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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, Issue 12</text>
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            <text>Student Government Elections - Eaker Wins Presidency</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>tree University oj Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
••••••••&#13;
Jazz Comes To UWP&#13;
s« page.5&#13;
NUMBER 12 APRIL 19, 1971&#13;
- Student Gov't Elections&#13;
". Eaker- Student Government President.&#13;
c&#13;
z&#13;
".J&#13;
Z&#13;
;(&#13;
WI.i.....aiIllo-_......~&#13;
o&#13;
Dou LoalOi - Top senatorial Vole-Getler. m&#13;
Eaker Wins Presidency&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
01 the New8cope Slall&#13;
After nearly two years without a student&#13;
government the Parkside student body now has&#13;
one.&#13;
In a general election that saw only 885students&#13;
vote out of a student body of 4,000, Tim Eaker&#13;
w.as elected President; R. E. (Ron) Williams,&#13;
VIce. president; Debbie Kemper, treasurer;&#13;
David Weber, recording secretary; and Jean&#13;
Koehler, corresponding secretary.&#13;
In the Senate 1601the 17positions were chosen.&#13;
For the 17th position there was a tie between&#13;
Tom Taskonis and Ed Toth. Taskonis has asked&#13;
for a recount, and if the 'tie remains the chairman&#13;
of the election committee will randomly&#13;
select the winner.&#13;
The 16 winners are: Dean Loumos, Tom&#13;
Garner, John Gottfredsen, Ken Antaramian,&#13;
Walter Breach, Jeanette Dremel, Walter&#13;
Ulbricht, Ken Konkol, Tom Fletcher, Chris&#13;
Crowe, Mark Timpany, Tom Meier, Mike&#13;
Mayeshiha, Gary Davis, Gary Adelson and Dale&#13;
Martin.&#13;
For the Student Union Committee, the four&#13;
students on the ballot, Tim Daley, Greg&#13;
Barrette, Tom Kreul and Jerry Horton, were all&#13;
elected. Sue Nevin won the fifth position on a&#13;
write-in campaign.&#13;
The race for the presidency saw Tim Eaker&#13;
defeat Madeleine Thielen of the Halloween party&#13;
by 87 votes. Eaker has been active in lobbying&#13;
for the restoration of cuts in the Parkside budget&#13;
in Madison. He was also a leader of the Commlttee&#13;
for United Student Action (CUSA), and&#13;
fought against the ratification of the Constitutional&#13;
Committee constitution.&#13;
.. Eaker had 38 per cent of the votes cast for&#13;
president and carried all three campuses. Don&#13;
Koser was second in votes cast at the Kenosha&#13;
campus.&#13;
The unofficial results are:&#13;
Rac. Ken. Gr. Tol&#13;
Tim Eaker 91 92 142 325&#13;
Madeleine Thielen 85 52 101 238&#13;
Don Kosher 54 68 57 179&#13;
David Karls 28 12 31 71&#13;
Ian MacTaggert 11 14 14 39&#13;
Per&#13;
Cl&#13;
38&#13;
28&#13;
21&#13;
8&#13;
5&#13;
Regents Meet At Parkside&#13;
WI Friday the University 01 Wisconsin Board of&#13;
....... met on the Parkside campus.&#13;
'I1&gt;emorningsessionbegan minus regents Walker and&#13;
... , duringwhich the grout&gt;approved an 18 credit&#13;
-c:bina certificate. The non-major, non-minor course ~s&#13;
dItIped for the full-time student, particularly .10&#13;
-lion, whomight be pressed into coaching dulles&#13;
tIiJe teaching.&#13;
.....~~ a break for lunch the group returned to the&#13;
~ti1 at full attendance and listened to Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie explainParkside. Wyllie stressed the land grant&#13;
lradilionasit relates toParkside's industrial mission. He&#13;
IIDted thatthearea is in tbe midst of changing from an&#13;
Ilri&lt;uJluralbackgroundto a solidly industrial base..He&#13;
Iloo mentionedParkside's nine interdisciplinary majors&#13;
• a part of its program. . .&#13;
During the course of Wyllie's address statisllea&#13;
;:emmg studentbodymake-up revealed 70 per cent of&#13;
studentbody work20hours per week, while takmg 12&#13;
::18 per semester and for this reason classes are held&#13;
B a.m. until 10 p.m, to provide as fleXible an&#13;
lC!dem!cprogramas Possibleto meet the demands of the&#13;
~ student.Itwas also mentioned that the average&#13;
of a Parkside student is 22.&#13;
~ Late:, Tom Rosandich Athletic Director, told the&#13;
~ts that Parkside "is in a situatiorl where the fan&#13;
lac:k't knowwhereteams are playing," referring to the&#13;
__ of, permanent athletic facilities on .campus. He&#13;
--a the unique nature of the club-Oriented sports&#13;
:tam directedat student participation in activities vs.&#13;
nt competitionon a varsity level. He S81d the ;::.m is "a model innovation" aud predicted other&#13;
Ilea: WOUlddevelop their programs along the same&#13;
'I1&gt;eIIleeliDg then turned to the committee Report on&#13;
the Budget which resulted in the group being informed&#13;
that the findings have nol yet been completed. Regent&#13;
Walker stressed that the public oughtto be kept aware of&#13;
whatever happensto the budget as it happens rather than&#13;
waiting until all the infonoation has been analyzed and&#13;
finalized. . bid TheRegents alsovoted downthe Madisoncampus&#13;
for COoedhousing; allocated $90,000 for th;, Library&#13;
Learning Center; and approved a measure allOWlng.the&#13;
developers of off-campus housing to coenect 1010&#13;
Parkside's sewer system.&#13;
For vice president Roo Williams soundly&#13;
trounced Lyn Van Eimeren, who did litUe&#13;
campaigning, 50&amp;-266 votes.&#13;
The unofficial results are: Per&#13;
Rae. Ken.. Gr. TaL Ct.&#13;
Ron Williams In 134 203 sal 6S&#13;
Lyn Van Eimeren 81 III lOS 2li6 35&#13;
For treasurer, Larry Thielen, long a campus&#13;
activist and the husband oC Madeleine Tlllelen,&#13;
was beaten convincingly by Debbie Kemper.&#13;
The unofficial results are: Per&#13;
Rae. ~en. Gr. Tol Ct&#13;
Debbie Kemper 151 t47 t91 4 62&#13;
Larry Thielen 104 83 119 306 38&#13;
Dave Weber, of the Hallov.een party, ran&#13;
unopposed for recording secretary and picked up&#13;
542votes. The [act that 885votes were cast would&#13;
seem to indicate there was a backlash against&#13;
the Halloween party candidates.&#13;
The contest for corresponding secretary was&#13;
the closest race among the Senate offices. Jean&#13;
Koehler emerged with a 33 vote edge over Sutton&#13;
Kinter. Kinter won the Kenosha campus b one&#13;
vote but lost heavily in Racine.&#13;
Miss Koehler was the only Halloween party&#13;
candidate to win an office in direct competition.&#13;
The unofficial results are:&#13;
Per&#13;
Rae. Ken.. Gr. To Cl&#13;
Jean Koehler 130 tOS 154 389 52&#13;
Sutton Kinter 104 106 t46 356 8&#13;
In the at-large election [or the Student Senate,&#13;
Dean Loumos paced all candidates in pulling In&#13;
340 votes, 45 votes more than runnerup, Tom&#13;
Garner.&#13;
In electing the Senate each voter cast six&#13;
votes.&#13;
Loumos ran on the Halloween party ticket and&#13;
opposed the candidacy of Tim Eaker [or&#13;
president. He WlIS a member of the Constitutional&#13;
Committee and was a leader of last&#13;
spring's campus strike.&#13;
Five of the six Halloween party senatorial&#13;
candidates, Loumos, Gary Davis, Mike&#13;
Mayeshiba Marl&lt; Timpany and John Gottfredsen&#13;
";011 senate seats. The sixth, Tom&#13;
Taskonls, is tied for the 17th positioo.&#13;
The unofficial results for the senate are: ( ote&#13;
discrepancies in totals.)&#13;
Rae. Ken. Gr.&#13;
141 01 132&#13;
117 62 116&#13;
89 75 126&#13;
74 85 118 277&#13;
44 110 lOS 259&#13;
82 55 110 247&#13;
49 lIS 89 231&#13;
60 75 89 224&#13;
43 92 84 219&#13;
rt 39 94 2tO&#13;
81 49 n 2111&#13;
(Continued 011 Pile I)&#13;
Dean Loumos&#13;
Tom Garner&#13;
John Gottfredsen&#13;
Ken Antararnian&#13;
Walter Breach&#13;
Jeanette Dremel&#13;
Walter Ulbricht&#13;
Ken Konkol&#13;
George Fletcher&#13;
01ris Crowe&#13;
Mark Timpany&#13;
Tot&#13;
340&#13;
29!;&#13;
0:&#13;
W&#13;
"&#13;
0:&#13;
o&#13;
m&#13;
.J&#13;
.J&#13;
W&#13;
0:&#13;
0:&#13;
"o&#13;
11IeBe...... lb._ ... -. Hall u.rary tu&amp; Frilia .&#13;
F ,ee University of Wis,onsin-Parkside&#13;
------"'-&#13;
NUMBER 12 APRIL 19, 1971&#13;
Jazz Comes To U&#13;
S pat 5&#13;
Student Gov't Elections&#13;
Eaker Wins Presidency&#13;
nm Eaker - Student Government President.&#13;
Dea.n Loamo11 - Top Senatorial Vote-Getter.&#13;
0&#13;
z&#13;
&lt;&#13;
.J&#13;
z&#13;
&lt;&#13;
::E&#13;
m&#13;
0&#13;
m&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
After nearly two years without a student&#13;
government the Parkside student body now ha&#13;
one.&#13;
In a general election that saw only 885 students&#13;
vote out of a student body of 4,000, Tim Eaker&#13;
was elected President; R. E. (Ron) Williams,&#13;
vice_ president; Debbie Kemper, treasurer;&#13;
David Weber, recording secretary; and Jean&#13;
Koehler, corresponding secretary.&#13;
In the Senate 16 of the 17 positions were chosen.&#13;
For the 17th position there was a tie between&#13;
Tom Taskonis and Ed Toth. Taskonis bas asked&#13;
for a recount, and if the ·ue remains the chairman&#13;
of the election committee will randomly&#13;
select the winner.&#13;
The 16 winners are: Dean Loumos, Tom&#13;
Garner, John Gottfredsen, Ken Antaramian,&#13;
Walter Breach, Jeanette Dremel, \ 'alter&#13;
Ulbricht, Ken Konkol, Tom Fletcher, Chris&#13;
Crowe, Mark Tilnpany, Tom eier, iike&#13;
Mayeshiba, Gary Davis, Gary Adelson and Dale&#13;
Martin.&#13;
For the Student Union Committee, the four&#13;
students on the ballot, Tim Daley, Greg&#13;
Barrette, Tom Kreul and Jerry Horton, were all&#13;
elected. Sue Nevin won the fifth position on a&#13;
write-in campaign.&#13;
The race for the presidency saw Tim Eaker&#13;
defeat Madeleine Thielen of the Halloween party&#13;
by 87 votes. Eaker has been active in lobbying&#13;
for the restoration of cuts in the Parkside budget&#13;
in Madison. He was also a lead of the Committee&#13;
for United Student Action ( SA) , and&#13;
fought against the ratification of the Con·&#13;
stitutional Committee constitution. Eaker had 38 per cent of the votes cast for&#13;
president and carried all three campuses. Don&#13;
Koser was second in votes cast at the Kenosha&#13;
campus.&#13;
The unofficial results are:&#13;
Rae. Ken.&#13;
Tim Eaker 91 92&#13;
Madeleine Thielen 85 52&#13;
Don Kosher 54 68&#13;
David Karls 28 12&#13;
Ian MacTaggert 11 14&#13;
Gr.&#13;
142&#13;
101&#13;
57&#13;
31&#13;
14&#13;
Tot.&#13;
325&#13;
238&#13;
179&#13;
71&#13;
39&#13;
Per&#13;
Ct.&#13;
38&#13;
28&#13;
21&#13;
8&#13;
5&#13;
Regents Meet At Parkside&#13;
Last Friday the University of Wisconsin Board of&#13;
Regents met on the Parkside campus.&#13;
The morning session began minus regents Walker an~&#13;
7.ieg}er, during which the group approved an 18 cred~t&#13;
CO&amp;~ing certificate. The non-major, non-minor course ~s&#13;
designed for the full-time student, particularly . m&#13;
education, who might be pressed into coaching duties&#13;
Ylhile teaching.&#13;
Aftei: a break for lunch the group returned to the&#13;
. ary at full attendance and listened to Chancellor&#13;
Ylli~ explain Parkside. Wyllie stressed the l~~ grant&#13;
tradition as it relates to Parkside's industrial mission. He&#13;
lrl~ that the area is in the midst of changing from an&#13;
&amp;gricu]tural background to a solidly industrial base .. He&#13;
mentioned Parkside's nine interdisciplinary maJors&#13;
a., a pa~t of its program. . .&#13;
During the course of Wyllie's address statistics&#13;
~ming student body make-up revealed 70 per cent of&#13;
Sbident body work 20 hours per week, while taking 12&#13;
~ts per semester and for this reason classes 8:re held&#13;
om 8 a.m. until 10 p.m. to provide as fleXIble an&#13;
~~ic program as possible to meet the dem~ds of the ~ student. It was also mentioned that the average&#13;
e of a Parkside student is 22.&#13;
11-Later, Tom Rosandich Athletic Director, told the&#13;
~ts that Parkside "is in a situation where the fan&#13;
lack 't know where teams are playing," referring to the&#13;
~ ti permanent athletic facilities on _campus. He&#13;
i'o ed ~e unique nature of the clut:H&gt;nen~. ~ports&#13;
~m directed at student participation in activi~es vs.&#13;
i-- nt competition on a varsity level. He srud the&#13;
C&gt;gram is "a model innovation" and predicted 0ther&#13;
~ Would develop their programs along the same&#13;
The meeting then turned to the Committee Report on&#13;
the Budget which resulted in the group being informed&#13;
th t the findings have not yet been completed. Regent&#13;
w:UCer stressed that the public ought to be kept aware of&#13;
whatever happens to the budget as it happens rather than&#13;
waiting until all the information has been analyzed and&#13;
finalized d' · bid&#13;
The Regents also voted down the ta ison cam~ .&#13;
for co-ed housing; allocated $90,000 for the ~brary&#13;
Leaming Center; and approved a mea ure allowuig . the&#13;
developers of off-campus housing to connect mto&#13;
Parkside's sewer system.&#13;
a:&#13;
Ill&#13;
C)&#13;
oc&#13;
0&#13;
m&#13;
.J&#13;
.J&#13;
Ill&#13;
oc&#13;
oc&#13;
&lt;&#13;
0&#13;
'lbe Rege ts meetm&#13;
Rae.&#13;
Ron 'illiams li2&#13;
Lyn \an Eimerens1&#13;
For treasurer, Larry T&#13;
activ " t and the husband&#13;
wa beaten com;nci 1 b&#13;
The unofficial resul&#13;
Jean Koehl r&#13;
Sutton Kinter&#13;
In th at-1&#13;
DeanLoum&#13;
340 VO&#13;
Gamer. In electi&#13;
Dean Loom&#13;
Tom Gar r&#13;
John GoWr n&#13;
Ken Antaramian&#13;
Walter Br ch&#13;
Jeanette Dremel&#13;
Walter lbricht&#13;
Ken Ko ol&#13;
~r e Fl tch r&#13;
01 . o&#13;
ark Timpany&#13;
Rae.&#13;
141&#13;
117&#13;
74&#13;
44&#13;
82&#13;
l&#13;
(Coo&#13;
e Ta ftll Hall f') la l Frid.a ••&#13;
p&#13;
m&#13;
4i&#13;
231&#13;
l&#13;
210&#13;
2(f/ &#13;
Pa.eZ i\Jll'lII'. l\lql&#13;
Volunteers Needed for Headstart&#13;
_Temple Baptist Church, 4715&#13;
5200 Avenue (2 classes)&#13;
Classes are from 9 a.m. until 1&#13;
pm., Monday through Friday.&#13;
There is a teacher and a&#13;
teacher-aide working with 20&#13;
four-year olds in each classroom.&#13;
Extra hands are needed to help at&#13;
most times. Those volunteering&#13;
should like cluldren and be able&#13;
to accept guidance from the&#13;
teacher.&#13;
Anyone interested in giving&#13;
some time and loving attention to&#13;
children please call 658-2371,&#13;
extension 77, and leave your&#13;
name and phone number.&#13;
Someone will contact you to give&#13;
you more information.&#13;
The Kenosha Head Start&#13;
Session&#13;
Offers&#13;
Summer&#13;
About 2,000 students are expe&#13;
ted to register for the 1971&#13;
summer session at the University&#13;
or Wisconsin·Parkside, according&#13;
to John Va laske. Director or&#13;
Summer Session and Extended&#13;
Day Programs. Enrollment last&#13;
. ummer was 1,789&#13;
Detailed umetables ror the&#13;
eight-week summer session&#13;
beginning June 28 now are&#13;
available from Valaske"s office&#13;
and at the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
campuses&#13;
The timetable lists 109 separate&#13;
courses In 'n different academic&#13;
and prctes ronal Cields including&#13;
18 courses which have not&#13;
previously been orrered during&#13;
ummer session.&#13;
The new summer courses are&#13;
Introduction to Accounting,&#13;
Personnel Management, Employe&#13;
Evaluation, Introduction to&#13;
Biochemistry, Mass Media in&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
New&#13;
American Society, Introduction&#13;
to Earth SCience, Government&#13;
and Business, Advanced&#13;
