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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, Issue 13</text>
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            <text>McKenna Fights Voting Bill - Supports Anti-War Bill</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
or The Newscope Staf!&#13;
"BiD 225virtually disenfranchises all of those,&#13;
comingto Wisconsin to study," -:sspeechby State Senator Dale McKenna (D-&#13;
....:.,) last Thursday sponsored by the Racine&#13;
--- of the ACLU, he warned the small :::e "They will not be qualified to register in&#13;
: t where they attend school and they&#13;
:.::: at all in the United States of America if&#13;
IIill passes in the Assembly,"&#13;
• AtClJIdiog to McKenna, "Th~ bill, in effect,&#13;
IIIIdset up stringent voting requirements that the&#13;
_city clerk could ask of a student or a person in&#13;
JlDSieDtvocationwhether he intended to remain&#13;
~.district heis living, whether he owns property&#13;
.1IIe district, whether he filed an inco~e tax&#13;
IIIII'D in the district, whether his driver's hcense&#13;
• Issued in the district, whether he has his&#13;
lIIDIJIObile registered in that district. All of these&#13;
.. are criteria the clerk can use to exclude you&#13;
hili voting inthat district if you answer no."&#13;
"It also disenfranchises all veterans returning&#13;
... VletDam going to school under the G.r. Bill&#13;
.. use unless they have established legal&#13;
IIIidmcY at home for voting purposes and because&#13;
11.18 year old vote change most of them will not&#13;
qaaUfied to register in the precinct in which they&#13;
II'lIIchool."&#13;
JlrKenM characterized the bill as an attempt&#13;
.~ the effect of the new 18 year old voting&#13;
IIlr JIaDy legislators expect the addition of 18 year&#13;
tIIII to lbe electorate to significantly affect the&#13;
IIRlIme of the local and state elections in college&#13;
-.tties.&#13;
MeKenM said the bill stood a good chance of&#13;
~ lbe Assembly but added on his own behalf,&#13;
ti this bill is a bad bill ... but it passed 25-4."&#13;
IIcKenna then spoke about Senate Bill 180, 314&#13;
illleAl8embly,that is designed to test the power&#13;
lillie President to commit U.S. troops in un-&#13;
__ red wars. Similar to a bill passed by the&#13;
by Dean Loumos&#13;
or The Newscope Start&#13;
Alan alt Faculty meetiug last Wednesday,&#13;
.\frIl 21, a resolution was presented fly Professor&#13;
Jell. Harbeson, representing the Social Science&#13;
DlYlsion. The resolution stated:&#13;
Tbal lbe Parkside Faculty opposes the&#13;
Prtsfnce on campus of armed security&#13;
personnel carrying sidearms and mace&#13;
dlring daylight hours,&#13;
"0 further explained that armed security were&#13;
: muchin evidence in Greenquist Hall and that&#13;
ItmOSpllereat Parkside did not warrant the :U.. of the security patrol. He added that "we&#13;
...d better resolve this now before somethmg .::::s." He ~lso said that there have been a few&#13;
.. Is where guns were not involved, but could&#13;
.. " been,&#13;
.. t\ancollor Irvin G, Wyllie then introduced&#13;
..:c:.nson, from Central Administration m&#13;
1IIeech" WhoISthe security head. He gave a short&#13;
llIu ' InWhichhe continually emphasized that "If&#13;
L.llve the security the authority to make arrests&#13;
~1 Shouldbe armed."&#13;
~e also revealed that some of our campuses,&#13;
1Ocu' Bay for example, do not have armed&#13;
~ty" a decision that was made in Madison.&#13;
~ Ylholookthe noor and explained that he was&#13;
1Ir~ by the Regents to "beef up security and&#13;
llibarhon On campuses, even if it meant 'canIlitQ~lDgFaculty&#13;
positions'." This order was later&#13;
IOcu '1ed because of outside pressure, but the&#13;
1llI~ Y patrol were armed and received the&#13;
lld~rn 20 hours training on the use of their&#13;
s. lbatrofessor Applebaum added he didn't believe&#13;
lld~en the .authority to arrest meant having a&#13;
M ,To him that reasoning didn't follow.&#13;
ba\'e r. Hanson answered, "admittedly arrests&#13;
.. ~n made Without sidearms," but then Cited&#13;
lilt' p,lewhere a gun was needed "to give out a&#13;
IIIg ticket."&#13;
Supports Anti-War Bill&#13;
SENATOR DALE McKENNA&#13;
Massachusetts legislature, it forbids state citizens&#13;
from serving in undeclared wars. The&#13;
Massachusetts bill was taken to the Supreme Court&#13;
to test its constitutionality. The court refused to&#13;
make a ruling on the grounds that the state had not&#13;
gone through the standard procedure of litigation in&#13;
the lower federal courts.&#13;
According to McKenna the Wisconsin bill,&#13;
introduced March 18, was immediately' mel b)&#13;
opposition senators who attempted to dilute its&#13;
effectiveness via amendment. He said, .. ection 1&#13;
mb states 'Any agrieved inhabitant of this stale on&#13;
his own behalf . . . may bring an appropriate action&#13;
in the United States Supreme Court ... 10&#13;
defend and enforce such rights of the indi\'idual&#13;
under section B . - .. "&#13;
Faculty Opposes&#13;
A rmed Security&#13;
On Campus&#13;
&gt;&#13;
•o&#13;
v&#13;
•~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
•&#13;
Describing secuon B and the I lent of I&#13;
documenl he said, "What thi bill means n elf t&#13;
that we would oot perrmt the )'lJW1 peopl of&#13;
Wisconsm to fight in undeclared" ar We re It'lhn&#13;
the President. 'really, we've had II nd II'&#13;
time 10 sa)' good-bye' ..&#13;
"When IIcame up on the nate ncor th first&#13;
amendmenl tha; "a gg ted "ould hav&#13;
destroyed It For exampl a am nded the bill&#13;
would not hold If th Unrted tat am Ill\ol\ ~&#13;
III an undeclared war In any counl!') thaI I'&#13;
.S aid, Also, thelf amended bill ould no lak&#13;
effect until the .Iassachu t la" "a declared&#13;
constilullonal I took stron e puon and con&#13;
sidered Wisconslll a sovereign tate."&#13;
Accorcing to tale la any bill pa ed b. the&#13;
two houses In, tadison. unl otherwt lpulated&#13;
lakes effect the day alter .1 pubh.hed in th&#13;
ficial stale publication he WI! co n. tal&#13;
Journal)&#13;
"We hould have th right on our 6"n to In&#13;
troduce Bill 180 and g I .1 th h th nat&#13;
without waiting for .Ia ch 10 reach t&#13;
Supreme Court"&#13;
Describing the dIfficulty III n th bill he&#13;
noted thai though there "as debate on the ncor&#13;
almost no one opposed the bill IIIthe pubhc he nn&#13;
attended by "aboul :;00" people&#13;
", 'ow even the forc Lhal had n III upport&#13;
of the war have come full err I nd re III opposition&#13;
to il If Un 0.01 c,idenc nough 10&#13;
con\'lnce thl! Prldenl Lhal th peopl I thl&#13;
countr)' don t anI their men d. I III&#13;
Vietnam then I don't kllO" "hat&#13;
A member 01 the audl nc SUJitRl'SlcdI&#13;
thoughl the I ue of th bill hould be pul fo&#13;
referendum to the peopl 01 the t, n a&#13;
thai thi was too Important a mal r for th r&#13;
elected rep"" ntall' to hand!&#13;
tConI1J1U on Pa 5&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
McKenna Fights Voting Bill&#13;
Supports Anti- by John Koloen&#13;
of The Newscope Staf!&#13;
"B'll 225 virtually disenfranchises all of those .&#13;
en~ coming to Wisconsin to study."&#13;
1 8 peech by State Senator Dale McKenna (D-&#13;
:SOn) last Thursday sponsored by the Racine&#13;
ter of the ACLU, he w~~ned the . sm~ll&#13;
~nee, "They will not be quahf1ed to register m&#13;
precinct where they attend school and they&#13;
vote at all in the United States of America if&#13;
bill passes in the Assem?}Y.' ' . . According to McKenna, The bill, m effect,&#13;
et up stringent voting requir~ments that the&#13;
city clerk could ask of a student or a person in&#13;
1 ansient vocation whether he intended to remain&#13;
district he is living, whether he owns property&#13;
Ille district, whether he filed an income tax&#13;
in the district, whether his driver's license&#13;
· ued in the district, whether he has his&#13;
, mobile registered in that district. All of these&#13;
are criteria the clerk can use to exclude you&#13;
voting in that district if you answer no."&#13;
•·u also disenfranchises all veterans returning&#13;
Vietnam going to school under the G .I. Bill&#13;
use unless they have established legal&#13;
idency at home for voting purposes and because&#13;
the 18 year old vote change most of them will not&#13;
qualified to register in the precinct in which they&#13;
to school."&#13;
cKenna characterized the bill as an attempt&#13;
minimize the effect of the new 18 year old voting&#13;
. lany legislators expect the addition of 18 year&#13;
to the electorate to significantly affect the&#13;
come of the local and state elections in college&#13;
unities.&#13;
lcKenna said the bill stood a good chance of&#13;
Ing the Assembly but added on his own behalf,&#13;
I think this bill is a bad bill . . . but it passed 25-4."&#13;
lcKenna then spoke about Senate Bill 180, 314&#13;
the Assembly, that is designed to test the power&#13;
the President to commit U.S. troops in unred&#13;
wars. Similar to a bill passed by the&#13;
by Dean Loumos&#13;
of The Newscope Staff&#13;
At an all Faculty meeting last Wednesday,&#13;
pril 21, a resolution was presented f&gt;y Professor t»/ _Harbeson, representing the Social Science&#13;
ion. The resolution stated:&#13;
That the Parkside Faculty opposes the&#13;
pre ence on campus of armed security&#13;
P r~onnel carrying sidearms and mace&#13;
during daylight hours.&#13;
Ile further explained that armed security were&#13;
f&gt;" much in evidence in Greenquist Hall and that&#13;
~tmosphere at Parkside did not warrant the&#13;
~ 1: of the security patrol. He added that "we&#13;
lter resolve this now before something Tns.'' He also said that there have been a few&#13;
1 ents where guns were not involved, but could&#13;
\ been.&#13;
Ral ~hancellor Irvin G. Wyllie then introduc~d&#13;
S· Hanso~, from Central Administration m&#13;
150~, Who 1s the security head. He gave a short&#13;
~ ~ in Which he continually emphasized that "If&#13;
give the security the authority to make arrests&#13;
Y should be armed "&#13;
He J · Gr a so revealed that some of our campuses,&#13;
~ Bay for example do not have armed&#13;
nty a d · · ' · M di \\. • ec1s1on that was made m a son. )Ir ered •e took the floor and explained that he was&#13;
Protecr by the Regents to " beef up security and&#13;
bar !0n on campuses even if it meant 'canUo~ing&#13;
Faculty positi~ns'." This order was later&#13;
rit ect because of outside pressure, but the&#13;
lllinint Y Patrol were armed and received the&#13;
idea urn 20 hours training on the use of their&#13;
rrns.&#13;
t:afessor Applebaum added he didn't believe&#13;
lldear1&#13;
ven the authority to arrest meant having a&#13;
1~ · To him that reasoning didn't follow. ve b · Hanson answered "admittedly arrests&#13;
~n ' · ed eJtarn made without sidearms," but then cit&#13;
rlti P_le Where a gun was needed " to give out a&#13;
ng ticket."&#13;
SENATOR DALE 1cKE. ·.'&#13;
&gt;&#13;
0&#13;
u&#13;
., •&#13;
J&#13;
J&#13;
•&#13;
Massachusetts legislature, it forbids state citizen&#13;
from serving in undeclared wars. The&#13;
Massachusetts bill was taken to the Supreme Court&#13;
to test its constitutionality. The court refused to&#13;
make a ruling on the grounds that the state had not&#13;
gone through the standard procedure of litigation in&#13;
the lower federal courts.&#13;
According to McKenna the ·Wi co in bill.&#13;
int oduced farch 18. w imm i te ~ ~&#13;
opposition senators who attempted to dilut i&#13;
effectiveness via amendment. He said " ' tion 1&#13;
rob states 'Any agrieved inhabitant of thi tat on&#13;
his own behalf . . . may bring an appropria c- tion in the United States upreme Court ... to&#13;
defend and enforce such rights of th individu I&#13;
under section B . . . . "&#13;
Faculty Oppose&#13;
Armed Security&#13;
On Campus&#13;
~ re&lt;-olut&#13;
ilh four Facull~&#13;
ar &#13;
April 2&amp;. I!HI..&#13;
Hearing Attracts Two&#13;
'lIKE t\l RTIt of The 'e~ ...cope taU&#13;
The Open Public Hr-artngs on&#13;
tenure crrteria held b} a special&#13;
rl'gt'nt eornrmttee last Frida&gt;&#13;
"as attended b~ ''''0 peopl~&#13;
("tIl( \\ a a "('Y.. cope reporter&#13;
th&lt;' other wu \ "" Prof of&#13;
l't \ rc Ben Grt"t"n('haum&#13;
(irecncllaum pre cered the onlv&#13;
I , lIollS on cnrcrta&#13;
(,r rt~um remark were&#13;
unun f) or n draft report of&#13;
ht . lentl 1&gt;1\ I IOn Sub&#13;
eornmrt tue un Pl'r onnel&#13;
Ih'\ It'\\ PU!ll'IC Ttw draft&#13;
n'port I':\elf tot,11s ~flmt' 1("0&#13;
pil~t&#13;
'Ill", ,'ntlal or hi remarks&#13;
In' a folll)\\&#13;
lh'luhH" \\"'I~hl~ or 50 pt'f&#13;
ll'nl, Jl} pl'f (:t'Ol Olndlil per c('nl&#13;
huuld t&gt;(o.1 l~nl"(l to the thrt '&#13;
tr.llhllOIMI ar'iI or actl\ It).&#13;
IC.ldlln~ fo('holart) ..u:lI\'11yand&#13;
~'nH"&#13;
"In n,O('",al promoll nand&#13;
,,'nun' 11ua"01\.... whl'n' the&#13;
t-: "t;ull"'" ('omnllltt"· ha!'t&#13;
(Irt..rlllmlUanll~ ad\('r.l' 10&#13;
lurtll"llUn l'lln(:l'rntn~ an 10&#13;
ill\ Idu.l) hi' h~lll bt.' notlflt.'d of&#13;
1111 I.,·, ,lIld hall bt' 10\ 1t&lt;'&lt;110&#13;
kelch I&#13;
3032 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
Phone 637-2533&#13;
Uhl_u ••• .tj. lMIarli .n" "lolli's)&#13;
speak to the committee on his&#13;
0\\0" behalf If he w ishes He may&#13;
brmg another member or the&#13;
Iacuhv as an advisor ..&#13;
Teacher:-. should be evaluated&#13;
pr irn arily b~ student&#13;
que:-.t1onnal re 'Ideally. the&#13;
(IUeStionnaire should be&#13;
developed administered and&#13;
tabula led b) students In&#13;
. peclat snuauore ....such as that&#13;
of an IOstructor trying real&#13;
1000\ auom the opmtnn of his&#13;
(..ollea~u~ "ill be invited"&#13;
"Some publishable scholarly&#13;
&lt;JClI\·ll} should be expected of&#13;
all faculty The amount expected&#13;
mUSl recognize the&#13;
hmltal10n duc to facilities and&#13;
other duties under which the&#13;
IOdlvldual faculty member may&#13;
hr working." Extraordinary&#13;
puhlic service could count as a&#13;
lempOrar) subsl1tute for&#13;
...cholarly activity&#13;
Finally. sen'ice ",ork should&#13;
melude both general public&#13;
st.'rVlce and Universit',- sen'ice.&#13;
.. An individual ought not to&#13;
rl.... &lt;..eiv(' an)· service credit for&#13;
ck)ing only public service arid&#13;
leaving his colleagues home to&#13;
do the dirty work."&#13;
The members of the regents&#13;
committee Suggested Prof.&#13;
Greenebaum check with UW!\1&#13;
and Green Bay re: student&#13;
evaluation. Evidently there&#13;
have been significant problems&#13;
with student evaluation at these&#13;
campuses&#13;
After the heanng Newscupe&#13;
spoke briefly with Asst. Prof.&#13;
Greenebaum. He explained that&#13;
his committee was composed&#13;
primarily of interested teachers&#13;
