,000&#13;
146,000&#13;
500.000&#13;
437,900&#13;
442.000&#13;
99,400&#13;
$ 879.200&#13;
223,500&#13;
432,300&#13;
1,313,000&#13;
223,000&#13;
255.900&#13;
~&#13;
154,900&#13;
~&#13;
338.200&#13;
324,100&#13;
110.800&#13;
C.C.H.E. Governor&#13;
$ 923.700 •&#13;
15....&#13;
223.500 00-&#13;
432,300 81••&#13;
465,800 465,8110&#13;
206,000 41.000&#13;
255.900 -0.&#13;
~ 00-&#13;
~ 00-&#13;
~ -0.&#13;
338.200 -0.&#13;
324.100 -0.&#13;
110,800 00-&#13;
81,800&#13;
114,700&#13;
$5,439.400&#13;
-0. ~ -0.&#13;
89,800 89.800 00-&#13;
$4.344.700 $3.370.100 $ 612.100&#13;
of S9.3 million. We don" know&#13;
.exactly what rhe shared portion of&#13;
that base budget cut would be at&#13;
Parkside. But what we do know is that&#13;
w. ..pect roughly 1,000 more&#13;
students next year.&#13;
"And it we're cut back in the base,&#13;
it can only lead to less staff. less&#13;
programs, and less support resources&#13;
thot are involved in the base." he said.&#13;
"I think the first thing we would be&#13;
hurt on is the base cut. .. ;' he&#13;
continued. "The second impact would&#13;
be that by putting us on the WSU&#13;
funding formula level lhere would be&#13;
not only further reduction for new&#13;
students, but also for the ones we have&#13;
here already,"&#13;
He was asked then if the WSU&#13;
schools and Parkside would be funded&#13;
on the same levels. "This is exactly&#13;
whar the Go...~rnor has sed in his&#13;
budget whether the merger is&#13;
a.ccomplished or not."&#13;
"The Governor is reaching for&#13;
merger through lhe budget; because&#13;
the funding levels he has proposed for&#13;
all campuses in the UW are the same as&#13;
in the proposed syslem.&#13;
"In other' words, under the&#13;
Governor's proposal, the Madison&#13;
campus, which has a distinctively high&#13;
level of funding. would be at level I.&#13;
Level 2 for undergraduate instruction&#13;
would be funded at exactly the same&#13;
level as institutions in the UWS&#13;
system," he said.&#13;
Wyllie continued, "Here we are at&#13;
an early slage of developmenl with a&#13;
great many legitimate for lhe studenls&#13;
and staff that have not yet been met.&#13;
These specific needs as identified in&#13;
our budget presentation and budget&#13;
have been largely ignored or wiped&#13;
out ..&#13;
The Ch a ncellor concluded b;&#13;
saying, "Until a new campus has been~&#13;
~n business for four full years, Or until&#13;
II reaches a 6 or 7.000 studenl lev.l it&#13;
doesn't have the physical r.sor~&#13;
staff and programs need.d to functi";&#13;
as an established institution.&#13;
"U takes lhat long for a new&#13;
campus to match up to lh. fund"&#13;
formula establi:lhed for lhe syst.m.~&#13;
are a year or two away from this."&#13;
"That is why, in the past, w. have&#13;
asked for and have gotten, from earlier&#13;
administration, some help in the 'start&#13;
up' costs," he stated.&#13;
"If we don't get furth.r h.lp 010"&#13;
these lines, and, in addition, we're&#13;
asked to take cuts in our bue IJlII&#13;
funding formuli, it's going to have •&#13;
very damaging effect," he .mphasiud.&#13;
DANCE&#13;
WOODEN&#13;
ROAD&#13;
Friday, March 19th&#13;
9:00-1:00 a.m.&#13;
adm. $1.00&#13;
ST. PATRICK'S&#13;
DAY SPECIAL&#13;
25¢&#13;
~&#13;
WED., MARCH 17&#13;
~&#13;
Glass of Green Beer &amp;&#13;
Box of popcorn&#13;
Parks ide &amp; Wisconsin '0 required.&#13;
ch 1 , 19 1&#13;
DECI.SIO,' ln:M: (Bien.aial Increase)&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Regents&#13;
(includes added&#13;
fringes and&#13;
Class. Merit) C.C.H.E. Governor&#13;
1D1er. :C tel' Word Processing Price Increase, M~jors:&#13;
~ ~en~. lndustri~ Rel'., Graphic Arts, Hist. of&#13;
Science and Tecl:mology - (Price Increases)&#13;
$ 948,400&#13;
STUDE, i'T RVICES: A t Dean of&#13;
Intern Teaching, credit by Exam, Grad. Check, ~ Drug&#13;
udents, Placement, Info Office, Psych. Coun ·•&#13;
Abuse, Vocational Counseling.&#13;
279,400&#13;
LIBRARl': · p ·odicats Foreign&#13;
ove to LLC, Goft. Pub., Maps, Music, en , 425,500&#13;
Puhl. Out-&lt;i-Print, Auto. Circ. System, - (Price Increases)&#13;
PHY JC L Pl.A! :T: . . ,-:n:- y hicle&#13;
Fuel Power &amp; Light. CUstodial, Heating~w.u=g, e&#13;
Main. &amp; Fleet, Groimds iaintenance&#13;
PROTECTIO .. &amp; ECURITY:&#13;
1,293,700&#13;
195,600&#13;
I:· TRU 110. 'AL CO:\fPUTING:&#13;
Operations, Systems, Time, Applications, Consult.&#13;
GRA.: i'T • TCHI! 'G FUNDS:&#13;
375,000&#13;
100,000&#13;
FACILITIES • IA!' GE. tE, 'T AND PLANNING AND CON- 146,000&#13;
UCTIO. 500,000 ':&#13;
CE RE.i'T L:&#13;
BU I R\'ICES:&#13;
Pu:rdlasing, Pa)TOll, Personnel, Bursar, Risk Management, 437,900&#13;
Centrex, fail, Duplicating&#13;
AD, 11. 'lSTRATI\'E DATA PROCESSIN~:&#13;
tudent Records, Ubrary, Financial Aids, Space, Personnel,&#13;
1mulat1on, Reporting&#13;
FI.· . CE PART YEAR PO ITIOSS:&#13;
PHY. ED.-ATIILETIC :&#13;
442,000&#13;
99,400&#13;
Aquatics, Women· P.E., Physical Therapy&#13;
p BLI 110. · A. 'D PUBLIC I!l.'FOR. IATION:&#13;
81,800&#13;
114,700&#13;
o 9.3 milh n. We don't know&#13;
.e actly what the shared portion of&#13;
that b ,e budget cut would be at&#13;
P r ide. But what we do know i that&#13;
we e pect roughly 1,000 more&#13;
tudent ne. t year. .. nd it we 're cut back in the base,&#13;
it an only lead to le staff, less&#13;
program . and le upport resources&#13;
that are involved in the base." he said.&#13;
"I think the first thing we would be&#13;
hurt on i the base cut. . . ," he&#13;
continued. "The second impact would&#13;
be that by putting us on the WSU&#13;
funding formula level there would be&#13;
not only further reduction for new&#13;
tudent . but also for the ones we have&#13;
here already."&#13;
He was asked then if the WSU&#13;
chools and Parkside would be funded&#13;
on the same levels. "This is exactly&#13;
.&#13;
TOTAL $5,439,400&#13;
budget whether the merger- is&#13;
accomplished or not."&#13;
''The Governor is reaching for&#13;
merger through the budget; because&#13;
the funding levels he has proposed for&#13;
all campuses in the UW are the same as&#13;
in the proposed system.&#13;
"In other · words, under the&#13;
Governor's proposal, the Madison&#13;
campus, which has a distinctively high&#13;
level of funding, would be at level 1.&#13;
Level 2 for undergraduate instruction&#13;
would be funded at exactly the same&#13;
level as institutions in the UWS&#13;
system." he said.&#13;
Wyllie continued, "Here we are at&#13;
an early stage of development with a&#13;
great many legitimate for the students&#13;
and staff that have not yet been met.&#13;
These specific needs as identified in&#13;
our budget presentation and budget&#13;
have been largely ignored or wiped&#13;
out."&#13;
$ 879,200&#13;
223,500&#13;
432,300&#13;
1,313,000&#13;
223,000&#13;
255,900&#13;
-0-&#13;
154,900&#13;
-0-&#13;
338,200&#13;
324,100&#13;
110,800&#13;
-0-&#13;
89,800&#13;
$4,344,700&#13;
$ 923,700&#13;
223,500&#13;
432,300&#13;
465,800&#13;
206,000&#13;
255,900&#13;
-0-&#13;
-0-&#13;
-0-&#13;
338,200&#13;
324,100&#13;
110,800&#13;
-0-&#13;
89,800&#13;
$3,370,100&#13;
• 1s,90o&#13;
89,(0e&#13;
465,800&#13;
41,000&#13;
-().&#13;
-().&#13;
-().&#13;
~&#13;
-().&#13;
$ 612,100&#13;
The Chancellor concluded b&#13;
saying, "Until a new campus has beenin&#13;
business for four full years, or until&#13;
it reaches a 6 or 7,000 student level It&#13;
doesn't have the physical resor~&#13;
staff and programs needed to functio~ as an established institution.&#13;