Calculus, Analytical Techniques&#13;
in Music, Contemporary Issues in&#13;
Public School Music Education,&#13;
Philosophy or Religion,&#13;
Psychology or Personality,&#13;
Seminar in Motivation, Introduction&#13;
to Social Theory,&#13;
Cervantes and Latin American&#13;
Perspectives.&#13;
Valaske pointed out that a&#13;
number of introductory courses&#13;
are being offered this summer to&#13;
accommodate students who have&#13;
just completed their high school&#13;
. work and wish to get a head start&#13;
on college.&#13;
A number of upper division&#13;
courses also will be offered to&#13;
meet the needs both of continuing&#13;
Parkside students and students&#13;
home for the summer from other&#13;
institutions, Valaske added.&#13;
"We will have a slightly different&#13;
mix of day and evening&#13;
courses this summer," Valaske&#13;
said, "to allow flexibility for&#13;
students combining employment&#13;
and study."&#13;
Valaske said the deferred&#13;
program is in need of volunteerS&#13;
to work with children 10 the&#13;
classrooms. Head Start is a&#13;
federally runded program Ior&#13;
children of families of low Income&#13;
(specificattons determined by&#13;
guidelines set up by the government).&#13;
We have centers at:&#13;
Beth Hillel Temple, 6050 8th&#13;
Avenue&#13;
Immanuel Methodist Church,&#13;
5410 Sheridan Road&#13;
St. Mark School, .1J17 14th&#13;
Avenue (2 classes)&#13;
St. Matthew Guild Hall, 5900 7th&#13;
Avenue&#13;
Courses&#13;
credit program for high school&#13;
juniors begun several years ago&#13;
also will be continued. Under the&#13;
plan, students completing their&#13;
junior year in high school In the&#13;
upper 50 per cent of their class&#13;
may enroll for summer work on&#13;
the recommendation or their high&#13;
school counselor with college&#13;
credits earned held in "escrow"&#13;
until completion of high school&#13;
work.&#13;
Courses will be offered on all&#13;
three Parkside campuses, with&#13;
registration June 22 through 25 at&#13;
Greenquist Hall on the Wood&#13;
Road Campus.&#13;
Summer session fees are&#13;
scaled to the number or credits&#13;
taken and are uniform at all touryear&#13;
UW campuses. Fees for&#13;
state residents are $37.50 (or one&#13;
credit, $55.50 for two credits,&#13;
$73.50 for three credits, $91.50 for&#13;
four credits, $109.50 (or five&#13;
credits, $127.50 (or six to nine&#13;
credits and $181.50 (or len or&#13;
more credits.&#13;
For non residents,&#13;
corresponding fees are $91.50,&#13;
$163.50, $235.50, $307.50, $379.50,&#13;
$451.50 and $667.50.&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE, , ,&#13;
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;
·equlpment 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;
Soutneastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
WednesdaY, April 21&#13;
Ecology Lecture .&#13;
Michael Cafferty, acting&#13;
assistant secertary of the t,J.S.&#13;
Department of Transpo:tatlOll&#13;
,&#13;
will talk on ''TransportatlOn and&#13;
the Environment" at 7:~O p.m.&#13;
in Room 103, GreenqUlst Hall&#13;
under sponsorship of Umverslty&#13;
Extension. (free)&#13;
University League&#13;
University League will m~et&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. in the Ra,lOe&#13;
Campus Badger Room where&#13;
Eugene GasiorkiewlcZ, assocIa~e&#13;
professor of life science, Will&#13;
speak on "A Fight for Space&#13;
-Daisies vs. Grasses at the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie."&#13;
Tbursday, Apnl'U&#13;
Lecture-Recital&#13;
Tenor Eugene Conley will&#13;
present a lecture-recital from&#13;
12:30 to 2 p.rn. in Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall. (free)&#13;
Architecture-Art Lecture&#13;
The noted architect, Victor&#13;
Christ-Janer, holder of&#13;
numerous awards and prizes for&#13;
architecture, will lecture on&#13;
"Architecture as Art" at 8 p.m.&#13;
in Room 103 Greenquist Hall&#13;
under sponsorship of the&#13;
Le c t u re and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee. (free)&#13;
Friday, April 23&#13;
Feature Film&#13;
Feature film "True Grit" will&#13;
be shown at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Activities Building. (adrn. 75&#13;
cents)&#13;
Saturday, April 24&#13;
Alumni Founder's Day&#13;
The UW Alumni Association&#13;
of Kenosha will hold a&#13;
Cheerleading&#13;
Tryouts&#13;
There will be cheerleading and&#13;
Rangerette tryouts coming up&#13;
this spring. All interested girls&#13;
are encouraged to come to the&#13;
practices or contact Mrs.&#13;
Patricia Mattek if interested and&#13;
can't come.&#13;
Practices will be held at&#13;
Kenosha and Racine, with the&#13;
final tryout to be held in the&#13;
Badger Room-Racine Campus .&#13;
Tuesday, May 18, from 3:30 to&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
CARL'S/ PIZZA&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
In four Sizes 9" - ·12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RI8S • SPAGHnTI • CHiCKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI. LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD. SANDWICHES&#13;
CARlY -OUTS • DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU IUNC ... WE alUNC"&#13;
Founder's Day dinner dance at&#13;
6:30 p.m. at Bristol Oaks&#13;
Country -Club. Speaker will be&#13;
UW President John Weaver&#13;
Tickets at $6.50 per person ar~&#13;
available on campus frorn&#13;
Charles Kugel (Ext. 391) Or&#13;
Coach Stephens (Ext. 245).&#13;
Dance&#13;
T he Booster ClUb&#13;
(Cheerleaders and Rangerettes)&#13;
'will sponsor a dance at8 p.rn, in&#13;
the Activities Building. (adm&#13;
charge) .&#13;
Sunday, April 2S&#13;
University Artists Series Concert&#13;
The David Baker Jazz&#13;
Ensemble will present a&#13;
University A!ltsts Series concert&#13;
at 4 p.m. In Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse. (Gen. adm. $1&#13;
student adm. 50 cents, childre~&#13;
12 and under free)&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
Parkside Poetry Forum will&#13;
feature Carl Lindner. assistant&#13;
professor of' English, speaking&#13;
on "concrete poetry" at 2 p.m,&#13;
at the Kenosha Public Museum&#13;
Rally Race .&#13;
Zeta Beta Tau will sponsor a&#13;
road rally wi th registration at&#13;
12:30 p.m. in the Tallent Hall&#13;
parking lot and the first car&#13;
scheduled to leave at I p.m&#13;
Cost of $5 per car (two per';'';&#13;
per car) includes free beer, food&#13;
and a party at the end of the&#13;
race. A traveling team trophy&#13;
will be introduced for&#13;
organizations wishing to sponsor&#13;
two or more cars as a team.&#13;
Teams also are eligible for&#13;
regular place trophies (six&#13;
trophies for the first three&#13;
places).&#13;
PRACTICE SCHEDULE&#13;
Athletic Room-Kenosha&#13;
Tuesday, May 4,3:30-5:30 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, May 11, 3:30-5:30&#13;
Thursday, May 13, 3:30-5:30&#13;
Racine Campus&#13;
Tuesday, May 4, 3:30-5:3Op.m.,&#13;
Room 201&#13;
Tuesday, May 11, 3:30-5:30&#13;
p.m., Badger Room&#13;
Thursday, May 13, 3:30-5:30&#13;
p.rn., ..Badger Room&#13;
_Final Tryouts&#13;
May 18, 3:30-5:30 p.m., Badger&#13;
Room- Racine.&#13;
For further information CODtact:&#13;
Mrs. Patricia Mattek, Advisor,&#13;
Extension 245.&#13;
Kathy Mauer, Captain of&#13;
Cheerleaders, Racine 633-1664,&#13;
Bev Noble, Captain or Pom·&#13;
Pom Girls, Kenosha 654-1OW. 'N"ij"wscope"&#13;
• Edit« Warren Nedry&#13;
Marc Eisen NewsEdit«&#13;
John Koloen Copy Eelt«&#13;
Jim Nolan Business Mallll'l&#13;
John Leighton Adv:':;:::&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF Bill&#13;
Jim KolDen, Bill Sorensen, BGb&#13;
Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Mike&#13;
Mainland, Dean LoUIDOS,Keo&#13;
Kurth, Bob Borchardt,&#13;
Konkol, Kevin McKay,J=&#13;
Casper, Paul LomartiJ'O,&#13;
Taffs.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF _&#13;
Narees Socha, Don Marjola,&#13;
Gray, Barbara Scott.&#13;
BUSINESS PHONES ESl--&#13;
658-1881&#13;
isw77&#13;
Newscope is an ~&#13;
sludent newspaper c~ .IY 01&#13;
students of The uruv .....bIiib"l&#13;
Wisconsin-Parks,de po ,,-&#13;
d&#13;
·ng va ....&#13;
weekly except un ined IOf&#13;
periods. Student oblJl lh&lt; .-&#13;
vertising runds are rOI tb'&#13;
source of revenue 6.&#13;
operation or NeWSCOPd·aod&#13;
copies are prln~~utl1I'&#13;
distributed throug. ..--&#13;
d Rac,ne&#13;
Kenosha an Unltll'&#13;
munities as well as lh&lt;av~&#13;
sity. Free COpies are&#13;
upon request.&#13;
Volunteers Needed for Headstart&#13;
program is in need of vol~teers&#13;
to work ..... ;th children m the&#13;
classrooms. Head Start is a&#13;
federally funded progr3:m for&#13;
children of families of low mcome&#13;
(specifications determined by&#13;
guidelines set up by the govern·&#13;
Temple Bapll ment). t Church, 4715&#13;
52nd Avenue (2 classe-)&#13;
Cla. · are from 9 a .m. until 1&#13;
p.m., 1onday throu h Frida} .&#13;
There i a teacher and a&#13;
t ch r-aide wor · ing with 20&#13;
four-year olds in each classroom.&#13;
E. tra hands are needed to help at&#13;
most tim . Th volunteermg&#13;
hould like childr n and be able&#13;
to accept guidance from the&#13;
teacher.&#13;
Anyone interested in gi\'ing&#13;
some time and lo\·ing attention to&#13;
children please call 658-2371 ,&#13;
extension n , and leave your&#13;
name and phone number.&#13;
Someone .,., ill contact you to give&#13;
you more information.&#13;
The Kenosha Head Start&#13;
We have centers at: Beth Hillel Temple, 6050 8th&#13;
Avenue&#13;
Immanuel Methodist Church,&#13;
5410 Sheridan Road&#13;
St. lark School, 7117 14th&#13;
Avenue (2 classes)&#13;
St. Matthew Guild Hall, 5900 7th&#13;
Avenue&#13;
Summer Session&#13;
Offers New Courses&#13;
for the&#13;
umrn r&#13;
American Society, Introduction&#13;
to Earth Science, Government&#13;
and Business, Advanced&#13;
Calculus, Analytical Techniques&#13;
in tusic, Contemporary Issues in&#13;
Public School tu ic Education,&#13;
Philosophy of Religion,&#13;
Psychology of Per onality,&#13;
eminar in totivation, In·&#13;
troduction to Social Theory,&#13;
Cervante; and Latin American&#13;
P r:;peclives.&#13;
Valaske pomted out that a&#13;
number of introductory courses&#13;
are being offered this summer to&#13;
accommodate students who have&#13;
ju t completed their high school&#13;
work and wish to get a head start&#13;
on college.&#13;
credit program for high school&#13;
juniors begun several years ago&#13;
also will be continued. Under the&#13;
plan, students completing their&#13;
junior year in high school in the&#13;
upper 50 per cent of their class&#13;
may enroll for summer work on&#13;
the recommendation of their high&#13;
school counselor with college&#13;
credits earned held in "escrow"&#13;
until completion of high school&#13;
work.&#13;
Courses will be offered on all&#13;
three Parkside campuses, with&#13;
registration June 22 through 25 at&#13;
Greenquist Hall on the Wood&#13;
Road Campus.&#13;
Th n · ·ummer cour e are&#13;
Introduction to Accounting,&#13;
P r onn I 1anagement, Employ&#13;
Evaluation, Introduction to&#13;
B1och •mi try, la s Media in&#13;
A number of upper division&#13;
courses also will be offered to&#13;
meet the needs both of continuing&#13;
Parkside students and students&#13;
home for the summer from other&#13;
institutions, Valaske added.&#13;
Summer session fees are&#13;
scaled to the number of credits&#13;
taken and are uniform at all fouryear&#13;
UW campuses. Fees for&#13;
state residents are $37.50 for one&#13;
credit, $55.50 for two credits,&#13;
$73.50 for three credits, $91.50 for&#13;
four credits, $109.50 for five&#13;
credits, $127.50 for six to nine&#13;
credits and $181.50 for ten or&#13;
more credits. it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
"We will have a slightly different&#13;
mix of day and evening&#13;
courses this summer," Valaske&#13;
said, "to allow flexibility for&#13;
students combining employment&#13;
and study."&#13;
Valaske said the deferred&#13;
For non residents,&#13;
corresponding fees are $91.50,&#13;
$163.50, $235.50, $307.50, $379.50,&#13;
$451.50 and $667.50.&#13;
NATIONAL BANK or KENOSHA&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE ...&#13;
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;
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 - Turntable!&gt;&#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;
Sout,,eastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
Wednesday, April 21&#13;
Ecology Lecture .&#13;
Michael Cafferty, acting&#13;
assistant secertary of the ~.J.S.&#13;
Department of Transpo~tat10n ,&#13;
will talk on "Transportation and&#13;
the Environment" at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in Room 103, Greenqui_st H_all&#13;
under sponsorship of Umvers1ty&#13;
Extension. (free) University League&#13;
University League will m~et&#13;
at ? :30 p.m. in the Racine&#13;
Campus Badge~ R.oom w~ere&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiew1cz, assoc1a~e&#13;
professor of life science, will&#13;
speak on "A Fight for Space - Daisies vs. Grasses at the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie."&#13;
Thurs&lt;iay, Aprtl U&#13;
Lecture-Recital&#13;
Tenor Eugene Conley will&#13;
present a lecture-recital from&#13;
12 :30 to 2 p.m. in Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall. (free)&#13;
Architecture-Art Lecture&#13;
The noted architect, Victor&#13;
Christ-Janer, holder of&#13;
numerous awards and prizes for&#13;
architecture, will lecture on&#13;
"Architecture as Art" at 8 p.m.&#13;
in Room 103 Greenquist Hall&#13;
under sponsorship of the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee. (free)&#13;
Friday, April 23&#13;
Feature Film&#13;
Feature film "True Grit" will&#13;
be shown at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Activities Building. (adm. 75&#13;
cents)&#13;
Saturday, April 24&#13;
Alumni Founder's Day&#13;
The UW Alumni Association&#13;
of Kenosha will hold a&#13;
Cheer leading&#13;
Tryouts&#13;
There will be cheerleading and&#13;
Rangerette tryouts coming up&#13;
this spring. All interested girls&#13;
are encouraged to come to the&#13;
practices or contact Mrs.&#13;
Patricia Mattek if interested and&#13;
can't come.&#13;
Practices will be held at&#13;
Kenosha and Racine, with the&#13;
final tryout to be held in the&#13;
Badger Room-Racine Cam1;ms&#13;
Tuesday, May 18, from 3: 30 to&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S/ PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" . 12" ~ 14" . 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHOTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • U SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARII.Y-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU II/HG •. . WE BIIIHG"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
Founder's Day dinner dance at&#13;
6:30 p.m. at Bristol Oaks&#13;
Country Club. Speaker will be&#13;
UW President John Weaver&#13;
Tickets at $6.50 per person ar~&#13;
available on campus from&#13;
Charles Kugel (Ext. 391) or&#13;
Coach Stephens (Ext. 245).&#13;
Dance&#13;
The Booster Club&#13;
(Cheerleaders and Rangerettes)&#13;
·will sponsor a dance at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Activities Building. (adm&#13;
charge) ·&#13;
Sunday, April 25&#13;
University Artists Series Concert&#13;
The David Baker Jazz&#13;
En_sem?le ~ill present a&#13;