(five tenured and five nontenured&#13;
members of the Science&#13;
Division I. He also mentioned&#13;
that six students were consulted.&#13;
VISTA:&#13;
Advisor Hopes To Instill&#13;
by Mark Timpany&#13;
or The :\ewscope Starr&#13;
Joseph G. Baier is an advisor&#13;
to the Parkside faculty and&#13;
administration. He represents&#13;
the University Faculty Council,&#13;
the executive committee of the&#13;
University Faculty Assembly.&#13;
.:'\lr. Baier was sent here, with&#13;
the approval of the Parkside&#13;
administration and University&#13;
Committee, early in January of&#13;
this year. At that time. shortly&#13;
after the dismissal and reinstatement&#13;
of 27 Parkside&#13;
faculty, the Council felt the need&#13;
for someone" . . who had had&#13;
a broad ~ulty government and&#13;
They make things happen in the rural pove t h&#13;
the big city slum, the, Indian reservati~nY 0110"·.&#13;
attorneys make the law serve the . VISTA&#13;
business specialists help develop m\lOO,·r. VISTA . nonty enterprIses.&#13;
VISTAS teach, work with street&#13;
develop adult education programs and 0 g~.&#13;
cooperatives. They do all these things and I rga....&#13;
.. a ot m&lt;rt&#13;
. you ve got to hang tough to be a VISTA.The&#13;
IS tough and the road to accomplishment· JOb&#13;
one. You've got to be mature, dedicated an~ca7&#13;
You've got to want to donate a year of your"hr '&#13;
helpmg th,IS natI?n's poor quit being poor. e to&#13;
If you re sertOUS about changing the wa f&#13;
world, if Y&lt;lUhave the skills and the desire toy~&#13;
0&#13;
lbr&#13;
you think you can make things better check' rye,if&#13;
1&#13;
. ,tnWlth&#13;
the. Vo unteers In SerVIce To America re&#13;
tatIves on campus. VISTA films will be Shown~&#13;
today and tomorrow. .GO&#13;
Have a question on VISTA?? Call toll free-Ill&gt;&#13;
424-8589·&#13;
Interested in changing the way things are?? You&#13;
can explore various ways to make the scene better by&#13;
talking with former VISTA Volunteers on campuS&#13;
today and tomorrow. Ex-Volunteers In Service to&#13;
America have an information booth set up in&#13;
Greenquist Hall from 9:00 to 5:00 to discUSS the&#13;
program and recruit mature, skilled men and women&#13;
who want to help solve some of the problems this&#13;
country faces.&#13;
Within VISTA the emphasis has shifted to the&#13;
specialist volunteers who bring specific knowledge&#13;
and skill to the people they serve. Therefore. in addition&#13;
to men and women with natural ability and a&#13;
well-rounded education, VISTA representatives will&#13;
actively seek out specialiSts. They will look for those&#13;
with professional training and degrees in law,&#13;
business, education, health services, architecture,&#13;
city planning, the social sciences and other fields.&#13;
The specialist volunteer puts skills into action.&#13;
Tuesday, May 4&#13;
TRANSCENDENTAL&#13;
as taught by Maharishi Mahesh '!'ogi&#13;
Introductory meeting&#13;
MEDITATION&#13;
Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall&#13;
4 p:m. and 8 p.m.&#13;
SantaJta&#13;
Snag&#13;
Skelch II&#13;
2133 91st SI.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Phone 694·1727&#13;
(Anol&gt;S ffOnt. 51. Thc:rue's)&#13;
administrative exper"&#13;
able to assist the f lence to be&#13;
d&#13;
'" acuIty a ministration in and&#13;
th . . perform,&#13;
err respective roles " ng&#13;
Baier states that h· h&#13;
instill in the facult&#13;
e&#13;
oPes to&#13;
derstanding of the Y Ian Un·&#13;
regulations of the Un,:U es. and&#13;
W&#13;
·· versltv of isconsm and the "w· .&#13;
tradition" which . ISConsin lllvolves&#13;
great faculty role in OV ,a&#13;
the University. He no~ese~~ng&#13;
faculty is strongly d'. he 'hth aViSO WIt e administratio l)&#13;
decision makers and" the&#13;
Regents, the final d . Ihe&#13;
maker." eCISlon&#13;
Mr. Baier is largely unaware&#13;
A Chance For Change&#13;
LIDDY CORRECTION&#13;
It has come to our attention&#13;
that the recent article on&#13;
visiting poet James Lidd'&#13;
contained two errors c011-&#13;
cerning the poet's coming to&#13;
teach at Parkside. First. James&#13;
Liddy will be guest writer-inresidence&#13;
during the 1972-73&#13;
school year. Second, Herbert&#13;
Kubly.. present writer-inresidence,&#13;
will remain at&#13;
Parkside and will not be&#13;
replaced by Liddy as the article&#13;
indicated. Newscope regrets&#13;
these ambiguitIes.&#13;
NEWH&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
Budweise&amp;&#13;
•.. but you&#13;
•&#13;
know that!!&#13;
being murdered, in defense ci&#13;
anticommunism, a slogan&#13;
which conceals a sinisler&#13;
combination of economic aad&#13;
political. justification by tbe&#13;
Wall Street-Pentagoo Eo·&#13;
terprise. Supporting dictators&#13;
who claim to be friendsin onler&#13;
to maintain profitable alliances&#13;
with capitalism is the game that&#13;
Washington has been plal111&amp;&#13;
for decades. Franco in SpaiD&#13;
Chiang . Kai-shek ID&#13;
"nationalist" China, Stroessnef&#13;
in Paraguay, la Junta in&#13;
Greece, and Ky io Sooth&#13;
Vietnam (who recently galt&#13;
concessions. to all Americanoil&#13;
companies) are a few of tlf&#13;
allies of American democrat1&#13;
The military organizatioll&#13;
that defends the interestso/tir&#13;
American government (noltit&#13;
people) has finally been ".&#13;
posed in the Calleyaffair.",.&#13;
lieutenant, as a hwnan l)eUIg.lS&#13;
guilty of the charges passed by&#13;
his comrades, but perhaPSI&#13;
professional military mill&#13;
should not be tried in ",on, "&#13;
even ~onsidered a hum~&#13;
species, since the d~ree&#13;
alienation in this caste IS sam;&#13;
that it has ceased to func~ II&#13;
a sensitive or moral edJIY&#13;
Duty, honor, palriotism,1W&#13;
free world, national "'::&#13;
have evidenllY subdued t!Jt&#13;
principles attached to ~&#13;
universal concept of lo\'t&#13;
the human condition. ed frOI'&#13;
A lession can be learn is III&#13;
defeat, and the first one&#13;
LETTERS&#13;
VISTA&#13;
(Volunteers In Service To America)&#13;
NEEDS: BUSINESS MAJORS HEALTH SPECIALISTS&#13;
LIBERAL ARTS MAJORS EDUCATION MAJORS&#13;
and THOUSANDS of others!&#13;
WE HAVE A LOT TO SHARE.&#13;
REPRESENTATIVES IN GREENQUIST HALL. TODAY AND TOMORROW. - 9- 5&#13;
VISTA FLICK' TO • DAy AND TOMORROW 4:00 P.M.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The war in Indochina is lost, it&#13;
has been sinc~ it started, and is&#13;
now a smelling cadaver that has&#13;
been exposed to the open for ten&#13;
years. The Vietnamese (these&#13;
are people too) and American&#13;
lives have been sacrificed in&#13;
vain, and the mental and&#13;
physical suffering that have&#13;
been paid by those directly or&#13;
indirectly involved in this&#13;
bloodbath is hard to be&#13;
evaluated. We are left with a&#13;
war-guilt complex that will be&#13;
in our conscience, if we have&#13;
any left, for the rest of our lives.&#13;
The military termination of&#13;
the war (the moral occurred a&#13;
long time ago) is far from sight&#13;
in spite of the time-table&#13;
produced by the president,&#13;
since it is quality, not quantity,&#13;
that in the last instance will&#13;
determine the final question of&#13;
hostilities. While personnel are&#13;
leaving Vietnam, new kinds of&#13;
bombs are tried in the most&#13;
sadomasoquistic experiments&#13;
that the world has known:&#13;
napalm, Riot Control Agent CS,&#13;
blockbusters, etc. It is indeed&#13;
symptomatic that in this&#13;
culture, one of our heroes has&#13;
been James Bond, the agent&#13;
With permission to kill.&#13;
The means of communication&#13;
~re used by the forces in power&#13;
to such a fashion that one&#13;
won~ers if they are maintaining&#13;
a dlalogue with a zombieculture.&#13;
"Our boys .... "our&#13;
brothers" keep murdering, and&#13;
Students' International&#13;
Meditation Society&#13;
iL°.., \e\\ - it"", Here -it":'; Feminine&#13;
ilos FOR FR.\I LES ONLY!&#13;
It's all in the Cut-It\ the "SEX LOOK"&#13;
~tS~;&#13;
iNI §:))0U9&#13;
LERMAN HAIRDRESSERS&#13;
THE FIRST WI1'l1 THE NEWEST&#13;
Stylists at your service Tues. 8:30 - 6;&#13;
Wod., Thurs., Fri. 8:30 - 8; Sal. 8 to 5&#13;
Member or Wise. lIair Fashion Committee&#13;
-:\::'\D ::'\OWFor.&#13;
the Budget-Minded, a Mini-Salon with TtIlNI·PRICESbehInd&#13;
Sketc:::hll-'"The Back Boo It CaJl CM-I121 ask lor "n. BI" .,. {or young and old.&#13;
, , . e au DOOI',"&#13;
p 2&#13;
aring Attract&#13;
:\JIKEKLH111 ofThe&#13;
\pdl-. I •l.&#13;
T\\'O&#13;
hould&#13;
public&#13;
rvice.&#13;
TRANSCENDENTAL&#13;
MEDITATION&#13;
as taught by Maharishi Mahesh yogi&#13;
Introductory meeting&#13;
Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall&#13;
4 p:m. and 8 p.m.&#13;
Students' International&#13;
Meditation Society&#13;
lhe&#13;
Sa11ta11a&#13;
Sltag&#13;
-iL·s Fe1ni11i11e&#13;
it·. L ~, -L&#13;
H's all i11 th ,ut- It'-. the · SEX LOOK"'&#13;
it\ ) O\IIS - at&#13;
LEHMAN -I IRDR&#13;
'l HE FIR T WI'l'II THE I'\EWEST&#13;
• lw li!ts at your service Tues. 8.30 - 6;&#13;
W'! ., Thur ., Fri. 8:30 - 8: Sat. 8 to 5&#13;
. kt l&lt;'h I&#13;
ERS&#13;
3032 Lathrop ve.&#13;
Raine&#13;
Phone G37-2533&#13;
2133 91st St.&#13;
Cl!ltt,.tta lla4 • at._ aDd h:ohl"•&gt;&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Phone 694-1727&#13;
(A&lt;"ro~ from St. Tht:rese'~)&#13;
emb r of Wi c. Hair Fa bion Committee&#13;
- .\ D _"O\V - or. the Budget-. tinded, a . tini-S 1 'th .. II",... PRICE&#13;
beh1ntl · etch 11-"The Back O ~.on " 1 " ,u · S-&#13;
'all ,112'7 1 k !or "Th oor .. . for young and old. · · · e Back Door."&#13;
lea\·ing his colleagues home lo&#13;
do the dirt~ work."&#13;
The members of the regents&#13;
committee suggested Prof.&#13;
Greenebaum check with CWM&#13;
and Green Bay re: student&#13;
e\'aluation Evidently there&#13;
h3ve been significant problems&#13;
"1th ·tudent e\'aluatJon at these&#13;
campu e:- After the hearing :\'ewscope&#13;
~poke briefly with Asst Prof&#13;
Greenebaum. He explained that&#13;
h1. committee was composed&#13;
primarily of intere ·ted teachers&#13;
tf1\'e tenured and five nontenured&#13;
member· of the c1ence&#13;
Di\'uon). He al o mentioned&#13;
that 1x student were conulled.&#13;
&#13;
Advisor Hopes To Instill&#13;
by :\lark Timpany&#13;
of The :\'ewscope Staff&#13;
Joseph G. Baier is an advisor&#13;
to the Parkside faculty and&#13;
administration. He represents&#13;
the University Faculty Council,&#13;
the executive committee of the&#13;
University Faculty Assembly.&#13;
:\Ir Baier was sent here, with&#13;
the approval of the Parkside&#13;
administration and University&#13;
Committee, early in January of&#13;
this year. At that time. shortly&#13;
after the dismissal and reinstatement&#13;
of 27 Parkside&#13;
faculty, the Council felt the need&#13;
for someone " ... who had had&#13;
a broad ~ulty government and&#13;
administrative exper·&#13;
able to assist the f ience to&#13;
administration in peacuflty and&#13;
th · r orrn&#13;
eir respective roles . in&#13;
Baier states that h · h&#13;
instill in the facult~- op to&#13;
derstanding of the · 1&#13;
an un.&#13;
regulations of the Cni'.~ e . and&#13;
W. · \Crs1t\' of&#13;
1sconsin and the "\\" . . tradition" which i·n . tlscon in&#13;
\O ve great faculty role in ov . a&#13;
the University. He no1e e:.;ng&#13;
faculty is strong!~· ct' . he . h , a \'ISO&#13;
wit the administrat· I)&#13;
d . . ion the&#13;
ec1s10n makers and&#13;
Regents, the final d . ~he&#13;
maker." ec1s1on&#13;
Mr. Baier is largely un&#13;
VISTA=&#13;
aware&#13;
A Chance For Change&#13;
Interested in changing the way things are?? You&#13;
can explore various ways lo make the scene better by&#13;
talking with former VISTA Volunteers on campus&#13;
todav and tomorrow. Ex-Volunteers In Service to&#13;
Ame.rica have an information booth set up in&#13;
Greenquisl Hall from 9:00 to 5:00 to discuss the&#13;
program and recruit mature, skilled men and women&#13;
who want lo help solve some of the problems this&#13;
country faces.&#13;
They make things happen in the rural pove t h&#13;
the big city slum, the. Indian reservatiiny ; 11011&#13;
attorneys make the law serve the poo · ,&#13;
1&#13;
STA&#13;
business specialists help develop mi· r .. \ISTA . nor,ty&#13;
terpnses. VISTAS teach, work with str l&#13;
develop _adult education programs andee O ga&#13;
cooperatives. They do all these things and I rgal!Ut , a ot more . You ve got to hang tough to be a VISTA. The&#13;
1s tough and the road to accomplishment ·s joh&#13;
Y , 1 a ro&#13;
one. ou ve got to be mature dedicated and&#13;
Within VISTA the emphasis has shifted to the&#13;
. pecialist volunteers who bring specific knowledge&#13;
and skill lo the people they serve. Therefore, in addition&#13;
to men and women with natural ability and a&#13;
well-rounded education, VISTA representatives will&#13;
actively seek out specialists. They will look for those&#13;
with professional training and degrees in law,&#13;
busines , education, health services, architecture,&#13;
city planning, the social sciences and other fields.&#13;
, ' capabl&#13;
You _ve go~ to w_ant to donate a year of your rr&#13;
helping th1&#13;
1s· nati_on's poor quit being poor. 1 e lo&#13;
If you re ser10us about changing the way r&#13;
world,_ if y-0u have the skills and the desire to s:~, the&#13;
you thmk you can make things better check · 'If&#13;
1 . ' In,,,,,&#13;
the Vo unteers In Service To America re tat. ~e&#13;
1ves on campus. VISTA films will be shown at 4&#13;
today and tomorrow.&#13;
llave a question on VISTA?? Call toll free_&#13;
424-8580.&#13;
The specialist volunteer puts skills into action.&#13;
LIDDY CORRECTION&#13;
Il has come to our attention&#13;
that the recent article on&#13;
visiting poet James Lidd·&#13;
contained two errors co~-&#13;
cerning the poet's coming lo&#13;
teach at Parkside. First. James&#13;
Liddy will be guest writer-inre&#13;
idence during the 1972-73&#13;
- chool year. Second, Herbert&#13;
Kubly, present writer-inresidence.&#13;
will remain at&#13;
Parkside and will not be&#13;
replaced by Liddy as the article&#13;
indicated. Newscope regrets&#13;
these ambiguil,P.s.&#13;
NEW!!&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
Budweisec&#13;
... but you&#13;
-&#13;
know that!!&#13;
LETTERS&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The war in Indochina is lost, it&#13;
has been sine!'! it started, and is&#13;
now a smelling cadaver that has&#13;
been exposed to the open for ten&#13;
years. The Vietnamese (these&#13;
are people tool and American&#13;
lives have been sacrificed in&#13;
vain, and the mental and&#13;
physical suffering that have&#13;
been paid by those directly or&#13;
indirectly involved in this&#13;
bloodbath is hard to be&#13;
evaluated. We are left with a&#13;
war-guilt complex that will be&#13;
in our conscience, if' we have&#13;