"It takes that long for a new&#13;
campus to match up to the fund '&#13;
formula establi!!hed for the system. ~ are a year or two away from this."&#13;
"That is why, in the past, we ha\e&#13;
asked for and have gotten, from earlier&#13;
administration, some help in the' tart&#13;
up' costs." he stated.&#13;
"If we don't get further help alo~&#13;
these lines, and, in addition, ~e·re&#13;
asked to take cuts in our base and&#13;
funding formuli, it's going to ha\e a&#13;
very damaging effect," he emphasiztd.&#13;
DANCE ST. PATRICK'S&#13;
WOODEN&#13;
ROAD&#13;
Fr· day, March 19th&#13;
9:00-1:00 a.m.&#13;
adm. $1.00&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wisconsin ID required.&#13;
DAY SPECIAL&#13;
WED., MARCH 17&#13;
• Glass of Green Beer &amp;&#13;
Box of Popcorn&#13;
25¢&#13;
• &#13;
Hal Stern.&#13;
grem who is adviser to the&#13;
("",~';ed Student Cnalition, the film&#13;
"'IY and the Black' Student Union,&#13;
'" leaderof last May's student strike&#13;
III! htlped with Teach-in preparations&#13;
Illbe time.&#13;
Rlprding his campaign Stern said,&#13;
'Wesimply do not have democratic&#13;
I"femment when QUf. elec~ed&#13;
IlP""ntatives take part in settmg&#13;
lofernment policies without&#13;
~Iting their constituents."&#13;
'10 return governmental control to&#13;
lite people in the first ward, [ would&#13;
bold regular ward meetings," he&#13;
.. Ie&lt;!. "These meetings will provide&#13;
• opportunity for people to fmd [ out&#13;
""', bhappening on the City Council,&#13;
bu' also to tell me what things they&#13;
~ Ishould be working for as their&#13;
~tative."&#13;
At the present his campaign centers&#13;
naacl three issues; Housing and&#13;
filii, Labor and Unemployment, and&#13;
HeohbCare.&#13;
lie said many of the houses in the&#13;
6nl ward are being allowed to&#13;
dCleriorate. and that stricter&#13;
lIIorcement of housing codes is&#13;
IIe&lt;Itd to remedy this. He also&#13;
Wbevesthere is serious need for new&#13;
-costhousing in the ward.&#13;
Seem said there should be a tax&#13;
meliOR made between homeowners&#13;
~ .'blentee landlords which means a&#13;
llllllction between' property for "':W use and property for profit.&#13;
reels what is needed is a&#13;
ptOPessivecounty-wide tax structure&#13;
It up so that corporations and&#13;
-ulthy individuals cannot avoid&#13;
~lte FrelCll erope.gowns&#13;
or Ioly lQud,ec1 with embrold-&#13;
~?{refl&lt;h rQSes (relIU!inber&#13;
rr 0 • ex~te. baDd made&#13;
r.";;b. laoe--salln rlbbons--&#13;
bJ L~r""" braI_. Deslgned_&#13;
-U I •lbeae g9wns come lU&#13;
lie ""11k: sblrt, shortle or graii-&#13;
~. aJId ~ tre some petgnor&#13;
l.llIIt liIldt&gt; enaa- ar'ldea1lortlle&#13;
Ilft~ 1IOald-1Ilat&lt;l a "elcame&#13;
~IICI A_ X.RD ....&#13;
• 652·2611&#13;
Marc:b IS. 1971&#13;
Eating In&#13;
Phaying their fair tax share. He said if&#13;
t IS 15 not done soon Ra .&#13;
lose its tax base to the sUbu~~sn would&#13;
Stem said the working man is hurt&#13;
most by inflation and that the only&#13;
way ~e can gurantee himself a decent&#13;
wage IS by the right to strike.&#13;
He emphasized, "It should be made&#13;
clear that wages increases for workers&#13;
~ave ,not been the primary SOurce of&#13;
inflation, From 1960-1970 COrporate&#13;
profits after taxes increased 75% while&#13;
average weekly wages for employees&#13;
went up only 35%."&#13;
Concerning health -care he said&#13;
"Health care in Racine is v~ry good if&#13;
you have the money to pay for it.&#13;
There IS not one public health clinic or&#13;
public hospital 'in the city. Many&#13;
people cannot afford medical&#13;
insurance. In addi tion t simple monthly&#13;
doctor bills can be a tremendous&#13;
burden for old people and families&#13;
with several children."&#13;
"Racine needs a public health clinic&#13;
very biftIly," he stated. "I would&#13;
support or initiate any efforts to&#13;
establish one."&#13;
A Citizens for Stern committee has&#13;
been formed, and is holding a meeting&#13;
Sunday March 21 at Stern's house,&#13;
812 College Avenue. He said anyone&#13;
interested in helping is invited to&#13;
come ..&#13;
by Prof. Kook&#13;
I never do much baking but I have&#13;
found a recipe for a lemon cake which is&#13;
so simple you can '1 go wrong.&#13;
Here's what you need:&#13;
lemon cake mix lemon JeUo&#13;
2/3 cup water ~3 cup vegetable oil&#13;
4 eggs· I tablespoon lemon e. tract&#13;
pinch of salt Ica_ pan&#13;
H ow to prepare'.&#13;
Mix everthing together: put into pan:&#13;
bake at 350 degeees for 30 minutes. Let&#13;
it cool a little before you take it out 0 r&#13;
the cake pan.&#13;
Speaking of after dinner treats, a&#13;
friend from Louisiana gave me lhi&#13;
receipe for home-made coffee brand). It&#13;
tastes great and costs about S~.OO I&#13;
fifth to make. Here's what you need&#13;
I cup of grain alcohol (available at&#13;
liquor store)&#13;
~ cup of while Karo syrup&#13;
~cup honey .&#13;
3 heaping teaspoons instant coffee&#13;
dash of vani lIa&#13;
empty bOIlI. (preferably an empty&#13;
fifth)&#13;
Mix all ingredients together m fiFth&#13;
bottle; add enough water to fill. Shake.&#13;
You mighLexperiment to your tast. For&#13;
example, use brewed coffee instead of&#13;
instant for a richer coffee flavor.&#13;
Serve as an after dinner liquor,&#13;
••••• :Cil.,..&#13;
SPORT NOTES&#13;
Tennis courts will be available at&#13;
Pershing Park on March 15.&#13;
ThOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
eu: Gallery Ont&#13;
503 fain t.&#13;
Racine&#13;
10% tudent Discount&#13;
011 all Posters &amp; Fram&#13;
r,.,A' -"f~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/&amp;-r&#13;
Sia •&#13;
eoee 40-.. AVE.&#13;
KEHOOlHA- Ot.7.1In4&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Gandy&#13;
McDonald\ Guide&#13;
to the care and feeding&#13;
of the st t b y.&#13;
The Hamburger&#13;
To make eating simple, start with&#13;
the basics: A pure beef paille on a&#13;
satisfying bun. Uncomplicated&#13;
and good.&#13;
French Frla&#13;
With sandwiches. or alone Or w th&#13;
f"ends Being hghtwe'ghl as ell&#13;
as crisp and fresh. they're ponable&#13;
Stern Seeks Office&#13;
By DeaD.lAumos&#13;
of the Newscope Staff _&#13;
assistant professor of&#13;
Ib1 SterniJw_p and one of the&#13;
f""rh, a~ore outspoken activists, has.&#13;
Jl1PuJ 'hi candidacy for alderman of ",ed s&#13;
~ " Iirst ward.&#13;
",.,.,&#13;
Coff"&#13;
IIcan keep your eyes open. That s&#13;
pretty lmportant In classes.&#13;
cramming. or slaying up past&#13;
your badllme.&#13;
FU.t 0' Flah&#13;
Tasty white filet. Special sauce.&#13;
A delicious bun.&#13;
Something different to keep the&#13;
stomach from gelling bored.&#13;
Big Mac&#13;
For those with big appetites. Two&#13;
beef patties. lelluce, cheese, a&#13;
special sauce. and a triple decker&#13;
sesame seed bun.&#13;
Hot Appl' Pie&#13;
Lots of apples in a CFlSP,de leate&#13;
crust 11 serves as a cure for&#13;
homesickness Keep one under&#13;
your pI'low for a lale n ght snac&#13;
eoc.CoIe&#13;
Bubbly. Icy Soothes and refrUSOOs&#13;
the hroat. mouth. and m nd&#13;
Cools the tummy&#13;
MUkS"-k ..&#13;
Chocolate. Stra ....'llerry. and 01&#13;
course. your bas&gt;c an a Cool&#13;
smoot • at hOme n aoy body&#13;
MeJJ_ u U.&#13;
52d Street and 40th At'enue&#13;
Sheridan Rd. and 81st&#13;
I . I&#13;
Stern Seeks Office&#13;
By oean.LQumos Eating In&#13;
f the Newscope Staff&#13;
0 -&#13;
5 n assistant professor of&#13;
tbl :t UW-P, and on~ _of the&#13;