University A~l!sts Series concert&#13;
at 4 p.m. m Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse. (Gen. adm. $1&#13;
student adm. 50 cents, childre~&#13;
12 and under free)&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
Parkside Poetry Forum will&#13;
feature Carl Lindner, assistant&#13;
professor of English, speaking&#13;
on "concrete poetry" at 2 p.m.&#13;
at the Kenosha Public Museum&#13;
Rally Race ·&#13;
Zeta Beta Tau will sponsor a&#13;
road rally with registration at&#13;
12:30 p.m. in the Tallent Hall&#13;
parking lot and the first car&#13;
scheduled to leave at I pm&#13;
Cost of $5 per car (two personi&#13;
per car) includes free beer, food&#13;
and a party at the end of the&#13;
race. A traveling team trophy&#13;
will be introduced for&#13;
organizations wishing to sponsor&#13;
two or more cars as a team.&#13;
Teams also are eligible for&#13;
regular place trophies (six&#13;
trophies for the first three&#13;
places).&#13;
PRACTICE SCHEDULE&#13;
Athletic Room-Kenosha&#13;
Tuesday, May 4, 3:30-5:30 p.m&#13;
Tuesday, May 11, 3:30-5:30&#13;
Thursday, May 13, 3:30-5:30&#13;
Racine Campus&#13;
Tuesday, May 4, 3:30-5:30p.m.,&#13;
Room 201&#13;
Tuesday, May 11, 3:30-5:30&#13;
p.m., Badger Room&#13;
Thursday, May 13, 3:30-5:30&#13;
p.m., .,Badger Room&#13;
. Final Tryouts&#13;
May 18, 3:30-5:30 p.m., Badger&#13;
Room-Racine.&#13;
For further information con·&#13;
tact:&#13;
Mrs. Patricia Mattek, Advisor,&#13;
Extension 245.&#13;
Kathy Mauer, Captain of&#13;
Cheerleaders, Racine 633-1664&#13;
Bev Noble, Captain of Porn·&#13;
Porn Girls, Kenosha 654-1020 . .............................. ,&#13;
Newscope&#13;
WarrenNedry - rut•&#13;
Marc Eisen News Edit«&#13;
John Koloen Copy Editcr&#13;
Jim Nolan Business Ma~~er&#13;
John Leighton Ad~~ger&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF ill&#13;
Jim Koloen, Bill Sorensen, ~ Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Mtkt&#13;
Mainland, Dean 1,ownos, ell&#13;
Kurth Bob Borchardt, K&#13;
' K James Konkol, Kevin Mc a~, S\'e!I&#13;
Casper, Paul Lomartire,&#13;
Taffs.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF . Jolil&#13;
Narees Socha, Don MarJala,&#13;
Gray, Barbara Scott.&#13;
BUSINES.S PHONES Ext&#13;
658-4861, - 652-4111&#13;
Newscope is an ind~&#13;
student newspaper co_m~: ·&#13;
students of Th~ uruversJ?&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside pu cab · g va weekly except durm . ed ,d-&#13;
'od Student obtain pen s. the&#13;
vertising funds are for&#13;
source of revenue&#13;
operation . of Newsco~- a&#13;
copies are pnn~e ut t&#13;
distributed throug O co d Racine Kenosha an the un1\1!&#13;
munities as well as availablt&#13;
sity. Free copies are&#13;
upon request. &#13;
James Liddy : Magician and Satanist&#13;
by JIm Koloen of the Newsc&#13;
' ope Staff&#13;
Liddy, Irish poet, red haired, portly,&#13;
~ DYlan Thomas, read poems, lectured and&#13;
...-!~~parkside students during the week&#13;
~ WJ Easter vacation. Instr:uctors, taking no&#13;
~ fat chance that their students would&#13;
~ OIlwn to hear Mr, Liddy voluntarily, invited&#13;
~~ and lecture in their classes. Few students,&#13;
""~- (asked, knew quite what to say about this&#13;
~,.raanY&#13;
&gt;-&#13;
ID&#13;
o&#13;
lJ&#13;
"~&#13;
-'&#13;
-'&#13;
ID&#13;
During tha t night th .&#13;
would be taking Herbert" poet ~nformed us that he&#13;
reSIdence next year H ~UblY s place as artist-infrom&#13;
Denison Unive~ite ~~ 0bf: coming to US directly&#13;
San Francisco State ~l hio andbefore that from&#13;
ther, Mr. Liddy said he wege&#13;
., When interrogated Iurof&#13;
course he would be t as~.t sure exactly what type&#13;
traduced Lidd eac 109, Mr. KUbly, who 10-&#13;
discussing poeJy&#13;
~~th ~:n aUdle~ce. told of Liddy&#13;
bis room till fou . th Francisco State students in&#13;
r In e mormng&#13;
The next day Wednesd .&#13;
terviewed Mr Lidd i ay . t? be exact, I inconvivial&#13;
tankards Y&#13;
OfnA&#13;
the Activities Building over&#13;
be . rnencan ale Whe di d&#13;
co~~~eto write ~lry.? "I started' in 1~9. II ~:&#13;
ke t ond myself scribbling quite unconsciously and I&#13;
p. It ... after aU the whole secret to writin is to&#13;
perSIst, not to give up, As Iget older [ feel Ih g&#13;
~ent. bU~I get lazier. As I get older I believ::o~:~~&#13;
mortality and another life so Idon't th'nk I' .&#13;
to do a~ything this time around. __ and las fa~ a~m~&#13;
po~trYI'S concerned, Istill think Isuffer from be~&#13;
so , a most sentimental, and try to consciously keep&#13;
awa&#13;
b&#13;
Y&#13;
I&#13;
from that, especially when approaching the&#13;
pro em of love."&#13;
I tbiLi~dYon poetry, "Poetry is a part of one's destiny&#13;
n a lord of creation or some great power .&#13;
wherever the power comes from or wherever' th~&#13;
• source of energy is, is the same place where poems&#13;
come from ... messages are brought to US from&#13;
''In America one becomes a non-human being.&#13;
it seem$ you've given up the ideo of Community. "&#13;
nb poet after hearing him speak in their classes.&#13;
Sort&lt; 01 judgementaluncertainty: Few students had&#13;
!"Ift'seen a poet close up before and, hence the first&#13;
Uddy contactwas in some ways equivalent to shaking&#13;
!Id with one's first martian; second reason conC8'D5&#13;
poet Liddy's Satanic obsession (Satanic in a&#13;
;odital sense) which obsession Ishall keep vague as&#13;
PDftI to remain poets must live behind a veil.&#13;
Mr. Liddyheld a reading in the Activities Building&#13;
11 Tuesday in which perhaps four score sat in at1IIIdance,&#13;
Helookedvery much like Dylan Thomas, his&#13;
_ the wavein his hair, the protruding stomach, and&#13;
Iipoeticreodering, interrupted by explanations and&#13;
-.Jtalk,provedthe night to be worthwbile. Except&#13;
louloudchOl1lS of beligerent drunks near the har, the&#13;
NICiDg was good, and though no one in the audience&#13;
." any questionsto ask the poet, he wasn't able to&#13;
lint the building for more than an hour after he&#13;
*liIIed down from the podium as be found bimself&#13;
.arded bystudents and curious onlookers. So this is&#13;
alrilb poet. Yup. •&#13;
faraway places, a spiritual world. The poems we \\-TIte&#13;
have, Ithink, little to do with ourselves except that we&#13;
mus~ receive them and acknowledge them and try to&#13;
public them out and cast them into the language we&#13;
have. The poet is the vehicle, the poem is the property&#13;
of the world."&#13;
During the reading yesterday, you spoke of evil&#13;
and Satanic qualities in Baudelaire and yourself Could&#13;
you expand on this: "I believe in evil as a sort of&#13;
necessary part of the world, evil as experienced in Its&#13;
duration. America has lost out because it never really&#13;
believed in evil, because it is facile and shallow in the&#13;
sense that it's an overoptimistic society_ I think it&#13;
needs a kind of a love of Baudelaire, of that coo) French&#13;
decadence. As for Satan, 1 think an ultimate reconciliation&#13;
between good and evil is theoreticall)&#13;
possible. You must realize that Satan is not totally evil.&#13;
he has sufficient evil in him to make him a wonderful&#13;
figure. "&#13;
How do you view the poet? "The poet is a magician&#13;
and a satanist. He can put a spell on us, and we can&#13;
either reject the spell or accept it. It should be&#13;
dangerous to meet poets, mothers should tell their kids&#13;
when young that one should read poets but not meet&#13;
them."&#13;
ApriI't.'tll PE&#13;
You were advertLsed as an 1nsh poe "'''hat 15 an&#13;
Irish poet' "An extIe E&gt;a.le has atways the g~'&#13;
lAlrment01tbe Imh 11'. our desuny to a"ay from&#13;
home, to be outsl&lt;le at"a) s: did you know there are&#13;
more IrtShmen In England than In Ireland' Another&#13;
thlllg is thai " .. underslal'd death. are b 1&#13;
11'. partly a cultural Ieelmg that th world not the&#13;
only ""orld That's wh e aren't too ve We&#13;
give death Its proper recogntuon In .. and In&#13;
funerals. in Ireland death IS an important al&#13;
event"&#13;
What are scrne 01 )"OUr obsen:allons on Amenca"&#13;
"In America one becomes a non-human bet OU'rf'&#13;
conUnually being Ioid to "ash a"a) our bod al'd&#13;
deodorize it. me loses ones pit) lcohl)' In Amenco&#13;
you all slay homeal 01 ht in froot 01the box, Illlrelal'd&#13;
~.eleavehome ""egolOlhepubs tt~l.hat)ou·&#13;
ll1"enup the Idea 01communI ' Hope for Amena I&#13;
10 tIus present generation. th IS tbe first Cl\lhud&#13;
generation that Amenca has t produced 1be au&#13;
are tT)i.ng to re..define It In human terms ..&#13;
On the poet and drugs "I I people" ho dn&#13;
.....Tite better than people vtho smoke ((lope. For .n·&#13;
stance. Colendge beeame addIcted 10 laudanum 'a&#13;
mixlure 0180 per cent ak&lt;Jboland 20 per cellt Opium&#13;
and wasn'l able to "nle an 'thlll&amp; for the \asl thlrt)&#13;
~eon oItus life Baudela1re expenmenled siroogl)&#13;
with opium and hashish, be " .. n "TOle a boolo. a , It&#13;
called the "Arbflcial Paradlse'·, and then me&#13;
slrUtgly anU~g Personall)', I don't like the ITIP&#13;
poem, At San FranCISCOI banned SO' ral ",-ords OM&#13;
was krishna, another ""as O. t 'T'be) came up lOG&#13;
(requently. I don'. mind so much If peopI &lt;:orne to&#13;
class sloned. there'. nothlll&amp;Ican do abou' tha bu'&#13;
Please doo't V.Tlle poems hen )o'OU're tcmtd.."&#13;
What ",auld ~ou .. ~ are major lbem n&#13;
poetry~ "Death al'd sex I ha,'e a profound de Ih&#13;
croosed '" Ith a burnl oullo,'e, burnt oul heart '&#13;
What do )' ou lhtnk of ,.,Ien h a Bob&#13;
D)"lan, Tim Buckley "It's al".} a question of&#13;
.....hether theyv.T1te poetry Of' nol I thl 0)Ian tumst'U&#13;
says someplace that }us 'IAOor&lt;bdon't tand alone.. HE."&#13;
an artist~ a complete arUSt. soph ucated. exc1 u·&#13;
roolless. be changes hi sl)'le. he dO\'eIops for the e&#13;
or his art extraonlmaril) ~erful, he tin back&#13;
belierinwords Iremember,lthmklt'lAOa earl,y D. Ian.&#13;
where he sur.g 01 the un IblIlt~ 01 Io-e beea&#13;
everythmg IS fadmg, nothmg g.. n to Iasl I It&#13;
James Taylor, 00'"&#13;
What poets Imp. ess you most and "hal quahll&#13;
make for a good poem' "Wben I gl'! a of&#13;
astonishment, .....hen I'm a tonlshed afttl" reach a&#13;
poem Poets hke Baudelaire and Pat" Ca\ ana&#13;
and lately Jack Spicer mix U1te1hg~ and ernot.iOn m&#13;
a way that forces the poem mlo my mind good&#13;
poems stay fore\'er m}our mind Hi II) the. tum&#13;
the reader 1010lbe poet •&#13;
For the students ",ho d,dn'l hO\ a chance to t I&#13;
with James Udd '. you'Uha\~)our cha~ nnt ar&#13;
He is quicl&lt; to laugh. kno led , al'd enJOY&#13;
tailing with .tudents In fac!. me or the problem I&#13;
encountered while mten'le"o'in him a • perpetual&#13;
circle of students cr"OVOdi~ me ou In hlm&#13;
quesllons like what makes a good poem&#13;
Senator Jeanl'! Dremel qu limed&#13;
"hat the encbn 01the lmJlO'llloo 01 the&#13;
llueu.Ky regIme ould mean&#13;
"'oodered 100If ,be Sena'e could act 00&#13;
on behalf of the studenl body. rallf)' lhe behalf 01the'luden' bod) In raur in lbe&#13;
Joint Trealy of Peace between tbe people treal)&#13;
of the United Stales, Soulh Vielnam and Pre, ,den TIm Eaker m ed to lab!&#13;
North Vietnam and urge other the mOlJon unlll the' nt t mnLJn 111&#13;
organizations and persons to supporl tbe ",as ,o,ed do....nU "'aller Breach, Cary&#13;
principles of the People's Peace Treaty" Adelson and Tom Carner' aled to la&#13;
The treaty says In part the U iL&#13;
agrees to immediate and total ¥lith· The \0 e on 1M rnouon i&#13;
drawal from Vielnam, al'd to end the £0&lt;..- jo'OIn~ the three ou no l\&#13;
imposition of the Tlueu-Ky regime in AnLaramian and Jeanette DrtmeJ abo&#13;
South Vietnam. The Vietnamese in tum sLained from \ 011 Tlmpan) Dtan&#13;
would enter into discussions concenung Loumos, Gary Da\ 1 ,Jean K r. John&#13;
the safety of withdrawing troops and CotLfredsen. 00\ Weber, Tom I r&#13;
release of military'r-!:pr;:l:so~ne;:;,:.rs::;,-:::: .. _~:,,:,_...;;Con=::u:n:,:u::;ed::..;:0::;n:.:p:.;:~e:,,:8,:,).....,&#13;
Student· Senate Ratifies Treafy by Marc Eisen&#13;
of lbe Newscope staff&#13;
1be Student Senate in its initial&#13;
~ tast Thursday ratilied "The&#13;
PtapIe's Peace Treaty", a joint peace&#13;
holy betweeolhe people of the United&#13;
.... , South Vietnam and North Viet-&#13;
.... by an 8-4 margin with two ab1IIIlboIl;,&#13;
Abo in the 3'h hour meeting the&#13;
Saat. appointed chairmen to the&#13;
~cornrnittees, passed a resolution&#13;
IIId Student Government does not&#13;
fltoBnize as legal any campus com- :llte that has heen functioning without&#13;
studentrepresentation intended for&#13;
taJnlDdpassed. a resolution concerning a&#13;
I'IS secw-Ity-studentmeeting set for&#13;
April 23,&#13;
Mark Tympany introduced the&#13;
resolution supporting the people'S Peace&#13;
Treaty, It read:&#13;
"Whereas we do not believe ourselves&#13;
10 be at war with the People of&#13;
Vietnam, and&#13;
"Whereas the lighting of an un·&#13;
declared war in Southeast Asia has inflicted&#13;
a great toll in human lives and has&#13;
been the cause of immeasurable suffering;&#13;
"We the elected student government&#13;
of the U~iversity of Wisconsin·Parkside&#13;
James Liddy : Magician and Satanist&#13;
by Jim Koloen of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Liddy, Irish poet, red haired, portly,&#13;
es Dylan Thomas, read poems, lectured and&#13;
like~ Parkside students during the week&#13;
111 Easter vacation. Instructors, taking no&#13;
fat chance that their students would&#13;
:wn to hear Mr. Liddy voluntarily, invited&#13;
d and lecture in their classes. Few students&#13;
::,~y I asked, knew quite what to say about thi~&#13;
During that night th . would be taking Herbe te poet informed u that he&#13;
residence next year. H/ w~u~:ts P!ace as ar~ t-infrom&#13;
Denison University i Oh coming to us direcUy&#13;
San Francisco State Coll n io and _before that from&#13;
ther, Mr. Liddy said hew ege., When interrogated furof&#13;
course he would be t as~.t sure exactly what type&#13;
troduced Liddy t th eac t~g, Mr. Kubly, who indiscussin&#13;
~ e audience. told of Lidd,&#13;
hi g pootry with San Francisco State stud ts .- s room till four in the mornin n m&#13;
The next day Wednesda g.&#13;
terviewed Mr Lidd . Y . t?. be exact, I inconvivial&#13;
tankards ~ft~ the _Act1V1tie Building over&#13;
begin t ·t mencan ale. When did you&#13;
coveredo mwrt e ~try_? "I ~tar~ed in 1959. I d1 • ke t . yself scribbling qu1te unconsciously and 1&#13;
p _on it ... after all the whole secret to \\Titin i t&#13;
ki:~:\~~\ t;ef~e ~p. As I get older I feel I havegmor:&#13;
im ' . azier. As I get older I believe more in&#13;
mortaht~ and ~nother life so I don't think I'm oi&#13;
to do a~ything this time around . . . and as far ag ~ :~try1&#13;
is concer~ed, I still think I suffer from be~&#13;
' a most sentimental, and try to consciously keep&#13;
~;o~ezo~ lthat:, especially when approaching the&#13;
ove.&#13;
1 ~iddy on poetry. "Poetry is a part of one's destiny&#13;
think a lord of creation or some great power ·&#13;
wherever the power comes from or wherever · th; • source of energy is, is the same place where poems&#13;
come from . . . messages are brought to us from&#13;
"In America one becomes a non-human being .&#13;
poet after hearing him speak in their classes.&#13;