any left, for the rest of our lives.&#13;
The military termination of&#13;
the war (the moral occurred a&#13;
long time ago) is far from sight&#13;
in spite of the time-table&#13;
produced by the president,&#13;
since it is quality, not quantity,&#13;
that in the last instance will&#13;
determine the final question of&#13;
hostilities. While personnel are&#13;
leaving Vietnam, new kinds of&#13;
bombs are tried in the most&#13;
sadomasoquistic experiments&#13;
that the world has known:&#13;
napalm, Riot Control Agent CS,&#13;
blockbusters, etc. It is indeed&#13;
symptomatic that in this&#13;
culture, one of our heroes has&#13;
~en James Bond, the agent&#13;
with permission to kill.&#13;
The means of communication&#13;
~re used by the forces in power&#13;
m such a fashion that one&#13;
won~ers if they are maintaining&#13;
a dialogue with a zombiecul&#13;
tur e. "Our boys", "our&#13;
brothers" keep murdering, and&#13;
VISTA&#13;
being murdered, in deferu e ct&#13;
anticommunism, a slogan&#13;
which conceals a sini ter&#13;
combination of economic and&#13;
political justification b\' the&#13;
Wall Street-Pentagon· Eoterprise.&#13;
Supporting diclalol'$&#13;
who claim to be friends in order&#13;
to maintain profitable allian&#13;
with capitalism is the game that&#13;
Washington has been playmg&#13;
for decades. Franco in pa&#13;
Chiang . Kai-shek 1n&#13;
"nationalist" China, Stroe&#13;
in Paraguay, la Junta •&#13;
Greece, and Ky m out•&#13;
Vietnam (who recently ga1&#13;
concessions to all American oiJ&#13;
companies) are a few of tll'&#13;
allies of American democracy&#13;
The military organizall&#13;
that defends the interest oltbe&#13;
American government nol tll'&#13;
people) has finally been&#13;
posed in the Calley affair 'l1uS&#13;
lieutenant as a human bem ,&#13;
guilty of the charges passl'd •&#13;
his comrades, but perhaps 1&#13;
professional military ma&#13;
should not be tried in court. or&#13;
even ~onsidered a hu!ll d&#13;
species, since the d~ree&#13;
alienation in this caste is so&#13;
that it has ceased to functiO!l 15&#13;
a sensitive or moral entI&#13;
Duty, honor, patriotism,. f]Jg&#13;
free world, national m&#13;
have evidently subdued&#13;
principles attached to&#13;
universal concept of love&#13;
the human condition. ,,&#13;
A lession can be learned ,&#13;
defeat, and the fir5t one&#13;
(Volunteers In Service To America)&#13;
NEEDS: BUSINESS MAJORS HEALTH SPECIALISTS&#13;
LIBERAL ARTS MAJORS EDUCATION MAJORS&#13;
and THOUSANDS of others!&#13;
WE HAVE_ A LOT TO SHARE.&#13;
REPRESENTATIVES N&#13;
5&#13;
I GREENQUIST HALL, TODAY AND TOMORROW , 9-&#13;
VISTA FLICK: TODAY ANO TOMORROW 4:00 P.M. &#13;
'Wisconsin Tradition'&#13;
jar concerns regard-&#13;
, l/Jt ilia nnel decisions&#13;
IC f'cul~~ at the time of&#13;
~ we: ;iring. He responded&#13;
Ibt: lfIauestion concerning ,the&#13;
III a ~ent of faculty review&#13;
fllabll&#13;
called for in the&#13;
;.odeh~~;,sDecember 10 [Klint&#13;
",..net 0"1 have no idea. I was&#13;
l"'I"~ved and will not be&#13;
~ ~ed" Baier was unaware&#13;
",01&gt; ";"ent Parkside Faculty&#13;
~ lbCi;uon statement calling&#13;
~e establishmento~ those&#13;
~h1iCguidelines.Mr. Baler ~as&#13;
..... officially met With llt,'er id&#13;
C&#13;
oncerning the Parksi e&#13;
JO'i(lle .'&#13;
r~euIlYAssOcIatIOn.&#13;
ReIlardingthe use of a. special&#13;
rt'iieW commi ttee, In the&#13;
~atter of the "super six" at th&#13;
time of the firing of 27 ParkSid:&#13;
faculty, Mr. Baier said, "This&#13;
has not b~n University custom&#13;
nor practice. I think it was&#13;
c~eat:d under very special&#13;
~lrcuI?stances. I have heard of&#13;
Its e~lstence. I have also heard&#13;
that It no longer does exist." He&#13;
stated that " ... there is no&#13;
!egal ~tatu~for that committee&#13;
In University structure."&#13;
In a speech before the faculty&#13;
last Wednesday, Joseph Baier&#13;
suggested that the admnustr-ator&#13;
is the only person&#13;
who can seen the whole picture&#13;
of the University. He did state&#13;
the " ... administrator doesn't&#13;
last long if he loses his&#13;
faculties. "&#13;
Recipients of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-P arkside Dis ti nguished&#13;
Teaching Awards for 1971 are Oliver&#13;
Hayward, Peter Martin, Robert Schrader&#13;
and James Ward. Each will receive an&#13;
award check for $500, which will be&#13;
presented to him at the Spring Honors&#13;
Convocation.&#13;
Recipients of Honorable Mention for&#13;
Distinguished Teaching Awards are Paul&#13;
Beyer, Walter Graffin, Henry Mann and&#13;
Roman Schauble .&#13;
Teachers Awards Committee Members:&#13;
Leon Applebaum, Stella Gray, Alan&#13;
Grossberg, Norbert Isenberg, Herbert&#13;
Kubly (chairman), Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
William Jeranek, William Loendorf,&#13;
Warren Nedry, Florence Onnhfk, Evelyn&#13;
sagat, Kathleen Turner. '&#13;
It&#13;
a&#13;
I:&#13;
..&#13;
•&#13;
..&#13;
APriI!!..ta. Vietor Christ Janner&#13;
Mythology and magic in architecture&#13;
P!f ..i&#13;
"I say that one stands before&#13;
the object condemned, helpless,&#13;
and fundamentally out of&#13;
control." "We think we can take&#13;
a simp.le idea like analysis,&#13;
synthesis and solution as a&#13;
mock-up model of life and learn&#13;
from iL"&#13;
It is Christ-Janner's belief&#13;
that man exists rationally in 8&#13;
profoundly irrational world, as&#13;
he said Thursday night in&#13;
Greenquist hall. It is this&#13;
TOTHE EDITOR&#13;
recognize that we are&#13;
nIpCIIlSibiefor having killed 1.5&#13;
milIiGIl Civilians,most of them&#13;
Americanand allied actions,&#13;
lid that we are not in any&#13;
p:ition to dictate moral conllJrt&#13;
10 anyone,and finally, too,&#13;
daIt the empire is collapsing in&#13;
lpiteor the injection to revive it&#13;
poriodicallythrough the circus&#13;
IIIoa 10 the moon.&#13;
Ilidtey Mouseshould retire to&#13;
Ibole and meditate about how&#13;
..... nUy,beastly and insane&#13;
- has been. After this&#13;
....ration he should self-&#13;
~ and perhaps from the&#13;
1Sb~ will emerge a New&#13;
.\alorO:an, a total human being&#13;
Who will see in himself a more&#13;
bumble, limited, and conIrIcktory&#13;
person and in his&#13;
10lio.. man another human&#13;
~ rather than a client to&#13;
I With in business or&#13;
IOm.thing that has to be&#13;
:::.OYedin order to get the job&#13;
Jose Ortega&#13;
Dear Editor' As' ,&#13;
Parkaia&#13;
concerned student at&#13;
~ . de Ueelthat it is my duty&#13;
....."':"~ oul a gross injustice&#13;
lbest~ been perpetrated on&#13;
I1IIde t bodtbody of UWP BY the&#13;
Then. y of UWP.&#13;
II theIn''·U JY.;&gt; ce to which I refer&#13;
IUd ~Iection of the New ~:~tGovernment&#13;
IlUdenlUon. The reason the&#13;
oJlI!ticebody perpetrated the&#13;
On Itself was not by&#13;
commission of an act, rather by&#13;
the omission of an act.&#13;
The act was voting in the&#13;
recent SGA elections.&#13;
FAILURE to vote by some 3,000&#13;
plus students was the reason for&#13;
the election of an SGA with&#13;
Luddites in control (Nice&#13;
campaigning Luddites!).&#13;
I, for one, have nothing&#13;
against any individual Luddite,&#13;
nor the group for that matter.&#13;
However, my' beliefs do not&#13;
happen to coincide with theirs.&#13;
To set matters straight, neither&#13;
am I an avid Tim Eaker fan. I&#13;
am, however, an advocate of a&#13;
strong stud~nt government&#13;
acting on those matters which&#13;
affect the relationship between&#13;
the student hody and the&#13;
university administration.&#13;
I cannot stand idly by while a&#13;
Luddite-sponsored, Ludditecarried&#13;
proposal to ratify the&#13;
"People's Peace Treaty" is&#13;
carried. Anyone who read the&#13;
last issue of Newscope could not&#13;
help but notice that those&#13;
members of SGA voting to&#13;
ratify are either declared&#13;
Luddites or were elected on the&#13;
Halloween Party ticket, itself&#13;
loaded with Luddites. No&#13;
matter who sponsored the&#13;
proposal, however, the SGA had&#13;
no business voting on it. According&#13;
to Article I, Section A.6.&#13;
under Student Government of&#13;
the Constitution: "The senate&#13;
shall investigate all policy&#13;
affecting student life and interests&#13;
they deem necessary."&#13;
If the SGA now seated deems it&#13;
necessary to ratify something&#13;
pertaining to anything so&#13;
personal as my beliefs concerning&#13;
the points covered in&#13;
the "People's Peace Treaty",&#13;
then it's already time for the&#13;
senate to investigate itself on&#13;
the matter of its collecth·e&#13;
swelled head. The senate can&#13;
"investigate" to its heart's&#13;
content, but it had better dray.&#13;
the line there Wltil the investigation&#13;
is complete. (I&#13;
believe "investigation" caJls for&#13;
a gathering of facts before&#13;
reaching some conclusion.)&#13;
My congratulations to&#13;
Senator Jeanette Dremel and&#13;
the other members or SGA who&#13;
had the forethought to consider&#13;
whether individual students&#13;
would desire to have someone&#13;
else voting for them on so&#13;
touchy a matter.&#13;
Meanwhile the SGA had&#13;
better clean its own constitutional&#13;
house before telling&#13;
me how to run mine. I'didn't&#13;
vote Halloween Party so 1 have&#13;
to thaok the pathetically&#13;
apathetic silent majority for my&#13;
plight.&#13;
John Leighton&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
OUR&#13;
ADVERTIZERS&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
JOIN THE NEWSCOPE STAFF&#13;
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED&#13;
STAFF MEMBERS NEEDED FOR NEXT YEAR&#13;
CREDITS AVAILABLE SALARIES&#13;
Get your name in the paper&#13;
DO SOMETHING FOR UWP -IT NEEDS IT AND NEll/SCOPE NEEDS YOU&#13;
COME TO THE STAFF MEETING THURSDAY, 1:30&#13;
KENOSHA CAMPUS, ME'SCOPE OFFICE&#13;
Tuesda)', Apnl 27 Red .. 1&#13;
Joanne Schlegel of l;WP musIc&#13;
facult)' will present a plano&#13;
recital 8:00 p.m Room 103,&#13;
Greenquist Hall T~nnl&#13;
Rangers vs ~Iarqu&lt;tte 2.&#13;
p.m. Pershing Courts. Racine&#13;
Golf. Rangers V5 Lo~ola&#13;
:. .... -$' «ll~~~~'8ll1~'I8IliIllll"lSlIllllll_•• __ ._"lIllllilll;l~illl;l~&#13;
Newscope&#13;
rationality which makes man&#13;
believe he can marupulate the&#13;
world with schemes of interaction.&#13;
This feeling is caughl m hi&#13;
creations 10 which he relies&#13;
beavily on myth and the natural&#13;
lay of the land He cnueued&#13;
technology for Its funcllOnal&#13;
aspect as lo the human 0,&#13;
perience. As be sa) _ "whoever&#13;
said thal functionalism ,. a&#13;
archilecll.o-e'! "ben we belle\e&#13;
that eVer)1hmg is packaged In a&#13;
place and everything in lIS&#13;
place, then "'e run mto thiS kmd&#13;
of reliance that totally depends&#13;
upon this perfect kInd of Idea&#13;
that I do architecture because II&#13;
CA p&#13;
He ho.. eel som&#13;
""urche .. hI"" are d&#13;
using hi archtol)pI(a) m&#13;
lo create an .lmaM m~ heal&#13;
appear.nC' of the nOt rlor&#13;
desIgn Som of the oho "ere&#13;
so spectacular that the aud.&#13;
.. round 100) r etten ap&#13;
proached that of a fIr "&#13;
dlsplay&#13;
. Ir Chn t ·Janner not onl)&#13;
poke but demon Ira. d&#13;
through hi 0,,""" cnoaho that&#13;
"archJtectw-- \erb. not a&#13;
noun, and UlIert'for It 10\"01\:&#13;
I A bean ~hlCh nolonl)&#13;
ph) !Calbut PJrI'Ua! a '" II&#13;
BE T&#13;
$amota In §,ined&#13;
,o/J~ w /J1aIian §'oorM&#13;
liquor Store&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
Monday. April 26, 0 lrlCI&#13;
Attorne) Talk. Burton SCOll ,.,11&#13;
speak on "Lawful Dissent'·&#13;
7:30 p.rn Room 0111&#13;
Greenqwsl Hall ponsored b)&#13;
the Pre-La .. Club&#13;
Warren 'edry Edllor&#13;
Marc Eisen :-.;-~ EdItor&#13;
John Koloen Copy EdI.or&#13;
Jim 'o)an BuslOe. tana er&#13;
John LeIghton Amerll IIlg&#13;
. lana ft'"&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, BoIl Soren~. BIll&#13;
Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Dean Lowno , ,hke&#13;
Kurth, Bob Borchard., Ken&#13;
Konkol, Ke\'In .leKay. James&#13;
Casper, Paul LornarUre, "en&#13;
Talis&#13;
PetTlf) In&#13;
Ba tball&#13;
Dominican&#13;
Domm n&#13;
prlr&#13;
Ran100&#13;
('our&#13;
r v&#13;
pm at&#13;
BUSI1''ESS STAFF'&#13;
areesSocha, Don .Iarjala, John&#13;
Gary, Barbara Scott&#13;
(loll&#13;
I t&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA- 658.3131&#13;
~wisconsin Tradition'&#13;
jor concerns regard- ,..., rna d .. ,J LU" It . personnel ec1s10ns&#13;
facu Yi·ssues at the time of were ded I ass firing. He re~pon&#13;
rn su·on concermng the&#13;
8 que . IO . tunent of faculty reV1ew&#13;
iablt es called for in the&#13;
d hn ' o · t 11 r's December 1 pom ce o "d I .,1 have no I ea. was&#13;
::ived and will not be&#13;
1.ed ,. Baier was unaware 011 -ec· ent Parkside Faculty lbt • a11· ation statement c mg&#13;
th establishment of those ~ e B. h _,11licguidelines. Mr. aier _as i-- officially met with&#13;
ere concerning the Parkside&#13;
lll,l'OO . t· raculty Assoc1a ion.&#13;
R arding the use of a. special&#13;
rt\iell committee, m the&#13;
~atter of the "super six" at the&#13;
time of the firing of 27 Parkside&#13;
faculty, Mr. Baier said, "This&#13;
has not been University custom&#13;
nor practice. I think it was&#13;
c~eat~d under very special&#13;
~1rcur_nstances. I have heard of&#13;
its e~1stence. I have also heard&#13;
that 1t no longer does exist.., H&#13;
stated that ". . . there is n~&#13;
!egal ~tatu:'"for that committee m University structure."&#13;
In a speech before the faculty&#13;
last Wednesday, Joseph Baier&#13;
su_g~ested that the administrator&#13;
is the only person&#13;
who can seen the whole picture&#13;
of the University. He did state&#13;
the " ... administrator doesn't&#13;
last long if he loses his&#13;
faculties."&#13;
Recipients of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Distinguished&#13;
Teaching Awards for 1971 are Oliver&#13;
Hayward, Peter Martin, Robert Schrader&#13;
and James Ward. Each will receive an&#13;
award check for $500, which will be&#13;
presented to him at the Spring Honors&#13;
Convocation.&#13;
Recipients of Honorable Mention for&#13;
Distinguished Teaching Awards are Paul&#13;
Beyer, Walter Graffin, Henry Mann and&#13;
Roman Schauble.&#13;
Teachers Awards Committee Members:&#13;
Leon Applebaum, Stella Gray, Alan&#13;
Grossberg, Norbert Isenberg, Herbert&#13;
Kubly (chairman), Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
William Jeranek, William Loendorf,&#13;
Warren Nedry, Florence Onninlc, Evelyn&#13;
Sagat, Kathleen Turner. '&#13;
Victor Christ Janner&#13;
Mythology and niagi in ar hi&#13;
.&#13;
' "I say that one stands before&#13;
the object condemned, helple ,&#13;
and fundamentally out of&#13;
control." "We think we can take a simple idea like analy i .&#13;
synthesis and solution as a&#13;