f,t,h 's more outspoken activists, haspu~&#13;
his candidacy for alderman of&#13;
~ 's rust ward. ~&#13;
Hal Stern.&#13;
Stern, who is adviser to the&#13;
c med Student Coalition, the film&#13;
,xitly, and the Blad&lt; Student Uni?n,&#13;
leader of last May's student stnke&#13;
helped with Teach-in preparations&#13;
the time.&#13;
Regarding his campaign Stern said,&#13;
·e sunply do not have democratic&#13;
ernmen t when our elected&#13;
eientatives take part in setting&#13;
onrnment policies without&#13;
!ting their constituents."&#13;
"To return governmental control to&#13;
people in the first ward, I would&#13;
regular ward meetings," he&#13;
led. "These meetings will provide&#13;
opportunity for people to find [ out&#13;
tis happening on the City Council,&#13;
t also to tell me what things they&#13;
I should be working for as their&#13;
resentative."&#13;
t the present his campaign centers&#13;
d three issues; Housing and&#13;
T e, labor and Unemployment, and&#13;
Ith Care.&#13;
He id many of the houses in the&#13;
w rd are being allowed to&#13;
teriorate, and that stricter&#13;
r ement of housing codes is&#13;
ed to remedy this. He also&#13;
m there is serious need for new&#13;
,co t housing in the ward .&#13;
tem id there should be a tax&#13;
mbtion made between homeowners . ~ntee landlords, which means a m hon between property for :ai use and property for profit. feels what is needed is a&#13;
e tve county-wide tax structure&#13;
up ? that corporations and&#13;
altby mdividuals cannot avoid&#13;
ihyi~g their fair tax share. He said if&#13;
is _is not done soon Racien w ld&#13;
lose its tax _base to the suburbs. ou&#13;
Stem s~1d the working man is hurt&#13;
most by mflation and that the only&#13;
way ~e can gurantee himself a decent&#13;
wage is by the right to strike.&#13;
He emphasized , "It should be made&#13;
clear that wages increases for workers&#13;
-~ave _not been the primary source of&#13;
mflatlon. From 1960-1970 corporate&#13;
profits after taxes increased 75% while&#13;
average weekly wages for employees went up only 35%."&#13;
Concerning health -care he said&#13;
"Health care in Racine is v~ry good if&#13;
you h~ve the money to pay for it.&#13;
There 1s not one public health clinic or&#13;
public hospital "in the city. Many&#13;
people cannot a fford medical&#13;
insurance. In addition , simple monthly&#13;
doctor bills can be a tremendou&#13;
burden for old people and families&#13;
with several children."&#13;
"Racine needs a public health clinic&#13;
very biftlly ," he stated . " I would&#13;
support or initiate any efforts to&#13;
establish one."&#13;
A Citizens for Stern committee ha been formed , and is holding a meeting&#13;
Sunday March 21 at Stern's house,&#13;
812 College Avenue. He said anyone interested in helping is invited to&#13;
come . ******-***&#13;
SPORT NOTES&#13;
Tennis courts will be available at&#13;
Pershing Park on March 15 .&#13;
The Hamburger&#13;
Ho w to p re p are::&#13;
Mix everthing t ether: put into p n:&#13;
bake at 350 deg e for 30 minut . ~t&#13;
it cool a little before you ta e it ut of&#13;
the cake pan.&#13;
Speaking of fter inner re t , a&#13;
friend from Loui · na&#13;
receipe for home-m de&#13;
ta te gre t and o&#13;
fifth to make. Here· ·h t&#13;
I cup of grain al oh I&#13;
liquor tore&#13;
½ cup of white Karo ) rup&#13;
!. cup honey .&#13;
3 heaping tea poon in t t&#13;
dash of ,-anilla&#13;
empty bottle (prefera ly an empt&#13;
fifth)&#13;
tix all ingredient t ether in fifth&#13;
bottle: add enough ter to fill. e.&#13;
You might.e. periment to ·our t t. F r&#13;
example. use bre ·ed offee inste d of&#13;
instant for a richer coffee fl ,-or.&#13;
Serve a an after dinner liqu r.&#13;
To make eating simple, start th&#13;
the basics: A pure beef pattie on a&#13;
satisfying bun. Uncomplicated&#13;
and good.&#13;
Filet o· Fish&#13;
Tasty white file! Special sauce.&#13;
A delicious bun.&#13;
Something different_to keep the&#13;
stomach from getting bored.&#13;
Coffee&#13;
u&#13;
Tl-1 0 U OS&#13;
OF FL RES&#13;
Big Mac&#13;
For those with big appetttes. Two&#13;
beef patties, lettuce, ~heese, a&#13;
special sauce. and a triple decker&#13;
sesame seed bun.&#13;
52d Street and 0th Ai ru&#13;
Sheridan Rd. and It &#13;
"'6 EWSCOPE MuclIIS,I971&#13;
Campus Events&#13;
Tuesday, March 16&#13;
POt try Lecture. Poet Galway&#13;
Kmnell. 8:00 p.m. Student ACllvities&#13;
Building.&#13;
Wednesday. March 17&#13;
Film. "Viridiana." ponsored by&#13;
Parkside Film Society. :00 p.m.&#13;
Room 103. Gree nquist Hall.&#13;
AdmIssion: S .so&#13;
Friday. larch 19s.&#13;
Dance. "Wooden Road." 9 • 1:00&#13;
P m. St ud e nt Ac rtvir ie s Bldg.&#13;
Admission: SI.OO. Parkside and&#13;
WI on an 1 D. reQuired.&#13;
GvmfUlSflcs 'A IA 'ational Champ1&#13;
n5lup. 'atchuoches. Louisiana.&#13;
lurday, March 20&#13;
Mtt,,,,, Management Science Club.&#13;
Creenqul t Hall, Room 0101.&#13;
rnkk uw·p YS lJW,·.Wwaukee al&#13;
WM&#13;
f/",.kty UW·p YS Johnson's Wax&#13;
u, ~II n Park Indoor Arena.&#13;
hlwaukee.&#13;
Omc." Buddy RIch and his&#13;
O"he "a. ,pon red by the Student&#13;
"v,"e Office. 00 p.m. Keno ha&#13;
Tremper Audlloflum. Adml ion&#13;
3.00 and S~.OO&#13;
,..,tiA ;;It&#13;
~&#13;
F.j,4'"&#13;
. ¥" Banquet&#13;
.~ "., RoomsAvailable&#13;
CARL'$/PIZZA&#13;
I. four Sia.,,,, . 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
A.LSO&#13;
• 'IllS. S'AGHffil • CHlCtclH&#13;
• GHO(CHI ..... VIOL! • LA SAGH •&#13;
• Sf A fOOD. SANOWICHU&#13;
CAIlY·OUn - DElIVElY&#13;
"YOU .,HC _ WE "'HC"&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
5140 't~AV(&#13;
Mission&#13;
(continued from hge1)&#13;
&lt;:IIanOOIor Wyllie explained, ''The&#13;
po .. ib~jty that Green Bay and&#13;
Parl&lt;side might. if I merJel develo~.&#13;
lost their distinctiven.... lose the ...&#13;
advantages in funding and ~me Just&#13;
like Iny ""'001 anywbere IS real. .&#13;
And so one of the Iisks ahead for the&#13;
two DeW campuses would be to&#13;
cItveIop I document. setting fortb the&#13;
unique character of these tw~&#13;
institutjons Ibll would justify the....&#13;
receiving more favored treatment In&#13;
everytbing relaling 10 funding than did&#13;
the &amp;eneral run of institutions."&#13;
If a merserof.the State Uni~ersiti~s&#13;
and the University of WisconSIn&#13;
crystallizes, there is a "p&lt;:,ssibility of&#13;
three distincl leagues bemg formed&#13;
with Madison and Milwaukee in the&#13;
tOP league, with Green B~v and&#13;
possible Parkside. Eau Cla"e and&#13;
Stevens Point in the second league,&#13;
and then the general run of&#13;
instilutions from the other system in a&#13;
tbird league:' Wyllie added, "If w'&#13;
failed 10 make a hard. light case&#13;
documenting our institutional&#13;
uniqueness and distinctiveness, then&#13;
we might end up in the bOllom&#13;
league:'&#13;
Wyllie continued, "We needed to be&#13;
in a beller defensive position in the&#13;
whole matter of institutional&#13;
distinctiveness and it was at that point&#13;
Ihat I had conversations with the&#13;
university committee, the chairmen of&#13;
the divisions, Dean Morrow and others&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-9747&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS&#13;
LIKE ... the brands you know&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000Albums&#13;
and 45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, not your&#13;
checkbook. see and talk to Mark, our&#13;