e o! judgemental uncertainty: Few students had&#13;
seen a poet close up before and, hence the first&#13;
Ld!)' contact was in some ways equivalent to shaking&#13;
with one's first martian; second reason conpoet&#13;
Llddy's Satanic obsession (Satanic in a&#13;
'cal sense) which obsession I shall keep vague as&#13;
to remain poets must live behind a veil.&#13;
Ir. Liddy held a reading in the Activities Building&#13;
Tuesday in which perhaps four score sat in atHe&#13;
looked very much like Dylan Thomas, his&#13;
the wave in his hair, the protruding stomach, and&#13;
poetic rendering, interrupted by explanations and&#13;
I talk, proved the night to be worthwhile. Except&#13;
aloud chorus of beligerent drunks near the bar, the&#13;
mng was good, and though no one in the audience&#13;
any questions to ask the poet, he wasn't able to&#13;
the building for more than an hour after he&#13;
down from the podium as he found himself&#13;
led by students and curious onlookers. So this is&#13;
Irish poet. Yup.&#13;
it seems you've given up the idea of Commun ity."&#13;
faraway places, a spiritual world. The poem we \\Tile&#13;
have, I think, little to do with ourselves except that e&#13;
mus~ receive them and acknowledge them and try to&#13;
pubhc them out and cast them into the language we&#13;
have. The poet is the vehicle, the poem is the property&#13;
of the world."&#13;
During the reading yesterday. you spoke of evil&#13;
and Satanic qualities in Baudelaire and yourseli. Could&#13;
you expand on this'? "I believe in evil a a ort or&#13;
necessary part or the world, evil as experienced m its&#13;
duration. America has lost out because it ne\'er really&#13;
believed in evil, because it i facile and hallo\\ an th&#13;
sense that it's an overoptimistic ociety. I think it&#13;
needs a kind of a love of Baudelaire. of that cool French&#13;
decadence. As for Satan, I think an ultimate reconciliation&#13;
between good and e ii is theoretically&#13;
possible. You must realize that Satan is not totally e\·il,&#13;
he has sufficient evil in him to make him a \\ onderful&#13;
figure.''&#13;
How do you \'iew the poet'? "The poet i a magician&#13;
and a satanist. He can put a spell on us, and we can&#13;
either reject the spell or accept it. It hould be&#13;
dangerous to meet poets, mothers should tell their kid&#13;
when young that one should read poets but not meet&#13;
them."&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
or the Newscope Staff&#13;
Tb Student Senate in its initial&#13;
~ last Thursday ratified "The&#13;
· ' Peace Treaty", a joint peace&#13;
ty b tween the people of the United&#13;
Student-Senate Ratifies Treaty&#13;
South Vietnam and North Vietby&#13;
an 8-4 margin with two ablio&#13;
.&#13;
Also in the 31&#13;
1:! hour meeting the&#13;
te appointed chairmen to the&#13;
lliing committees, passed a resolution&#13;
laid Student Government does not&#13;
·ze as legal any campus comthat&#13;
has been functioning without&#13;
dent representation intended for&#13;
d pa sed a resolution concerning a&#13;
P-IS security-student meeting set for&#13;
April 23.&#13;
Mark Tympany introduced the&#13;
resolution supporting the People's Peace&#13;
Treaty. It read:&#13;
"Whereas we do not believe ourselves&#13;
to be at war with the People or&#13;
Vietnam, and&#13;
"Whereas the fighting or an undeclared&#13;
war in Southeast Asia has inflicted&#13;
a great toll in human lives and has&#13;
been the cause of immeasurable suffering&#13;
;&#13;
"We the elected student government&#13;
of the U~iversity of Wisconsin-Parkside &#13;
. April I'. 1'71&#13;
Anyone who has been exposed to the television&#13;
medium, knows that the Pondorosa is's giant&#13;
.pread in Nevada inhabited by the Cartwrights.&#13;
They work hard. play hard. and devour the lood&#13;
prepared by Hop Sing, their hired cook.&#13;
Well Pardner, Kenosha has a Ponderosa, but it&#13;
is a steak house and not a ranch. The only steer or&#13;
head of calUe you may run into is on a plate. The&#13;
hired help aren't quite as tan or strong as the ranch&#13;
hands on the television Pondorosa, but they are&#13;
more efficient.&#13;
Pondorosa Steak House enjoys a very good&#13;
business on Tuesday nights. people seem to come&#13;
out 01 the woodwork in Kenosha, just to eat a Ribeye&#13;
stead dinner for ninty-nine cents. Tuesday is the&#13;
only mght that is termed "Family Night", and this&#13;
is when 1 went to the steak house to eat.&#13;
I was very surprised to see all the cars in the&#13;
parking lot when I first arrived. Ithought maybe&#13;
one of the Carlwrights was making a personal&#13;
appearance or something. The first thing Idid see&#13;
when Iwalked in was 8 line. I'm not used to standing&#13;
in line at a restaurant.&#13;
The Pondorosa is a cafeteria type restaurant.&#13;
The building is one large room full of picnic tables.&#13;
There are pictures of cowboys and Indians around&#13;
on the walls. and holsters and guns. The people&#13;
working here all wear black cowboy hats, black&#13;
sklfts or pants and red checkered shirts. The atmo&gt;phere&#13;
is all here, and I noticed it delighted&#13;
children&#13;
Their menu consists of steaks and hamburgers .&#13;
by Paul Lomartire 01 the Newscope stal!&#13;
You can get any number 01 steaks. but on TueSday&#13;
night the Ribeye dinner is the mover. I went along&#13;
with the crowd and the weekly sale and ordered a&#13;
rare steak asked for blu cheese dressing on my&#13;
salad, baked potato and a roll and collee. Itall adds&#13;
up to a little over a dollar as the drink is not mcluded&#13;
in the ninty-nine cents. .&#13;
Noone was more surprised than Ito reahze that&#13;
my steak was indeed rare, and very good. I got&#13;
more blu cheese dressing than other places usually&#13;
eke out to you, and the coffee is very good. The&#13;
reason 1 would return to the Ponderosa is the fact&#13;
that there are coffee pots out (or the customers to&#13;
help themselves.&#13;
The meal I had was good enough to make me&#13;
return. So, Idid eat there again, but not on Tuesday&#13;
night. Maggie and Ireturned on a regular night and&#13;
paid the usual dollar seventy-nine (or the Ribeye&#13;
dinner. After eating here on a regular night, 1&#13;
realized that Tuesday evening is the best time to&#13;
frequent this place. The meal is well worth a little&#13;
..~~~~o&amp;=.:':-:'~~:::':*:::::::::::::::::::::$:::::==::~8~8;:§'~~:&gt;-::~X::::::&gt;~~"m:::;:.~:::::.,,:~::~-:::;::~;s.m?.~:~~&#13;
; ".: III Could Only Remember My !~::j1&#13;
Name - David Crosby - with&#13;
Grace Slick, Jane Mitchell. Jack&#13;
Casady, Jorma Kaukonen,&#13;
Graham Nash, Neil Young. Paul&#13;
Kantner, Jerry Garcia and&#13;
anybody else Atlantic could&#13;
round up. Atlantic Records&#13;
S07203.&#13;
I suppose that alter the solo&#13;
albums by McCartny. Harrison&#13;
and Lennon, Ibegan to expect too&#13;
much of recordings released&#13;
under one name. To me, the&#13;
purpose 01 doing a solo album is&#13;
lo reveal yourself as an individual&#13;
artist, away from the&#13;
influence of any group that you&#13;
had been with. Except for&#13;
Ringo's album that was precisely&#13;
what the Beatles had done. This&#13;
album as a definite contrast.&#13;
Dave Crosby was probably the&#13;
one most responsible for the&#13;
overall sound 01 Crosby Stills&#13;
Nash and YQUng; the close.&#13;
defined Inur-part harmony over&#13;
the subdued lolk guitar, much the&#13;
same as Lennon and McCartny,&#13;
were mostly responsible for the&#13;
particular style 01 the Beatles.&#13;
The difference is that when you&#13;
listen to Lennon's or McCartny's&#13;
album, you are very definitely&#13;
listening to Lennon or McCartny's&#13;
album, you are very&#13;
definitely listening to Lennon or&#13;
McCartny singularly, in-.&#13;
dependent 01 eaclr other. the&#13;
group, and anyone else they've&#13;
been connected with - at least as&#13;
much as that is humanly&#13;
possible. But Crosby. whether&#13;
intentionally or not, never left his&#13;
group sound. This album is obviously&#13;
one-hall CSN&amp;Y and onehall&#13;
Jeflerson Airplane, the latter&#13;
hall due to the fact that the whole&#13;
band is on the album.&#13;
So. taking the album lor what it&#13;
is, I'd rate it as slightly above&#13;
average, for the simple reason&#13;
that I enjoy the Airplane and&#13;
CSN&amp;Y. Unfortunately, with&#13;
Dave Crosby trying to come up&#13;
with a more or less original&#13;
sound, he succeeded in doing&#13;
nothing more than watering down&#13;
the style 01 the two groups.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
"III Could Only Remember My&#13;
Name" courtesy of Bidinger'S&#13;
Record Shop.&#13;
(Audio Realm would like to&#13;
review records that are of particular&#13;
interest to you, the&#13;
reader. If you have any&#13;
suggestions, drop us a line and&#13;
we'll see what we can do.)&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
meet the Parkside Fuzz at&#13;
fREE BEER PARTY&#13;
April 23 from 10 p,m.-12 p.m.&#13;
after the movie&#13;
FEATURE FILII SERIES PRESENTS:&#13;
--- JOHN WAYNE&#13;
GlEN CAMPBELL&#13;
KIM DARBY&#13;
Th• .rran .... trio&#13;
.ver to trod ..a kill....&#13;
rtTf'dJ/e--&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
HAlWAWS'&#13;
--&#13;
over a dollar, but il two people eat here on a regular&#13;
night. the prices add up (drinks. deserts, ete.) I&#13;
figured tha t an average couple would work their&#13;
way up toward live dollars il they had a good meal&#13;
equipped with a lew extras, like pie, jello, and&#13;
maybe seconds on a baked potato or something.&#13;
If this were the case, I would assume that&#13;
someone spending five dollars would not appreciate&#13;
mess hall type atmosphere. The confines of&#13;
conventional restaurant would be more a;&#13;
preciated, at least by me. .&#13;
But on Tuesday night you can't beat it. Eating&#13;
at the Pondorosa on this night is a good chance to&#13;
catch up on all the old friends that you thought lell&#13;
town, got married and moved. away, died, Or&#13;
blended into the woodwork. I noticed a lew people&#13;
who tried to crawl into the wood work when Isaw&#13;
them, as they were a couple 01 old lriends who OWed&#13;
me money. But all in all I can't say Iwould eat at&#13;
the Pondorosa on any night but Tuesday, because it&#13;
is a good deal. 'if money was of no consequence for&#13;
someone else, they might eat. here every night&#13;
appreciating the fast, e(flcl~nt service, the&#13;
cleanliness 01 the place, the quality and quantity 01&#13;
the lood and the dillerent atmosphere.&#13;
So Pardner, mosey on over to the Pondorosa&#13;
but ya don't have to go armed, ya won't get robbed&#13;
here. To me it is a big chuck wagon that doesn't&#13;
move, and I expect to meet Roy Rogers, Dale&#13;
Evans. Gene Autry, Hopalong and the Long Ranger&#13;
lor a good deal on a Tuesday night.&#13;
LITTLE BIG MAN&#13;
Jack Crabb Dustin Hollman&#13;
Old Lodge Skins&#13;
Chiel Dan George&#13;
Gen. George A. Custer&#13;
Richard Milligan&#13;
Mrs. Pendrake Faye Dunaway&#13;
Wild Bill Hickock Jell Corey&#13;
A. T. Merriweather&#13;
Martin Balsam&#13;
as the theme he relates hiI&#13;
existence with the Indians,&#13;
showing their natural love 01&#13;
Terra and of each other as a part&#13;
01 that matrix. Calling themselves&#13;
"Human Beings" they see&#13;
themselves as extensions of&#13;
nature rather than as tbe&#13;
whiteman's stolid spiritoal&#13;
"Image of God". In one sequerw:t&#13;
Jack Crabb's adopted Grandlather&#13;
says to the youngwarri"',&#13;
"There is an endless suWly01&#13;
whitemen, but there is only •&#13;
limited supply 01 H._ Beings." a statement that ..&#13;
perhaps, even more true todaY·&#13;
The film did an exceDen! job 01&#13;
relating the cruelty dealt lD !be&#13;
indians by what we sometilllt'&#13;
haphazardly call "heroes" 01 !be&#13;
old west. Raids upon the JndiaD&#13;
villages are quite believableaJ&gt;!&#13;
remove many histOrical&#13;
distortions.&#13;
A desirable experience t...&#13;
those who like bumor 01 a dil·&#13;
lerent kind than Howdy[JoOdY.&#13;
The film is accurate in ...&#13;
complishing its aims. See It&#13;
-BilI~&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657':5191&#13;
DUSTIN HOFFMAN has&#13;
certainly done it again with a&#13;
superb performance as Little Big&#13;
Man - a role that demanded that&#13;
he play everything from a boy in&#13;
puberty to a 121 year old man.&#13;
As an ancient narrator he&#13;
conducts an imagery lilled&#13;
odyssey into the world 01 the&#13;
Cheyenne "Human Beings"&#13;
telling his experiences as a&#13;
satireal character moving from&#13;
one historical western figure to&#13;
the next, inviting many of the&#13;
same impressions common to&#13;
films of this genre.&#13;
The century which separates&#13;
tOe topics discussed in productions&#13;
like Catch 22 and this lilm&#13;
S d b P . make true social commentary&#13;
ponsore y rotecnon &amp; Security second run to aesthetic inquiries&#13;
D&#13;
and make comedy possible&#13;
epartmcnt OL7·t1174 without disdain. The Ancient&#13;
i&#13;
t=:::::=:::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::~ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * graphically General Custer and describes his recalls his disgust 01&#13;
- -&#13;
_ .c~ _ attempt to destroy him at The _ O"~ LitlIe Big Horn. His descriptions&#13;
i'\ .. are clouded into a sometimes&#13;
: ,.j\e.,v - . comical and sometimes painlul&#13;
_ s:' : . dream 01 times gone by. With this&#13;
: ~~ e-&lt;':&gt;-&#13;
'::...'b-~ -&#13;
- &lt;".V: -&#13;
- &lt;~ if {j)'" -•&#13;
- rO~"O -&#13;
- V -&#13;
.- -&#13;
- -&#13;
-- ~&#13;
'" --&#13;
• _ V&#13;
- 0&lt;':&gt; -&#13;
-&#13;
_ • b,'b-.... - .'" -&#13;
- ~ ..&#13;
. - 1:11 ".M. : CJ'b-~ :&#13;
AOTIYITI .. IUILDI •• - ADM. 11, - -&#13;
~...c----.... ""'~............ _~. * * * * * -:* * * * **.-&#13;
by Bob Borchardt 01 the Newscope Stall&#13;
~ ...__( I&#13;
':---.1 .&#13;
PIZZA 'h?t:.&#13;
KITCHEN ---.'.~~_&#13;
ALSO ",~g."'~~&#13;
CHICKEN D1NNj:RS and -t~~&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Doys a Week From 4 p.m., posed MondaY'&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
Page EWSCOPE pril 19. 1971&#13;
by Paul Lomartire of the Newscope Staff&#13;
You can get any number of steaks, but on Tuesday&#13;
rught the Ribeye dinner is the mover. I went along&#13;
with the crowd and the weekly sale and ordered a&#13;
rare steak, asked for blu cheese dressing on my&#13;
salad, baked potato and a roll and coffee. It_ all adds&#13;
up to a little over a dollar as the drink is not mcluded&#13;
in the ninty-nine cents. . No one was more surprised than I to realize that&#13;
my steak was indeed rare, and very good. I got&#13;
more blu cheese dressing than other places usually&#13;
eke out to you, and the coffee is very good The&#13;
reason I would return to the Pondorosa is the fact&#13;
that there are coffee pots out for the customers to&#13;
help themselves.&#13;
The meal I had was good enough to make me&#13;
return. So, I did eat there again, but not on Tuesday&#13;
night. Maggie and I returned on a regular night and&#13;
paid the usual dollar seventy-nine for the Ribeye&#13;
dinner. After eating here on a regular night, I&#13;
realized that Tuesday evening is the best time to&#13;
frequent this place. The meal is well worth a little&#13;
If I Could Only Remember My&#13;