mock-up model of life and learn&#13;
from it."&#13;
It is Christ-Janner's belief&#13;
that man exists rationally in a&#13;
profoundly irrational world, a&#13;
he said Thursday night in&#13;
Greenquist hall. It is thi&#13;
tur,&#13;
TO THE EDITOR&#13;
recognize that we are&#13;
responsible for having killed 1.5&#13;
ion civilians, most of them&#13;
American and allied actions,&#13;
and that we are not in any&#13;
ition to dictate moral condiet&#13;
to anyone, and finally, too,&#13;
the empire is collapsing in&#13;
SJXle of the injection to revive it&#13;
nod1cally through the circus&#13;
to the moon.&#13;
1ckey Mouse should retire to&#13;
1 bile and meditate about how&#13;
arroganUy, beastly and insane&#13;
ha been. After this&#13;
ration he should selfct&#13;
and perhaps from the&#13;
e. will emerge a New&#13;
en~an, a total human being&#13;
will see in himself a more&#13;
mble, limited, and condictory&#13;
person and in his&#13;
ellow man another human&#13;
~ rather than a client to&#13;
1 with in business or mething that has to be&#13;
oyed in order to get the job&#13;
Jose Ortega&#13;
r Editor· As • I&#13;
Park ~ concerned student at&#13;
lo _ide 1 feel that it is my duty&#13;
~~ out a gross injustice as been perpetrated on&#13;
~Udent body of UWP BY the&#13;
Thent ~y of UWP.&#13;
thelnJUSlice to which I refer&#13;
hid ,election of the New -:t t Government&#13;
dent ion. The reason the&#13;
lice body_ perpetrated the on itself was not by&#13;
commission of an act, rather by&#13;
the omission of an act.&#13;
The act was voting in the&#13;
recent SGA elections.&#13;
FAILURE to vote by some 3,000&#13;
plus students was the reason for&#13;
the election of an SGA with&#13;
Luddites in control (Nice&#13;
campaigning Luddites! ).&#13;
I, for one, have nothing&#13;
against any individual Luddite,&#13;
nor the group for that matter.&#13;
However, my beliefs do not&#13;
happen to coincide with theirs.&#13;
To set matters straight, neither&#13;
am I an avid Tim Eaker fan. I&#13;
am, however, an advocate of a&#13;
strong student government&#13;
acting on those matters which&#13;
affect the relationship between&#13;
the student body and the&#13;
university administration.&#13;
I cannot stand idly by while a&#13;
Luddite-sponsored, Ludditecarried&#13;
proposal to ratify the&#13;
"People's Peace Treaty" is&#13;
carried. Anyone who read the&#13;
last issue of Newscope could not&#13;
help but notice that those&#13;
members of SGA voting to&#13;
ratify are either declared&#13;
Luddites or were elected on the&#13;
Halloween Party ticket, itself&#13;
loaded with Luddites. No&#13;
matter who sponsored the&#13;
proposal, however, the SGA had&#13;
no business voting on it. According&#13;
to Article I, Section A.6.&#13;
under Student Government of&#13;
the Constitution: "The senate&#13;
shall investigate all policy&#13;
affecting student life and interests&#13;
they deem necessary."&#13;
P7amout&gt; ~ f7med&#13;
@)~ w- #lalian P7oo&lt;/4&#13;
Liquor Store&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
KENOSHA- 658-313 1&#13;
If the SGA now seated deems it&#13;
necessary to ratify something&#13;
pertaining to anything . o&#13;
personal as my beliefs concerning&#13;
the points covered in&#13;
the "People's Peace Treaty•·,&#13;
then it's already time for the&#13;
senate to investigate itself on the matter of its collecth·e&#13;
swelled head. The enale can&#13;
"investigate" to its heart'.&#13;
content, but it had better dra\\&#13;
the line there until the inves&#13;
ti ga tion is complete. (I&#13;
believe "investigation" call for&#13;
a gathering of fact before&#13;
reaching some conclusion.)&#13;
My congratulation to&#13;
Senator Jeanette Dremel and&#13;
the other members of SGA who&#13;
had the forethought to con ider&#13;
whether individual student&#13;
would desire to have someone&#13;
else voting for them on so&#13;
touchy a matter.&#13;
Meanwhile the SGA had&#13;
better clean its own con·&#13;
stitutional house before telling me how to run mine. I · didn't&#13;
vote Halloween Party so I have&#13;
to thank the pathetically&#13;
apathetic silent majority for my&#13;
plight. John Leighton&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
OUR&#13;
ADVERTIZERS&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
JOIN THE NEWSCOPE STAFF&#13;
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED&#13;
STAFF MEMBERS NEEDED FOR NEXT YEAR&#13;
CREDITS AVAILABLE SALARIES&#13;
Get your name in the paper&#13;
DO SOMETHING FOR U P - IT NEEDS IT AND E SCOPE EEDS YOU&#13;
COME TO THE STAFF EETIHG THURSDAY, 1:30&#13;
KEHOSH A CAMPUS, NE SCOPE OFFICE&#13;
r &#13;
Pag~"&#13;
April 26, 1911&#13;
by Bob gorchardt&#13;
of the ewsrepe Staff&#13;
good the musicians are they've&#13;
got to have consistently good&#13;
charts to prate it.&#13;
A second flaw which is totally&#13;
inexcusable for an innovative&#13;
group is thrs- Chicago made It&#13;
by having an original sound and&#13;
10 a time when Imitation groups&#13;
arc dcminaung the market an&#13;
orjgmal sound should be held as&#13;
almost sacred With that in&#13;
rrund listen to "fUght 602&#13;
Bhnd". and tell me why they&#13;
gave it up for an exact copy of&#13;
Cr""by·. SlIUS. 'a h and Young.&#13;
ClI1Co\GO&#13;
Columbia Obi album)&#13;
110&#13;
1J in S('raphln('&#13;
ItntN.'rt l.dmm&#13;
"Ir rr&gt; Kuth guuar and vocats&#13;
\ It Pt.'rn Woochl.lnd.&#13;
I t ,nu~nan(' Trumpet&#13;
Pete C'l,t('ru Ra!'o~and vocals&#13;
JlIll P nku..... Trombone&#13;
I hrfl' can be no questioning&#13;
Ih(' (', Irbcr of the musrctans In&#13;
tfu groop If thl') had. lOPped&#13;
rl'( orthng .dttr tht'lr first&#13;
album thC'lr prohcl '1)(:) both as&#13;
\\,nlt'rs and In....trumentahsts&#13;
"HuhJ h.t\(' hi't'n proven There&#13;
(an ,lbu hi' no qU&lt;'slIonmg the&#13;
f,lC:I that If JJ1Z rOt:k I· 00\\&#13;
lUtl ,d('n'd a Il~~lllmat~ In·&#13;
.11\Idual form, 'hlca~o was the&#13;
~rnllpmO-'ot rlosponslble for Its&#13;
l'fMl(·l'ptlun and M:!) done the&#13;
I1lU' to propugalc It smce&#13;
Irr) BS&amp;T no apology IS&#13;
Ilt'n r))&#13;
T'u;,n- cun, ho\\('n~r. be some&#13;
I ~llI11l3Il' cfll1cal qU~liomng&#13;
,.tlnt:t'rntn~ thiS latest album&#13;
FIr I, and most ob\'lous or all,&#13;
I (IUt'~hon the It."gillmacy of Ihis&#13;
IS a daubl album Like too&#13;
lIlan) &lt;klubl~ diSCS commg out&#13;
luclay It could have made a hell&#13;
1t1.1sll\~l(' but suffers when only&#13;
Ih.lt mUl'h material IS stretched&#13;
tl,l,I(·(' as far No maller how&#13;
Drums&#13;
Key board and&#13;
Lastly. and very simply,&#13;
....ongs like "1 Don't Want Your&#13;
.\10ney··. "Travel Suite" and&#13;
..An Hour In the Shower"&#13;
cannot be tolerated from artists&#13;
with the formerly apparent&#13;
expertise of Chicago. These&#13;
songs are simply not worth&#13;
listening to.&#13;
Unlike their first album their&#13;
brilliance is seen only in&#13;
Oashcs, never sustained over&#13;
the length of an entire com+&#13;
position, Many people will&#13;
undoubtedly disagree, pointing&#13;
out songs like "Free" and&#13;
"Lowdown". But compared to&#13;
some of their earlier works&#13;
("Time", "Make Me Smile",&#13;
etc) they just don't measure up.&#13;
It SQunds corny, but they can&#13;
and should have done better.&#13;
FEATURE FILM SERIES&#13;
presents&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of The NewscopeStaff&#13;
.&#13;
flapjacks were first created by Jack ~;~p ~~&#13;
de e Missouri on December 30, 1 . ~adl~~m~sin' aroWld in his kitchen wh~ fhe c::&#13;
up with a unique batter, that when heate h orm k a&#13;
very tasty and filling cake. people ealled t e ca f~ne&#13;
flapjack in honor of Jack. EverythlOg went 1&#13;
around Independence until a hot shot newspaperman&#13;
from New York got on to the idea.&#13;
The city slicker took the flapjack back to, New&#13;
York with him, and of course clayr;ted credIt. fO,r&#13;
discovering it. Jack Flap was an Indian and didn t&#13;
tr-avel much, so the reporter ~idn't have to worry&#13;
about the true inventor becomlOg we~l known, ,&#13;
Once the flapjack hit New York, It was r-evised,&#13;
refined and renamed the pancake, The newspaperman&#13;
tried to tag his name onto it, but no one could g~t&#13;
used to asking for a Harvey Flourcake first thing In&#13;
the morning. Ever since this beginning, the pancake has enjoyed&#13;
international acclaim. Jack Flap die~ a pauper&#13;
on a reservation, and Harvey Flourcak~ died ,a very&#13;
unhappy man. He went i,nto eaudeville with the&#13;
pancake, juggling and aaung them 10 ev.ery small&#13;
town between Arne, Iowa, and Wheeling, West&#13;
Virgina. "&#13;
Al this history came to mind while I was m the&#13;
Village Inn one morning. I assumed that they don't&#13;
know the true story behind the pancake, because I&#13;
didn't see one memorial picture of Jack Flap or even&#13;
Harvey Flourcake on any of. the walls .&#13;
Other than this obvious slight on a great man, I&#13;
like the atmosphere of the place. Restaurant~ are~'t&#13;
built helter skelter. The building and mteflor&#13;
decorating are very important in the sal&#13;
products. Colors like orange and red are su e of ~&#13;
induce one into becoming hungry. The ~Plloed~&#13;
important if the customer is to feel relaxed. AU&#13;
ung&#13;
put together quite nicely at the Village Inn a th"&#13;
chain. ' nalllllll&#13;
No matter how the place is built or f&#13;
colors, the food still remains the most'dete&#13;
0&#13;
~1al&#13;
factor in popularity. The Village Inn speci:11I1IIC&#13;
pancakes, an.d as expe~ted, they have it downaes 1lI&#13;
tried the baSIC buttermilk pancake, with an PI! 1&#13;
coffee. egg and&#13;
The pancakes were excellent. The comb,nati&#13;
the butter and hot syrup with the pancake ot~&#13;
satisfy anyone's breakfast tastes. The egg was&#13;
5&#13;
r&#13;
over easy, .and done v.ery well, Some restaurants:&#13;
to serve ffled eggs WIth a tough skin underneath&#13;
yolk, I a~swne so the egg doesn't break if it is:&#13;
ped. Frymg eggs, I have concluded, is an art.&#13;
. Coffee is served i~ pitc~ers and left on the latit&#13;
WhIle the customer IS eatmg. There is no ...&#13;
'The London Merchant' Here This Week&#13;
Murder, Prostitution, and Women's Lib will&#13;
all be presented when the Parkside Players&#13;
group presents George Lillo's "The London&#13;
Merchant". The play opens Friday at 8:15&#13;
p.m. and will continue for Saturday at the&#13;
same time and Sunday at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts Room.&#13;
"The London Merchant", or "The History&#13;
of George Barnwell", is an 18th century&#13;
British play by George Lillo. It teUs the story&#13;
of George Barnwell, a London apprentice,&#13;
who falls in love with a prostitute, Mistress&#13;
MillWood, and is influenced by her to cheat&#13;
his master and kill his uncle for money.&#13;
Lillo based the play on a 17th century ballad&#13;
which told the true story of just such a London&#13;
apprentice. The original ballad has been&#13;
arranged by Marvin Pollard, assistant&#13;
professor of music at Parkside. It will be&#13;
played on guitar and sung by Mike Ingram&#13;
between scenes of the production.&#13;
"The London Merchant" is considered by&#13;
theatrical historians as one of the significant&#13;
plays which moved the theater in England&#13;
and all of Europe towards realism.&#13;
Lillo's play was one of the first to present a&#13;
common man as the hero of a tragedy. Lillo&#13;
wrote the play in prose instead of blank verse&#13;
and started the trend toward prose as the&#13;
principal medium of expression in serious&#13;
drama. .&#13;
In this production, Don Rintz who is&#13;
directing the play for· the Parksid~ Players,&#13;
ho~s to achIeve some of the realistic impact&#13;
WhICh the play made upon London audiences&#13;
r;~rRo~'~;;"'~l&#13;
I OUR r&#13;
I ADVERr'ZERS i&#13;
1 I&#13;
WINNER OF&#13;
4 ACADEMY&#13;
AWARDS&#13;
FRIDAY, APRIL 30th 8:00 P.M.&#13;
ELOT&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
ADM. 15C&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
AND&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
Please order your Caps &amp;.&#13;
Gowns for Graduation now&#13;
all orders must be in by&#13;
April 30th.&#13;
NEW!!&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
Budweiser.,&#13;
but you&#13;
•&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE know that!!&#13;
. . .&#13;
two hundred and forty years ago.&#13;
In 1731 audiences were stunned by the&#13;
"reality" of Lillo's dia19gue and were moved&#13;
to tears by the fate of George Barnwell.&#13;
"Realism in the theater has come a long way&#13;
since then," Rintz commented. "Today, 'The&#13;
London Merchant' reads more like soap opera&#13;
than serious drama, Some of the old·&#13;
fashioned conventions of the play, like&#13;
soliloquies and asides, often provoke laughter&#13;
from modern audiences. Yet in 'The London&#13;
Merchant', Lillo dealt with basic human&#13;
experience and emotions that are as strongly&#13;
felt today as they were two centuries ago.&#13;
These will be the focus of the productioo."&#13;
In this production Mitch Hebert (Kenosha)&#13;
will play George Barnwell and Annabene&#13;
Current Rintz (Racine) will play Mistress&#13;
Millwood. John S. Gray (Racine) has beeIl&#13;
cast as the merchant, Thorowgood; Karen&#13;
Glaeser (Kenosha) will play his daughter&#13;
Maria. Rick Donnely (Racine) has been cast&#13;
as Barnwell's friend and fellow apprentice,&#13;
Trueman, and Todd Rattle (Racine) will play&#13;
Barnwell's uncle. Millwood'S servants and c0-&#13;
conspirators, Lucy and Blunt, will be played&#13;
by Janet Gerler (Racine) and Rick PonziO&#13;
(Kenosha). Completing the cast are RaY&#13;
Waldie (Kenosha) and Art Dexter (Un""&#13;
Grove), who will play the policeman and the&#13;
hangman, Marc Colby (Kenosha) is the&#13;
assistant director and wilt be the stage&#13;
manager of the production. James C~xfocd&#13;
(Kenosha) is in charge of set construction and&#13;
lighting.&#13;
"Interested in starting r&#13;
your own business this a&#13;
nationally-known product?&#13;
summer with a new h&#13;
Write R.A.H. Distributing Company,&#13;
Suite 14. 4821 Sahler Street&#13;
Omaha, Nebraska 68104 • ,&#13;
or call 402-455-3995 (no collect callS) •&#13;
distributing company&#13;
:::?x::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::&#13;
i\\ Sunnyside :~j:&#13;
~\ Florists :~~\&#13;
~\&amp;Greenhouses j\\l&#13;
::::l KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 53140 l:&#13;
~:; '::: .:,' PHONE: 69"-6700 :-:-&#13;
::*:::;:;:::~:::;:::;:;:;:~:~:;:i:~=*~:~:~:~:;:i:;;=:::;:;:;:::::::::;:::;:;&#13;
it's t~e&#13;
real thing&#13;
Rowen - Fruit Bal,ts - Gifts&#13;
VI and FRANK WEINSTOCK&#13;
•&#13;
I' e \pril 26, I 971&#13;
La ti), and \ery imply .&#13;
h " I Don't \\'ant Your&#13;
