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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, Issue 14</text>
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            <text>Knopps and Rubin Address "a Gathering of the People"</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
VOLUME 3 NUMBER 14 MAY 3,1971&#13;
—FREEStalbaum&#13;
and Molinaro&#13;
Interviewed -page 3&#13;
Knopps &amp; Rubin&#13;
Address "a gathering of the people"&#13;
By Marc Eisen of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Parkside had its "gathering of people" to&#13;
support the People's Peace Treaty last Wednesday,&#13;
and an overflow crowd responded, filling&#13;
the Activities Building to hear.Jerry Rubin and&#13;
Mark Knopps of Kaliedescope speak.&#13;
The Gathering was sponsored and financed in&#13;
part by Student Government. Much of the crowd,&#13;
an estimated 700 strong, was composed of area&#13;
high school students.&#13;
Other speakers were Father Luke MacArthur&#13;
of Dominican College, Helen Schiller of the Racine&#13;
Children's Breakfast program, and an unidentified&#13;
youth who had just finished a two year&#13;
stretch at Green Bay for a dope conviction.&#13;
Rubin, noted yippie and a defendant in the&#13;
Chicago 8 conspiracy trial, gave an hour long freeform&#13;
speech that touched upon almost every&#13;
radical cause and interest around.&#13;
Among the topics he discussed were: women's&#13;
liberation, children's liberation, gay liberation,&#13;
male chauvinism, a Freudian analyses of&#13;
education, ecocide, genocide, American imperialism,&#13;
economic imperialism, Christianity,&#13;
water beds, organic food, Joe Cocker, Calley and&#13;
Manson, Cuba, dope (marijuana), drugs (heroin),&#13;
pacifism, March on Washington, Tim Leary, dope&#13;
smoking as a religious act, closet acid heads, the&#13;
army, J. Edgar Hoover, and the Revolution.&#13;
Rubin exhorted those present to go to&#13;
Washington. "If you're worried about violence,&#13;
Washington is going to be a non-violent action."&#13;
"They can't jail all of us. If we all stick&#13;
together, we can't lose. That's our power," he&#13;
said.&#13;
"What's going to happen in Washington is that&#13;
masses and masses of people are going to it to&#13;
raise the cost of war so high that it can't be carried&#13;
on anymore," he explained.&#13;
"It's going to spread," he told the audience.&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
by John Koloen and Mike Kurth&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
The Southeastern Wisconsin Committee&#13;
to Preserve Parkside met last Friday night in&#13;
Greenquist Hall. The meeting was primarily&#13;
devoted to intra-organizational problems but&#13;
included an address by Assemblyman George&#13;
Molinaro D-Ken.&#13;
Prior to Mr. Molinaro's address the&#13;
chairman of the meeting, Mrs. Ralph&#13;
Jaeschke, outlined the business to be&#13;
discussed which included the election of a&#13;
board of directors to prepare by-laws. Several&#13;
Parkside students were nominated including&#13;
Dennis Cashion, Tim Eaker and Ken Antaramian.&#13;
&#13;
Made up of local citizens and alumni of&#13;
the university the group is opposed to the&#13;
proposed UW-State university merger and&#13;
invited Mr. Molinaro to the meeting to discuss&#13;
the status of the merger bill in the state&#13;
legislature.&#13;
Molinaro began by explaining his strategy&#13;
in opposition to the merger noting that "The&#13;
University itself is a little naive or a little&#13;
stupid or whatever you want to call it. They're&#13;
playing a game that they know very little&#13;
about and they're on thin ice and they're about&#13;
to go under." He was referring to the apparent&#13;
lack of interest on the part of President&#13;
Weaver since Weaver had not approached&#13;
him personally concerning the budget cuts.&#13;
He added that the Green Bay campus and&#13;
community has shown almost ho initiative in&#13;
fighting the merger expressing the attitude&#13;
that if Green Bay doesn't show some enthusiasm&#13;
he is going to concentrate on aiding&#13;
the Parkside campus only.&#13;
"Parkside is the most important thing to&#13;
me. Any other field of education you've got in&#13;
this state, including Mr. "Buck" Weaver and&#13;
all his other aides that I'm about ready to let&#13;
Assemblyman Molinaro&#13;
them play their game of chance, let them wind&#13;
up with an open end book and let them&#13;
struggle for these two years and the following&#13;
two years and we'll see what kind of political&#13;
plum game we're going to end up with."&#13;
He re-emphasized his disappointment in&#13;
the University's "Ivory tower" attitude&#13;
toward the merger crisis. Turning to factors&#13;
causing the merger he stated, "We have to go&#13;
-C&#13;
a ID&#13;
? O&#13;
£&#13;
Molinaro Speaks to&#13;
S.W.C.P.P.&#13;
back to the Kellett reorganization of state&#13;
government. We had 83 departments before&#13;
the Kellett reorganization committee came&#13;
about, they sold us a package deal that we're&#13;
going to save $3Vfe m illion the first biennium&#13;
by reducing the 83 down to 29 departments, I&#13;
lost the fight by three votes. Today we have&#13;
153 divisions within the 29 departments, we&#13;
By Marc Eisen of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Beginning his speech as Jerry Rubin would&#13;
later begin his, Mark Knopps, the editor of&#13;
Kaleidescope, questioned the audience why they&#13;
weren't smoking dope, and when someone threw&#13;
him up a joint, he lit it, took a couple of tokes, and&#13;
then passed u He began speaking then on what&#13;
it is to be young m America and to be living in the&#13;
midst of a crumbling empire.&#13;
Knopps, who chose six months in jail rather&#13;
|than to testify before a grand jury on how he obtained&#13;
a letter from the bombers of the Army&#13;
Math Research Building in Madison, described&#13;
how in traveling across the state he has seen the&#13;
same thing —- kids not knowing what's happening&#13;
to them.&#13;
He spoke in a slow, deliberate manner that&#13;
contrasted to the frantic disjointedness of Rubin.&#13;
Aptly, in the background the easy sound of D avid&#13;
Crosby's album, If I Co uld Only Remember My&#13;
Name, played.&#13;
Selected extracts from Knopps' speech are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
"Most importantly, if we want to understand&#13;
ourselves as a group (and we are a group), we&#13;
have to see one key word — it may sound strange&#13;
at first, but everything fits together once you get it&#13;
in your head — that word is empire, because that&#13;
is what we are living in. We're right in the heart of&#13;
it.&#13;
"That's why we are what we are. That's why&#13;
we're here. Maybe we have never heard that word&#13;
before, empire. It's something you read about&#13;
when you study Rome. To me that is the word that&#13;
describes exactly what is happening to my life,&#13;
and the lives of the people around me."&#13;
He went on to describe the United States to the&#13;
Roman Empire in its last days.&#13;
"You go up to Madison and they're building&#13;
about five or six huge new buildings on the&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
even increased the payroll by almost 7,000&#13;
employees, and it is costing us $13 million&#13;
more each biennium, that's what they call&#13;
austerity, economy and efficiency in government."&#13;
&#13;
Molinaro»cautioned the audience of the&#13;
foreseeable effects of the merger (ie.&#13;
limitations on out of state enrollment, etc.)&#13;
adding that the ruling body over the merged&#13;
system would "evaluate the whole system&#13;
within the next two years ... and then&#13;
determine what's going to be on any campus,&#13;
which campus is going to be eliminated . . .&#13;
which campus is going to be allowed to grow&#13;
and which ones will freeze."&#13;
He warned that the president of this ruling&#13;
body would be a "dictator" over state&#13;
education as a result of the extensive power&#13;
his position will have.&#13;
Returning to an earlier point in the address&#13;
he notes that "All the businessmen and&#13;
professional people and the unions and the&#13;
PTA's sit on their hands . . . and they will&#13;
have what they have got today and a little&#13;
less."&#13;
Concluding with a plea for organized&#13;
efforts by the citizens, and students in opposition&#13;
to the merger he assured them that&#13;
"I'll do my best and I trust that you'll do&#13;
yours."&#13;
A question period followed and soon after&#13;
the meeting was turned to its regular&#13;
business. The regular business primarily&#13;
involved haggling over parlimentary&#13;
procedures while discussing a "position"&#13;
paper the steering committee had proposed. A&#13;
motion was finally made and carried to refer&#13;
the paper to the board of directors.&#13;
The turnout for the meeting was very&#13;
light, about forty people and only four&#13;
students attended, two were reporters. &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
OUR&#13;
ADVERTIZERS&#13;
May 3,1971&#13;
HUXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY&#13;
STORE&#13;
302 Green Bay Rci&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
634-1336&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
far 4* xt#/&amp;*ve/&#13;
EMIL G ERLACH&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Candy&#13;
eooa 40th AVE&#13;