Name - David Crosby - with&#13;
Grace Slick, Jane Mitchell, Jack&#13;
Casady , Jorma Kaukonen, Graham Nash, Neil Young, Paul&#13;
Kantner, Jerry Garcia and&#13;
anybody else Atlantic could&#13;
round up. Atlantic Records&#13;
SIY7203.&#13;
over a dollar, but if two peopl~ eat here on a regular&#13;
night, the prices add up (drmks, deserts, etc.). 1&#13;
figured that an average couple would work their&#13;
way up toward five dollars if they had a good meal&#13;
equipped with a few extras, like pie, jello, and&#13;
maybe seconds on a baked potato or something.&#13;
If this were the case, I would assume that&#13;
someone spending five dollars would not ~ppreciate&#13;
mess h~ll type atmosphere. The confmes of a&#13;
conventional restaurant would be more appreciated,&#13;
at least by me.&#13;
But on Tuesday night you can't beat it. Eating&#13;
at the Pondorosa on this night is a good chance to&#13;
catch up on all ~e old friends that you thought left&#13;
town, got married and moved_ away, died, or&#13;
blended into the w~work. I noticed a few people&#13;
who tried to crawl mto the wood work when I saw&#13;
them as they were a couple of old friends who owe(!&#13;
me ~oney. But all in all I can't say I would eat at&#13;
the Pondorosa on any night but Tuesday, because it&#13;
is a good deal. 'If money was of no consequence for&#13;
someone else, they might ~t. here every night&#13;
appreciating the fast, efflc1~nt service, the&#13;
cleanliness of the place, the quality and quantity of&#13;
the food and the different atmosphere.&#13;
So Pardner, mosey on over to the Pondorosa&#13;
but ya don't have to go armed, ya won't get robbed&#13;
here. To me it is a big chuck wagon that doesn't&#13;
move, and I expect to meet Roy Rogers, Dale&#13;
Evans, Gene Autry, Hopalong and the Long Ranger&#13;
for a good deal on a Tuesday night.&#13;
by Bob Borchardt of the Newscope Staff&#13;
1 uppos that after the solo&#13;
!bums by McCartny, Harrison&#13;
nd Lennon, I began to exl)l!ct too&#13;
mu h of recordings released&#13;
und r one name. To me, the&#13;
purpos of doing a solo album is&#13;
to r v al yourself as an individual&#13;
artist, away from the&#13;
influence of any group that you&#13;
h d b n with. Except for&#13;
Hingo' album that was precisely&#13;
what th Beatles had done. This&#13;
album is a definite contrast.&#13;
Dave Crosby was probably the&#13;
one mo t responsible for the&#13;
overall ound of Crosby Stills&#13;
a h and Young, the close,&#13;
defined four-part harmony over&#13;
the ubdued folk guitar, much the&#13;
same a Lennon and McCartny,&#13;
were mostly responsible for the&#13;
particular style of the Beatles. The difference is that when you&#13;
listen to Lennon's or McCartny's&#13;
album, you are very definitely&#13;
listening to Lennon or McCartny's&#13;
album, you are very&#13;
definitely listening to Lennon or&#13;
McCartny singularly, independent&#13;
of each other, the&#13;
group, and anyone else they've&#13;
been connected with - at least as&#13;
much as that is humanly&#13;
possible. But Crosby, whether&#13;
intentionally or not, never left his&#13;
group sound. This album is obviously&#13;
one-half CSN&amp; Y and onehalf&#13;
Jefferson Airplane, the latter&#13;
half due to the fact that the whole&#13;
band is on the album.&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
meet the Parkside Fuzz at&#13;
FREE BEER PARTY&#13;
April 23 from 10 p.m.-12 p.m.&#13;
after the movie&#13;
pon orcd by Protection &amp; Security&#13;
Department&#13;
FEATURE FILM SERIES PRESENTS:&#13;
- JOHN WAYNE&#13;
GLEN CAMPBELL&#13;
KIM DARBY&#13;
The strongffl trio&#13;
ever to trock o killer.&#13;
HALWAWS' """'&lt;&gt;UCTlON&#13;
So, taking the album for what it&#13;
is, I'd rate it as slightly above&#13;
average, for the simple reason&#13;
that I enjoy the Airplane and&#13;
CSN&amp;Y. Unfortunately, with&#13;
Dave Crosby trying to come up&#13;
with a more or less original&#13;
sound, he succeeded in doing&#13;
nothing more than watering down&#13;
the style of the two groups.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
"If I Could Only Remember My&#13;
Name" courtesy of Bidinger's&#13;
Record Shop.&#13;
(Audio Realm would like to&#13;
review records that are of particular&#13;
interest to you, the&#13;
reader. If you have any&#13;
suggestions, drop us a line and&#13;
we'll s~ what we can do.)&#13;
rtrr~wJt/~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
OL7-5l74&#13;
LITTLE BIG MAN&#13;
Jack Crabb Dustin Hoffman&#13;
Old Lodge Skins&#13;
Chief Dan George&#13;
G.en. George A. Custer&#13;
Richard Milligan&#13;
Mrs. Pendrake Faye Dunaway&#13;
Wild Bill Hickock Jeff Corey&#13;
A. T. Merriweather&#13;
DUSTIN HOFFMAN has&#13;
certainly done it again with a&#13;
superb performance as Little Big&#13;
Man - a role that demanded that&#13;
he play everything from a boy in&#13;
puberty to a 121 year old man.&#13;
As an ancient narrator he&#13;
conducts an imagery filled&#13;
odyssey into the world of the&#13;
Cheyenne "Human Beings"&#13;
telling his experiences as a&#13;
satireal character moving from&#13;
one historical western figure to&#13;
the next, inviting many of the&#13;
same impressions common to&#13;
films of this genre.&#13;
Martin Balsam&#13;
as the theme he relates his&#13;
existence with the Indians,&#13;
showing their natural love of&#13;
Terra and of each other as a part&#13;
of that matrix. Calling themselves&#13;
"Human Beings" they see&#13;
themselves as extensions of&#13;
nature rather than as the&#13;
whiteman's stolid spiritual&#13;
"Image of God". In one sequerx:e&#13;
Jack Crabb's adopted Grand·&#13;
father says to the young warrior,&#13;
"There is an endless supply of&#13;
whitemen, but there is only a&#13;
limited supply of Human&#13;
Beings," a statement that Ii.&#13;
perhaps, even more true t~Y· The century which separates&#13;
the topics discussed in productions&#13;
like Catch 22 and this film&#13;
make true social commentary&#13;
second run to aesthetic inquiries&#13;
and make comedy possible&#13;
without disdain. The Ancient&#13;
graphically recalls his disgust of&#13;
: * * * * * * * * * * * * * General Custer and describes his&#13;
41 -0 ~ : attempt to destroy him at The&#13;
The film did an excellen~ JOb of&#13;
relating the cruelty dealt ~ tht&#13;
Indians by what we sometimes&#13;
haphazardly call "heroes" of tbe&#13;
old west. Raids upon the Indian&#13;
villages are quite believable .84&#13;
r.emove many his tori ca&#13;
distortions.&#13;
A desirable experience f~&#13;
those who like hwnor of a different&#13;
kind than Howdy I)oO(ly.&#13;
The film is accurate in al'-&#13;
complishing its aims. See it.&#13;
• O'li.'-' Little Big Horn. His descriptions&#13;
41 C tr are clouded into a sometimes&#13;
• ....1\ c; tr comical and sometimes painful&#13;
tr ~ : . dream of times gone by. With this&#13;
: ~~ •&#13;
tr&#13;
•&#13;
tr&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
•&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
•&#13;
tr&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
- Bill SorefJSt!II&#13;
II if&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
CHICKEN DINN~RS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30th AV9•&#13;
KENOSH;A&#13;
657..:.5191&#13;
· - l:H P.M.&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING - ADM. 11•&#13;
tr .&#13;
tr •&#13;
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tr&#13;
~~~ ................ ~··············&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 P .M. TO 12:00 P .M.&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m., Closed Mondoy• &#13;
April g, 11'11 ,'EWSCOPE Pages&#13;
.-- -----Jazz ComesToParkside------- ....&#13;
ftQm the Uchey Foot Mose,&#13;
. ore West, Fillmore East&#13;
ru:n LoS Angeles' Shrine,&#13;
•~.• go - the popular&#13;
C llcmbia recording group not&#13;
ClJU t R . , city - comes 0 acme S&#13;
~seHighSchoolField House on&#13;
/dondaY May 10, under sponsorship'of&#13;
the University of&#13;
lI'isconsin.parkslde Student&#13;
ActivitiesOffice.&#13;
Theltehey Foot is the college&#13;
beeJ' bar in Los Angeles where&#13;
(bicago got its start after&#13;
movingto California from its&#13;
oamesake city.&#13;
(bicago has had much more&#13;
illustrious bookings since, but its&#13;
populartty with college&#13;
.audiences remains. Last year&#13;
the seven-piece group was th~&#13;
top album seller in college&#13;
campus and community record&#13;
stores as well as in jukeboxes&#13;
according to Billboard&#13;
magazine.&#13;
Robert Gold of the Los&#13;
Angeles Free Press calls&#13;
Chicago "the most inventive&#13;
hardest. blowing jazz-rock -or:&#13;
chestra I ever heard ... They&#13;
are excellent musicians in every&#13;
way."&#13;
A limited number of $4.50&#13;
tickets for their Racine apThe&#13;
award winning David Baker Jazz&#13;
Ensemble will present a University Artists&#13;
Series Concert at 4 p.m. on Sunday, April 25,&#13;
in the Greenquist Hall Concourse at the&#13;
Universityof Wisconsin-Parkside Wood Road&#13;
campus.&#13;
Baker is a widely-known artist, composer&#13;
and performer. He has been chairman of jazz&#13;
studies at the Indiana University School of&#13;
Musicsince 1966 and is associate director of&#13;
the IU Black Music Center.&#13;
His ensemble has appeared in concerts&#13;
from Athens to Bombay and is a two-time&#13;
winner of the Big Band Award at the Notre&#13;
Dame Collegiate Jazz Festival.&#13;
Baker's own awards and citations include&#13;
the Indiana Philharmonic Gold Award, the&#13;
DownbeatHall of Fame Scholarship Award,&#13;
theDownbeat New Star Award for Trombone&#13;
and the Outstanding Music Award of the&#13;
National Association of Black Musicians ..&#13;
Baker has played with such jazz greats as&#13;
stan Kenton, Maynard Ferguson, Lionel&#13;
Hampton, Slide Hampton, Buddy Jones and&#13;
Quincey Jones. He also has appeared as&#13;
soloist with the Boston Symphony Orchestra&#13;
writers in the band, has been&#13;
playing eight years .&#13;
Terry Kath (guitar-vocals)&#13;
has also been playing eight&#13;
years, and, although has had no&#13;
formal training, is one of the&#13;
prolific writers in Chicago.&#13;
Walt Perry (woodwinds)&#13;
earned a degree from DePaul In&#13;
orchestral clarinet. studied WIth&#13;
woodwind players in the&#13;
Chicago Symphony, has been&#13;
.playing 14 years.&#13;
Lee Loughnane (trumpetflugel&#13;
horn) studied at DePaul&#13;
two years, then at the Chicago&#13;
Conservatory College for two&#13;
years, played in several local&#13;
Chicago rock groups and big&#13;
bands.&#13;
Pete Cetera (bass-vocal)&#13;
began playing accordian at 12.&#13;
worked with several local&#13;
groups, the last for six years&#13;
with his city's top rock group.&#13;
Jim Pankow (trcmbone)&#13;
studied at DePaul and Quincy&#13;
College, played with the Bobby&#13;
Christian and Ted Weems orchestras,&#13;
Bill Russo's Clucago&#13;
Jazz Ensemble and his own Jazz&#13;
quintet, does much of Chicago's&#13;
composition and brass&#13;
arrangements.&#13;
pearance still are available at&#13;
Cook-Gere in Racine and&#13;
Bidinger's House of Music in&#13;
Kenosha. The $5.50 seats have&#13;
been sold out for several weeks.&#13;
The seven members or&#13;
Chicago call themselves "a&#13;
creative community" and bring&#13;
a variety of musical&#13;
backgrounds to their unique&#13;
sound wluch incorporates jazz,&#13;
blues, rock and symphonies.&#13;
The inhabitants of the&#13;
"creative community":&#13;
. Dan Seraphine (drums)&#13;
studied percussion at DePaul&#13;
University, then with Chuck&#13;
Flores, ex-member of Maynard&#13;
Ferguson and Woody Herman&#13;
bands. Has been playing for 11&#13;
years.&#13;
Robert Lamm (organ-electric&#13;
piano-vocals) studied piano and&#13;
composition at Roosevelt&#13;
University, is one of the prolific&#13;
and has been guest conductor of the Indianapolis&#13;
Symphony and the Indianapolis&#13;
Civic Orchestra.&#13;
His credits also include some 15 reeordings,&#13;
scores of jazz compositions and four&#13;
books on jazz techniques.&#13;
A proponent of the tlurd stream in Jazz,&#13;
Baker believes experimentation i of some&#13;
consequence to the progression of jan. "With&#13;
improvisation being the motivation, the new&#13;
third stream in jazz is a marriage between&#13;
classical form, composition and pure Jan,"&#13;
he asserts.&#13;
His Jazz Ensemble presents both the&#13;
music 01 the contemporary jazz composer and&#13;
classic big band numbers.&#13;
Members of the ensemble are Paul&#13;
Demarinis, alto sax, Larry Wiseman,&#13;
trumpet, Don Pickett, piano, Mark Dr er,&#13;
bass, Emory Whipple, drums, and Baker on&#13;
trombone.&#13;
Concert tickets wiU be available at the&#13;
door. General admission is $1 and studenl&#13;
admission is SO cents (children 12 and under&#13;
admitted freel.&#13;
FLARES. BELLS. BODY SHIRTS&#13;
george A lester's&#13;
10% Discount with Georgeand Lester'sStudent ID.&#13;
[lj'amou6fin [lj'~&#13;
g'J~ w: 91aiian [lj'~&#13;
liquor Store&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. K~NOSHA 658·1131&#13;
-------------Jazz Comes To Parkside--------.&#13;
the Itchey Foot Mose,&#13;
from west Fillmore East&#13;
f1llm0&#13;
:s A~geles' Shrine,&#13;
an? 0 _ the popular&#13;
Ch1cat·a recording group not&#13;
Colun:1 1&#13;
comes to Racine's&#13;
the_ c~rgh School Field House on&#13;
case May 10, under spon-&#13;
:,toniay, of the University of&#13;
so~s 0&#13;
1&#13;
pnsin-Parkside Student w,sc . ctivities Office.&#13;
A The Itchey Foot is the college&#13;
bar in Los Angeles where&#13;
be:r go got its start after&#13;
onca . f ·t . g to califorma rom i s movm&#13;
namesake city.&#13;
Chicago has had 1!1uch mo_re&#13;
illustrious bookings smce, but its&#13;
popularity with college&#13;
audiences remains. Last year,&#13;
the seven-piece group was the&#13;
top album seller in college&#13;
campus and community record&#13;
stores as well as in jukeboxes&#13;
aceording to Billboard&#13;
magazine.&#13;
Robert Gold of the Los&#13;
Angeles Free Press calls&#13;
Chicago "the most inventive,&#13;
hardest . blowing jazz-rock orchestra&#13;
I ever heard . . . They&#13;
are excellent musicians in every&#13;
way."&#13;
A limited number of $4.50&#13;
tickets for their Racine apThe&#13;
award winning David Baker Jazz&#13;
Ensemble will present a University AJ:tists&#13;
Series Concert at 4 p.m. on Sunday, April 25,&#13;
in the Greenquist Hall Concourse at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Wood Road&#13;
Campus.&#13;
Baker is a widely-known artist, composer&#13;
and performer. He has bee~ cha~rman of jazz&#13;
studies at the Indiana Umversity ~c~ool of&#13;
Music since 1966 and is associate director of&#13;
the IU Black Music Center.&#13;
His ensemble has appeared in concerts&#13;
from Athens to Bombay and is a two-time&#13;
\!,inner of the Big Band Award at the Notre&#13;
Dame Collegiate Jazz Festival.&#13;
Baker's own awards and citations include&#13;
the Indiana Philharmonic Gold Award, the&#13;
Downbeat Hall of Fame Scholarship Award,&#13;
the Downbeat New Star Award for Trombone&#13;
and the Outstanding Music Awa~d. of the&#13;
National Association of Black Musicians. '&#13;
Baker has played with such jazz grea~ as&#13;
Stan Kenton Maynard Ferguson, Lionel&#13;
Hampton Slide Hampton, Buddy Jones and&#13;
' ed as Quincey Jones. He also has appear&#13;