Department Manager, who is a Parkside&#13;
--:;;::::~student and will talk your language, both in&#13;
- equipment purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY- Tape recorders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
PANASONIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
KOSS - Headsets&#13;
KENWOOD - Receivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANTZ - Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC - Speakers&#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 you&#13;
are here, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
. a document that&#13;
about developmg h point of our&#13;
would speak to t e "&#13;
institutional distinctiveness. d . t a&#13;
The tlsk bas mushroome 10 °b&#13;
. T pie serve on t e major proJect. e~ peo d t the&#13;
Missions CommIttee an a&#13;
- '1 was announced that the&#13;
~:~~:n: would have to bThsent t~&#13;
Madison by March 15. e n~x&#13;
scbeduled meeting of the MISSIOn&#13;
C mrnittee is March 17.&#13;
oThe group had written a first draft&#13;
for the document but Cbancellor&#13;
W llie said that "The document. If&#13;
gi~en to a legislator or a state b~d~~t&#13;
analyst or the governor, pr.o a y&#13;
Id not be fully persuasive on&#13;
wou 'ghl.ght specific points that would hi I_al why this campus deserves speci&#13;
consideration as against all o!h~r&#13;
campuses. In other words, what .IS 1t&#13;
Ibal makes us, in all things.&#13;
distinctively different:'&#13;
Tom Reeves suggested that tbe&#13;
document be written by .publIc&#13;
relations people who are profeSSIOnally&#13;
suited to this type of task, because P.&#13;
R. people would be more aware of the&#13;
specific points which would mfluence&#13;
taxpayers and legislators. .&#13;
The unique attributes Parkslde has,&#13;
include the texture of the student&#13;
body, which is mostly working class.&#13;
first generation college ,students, t~e&#13;
athletic programs that ~uected at life&#13;
time involvement In sports as&#13;
recreation, the physical plan of the&#13;
campus (Le. this huge wooded tract of&#13;
land laid out with the intent of&#13;
preserving that land) and the&#13;
in terrelationship of the physlCal&#13;
rn a st e r p Ian and the academic&#13;
program.&#13;
Rita Tallent. tbe Cbancellor's&#13;
Special Assistant, said, ~7he original&#13;
document does a tremendous job of&#13;
showing how we serve our two&#13;
communities. . . and I noticed that&#13;
"there were two pages and part of a&#13;
Ihird devoted to tbat. but tbe scbool&#13;
of modern industry has just one&#13;
paragrapb .... I think tbe pbilosopby&#13;
bebind tbe AST program wbicb is&#13;
quite similar to tbe general en~ineering&#13;
degree at Milwaukee, but With some&#13;
differences; theirs is Applied Science&#13;
and Engineering and ours is Applied&#13;
Science and Tecbnology. I tbink' tbe&#13;
uniqueness of which is considerably&#13;
different from Milwankee. sbould be&#13;
brougbt out:'&#13;
For the remainder of the meeting&#13;
the discussion centered around the&#13;
differences which make Pa .&#13;
distinctive. Reeves SUggested~kIi4e&#13;
greatest distinction Was "the f I !be&#13;
we are here as a four year inst·tICtthall .&#13;
tb t&#13;
. gh" lUI....&#13;
~ IS .. enou . He believed ..&#13;
Madison set us up. cut us 100 thaI&#13;
sold us out and then ha~' iIId&#13;
affrontery to demand we der d !be&#13;
own existence." en OUt&#13;
It seemed that some of the&#13;
bad tbe attitude that the prodl!ltlllbeq&#13;
want to sell was not of i~ct~&#13;
adequate advertisement for the~If II&#13;
analysts and tbe politician. lIdeeI&#13;
others found that a dOcument'wwillie&#13;
according to the way it had ~&#13;
discussed would just as easily ......&#13;
vocational school as a firstIeII •&#13;
university if it concentrated On th~&#13;
tbat tbe two bad in common -.....&#13;
Toward tbe end of tbe ;"eel&#13;
was decided to roll up sloe."U1I n&#13;
produce the document by dividinaIIId&#13;
committee into four smailer tilt&#13;
each responsible for a specificIf...,.,&#13;
tbe document. The firsl grOllpan"&#13;
consider the nature of Ihe ~li1lOald&#13;
and po !itical consideralions.·n:&#13;
second would expand on wha'l Iud&#13;
previously been done On 'Ptcif,&#13;
programs in the original document.~&#13;
third would take up the phYSic~,&#13;
of the campus relating it 10 the0::&#13;
groups; and. the fourth WouldtB,&#13;
work on the mterdisciplinary nalur."&#13;
the academIC program. Th.y thoo&#13;
decided to develop a them. " lhr&#13;
framework of tbe docum.&#13;
hi~lighting the general and ~~&#13;
mISSIOnsby complunenting eachotha&#13;
"Yyllie. stressed tbat Par!uid. 11•&#13;
• opportumty campus" offeringadtit&#13;
educatlOn, lOnovatlOnsin the acadeaic&#13;
program. and tha t the campusallflCll&#13;
a majority of its studenls r,..&#13;
working class backgrounds.&#13;
·There seems to be only on. tJu,.&#13;
rrussmg and tbat ISthe opporlunily£..&#13;
students, IW~o ~e the univerluy'.&#13;
number one chents to participate&#13;
on this I committeel.&#13;
Mission Committee Members&#13;
Sam Fillipone. Chairman&#13;
Peter Martin&#13;
Richard Rosenberg&#13;
Henry Cole&#13;
Gene Gasiorkiewicz&#13;
Alan Shucard&#13;
Emmet Bedford&#13;
Sam Tang&#13;
Thomas Mueller&#13;
Thomas Reeves&#13;
YOUR COMPLETE "ON CAMPUS" BOOK &amp; SUPPLY CENTER&#13;
ANNUAL SPRING&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
Books of interest to everyone, beginning March 19,&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
A HIW KIHD Df ALCDHDUeamUlE&#13;
•&#13;
Pa 6 OPE ch IS, 1971&#13;
Cam pus Events Mission&#13;
( continued fi m Page 1)&#13;
famous lo,&#13;
Ga1 ,ay&#13;
cthities&#13;
CARL'S/ PIZZA&#13;
" fo r Sizes 9• - 12· - u· - 16·&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIIS • SPAGHf'-.TI • CHICKEN&#13;
• G OCCHI • UVIOLI • LA SAGMA&#13;
• SlA FOOD • SAMOWICHU&#13;
CAUY-OUTS - OELIVUY HYOU .INC ••• WE UIHC"'&#13;
6S7-9843 or 658-4922 SUO 4111 AV( .&#13;
ncellor Wyllie explained, "The&#13;
po ibility that Green Bay and&#13;
Par · e might, if a merger deYelo~.&#13;
lo their d" tincti\ene • lose t~eir&#13;
dYantage in funding and be~me JU t&#13;
like any hool anywhere is real . .&#13;
· nd one of the ta ahead for the&#13;
t',\O ne"' campuse would be to&#13;
d \elop a document. setting forth the&#13;
unique c hara ct er of . th~se tw~&#13;
in'ititutions that would JUShfy the_ir&#13;
recehing more fa ored n:eatment ~&#13;
e\er,·thing relating to fundmg than did&#13;
the g neral run of in itution . "&#13;
ff a merger of.the State Uni~ersiti~s&#13;
nd the niver it}- of W1sconsm&#13;
ry tallize there is a "p~ ibility of&#13;
three di tinct league bemg formed&#13;
·with fadi on and 1ilwaukee in the&#13;
top league, with Green B~v and&#13;
po 'ble Par side. Eau Claire and&#13;
teven Point in the second league,&#13;
nd then the general run of&#13;
In titution from the other system in a&#13;
third league." Wyllie added. "If W€&#13;
~ iled to ma ·e a hard, tight case&#13;
documenting our in titutional&#13;
uniquene and di tinctiveness, then&#13;
·e might end up in the bottom&#13;
league."&#13;
Wyllie continued, "We needed to be&#13;
in a better defensive po ition in the&#13;
whole matter of institutional&#13;
di tinctivene and it was at that point&#13;
that I had conversations with the&#13;
univer ity committee. the chairmen of&#13;