KENOSHA WIS&#13;
OL7-B174&#13;
Open Soturdays&#13;
9 A.M.- to Noon&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FREE CHECKI NG&#13;
ACCOUNTS TO STUDENT&#13;
AND R ETIREES&#13;
3928 Sixtieth Street&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Symposium To be Held This Saturday&#13;
A one-day symposium titled&#13;
"Corrections and the Offender:&#13;
Treatment or Punishment" will&#13;
be held Saturday (May 8) at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
The symposium, which will&#13;
run from 9:30 a.m. to 3:15 p.m.,&#13;
is sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
&#13;
Keynote speaker will be&#13;
Sanger Powers, director of the&#13;
Wisconsin Division of&#13;
Corrections and chairman of&#13;
the Wisconsin Parole Board.&#13;
Prior to taking his current posts&#13;
Powers was superintendent of&#13;
the Wisconsin State Reformatory.&#13;
&#13;
He will talk on •Current&#13;
Problems in Corrections".&#13;
Discussants of the keynote&#13;
address will be Joseph Rowan,&#13;
director of the John Howard&#13;
Association, an agency&#13;
dedicated to the rehabilitation&#13;
of former prisoners, and Prof.&#13;
William H. Hewitt, coordinator&#13;
of the Criminal Justice&#13;
Program at UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
Rowan is a former deputy&#13;
commissioner of corrections for&#13;
Minnesota and has done&#13;
probation and parole work in&#13;
California and Wisconsin. He&#13;
served for seven years as a^&#13;
member of the National Council&#13;
on Crime and Delinquency.&#13;
Hewitt previously taught in&#13;
the Center for Law Enforcement&#13;
and Corrections at&#13;
Pennsylvania State University&#13;
and the Police Administration&#13;
department at State University&#13;
of New York-Farmingdale. A&#13;
consultant to the President's&#13;
Crime Commission, he is the&#13;
author of two books on police&#13;
administration.&#13;
Their talks will precede&#13;
showing of three award-winning&#13;
films, "The Odds Against" ,&#13;
"The Price of a Life" and "The&#13;
Revolving Door", which deal&#13;
respectively with maximum&#13;
security prisons, probation and&#13;
jails. A panel discussion will be&#13;
held after each film.&#13;
Charles Gray, Kenosha&#13;
probation officer, will chair the&#13;
panel on probation which will&#13;
include Delmar Huebner,&#13;
director of the Wisconsin&#13;
bureau of probation and parole,&#13;
Rowan and Hewitt.&#13;
Andrew McLean of the&#13;
Parkside faculty will chair the&#13;
panel on jails including Vern&#13;
Verhulst, Wisconsin director of&#13;
detention; Robert Ellsworth,&#13;
associate warden for treatment&#13;
at the Wisconsin Correctional&#13;
Institution-Fox Lake; Huebner,&#13;
Rowan and Hewitt.&#13;
James McKeown of the&#13;
Parkside faculty will chair the&#13;
panel on prisons including&#13;
Ellsworth, Verhulst and Rowan.&#13;
Persons wishing to participate&#13;
in the symposium&#13;
should pre-register by May 6&#13;
with Prof. McLean at the UWP&#13;
Kenosha Campus.&#13;
LETTER TO THE EDITOR&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
It seems the Parkside Police&#13;
threw a party last weekend&#13;
entitled "Meet the Parkside&#13;
Police", and as an extra added&#13;
attraction there was plenty of&#13;
pre-advertised FREE BEER!&#13;
Naturally with the free beer the&#13;
party' was a ripped roaring&#13;
success, as far as attendance&#13;
goes anyway.&#13;
To put it differently, the same&#13;
men who feel a need to carry&#13;
mace and revolvers while&#13;
passing out their $5.00 parking&#13;
tickets threw a bash. Anyone&#13;
and everyone who wanted to&#13;
could get drunker than a&#13;
roaring skunk, free.&#13;
To 'get it on' or whatever, the&#13;
officers were playing 'top forty&#13;
music' over the intercom on a&#13;
squad car they had parked in&#13;
front. The music was well&#13;
complemented by the red&#13;
flashing lights and blaring&#13;
siren. But that's not the point.&#13;
The point is . . . while&#13;
'Security' was getting into it&#13;
with their gesture of good will,&#13;
others were getting into&#13;
something else. Lost of suds and&#13;
M^AMPUS EVENTS^&#13;
Monday, May 3: Meeting.&#13;
Equestrian Club. 6:00 p.m.&#13;
Room Dill. Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Baseball. Rangers vs. '&#13;
Dominican. 1:00 p.m. at&#13;
Dominican.&#13;
Tuesday, May 4: Golf. UW-P&#13;
vs. UW-M and Carthage at&#13;
Petrifying Springs.&#13;
Music students at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will present a free&#13;
public Honors Concert at 8 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday. May 4, in the Badger&#13;
Room at the UWP Racine&#13;
Campus.&#13;
Wednesday, May 5: Film.&#13;
"Loved One". Presented by&#13;
Parkside Film Society. Room&#13;
103. Greenquist Hall. Admission:&#13;
$.50.&#13;
Friday. May 6: Golf. UW-P&#13;
vs. Whitewater. Petrifying&#13;
Springs. Feature Film. "Four&#13;
for Texas". Student Activities&#13;
Building. 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, May 8: Symposium.&#13;
"Corrections and the&#13;
Offender: Treatment or&#13;
Punishment". Sponsored by&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
9:30 a.m. - 3:15 p.m.&#13;
Greenquist Hall. Baseball.&#13;
Rangers vs. U of Illinois&#13;
Chicago. Parkside Athletic&#13;
Field. 12:00 noon. Tennis. UW-P&#13;
vs. St. Norbert. 1:00 p.m. at&#13;
home. Dance. 9:00 - 1:00 a.m.&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin I.D.&#13;
required.&#13;
Special Events&#13;
Summer Travel: Three&#13;
European Flights this summer.&#13;
Flight C departs August 15 from&#13;
Chicago to London and returns&#13;
September 12 from London to&#13;
Chicago. The cost is $197.00.&#13;
Flight D departs July 15 for&#13;
London and returns August 11&#13;
from Amsterdam to Chicago.&#13;
The cost is $197.00. Flight I&#13;
departs June 15 from Chicago to&#13;
London and returns September&#13;
18 from London to Chicago. The&#13;
cost is $218.00. Information&#13;
available at the Student Activities&#13;
Office in Tallent Hall.&#13;
r~&#13;
JOB HUNTING&#13;
We're So Proud of Mony's&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Program For College Seniors that we&#13;
will give you a copy of The Complete Job&#13;
Hunting Guide for the opportunity to&#13;
show you what&#13;
The Life Insurance Program for College&#13;
Students can do for you&#13;
for information send:&#13;
Name&#13;
Address&#13;
,Ci ty&#13;
Phone.&#13;
To: John J. Schmitz&#13;
612 15 th Place&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
652 4020&#13;
roaring and flexing their&#13;
muscles.&#13;
To get away from abstract&#13;
thoughts and state it bluntly&#13;
man, some people really got the&#13;
shit kicked out of themselves&#13;
there. Maybe because others&#13;
can't keep their beer down&#13;
without getting rowdy.&#13;
It's not the first campus 'get&#13;
together' with some "really&#13;
good fights" nor the last. But&#13;
with the proper encouragement&#13;
the Angel types could have a&#13;
hand in making Parkside by&#13;
creating the annual&#13;
McGovern&#13;
Committee&#13;
Formed&#13;
A Kenosha County McGovern&#13;
for President Committee has&#13;
been formed to promote the&#13;
candidacy of the South Dakota&#13;
Senator.&#13;
Co-chairmen of the committee&#13;
are Mrs. Linda Legler&#13;
and James M. Hansen. Hansen&#13;
was 1st District McCarthy&#13;
delegate to the 1968&#13;
Democratic National convention.&#13;
Other officers are&#13;
Robert Ormeth, secretary, and&#13;
James Taube, treasurer.&#13;
Hansen said the group was&#13;
aiming for a McGovern win in&#13;
the Wisconsin presidential&#13;
primary next year. He invited&#13;
persons to join the campaign by&#13;
contacting officers.&#13;
"We believe," a spokesman&#13;
said, "that Sen. George&#13;
McGovern is an independent&#13;
voice speaking on behalf of&#13;
millions of Americans, young&#13;
and old, who are deeply&#13;
disturbed and dissatisfied with&#13;
the performance of our&#13;
government at home and&#13;
abroad.&#13;
"We believe Sen. McGovern&#13;
is speaking to, and on behalf of,&#13;
millions of Americans who feel&#13;
alienated from their government."&#13;
&#13;
All interested students,&#13;
faculty, administration, call&#13;
654-4982 o r 694-2809.&#13;
GOnSORT&#13;
Policeman's Brawl.&#13;
We're supposed to be&#13;
proponents in the new third&#13;
world, not opponents doing the&#13;
same old shit. The energies&#13;
expended in fighting amongst&#13;
ourselves are not only wasted&#13;
but are a setback. If you gotta&#13;
get pissed off at least be constructive&#13;
— scream dirty words&#13;
or something about really bad&#13;
things.&#13;
A certain dude named Sly was&#13;
quoted in Rolling Stone: "We&#13;
just aren't into street-fighting&#13;
here."&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Warren Nedry Editor&#13;
Marc Eisen News Editor&#13;
John Koloen Copy Editor&#13;
Jim Nolan Business Manager&#13;
John Leighton Advertising&#13;
Manager&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, Bill Sorensen, Bill&#13;
Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Dean Loumos, Mike&#13;
Kurth, Bob Borchardt, Ken&#13;
Konkol, Kevin McKay, James&#13;
Casper, Paul Lomartire, Sven&#13;
Taffs. Mark Timpany&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
NareesSocha, Don Marjala, John&#13;
Gray, Barbara Scott.&#13;
BUSINESS PHONES&#13;
658-4861, Ext. 36&#13;
652-4177&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole&#13;
source of revenue for the&#13;