soloist with the Boston Symphony OrcheStra&#13;
FLARES, BELLS, BODY SHIRTS&#13;
pearance still are available at&#13;
Cook-Gere in Racine and&#13;
Bidinger's House of 1usic in&#13;
Kenosha. The 5.50 seats have&#13;
been sold out for several weeks. The seven members of&#13;
Chicago call themselves " a&#13;
creative community" and bring&#13;
a variety of musical&#13;
backgrounds to their unique&#13;
sound which incorporates jazz,&#13;
blues, rock and symphonies.&#13;
The inhabitant of the&#13;
"creative community"·&#13;
· Dan Seraphine drums&#13;
studied percussion at DePaul&#13;
University, then v.ith Chuck&#13;
Flores, ex-member of 1aynard&#13;
Ferguson and Woody Herman&#13;
bands. Has been playing for 11&#13;
years.&#13;
Robert Lamm (organ-electric&#13;
piano-vocals) studied piano and&#13;
composition at Roo evelt&#13;
University, is one of the prolific&#13;
f/taniou o-i flt',&#13;
9'i~ !Jtalian ~ o&lt;./4&#13;
Liquor Store&#13;
d -,e &amp; Jester's&#13;
eeOre G and Lester's Student JD.&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
10% Discount with eorge&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KF.NOSHA 658-1131 &#13;
Election TENURE HEARING!&#13;
EWSCOPE AprU 19. 1971&#13;
Results&#13;
&lt;Continued from Page 1l&#13;
Tom Meier&#13;
Mike Mayeshiba&#13;
Gary Davis&#13;
Gary Adelson&#13;
Dale Marlin&#13;
Tom Taskonis&#13;
Ed Toth&#13;
Della Simpson&#13;
Jack Tucker&#13;
Mike Lofton&#13;
Da vid Scharneck&#13;
For the student Union Committee votes were&#13;
cast evenly for the lour people on the ballot. Sue&#13;
evin beat C. E. Sahakian and others in write-ins&#13;
lor the filth position.&#13;
Greg Barrette&#13;
Tim Daley&#13;
Jerry Horton&#13;
Tom Kreul&#13;
ue evan&#13;
E Sahakian&#13;
This Friday a special regents&#13;
committee will conduct an open&#13;
hearing on tenure criteria. The&#13;
Committee, composed of Frank&#13;
Pelisek, George Strother -&#13;
acting chancellor of extension,&#13;
and Eric SChenker - UWM, is&#13;
researching criteria for&#13;
evaluation used in determining&#13;
the granting of tenure. The&#13;
committee will hear anyone who&#13;
wishes to offer constructive&#13;
suggestions regarding the&#13;
granting of tenure and will answer&#13;
pertinent questions. As a&#13;
pre-condition of appearing before&#13;
the committee speakers must&#13;
submit a written summery of&#13;
what they intend to say. A study&#13;
committee list of questions is&#13;
available at the chancellor's&#13;
office. The hearing will be held at&#13;
1:30 in room 221 at Greenquist&#13;
Hall.&#13;
70&#13;
72&#13;
72&#13;
40&#13;
58&#13;
72&#13;
27&#13;
36&#13;
40&#13;
49&#13;
21&#13;
57&#13;
45&#13;
50&#13;
61&#13;
45&#13;
33&#13;
f;l&#13;
49&#13;
49&#13;
25&#13;
36&#13;
78&#13;
78&#13;
68&#13;
87&#13;
78&#13;
56&#13;
66&#13;
53&#13;
46&#13;
43&#13;
34&#13;
205&#13;
195&#13;
190&#13;
188&#13;
178&#13;
161&#13;
161&#13;
137&#13;
135&#13;
117&#13;
91&#13;
Rae.&#13;
81&#13;
17&#13;
58&#13;
78&#13;
22&#13;
9&#13;
Ken.&#13;
45&#13;
73&#13;
38&#13;
27&#13;
15&#13;
5&#13;
Gr.&#13;
64&#13;
62&#13;
53&#13;
65&#13;
37&#13;
12&#13;
Tot.&#13;
190&#13;
152&#13;
149&#13;
170&#13;
74&#13;
26&#13;
Management Science Club Formed&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
and Walter lJlbricht voted yes.&#13;
An additional resolution was passed&#13;
concerning the trea Iy in which SGA&#13;
"acknowledge and morally support, to&#13;
the fullest extent a delegation under the&#13;
chairmanship of Gary Davis to present&#13;
Ute ratified people's Peace Treaty to&#13;
congress," passer' unanimously.&#13;
Eaker introduced a resolution that&#13;
called for the non-recognit~on of a~y&#13;
campus committee that required but did&#13;
not have student representation. He&#13;
extended this to include Student&#13;
Government would not recognize any&#13;
past actions of a committee of this sort.&#13;
The resolution passed unanimously.&#13;
The Sena te passed another resolution&#13;
concerning a meeting between students&#13;
and campus security alter a film on April&#13;
Student Government Meets&#13;
0-101, Greenquisl Hall, at 2:30&#13;
p.m. All members are urged to&#13;
attend. There is still time to join&#13;
the club, it's open to all students&#13;
interested in business&#13;
management. Become a member&#13;
of Parkside's progressive new&#13;
club!&#13;
Dean Loumos questio&#13;
meeting was just a pub!' .lIed d&#13;
d&#13;
. . tr . lelk• ...~ a mIDIS ~t1onwould try to '1 ~y&#13;
Gary-Davis said there sbouId~&#13;
WIth the campus police be ..&#13;
disarmed. lIDtilIlloy&#13;
The Senate passed .&#13;
resolution that said "W~ I&#13;
d&#13;
. ,e acknn...:.·&#13;
an appreciate the party s _-="q&#13;
campus security as an t ~ It&#13;
prove relations with Slu~temptto&#13;
cann~t endorse as a SOI:~' but&#13;
security-student problems 10'1 to&#13;
dards are accepted Illat lIDbI"-&#13;
during negotiations." are Il'r'i"'d&#13;
In other business Eaker .&#13;
right to. name commitll!e1OIiYod-.&#13;
because he felt he didn'l&#13;
=-&#13;
Senators well enough and&#13;
for nominations from the ~ .....&#13;
Dean Loumos was el":'&#13;
01 Ihe Siudent Union Corn .thaonr"&#13;
Tom Meier was the other nullo&lt;&#13;
pomted. They will join the fi,:"b ..&#13;
elected, three faculty appointed:::-&#13;
faculty sena le, two alumna lite&#13;
of Auxiliary Enlerprises ~ -...&#13;
dinalor of Student Activities.. lite e.".&#13;
of the Studenl Union Comrnit:e--&#13;
Walt Breach was elected·1I&#13;
Finance Committee, andGary0...&#13;
elecled Chairman of the&#13;
Policies Committee. Four&#13;
appointments, Jeanette DrerneI.&#13;
Gottfredsen, Walter Ulbricht, lid&#13;
Konkol were made to the&#13;
Committee. Gottfredsen WII&#13;
temporary chairman.&#13;
23. Security plans to provide free beer at&#13;
the meeting.&#13;
At the last meetmg or the&#13;
Management Science Club of&#13;
Park Ide, an election of otficers&#13;
wa held The new club officers&#13;
are' President, John leighton;&#13;
Vlce.PreslC~ent, Art Oulan.&#13;
ecretary. Vincent Gigliotti,&#13;
Treasurer, Dan Modrijan.&#13;
Plans are no-.wbeizlg made to&#13;
have Mr Roy Coubte. Assistant&#13;
Professor In the Management&#13;
Science Division of parkside, to&#13;
speak to the club members and&#13;
anyone else interested in the&#13;
Business Management field.&#13;
Mr Coogle plans to discuss&#13;
with the students the role or the&#13;
Management Science Division&#13;
here at Parkside. He will also&#13;
explain its goals. curriculum and&#13;
what students can expect in the&#13;
future.&#13;
The date of this discussion will&#13;
be May 4, lime and place to be&#13;
announced. All interested&#13;
students are Invited and urged to&#13;
attend. This will be a great opportunity&#13;
to lind out all the facts&#13;
on what the Management Science&#13;
Division has to offer.&#13;
The next regular meeting of the&#13;
Management Science Club will be&#13;
on Wednesday, April 21, in Room&#13;
The first malt liquor&#13;
good enough to be&#13;
called BUDWEISER~&#13;
E. F. MADRICiRANO Inc&#13;
BUDWEISER • BUDWEISER MALT I •. • MICHELOB&#13;
Phone 658-3553&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
1831 55th Street&#13;
A"HEUSER·BUSCH, INC.• ST. lOUIS&#13;
Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
Secretary, Mgl. Sci Club&#13;
WBITEWAW&#13;
6.50-13&#13;
(Blaekwolls 110.151&#13;
Itwn.u, ....... _ maa:r e-.tI, c..-&#13;
adV_&#13;
PlUI 'us Feel. Es. fIR&#13;
mdUzeoff,.-&#13;
Tt,e$ton,&#13;
ORAMPIONS&#13;
Fu1l4-1'J.y&#13;
Nylon Cord&#13;
A great tire. buy at these&#13;
low prices! Built to Firestone's&#13;
rigid quality standards to&#13;
deliver excellent mileage and&#13;
dependable performance,&#13;
Check our low&#13;
price on your size!&#13;
5.60-15or7.35-14 7.75-14u7.75-15 8,25-1401'8.10.15 8.~~&#13;
$iS10 $fij15 $2F5 $23~&#13;
B1aekwaJls$l5.70 BlackwaIlsS16.75 ~'18.85 ~ ......&#13;
1'100 .l.14 or IZ.01F'tod. E:L I'1WlIlL14 orI:L16 VecL E&amp;. I'!UltuSorfU'l Ft&lt;LEL "" ...... i!:::' kI:__ Dff,...,.ca:r. ta __ off,...,.__ __Il.-atl~"" fM';::::::;-&#13;
~~~~~;~~:irtir8~&#13;
3J.tILJ: III. kidSiP'"&#13;
1011 10111SI.&#13;
KENOSHA 154-1lII&#13;
9·(Jl ~&#13;
Open 8:00 a.m. - ~&#13;
Monday- pi&#13;
5 P'-'&#13;
Saturday to 5 p.m. saturday to •&#13;
. . ••1'" Brin_g this Ad and Receive 10% DisCI 1111&#13;
automotive services until June. It&#13;
109 -WISCONSIN AVE.&#13;
RACINE 631-9591&#13;
Open 7:30 a.m. - 8 p.m.&#13;
Monday - Friday&#13;
OPE&#13;
Election Results&#13;
&lt;Continued from Page 1)&#13;
Tom Meier 70 57&#13;
1ike 1ayeshiba 72 45&#13;
Gary Davis 72 so&#13;
Gary Ad Ison 40 61&#13;
Dale Martin 58 45&#13;
Tom Taskonis 72 33&#13;
Ed Toth 27 61&#13;
Della impson 36 9&#13;
Jack Tucker 40 9&#13;
1ike Lofton 49 25&#13;
D vid Scharneck 21 36&#13;
pril 19, 1971&#13;
78 205&#13;
78 195&#13;
68 190&#13;
87 188&#13;
78 178&#13;
56 161&#13;
66 161&#13;
53 137&#13;
46 135&#13;
413 117&#13;
34 91&#13;
TENURE HEARING&#13;
This Friday a special regents&#13;
committee will conduct an open&#13;
hearing on tenure criteria. The&#13;
committee, composed of Frank&#13;
Pelisek, George Strother -&#13;
acting chancellor of extension,&#13;
and Eric Schenker - UWM, is&#13;
researching criteria for&#13;
evaluation used in determining&#13;
the granting of tenure. The&#13;
committee will hear anyone who&#13;
wishes to offer constructive&#13;
uggestions regarding the&#13;
granting of tenure and will anwer&#13;
pertinent questions. As a&#13;
pre-condition of appearing before&#13;
the committee speakers must&#13;
Student Government Meets&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
and Walter Ulbricht voted yes.&#13;
An additional resolution was passed&#13;
concerning the treaty in which SGA&#13;
"acknowledge and morally support, to&#13;
the fullest extent a delegation under the&#13;
chairmanship of Gary Davis to present&#13;
the ratifiM People's Peac.- Treaty to&#13;
congress, 11 passetl unanimously.&#13;
Dean Loumos questi&#13;
meeting was just a pub!' 0.lled if&#13;
administration would try ~•ty ~&#13;
Gary Davis. said there shoUldrnaru&#13;
with the campus police _be llo&#13;
disarmed. llntil th&#13;
The Senate passed un . resolution that said "W anun&#13;
d , I e ar~~ an appreciate the party ""'IQV,&#13;
campus sec_urity as an atte~&#13;
prove relations with studen ~ to&#13;
cannot endorse as a sol ~.&#13;
security-student problems ution to&#13;
dards are accepted that llntil&#13;
d . ,1 • • are aurm6&#13;
negotiations." .. ,&#13;
Rae. Ken. Gr. Tot. ubmit a written swnmary of&#13;
what they intend to say. A study&#13;
committee list of questions is&#13;
available at the chancellor's&#13;
office. The bearing will be held al&#13;
1:30 in room 221 at Greenquist&#13;
Hall .&#13;
Eaker introduced a resolution that&#13;
called for the non-recognit!on of a~y&#13;
campus committee that reqmr~ but did&#13;
not have student representation. He&#13;
extended this to include ~tudent&#13;
Government would not recognize any&#13;
past actions of a committee of this sort. . In other business Eaker ,. . right to name committee 'ah&#13;
81 5 64 1&#13;
17 73 62 152&#13;
58 38 53 149&#13;
78 27 65 170&#13;
22 15 37 74&#13;
9 5 12 26&#13;
The resolution passed unanimously.&#13;
The Senate passed another resolution&#13;
concerning a meeting between students&#13;
and campus security after a film on April&#13;
because he felt he didn't cha&#13;
Senators well enough and kkno.,&#13;
f . t· as ed or nomma ions from the fl&#13;
Dean Loumos was elec~r.&#13;
of the Student Union Com . T M . m1 o~ e1er was the other&#13;
pomted. They will join the ns:na&#13;
elected, three faculty appointed&#13;
faculty_ s~nate, two alumnae, the Management Science Club Formed 23. Security plans to provide free beer at&#13;
the meeting.&#13;
1 nee Di\ i ion of Par ide, to&#13;
k to the club members and&#13;
anyone el e inter ted in the&#13;
Bu ·10 lanag ment field .&#13;
Ir. Cougle plans to di cu&#13;
with the tudents the role or the&#13;
t nagcment cience D1vi ion&#13;
her at Park ide. He will al o&#13;
xplain it goal , curriculum and&#13;
what . tud nts can expect in the&#13;
future.&#13;
The date of this discussion will&#13;
be • fay 4, time and place to be&#13;
announced. All interested&#13;
stud nts are invited and urged to&#13;
attend . This will be a great opportunity&#13;
to find out all the facts&#13;
on what the Management Science&#13;
Division has to offer.&#13;
The next regular meeting of the&#13;
lanagemenl Science Club will be&#13;
on Wednesday, April 21, in Room&#13;
The first malt liquor&#13;
good enough to be&#13;
called BUDWEISERe&#13;
ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. , ST LOUIS&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
E. F. MADRl&lt;iRANO Inc&#13;
BUDWEISER • BUDWEISER MALT I M • . • ICHELOB&#13;
1831 55th Street Phone 658-3553-&#13;
D-101, Greenquist Hall, at 2:30&#13;
p.m. All members are urged to&#13;
attend. There is still time to join&#13;
the club, it's open to all students&#13;
interested in business&#13;
management. Become a member&#13;
of Parkside's progressive new&#13;
club!&#13;
Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
Secretary, Mgt. Sci Club&#13;
of Auxiliary Enterprises and&#13;
dinator of Student Activities as&#13;
of the Student Union Committee&#13;
Walt Breach was elected to&#13;
Finance Committee, and Gary 0&#13;
elected Chairman of the A&#13;
Policies Committee. Four&#13;
appointments, Jeanette Dr&#13;
Gottfredsen, Walter Ulbrich a&#13;
Konkol were made to the G&#13;
Committee. Gottfredsen wa&#13;
temporary chairman.&#13;
WHITEWALLS&#13;
OBAMPIONS:&#13;
FuH 4-Ply Ny.fonCJord&#13;
A great tire buy at these&#13;
low prices/ Built to Firestone's&#13;
rigid quality standards to&#13;
deliver excellent mileage and&#13;
dependable performance.&#13;
Check our low&#13;
price on your size!&#13;
109 WISCONSIN AVE.&#13;
FIia man;y Ccnnotl, c.m.,&#13;
Darts, .r.i.ou, Spocilll&#13;
andVllliladl&#13;
Plus '1.76 Fed. EL tu&#13;
and tll9off ,-cu.&#13;
RACINE 631-9591&#13;
Open 7:30 a.m. _ a p.m.&#13;
1011 &amp;0th Sf,&#13;
KENOSHA &amp;54-21"&#13;
m _g:~&#13;
Open 8:00 a. · . frtdS&#13;
Monday - Friday Monday -&#13;
• day to 5 P· · Saturday to 5 p.m. ~atur 11&#13;
· · aunt•• 1&#13;
Srin_g this Ad and Receive 1~% oisc 1971&#13;
automotive services until June &amp;, &#13;
�ngerTrackmen Take Thirdby&#13;
Jim Casper&#13;
r&#13;
I F:&#13;
Eugene Prince setting school record.&#13;
,.uiderrestunan Bob Waters&#13;
4........ won- two events but&#13;
• _ took third in a&#13;
........ meet with Illinois and&#13;
..... tern.&#13;
, .... turned in a 9.9 100 yard&#13;
and ran the 220 in 21.9. He&#13;
.. ""anchoron Parkside's 440&#13;
relay team which placed second.&#13;
Eugene Prince set a new&#13;
personal record and also a school&#13;
record by leaping 6'6" in the high&#13;
jump. His jump was good for&#13;
third place.&#13;
Jim McFadden placed third in&#13;
the.mile with a time of 4:20.5 .&#13;
ermen _Drop Openner&#13;
Pubide opened its 1971 tennis&#13;
_on a losingnote, dropping&#13;
....... opener !HI to uw-&#13;
...... at Pershing Park.&#13;
Dt Salago, Dan Miec1IIftkj,&#13;
Mark Haase, Cal&#13;
=:DaveHercben and Todd&#13;
aullered losses lor&#13;
IlIIIide in singles competition.&#13;
l'-Rangers also lost the three&#13;
"'maldles.&#13;
Parkside gets another shot at&#13;
UWM on April 28. The schedule is&#13;
listed. All home meets are at&#13;
Pershing Park in Racine.&#13;