ton)", ''Tra \' I uite" and&#13;
" \ n Hour ln the hower"&#13;
c nno b tolerated from arti t ·&#13;
\\1th U1 formerly apparent&#13;
•• - • bv Paul Lomartire&#13;
of The ;o.;ewscope Staff .&#13;
Flapjacks were first created by Jack F1apHm . · December 30 1851. e Independence, ~l1ssouri'. on. . h • he came&#13;
wasju t messin' around 1:1 his kitchen w en&#13;
up with a unique batter, that when heated formed a&#13;
\·erv tastv and filling cake. People called the cakf~ a · ·. k E th·ng went me&#13;
flapjack m honor or Jae . very 1&#13;
around Independence until a hot shot newspaperman&#13;
from , ·ew York got on to the 1de~.&#13;
The citv slicker took the flapJack back to_ New&#13;
York with ·him. and or course cl~imed credit_ f~r&#13;
di co\·ering it. Jack Flap was an Indian and d1dn t&#13;
travel much, o the reporter didn't have to worry&#13;
about the true inventor becoming we_ll known, . Once the flapjack hit New York, 1t was revised,&#13;
refined and renamed the pancake. The newspaperman&#13;
tried to tag his name onto it, but no o~e cou_ld g~t&#13;
used to asking for a Harvey Flourcake first thmg m&#13;
the morning. Ever ince this beginning, the pancake has enJOYed&#13;
international acclaim. Jack Flap die~ a pauper&#13;
on a re ·ervation , and Harvey Flourcake died a very&#13;
unhappy man . He went into vaud~ville with the&#13;
pancake. juggling and eating them m every small&#13;
town between Ame, Iowa, and Wheeling, West&#13;
Virgina. . . . Al this history came to mmd while I was m the&#13;
Village Inn one morning. I assumed that they don't&#13;
know the true story behind the pancake, because I&#13;
didn't ee one memorial picture of Jack Flap or even&#13;
Harvey Flourcake on any of the walls. Other than this obvious slight on a great man, I&#13;
like the atmosphere of the place. Restaurants aren't&#13;
built helter skelter. The building and interior&#13;
ft •&#13;
decorating are very important in the sa]&#13;
products. Colors like orange and red are sue or&#13;
induce one into becoming hungry. The ~l&gt;Osed&#13;
important if the customer is to feel relaxed· 4Jlli&#13;
put together quite nicely at the Village Inn· '&#13;
chain. • ana&#13;
No matter how the place is built O r&#13;
colors, the food still remains the most' de~ 0&#13;
factor in popularity. The Village Inn spec~~&#13;
pancakes, and as expected, they have it do&#13;
tried the basic buttermilk pancake, with anV.TI&#13;
coffee.&#13;
The pancakes were excellent. The combina&#13;
the butter and hot syrup with the pancak&#13;
satisfy anyone's breakfast lastes. The egg v.as r&#13;
over easy, _and done v_ery well. Some restaura&#13;
to serve fried eggs with a tough skin underneath&#13;
yolk, I assume so the egg doesn't break if it ·&#13;
ped. Frying eggs, I have concluded, is an art 15 dnt&#13;
Coffee is served in pitchers and left on ·th&#13;
while the customer is eating. There is no&#13;
• I rt1 . or h1cago. These n : are . imply not worth&#13;
hsl nmg to&#13;
'The London Merchant' Here This Week&#13;
nl1ke th ir first album th ir&#13;
brillian i een only in&#13;
na. h ·, never u ·tamed over&#13;
th length or an entire composit&#13;
ion . :\1any people will&#13;
undoubtedly disagree, pointing&#13;
out ng like " Free" and&#13;
" Lowdown" But compared to ,&#13;
ome or their earlier works&#13;
("Time' ', "Make l\le mile" ,&#13;
etc ) th y Just don 'l measure up.&#13;
It . ounds corny. but they can&#13;
and hould have done better.&#13;
FEATURE FILM SERIES&#13;
presents&#13;
WINNER OF&#13;
4 ACADEMY&#13;
AWARDS&#13;
Cll.M:ELOT&#13;
FRIDAY, APRIL 30th 8:00 P.M.&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
ADM. 75C&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
AND&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
Please order your Caps &amp;.&#13;
Gowns for Graduation now&#13;
all orders must be in by&#13;
April 30th.&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
1urder, Prostitution, and Women's Lib will&#13;
all be presented when the Parkside Players&#13;
group presents George Lillo's "The London&#13;
1erchant". The play opens Friday at 8:15&#13;
p.m. and will continue for Saturday at the&#13;
same time and Sunday at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts Room.&#13;
"The London Merchant", or "The History&#13;
of George Barnwell", is an 18th century&#13;
British play by George Lillo. It tells the story&#13;
or George Barnwell, a London apprentice,&#13;
who falls in love with a prostitute, Mistress&#13;
1illwood, and is influenced by her to cheat&#13;
his master and kill his uncle for money.&#13;
Lillo based the play on a 17th century ballad&#13;
which told the true story of just such a London&#13;
apprentice. The original ballad has been&#13;
arranged by Marvin Pollard, assistant&#13;
professor of music at Parkside. It will be&#13;
played on guitar and sung by Mike Ingram&#13;
between scenes of the production.&#13;
"The London Merchant" is considered by&#13;
theatrical historians as one of the significant&#13;
plays which moved the theater in England&#13;
and all of Europe towards realism.&#13;
Lillo's play was one of the first to present a&#13;
common man as the hero of a tragedy. Lillo&#13;
wrote the play in prose instead of blank verse&#13;
and started the trend toward prose as the&#13;
principal medium of expression in serious&#13;
drama. ·&#13;
In this production, Don Rintz who is&#13;
directing th~ play for the Parksid~ Players,&#13;
ho~s to achieve some of the realistic impact&#13;
which the play made upon London audiences&#13;
two hundred and forty years ago.&#13;
In 1731 audiences were stunned by the&#13;
"reality" of Lillo's dialogue and were moved&#13;
to tears by the fate of George Barnwell.&#13;
"Realism in the theater has come a long way&#13;
since then," Rintz commented. "Today, 'The&#13;
London Merchant' reads more like soap opera&#13;
than serious drama. Some of the old·&#13;
fashioned conventions of the play, like&#13;
soliloquies and asides, often provoke laughter&#13;
from modern audiences. Yet in 'The London&#13;
Merchant', Lillo dealt with basic human&#13;
experience and emotions that are as strongly&#13;
felt today as they were two centuries ago&#13;
These will be the focus of the production."&#13;
In this production Mitch Hebert (Kenosha)&#13;
will play George Barnwell and Annabelle&#13;
Current Rintz (Racine) will play Mistress&#13;
Millwood. John S. Gray (Racine) has been&#13;
cast as the merchant, Thorowgood; Karen&#13;
Glaeser (Kenosha) will play his daughter&#13;
Maria. Rick Donnely (Racine) has been ca&#13;
as Barnwell's friend and fellow apprentice&#13;
Trueman, and Todd Rattle (Racine) will play&#13;
Barnwell's uncle. Mill wood's servants and coconspirators,&#13;
Lucy and Blunt, will be played&#13;
by Janet Gerler (Racine) and Rick Ponzio&#13;
(Kenosha). Completing the cast are Ray&#13;
Waldie (Kenosha) and Art Dexter (Union&#13;
Grove), who will play the policeman and the&#13;
hangman, Marc Colby (Kenosha) is the&#13;
assistant director and will be the stage&#13;
manager of the production. James Croxford&#13;
(Kenosha) is in charge of set construction and&#13;
lighting.&#13;
"Interested in starting&#13;
your own business this&#13;
ADVERTIZERS !&#13;
•• •mJ&#13;
NEWll&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
nationally-known product?&#13;
Write R.A.H. Distributing Company,&#13;
Suite 14, 4821 Sahler Street&#13;
Omaha, Nebraska 68104 ' ,, or call 402-455-3995 (no collect calls} ·&#13;
distributing company&#13;
::if .. :..· ............ , ..... :, ............. ,' .. ';:;:&#13;
lj\l Sunnyside !Iii&#13;
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\{ Rowers - Fruit Baskets - Gifts [)l&#13;
VI and FRANK&#13;
-&#13;
WEINSTOCK&#13;
•:•:· I ·t= lf KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140 {&#13;
:)::._ ...•••• _F'HONE: 694-6700 :):)&#13;
.. ,. ·•·•·• ...... -...... --.- ~ ~ ~ :.~ :.:::· ...... • ..... :::. &#13;
waitress to fill your cup every so often, .&#13;
~ th;' only charged fifteen cents. This is the&#13;
;,.d'~ I have come across In a. restauram&#13;
,deasomeplace, is on the !&gt;all, thinking of the&#13;
~eone, f st at least in this respect.&#13;
cuswrnec I~~r anything other than the dozen or so&#13;
If)-oU°ou may be disappointed here and there.&#13;
;tU"skes,~ the chili was served 50 hot that it seems&#13;
'01' tnsta':opriatefor J~ar~~, Mexico: B~t.Chili is one "",pr differs from Individual to individual. I did&#13;
..,od tha ir chili, but the next person might.&#13;
.",rliie~~lther visit I had a chicken dinner which at&#13;
~Iars didn't seem all that good. There were four&#13;
... 00 r chicken that would seem to benefit from a&#13;
~ 00g in the breading. Included in the dinner&#13;
;tt5OI'I}renchfries, a sli~~ of candied apple, a&#13;
ttre e and a choice of JUice or salad.&#13;
t!t'~ are the only tw~ foods I ventu,red into&#13;
my visits to the Village Inn. Their menu&#13;
tiJrinB around pancakes, which start at seventy&#13;
ceo:7orbuttermilk pancakes, on up. There. are six or&#13;
"" different kinds of syrup that add variety to the&#13;
...."'1 that an individual could eat breakfast there&#13;
CIU" davsa weekand not run out of combinations of&#13;
....... k&#13;
;rup and panca es.&#13;
" '!be VillageInn chain seems to be a worthwhile&#13;
restaurant. Iwould look for one of these restaurants if&#13;
Iwere in a stran~e city,.ifthe Kenosha branch is any&#13;
odJ&lt;Ouon of their quality.&#13;
I realize the responsibility that Village Inns&#13;
"""America have shouldered in serving the public&#13;
• inStitution: the pancake. It seems only poetic&#13;
jIIi&lt;e that a descendant of Jack Flap be working&#13;
,....mere in the chain. If doing nithing, just&#13;
MSSiD' around in the kitchen.&#13;
McKenna on vote, war i:idinued from Page I) -&#13;
McKenna responded by wars the cost of litigation would&#13;
1I)'iDg, OlWesupport this piece rest entirely on his shoulders.&#13;
~ iogisIation because we feel He also noted that the ultimate&#13;
Ille peopleof Wisconsin are in purpose of the bill was not to&#13;
_olit ... if this is not true prevent Wisconsin men from&#13;
lIIeIl we'D hear about it in the serving in Vietnam but to test&#13;
n election." the constitutionality of the&#13;
President's .power to commit&#13;
the United States to an undeclared&#13;
war. "Referendum is not good&#13;
lO'm1ment. We are in a&#13;
"IIftIODtatiDnal form of&#13;
.....,..ent. What we're doing&#13;
laying that you have a right&#13;
10 10 10 the Supreme Court to&#13;
lIodout U the President has the&#13;
flD'I!I' to send young men to&#13;
lPt in an undeclared war ...&#13;
Ilis I based fundamentally on&#13;
" C4mstitutionof the United&#13;
.....:'&#13;
AlIted to characterize the&#13;
dill! IOUJ'ce of opposition he&#13;
IlIltd, liThe wording was&#13;
*ittly political maneuvering&#13;
was the strategy of the&#13;
_bOIl by delaying the ef-&#13;
~.' date of the bill thereby&#13;
-all it."&#13;
According to McKenna&#13;
~ the bill would give a~&#13;
lo'Crieved inhabitant" the right&#13;
refuseto serve in undeclared&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
t SUN. THRU THURS. ;~~ l11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE'{&#13;
~~FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.;:&#13;
« ~&#13;
~~f\HAMBURGERS~:~ 109 WISCONSIN AVE. 1011 60lb SI• II 40( &amp; 24( )!!: RACINE 631-9591 HNOSHA 654-2186&#13;
.. .. Open 7:30 a.m. - 8 p.m. Open 8:00 a m. - 9.00 pm&#13;
m SUP ERC HEW 1 Monday - Friday .Ionday - Frld&#13;
iii. (triple decker) :::: s::~::a~;:::a:~ Receivel:~.tu~~::o~:::n:1I&#13;
!il[:::::::::::::::::::::;:~:~::::::~:~::;:;:::~:;:!t a~.'.~~~.'.i~.e..~~:~:~~.s..u.~:i.'.~.u.n.~.~:.~~~.1 '!&#13;
Suggesting that the Nixon&#13;
administration left much to be&#13;
desired, McKenna was&#13;
reminded of the two democratic&#13;
administrations by a member of&#13;
the audience. McKenna&#13;
responded by explaining&#13;
"Johnson sent twice as many&#13;
men as were needed to Vietnam&#13;
and now Nixon is taking advantage&#13;
of this mistake by withdrawing&#13;
this surplus of men."&#13;
Concerning the proposed&#13;
State University-UW merger,&#13;
he said, "I have indicated that if&#13;
the merger would respect the&#13;
various areas of expertise of the&#13;
various state schools and it&#13;
would not impair the education&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin&#13;
. yes, I would support it."&#13;
VALED'S&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Open 6 0&#13;
ay, a Week From 4 p.m., Closed Mondays&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
21 FLAVORS&#13;
BEER 'Il' POP&#13;
WA';--$qjjjjV'==;,OP 4ItfJ&#13;
24-7 oz. bot. 12-24 oz. bot.&#13;
Stu $1.39&#13;
plus tax &amp; deposit&#13;
1428 Washin ton Rd., Kenosha&#13;
UW.PARKSIDE&#13;
STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES&#13;
SfJ.IIf,(MA&#13;
).w&#13;
o p&#13;
Spaid&#13;
THREE OPTIONS&#13;
CHICAGO to&#13;
LONDON&#13;
THREE DEPARTURES&#13;
June - Ju Iy - Augusl&#13;
$19710 $218 plus lax&#13;
For Information Contact:&#13;
Siudeni Aclivi Ii .. Olli'ce I&#13;
Talenl Hall&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
AprilZC.19il&#13;
rt ~--~--~--~~-~---r&#13;
1971Original Equipment&#13;
DOUBLE&#13;
BELTED&#13;
LONG MILEAGE TIRES&#13;
AS LOW AS&#13;
25&#13;
jirt$.ont&#13;
DELUXE CHAJllPION&#13;
SUp·R-BELT&#13;
WHlTEWALLS ADD '5.00&#13;
3ways to charge&#13;
·tn__ DE -.&#13;
·L...C£.TU..OTOOn'.I'l'.- ...... --.....&#13;
.QOl&amp;1.Lll£Ln:D~''!!~:::''!~~'~&#13;
.......... --- ....&#13;
DRIVE IN TODAY FOR&#13;
FAST TIRE SERVlCEl&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
····· .&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
·· . · . : •.••.•.•...•.....•..••..•............................................... ~&#13;
:- .&#13;
:&#13;
vaitress to fill your cup every so often,&#13;
~ the 'only charged fifteen cents. This is the&#13;
OU are . &gt; 1 have come across m a restaurant.&#13;
idea meplace , is on the ball, thinking of the&#13;
-~e so . h' . t CV" ' frst at Jeast m t 1s respec .&#13;
torner 1&#13;
rd~r anything other than the dozen or so&#13;
If you 0,&#13;
0u may be disappointed here and there.&#13;
. e. · Je the chili was served so hot that it seems&#13;
ror ta~opriate for J~ar~~· Mexico.- B~t_Chili is one&#13;
app differs from mdiv1dual to md1v1dual. I did&#13;
1ha~ ir chili, but the next person might.&#13;
e ;!her visit I had a chicken dinner which at&#13;
Onll~ didn't seem all that good. There were four&#13;
ck&gt; f chicken that would seem to benefit from a 0 g in the breading. Included in the dinner&#13;
;rench fries, a slice of candied apple, a&#13;
l!ft'ra e and a choice of juice or salad. ni!e are the only tw~ foods I ventu_red into&#13;
my visits to the Village Inn. The1r menu&#13;
around pancakes, which start at seventy&#13;