operation of Newscope. 6,000&#13;
copies are printed and&#13;
distributed throughout the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University.&#13;
Free copies are available&#13;
upon request.&#13;
2nd Class Postage paid at&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
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Mav 3.1971&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
of t he Newscope Staff&#13;
^ feature series&#13;
Finance Committee Member Stalbaum&#13;
NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
EDITORS NOTE: This is the first of a&#13;
four-part series on the merger vs.&#13;
UW-Parkside. The series will consist&#13;
of interviews with our state&#13;
legislators from Racine and Kenosha&#13;
counties.&#13;
Merrill Stalbaum is the assemblyman&#13;
from western Racine county.&#13;
Newscope asked Mr. Stalbaum if it was&#13;
true that Governor Lucey's merger would&#13;
save the state money.&#13;
"Governor Lucey has said we would&#13;
save the state $4 million by merging the&#13;
universities. I feel there are more funds&#13;
jeopardized than that because the amount&#13;
of federal funds for research purposes that&#13;
Wisconsin will receive during the next&#13;
bienpium amounts to $60 million a year,&#13;
which means a total of $120 million is&#13;
jeopardized."&#13;
Newscope then asked about the future of&#13;
the State universities.&#13;
Mr. Stalbaum answered: "It's impossible&#13;
for the state to afford to bring the&#13;
state university system up to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin system."&#13;
Newscope then inquired about&#13;
Parkside's future.&#13;
"There will be no priorities," he said.&#13;
"I'm not worried about Parkside or Green&#13;
Bay because we do have points in our&#13;
favor. After reapportionment we'll have&#13;
five more new assemblymen in&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin, the area sympathetic&#13;
to our cause."&#13;
Newscope questioned Stalbaum about&#13;
Parkside's ambitious building program.&#13;
"It will be costly," Mr. Stalbaum said.&#13;
"There should be quite a large amount of&#13;
funds for both Green Bay and Parkside in&#13;
the next two years. At Parkside the&#13;
potential for students is great. In order to&#13;
keep up with enrollment they've got to&#13;
build."&#13;
Will. Parkside funds be restored?&#13;
"I should think that Parkside would&#13;
have considerable of their funds restored&#13;
— so would Green Bay. The enrollment&#13;
determines the size of the faculty and the&#13;
amount of buildings you're going to need."&#13;
"Governor Lucey argues that the cost&#13;
per student going to Parkside is too high.&#13;
But you have the start-up costs and&#13;
potential for increased enrollment. I feel&#13;
when the dust is settled considerable of the&#13;
funds will be restored."&#13;
"I've been on Finance Committee for&#13;
four years and I've never really had to do&#13;
very much for Parkside. That is&#13;
changing."&#13;
Stalbaum said some state universities&#13;
may be in for a sad awakening. He considered&#13;
a partial merger of the two&#13;
systems, favoring bringing Stevens Point&#13;
and Platteville into the UW system.&#13;
He said: "There are three adjacent state&#13;
universities in three adjacent counties;&#13;
River Falls, Menominee and Eau Claire. It&#13;
is rather doubtful that all three of those&#13;
institutions will be kept in operation,&#13;
Menominee and Eau Claire might be&#13;
gone."&#13;
The topic then switched to taxes. Mr.&#13;
Stalbaum said there will be an increase in&#13;
both corporate and personal taxes as well&#13;
as property taxes. It may drive some of&#13;
our corporations out of the state by raising&#13;
the corporate tax from 7 to 8.4 per cent&#13;
"Taxes will go up to 14 per cent over the&#13;
present ten per cent on incomes over&#13;
$14,000. All the brackets will be increased&#13;
20 per cent, but the exemptions will only be&#13;
raised from $10 to $20." By this method&#13;
lower brackets will pay less and higher&#13;
brackets more.&#13;
Newscope then asked if Governor&#13;
Lucey's budget was going to make it&#13;
through the legislature or if there were&#13;
going to be any drastic changes.&#13;
Stalbaum answered that it probably&#13;
would be amended, spelling out every&#13;
phase of the UW system right in the&#13;
merger. The legislature could even&#13;
completely tie the hands of the Board of&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Newscope concluded the interview by&#13;
asking if the merger would make it&#13;
through the assembly.&#13;
"In the Democratically controlled&#13;
house, Governor Lucey is assured of 45&#13;
votes of the 66 Democrats, and he'll also&#13;
pick up some Republican votes."&#13;
will have a two-week's debate&#13;
Finance Committee Chairman Molinaro h&#13;
.^£i&#13;
what they amend, so it will go to&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Do you think the&#13;
merger will help or hinder the&#13;
University?&#13;
"At the start of the merger it&#13;
was such a loose affair which left&#13;
complete control to just one&#13;
person, the president of all the&#13;
universities. That kind of a&#13;
merger is the worst type of&#13;
merger you can get with all the&#13;
open loose ends for someone else&#13;
to tie for political purposes."&#13;
"The merger can be good and it&#13;
can be bad. The savings we would&#13;
make on the proposed merger as&#13;
it now stands since they lowered&#13;
their aims of an absolute dictatorial&#13;
type of merger. They&#13;
can't save more than $3 million in&#13;
the biennium and could cost us&#13;
$10 to $15 million more in the next&#13;
ten years."&#13;
"As it now stands, the merger&#13;
provides where the degrees&#13;
would be set, what the academic&#13;
course would be, and other items.&#13;
Mr. Molinaro can't see anyone&#13;
handling this other than Madison&#13;
— to the detriment of the other&#13;
schools."&#13;
Regents Must Change&#13;
"Eventually it will have to&#13;
wind up with 16 paid regents. If&#13;
you have to have 16 people who&#13;
are paid a salary to serve on that&#13;
it's not only the amount of dollars&#13;
that goes into it but it will turn&#13;
over the field of higher education&#13;
to a group of professionals and&#13;
that is bad since no one else will&#13;
have anything to say except the&#13;
group of professionals and&#13;
professionals are just like anyone&#13;
else, once they get control no one&#13;
knows anything but the pros. And&#13;
that is highly detrimental to the&#13;
field of education."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Would the&#13;
merger affect Parkside in particular?&#13;
&#13;
"If the merger says that they&#13;
will not phase anyone out by&#13;
statutory provisions and if the&#13;
merger says that Parkside and&#13;
Green Bay will be permitted to&#13;
have Master's Degrees, then that&#13;
won't be so bad."&#13;
"If they don't give us enough&#13;
money to start up that will again&#13;
stymie the whole program in both&#13;
Green Bay and Parkside. A&#13;
merger that will be worth&#13;
anything is a merger that&#13;
guarantees with statutory&#13;
provisions that state legislators&#13;
will have full control of&#13;
designating what is going to be&#13;
taught in any of these institutions,&#13;
the amount of money&#13;
that's going to be released for all&#13;
those institutions, that under no&#13;
circumstances can anyone phase&#13;
one out because they feel that&#13;
they can merge with someone&#13;
else."&#13;
..NEWSCOPE: Is the budget&#13;
being amended?&#13;
"The building commission has&#13;
now given Parkside the Student's&#13;
Union, the buildings for the&#13;
classrooms and a few other&#13;
items."&#13;
"They have come out with a&#13;
position paper of a mission for&#13;
each one of the institutions."&#13;
"They've hurt Parkside and&#13;
Green Bay by cutting off a certain&#13;
amount for the start up&#13;
money. I think half of that ought&#13;
to be restored, then that would&#13;
put them back in the proper&#13;
place "&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Is the merger&#13;
going to save money?&#13;
"In four years it will quadruple&#13;
the amount of money (spent) you&#13;
have saved."&#13;
"Five years ago 83 departments&#13;
were merged into 29&#13;
departments. This was supposed&#13;
to save $3V2 million for the&#13;
biennium. Now that same&#13;
program is costing us $13 million&#13;
for the biennium. And we now&#13;
have 153 divisions in the 29&#13;
departments with executive&#13;
secretaries in charge with no one&#13;
in charge."&#13;
Mr. Kellett is now in charge of&#13;
the university merger proposal.&#13;
Even so, the governor is only&#13;
paying attention to half of his&#13;
program.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: What about the&#13;
building program?&#13;
"We are getting just about 100&#13;
per cent of what we orginially&#13;
asked for. We did scratch out&#13;
BEER&#13;
&amp; WATER&#13;
21 F LAVORS&#13;
POP&#13;
STOP&#13;
24—7 oz. bot. 12—24 oz. bot.&#13;
$1.11 $1.39&#13;
plus tax &amp; d eposit&#13;
2428 Washington RdKenosha&#13;
housing for students because I&#13;
am not in favor of putting&#13;
student's housing on the campus.&#13;
I want private enterprise to&#13;
handle that at all times."&#13;
"County trunk E is going to be&#13;
four lane all the way to Sheridan&#13;
Road. We are planning a new four&#13;
lane freeway coming by. Somers&#13;