the di i ion . Dean forrow and others&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97 47&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#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 your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, our&#13;
Department Manager, who is a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk your language, both in&#13;
---~equipment purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY - Tape recorders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
PANASONIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
KOSS - Headsets&#13;
K'ENWOOD - Receivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANn - Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC - Speakers&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntable!.&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are ere, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS&#13;
512 MAIN STREET&#13;
\&#13;
on the west side of Monument Square&#13;
RACINE 'S&#13;
GREAT&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
01scour-,;1 ,,ou sf&#13;
. a document that&#13;
about developmg · t of our would speak to t~e pol!!&#13;
institutional distinctiveness. d . to a The task has mushroome in h . T eople serve on t e major pro1ect. e':1 P d at the&#13;
Missions Committee and that the&#13;
meeting it was announce t to&#13;
document would hhave 1 ~o b;h:ennext&#13;
Madison by Marc . . . scheduled meeting of the M1ss10n&#13;
c mmittee is March 17. o The group had written a first draft&#13;
for the document but Chancell~r&#13;
W llie said that "The document, if&#13;
giien to a legislator or a state b~d~f t&#13;
analyst or the governor, pr_o a y&#13;
ould not be fully persuasive on&#13;
s;ecific points that would highli~J why this campus deserves spec1&#13;
consideration as againSt all 0 !h~r&#13;
campuses. In other words, what _is it&#13;
that makes us, in all things,&#13;
distinctively different." h&#13;
Tom Reeves suggested that t _e&#13;
document be written by yubhc&#13;
relations people who are professionally&#13;
suited to this type of task, because P.&#13;
R. people would be more aw~re of the&#13;
specific points which would influence&#13;
taxpayers and legislators. .&#13;
The unique attributes Parkside has,&#13;
include the texture of the student&#13;
body, which is mostly working class,&#13;
first generation college ~tudents, t~e&#13;
athletic programs that ~irected at hfe&#13;
time involvement m sports as&#13;
recreation, the physical plan of the&#13;
campus (i.e. this huge wood~d tract of&#13;
land laid out with the intent of&#13;
preserving that land) and !he&#13;
interrelationship of the physical&#13;
master plan and the academic&#13;
program. , Rita Tallent the Chancellors&#13;
Special Assistant,' said, "The original&#13;
document does a tremendous job of&#13;
showing how we serve ~nu two&#13;
communities. . . and I noticed that&#13;
there were two pages and part of a&#13;
third devoted to that, but the school&#13;
of modern industry has just one&#13;
paragraph . .. . I think the philosophy&#13;
behind the AST program which is&#13;
quite similar to the general eniineering&#13;
degree at Milwaukee, but with some&#13;
differences; theirs is Applied Science&#13;
and Engineering and ours_ is Applied&#13;
Science and Technology. I think the&#13;
uniqueness of which is considerably&#13;
different from Milwaukee, should be&#13;
brought out."&#13;
For the remainder of the meeting&#13;
the discussion centered around the&#13;
differences which make p .&#13;
distinctive. Reeves suggested tl~rks1&lt;1e&#13;
greatest distinction was "the fac~t the we are here as a four year insn . that&#13;
that is enough." He belie1 i::•on,&#13;
Madison "set us up, cut us 1~ that&#13;
sold us out and then h ~· llld&#13;
affrontery to demand we det a d own existence." en 0tli&#13;
It seemed that some of the&#13;
had the attitude that the prod mernbcr-i&#13;
want to sell was not of i~ct&#13;
adequate advertisement for the ~If&#13;
analysts and the politicians Ud&amp;t•&#13;
others found that a document 'w ~'hile&#13;
according to the way it had ntt&#13;
discussed would just as easily be&#13;
vocational school as a first ll •&#13;
university if it concentrated on rate&#13;
that the two had in common&#13;
Toward the end of the ~eer was decided to roll up sleeve Ill n&#13;
produ?e the. document by dividin&#13;
comrmttee mto four smaller g&#13;
each responsible for a specific &amp;rOUJl$&#13;
the document. The first grou/:rt Ii&#13;
consider t?~ nature of the clien&#13;
and pohttcal considerations· tele&#13;
second would expand on wha't&#13;
previously been done on spc ·n&#13;
programs in the original document~&#13;
third would take up the physical '&#13;
of the campus relating it to the 0P&#13;
groups; and the fourth would&#13;
work on the !nterdisciplinary nature &lt;i&#13;
the academic program. They&#13;
decided to develop a theme as&#13;
framework of the docume&#13;
hi~ighting the ~eneral and pe&#13;
missions by complimenting each otb&#13;
Wyllie stressed that Parkside LS&#13;
"opportunity campus" offering ad&#13;
education, innovations in the acad&#13;
program, and that the campus attra&#13;
a majority of its student fr&#13;
working class backgrounds.&#13;
There seems to be only one&#13;
missing and that is the opportun ty r&#13;
students, !who ale the univer t)I&#13;
number one clients to partiap&#13;
on this , committee/.&#13;
Mission Committee Members&#13;
Sam Fillipone, Chairman&#13;
Peter Martin&#13;
Richard Rosenberg&#13;
Henry Cole&#13;
Gene Gasiorkiewicz&#13;
Alan Shucard&#13;
Emmet Bedford&#13;
Sam Tang&#13;
Thomas Mueller&#13;
Thomas Reeves&#13;
YOUR COMPLETE "ON CAMPUS" BOOK &amp; SUPPLY CENTER&#13;
ANNUAL SPRING&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
Books of interest to everyone, beginning March 19,&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK .STORE&#13;
A NIW KIND Of AlCDHDUC BIVIRAGI&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
• &#13;
Ell Slaughter and Stan White share Ranger records.&#13;
S~ughterSets Scoring Mark&#13;
By James Casper&#13;
of !be Newscope Staff&#13;
EllS1aught.rset the Parkside career&#13;
IIlliII re&lt;ord with a total of 923&#13;
,... In 39 garnes. H. also holds the&#13;
...-av.lI8" per single season (24.3)&#13;
111969.70.His 1970 season scoring&#13;
,..wu23.4.&#13;
Be Ibo cleared 280 rebounds during&#13;
11100years at Parkside.&#13;
QdIer records held by Eli include:&#13;
.. points in one game (42), fields&#13;
ph in on. game (17), most field&#13;
ph In one season (265), most career&#13;
!lid pis (405), and highest shooting&#13;
pntentage for one season (.s 51 in&#13;
1%9·70).&#13;
Fli is pl.ased to hold the scoring&#13;
1lCOIds, but is quick to point out that&#13;
lIlmduai !Coring is not everything&#13;
boauJe it is the team effort that&#13;
:ounlsthe most.&#13;
Accordingto Eli, "If I score 30&#13;
poults in a game and the team loses&#13;
1m not satisfi.d." He was hoping for a&#13;
.lOO or b.tt.r season and the goal was&#13;
IGI realiud. It cannot be said that&#13;
'to foil.d 10 do his part.&#13;
Alloth.r Rang.r who deserves credit&#13;
for ann. leason is Stan White, the&#13;
lock van.y Je transfer who played&#13;
lorwardopposite Eli.&#13;
f/bite c1.ar.d 267 rebounds while&#13;
1On1lI479points, giving him a season&#13;
""""I mark of 18.4.&#13;
One of Stan's strong points was his&#13;
rebounding (10.3 per game), and that&#13;
includes the 22 rebounds he gatliered&#13;
in against Northland. That&#13;