1971 Tennis Schedule&#13;
April 12 - UW-Milwaukee&#13;
home, 2 p.m. •&#13;
April 16 - Dominican College,&#13;
home, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
April 23 - Oshkosh Invitational&#13;
&lt;oshkosh, Milton, Stout,&#13;
Bowling Tournament Sunday&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
It, Red C arpet treatmen t&#13;
at the&#13;
BANK OF&#13;
ELMWOOD&#13;
IOVery 1 - one e se does!)&#13;
broad concepts of "The&#13;
American Training Pattern".&#13;
which is the title 01 a book put out&#13;
by Rosandich, Lawson and Paul&#13;
Ward. It deals with the&#13;
development 01 skill, speed,&#13;
stamina and strength - all 01&#13;
which are attributes that&#13;
characterize the successful&#13;
athlete&#13;
John Patten soa&#13;
pole vault taki:ed I? feet in the&#13;
ParkSid~ had g third.&#13;
- Tim MeG'} \pal~ of fourths&#13;
(1:21.1), and l\~i~: z~n the 660&#13;
440 intermediate hur~lch 10 the&#13;
Illinois won th es .(59.0)&#13;
points e meet WIth 103&#13;
second ~i~~thwestern placed&#13;
Parkside' 50, lollowed by&#13;
s 30.&#13;
InclUded is the bal&#13;
track schedule: ance of the&#13;
Remainder of Tr-ack Schedule&#13;
1\1 - men's&#13;
April 17 Loui W - women's&#13;
'. - ursrana Stat In Vltallonal (M) LSU H e - , • ouston,&#13;
Tulane, McNeese Balon Rouge&#13;
La. ' ,&#13;
April 23-24 - Drake Relays (MW),&#13;
Des Moines, Ia.&#13;
May 1 - Northern Il1inois invitational&#13;
(M), DeKalb, Ill.&#13;
M.ay 4 - Whitewater Invitational&#13;
(M), Whitewater.&#13;
May 8 - LaCrosse Invitational&#13;
(M-W), LaCrosse.&#13;
~ay 11 Whitewater&#13;
Triangular, Whitewater.&#13;
May 15 . Wisconsin Relays&#13;
Stevens Point. '&#13;
May 22 -&#13;
May 29 -&#13;
June 2-5 - N.A.I.A. ationals,&#13;
Billings, Mont.&#13;
June 15-19 - N.C.A.A., Seattle&#13;
Wash. '&#13;
Parkside) , away, 9 a.m.&#13;
April 24 - UW-Green Bay,&#13;
home, 9 a.m.&#13;
April ~ . Marquette niversity,&#13;
home, 2 p.m.&#13;
April 28 - VW-Milwaukee&#13;
awaY,2 p.m. '&#13;
April 30 " Dominican College,&#13;
away, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
May 8 - SI. Norbert College,&#13;
home, 1 p.m,&#13;
May 15-,UW-Green Bay, away,&#13;
12 noon.&#13;
May 21-22 - NAtA. Dislrict14&#13;
play-offs at Whitewater.&#13;
April I'. 1171&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
"Check Our&#13;
Prices Last"&#13;
PE Page 7&#13;
Golfers Organize&#13;
Parksioe's gol£ team I' bus,&#13;
rounding mte shape for the ne";'&#13;
season&#13;
Leif Guttorsmen hea&lt;b til II t&#13;
or Ranger linksmen cornpetm,g&#13;
lor spots on the squad Coach&#13;
Steve Stevens says he win carT)&#13;
12 men this lear&#13;
Gultormsen was last )ear's&#13;
MVP, and is capable of shootull&#13;
Scores that could earn him&#13;
medaJist honors 10 rnanv meets&#13;
Other golfers Ste~ens IS&#13;
counting on include Tom Both~&#13;
Randy Dreilke, George Hon'at'&#13;
Bob Toeppe, Tom Krummel \&lt;..;&#13;
Rossi and Dan We)Tauch&#13;
Ji~ Vakos, a lop prospect from&#13;
Racine, has a broken finger 00&#13;
his left hand and will not be&#13;
available for a fe'4 weeks&#13;
Stevens says the toughest part&#13;
01 the schedule comes firsL "UW.&#13;
Madison, Platteville and Oshkosh&#13;
~e three of the strongest learns&#13;
on the state," said Stevens All&#13;
three will appear with Par SIde&#13;
on April 19.&#13;
'971 Goll&amp;hodute&#13;
(All home matches are at&#13;
Petrifying Spr-ings gol£ course I&#13;
April t6 - Lake Forest College.&#13;
Rocklord College. away&#13;
April 19 - '-Madison. Platteville,&#13;
Oshkosh. away.&#13;
Apnl 23 - Dominican College.&#13;
Racine.&#13;
April 77 • Loyola t.:niVer5lt)&#13;
home.&#13;
April 30 - Lake Forest College.&#13;
home.&#13;
May I - Lakeland Invitallonal,&#13;
away.&#13;
May 4 - VW.I, Carthage&#13;
College, hol1U!.&#13;
May 7 - Whitewater. home.&#13;
May 10 - Domllucan College,&#13;
home.&#13;
May 14 - 'M. away&#13;
May 26-22. NA LA Dl InCI ..&#13;
Tourney. La~"SOOia,Green Lake,&#13;
Wis.&#13;
Baseball Club Formed&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
This year Parkside has formed&#13;
a club baseball team. The&#13;
organization is different from a&#13;
varsity sport in that it is not part&#13;
of Parkside's formal athletlc&#13;
program.&#13;
The new team has secured a&#13;
schedule that includes such&#13;
schools as Dominican College. St&#13;
Norbert and UWM, among&#13;
others.&#13;
Some of the more promising&#13;
players according to Coach&#13;
"Red" Oberbruner include&#13;
pitchers Joe Johnson, Rick&#13;
Jackson, Carl Talsma, Tom&#13;
Jaehne, Tom Pinzger and Jim&#13;
Kobierski. Some of these men&#13;
will play at other positions when&#13;
not on the mound.&#13;
Other team members who will&#13;
figure in Oberbruner's plans ~re&#13;
infielders Tom Gedemer, Nick&#13;
Perrine, Dennis Serpe, Ron ~hmitz&#13;
John Pills and JIm&#13;
Moh;bacher. Dean Karis and&#13;
Tom Elsen are tbe catchers.&#13;
Scot Piemeisl, Chuck&#13;
Christiano, Jef£ Koleske and Scot&#13;
Nelson will handle outfield&#13;
hrkside's intramural division.&#13;
IIponmentis sponsoring the Sunday, April 25 is the date&#13;
It AIl.University bowling of the tournament to be held at&#13;
mament. The tournament Sheridan lanes in Kenosha.&#13;
consist of three divisions: Bowling will begin at 10:00 a.m.&#13;
.', handicap, women's Those interested should&#13;
1IMicap, and scratch. To be contact Jim Koch, Room 144&#13;
dIiHe to participate in either Kenosha; or Dick Frecka, Room&#13;
the handicap divisions a 302 Racine. Other registration&#13;
fImn must bowl in either the places are Sheridan Lanes and&#13;
Iacile or Kenosha intramural the Athletic Office.&#13;
~~~th,e physical education Registration fee is $1.25 to&#13;
-",woadeague. be paid at Ihe time of&#13;
Bowlers in any of these registration. This fee will&#13;
:' who average 170 or include the cost of trophies&#13;
... or anyone not In these which will be awarded In all&#13;
mUlt bowl In the scratch divisions.&#13;
~ ~onl&amp;M UJfit!t !7ainl6&#13;
~~~s athletic director&#13;
... -.,h spent last Friday&#13;
~rday In Louisiana&#13;
IIlI pia Withboth the coaches&#13;
~ ren 01 the NFL New&#13;
e..t Sllnla.&#13;
~ Bob Lawson, who was&#13;
~ In Louisiana with the&#13;
Rosie, tra.ck team, joined&#13;
.... lIdich In discussing the&#13;
WEST&#13;
SIDE&#13;
SWEET&#13;
SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phane 657-9147 27 4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
04 Lothrop Ave.&#13;
... Racine, Wis. KENOSHA, WISCONSIN . .... ..~!::=:::=:::::---:----.-a&#13;
duties ~elson may see some&#13;
action in lhe infield also.&#13;
The schedule as It nO\\ stands lS&#13;
listed here:&#13;
April 15 - Domlrucan College&#13;
(2), home or away&#13;
April 2li - Domin n CoIldlle.&#13;
awaY&#13;
May 3·Dormnican CoIleRe12 ,&#13;
away.&#13;
May 8 - .01 III -Ch,ca 0 C...de&#13;
(2), home&#13;
May 11· dwaukee Tech 2.&#13;
away.&#13;
May 15- l. Norbert 121• home&#13;
!\lay 22 - VII'-, hluukee 2'.&#13;
away.&#13;
Carthage and Parks,de ""II&#13;
play a home and a home&#13;
scrimmage to be decIded upon at&#13;
a future date&#13;
!IIa!l dla&lt;k?a1l&#13;
()J~ J"cwJ&#13;
For&#13;
Resenations&#13;
PhOl1'&#13;
69-HJ-+55&#13;
1([ os"" ....&#13;
'rs;~Y;id;'&#13;
I&#13;
.Florists .&#13;
~&amp;Greenhouses :::&#13;
~~ ---&#13;
.:::&#13;
,~&#13;
x&#13;
,I:&#13;
:~ noe&#13;
:-": '021, 7ST.. Sf&#13;
51~ Kl.NOSHA WISCONSIN '1&lt;10&#13;
~:~ PHO E "'.uoo :::~~~:::::::::::":::~·:·:-""?-~~"}"'::·:«..~n~~&#13;
.:'.&#13;
ST_. RACI E&#13;
10%&#13;
tlldmt Diu-Olll1t&#13;
011 all&#13;
POsfl'rs &amp; Frames&#13;
503 Al&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
pregnancies ~ 12&#13;
vee.ks e in&amp;ted r&#13;
117iJ1O&#13;
Medication, Lab T~st&#13;
Doctors fees includ&#13;
Hospital &amp; Roepital&#13;
&amp;tfilia ed clinics.&#13;
(212) TR 1-8803&#13;
2 hours-1 cays&#13;
PIlYSlCIAllS REFERRAL&#13;
We u..w .. UifI, .,., .... If&#13;
.... ,.... ..~ ......&#13;
anger Trackmen Take Third&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
DARRELL BORGER&#13;
Eugene Prince setting school record.&#13;
ule freshman Bob Waters&#13;
aukee won two events but&#13;
ream took third in a&#13;
lar meet with Illinois and&#13;
tern&#13;
ers turned in a 9.9 100 yard&#13;
and ran the 220 in 21.9. He&#13;
ran anchor on Parkside's 440&#13;
relay team which placed second.&#13;
Eugene Prince set a new&#13;
personal record and also a school&#13;
record by leaping 6'6" in the high&#13;
jump. His jump was good for&#13;
third place.&#13;
Jim McFadden placed third in&#13;
the . mile with a time of 4: 20.5.&#13;
etmen _Drop Openner&#13;
Put.side opened its 1971 tennis&#13;
on a losing note, dropping&#13;
borne opener 9--0 to UWee&#13;
at Pershing Park.&#13;
e Sarago, Dan Mieci,&#13;
Mark Haase, Cal&#13;
Dave Herchen and Todd n suffered losses for&#13;
de in singles competition.&#13;
Rangers also lost the three&#13;
matches.&#13;
Parkside gets another shot at&#13;
UWM on April 28. The schedule is&#13;
listed. All home meets are at&#13;
Pershing Park in Racine.&#13;
1971 Tennis Schedule&#13;
April 12 - UW-Milwaukee&#13;
home, 2 p.m. '&#13;
April 16 - Dominican College, home, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
April 23 - Oshkosh Invitational&#13;
( Oshkosh, Milton, Stout,&#13;
Bowling Tournament Sunday&#13;
Parkside's intramural division.&#13;
rtment 1s sponsoring the Sunday, April 25 is the date&#13;
t \II-University bowling of the tournament to be held at&#13;
nt. The tournament Sheridan lanes in Kenosha .&#13;
, on 1st of three divisions: Bowling will begin at 10:00 a.m.&#13;
s handicap, women's Those interested should&#13;
P, and scratch. To be contact Jim Koch, Room 144&#13;
1 to participate in either Kenosha; or Dick Frecka, Room&#13;
handicap divisions a 302 Racine. Other registration&#13;
must bowl in either the places are Sheridan Lanes and&#13;
or Kenosha intramural the Athletic Office.&#13;
or the physical education Registration fee is $1 .25 to&#13;
t1onal league. be paid at the time of&#13;
Bov.ier in any of these registration. This fee will&#13;
s who average 170 or include the cost of trophies&#13;
e, or anyone not in these which will be awarded in all&#13;
s must bowl in the scratch divisions .&#13;
. 'fto~dic/t ~on/eM u)f itft :?ain/4&#13;
Parkside's athletic director&#13;
d Rosandich s~nt last Friday&#13;
~turday 1n Louisiana&#13;
rrtng with both the coaches&#13;
players or the NFL New&#13;
ans Saints&#13;
ch ~b Lawson, who was&#13;
Y 10 Louisiana with the t track team, joined&#13;
dich In discussing the&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
s,1 Red C orpet treatment&#13;
at the&#13;
,BANK OF&#13;
~LMWOOD&#13;
(e~ery l one e se does!)&#13;
broad concepts of ''The&#13;
American Training Pattern",&#13;
which is the title of a book put out&#13;
by Rosandich, Lawson and Paul&#13;
Ward. It deals with the&#13;
development of skill, speed,&#13;
stamina and strength - all of&#13;
which are attributes that&#13;
characterize the successful&#13;
athlete.&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
"Check Our&#13;
Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
John Patten soared . pole vault taki 1_3 feet in the&#13;
P . • ng third arks1de had a . · - Tim 1 . pair of fourth&#13;
( cG1lsky in th&#13;
1:21.1&gt;, and Mike · ~ 660&#13;
440 intermediate h Zug1ch m the&#13;
Illinois won the l!fdJes _(59.0).&#13;
points N meet with 103 . orthweste I second with 50 rn P aced&#13;
Parkside's 30. . fol lowed by&#13;
Included is th ba&#13;
track schedule : e lance of the&#13;
Remainder of Track chedule&#13;
1\1 -men's&#13;
April 17 _ Lo . W · women· · . llls1ana tate I V1tat1onal CM&gt; n- , LSU, Houston,&#13;
~~ane, McNeese, Baton Rouge,&#13;
April 23-24 - Drake Relays ( tW),&#13;
Des Moines, Ia.&#13;
May 1 - Northern Illinois Invitational&#13;
(M), DeKalb, Ill.&#13;
M_ay 4 - Whitewater Invitational&#13;
(M), Whitewater.&#13;
May 8 - LaCrosse Invitational&#13;
(M-W), Lacrosse.&#13;
~fay 11 - Whitewater&#13;
Triangular, Whitewater.&#13;
May 15 - Wisconsin Relays&#13;
Stevens Point. '&#13;
May 22 -&#13;
May 29 -&#13;
June 2-5 - N.A.I.A. 'ationals, BilJings, Mont.&#13;
June 15-19 - N.C.A.A., Seattle&#13;
Wash. '&#13;
Parkside), away, 9 a.m.&#13;
April 24 - UW-Green Bay, home, 9 a .m.&#13;
April Z7 - larquette nh·er- sity, home, 2 p.m.&#13;
April 28 - UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
away, 2 p.m.&#13;
April 30 - Dominican College,&#13;
away, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
May 8 - St. Norbert College, home, 1 p.m.&#13;
May 15-,UW-Green Bay, away,&#13;
12 noon.&#13;
May 21-22 - N.A.I.A. Di trict H&#13;
play-offs at Whitewater.&#13;
'Golfers Organize&#13;
Baseball Club Formed&#13;
b Jim a per&#13;
This year Parkside has formed&#13;
a club baseball team The&#13;
organization is different from a&#13;
varsity sport in that it i not part&#13;
of Parkside's formal a hlet1c&#13;
program. The new team has ecured a&#13;
schedule that include uch&#13;
schools as Dominican College · Norbert and \\' I, among&#13;
others. Some or the more promi. in&#13;
players according to Coach&#13;
"Red" Oberbruner include&#13;
pitchers Joe John on , Rick&#13;
Jackson, Carl Tai ma. Tom&#13;
Jaehne, Tom Pmzger and Jim&#13;
Kobierski Some of these men will play at other po ition wh n&#13;
not on the mound. Other team members who will&#13;
figure in Oberbruner's plans are&#13;
infielders Tom Gedemer . 'ick&#13;
Perrine, Dennis Serpe, Ron Schmitz&#13;
John Pitts and Jim&#13;
Moh;bacher. Dean Karis and&#13;
Tom Elsen are the catchers. Scot Piemeisl, Chuck&#13;
Christiano, Jeff Koleske and Scot&#13;
Nelson will handle outfield&#13;
WEST&#13;
SIDE&#13;
SWEET&#13;
SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97 47&#13;
Sunnyside&#13;
Florists&#13;
· &amp; Greenhouses&#13;
10%&#13;
111d 111 Di 11111&#13;
-011 all&#13;
Po I &amp; I·,·.,&#13;
503 Al ST •• R Cl E&#13;
ABORTIO &#13;
PaleS AprU 11. 1111&#13;
lIy Jim Kojoen&#13;
of the ewscope Staff&#13;
Tille' Touching&#13;
Author' Gwen Davis&#13;
Publisher' Doubleday&#13;
Hell has found a true earthly paradise in&#13;
Southern California; God left for greener&#13;
pastures. and Satan's manifesto of&#13;
hopelessness and boredom fills the gap with&#13;
emptiness.&#13;
Gwen Davis treats us to yet another&#13;
novelistic probe into the desert aridity&#13;
behind the billboard of modern society.&#13;
telling us like it is just as everyone else has,&#13;
poinung out the sexual nexus of life; the&#13;
primal gift of God (if fulfilling) and ice-cold&#13;
prod of Satan (if unfulflllmg); the dialectic&#13;
For Hell's frame of reference Southern&#13;
California style, the author introduces&#13;
Soralee's husband Simon Herford potentate&#13;
of the encounte~ marathon, various and&#13;
sundry (stereotypical) social freaks,&#13;
"Kerouwackian" freaks standing vigil for&#13;
Caryl Chessman. and Lionel. Lionel is a&#13;
pivotal character, he is the ~mp~r~r of a&#13;
chain shoestore kingdom. his life s goal&#13;
merely to get through life, working ~ haT?&#13;
that he has no time for despair. His&#13;
"becoming a multi4mil/ionaire was one of&#13;
the grearjokes o[all rime."&#13;
Lionel was in his and everyone else's view&#13;
a "funny little man, middleaged and beaten,&#13;
stuffed into his skin like an overcooked&#13;
potato .." Saralee refuses to see his ugliness.&#13;
-&#13;
•&#13;
;.::&#13;
-&#13;
~&#13;
rnv I.. love nd canng (touchmg) m&#13;