road, county trunk E, is going to&#13;
be four lanes going to the Isystem.&#13;
We're building a belt line&#13;
that is coming around it. It goes&#13;
in from Racine, takes into Highway&#13;
20, comes around just about&#13;
a mile west of the Green Bay&#13;
Road. By about 1980 we'll have it&#13;
all done."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Will there be tax&#13;
increases?&#13;
"Corporations and industry&#13;
haven't had an income tax raise&#13;
in 20 years. So maybe it is time&#13;
that they adjust their brackets&#13;
slightly. I don't think they're&#13;
getting too big a hit. I think&#13;
between 5 and $12 thousand income&#13;
is where the real tax bite&#13;
is."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Will merger&#13;
pass?&#13;
"That's anybody's guess.&#13;
Everyone has a pet. I imagine&#13;
you'll agree to my type of merger&#13;
provided your interest is well&#13;
protected by statutory law."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Has there been&#13;
any discussion on the floor:&#13;
"Nothing has been talked over&#13;
on any floor yet, either the&#13;
assembly or the senate, until that&#13;
budget bill gets out."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Will there be a&#13;
great deal of argument once it&#13;
does come out?&#13;
"I'm hopeful we'll get it out of&#13;
there after we get it on the floor.&#13;
It's going to take three weeks to&#13;
get it out of finance if not more.&#13;
Once it gets on the floor it's going&#13;
to be a week's debate if n ot more.&#13;
When it gets over to the senate it&#13;
the committee on negotiations."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: When will the&#13;
budget come out?&#13;
"When we get through with it. I&#13;
don't know. If the budget isn't&#13;
adopted by July 1 we operate on&#13;
the last budget. It could get a&#13;
little tight."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Will the merger&#13;
be in the final budget?&#13;
"Some say no, some say yes.&#13;
We don't even know how many&#13;
votes we've got in Finance&#13;
Committee. We could send the&#13;
budget up for indefinate postponement&#13;
with 11 votes of 14 now,&#13;
then send it to senate and kill it&#13;
there too."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Are other&#13;
campuses for the merger tie.&#13;
Steven's Point and Platteville?&#13;
"Not at Steven's Point. They're&#13;
going to get eliminated. They&#13;
have a lot more to worry about&#13;
than they think. Eventually a lot&#13;
of campuses will be phased out."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: If merger goes&#13;
through, will salaries of State&#13;
Universities be brought up to the&#13;
level of the UW system?&#13;
"No, because they can't teach&#13;
the same level of education. The&#13;
merger doesn't upgrade the&#13;
standards, it's not going to give&#13;
you the type of education any&#13;
different than what you have&#13;
now."&#13;
"It's just a fancy deal that you&#13;
think you've got to do something&#13;
because you got into the governor's&#13;
chair and because Kellett&#13;
was crazy enough to think he had&#13;
another second hand dream like&#13;
the first one which I lost with&#13;
three votes."&#13;
"You don't upgrade by consolidation&#13;
and merger, you&#13;
create bigger chaos, bigger&#13;
dynasties."&#13;
Next week: Senators Dorman&#13;
and Devitt.&#13;
Parkside's Fea ture F ilm Series&#13;
presents&#13;
HOW THE WEST WHS LOST.&#13;
FRANK • EAN&#13;
s IN n ma • Ma R tin&#13;
ANITA URSULA&#13;
E 11 IE RG AND Rl ESS&#13;
i&#13;
mm&#13;
i x :&#13;
FOR TEXAS&#13;
mm&#13;
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Talent Hal! &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE May 3,1971&#13;
By Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
For the sake of all you people&#13;
who believe that the adage, "If&#13;
you ean't say something nice,&#13;
don't say anything at all",&#13;
applies to music critics, I ask&#13;
you to turn to the sports section.&#13;
The David Baker group simply&#13;
did not live up to its advance&#13;
publicity. But I'll do this much;&#13;
I'll begin with a few remarks in&#13;
their defense.&#13;
First of all, the Greenquist&#13;
Concourse is intended to be a&#13;
concert hall about as much as&#13;
La Scala is intended for Roller&#13;
Derby. That afternoon I often&#13;
felt as if I was listening to a&#13;
concert in a sewer tunnel with a&#13;
pail over my head. Secondly,&#13;
the group had been playing, I&#13;
was told, till 3 a.m. the day&#13;
before and therefore was not at&#13;
its peak of proficiency. But for&#13;
lack of further argumentative&#13;
material, the defense must now&#13;
rest, and give way to the&#13;
prosecution.&#13;
The music itself was little&#13;
more than pure West Coast&#13;
funk, ala Quincy Jones, and at&#13;
times Don Sebesky. It's very&#13;
suitable for background music;&#13;
you can hear it on the Bill Cosby&#13;
show, but when put out front in&#13;
the limelight, it just doesn't&#13;
seem to fit. Besides, I went to&#13;
hear something new, somethihg&#13;
a little innovative. I was&#13;
listening to this same stuff ten&#13;
years ago and it didn't thrill me&#13;
then.&#13;
As far as the individual&#13;
members go, I'd have to admit&#13;
that I liked what Baker was&#13;
doing on trombone. Unlike the&#13;
others, you could tell that on his&#13;
solos he had a command of both&#13;
style and the chord procession&#13;
behind him. If the tunes weren't&#13;
innovative, at least he was. But&#13;
other than Dave, I was hard&#13;
pressed to find anything impressive.&#13;
The drummer did&#13;
nothing but whack out a«&#13;
m o not o n ous C H U N K - A&#13;
CHUNK-A CHUNK-A Boogalooooff,&#13;
ad nauseum, until my&#13;
head throbbed. The alto man,&#13;
who could best be described as a&#13;
musical sisyphus, seemed to&#13;
pick up an idea, work on it, build&#13;
it up to a point where he was&#13;
just about to really do&#13;
something, and then drop it.&#13;
The trumpet player constantly&#13;
used every trick in the book to&#13;
make the audience think he was&#13;
playing jazzy.&#13;
To think that I thought I was&#13;
getting a bargain by only&#13;
paying 50 cen ts to get in!&#13;
•MaAat ^acle&#13;
By James Madura&#13;
Opposites are often the most&#13;
interesting and entertaining&#13;
aspects of life. Dominican&#13;
College's Lakefront Players with&#13;
their production of Marat-Sade&#13;
provided an evening of delightful&#13;
opposites.&#13;
The play itself is the greatest&#13;
opposite of all when compared to&#13;
the "terribly worthwhile" but&#13;
boring plays usually done by&#13;
college companies. Peter Weiss'&#13;
Marat-Sade is a modern play&#13;
filled with life, and manifesting&#13;
stimulating theatre as rarely&#13;
seen in this area.&#13;
Dominican's production has&#13;
strong and weak points. The&#13;
uneffective set, tired lighting,&#13;
and other minor defects are&#13;
overshadowed by the strikingly&#13;
strong points. Chief of these were&#13;
the inmates. Eight adept actors&#13;
playing hard roles that set both&#13;
mood and pace for the entire&#13;
production. Several of these&#13;
young actors developed and&#13;
maintained their insanity to near&#13;
perfection, without overshadowing&#13;
the main action of the&#13;
play.&#13;
Alex Korff as Marat had a&#13;
voice that was musical and&#13;
enhanced his speeches. Unfortunately,&#13;
he lacked, developed&#13;
or sustained characterization&#13;
which should have corresponded&#13;
with his vocal quality.&#13;
Dennis Lynch as De Sade and&#13;
Bruce Greening as the Herald&#13;
gave performances worthy of&#13;
seasoned actors. They were good&#13;
without being extraordinary and&#13;
complemented the rest of the&#13;
cast.&#13;
The acting highlight of the play&#13;
was given by three show-stealers,&#13;
the singers. Deb Clifton, as&#13;
Rossingol, Dan Pekarske as&#13;
Cucurucu, and Nick Bart portraying&#13;
Polpoch combined three&#13;
bodies and three voices to make&#13;
one or struck out seperately to&#13;
complement each other. These&#13;
people are ACTORS.&#13;
Unfortunately the director&#13;
chose to let his cast j)lay for the&#13;
audience and not to and with&#13;
them. This decision weakened the&#13;
emotional and dramatic effect of&#13;
the production upon the audience.&#13;
Rarely did the audience react&#13;
with the cast and then only out of&#13;
curiosity.&#13;
As a whole "The Persecution&#13;
and Assassination of Jean-Paul&#13;
Marat as performed by the inmates&#13;
of the Asylum of&#13;
Charenton under the direction of&#13;
the Marquis de Sade" is a play&#13;
well worth seeing. It can shock,&#13;
entertain and make you think.&#13;
Dominican should be complemented&#13;
for bringing this kind&#13;
of theatre to our local stage and&#13;
praised for its fine production.&#13;
While the cost of tickets $1.75&#13;
could be a little lower for&#13;
students, its worth the money to&#13;
see this play. Tickets are&#13;
available at the box office. The&#13;
curtain goes up at 8:00 p.m. on&#13;
May 1, 2, 6, 7, 8, and 9. Everyone&#13;
should see this production.&#13;
VISITING PROF. HOLDS EXHIBITION&#13;
. .Note: On April 181 attended&#13;
an exhibition held by Ian&#13;
Fraser at NEW GALLERY&#13;
ONE in Racine. I was very&#13;
much impressed with Mr.&#13;
Fraser's work, but I felt I was&#13;
in no position to make a&#13;
statement about it other than&#13;
to say it was most enjoyable&#13;
and easy to look at. I asked&#13;