performance was good for a school&#13;
record.&#13;
Perhaps the most surprising thing&#13;
about Stan's showing is that he played&#13;
very little in 1969·70. He often said&#13;
that if he would get the chance to play&#13;
regularly he could be a top scorer and&#13;
rebounder. This year he got the chance&#13;
and backed up what he said.&#13;
.~ an .r:. ~. 0"&#13;
~o RANCH ~&#13;
1l0RTH .. SllIITtI SH~IllOAN !IOAO&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
HARCOAl BROllE&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
A&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
'Tradition of IJltcellence"&#13;
KING of ORGANS,&#13;
Gymnasts&#13;
To Nationals&#13;
ByJamosCa¥&lt;&#13;
of tbe ewscope Staff&#13;
. Parkside gymnasts, followlOg an&#13;
un~ressive win over Stevens Point in&#13;
which they. scored a season high of&#13;
146.85, WIll compete in the AlA&#13;
cha~pionship at a tch ucches,&#13;
Louisiana March 19·20.&#13;
The enure Ranger team has&#13;
qualified for team honors. Some team&#13;
members wiU also compete for&#13;
individual honors-Doug Anderson 10&#13;
the all. around and high bar, Wanen&#13;
McGiIlivray·alI around, free exercise,&#13;
and long horse; and both Pete Hickey&#13;
and Dan Boswein in the long horse.&#13;
To qualify for the meet. three&#13;
scores over 130 .... re needed.&#13;
When asked about the team's&#13;
chances in the ationals, Coach Bill&#13;
Ballester said, ''My tearn should place&#13;
in the top 10. Best chances for national&#13;
recognition by an individual will he&#13;
Doug Anderson-all around and hial&gt;&#13;
bar, and Wanen McGiIlivny in long&#13;
horse."&#13;
Wrestling Report&#13;
Parkside's Wrestling ream&#13;
participated in the ational meet at&#13;
Appalachian State Urn.ersiry located&#13;
in Boone. orth Carolina t on Much&#13;
U·13.&#13;
Ranger wrestlers appearing in the&#13;
meet were Jeff Jenkins (13·3 season&#13;
mark), Ken Martin (13·1), 10m !kYer&#13;
(10·5), and Bill Benkenstein (11-4-1).&#13;
Results as of March II show Parkside&#13;
with 3 points going into the quarter&#13;
finals, Martin has won '2 matches and&#13;
if he wins the next he has a chance to&#13;
finish in the top 6 in the country .&#13;
Benkstein also won his first match.&#13;
~&#13;
Slaughter I&#13;
'lopn 42&#13;
doen&#13;
lI. 4&#13;
Ptmne 143&#13;
RJc 14&#13;
!acloon S 45&#13;
Van TIOe 3 I&#13;
fechhelm 13&#13;
Dave Woods 10 4&#13;
frndrenl 1 10&#13;
Don Wood 6 1&#13;
IUgenow 9 5&#13;
Wad. I I&#13;
tOlal, 2&#13;
,~.2 \I&#13;
opponenu 931 421 2~5 1253&#13;
Rangers Set Records&#13;
Three Ranger runnen .. t&#13;
records while pUllClpatU1ll In tho&#13;
Illinois Trac Oub In uattonaJ.&#13;
Bob Wal.n set a 001 record In&#13;
the 60 yard dalt1 (6.3sec)&#13;
~lacrng second. Jun M Fadden was a&#13;
record seller in the nule ..,th 4 :27.&#13;
while Sandy Houston did 1 ~ Ie In&#13;
the women's 1000 th a 2 5 J&#13;
cloclanl·&#13;
Other Ranger performanc.. re&#13;
Mike DeWitt. 9,514 to the t nul&lt;,&#13;
and Vic Godfrej • (Ranger ). wllb&#13;
a second place 10 the "'a ten de for&#13;
those 30 and ever, HI nrre "''1S&#13;
4:33.6.&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE aOMaERS&#13;
S021 30"" A ••.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657 ·5191&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
FREE DEUVUY ".00 P.M. TO 1200 PJA&#13;
Open 6 Day-.a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
The ~BRAT",s&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
DAILY SPECW&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.&#13;
A Botti. of&#13;
Ind •&#13;
STEAK,&#13;
BRAT or&#13;
BEEFBURGER&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p..... to 8 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 2Ge&#13;
A.. II '.' .... •&#13;
....... , " ....I .",....&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
,,* IRAT-STOP&#13;
• lIwe.e:-a-.-HI# q.&#13;
l&#13;
i~;~I~I~~~S~~,"., -~&#13;
~~:&#13;
Set . \1r:a ' T d In Value&#13;
~III"""Iek "Mr. Hammond"For GuaranteedSI"lce' rl lOut&#13;
of Town-CIU CIUlef&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN'&#13;
l!~~IIJ-.R.!.~~:-&#13;
-, Bear Or.- _1IU41J.. nd .... B.M rr--&#13;
Ell Slaughter and Stan White share Ranger records.&#13;
Slaughter Sets Scoring Mark&#13;
By James Ca~r&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Eli Slaughter set the Parkside career&#13;
g record with a total of 923&#13;
15 in 39 games. He also holds the&#13;
st average per single season (24.3)&#13;
1969-70. His 1970 season scoring&#13;
was 23.4.&#13;
lie also cleared 280 rebounds during&#13;
iwo years at Parkside.&#13;
Other records held by Eli include:&#13;
points in one game (42), fields&#13;
in one game (17), most field&#13;
in one season (26S), most career&#13;
goals (405), and highest shooting&#13;
ntage for one season (.551 in&#13;
9-70).&#13;
Eli i pleased to hold the scoring&#13;
ds, but is quick to point out that&#13;
mdual scoring is not everything&#13;
St it is the team effort that&#13;
ts the most.&#13;
A ording to Eli, "If I score 30&#13;
U in a game and the team loses&#13;
not satisfied." He was hoping for a&#13;
or better season and the goal was&#13;
1ealized. It cannot be said that&#13;
"E" failed to do his part.&#13;
Another Ranger who deserves credit&#13;
a fine season is Stan White, the&#13;
k Valley JC transfer who played&#13;
rd opposite Eli.&#13;
le cleared 267 rebounds while&#13;
479 points, giving him a season&#13;
mark of 18.4.&#13;
One of Stan's strong points was his&#13;
rebounding (10.3 per game), and that&#13;
includes the 22 rebounds he gathered&#13;
in against Northland. Th.at&#13;
performance was good for a school&#13;
record.&#13;
Perhaps the most surprising thing&#13;
about Stan's showing is that he played&#13;
very little in 1969-70. He often said&#13;
that if he would get the chance to play&#13;
regularly he could be a top scorer and&#13;
rebounder. This year he got the chance&#13;
and backed up what he said.&#13;
· ~ an -.r-,.&#13;
~- o" ~0 RANCH ~ ltORTH I SOUTH SH!ftlDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
HARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
A&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
•Tradition of Excellence•&#13;
KING of ORGANS_&#13;
Gymnasts&#13;
To Nationals&#13;
By lame Ca r Of fhe f'loM&amp;.'Y"on,_ ff&#13;
. Par~ide gymn t , i llo&#13;
unpre sive wm o\·er Steven p&#13;
which they_ scored a 0&#13;
146.8S, will compete n the I&#13;
cha~pionship at • atchitoche&#13;
Lou, 1ana March 19--0.&#13;
The entire Ranger team s&#13;
qualified for team honor . me team&#13;
!lle_~bers will al ompete for&#13;
tlldtVJdual honor -Doug n er in&#13;
the ~ll_ around and high bar, arren&#13;
McGillivray-all around, free e er i , and long horse: and both Pete H1 ey&#13;
and Dan Boswein in the long h rse.&#13;
To qualify for the meet, three&#13;
scores over 130 "'ere needed.&#13;
When a ked about the team·&#13;
chances in the ation I , C ch Bill&#13;
Ballester said, • ty team ould p&#13;
- II&#13;
I&#13;
in the top 10. Best chan es for nat nal&#13;
recogI!ition by an individual rill be&#13;
Doug Anderson-all around and h&#13;
bar, and Warren 1cGillivray in long&#13;
horse."&#13;
Wrestling Report Rangers Set Records&#13;
Parkside's Wrestling team&#13;
participated in the 'ational meet t&#13;
Appalachian State Univer 'ty located&#13;
in Boone, orth Carolina, on ar h&#13;
11-13.&#13;
Ranger wrestler appearing tn the&#13;
meet were Jeff Jenkins (13-3 se&#13;