te~or buttermilk pancakes, on up. There_ are six or&#13;
different kinds of syrup that add variety to the&#13;
"\ that an individual could eat breakfast there&#13;
ltll davs a week and not run out of combinations of&#13;
an·d pancakes.&#13;
• The Village Inn chain seems to be a worthwhile&#13;
urant. I would look for one of th~se restaurants if&#13;
1 ere in a strange city, if the Kenosha branch is any&#13;
cation of their quality.&#13;
I realize the responsibility that Village Inns&#13;
America have shouldered in serving the public&#13;
institution: the pancake. It seems only poetic&#13;
uce that a descendant of Jack Flap be working&#13;
ewhere in the chain. If doing nithing, just&#13;
· ' around in the kitchen.&#13;
McKenna on vote,war Continued from Page 1) ·&#13;
cKenna responded by wars the cost of litigation would&#13;
g, "We support this piece rest entirely on his shoulders.&#13;
ltgi Jation because we feel He also noted that the ultimate&#13;
people of Wisconsin are in purpose of the bill was not to&#13;
r of it ... if this is not true prevent Wisconsin men from&#13;
·e'll hear about it in the serving in Vietnam but to test&#13;
t election." the constitutionality of the&#13;
'·Referendum is not good&#13;
erament. We are in a&#13;
rtpre entational form of&#13;
mment. What we're doing&#13;
saying that you have a right&#13;
ID go to the Supreme Court to&#13;
out if the President has the&#13;
er to send young men to&#13;
in an undeclared war . . .&#13;
based fundamentally on&#13;
Constitution of the United&#13;
.,&#13;
ked to characterize the&#13;
source of opposition he&#13;
ated, ' 'The wording was&#13;
llrictly political maneuvering&#13;
~~s the strategy of the&#13;
ttion by delaying the efe&#13;
date of the bill thereby&#13;
tn It."&#13;
ccording to McKenna&#13;
gh the bill would give a~&#13;
lo eved inhabitant" the right&#13;
refuse to serve in undeclared&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
President's power to commit&#13;
the United States to an undeclared&#13;
war.&#13;
Suggesting that the Nixon&#13;
administration left much to be&#13;
desired, Mc Kenna was&#13;
reminded of the two democratic&#13;
administrations by a member of&#13;
the audience. Mc Kenna&#13;
responded by explaining&#13;
"Johnson sent twice as many&#13;
men as were needed to Vietnam&#13;
and now Nixon is taking advantage&#13;
of this mistake by withdrawing&#13;
this surplus of men."&#13;
Concerning the proposed&#13;
State University-UW merger,&#13;
he said, "I have indicated that if&#13;
the merger would respect the&#13;
various areas of expertise of the&#13;
various state schools and it&#13;
would not impair the education&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin&#13;
. . yes, I would support it. "&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:oo P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Open 6 D '&#13;
ays a Week From 4 p.m., Closed Mondays&#13;
21 FLAVORS&#13;
BEER 'f' POP ~~'~---&#13;
&amp; WA u?·,//q --=: --==== 1//II\''~"' STOP&#13;
24- 7 oz. bot. 12-24 oz.&#13;
$1.11 $1.39&#13;
plus tax &amp; deposit&#13;
2428 Washington Rd., Kenosha&#13;
bot.&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES&#13;
SIUIUMA&#13;
Spui.ai&#13;
THREE OPTIONS&#13;
CHICAGO to&#13;
LONDON&#13;
THREE DEPARTURES&#13;
June - July - August&#13;
$197 to $218 plus tax&#13;
For Information Contact:&#13;
Student Activities Office&#13;
Talent HaH&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
(j;j SUN. THAU THURS. \ii&#13;
t 11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE t&#13;
1f:FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.MJ&#13;
11llHAMBURGERsllli&#13;
III 40¢ &amp; 24¢ J&#13;
:!II SUPERCHEW i~i&#13;
i1t{triple decker) !\11&#13;
Ifi: s s ¢ Ill!&#13;
April_, I ;1&#13;
1971 Original Eq ·pmen&#13;
DOUBLE&#13;
BELTE&#13;
ILEA&#13;
1&#13;
109 ISCO SI AVE.&#13;
RACINE 631-9591&#13;
Open 7:30 a.m. - 8 p.m.&#13;
• onday - Friday&#13;
Saturday to 5 p.m.&#13;
Bring this Ad and R&#13;
0&#13;
1011 01 s,. ~ OSH&#13;
tur&#13;
E&#13;
:.::.:•:•:•.•:•.•.•.• ... ; .. -:.:•:•:•.: ... :::.:;:.:;:::.:;:~:.:_:~_:.:.:::.:~~· ·-~~;:~: ................................................................ ..................... .. ! . . .&#13;
. .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
NOW&#13;
The Rolling Stones&#13;
GIMME&#13;
SHELTER 1&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
: ............................................................................ ... =················· &#13;
Palel Speak""At PSGA 'Gathering'&#13;
Centel' complex has been dr?pped. The&#13;
reason for the change is ~at It generally&#13;
has been University practice to h.av.&#13;
e&#13;
state&#13;
architects design state funded bUIldings. A&#13;
general architectural plan has already&#13;
been laid out but is still open to&#13;
modifications. . .&#13;
SGA then passed a resolutIOn 10-&#13;
troduced by Walter Ulbrict to appoint Ian&#13;
MacTaggert chairman of an A.d .. ~oc&#13;
Committee to investigate the possibilities&#13;
of student imput and review of present and&#13;
future construction. MacTagge~t&#13;
suggested having paintings place? 10&#13;
classrooms and that rooms be pam ted&#13;
colors other than white as possibilities for&#13;
improving the present conditions.&#13;
With the unanimous approval of the&#13;
Senate Eaker appointed himself (a&#13;
mandatory appointment), Dennis Cashion,&#13;
Edmund Gilday, Ian MacTaggert and&#13;
Madeline Theilen to the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee.&#13;
f&#13;
~'~::'::::'- ,S--h-p"'!"" P ,-,~"""".,&#13;
'r~ WW l&#13;
I rm~.J~·&#13;
I 7 :30-0~&#13;
6t_,..-..m"",",""",_''''''''''lII_."""m,''''"'''''II"",",ml'&#13;
Rubin To&#13;
b) \\ arren l"~dr)&#13;
or The 'e~scope- Starr&#13;
Arter a long and dehcate debate over&#13;
workmg , hnances and securuy, the&#13;
tudera senate passed a resolunon to&#13;
upport a gathering where people" III be&#13;
able to learn more about the Peoples&#13;
Peace Treaty The resoluuon was introduced&#13;
by Recording ecretary David&#13;
weber and reads&#13;
The tudent enate of the&#13;
UOlverslty of WI. on In-Park Ide&#13;
upport a gathering of people for&#13;
the purposes of tnW'·ldually endor&#13;
109 th Joint Treat) of Peace&#13;
-tween the peopl of Amertea and&#13;
orrh Va'lnam nd outh Vietnam.&#13;
and educating people about this&#13;
pnnK anti war movement and&#13;
related tOPiC .\ tentative list of&#13;
peaker mclud Jerr)' Rubin,&#13;
'lark Knopp,. eduor of MadISon&#13;
Kal.,do cope, Father Luke&#13;
\13 Arthur. 0 mtnlcan College.&#13;
Helen chiller, coordmator.&#13;
Ch,ldrt&gt;n': nre kIa I Program The&#13;
l'oordlnators 8rC Mark Tympany&#13;
and Dave W('ber PrOVisions will be&#13;
madt-. for lUdent marshalls and&#13;
stud nt government funds are not&#13;
appropn8tl'd m this mohon&#13;
The gathenng IS heduled to beg," at&#13;
10 a m Wednesday, Apnl 28, at the&#13;
Athie,," field on Wood Road Free food and&#13;
music "ill be provided. The county highway&#13;
department has warned that cars&#13;
parked on Wood Road will be ticketed.&#13;
The resolution met with a srngle opposing&#13;
vote, cast by Ken Ko~ol. ~fter ~&#13;
Involved discussion regarding (manclal&#13;
support of the event. Konkol inlrodu~e? a&#13;
motion to allot $25 for advance publicity.&#13;
The motion passed with only ~eane~te&#13;
Dremel in opposition. Further fmanclal&#13;
support will be taken up at this week's&#13;
meeting. .&#13;
In other business SGA passed a motion&#13;
to have Academic policies committee&#13;
investigate all the committees at Parkside&#13;
to which students are appointed and report&#13;
their findings to SGA. At an ear-lier&#13;
meeting SGA voted not to recognize&#13;
committees with student appointments&#13;
that have not been cleared with SGA. SGA&#13;
also passed a measure to send letters to all&#13;
student organizations requesting each one&#13;
to recommend one representative to serve&#13;
on the Ad Hoc Judiciary Committee.&#13;
Ian MacTaggert appeared before the&#13;
Senate and spoke concerning the architecture&#13;
of Parkside. "It's design is&#13;
rooted in decoration. It is designed from&#13;
the outside in, It is an expression of&#13;
technology." In his remarks he brought to&#13;
light the fact classrooms lack windows and&#13;
that most have no windows at all. He&#13;
reported that the firm from Sl. Louis thaI&#13;
designed. the Greenquist-Library Learning&#13;
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Englewood Cliffs, N. J- 07632&#13;
NEWH&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
PSGA presents Budweise&amp;&#13;
PEOPLE'S PEACE TREATY&#13;
GATHERING&#13;
with Jerry RUbin - Mark Knopps - others&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28&#13;
MAIN UW-P CAMPUS&#13;
AC1ivilies start at 10 a,m,&#13;
Peace is coming because the people&#13;
are making Ihe peace.&#13;
• • •&#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 - Receill'er" 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~&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are here, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
Faculty&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
. In business conducted .&#13;
10 the meeting, two :arher&#13;
were heard from HarbesoCJ&gt;orts&#13;
introduced a resolution n ..He&#13;
the Parkside Faculty 0 puttiog&#13;
as being against tiln recOtd.&#13;
executive budget proPO~alSlate&#13;
recommended m sand&#13;
Professor John Buenke~rfer&#13;
Personnel Policies Com o. the&#13;
reported that they are ~lIttee&#13;
process of establishing te~~~he&#13;
evaluation criteria w·th iii&#13;
emphasis on student im' an&#13;
. hich put .. Issue w lC he said Will'&#13;
handled separately beca be&#13;
its Importance. use fA&#13;
Professor Norbert Is berg&#13;
read a tribute to then I&#13;
Professor Harlow Mil~ ale&#13;
announced the establish and&#13;
1&#13;
. menlo(&#13;
a Har ow Mills Mem .&#13;
Scholarship in Mills' fiel~l~&#13;
Anamology.&#13;
Wyllie reported that lh&#13;
building program was go' e 109 as&#13;
planned and wasn't expecti&#13;
any cut-backs. He also ad~&#13;
that bids for the PhYeal&#13;
Education BUilding Wil~l be&#13;
received this week and that thr&#13;
Communication Arts Buildmg&#13;
will be bid on soon.&#13;
Members and Friends of&#13;
"Another Mother For Peace"&#13;
will hold a Mother's Day Few&#13;
Peace on Sunday, May 2, 1m.&#13;
at 2:00 p.m. at United AIM&#13;
Workers Local 72, :IlIlS&#13;
Washington Road, Kenosha&#13;
Les Aspin, Congressman IJIJI&#13;
member of tbe House ArmoI&#13;
Services Committee, will he lito&#13;
guest speaker in an informll&#13;
program which will include&#13;
open dialogue and Concl!l1lOd&#13;
Voices for Peace. There wi!&#13;
also be refreshments aDd&#13;
music. Open to all.&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
At the Young Democratic&#13;
Clubs of Wisconsin's State&#13;
Convention, held April 16, 17&#13;
and 18 in Milwaukee, Gregory&#13;
Barrette, Chairman of the V.W.&#13;
Parkside delegation, addressed&#13;
a caucus of the South Lake&#13;
District, which is composed of&#13;
the Young Dem clubs from&#13;
Racine County, Kenosha&#13;
County, WSU-Whitewater and&#13;
the U.W. Parkside unit.&#13;
He urged all delegates to vote&#13;
in opposition to the platform&#13;
plant supporting the proposed&#13;
tUliversity merger and budget.&#13;
but you&#13;
•&#13;
know that!!&#13;
The grievance and clearing&#13;
house committee of the&#13;
Parkside student senate is&#13;
looking for ad hoc student&#13;
members to serve. Interested&#13;
3tudents must meet this Friday&#13;
in room Di03 Greenquist at&#13;
10:30 a.m., when three ad hoc&#13;
mem bers will be selected to be&#13;
on the committee. They will&#13;
have full voting powers.&#13;
Free&#13;
Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#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;
The Kenosha Symphony&#13;
Orchestra, under the dir&lt;c\IJJJI&#13;
of Mr. Istvan Jaray, with the&#13;
Carthage College-Communil!&#13;
Chorus will present a emcertized&#13;
arrangement or "Dir&#13;
Fledermaus" by Joba"&#13;
Strauss at the Mary D. Bradford&#13;
High School AuditoriJll\.&#13;
8:15 P.M. Wednesday, AJIllI.&#13;
1971.&#13;
Soloists will be nona KOID'&#13;
brink, soprano. as orIofsky&#13;
Arcenia Moser, sopraoo, ..&#13;
Rosalinda; Jane Carm~&#13;
soprano as Adele; Ri&#13;
, EO'&#13;
Sjoerdsma, tenor, as&#13;
enstein; Davis Astor, teD'&#13;
as Alfred; Slephen M"""",&#13;
baritone, as Frank; and ~&#13;
Hottmann, baritone, as f&#13;
The performance will bt •&#13;
English.&#13;
The Cartbage Coll~&#13;
Community Chorus is com':-:&#13;
of more than 85 VOiCes WI'&#13;
directed and rebearsed bY&#13;
John Windb. . lie'&#13;
Tickets will be availa adttl&#13;
the box offi,e at $3.00 per&#13;
and $1.00 per student.&#13;
A professional&#13;
ABORT~&#13;
that is safe&#13;
legal St.&#13;
inexpensWt&#13;
be sel uP onfl .&#13;
can '111&#13;
outpatient baS.•1..5 ... ~I&#13;
The ,rOIJIenI ._-Jd Referral )P'-:-&#13;
215~722.536'&#13;
24 hOUrs-7 da~&#13;
for prOflSSiOJ\l1, :;.&#13;
and ,,",'OIl&#13;
Pa , ·e"' cop&#13;
Rubin To Sp~ai··'At PSGA 'Gathering'&#13;
Center complex has been dropped. The&#13;
reason for the change is ~at it generally&#13;
has been University pracbce to h_av_e state&#13;
architects design state funded buildings. A&#13;
general architectural plan has already&#13;
been laid out but is still open to&#13;
gin at&#13;
music ,,ill be provided. The county highway&#13;
department ha w~med _that cars&#13;
par eel on Wood Road w1I_I be t1~keted.&#13;
Th re. olution met with a smgle oppo&#13;
·mg vote, cast by Ken Konkol. ~Iler an&#13;
involved discussion regarding fmanc1al&#13;
upport of the event, Konkol introduced a motion to allot S25 for advance publicity.&#13;
The motion pas eel with only ~eane!te&#13;
Dremel in opposition. Further fmanc1al&#13;
upport will be taken up at this week's&#13;
meeting. . In other busines GA passed a motion&#13;
to have Academic Policies committee&#13;
m·e:-tigate all the committees at Parkside&#13;
to which tudents are appointed and report&#13;
their finding to GA At an earl!l!r&#13;
m tin GA vo•ed not to recognize&#13;
committee with student appointments&#13;
that have not been cleared with GA. SGA&#13;
al. o pa:. ed a measure to send letters to all&#13;
~tudent organizations requesting each one&#13;
to recommend one repre ·entative to serve&#13;
on the d Hoc Judiciary Committee.&#13;
Ian :'\lacTaggert appeared before the&#13;
modifications. . . SGA then passed a resolut10n introduced&#13;
by Walter Ulbrict to appoint Ian&#13;
MacTaggert chairman of an A_d. -~oc&#13;
Committee to investigate the poss1b1hbes&#13;
of student imput and review of present and&#13;
future construction. MacTagge~t&#13;
suggested having paintings placed m&#13;