Mr. Fraser to make a&#13;
statement about art for the&#13;
average person — Robert&#13;
Mainland, Staff Photographer.&#13;
&#13;
Ian Fraser&#13;
While I do not pretend to make&#13;
prints for philantropic reasons —&#13;
my primary reason being that I&#13;
enjoy the medium as a language&#13;
Ian Fraser&#13;
Verfuufov&amp;S&amp;m,&#13;
It dots make a dif fart net where you shop!&#13;
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distinct from painting — I&#13;
nevertheless believe that prints&#13;
do afford an opportunity for a&#13;
greater number of people to own&#13;
and enjoy original works than the&#13;
average market price of paintings&#13;
allows. In this sense I&#13;
believe it fair to argue that the&#13;
various print media have done&#13;
much to increase public understanding&#13;
and appreciation of&#13;
contemporary art.&#13;
The variety of styles and&#13;
techniques is enormous, even&#13;
bewildering on the first few visits&#13;
to the average commercial&#13;
gallery. There are, of course,&#13;
many books on the subject,&#13;
written, I imagine with the avid&#13;
collector in mind. These books&#13;
quite often dwell on such matters&#13;
as authenticity, pedigree and&#13;
generally how not to buy a pig in&#13;
a poke. This certainly can be a&#13;
fascinating study, though beside&#13;
the point as far as I am concerned&#13;
as an artist. It can also be&#13;
daunting for someone wishing to&#13;
buy something simply because&#13;
they enjoy it. My advice on this&#13;
matter is that you cannot go&#13;
wrong is you choose what you&#13;
enjoy — it is only when a purchase&#13;
is made as a possible&#13;
financial investment that&#13;
disappointment results from&#13;
having backed the wrong horse —&#13;
and deservedly so!&#13;
There should be no difficulty in&#13;
discerning that which moved you,&#13;
whether violently or gently: the&#13;
sensation is unmistakable. The&#13;
only measure of true art is that&#13;
the sensation does not subsequently&#13;
diminish, but continues&#13;
to move the viewer or listener —&#13;
quite often with growing conviction.&#13;
&#13;
The faculty for such sensation&#13;
is within all of us and should be&#13;
nourished, for it is one of the&#13;
great redeeming features of a&#13;
beast that is still plenty savage.&#13;
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CD&#13;
3&gt;&#13;
Z &#13;
May 3,1971 NEWSCOPE Pagea&#13;
By William Sorensen&#13;
FIVE EASY PIECES&#13;
Cast&#13;
Jack Nicholson Robert Dupea&#13;
Karen Black Rayette Dipesto&#13;
Bill "Green" Bush Elton&#13;
Lois Smith Partita Dupea&#13;
Helena Kallianiotes Apodace&#13;
Ralph Waite Karl Dupea&#13;
Susan Anspach&#13;
Katherine VanOst&#13;
William Challe Nicholous Dupea&#13;
Five Easy Pieces is a film that&#13;
concerns something that has&#13;
become a universal in our time&#13;
. . . alienation ... man encased&#13;
in himself, uttering words&#13;
that never quite mean the same&#13;
thing after they have left the&#13;
confines of one's mind. The&#13;
obstacles are so great and the&#13;
words are so small that the&#13;
battle of stimulus-response is&#13;
never won and communicating&#13;
finally seems futile.&#13;
Despite trying to understand&#13;
and to be understood is the&#13;
gifted hero, clad in a self that&#13;
has been stripped of all&#13;
tradition, of all things that&#13;
would hold him anywhere in this&#13;
society's time and space . . .&#13;
brought closer to pain, lust,&#13;
sorrow and anger. His voyage&#13;
brings him into a contact with&#13;
reality that shows him he can&#13;
never understand that contact.&#13;
This classic idea has imbellished&#13;
the writings of many a&#13;
philosopher... but here, on the&#13;
screen, the flesh is warm with&#13;
color and the words ring in the&#13;
ear and the sights soothe and&#13;
pain the eyes:&#13;
I couldn't help but look at the&#13;
man next to me in the theatre&#13;
and wonder what he was&#13;
thinking, but then I received the&#13;
message ... I knew it was all&#13;
in my head. All the impressions&#13;
were mine and it was only from&#13;
that frame of reference that I&#13;
could judge, however feebly,&#13;
what he really thought. A&#13;
special blindness is Man's, a&#13;
blindness that can destroy him&#13;
or leave him with a greater&#13;
creative vision.&#13;
Filming techniques varied&#13;
from the lashing of sunlight to&#13;
the cool blue twilight of a&#13;
dream, all accomplished&#13;
quietly and meaningfully.&#13;
Jack Nicholson is powerful, a&#13;
character lay angry beneath the&#13;
skin, like a tormented beast&#13;
being poked and stabbed by&#13;
truth and lie alike. The pain&#13;
resulted in confustion and&#13;
eventual frustration. He could&#13;
not say 'yes' to life because it&#13;
was not understandable and in&#13;
portraying this he was highly&#13;
successful in relating the theme&#13;
of t he film. It seems safe to say&#13;
that Mr. Nicholson carried the&#13;
entire film almost on his own&#13;
... so much of the dialogue&#13;
produced by Karen Black as&#13;
Rayette Dipesto, his almost&#13;
alive, almost thinking girl&#13;
friend, and that interaction with&#13;
his sister portrayed by Lois&#13;
Smith did reflect Robert's interior&#13;
monologue more than a&#13;
dialogue. The photography&#13;
seemed to imply a greater inner&#13;
search as well with close-ups of&#13;
Nicholson.&#13;
To generalize . . . further&#13;
. . . this film is what might be&#13;
called truly a product of the&#13;
United States. The difficulties&#13;
seem almost exclusive of the&#13;
rest of the world and the things&#13;
that surround this alienation&#13;
smell of Detroit, Pittsburgh,&#13;
New York and Chicago. As the&#13;
character moves from the oil&#13;
fields of Texas to the forests of&#13;
Washington State the dirt and&#13;
auto fumes that so deeply affect&#13;
us are made to live. In the end&#13;
he stands naked and unsure as&#13;
he was in the beginning . . .&#13;
alienated.&#13;
The film is a well integrated&#13;
piece of communication matter.&#13;
I think its effect has been understood&#13;
as I have put it down&#13;
here. In this way the film is selfdefeating&#13;
for in making such a&#13;
fine piece of work as this I can&#13;
see that it isn't all futile. See it.&#13;
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTIZERS&#13;
Management Club News&#13;
By Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
Sec., Mgt. Club.&#13;
Mr. Roy Cougle, Assistant&#13;
Professor in the Management&#13;
Science Division of Parkside,&#13;
will speak to the Management&#13;
Science Club, and other interested&#13;
students, on the role of&#13;
the Management Science&#13;
Division here at Parkside.&#13;
The time for this discussion&#13;
will be on Tuesday, May 11, at&#13;
3:30 p.m., location to be announced.&#13;
All students interested&#13;
in the business management&#13;
field should attend and find out&#13;
just what the .Management&#13;
Science Division has to offer.&#13;
Mr. Cougle will also answer&#13;
any questions on the subject. Be&#13;
in the know! Plan now to attend&#13;
this session — it should prove to&#13;
be very interesting.&#13;
The Management Club is now&#13;
making plans to organize a&#13;
Summer Carnival to run in&#13;
'conjunction with the annual end&#13;
of the year Beer Blast sponsored&#13;
by Student Activities. The&#13;
Management Club is contacting&#13;
all the other school clubs with&#13;
the hopes of bringing about a&#13;
joint effort of the clubs to make&#13;
this the biggest event of the&#13;
year.&#13;
There are more than twenty&#13;
clubs here at Parkside. If we all&#13;
work together, this could be the&#13;
highlight of the year. So, clubs,&#13;
start brainstqrming for an idea&#13;
for a booth to represent your&#13;
club. Students, plan now to&#13;
attend the Summer Carnival&#13;
and end of the year Beer Blast.&#13;
The best way to relax and&#13;
release tensions after finals.&#13;
The next regular meeting of&#13;
the Management Club will be&#13;
Wednesday. May 5, at 2 30 p.m.&#13;
in room D101, Greenquist Hall.&#13;
All members are urged to attend,&#13;
and bring a friend.&#13;
For students interested in&#13;
Business Management, these&#13;
are the dates for you to&#13;
remember: Tuesday, May 11,&#13;
Mr. Cougle talks on the Role of&#13;
the Management Science&#13;
Division at Parkside and&#13;
Wednesday, May 5, the nefct&#13;
regular meeting of the Parkside&#13;
Management Science Club. All&#13;
students remember the Summer&#13;
Carnival June 12 and 13,&#13;
Plan to attend them all!!&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
JOIN THE NEWSCOPE STAFF&#13;
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED&#13;
S T A F F MEMBERS NEEDED FOR NEX T YE A R&#13;
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7 0 9 W ISCONSIN A V E.&#13;
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Open 8:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m&#13;
Monday — Frida y&#13;
Saturday to 5 p.m.&#13;
Bri n g m is Ad a n d Re c e i v e 1 0 ° / o D i s c o u n t o n a ll&#13;
automotive services until June 6, 1971 &#13;
Fagefi NEWSCOPE May 3,1971&#13;
Rllbin (Continued from Page 1)&#13;
"Because if Washington is&#13;
in uproar, the army is going&#13;
to revolt, Saigon is going to&#13;
burst out in revolution, and&#13;
demonstrations will occur&#13;
all over in Europe.&#13;
"If you're sitting back&#13;
listening to rock music&#13;
getting stoned, you're&#13;
missing out on the&#13;
Revolution!" he warned.&#13;