mark), Ken Martin (13-1), Tom Beyer&#13;
(lO-S), and Bill Benken tein (11-4-1 . Results as of March II sho Par · ide&#13;
with 3 point going into the quarter&#13;
finals. Martin has won _ matches and&#13;
if he wins the next he ha a hance to&#13;
finish in the top 6 in the country.&#13;
Benkstein also won hi ftr t mat h.&#13;
VALEO'S PIZZA&#13;
ALSO KITCHE&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
FREE OEUVERY ~ 00&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
DAILY SPECIAL&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.&#13;
A Bottle of&#13;
aod •&#13;
STEAK,&#13;
BRAT or&#13;
BEEFBURGER&#13;
Alco olic&#13;
Beverage&#13;
HAPPY HO&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p. • to&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20&#13;
Av• I • f• Pert •&#13;
a.ca., F-----tr • S-ltJ '-''-•&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P&#13;
'"' BRAT-STOP&#13;
Naik• .. C:-1-~ ~ " .... ., •&#13;
p.m.&#13;
• &#13;
By Jim Koloen&#13;
T,tle: tt« Bluest Eye&#13;
Author- Tom Morrison&#13;
Publisher' Holt, Ronehart and Winston&#13;
"Quret QS it 'J kept, there WE'rt' no&#13;
marigolds in the fall of 1941. We&#13;
lh(wght, at tht rime. that it MoDS&#13;
because hrolir ,,"s havllIg her father's&#13;
bab} that th. mDngolds did nat gro....&#13;
A Itll/~ t;(ammotion and much ley&#13;
melirncholy ...ould have proved to u&gt;&#13;
thot QUT J«dJ k re not the only ones&#13;
that did not sprout; nobody 's did. or&#13;
.. n the gard.ns fron/lng the Iirke&#13;
shuwed mangolJs that year. But SO&#13;
detply ron emed ...ere w. ,,;th the&#13;
health and JtJfe d.l,v.ry of Pecola's&#13;
bab) we could thlllk of nothlllg but&#13;
our 0"" magic: if " .. planted the&#13;
eed s, and said the right words over&#13;
th m the)' woutd blossom. ana&#13;
everythIng woutd be all right...&#13;
Th Bh,," Ey. i Toni torrison's&#13;
" I n el nd us theme IS childhood,&#13;
"".,ficall) bla k ch,ldhood in Lorain,&#13;
Oh,o. The narr lor I lookong back al&#13;
her childhood, .. hen she ( laudia) wa.&#13;
nmt or ten years old. bout the same&#13;
lunt ,hat Pe ola Breedlove first "ar,ed&#13;
"mlnl tr un," Pecola wa becoming a&#13;
woman; one day she dlsco't'ered she&#13;
"a bleedIng. ared to death that she&#13;
mlghl h.,'e labbed her~lf. unlll&#13;
laudla's mother explatned what&#13;
nuni Iratln' i all about: it means you&#13;
can ha.. a baby, How do you have a&#13;
baby' A man' g lIa I 'e )'ou.&#13;
Po&lt;ola become pregnant by her&#13;
f.th r ( holly Breedlove) who sphts&#13;
n after and ends up eying 10 the&#13;
• unu) workhouse. Pecola fus had&#13;
"ual relations with her father and&#13;
denie It while talking to a fantasy&#13;
chara4::ler,her alter ego. Her life's goal&#13;
1 10 have blue eye, to be a beautiful&#13;
as the whIte. blond haired. blue eyed&#13;
doll. hllie gHls play with. to be&#13;
prelller lhan Shirley Temple. She ha.&#13;
gone down to see Soaphead Church, a&#13;
p udo witchdoelor who~ business&#13;
"was dread," He tells her that she will&#13;
have blue eyes. The following d.y&#13;
Pecol. enters the fanlasy world of&#13;
haVIngblue )e without really having&#13;
them; an alter-ego becomes her only&#13;
friend whom she ask&gt; if she has seen&#13;
anyone with blue eyes than hers. Her&#13;
alter-ego reminds her of having had a&#13;
child. She denies it.&#13;
But the novel is more than a story&#13;
about a girl raped by her father) it is&#13;
about her father. her mother,&#13;
Soaphead Church. three whores.&#13;
Claudia and her sister and about pretty&#13;
lillie white girls: lillie black girls&#13;
learning about sex and whites,learning&#13;
how to hate themselves because&#13;
Tool M«rlson.&#13;
they're black and because adults are so&#13;
much bigger; when you're angry and&#13;
there's no one your own size to strike&#13;
at. you strike at yourself.&#13;
There are no victimizers because&#13;
everyone is a victim. ehoUy is a&#13;
bastard, his father ran off before he&#13;
was born. his mother died before he&#13;
was two and his aunt raised him. His&#13;
aunt dies when he's 14, he runs away&#13;
to Macon where he fmds a man who&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WANTED&#13;
8.Jbysiun W,an~ed either libury or my&#13;
nolT1«', Tues. &amp; Thurs. from 11-3; c,aU&#13;
637·3782 collect.&#13;
\l.'~nted. 50 &amp;~1. ,aquuium or bigger;&#13;
"chup" ull GeolltC' 694~)96.&#13;
W.. nted· Smelt Ri&amp; or Smelt Net: call&#13;
~94-5957 or 63-4·1863.&#13;
Roommau: 'flI-d: h,ave 2, need 3, 3 BR&#13;
low fbt. 28th &amp; Wuh .. Kenosh.oa;Call Oon&#13;
at 65.....1912 lu~ name &amp;" phonf' no,&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
'969 VW Ok. 81, chrome IP. tape player.&#13;
UdlO, 2 new ttrU - call 634-2158 after&#13;
3,00.&#13;
For S~lc:_ 8,anlo, c.ase,_strings, and capo'&#13;
load conduJQn - aU Ten.at 633-8475.&#13;
For Sale: 1970 Ambusodor, Z door HT&#13;
5.100 mIles. 360 CI, 2 Bar Auto, Air,&#13;
power, buckets; caLllXnnis ~t 652-5673 or&#13;
(,1IiR."111&#13;
For Sa~: Tenn" Ruket, Cunlop Fort -&#13;
all Cary Van. 632·7454&#13;
For Sale: 1966 Chey. Malibu, 283 Cu. 4&#13;
sp., buckC'ts, posi-u,act; call Steve at&#13;
658-4056.&#13;
For Sale: 45 Shakespear ''Neledah'' Bow&#13;
Fred Bear, 9 Arrow Bow quiver Shoulder&#13;
quiver, Rack - S 35.00 2104 - 57;h St. Apt.&#13;
8 - Steve.&#13;
ror Sale: Garcia "300" Red, Rod, Tackle&#13;
Box - $30.00 2104 - 57th St. Apt. 8 -&#13;
Steve,&#13;
For Sale: Encyclopedia Britannica 1961&#13;
Year Books to 1964, World Atlas nookcase~&#13;
$300.00 - ca.1l658-3921 ' ,&#13;
For S,ale: Typewriter - Manual- S5~5.00-&#13;
caU 6;&gt;2-7482_&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
. Apt. for rent; 3 students; girls pref.--Call&#13;
65Br3888.&#13;
MISC.&#13;
Hand made: Sweaters, sweater vests,&#13;
afllhans crochetted vests call 652-2324 ..&#13;
he thinks is his father. He is rejected;&#13;
the 'man doesn'l know him. Cholly&#13;
moves up north picking up a woman&#13;
(polly) on the way. They marry and&#13;
the early years are love years, but they&#13;
O1olly is finally mteresteo only&#13;
:::u~hiskey and oblivion; and Polly,&#13;
(Mrs. Breedlove) is concerned only&#13;
with putting everything in Its p~?per&#13;
place inftnitely. An "ideal servant ~e&#13;
is interested only in her employer"s&#13;
family where they call her 'P?,llY .&#13;
Her own family calls her Mrs.&#13;
Breedlove".&#13;
The novel is composed of&#13;
biographical sketches and childhood&#13;
vignettes which create moods and&#13;
characters, reflecting the author's great&#13;
sensitivity and obviating judgements.&#13;
The writing is very well done, ~e&#13;
narrative is evocative and near poetic,&#13;
and the dialogue leaves nothing to be&#13;
desired. The sensitivity of the author&#13;
to her subject is intense; all ch~racters&#13;
are sympa thetic and ultunately&#13;
Pecola's pregnancY' is no more her&#13;
f.ther's fault than her not having been&#13;
born with blue eyes. The children are&#13;
invisible to their parents and are left to&#13;
grow up on their own and, let's face it,&#13;
1941 was just a plain bad year fOl&#13;
marigolds,&#13;
The Bluest Eye is a very ~oop .ftrst&#13;
novel about childhood, a subject many&#13;
novelists focus on as a fIrst vehicle for&#13;
their literary talents. Keep your eye on&#13;
the name Morrison.&#13;
The Bluesr Eye. courtesty of the&#13;
Book Mart, 622 59th Street. Kenosha,&#13;
can be purchased for $5.95.&#13;
Bank of&#13;