oppo ilion to sex as a materialistic means.&#13;
It all depend on how you look at it For&#13;
In lance, tf you're middleaged and your&#13;
hu band takes Wednesday off for a round of&#13;
golf wuh the fellas, well then, you JUSlform&#13;
a hule club (acung as a sexual clearinghouse)&#13;
of discreet women whose rallying point is to&#13;
pick up namele studs m out of the way&#13;
restaurant and that sort of relieves the&#13;
b redorn. But" do also yolk you with guilt&#13;
~nd mote empuness. That Satan's real devil.&#13;
The novel IS wntten from an observer&#13;
narrau n pomt of view. Marion, the&#13;
narrOitor, is telling the story of Sorale, who&#13;
was for a time her best friend. Marion is a&#13;
Journalist, femiOlSl, 'yplcally (for a&#13;
journaliSl) '·cynical about nearly&#13;
tverylhillg". She is as igned the task of&#13;
writing an article about a nude encounter&#13;
marathon for which "there was no need for&#13;
me to get emotionally involved. ..Crux: She&#13;
does ge' emo'ionally involved. through' the&#13;
auspices of Saralee anti here own gutdeep&#13;
rage rising uncontrollably from a stomach&#13;
overrun with existential spasms, Exhausted,&#13;
Marion finds herself or at least the raod to&#13;
herself&#13;
she invests in him a beauty that isn't there.&#13;
She pities him and only because women can&#13;
give enought at open a man up, to touch&#13;
"the little boy in men" she sees herself as a&#13;
savior for Lionel. She convinces herself ilia t&#13;
she actually loves him and for a short time&#13;
succeeds.&#13;
Marion invites Saralee to the encounter&#13;
marathon where she discovers, through&#13;
self-analysis and Simon's (a possible&#13;
charlatan) direction. her exact Freudian&#13;
hang-ups, not quite accepting 'he final&#13;
judgement that lionel represents a father&#13;
figure; female oedipus. Soralee is finally&#13;
purged of her pity and flase love for Lion".&#13;
She leaves the marathon ready and willing to&#13;
extract that latent affection of her husband,&#13;
long neglected. who needs it as much as&#13;
Lionel and who is capable of giving if primed&#13;
long enough. Yes sir, everything gonna be&#13;
awright.&#13;
But strong·ann Chance jumps on thE&#13;
stage. As she is driving home to her hubby&#13;
Soralee wraps her car around a tree and&#13;
boom, no more Soralee in an orange ball of&#13;
flame. Marion, who is driving behind her,&#13;
can see the fireball of Soralee's eviction from&#13;
life and ends the novel in a revery about&#13;
~===CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
For Sale Stereo Cassette Player and&#13;
Recorder with changer Model 377&#13;
$2DO Cill 652-8870 MUST SELL.&#13;
Honda '150" cc $200 694-0325&#13;
RCA Signal Generator S20.00 also&#13;
RCA Vacuum Tube voltmeter&#13;
$20.00 639-8202&#13;
'69 KoIwolSOIkiWI-SS 650 cc Ex&#13;
Cono, 652·6335 after 4&#13;
'57 Chev. Wagon $350 or best&#13;
o((er 652·0109 ..(tet 6&#13;
'69 Ramb. American $995&#13;
652·4215 btfore 7&#13;
'69 Munana S I ,800 or best a((el&#13;
6944117&#13;
Flat walon S150 call Ror&#13;
6)2-8230&#13;
'10 AMX S2450 or best offer&#13;
658·4211 or 658-4111&#13;
. ·61 Tflumph TR·4 IRS whole or&#13;
tor p,ms 886·3618&#13;
2: Piece IUllil&amp;( ~t che;lp c;lll Tom&#13;
654·2074 after 4&#13;
WtntC'r coat sin 7 S10 633-7576&#13;
or 637-8120&#13;
·70 Anlbasgdor call Dennis&#13;
652·5613&#13;
Fender Scudcuter 1450 or best&#13;
offer 639 ·6360&#13;
·62 Rambler 1100 Call 652·9552&#13;
Misc.&#13;
Chance. At the funeral home she wonders why .no&#13;
one is pounding their fists and gutscreammg&#13;
"fuck you fate." "Soralee was dead, and&#13;
dead she couldn't be Saralee. Because she&#13;
was alive, that's what she was about, wa,s&#13;
living so wharever was in that coffin wasn t&#13;
Soral~e." Age old consolation. .'&#13;
1 suppose you could call Soralee tragic, In&#13;
a modern sense. She was moti~ated. by her&#13;
emotions and a few psychological insights.&#13;
Trapped by pit~! she finally tr~!,scended,&#13;
herself, attained peak sensittvuv, ready to&#13;
give herself to her husband, ready to touch&#13;
the little boy, and is cut down before she has&#13;
the chance. Touching is not a particularly great novel;&#13;
it's decent and is well-written only in places.&#13;
The central theme, that of an empty society&#13;
and the hopelessness of its inhabitants, is the&#13;
central theme of too many modern novels&#13;
the story is interesting particularly when the&#13;
author concerns herself with a behind the&#13;
scenes look at the vigil held when Caryl&#13;
Chessman was executed, (and occasionally&#13;
when she describes the encounter&#13;
marathon). The newspapers purported the&#13;
'Chessman vigil to be a noble action on the&#13;
part of hundreds of ~elebrities, Gwen Davis&#13;
'reinterprets it as a circus. Her elUCidations&#13;
concerning sex, love, males and females, the&#13;
repressed rage of modern man and woman&#13;
are contemporary, but far from original. It&#13;
seems as if I've read this novel before, in bits&#13;
and pieces of other novels. Only the names&#13;
have been changed..&#13;
One big advantage of this book is its&#13;
length, a mere 212 pages, short enough to&#13;
read in a few hours. It's nice to read about&#13;
Southern California freaks but it ain't worth&#13;
too much effort. A consistently perceptive&#13;
writer, Gwen Davis isn't. Ultimately,&#13;
Touching leaves you untouched.&#13;
Touching, courtesy of the Book Mart&#13;
622-59th Street, Kenosha, can be purchased&#13;
for $5.95.&#13;
A professional&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
that is safe&#13;
legal &amp; •&#13;
Inexpensive&#13;
can be set up on III&#13;
o~patient basisby QU'&#13;
The Problem&#13;
Referral 5enIa:&#13;
215-722-5360&#13;
?4 hours-7 dlys&#13;
for professionel. cxlflf~&#13;
and caril1ll help.&#13;
GOT THE. DRAFT hanging over&#13;
your head??? Do something about it.&#13;
ECUMENICAL CENTER FOR&#13;
DRAFT COUNSELING 2211 EAST&#13;
KENWOOD BLVD. MILWAUKEE&#13;
Eor appointments phone: (414)&#13;
962-5855 or contact: STEVE&#13;
BANGERT S11JDENT AFFAIRS -&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Fiberglass Repair work&#13;
654-8739&#13;
Any ty~ or work 652-8734&#13;
For Rent&#13;
Offic~ Space - Modern. Carpeced,&#13;
Partitioned, Air Cond, Ideal for&#13;
Acetg., Insurance, or Sales. Good&#13;
proximity 10 ParksKie and Carthage.&#13;
4058 7ch Ave. Call 652-3945 or&#13;
654·7410.&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
o&#13;
It&#13;
,ill&#13;
Minnie the Midnite Maid&#13;
Qualifications for calling:&#13;
P~offessors &amp; Bachelors over 25&#13;
(I'm not cute but I'm efficient)&#13;
C,ll657·5929 r~c:H:A'T:::::::::::::::l&#13;
I N&#13;
ICHEW&#13;
. 40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
::l:&#13;
~&#13;
!&#13;
i&#13;
~~~:"&#13;
SUN. THRU· THURS. ::~~:&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE~~~:&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.Ml&#13;
HAMBURGERSljj:&#13;
~:'&#13;
40( &amp; 24( 1~I&#13;
~ ~::&#13;
fw.. SUPERCHEW ~:~: ...•&#13;
ll(triple decker) r~&#13;
~~: f.::&#13;
m 55(. ~&#13;
~~~. ' ~': ~ ;:::::::::::."~:~~W:?&#13;
L:!!Ai6iii _.- _.- _.- _.-&#13;
-&#13;
CourtE!l&gt;Y Discount ~.&#13;
to Students and "';:;'..!!EFaculty'&#13;
....... I&#13;
(Must Show 1.-0.) 05'&#13;
Fairtrade .... ~i .,&#13;
excepted DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
~~BRAT'i~&#13;
Where It's At!&#13;
DAILY SPECIAL&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4 P.M .&#13;
A Bottle of _,DIE&#13;
A New Kind of&#13;
Akohorai Beverage&#13;
andaBEEFBURGER&#13;
ST~~K99~&#13;
BRAT ~&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
HOUR&#13;
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6 p.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20~&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
I I&#13;
S&#13;
·ty partl"&#13;
Open~UD~gilyat9niA:M. a:&#13;
01l&#13;
12 p.M.&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and HighwaY 50&#13;
Page WSCOPE pril 19, 1971&#13;
b) Jim Koloen&#13;
of th 'e cope Staff&#13;
Title: Tou hing&#13;
uthor· G ·en D vis&#13;
Publisher· D ubleday&#13;
H II h found a true earthly paradise m&#13;
uthern aliforni ; God left for greener&#13;
p stures, nd at n's m nifes10 of&#13;
hopele ness nd boredom fill the gap with&#13;
emptme .&#13;
Gwen D \i treats u to yet another&#13;
n veli ll probe into the desert aridity&#13;
behind the billbo rd of modern iety.&#13;
t llin u It ·e it I JU l a everyone el e ha ,&#13;
p inting ut the se ual ne us of life: the&#13;
primal ift of G {if ful illin nd kc-cold&#13;
pr d o t n If unful 11lin ); the di le ti1.&#13;
For Hell's frame of reference Southern&#13;
C.tlafomia stvle. the author introduces&#13;
Soralee·s husband, Simon Herford potentate&#13;
f the encounter marathon, various and&#13;
sundry (stereotypical) social freaks,&#13;
'·Kerouwac ·ian.. freaks standing vigil for&#13;
C ryl Chessman. and Lionel. Lionel is a&#13;
pivotal character. he is the emperor of a&#13;
chain hoe tore kingdom. his life's goal&#13;
merely to get through life, working ~ har~&#13;
that he ha np time for despair. His&#13;
"becoming a multi-millionaire was one of&#13;
the great jokes of all rime. ·: Lionel was in his a-nd everyone else's view&#13;
a "funny Lillie man, middleaged and beaten,&#13;
stuffed into his skin like an overcooked&#13;
potato. ' Soralee refuses to see his ugliness,&#13;
Vte anve ts in him a beauty that isn't there.&#13;
he pities him and only because women can&#13;
give enought ot open a man up, to · touch&#13;
"the Lillie boy in men" she sees herself as a&#13;
\'ior for Lionel he convinces herself that&#13;
she tu Jly loves rum and for a short time&#13;
ucceed .&#13;
farion invite Soralee to the encounter&#13;
marathon where she discovers, through&#13;
self-analy i and Simon's (a possible&#13;
charlatan) direction, her exact Freudian&#13;
hang-up , not quite ac epting the final&#13;
judgement that Lionel represents a father&#13;
figure : female oedipus. Soralee is finally&#13;
purged of her pity and flase love for Lio11~l.&#13;
he leaves the marathon ready and willing to&#13;
extr.ict that latent affection of her husband,&#13;
lon·g neglected, who needs it as much as&#13;
Lionel and who is capable of giving if primed&#13;
long enough. Yes sir, everything gonna be&#13;
awright.&#13;
But strong-arm Chance jumps on the&#13;
tage. As she is driving home to her hubby&#13;
Soralee wraps her car around a tree and&#13;
boom, no more Soralee in an orange ball of&#13;
flame . 1arion. who is driving behind her,&#13;
can see the fireball of Soralee's eviction from&#13;
life and ends the novel in a revery about&#13;
Chance.&#13;
At the funeral home she wonders why _no&#13;
one is pounding their fists and gutscreammg&#13;
"fuck you fate." "Soralee was dead, and&#13;
dead she couldn't be Sora lee. Because she&#13;
was alive, that's what she was about, wa;&#13;
living so whatever was in that coffin wasn t&#13;
Soral~e. "Age old consolation.&#13;
I suppose you could call Soralee tragic, in&#13;
a modern sense. She was motivated by her&#13;
emotions and' a few psychological insights.&#13;
Trapped by pit~: she fin~ll_y_ tr~scended&#13;
herself, attained peak sens1t1v1ty, ready to&#13;
give herself to her husband, ready to touch&#13;
the little boy, and is cut down before she has&#13;
the chance.&#13;
Touching is not a particularly great novel;&#13;
it's decent and is well-written only in places.&#13;
The central theme, that of an empty society&#13;
and the hopelessness of its inhabitants, is the&#13;
central theme of too many modern novels&#13;
the story is interesting particularly when the&#13;
author concerns herself with a behind the&#13;
scenes look at the vigil held when Caryl&#13;
Chessman was executed, (and occasionally&#13;
when she describes the encounter&#13;
marathon). The newspapers purported the&#13;
'Chessman vigil to be a noble action on the&#13;
part of hundreds of celebrities, Gwen Davis&#13;
'reinterprets it as a circus. Her elucidations&#13;
concerning sex, love, males and females, the&#13;
repressed rage of modern man and woman&#13;
are contemporary, but far from original. It&#13;
seems as if I've read th.is novel before, in bits&#13;
and pieces of other novels. Only the namei&#13;
have been changed.&#13;
One big advantage of th.is book is its&#13;
le·ngth, a mere 212 pages, short enough to&#13;
read in a few hours. It's nice to read about&#13;
Southern California freaks but it ain't worth&#13;
too much effort. A consistently perceptive&#13;
writer, Gwen Davis isn't. Ultimately,&#13;
Touching leaves you untouched.&#13;
Touching, courtesy of the Book Mart&#13;
622-59th Street, Kenosha, can be purchased&#13;
for $5.95.&#13;
A professional ABORTION&#13;
that is safe, legal &amp;&#13;
• • 1nexpens1ve&#13;
can be set up on an&#13;
outpatient basis by calli&#13;
The Problem Preg&#13;
Referral 5enice&#13;
21S-722-5360&#13;
?4 hours-7 days&#13;
for professiontl, confidential&#13;
and caring help.&#13;
~C.8.tmJ.&#13;
I WATCHIS _J&#13;
--............&#13;
-·--- h 1- make a ,liffete11ce .,-. you sl,op1&#13;
10%&#13;
Court~~Y Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Faculty '&#13;
-Ito--&#13;
~,,.. - I&#13;
• t:,:=,·it--&#13;
-· - ~ F ===CLASSIFIEDS====-1&#13;
For Sale&#13;
(Must Show 1.0.)&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
excepted DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
'69 K.wu,l.1 WI S 650 cc Ex&#13;
Cono. 652 6. JS after 4&#13;
'57 Chev. W.gon S350 or best&#13;
off; r 652-0109 After 6&#13;
' 69 R~mb . Amcric~n $995&#13;
652-4215 before 7&#13;
'69 MustJn S 1,800 or best offer&#13;
694-4117&#13;
Fiat wa on Sl50 call Ror&#13;
6 2 230&#13;
'70 AMX S'.?450 or best offer&#13;
65 271 or 65 -4117&#13;
'67 Triumph TR-4 IRS whole or&#13;
for p;,ru 6-3618&#13;
'.? Pu:c.· I J ( so:1 cltup cJII Tom&#13;
654,20H aftrr 4&#13;
WmtC'r COAi size 7 SI0 633 -7576 or 637 1'20&#13;
'70 Ambassador call Dennis&#13;
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Fender tr d Jstcr S450 or best&#13;
offi r 639-6360&#13;
' 62 R mblcr SIOO CJII 652 -9552&#13;
Stereo Cassette Player and&#13;
Recorder w11h changer Model 377&#13;
S200 Call 652-8870 MUST SELL.&#13;
Honda • 150" cc S'200 694--0325&#13;
RCA Signal Generator S20.00 also&#13;
RC A Vacuum Tube voltmeter&#13;
S20.00 639 202&#13;
Misc.&#13;
GOT THE DRAFT hanging over&#13;
your head??? Do something about it.&#13;
ECUMENICAL CENTER FOR&#13;
DRAFT COUNSELING 2211 EAST&#13;
KENWOOD BLVD. MILWAUKEE&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Fiberglass Repair work&#13;
654-8739&#13;
F.or appointments phone : ( 414)&#13;
962-5855 or contact: STEVE&#13;
BANGERT STUDENT AFFAIRS -&#13;
call KENOSHA&#13;
Any type or work 65'2-87 34&#13;
For Rent&#13;
Office Space - Modern. Carpeted,&#13;
Partiuoned, Air Cond. Ideal for&#13;
Acctg., Insurance, or Sales. Good&#13;
proximit)' to Parkside and Carthage.&#13;
4058 7th Ave . Call 652-3945 or&#13;
654-7410.&#13;
Minnie the Midnite Maid&#13;
Qualifications for calling:&#13;
Proffessors &amp; Bachelors over 25&#13;
(I'm not cute but I'm efficient)&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 12, April 19, 1971</text>
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        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61876">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