classrooms and that rooms be painted&#13;
colors other than white as possibilities for&#13;
improving the present conditions.&#13;
With the unanimous approval of the&#13;
Senate Eaker appointed himself (a&#13;
mandatory appointment), Dennis C~shion,&#13;
Edmund Gilday, Ian MacTaggert and&#13;
Madeline Theilen to the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee.&#13;
-&#13;
-~----UNUltlUHt .. ,,,,. .. _,,.,...,,_, __ .. ;&#13;
,~s~ i&#13;
! rm~ .T~-&#13;
1 7 :30-0~&#13;
tii••••v•r---HHftH"INIHIUIHIHUUIIIIIUUUIHHtt; un1muumt111tllUIIIMIIIIII&#13;
Faculty&#13;
(Continued from Page ll&#13;
In business conducted e . in the meeting, two r arher&#13;
were heard from Harb ep0r&#13;
introduced a resolutioneson. He&#13;
the Parkside Faculty O PUtling&#13;
as being against th n record&#13;
executive budget prop0:a1 Slate&#13;
recommended m sand&#13;
Professor John Buenke~rfer&#13;
Personnel Policies Com O. the&#13;
reported that they are ~ilt&#13;
process ?f esta~lishing tea~ ihe&#13;
evaluabon criteria w·thhing&#13;
emphasis on student im1 an . hi h put an lSSUe W C he said Will'&#13;
handled separately bee&#13;
its importance. aUSe of&#13;
Professor Norbert ls ....._&#13;
read a tribute to th en"i""&#13;
Professor Harlow l\1i1\: ate&#13;
announced the establishm and&#13;
a Harlow Mills Mement_of&#13;
Sch l h. . or1a1 o ars 1p m Mills' field _ Anamology.&#13;
~y_llie reported that the&#13;
bmldmg program was go 1 d mg as&#13;
P anne and wasn't expecti&#13;
any cut-backs. He also addl'd&#13;
E&#13;
thdat bti~s for the Phy. ica]&#13;
uca 10n Building will be&#13;
received this week and that the&#13;
Communication Arts Buildi&#13;
will be bid on soon.&#13;
nate and poke concerning the architecture&#13;
of Parkside. "It's design is&#13;
rooted in decoration. It is designed from&#13;
the outside in. It is an expression of&#13;
technology." In his remarks he brought to&#13;
light the fact classrooms lack windows and&#13;
that mo t have no windows at all. He&#13;
reported that the firm from St. Louis that&#13;
d signed the Greenquist-Library Learning NElNS BRIEFS&#13;
?? PREGNANT ??&#13;
T T YOURSELF lt,j YOUR HOME!&#13;
CCURATE RESULTS I TEN MINUTES!&#13;
TWO TESTS PER KIT&#13;
PROMPT DELIVERY&#13;
D: CASH, CHECK OR MONEY ORDER&#13;
NEW!!&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
PRICE: $6.95 PER KIT + .55¢ HDLG. CHGS.&#13;
BE SURE PRODUCTS, INC.&#13;
375 Sylvan Avenue&#13;
Englewood Cliffs, N. J. 07632 GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
PSGA presents Budweiser*&#13;
PEOPLE'S PEACE TREATY&#13;
GATHERING&#13;
with Jerry Rubin - Mark Knopps - others&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28&#13;
Activities&#13;
MAIN UW-P&#13;
start&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
at 10 a.m, • • • but you&#13;
-&#13;
Peace is coming because the people&#13;
are making the peace.&#13;
know that!!&#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 - Receiver,, 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~&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are here, shop_ for _J~welry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin s lowest prices.&#13;
At the Young Democratic&#13;
Clubs of Wisconsin's State&#13;
Convention, held April 16, 17&#13;
and 18 in Milwaukee, Gregory&#13;
Barrette, Chairman of the U. W.&#13;
Parkside delegation, addressed&#13;
a caucus of the South Lake&#13;
District, which is composed of&#13;
the Young Dem clubs from&#13;
Racine County, Kenosha&#13;
County, WSU-Whitewater and&#13;
the U.W. Parkside unit.&#13;
He urged all delegates to vote&#13;
in opposition to the platform&#13;
plant supporting the proposed&#13;
university merger and budget.&#13;
The grievance and clearing&#13;
house committee of the&#13;
Parkside student senate is&#13;
looking for ad hoc student&#13;
members to serve. Interested&#13;
students must meet this Friday&#13;
in room D103 Greenquist at&#13;
10:30 a.m., when three ad hoc&#13;
members will be selected to be&#13;
on the committee. They will&#13;
have full voting powers.&#13;
Free&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#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;
Members and Friends f&#13;
"Another Mother For Peace·&#13;
will hold a Mother's Day F&#13;
Peace on Sunday, May 2, 1971&#13;
at 2:00 p.m. ~t United Auto&#13;
Workers Local 72, !615&#13;
Washington Road, Keno ha&#13;
Les Aspin, Congressman&#13;
member of the House Arm&#13;
Services Committee, will be thr&#13;
guest speaker in an inform&#13;
program which will inclu&#13;
open dialogue and Concern&#13;
Voices for Peace. There v.&#13;
also be refreshments and&#13;
music. Open to all.&#13;
The Kenosha Symphon&#13;
Orchestra, under the directi&#13;
of Mr. Istvan Jaray, with thr&#13;
Carthage College-Commum.&#13;
Chorus will present a caicertized&#13;
arrangement of ''Die&#13;
Fledermaus" by Johs&#13;
Strauss at the Mary D Bra~&#13;
ford High School Auditorium&#13;
8:15 P.M. Wednesday, AJXi)&#13;
1971.&#13;
Soloists will be Ilona Ko&#13;
brink, soprano, as Orlof )&#13;
Arcenia Moser, soprano,&#13;
Rosalinda· Jane Carmich&#13;
soprano, 'as Adele; Richard&#13;
Sjoerdsma, tenor, as E •&#13;
enstein; Davis Astor, te!Of&#13;
as Alfred; Stephen Ma~&#13;
baritone, as Frank; and !)a;&#13;
Hottmann baritone, as F&#13;
The pe;formance wiU be&#13;
English. The Carthage Coll&#13;
Community Chorus i~ com and 11&#13;
of more than 85 vmces&#13;
directed and rehearsed by&#13;
John Windh. _ lie at&#13;
Tickets will be availa&#13;
the box office at $3.00 per a&#13;
and $1.00 per student&#13;
A professional ABORTION&#13;
that is safe&#13;
legal&amp;.&#13;
inexpensa\'f&#13;
can be set u_P on:&#13;
outpatient ba915 bY&#13;
The pn,blelll Prtl.&#13;
Referral servi"&#13;
21s-122-s360&#13;
24 hours- 7 dafjdtf'lt · · nal o,n for profeSSIO . • t,tlP· and carin!I &#13;
GolfersWhip Lake Forest&#13;
uWP '9'&#13;
~JlmCasper&#13;
"'" Ne",cope Staff&#13;
(1IIl baseball, new at&#13;
!ItIdo Ibis year, got off to a&#13;
"" lIIrt as the Rangers won&#13;
... 01 a doubleheader&#13;
arcb-rival Dominican&#13;
The Rangers took the&#13;
..... 11-3, and won a 1-0&#13;
,..... duel in the second&#13;
....&#13;
played well for the first meet.&#13;
The course was in good shape&#13;
and the scores indicated it."&#13;
After their i~itial victory. the&#13;
Rangers ran Into two of the&#13;
state's best college golf teams&#13;
UW-Madison and Oshkosh, and&#13;
lost to both.&#13;
UW·Madison finished with 383&#13;
strokes, Oshkosh 391, and&#13;
Parkside 416, in a match held at&#13;
the tough Cherokee Course in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
~oach ?tevens was disappointed&#13;
with the Scores in the&#13;
Madison meet. Only one&#13;
Ranger, Leif GUHormsen&#13;
broke 80. He just barely did it'&#13;
shooting a 79. Tom Bothe shot&#13;
80, Bob Toeppe 84, Dan&#13;
Weyrauch 86. and Ken RossI Sf&#13;
Stevens attributed the&#13;
relahvel.y high Scores in part to&#13;
the rainy conditions that&#13;
plagued the meet. "The course&#13;
was w~t and it played long and&#13;
tough. said Stevens&#13;
Despite the poor weather&#13;
cond~tlons the Badger Golfers&#13;
had five men below SO. paced be&#13;
medalist Willy Tack's rj Tack&#13;
was not originally scheduled 10&#13;
play. but one of the starting&#13;
golfers had an exammatlon so&#13;
he was put in as a substitute&#13;
The Badgers were readv (0&#13;
play, having had considerable&#13;
pr.actice time dur-ing a spring&#13;
tr-ip down South. "Thev alreadv&#13;
had played three or iour matches."&#13;
said Stevens.&#13;
Oshkosh, finishing only eight&#13;
strokes behind the Badgers, had&#13;
balanced scoring with three&#13;
79's, an 80 and a 75.&#13;
Take Doubleheader&#13;
the first game, managed only&#13;
one ru~ in the second game. It&#13;
came In the sixth inning when&#13;
Jeff Koleske-s- walk was&#13;
followed by Ron Schmitz's&#13;
triple.&#13;
Coach Kenneth "Red"&#13;
Oberbruner was happy about&#13;
the double win. "The team&#13;
played well despite having no&#13;
place to practice. We hadn't&#13;
been able to get outside too&#13;
much before these games," he&#13;
said.&#13;
What pleased Oberbruner&#13;
most was the defense. "The&#13;
defense held up and didn't make&#13;
the number of errors that would&#13;
be normal for early games,"&#13;
said Oberbruner. He was happy&#13;
with the 13 hits lhe team&#13;
collected 'during the&#13;
doubleheader.&#13;
Although the squad has no&#13;
uniforms yet, it will Soon have a&#13;
home field if the weather&#13;
remains favorable. A new&#13;
diamond, with a freshly sodded&#13;
infield, should be readv shorth&#13;
It is located west of the soccer&#13;
field on the Wood Road campus.&#13;
According to Oberbruner. the&#13;
addition of a home playing field&#13;
located on the campus will be a&#13;
great asset to the team. The&#13;
field has been watered&#13;
frequently and looks quite green&#13;
now. Some miscellaneou&#13;
chores remain to be taken care&#13;
of, such as acquiring bases. but&#13;
nevertheless, the team should&#13;
be playing its remaining home&#13;
games on the new diamond.&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS-----&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
¥W (~.ooo ml) S6OO; '66&#13;
c:.r.net (12,000 mt.) $700,&#13;
.... Inoton Ave, Raei.&#13;
"'Osc, Auto, 6, $150, Also&#13;
lIIl-lSBFG tires, rims &amp; Bal.&#13;
ifill-IS OBFG Ilres (500&#13;
~ &amp; 801 560_ 859-2653&#13;
.,,-:"!!Idget COllY,New Ban,&#13;
'- lMto Keno, R, Smllh or&#13;
~ 'so! t&#13;
... aio .... p. 326, Sp, Coup, _ ' 6II-aocl,&#13;
....... 710&#13;
lD2Iit 2de HT, 287,51, Sh-&#13;
•Cllo.oi=-It---- -&#13;
Ao1ro' 301-350 hp, 4 sp, 4&#13;
.. ..... &amp; More_ 654-4440,&#13;
____ Ave, Keno,&#13;
~ twa. ltSobre $100, 1-634-&#13;
---------&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
-0&lt;1 Corpet treatment&#13;
0' the&#13;
ANK OF&#13;
MWOOD&#13;
".ryOne I&#13;
e Se does!)&#13;
1704 L .&#13;
_ ,.fhrop Ave,&#13;
tc, •• VI' , IS.&#13;
'68 r-r. Spitfire Mk III, Conv..&#13;
Low miles. 637-7966 or 654-9471&#13;
(after 6 p.m.) Rod Marescalo.&#13;
'63 Ram. Amer. Wag., Stk. new&#13;
clutch, muff, trans. 694-6353.&#13;
'62 Pont. Conv. Auto $250. 652-&#13;
1443 after 5 p.m.&#13;
'69 Ply. Rdrnn'r, 4 spcL 383-335&#13;
hp; rad, htr. 637-5520 after 5:00&#13;
'63 Olds 88 HoI., 4953 btt, high&#13;
comp. Best Offer. 654-6746 after&#13;
5:30 p.m. '&#13;
WANTED TO BUY - 2 used 3&#13;
or 5 speed 26" bicycles. Call 633-&#13;
3131 after 5.&#13;
RIDES NEEDED-WANTED&#13;
DRIVE a Pugeot to Min·&#13;
neapolis. Must get there before&#13;
June. Call 843-2225 after 5 or 657-&#13;
5121 ext. 36.&#13;
NEE 0 ride to Seattle or Anchorage,&#13;
Mayor June. Will split&#13;
cost. Call Barb 654-9631.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
MAOI SON summer sublet 2&#13;
bed. near Vilas Park. Call 608&#13;
251-8632, $65 per person.&#13;
ROOM - Men only, 59_00 per&#13;
wk. 3 blocks from Racine&#13;
Cam pus. Inquire 832 S&#13;
Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
MISC, FOR SALE&#13;
AMP _ Silvertone .4 channel.&#13;
Also mike. Best offer. Call&#13;
Cathy, 694-2769. Must sell.&#13;
ELECTRIC RANGE&#13;
Weslinghouse 30", $75;&#13;
REFRIGERATOR.&#13;
Westinghouse, 575. Box spnng&#13;
mattress for double bed. 575.&#13;
Ca II 633,0541.&#13;
e&#13;
-&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
"Prilai.• 1..&#13;
Netmen BIonic Dominican&#13;
In the double, , la&#13;
Herchen-. "elson d lea f'd&#13;
Tennis Tournament Set&#13;
A sprmg teem&#13;
for students and (a ult~&#13;
members at Par will&#13;
held at th(' R vx ("am&#13;
tennis court In P&lt;-Nh n Park&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
""&#13;
..., It CERLACH&#13;
~&#13;
s&#13;
117I1( Bill If&#13;
"Check OUI'&#13;
Price. 1.11_\("&#13;
4 07 ; lh \ \ I 'l I&#13;
'Tradition&#13;
.••• .•••&#13;
~::&#13;
~~;&#13;
~~&#13;
~~&#13;
=$&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
$'&#13;
~::&#13;
:~&#13;
~&#13;
f.&#13;
II&#13;
~~&#13;
.:-- For Cuafanh·ed Service &amp; Trade-in Value&#13;
~~; See Jim Merrie ~ ·'1114, HOllunond"&#13;
IHAMMO&#13;
~; STUDIO&#13;
::~: I ~29 lIa bonClOn PbOM 6H-216 I 1&lt; i'If Better Organs ore BUilt, Hammond _til bu.ld them,: ~.&#13;
;:::. :"':::-.:«:::::::*,~~":~..-..::.:.::.-:;:::s.w;::~""" - ~.&#13;
olf ers Whip Lake· Forest Weyrauch 86, and Ken Ro 1 ;&#13;
Ste\·ens attributed h&#13;
relati\'ely high :core_ in part t~&#13;
the rainy cond111on that&#13;
plagued the meet '"The cour ,&#13;
\\as w~t and it played long and&#13;
tough. said 'te\en.&#13;
Jil11 Casper&#13;
b1 \e11scope Staff&#13;
1/'fhe • won their first&#13;
Ri,.nr~r the season,&#13;
tc1.,akc Forest ~Y 15&#13;
nd Rockford by ;il.&#13;
a rn was paced by junior&#13;
uch and freshman&#13;
t}Ta \\'e1Tauch fired a I e •&#13;
a i4 . th r Ranger scores_ m e&#13;
d at oeerpath ~n Lake&#13;
Ill., were Leif Gut78,&#13;
Bob Toeppe 78, and&#13;
ilJjams 83. fil'e of six men shoot&#13;
iO' In the first meet was&#13;
'usfying to Coach Steve&#13;
n said, • 'The team&#13;
UWP '9'&#13;
b1 Jim Casper&#13;
,~ Sewscope Staff&#13;
baseball, new at&#13;
this year, got off to a&#13;
art as the Rangers won&#13;
of a doubleheader&#13;
arch-rival Dominican&#13;
The Rangers took the&#13;
e S-3, and won a 1-0&#13;
's duel in the second&#13;
de came up with eight&#13;
the opening game, and&#13;
the second. Dominican,&#13;
ile, was held to five hits&#13;
fi game, and only three&#13;
leap. Parkside's Carl&#13;
threw a three hit&#13;
in that game.&#13;
Ra ers, who scored in&#13;
of e first six innings of&#13;
played well for the first meet.&#13;
The course was in good shape&#13;
and the scores indicated it."&#13;
After their initial victory. the&#13;
Rangers ran into two of the&#13;
state's best college golf teams&#13;
UW-Madison and Oshkosh, and&#13;
lost to both.&#13;
UW-Madison finished with 383&#13;
strokes, Oshkosh 391, and&#13;
Parkside 416, in a match held at&#13;
the tough Cherokee course in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Coach Stevens was disappointed&#13;
with the scores in the&#13;
Madison meet. Only one&#13;
Ranger, Leif GuHormsen&#13;
broke 80. He just barely did it:&#13;
shooting a 79. Tom Bothe shot&#13;
80, Bob Toeppe 84, Dan&#13;
Desp11e the poor wea her&#13;
cond1t1ons the Bad er Golfo&#13;
had fiw men below 80. paced b,&#13;
medalist \\"illy Tack' ii Ta ·.&#13;
was not originally .-cheduled 0&#13;
play· but one of the ·•artm&#13;
golfers had an examination&#13;
he was put in a. a ,ub tllut&#13;
The Badgers were r ad, to&#13;
play, ha\'ing had con~1d r"abl&#13;
practice time during a ,pri&#13;
trip down outh. ··Toe, alread,&#13;
had played three or r our mai.&#13;
ches," said Ste\'en .&#13;
Oshkosh, fini hmg only eight&#13;
strokes behind the Badgers. had&#13;
balanced scoring \\ith thr "&#13;
79's, an 80 and a 75.&#13;