EIIllwood&#13;
270" la,hrop A.,.., lad"., Wi,con,ill&#13;
Students get, red carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone else!l&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
After Mafch 19, we must&#13;
turn all remaining textb~~&#13;
to the publishers.&#13;
If you still have boOksto g I&#13;
please do so now. while Ilie&#13;
•&#13;
are still available. ey&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
600KSTORE&#13;
UW-PARKSIDt&#13;
Pru .. ,.&#13;
IN CONCElT&#13;
SA T., MARCH 20&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
Kenosha Trempe, Aud.&#13;
Roserved Seat ~icketl&#13;
$3.00 &amp; $2.00&#13;
Tox Included&#13;
Avoiloble now in Studlot&#13;
Activ'ities Office Talent H.I&#13;
~.TCHlS _ II iiWi". I&#13;
.- u..... _·~ ...- ........ cw-, T __&#13;
.--&#13;
w_·_&#13;
~=....-&#13;
SULT&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount.&#13;
to Students and DOWNTOWNKENOSHA&#13;
Faculty , -Cetdfio4~&#13;
(Must Show 1.0.) er.d••I.Ge-I ....&#13;
V~&amp;gIt&#13;
""' _. d_ -,.-&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
excepted&#13;
inst&#13;
them; n alter-ego become her only&#13;
rr·end ·h m she ks if she has seen&#13;
anyone v.ith blue eye than hers. Her&#13;
ter-eg remind her of having had a&#13;
child. e denie it.&#13;
But the no\·el i more than a story&#13;
bout girl raped by her father. it is&#13;
about her father. her mother,&#13;
Soaphead Oturch. three whores&#13;
audia and her sister and about pretty&#13;
1ttle white girl : little black girls&#13;
earning bout se and whites, learning&#13;
how to hate them elves because&#13;
Toni Morrison.&#13;
they're bl k and becau e adults are so&#13;
much bigger; when you 're angry and&#13;
there' no one your own size to strike&#13;
at, you trike at yourself.&#13;
There are no victimizers because&#13;
everyone i a victim. Cholly is a&#13;
ba lard, hi father ran off before he&#13;
wa born, his mother died before he&#13;
wa two and his aunt raised him. His&#13;
aunt dies when he's 14, he runs away&#13;
to 1acon where he finds a man who&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WANTED&#13;
&amp;bys tn W ntcd: either library or my&#13;
rm; Tu • &amp; Thurs. from 11-3; call&#13;
637 • 7 2 collect.&#13;
'anted. 50 .al. aquarium or b"igger;&#13;
"chc p" II Ge c 69~-4396.&#13;
.anted: melt R or Smelt ct: call&#13;
• 94.5957 or 634-1 63.&#13;
Roomma~ d: ha 2, need 3, 3 BR&#13;
low t, 2 th &amp; ash., 'cnosha; C.all Don&#13;
t 654-1972 - lenc name · phon~ no,&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1969 ' D • Bl, chrome gp, t.ape player, r io, 2 nrc, - call 634-2158 after&#13;
:00.&#13;
For S.alc: &amp;ngo, c.a~, 1trings, and c.apo·&#13;
condnion - call Teri at 633-8475.&#13;
For ale: 1970 Ambassodor, 2 door HT.&#13;
5,700 miles, 360 Cl, 2 &amp;r Auto, Air,&#13;
er, buc ca: all Dennis at 652-5673 or (,&lt;; 61 7&#13;
For S le: Tennis Racket, Cunlop Fort - II Gu• Van - 632,7454&#13;
For Sale: 1966 Chev. Malibu, 283 Cu. 4&#13;
sp., buckets, posi-tract; call Steve at&#13;
658-4-056.&#13;
For Sale: 45 Shakespear "Neledah" Bow&#13;
Fred Bear, 9 Arrow Bow quiver, Shoulder&#13;
qwver, Rack - S35.00 2104 - 57th St. Apt. 8 · Steve.&#13;
For Sale: Garcia "300" Reel, Rod, Tackle&#13;
Box · S30.00 2104 - 57th St. Apt. 8 - Steve.&#13;
For Sale: Encyclopedia Britannica 1961,&#13;
Year Books to 1964, World Atlas, &amp;ookcase;&#13;
S300.00 - call 658-3921&#13;
For Sale: Typewriter . Manual - SS5.00 - call 652-7482.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
Apt. for rent; 3 students; girls pref.-Cal1&#13;
658,..3888.&#13;
MISC.&#13;
Hand made : Sweaters, sweater vests,&#13;
a~ hans crochetted vests - call 652-2324.&#13;
he thinks is his father. He is rejected;&#13;
the ' man doesn't know him. Cholly&#13;
moves up north picking up a woman&#13;
(Polly) on the way. They marry and&#13;
the early years are love years, but they Cholly is finally interested only&#13;
:u~hiskey and oblivion; and Polly,&#13;
(Mrs. Breedlove) is con~er?ed only&#13;
with putting everylh:ing m its P~?per&#13;
place infinitely. An "ideal servant ~e&#13;
is interested only in her emgloyer,,s&#13;
family where they call her P~,lly · Her own family calls her Mrs.&#13;
Breedlove". f&#13;
The novel is composed 0&#13;
biographical sketches and childhood&#13;
vignettes which create moods and&#13;
characters reflecting the author's great&#13;
sensitivity' and obviating judgements.&#13;
The writing is very well done, t?e&#13;
narrative is evocative and near poetic,&#13;
and the dialogue leaves nothing to be&#13;
desired. The sensitivity of the author&#13;
to her subject is intense; all c~racters&#13;
are sympathetic and ultunately&#13;
Pecola 's pregnancy- is no more her&#13;
father's fault than her not having been&#13;
born with blue eyes. The children are&#13;
invisible to their parents and are left to&#13;
grow up on their own and, let's face it, 1941 was just a plain bad year fm&#13;
marigolds. The Bluest Eye is a very ~ood ,first&#13;
novel about childhood, a subJect many&#13;
novelists focus on as a first vehicle for&#13;
their literary talents. Keep your eye on&#13;
the name Morrison.&#13;
The Bluest Eye, courtesty of the&#13;
Book Mart, 622 59th Street, Kenosha,&#13;
can be purchased for $5. 95.&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 Lothrop Ave., llodne, Wisconsin&#13;
Students get·red carpet serv ice&#13;
(So does everyone else!)&#13;
10%&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
After March 19, we must&#13;
turn all remaining textbo~~&#13;
to the pub I ishers.&#13;
If you still have books to get&#13;
please do so now, while th '&#13;
are still available. ey&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
lJOOK STORE&#13;
UW-PARKSIDt&#13;
presents&#13;
IN CONCERT&#13;
SAT., 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;
WATCHES lj .....~ ........ lll--. ,...;,.i .. .............&#13;
CWaWt _, .. • TlfM• ... CHIMA&#13;
llllDAL&#13;
UGISTlY&#13;
Courtesy Discount. to Students and DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Faculty . ,._ .,,_,~ (Must Show , . D.) Gracluai·e Ge•o10,11t ..... rtnFairtrade&#13;
4J( y ~" ,e "c).,'; p ~ excepted It do,s ,uh a diffe,e,Ke .. ..,. ,,.&#13;
LIVE MUSIC&#13;
· Now AppqrlnO&#13;
I"'°" Men. allf Tun. ....... NIii DRINKS 'h PRICE ·yo ALL UNIFORMED IOWL£RS </text>
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          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61789">
              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 7, March 15, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61790">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="61791">
              <text>1971-03-15</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="49">
          <name>Subject</name>
          <description>The topic of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61793">
              <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="61794">
              <text> Student publications</text>
            </elementText>
            <elementText elementTextId="61795">
              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61799">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
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          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61802">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
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