Speaking of the Calley&#13;
trial, he said, "I think Calley&#13;
should have been put on&#13;
trial. I think Medina and&#13;
Westmoreland and every&#13;
Pentagon general should be&#13;
put on trial.&#13;
"There's only one thing&#13;
— they should all be flown to&#13;
North Vietnam and put on&#13;
trial there! That's what war&#13;
crimes are all about. It&#13;
doesn't mean the naziis try&#13;
the naziis!" he said with&#13;
incredulity.&#13;
"What other agressive&#13;
power in the world has said,&#13;
'I won't end the war till you&#13;
release the prisoners?" he&#13;
elaborated.&#13;
"What an incredible&#13;
demand. A guy flys over&#13;
North Vietnam with the&#13;
intention of destroying&#13;
bridges, schools and&#13;
hospitals. He gets shot down&#13;
and they expect 'Oh. sorry&#13;
you're shot down. We'll send&#13;
you right back so you can hit&#13;
us again the next day.'&#13;
"That's what Richard&#13;
Nixon thinks. That's incredible!"&#13;
he emphasized.&#13;
Rubin told of his&#13;
meeting with Che Guevara&#13;
in 1964. "A group of us were&#13;
in Cuba for about two&#13;
months and we had a&#13;
meeting with Che. All of us&#13;
were sick of being&#13;
Americans and wished we&#13;
could be Cuban&#13;
revolutionaries.&#13;
"Che told us, 'You're&#13;
talking like you want to be a&#13;
Cuban or Venezuelan and&#13;
stay here. That's wrong. If I&#13;
had my wish I wish I could&#13;
be out in the audience with&#13;
you, and go back to America&#13;
and fight there. Because you&#13;
live in the middle of the&#13;
beast. Everything you do&#13;
back there is much more&#13;
important than what we do&#13;
here. Because we're only at&#13;
the fringe of imperialism. I&#13;
envy you!', Rubin related.&#13;
Rubin spoke, too, of&#13;
dope and heroin (which he&#13;
called poison) and of Tim&#13;
Leary. He said of Leary,&#13;
"Tim Leary was busted for&#13;
smoking dope and was given&#13;
30 years in the penitentiary.&#13;
He's put in jail for&#13;
something which everyone&#13;
here is probably going to do&#13;
in the next couple of hours..&#13;
"What happened?&#13;
Suddenly everyone forgot&#13;
about him. Tim Leary?&#13;
Who's that? All the acid&#13;
heads became closet acid&#13;
heads," Rubin contended.&#13;
"It broke the most&#13;
important thing about pot&#13;
smoking, which is the&#13;
community. I consider&#13;
smoking marijuana to be a&#13;
religious and sacred act&#13;
because of the way it is&#13;
done," he stated. "Take a&#13;
puff, pass it on. Take a puff,&#13;
pass it on."&#13;
He was interrupted by&#13;
long and sustained applause;&#13;
the loudest applause&#13;
of the afternoon.&#13;
"There's a solidarity to&#13;
it; a brotherhood, a&#13;
sisterhood," he explained.&#13;
"They arrested one of us&#13;
because we smoke dope. Not&#13;
because Tim Leary smokes&#13;
dope. They didn't care about&#13;
one person. But because&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
ge t Red Carp et tre at me nt&#13;
a t the&#13;
BANK O F&#13;
ELMW00D&#13;
(e ve ryon e el se do es !)&#13;
2704 La thro p Ave .&#13;
R ac in e , Wi s.&#13;
KnOppS (Continued&#13;
campus. There is only one&#13;
way to describe them. They&#13;
all look like fortresses. Like&#13;
huge brooding Teutonic war&#13;
helmets that you'd see in a&#13;
medieval wood cut. These&#13;
buildings don't represent&#13;
life or happiness. They're&#13;
brooding, and sad, and&#13;
grim.&#13;
"You walk around that&#13;
campus and look at those&#13;
buildings — especially if&#13;
you're stoned and it's late at&#13;
night. It's the scariest experience&#13;
you'll ever have.&#13;
It's like walking through the&#13;
gears of a giant machine.&#13;
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KENOSHA&#13;
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Op en 6 Day s a Week Fr om 4 p. m., C lose d Mon da vs&#13;
from Page 1)&#13;
You get the feeling those&#13;
buildings, those gears, are&#13;
going to engage and you're&#13;
going to get ground up like&#13;
an insect.&#13;
"You realize then that&#13;
type of architecture occurs&#13;
only in the last days of an&#13;
empire.&#13;
He went on to say that&#13;
type of architecture is&#13;
pervasive in America —&#13;
especially in Washington.&#13;
"The people there they&#13;
see themselves as the imperial&#13;
custodians — as the&#13;
men who have the mission of&#13;
determining the direction of&#13;
the planet in the next century.&#13;
&#13;
"Once you begin to&#13;
understand this thing about&#13;
the American empire, and&#13;
once you begin to see&#13;
yourself as a rebellious self&#13;
inside of this empire, I think&#13;
it helps you understand your&#13;
own head.&#13;
"Essentially, you have&#13;
two options. One is to go on&#13;
and get yourself a job and&#13;
help run the empire, in&#13;
effect.&#13;
"The other alternative&#13;
is to begin to build a totally&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE . . .&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
and 45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, not your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, our&#13;
Department Manager, who is a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk your language, both in&#13;
equipment purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY — Tape recorders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
PANASONIC — Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
KOSS — Headsets&#13;
KENWOOD — Receivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANTZ — Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC — Speakers&#13;
J.B.L. — Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. — Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD — Turntables&#13;
G.E. — Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are here, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
different culture — a culture&#13;
of resistance to that empire,&#13;
as an attempt to try to tear it&#13;
apart, and at some point to&#13;
kill it.&#13;
Knopps sees Vietnam in&#13;
this light. It's murder. You&#13;
can go through legal&#13;
channels to stop it, but the&#13;
victim will probably die in&#13;
the meantime, or, you can&#13;
step in and try to stop it&#13;
yourself.&#13;
"Vietnam is like that.&#13;
Hopefully, in 1976 or 1984&#13;
some president will end the&#13;
war, or else, you can step in&#13;
and try to stop the hand of&#13;
the murderer right now&#13;
yourself.&#13;
"A lot of us have made&#13;
our moral decision. We see&#13;
over one million human&#13;
beings murdered in Vietnam&#13;
over the last ten years.&#13;
One out of three babies born&#13;
in Vietnam is a monster.&#13;
The child is so deformed he&#13;
can't live more than a few&#13;
days or weeks. This is&#13;
because of the herbicides we&#13;
have dropped on the&#13;
countryside.&#13;
"Vietnam is a people's&#13;
war. The only way to break&#13;
the back of a people's war is&#13;
Tim Leary is a symbol they&#13;
arrested him, and we didn't&#13;
do anything about it. The&#13;
family has been broken."&#13;
"Tim Leary was taken&#13;
away and the hippies didn't&#13;
do anything about it," Rubin&#13;
said. He claimed Bernadine&#13;
Dohrn and Jeff Jones of the&#13;
Weatherman underground&#13;
engineered his escape.&#13;
Speaking of himself,&#13;
Rubin said, "In America&#13;
you work till you're 65, then&#13;
you retire. It's a trick.&#13;
Retire? I'm retired right&#13;
now! The technology is so&#13;
developed here that if we&#13;
just take it from the monsters&#13;
who have it now we&#13;
can turn this country into a&#13;
paradise in 24 hours.&#13;
"But you saw what&#13;
happened at Kent State.&#13;
This country will kill its own&#13;
children if it doen't like what&#13;
they're doing. It will wipe&#13;
them out."&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
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to kill the people.&#13;
"That's what the United&#13;
States is doing. One million&#13;
of them murdered in the&#13;
past ten years by this&#13;
country.&#13;
"I see the only thing a&#13;
person who has any sense of&#13;
moral worth can do, is to&#13;
step in and try to stop the&#13;
hand of the murderer.&#13;
"To a lot of us that is&#13;
what sabotage is.&#13;
"Sabotage is our answer.&#13;
It's not embraced&#13;
lightly. It's not embraced&#13;
even joyously. It's seen as a&#13;
grim necessity, at this point,&#13;
to uphold the honor of our&#13;
generation.&#13;
"I'll say now what I said&#13;
once before, that if five&#13;
people were killed in the&#13;
bombing of the Army Math&#13;
Research Building, I would&#13;
still back it. Because that&#13;
building had to go. That&#13;
building was responsible for&#13;
the deaths of 100 times five&#13;
people, a 1,000 times five&#13;
people.&#13;
"That's my side of the&#13;
coin. The other side is that&#13;
we're trying to build a&#13;
culture. We may have to&#13;
fight and we may have to be&#13;
grim and we may have to&#13;
die.&#13;
"The major thing we're&#13;
trying to do s i build a culture&#13;
that hopefully will at some&#13;
point in time replace the&#13;
culture of the whole society.&#13;
"That can be a culture,&#13;
a way of life that will make&#13;
sure that never again will&#13;
another generation go&#13;
through what our generation&#13;
has gone through."&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS / RACINE'S ;&#13;
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&lt; • DOWNTOWN, .&#13;
on the west side of Monument Squire DISCOUNT HOUSE -&#13;