Take Doubleheader&#13;
the first game, managed only&#13;
one run in the second game. It&#13;
came in the sixth inning when&#13;
Jeff Koleske 's · walk was&#13;
followed by Ron Schmitz's&#13;
triple.&#13;
Coach Kenneth " Red"&#13;
Oberbruner was happy about&#13;
the double win. " The team&#13;
played well despite having no&#13;
place to practice. We hadn't&#13;
been able to get outside too&#13;
much before these games," he&#13;
said.&#13;
What pleased Oberbruner&#13;
most was the defense. "The&#13;
defense held up and didn't make&#13;
the number of errors that would&#13;
be normal for early games,"&#13;
said Oberbruner. He was happy&#13;
with the 13 hits the team&#13;
collected during the&#13;
doubleheader.&#13;
Although the quad ha no&#13;
uniforms yet, it will oon ha,·c a&#13;
home field if the weather&#13;
remains favorable A ne,,&#13;
diamond, wilh a freshh· .odded&#13;
infield, should be read,: hortlv&#13;
It is located west of the occer&#13;
field on lhe Wood Road campu.&#13;
According to Oberbruner. the&#13;
addition of a home playing field&#13;
located on the campu will be a&#13;
great asset to the team The&#13;
field has been watered&#13;
frequently and look quite green&#13;
now. Some mi cellaneou.&#13;
chores remain to be taken care&#13;
of, such as acquiring ba.- .. bu&#13;
nevertheless. the team :hould&#13;
be playmg its remaining horn&#13;
games on the ne,, diamond.&#13;
----CLASSIFIEDS----&#13;
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i 15 BFG tires, rims &amp; Bal.&#13;
l 9.'I0-15 OBFG tires (500&#13;
ms &amp; Bal $60. 859-2653&#13;
)&#13;
td Co&#13;
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ot the&#13;
8ANK OF&#13;
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e se does!)&#13;
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0C111e W' • I S .&#13;
'68 Tri. Spitfire Mk 111, Conv .,&#13;
Low miles. 637-7966 or 654-9471&#13;
(after 6 p.m.) Rod Marescalo.&#13;
'63 Ram. Amer. Wag., Stk, new&#13;
clutch, muff, trans. 694-6353.&#13;
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'69 Ply. Rdrnn'r, 4 spd, 383-335&#13;
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comp. Best Offer. 654-6746 after&#13;
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DRIVE a Pugeot to Minneapolis.&#13;
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FOR RENT&#13;
MADISON summer sublet 2&#13;
bed. near Vilas Park. Call 608-&#13;
251 -8632, $65 per person.&#13;
ROOM - Men only, S9.00 per&#13;
wk. 3 blocks from Racine&#13;
Campus. Inquire 832 S&#13;
Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
MISC. FOR SALE&#13;
AMP _ Silvertone A cha ncl.&#13;
Also mike. Best offer. Call&#13;
Cathy, 694-2769. Must sell.&#13;
ELECTRIC RANGE&#13;
Westinghouse 30", s75 :&#13;
REFRIGERATOR&#13;
Westinghouse S75. Box spC"ing&#13;
mattress for double bed, S75.&#13;
Call 633-0541 .&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Netmen Blan&#13;
Re&#13;
the Ran&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
PED&#13;
.. h&#13;
Cl y I&#13;
111"&#13;
p,-j . I... ,.. i&#13;
• ilh \ ,.&#13;
'1 r, die ion&#13;
For Guoro&#13;
Su Ji&#13;
Do • • ,n,can&#13;
• • &#13;
PaseS AprilZS.IS71&#13;
.....---Jethro TullBringsOutTherUnderground'-----&#13;
b) Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Se'Ascope Starr&#13;
America's cngtnal longhair. weaned on purple&#13;
hate acid and ''In·A-Gadda-Da-Vida''. by Iron&#13;
ButterOy. IS to. 109 hi imege 10 the underground he&#13;
created If the Jethro Tull concert in Milwaukee on&#13;
Apnl14 is any indicauon of the counter-culture of the&#13;
day&#13;
It seems to me that those ....ho Identify with the&#13;
I ft hav reached a new plateau of wealth The drab&#13;
clothing con. I ling of blue Jeans. fatigues. and other&#13;
urplu items. have en replaced by $8 T-shirts with&#13;
tars nd lIghtenmg bolt sewn on, fringe coats made&#13;
of leath rand uede, boots with an accessory atchm&#13;
nt. for spurs, and clever patches including&#13;
l\hckl''\o'Motbc and marijuana leafs. that cover the&#13;
, hoi an the old faded Jeans&#13;
But weather the COIlOOI .eurs of rock dress well&#13;
or not. It . e m. that a group like Jethro Tull brings&#13;
f\tqOO tDgNher. 81 least for one evening of music.&#13;
Bolh concerts \\ ere sold out in advance, With a few&#13;
hundred people "31lmK outSIde the Perform 109 Arls&#13;
Ct.'nt r for lick L~to fall out of the sky, or someone's&#13;
ket&#13;
Thf En~hsh musicians use the name of an 18th&#13;
c ntury 10\ enter. Jethro Tull. who among other&#13;
Ihl~ • founded fle\l, uses for manure in his native&#13;
England Th group consists of Jan Anderson. nute,&#13;
\'()('al and gUitar· ClI\'C BWlkcr. drums (the only two&#13;
orlKmal Tull member&gt; I.ft). Jelfrey HammondHammond&#13;
bass gUitar; John Evan. plano. organ,&#13;
nd !\larlln Barre, lead gUitar&#13;
Ian Ander~n is the founder and leader of the&#13;
group H appe red wearing knee high moccasins.&#13;
hghts, on e \\torn Inmerry old England, and a ripped,&#13;
pl ld, kn length robe. HIS dress and stage antics&#13;
prompted a ~1I1wukee Jow-nal writer to say that&#13;
Ander. n "100 as though he's stepped straight out&#13;
I an 18lh century· a ylurn."&#13;
Before an)"one could enjoy the music of Jethro&#13;
Tull. lhey were subjected to another English group&#13;
called Cun'ed Air. A female vocalist named Sonja&#13;
Krl ·tlona tried to get It on, as Tina l\Irner does and&#13;
Jopltn did. but came up short. Curved Air also has a&#13;
menacing V10hnist named Darryl Way. His function&#13;
was to abuse the viohn and capture the intensity of&#13;
Grand Funk&#13;
When thiS nonsense was over, and after a fifteen&#13;
minute Intermission, everyone seWed back to hear&#13;
Ian Anderson and company. The appearance of the&#13;
robe-clad nute player broughlthe entire second show&#13;
audience to its feet. To many. h~ has ~id ~s d~les ~&#13;
the underground with albwns Iike This Was, an&#13;
Cp, and Benefit, and cross-country tours the past&#13;
three years. . ed The new album Tull was to introduce IS nam&#13;
Aqualung. It is mainly the creation of Ian Anderson,&#13;
who calls the album ·'anti-religious". The album was&#13;
released in England awhile ago, but has not come out&#13;
in America yet.&#13;
Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull&#13;
After turnng-up and greeting the crowd, the group&#13;
began with "Nothing Is Easy" from the Stand-Up&#13;
album, The rest of the show followed the pattern of a&#13;
few old favorites and then two or three songs off the&#13;
new album. This mixture provided for a fine show.&#13;
The appearance of Jethro Tull at Uihlein Hall at&#13;
the Performing Arts Center was somewhat of a rarity&#13;
in rock. It isn't very often that anyone can enjoy the&#13;
plush surroundings of the Center and see a&#13;
rock group. IlOlIU1ar&#13;
Concerts are usually in huge arenas, or cav '&#13;
the Aragon and the Syndrome in Chicago. Th~like&#13;
peting, comfortable seats, elevator and car·&#13;
"luxuries" (not to mention the excellent accou~~her&#13;
proved to be welcome but confusing. Itwas too ~cS)&#13;
learn that crashers, who didn't get in, smash d to&#13;
glass door that caused some $400 damage. With ~ a&#13;
like this, Milwaukeens may have to get used t antics&#13;
accommodations like the Oriental "Theater w~ ~&#13;
costs $4 to sit on the floor. ' ere It&#13;
Individuals who have "followed this group 8i&#13;
1968 may argue that the group Anderson brou nee&#13;
MiNl""kee is not up to the standards set by thgh~&#13;
groups. on the first three albums, The first ~b&#13;
included Anderson, Bunker, Mick Abrahams IUIn&#13;
guitar, and Glenn Cornick, bass guitar. Abrciliead&#13;
started his own group after this album naams&#13;
Blodwyn Pig. Glenn Comic did two more albumsmed&#13;
then went on his way. For the current tour and alb and&#13;
the five member Jethro Tull is somewhat new urn,&#13;
Any skeptics as to the quality of the perform'&#13;
of the group were answered with Ian Ande:&#13;
Though solos on lead and bass guitars were&#13;
somewhat weak as compared to the original Tu1I&#13;
guitarists, the performance of Ian Anderson left&#13;
one questioning his talents, which I thought w no&#13;
worth the price of admission. eft&#13;
His lyrics in Aqualung concern a dirty old rnaa&#13;
who sit~ in the park "eyeing up little girls withbod&#13;
mtent.' SIde one IS devoted to the antics or the&#13;
'*&#13;
man Aqualung. Side two is called "My God" 8tId&#13;
her .. Ian Anderson displays his philosop,ies' .....&#13;
cernmg religIOn. The whole album which Jethro TuB&#13;
performed in full, seems to be an excellent wort&#13;
Many concert goers will either have to buy the&#13;
English copy, or anxiously await the release of the&#13;
album by Reprise.&#13;
o&#13;
..&#13;
o&#13;
..•&#13;
"•z&#13;
":&gt;&#13;
o&#13;
"w&#13;
w&#13;
•:&gt;&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
"&#13;
•&#13;
The lyrics of one song in particular will COII'1Oj&#13;
the tone of the "anti-religious" theme Anele....&#13;
spok,e of. The last song Jethro Tull performedia&#13;
Milwa.ukee, and the last song on side two ofthealbum&#13;
is called "Wind-Up". Standing alone on stage with biI&#13;
gUitar, Ian Anderson sang, "Well you caD a·&#13;
communicate me on my way to Sunday school,"udl&#13;
assume after hearing this album, someone,&#13;
somewhere will try to. But they weren't in tilt&#13;
audience the night Ian Anderson and Jethro M&#13;
captivated the Milwaukee counter-culture.&#13;
SUPPORT THOSE WHO SUPPORTU&#13;
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTIZERS&#13;
f,lol;' RRr~f\ooJ'o\-&#13;
~l:NOS)i" Cl\~&#13;
F\mJ~30 -MR~\t 2.. --::~-- ~~~..,.,&#13;
F~\- .. SAI. i:I!'t".·S,\.IN.'l:30r. .. ~&#13;
i\(.¥.~\S 4\.50 STUO}:Nls~.oo&#13;
f\VJ\)"~\3\-'f. ~, \)\i:. 'COOP-&#13;
.. t&gt;\"1!:C.~, -e'f Oo~ ~ \Mi~'~F&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
pregnancies up to 12&#13;
weeks tenninated fr&#13;
$17&amp;.00&#13;
Medication) Lab Test&#13;
Doctors fees include&#13;
Hospi~ &amp; Hospital&#13;
affiliated clinios.&#13;
(212) TR 7-8803&#13;
24 hours-7 days&#13;
PHYSICIANS REFERRAL&#13;
w. know .. can help you, eveft H&#13;
It's juat to talk to ·aomKn •.&#13;
NEW"&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
Budweisen&#13;
• • • but you&#13;
•&#13;
know that!!&#13;
~~BRAT'~&#13;
Where It's At!&#13;
DAILY SPECIAL&#13;
9 A.M. TO .4 P.M.&#13;
A Bottle' of&#13;
BiIllIIilE&#13;
A New If'meI of&#13;
Alcoholic Beverage&#13;
andaBEEFBURGER&#13;
ST~~K99· ~&#13;
BRAT ~&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
HOUR&#13;
MONDAY thru FRIDAY&#13;
6 p.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
Available Far Parties&#13;
, . PClrti,1&#13;
Op~~'uD;ilyat9niA."M .5&#13;
0&#13;
:&#13;
0&#13;
"l&#13;
Y&#13;
2 p.M.&#13;
d H· h"aY SO Narthwest Corner 1-94 an .g&#13;
pg Aprll ?6, 1971&#13;
.-----Jethro Tull Brings Out The 'Underground'-------&#13;
audience to its feet. To many, h: has ~id his dues~~&#13;
the undergrolllld with albwns like This Was, Stan&#13;
l'p, and Benefit. and cross-country tours the past&#13;
three vears. . ed&#13;
The new album Tull was to introduce 1s nam&#13;
Aqu lung. It is mainly the creation of Ian Anderson,&#13;
\·ho calls the album ··anti-religious" . The album was&#13;
released in England awhile ago, but has not come out&#13;
in America yet.&#13;
Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull&#13;
After turung-up and greeting the crowd, the group&#13;
began with " othing ls Easy" from the Stand-Up&#13;
album. The rest of the show followed the pattern of a&#13;
few old favorites and then two or three songs off the&#13;
new album. This mixture provided for a fine show.&#13;
The appearance of Jethro Tull at Uihlein Hall at&#13;
the Performing Arts Center was somewhat of a rarity&#13;
in rock. It isn't very often that anyone can enjoy the&#13;
0&#13;
....&#13;
0&#13;
X&#13;
6.&#13;
J&#13;
&lt;&#13;
z&#13;
a:&#13;
:,&#13;
0&#13;
.,&#13;
w&#13;
w&#13;
~&#13;
:,&#13;
&lt;&#13;
3:&#13;
J&#13;
i&#13;
plush surroundings of the Center and see a rock group. PClPlllar&#13;
Concerts are usually in huge arenas, or cav .&#13;
the Aragon and the Syndrome in Chicago. Th~ hke&#13;
peting, comfortable seats, elevator and car.&#13;
"luxuries" (not to mention the excellent acco other&#13;
proved to be welcome but confusing. It was too ~tic I&#13;
learn that crashers, who didn't get in, smash ad lo&#13;
glass door that caused some $400 damage. With ed a&#13;
like this, Milwaukeens may have to get used t anuc&#13;
accommodations like the Oriental "Theater, wi ro~ costs $4 to sit on the floor. ere U&#13;
Individuals who have followed this group si&#13;
1968 may argue that the group Anderson brou nee&#13;
MiN11111kee is not up to the standards set by th gh~o&#13;
groups. on the first three albums. The first ~b ll&#13;
in~luded Anderson, B~ker, Mick Abrahams, 1~rn&#13;
gmtar, and Glenn Cornick, bass guitar. Abrah d&#13;
started his own group after this album na allls&#13;
Blodwyn Pig. Glenn Comic did two more albums me(!&#13;
then went on his way. For the current tour and alb and&#13;
the five member Jethro Tull is somewhat new urn,&#13;
Any skeptics as to the quality of the perform'ance&#13;
of the group were answered with Ian Anderson&#13;
Though solos on lead and bass guitars wer ·&#13;
somewhat weak as compared to the original run&#13;
guitarists, the performance of Ian Anderson left&#13;
one questioning his talents, which I thought w no&#13;
worth the price of admission. re&#13;
H!s l~rics in Aqu~lun~ conce~n a dirty old man&#13;
~ho s1~ 1~ the pa~k eyemg up little girls with bad&#13;
mtent. Side one 1s devoted to the antics of the old&#13;
man Aqualung. Side t_wo is cal!ed "My God'', and&#13;
here_ Ian ~~derson displays his philosophi concernmg&#13;
religion. The whole album which Jethro Tull&#13;
performed in full, seems to be an excellent worl.:&#13;
Many concert goers will either have to buy u..;&#13;
English copy, or anxiously await the release of the&#13;
album by Reprise.&#13;
The lyrics- of one song in particular will COlll'ey&#13;
the tone of the "anti-religious" theme Andersai&#13;
spo~e of. The last song Jethro Tull performed ·&#13;
Milwaukee, and the last song on side two of the album&#13;
is called "Wind-Up". Standing alone on stage with hJs&#13;
guitar, Ian Anderson sang, "Well you can excommunicate&#13;
meon my way to Sunday school," and I&#13;
assume after hearing this album, someone,&#13;
somewhere will try to. But they weren't in the&#13;
audience the night Ian Anderson and Jethro Tull&#13;
captivated the Milwaukee counter-culture.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 13, April 26, 1971</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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