; • o &#13;
May 3,1971 NEWSCOPE Page?&#13;
Trackmen Second to Marquette&#13;
Courtesy Public Information.&#13;
1971 GOLF TEAM: Left to right: Leif Guttormsen, Bob Toeppe&#13;
Dan Weyrauch, Tom Bothe, Randy Dreifke, Rick Willems George&#13;
Horvat, Mark Hjortness, Mike Niles.&#13;
Golfers Post 2 Victories&#13;
With Leif Guttormsen capturing medalist honors twice, Parkside&#13;
scored dual meet victories over both Dominican College and Loyola&#13;
University of Chicago.&#13;
In the Dominican meet, the Rangers totaled 198 s trokes to the&#13;
losers' 222. Guttormsen led the way with a 37 in the 9-hole event at&#13;
Johnson's Park. Tom Bothe had 39 and Dan Weyrauch 40. Rich&#13;
Willems and Ken Rossi each turned in 41's.&#13;
Guttormsen's 73 paced the 464-496 victory over Loyola at the rainsoaked&#13;
Petrifying Springs course. Tom Bothe was next with a 74, while&#13;
Dan Weyrauch and George Horvat had 78's. Rich Willem's 79 and Bob&#13;
Toeppe's 82 rounded out the scoring.&#13;
Russ Coley, assistant athletic director, acted as a clinican at the&#13;
62nd annual Drake Relays. Coley, whose area was baton passing, was&#13;
the featured speaker at the Friday night clinic.&#13;
Mr. Suh, Parkside judo instructor, will demonstrate techniques at&#13;
the Junior National in Odessa, Texas, on July 9-10. His partner will be&#13;
Mr. Park of Eastern Montana.&#13;
Grant Anderson, Parkside fencer, participated in the Junior&#13;
World Fencing Championships which were held in the United States&#13;
for the first time. Seventeen countries competed in this event.&#13;
Keith Herbrechtsmeier and John Hanzalik competed in the&#13;
Martini-Rossi International Fencing tournament held in New York.&#13;
This tournament had participants from 15 n ations.&#13;
Freshmen Top Track&#13;
Netmen Place 5th in&#13;
A pair of freshmen from&#13;
Milwaukee, Bob Waters and&#13;
Eugene Prince, have turned in&#13;
UW-Parkside's most impressive&#13;
track performances&#13;
this season.&#13;
Waters, a sprinter from&#13;
Milwaukee Lincoln, has times&#13;
of :09.7 and :21.9 in the 100 and&#13;
220, while Prince, a high jumper&#13;
from Milwaukee Lutheran, has&#13;
soared 6-6.&#13;
Mark Kohen, Mike Kmetz and&#13;
Pat Kekic won their respective&#13;
divisions in the Parkside intramural&#13;
bowling tournament&#13;
which had 70 participants. Some&#13;
of the top scores are listed:&#13;
Men's Scratch Division&#13;
Mark Koehn 592&#13;
Steve Stone 567&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
'66 Ram. Amer. Con. 7843 - 2 0th&#13;
Keno.&#13;
'63 VS (40,000 mi) $600; '66&#13;
Dodge Coronet (12,000 mi) $700.&#13;
12911 W ashington Ave. Raci.&#13;
'65 Chevy Bel. 4 dr. Auto, 6, PS,&#13;
Rad. Reas. 633-3963.&#13;
'60 Ram CIsc, Auto, 6, $150. Also&#13;
2,7075-15 BFG tires, rims &amp; Bal.&#13;
$40; 2, 9.90-15 OBFG tires (500&#13;
mi) Rims &amp; Bal $60. 859-2653&#13;
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'64 Pont. Temp. 326, Sp. Coup,&#13;
Stick $300. 658-8043.&#13;
'64 Ram. 770 2 dr HT, 287, St.&#13;
Shf. 857-2016.&#13;
Freshmen, in fact, dominate&#13;
theUW-P best-times chart: Jim&#13;
McFadden of Waterford has a&#13;
4:21.5 mile and 15:17.9 threemile;&#13;
Tim McGilsky of Racine&#13;
is 1:58.7 and :52.7 in the 880 and&#13;
440; Mike Zugich of Racine is&#13;
:58.2 in he t 440 and intermediate&#13;
hurdles; and Dennis Fechhelm&#13;
of Mayville is :15.8 in the 120&#13;
high hurdles.&#13;
Junior Leonard Bullock, who&#13;
Mark Haabrauer 552&#13;
Men's Handicap&#13;
Mike Kmetz 643&#13;
Jerry Grezener 639&#13;
A1 Anderson 638&#13;
Women's Handicap&#13;
Pat Kekic 600&#13;
Linda Olsen 592&#13;
Judy Knutson 576&#13;
'66 Chevelle 301-350 hp, 4 sp. 4&#13;
Brl. Astro's 8&lt; More. 654-4440,&#13;
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'62 Buick LeSabre $100. 1-634-&#13;
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(after 6 p.m.) Rod Marescalo.&#13;
'63 Ram. Amer. Wag. Stk, new&#13;
clutch, muff, trans. 694-6353.&#13;
'63 Pont. Conv. Auto $250. 652-&#13;
1443 after 5 p.m.&#13;
'69 Ply. Rdrnn'r, 4 spd, 383-335&#13;
hp, rad, htr. 637-5520 after 5:00.&#13;
'63 Olds 88 Hoi. 495 3 Brl, high&#13;
comp. Best offer. 654-6746 after&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Marquette, avenging earlier&#13;
loses to Parkside, defeated the&#13;
Rangers in a quadrangular&#13;
track meet held at Marquette&#13;
Stadium.&#13;
The Warriors totaled 90&#13;
points, with Parkside second&#13;
with 65. Northwestern College&#13;
had 23 and Dominican College&#13;
five.&#13;
Highlighting the meet for&#13;
Parkside were Jim McFadden&#13;
and Mike Zugich, who both&#13;
scored double victories while&#13;
setting school records.&#13;
McFadden won the mile and&#13;
the two mile with times of 4:27.4&#13;
and 9:48. His time in the two&#13;
mile set an outdoor school&#13;
record. Zugich set a school&#13;
record in the 440 in termediate&#13;
hurdles at :58.2, and also won&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Facing some tough competition,&#13;
the Ranger netmen&#13;
finished fifth in a six-team meet&#13;
in Oshkosh, and dropped an 8-1&#13;
decision to UW-Green Bay.&#13;
The Green Bay defeat left the&#13;
Rangers with a 1-2 record in&#13;
dual meets, the lone victory&#13;
coming over Dominican.&#13;
In finishing fifth in the Titan&#13;
Invitational at Oshkosh, the&#13;
Rangers picked up five points,&#13;
three of them coming on byes;&#13;
two in competition.&#13;
Todd Nelson defeated&#13;
Milton's Roy Gelin 10-2 in&#13;
singles. Nelson also teamed&#13;
with Dave Herchen to give&#13;
Parkside a 10-3 win over a Stout&#13;
doubles team.&#13;
In team totals, Oshkosh&#13;
dominated the meet with 54&#13;
Team&#13;
moved to Kenosha this summer&#13;
from El Paso, Tex., leads the&#13;
long jump, 21-1V2, and triple&#13;
jump, 40-5, while junior John&#13;
Patton of Santa Cruz, Calif., has&#13;
gone 13 feet outdoors in the pole&#13;
vault, a height that has been&#13;
matched indoors by freshman&#13;
Keith Merritt of Kenosha.&#13;
Because of injuries, the&#13;
Rangers have had no entries in&#13;
the shot put, discus or javelin.&#13;
Parkside plunges into the&#13;
heart of its outdoor season&#13;
beginning Saturday with the&#13;
Northern Illinois Invitational at&#13;
DeKalb. That will be followed&#13;
by the Whitewater Invitational&#13;
May 4, the LaCrosse State Invitational&#13;
May 8 and the&#13;
Stevens Point State Invitational&#13;
May 15.&#13;
'69 Opel GT Silver $2,400 or best&#13;
offer. 652-3312 after 4.&#13;
'63 MG Midget Conv. New Batt,&#13;
$275. 250854th Keno. R. Smith or&#13;
C. Lawler.&#13;
'64 Jeep 4-wheel drive Red conv.&#13;
Built up; like new. Racine 633-&#13;
3367.&#13;
WANTED TO BUY — 2 u sed 3&#13;
or 5 speed 26" bicycles. Call 633-&#13;
3131 after 5.&#13;
RIDES NEEDED-WANTED&#13;
DRIVE a Pugeot to Minneapolis.&#13;
Must get there before&#13;
June. Call 843-2225 after 5 or 657-&#13;
5121 ext. 36.&#13;
NEED ride to Seattle or Anchorage,&#13;
May or June. Will split&#13;
cost. Call Barb 654-9631.&#13;
the high hurdles in 16.4.&#13;
Tim Martinson won the pole&#13;
vault for Parkside, and Tim&#13;
McGilsky triumphed in the 880&#13;
with a 1:59 clocking. McGilsky&#13;
placed second in the 440 also.&#13;
A number of other Rangers&#13;
placed second. They were Ken&#13;
Bullock in the triple jump, Keith&#13;
Merritt in the pole vault, and&#13;
DenniS Fechhelm in both the&#13;
high hurdles and two relay&#13;
teams. Chuck Dettman ran&#13;
second in the mile.&#13;
Gary Geoby, Len Bullock,&#13;
Fechhelm, and Dean Maschoff&#13;
comprise the 440 relayVteam.&#13;
Judd Johnston, Fechhelm,&#13;
Merritt and McGilsky ran&#13;
quarters in the mile relay.&#13;
While Parkside finished&#13;
second in the meet, 25 points&#13;
behind Marquette, the Rangers&#13;
might have won had Bob Waters&#13;
points. Lagging behind were St.&#13;
Norbert with 21, Stout 10,&#13;
Lakeland, six, Parkside five,&#13;
and Milton three.&#13;
Parkside coach Dick Frecka&#13;
said Oshkosh has one of the&#13;
strongest teams in the state.&#13;
They finsihed 9th nationally in&#13;
the NAIA last year.&#13;
The match with UW-Green&#13;
Bay was highlighted by&#13;
Parkside's Mike Safago's&#13;
victory over Larry Kropp in&#13;
three sets.&#13;
Coach Frecka was pleased&#13;
with Safago's effort. "Kropp is&#13;
a highly experience player who&#13;
only lost about two matches last&#13;
year," said Frecka.&#13;
Despite the modest record&#13;
compiled so far, Frecka feels&#13;
that the team has been getting&#13;
better.. "We're playing top&#13;
competition now so we can have&#13;
WANT ED TO BUY — Tickets to&#13;
Chicago Concert. Contact Dale&#13;
Martin 878-2992.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
MADISON summer suoiet 2&#13;
bed. near Vilas Park. Call 608-&#13;
251-8632, $65 p er person.&#13;
ROOM — Men only, $9.00 per&#13;
wk. 3 blocks from Racine&#13;
Campus. Inquire 832 S.&#13;
Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
FOR RENT — Office Space -&#13;
Modern, Carpeted, Partitioned,&#13;
Air Cond. Ideal for Acctg.,&#13;
Insurance or Sales. Good&#13;
proximity to Parkside and&#13;
Carthage. 4058 7th Ave. Call 652-&#13;
3945 or 654-7410.&#13;
and Eugene Prince been able to&#13;
participate.&#13;
Waters, the flashy Ranger&#13;
sprinter, would very likely have&#13;
scored victories in the 100 an d&#13;
the 220. Waters would also have&#13;
run on one or both of the relay&#13;
teams which could have given&#13;
Parkside more scoring in these&#13;
events. He missed the meet&#13;
because of a death in his family.&#13;
Eugene Prince, school record&#13;
holder in the high jump at 6'6",&#13;
was competing in the Drake&#13;
Relays and had to miss the&#13;
Marquette meet. Prince was&#13;
unable to place at the Drake&#13;
meet as four jumpers went over&#13;
seven feet.&#13;
Another Ranger, Mike&#13;
DeWitt, ran in the marathon at&#13;
Drake, but had to quit after 22'&#13;
miles when he suffered dizzy&#13;
spells.&#13;
Oshkosh&#13;
a good schedule for the future.&#13;
We could schedule lighter&#13;
competition now but it would be&#13;
more difficult to develop a&#13;
major schedule later," Frecka&#13;
said.&#13;
Frecka readily admits that&#13;
the team will have rough going&#13;
with this year's schedule. Some&#13;
improvement will have to be&#13;
measured in defeats.&#13;
Although soundly beaten by&#13;
the Bay team, Fredta saw&#13;
improvement over last year's&#13;
performance against Green&#13;
Bay: "Last year we dropped&#13;
two matches to them by 9-0&#13;
scores. Besides winning a&#13;
match this year, several other&#13;
matches went to three sets."&#13;
The meet against Marquette,&#13;
scheduled for April 27. was&#13;
postponed because of poor&#13;
weather.&#13;
MISC. FOR SALE&#13;
AMP — Silvertone 4 channel.&#13;
Also mike. Best offer. Call&#13;
Cathy, 694-2769. M ust sell.&#13;
•&#13;
ELECTRIC RANGE — West&#13;
inghouse 30", $75; Refrigerator&#13;
Westinghouse, $75. Box&#13;
spring mattress for double bed,&#13;
$75. Call 633-0541.&#13;
TAPE DECK — Sony - T C 355.&#13;
List FYice $219. Sacrifice for&#13;
$100. Phone 654-1731 a fter 4 or&#13;
see Frank Chiapetta.&#13;
SPmile&#13;
Bowling Results &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE May 3,1971&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of The Newscope Staff&#13;
Title: Positively Main Street&#13;
Author: Toby Thompson&#13;
Publisher: Coward McCann &amp; Geoghegan&#13;
Inc. ($5.95)&#13;
This week's column is dedicated not to&#13;
literary hunchbacks but to Dylan Freaks. It&#13;
has been my good fortune to have fall in my&#13;
lap (with a crash) Bob Dylan's first&#13;
biography (Positively Main Street), and (end&#13;
of four year quest for blackprint grail)&#13;
Tarantula, his one and only prose work, the&#13;
one he refused to publish at the last minute.&#13;
Where do I start? The beginning. Toby&#13;
Thompson took a trip to Hibbing, Minnesota,&#13;
(Dylan's hometown) and looked up the&#13;
Zimmerman family, old friends, and high&#13;
school teachers of Robert Zimmerman (Bob&#13;
Dylan). In a style which Toby calls "New&#13;
Journalism" but which is really prolix "Bad&#13;
Writing", Bob Dylan's days as Bob Zimmerman&#13;
are relived (relive here has no&#13;
connection with life) through the words of his&#13;
brother David, Echo Helstrom (the "Girl&#13;
From the North Country"), his uncles who&#13;
"don't know that much about him", his&#13;
English teacher (his best subject), and his&#13;
mother. Much of what is reported is contradictory;&#13;
Toby would hear something about&#13;
Dylan from one person and later someone&#13;
else would say that it was a lie. However,&#13;
everyone does agree on one thing, they all&#13;
deny Dylan's self-confessed intimate&#13;
relationship with Crystal Methadrine, Mrs.&#13;
Zimmerman most emphatically. A lot of tall&#13;
tale telling here, tongues hanging out coated&#13;
with white lies. Everybody's got good intentions&#13;
(and they "don't want to make Bob&#13;
angry"), but good biographies are made of&#13;
much harder stuff than a syrupy varnish.&#13;
Actually we discover that Dylan was a fat&#13;
kid, eccentric (for Hibbing), a wild dresser,&#13;
played with an electric band at a high school&#13;
assembly at full decibels and blew die&#13;
principal's wig off, nobody liked his voice,&#13;
everyone laughed, he loved first love Echo,&#13;
lived in Dinky town for awhile (Dinkytown is&#13;
the student section of the U. of Minnesota),&#13;
listened at night to a southern radio station to&#13;
hear dem good ole blues, waylaid every Black&#13;
who sauntered through Hibbing to check him&#13;
and his experiences out, was self-conscious&#13;
about his Jewishness, and wanted to be a rock&#13;
and roll star, made it big and never forgot the&#13;
folks back home.&#13;
Hibbing itself is behind the times, high&#13;
school students laughed at Toby's long hair,&#13;
and no one listens to Dylan albums, in fact the&#13;
local record shop only had a couple copies of&#13;
"Greatest Hits". It becomes obvious that&#13;
Dylan had to escape Hibbing in order to make&#13;
it, it was oppressive to him, but the stories&#13;
about his running away from his family are&#13;
untrue, his father gave him money to go to&#13;
New York, and before his mecca to Fun City&#13;
at the age of 19, Bob had never been out of&#13;
Hibbing.&#13;
The trouble with this biography is that the&#13;
biographical information takes up about forty&#13;
pages, the rest is Toby on Toby. Toby in&#13;
Madison where a couple of Dylan Freaks say&#13;
to leave Dylan alone, his past is his own and&#13;
no one has any business fucking around with&#13;
Bobby D's past. Toby in Hibbing and getting&#13;
drunk and making a spectacle of himself in a&#13;
bar, singing "Girl From the North Country",&#13;
everybody applauding, waking up with a&#13;
hangover, and Echo later, telling him that he&#13;
sounds a lot like Bob did. Bullshit. 140 pages of&#13;
bullshit and 40 pages of interview which does&#13;
little to clarify the young Bob Zimmerman. I&#13;
expected more. Maybe Robert Shelton, who&#13;
has reportedly (Toby tells us) been working&#13;
for five years on a Dylan biography, will fill&#13;
the many gaps Toby only stumbles into. Oh&#13;
yah, good ol' Tobe has never met Dylan, but&#13;
you know Dylan Freaks, yeah I know a lot&#13;
about one anyway.&#13;
Title: Tarantula&#13;
Author: Bob Dylan&#13;
Publisher: none listed (bootlegged) ($1.75)&#13;
I approach this book like I. . . like I never&#13;
approached a book quite like this one before.&#13;
Let's get one thing straight, Dylan is&#13;
something of a god to me and well, like&#13;
Tarantula is a bible of sorts. In a literary&#13;
sense it isn't worth more than a few quill&#13;
pens, but then again, we don't always read the&#13;
Bible for its literary value. No, this is BOB&#13;
DYLAN'S first published (even if it's&#13;
bootlegged it's still published) prose work,&#13;
and its literary pretensions are attested to by&#13;
the fact that Dylan himself refused to publish&#13;
it.&#13;
Tarantula is a % page book composed of&#13;
short story sequences, a few long poems, and&#13;
short letters appearing at the end of each&#13;
story and signed by non-characters with&#13;
names like "louie louie", or "Shorty Cookie".&#13;
Dylan is "shadow boxing" the language, he is&#13;
using words in unusual contexts, he is being&#13;
complex and absurd, simple and poignant,&#13;
and he tells us not to be afraid of&#13;
meaninglessness.&#13;
It is a speedfreak-poet-folk legend's&#13;
collection of poem-prose sketches whose&#13;
metaphoric ambiguity and complexity&#13;
reminds me of some of Dylan Thomas' prose&#13;
pieces. With Dylan it is the words themselves&#13;
rather than what is behind words which is of&#13;
prime importance. Dylan has always been&#13;
eminently quotable and Tarantula is no exception.&#13;
Literally hundreds of Dylanisms are&#13;
contained here, phrases and sentences which&#13;
are as poetic as they are often overwhelming.&#13;
Within Tarantula there are references to&#13;
his songs, "somebody once said the sun ain't&#13;
yellow, it's chicken", also the "Memphis&#13;
Blues" paranoia caused by Dylan's discovery&#13;
of the absurdity and meaninglessness of life is&#13;
rampant. It is a speed trip, spread out, spaced&#13;
out and confusing. It begins with the&#13;
"Freewheelin' " Dylan and ends with the&#13;
"Blonde on Blonde" SuperDylan. There is a&#13;
great deal of self-mockery, for example&#13;
"sang at the vegetarian convention my new&#13;
song against meat, everybody dug it excpt&#13;
(sic) for the plumbers neath the stage."&#13;
As a whole I can't find any real structure in&#13;
Tarantula, it is a collection of weird incidents&#13;
and absurd stories, huncreds of noncharacters&#13;
come into view for a few lines and&#13;
then disappear. The only continuing&#13;
characters in the book are aretha and prince&#13;
hamlet, and even they are seen only in the&#13;
beginning and the end.&#13;
If you ever get the opportunity to read&#13;
Tarantula, approach it with an open mind,&#13;
don't expect anything because everything in&#13;
Tarantula is to be unexpected. It's a&#13;
bootlegged book (I bought it in Madison) and&#13;
maybe it's not right to buy from bootleggers,&#13;
but Dylan Freaks will understand. I tried to&#13;
pull Tarantula.s legs off but they only&#13;
disappear.&#13;
"here lies bob dylan&#13;
demolished by Vienna politeness —&#13;
which will now claim to have invented him&#13;
the cool people can&#13;
now write Fugues about him&#13;
&amp; Cupid can now kick over his kerosene&#13;
lampbob&#13;
dylan — killed by a discarded Oedipus&#13;
who turned around&#13;
around&#13;
to investigate a ghost&#13;
&amp; discovered that&#13;
the ghost too&#13;
was more than one person"&#13;
Positively Main Street may be&#13;
purchased at the Book Mart 622-&#13;
. 59th Street, Kenosha.&#13;
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