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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, Issue 17</text>
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            <text>CCC Votes to Recommend Its Own Dissolution</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>"]OIlmalism is literature I"a hurry"_ M the UlIiversity oj Wiscollsi,,_P arltside&#13;
~,~-",•••••&#13;
MAY24.1171&#13;
Assemblymen&#13;
On Merger&#13;
See Page 5&#13;
CCCVotes To Recommend&#13;
Its Own Dissolution&#13;
'y Marc Elsen of The Newscope Staff&#13;
1be Campus Concerns Committee will no&#13;
.... exist - if the memhers of the committee&#13;
... tbeir way.&#13;
1lIeY voted last Friday, 6-1. to recommend to&#13;
tt faculty Senate that the CCC he dissolved&#13;
....... Student Government now fills the needs&#13;
IIIIIIOrlY provided by that committee.&#13;
TIle committee did this after rejecting another&#13;
.... '" the resolution that said, in addition, the&#13;
~ should be dissolved because it has heen&#13;
.. IS a repressive instrument by the adJIliIb'8tiOD.&#13;
ne "Dissolution Resolution", as it was called,&#13;
• sp&gt;mOred by Luddite members of the comIilIIt.&#13;
Ian MacTaggart, Edmund Gilday, and&#13;
JIIdeIeine Thielen. The three are among the five&#13;
.... student appointments to the committee.&#13;
TIle other students, Dennis Cashion and Student&#13;
(ill8'mDentPresident Tim Eaker, were absent&#13;
hoD !be meeting.&#13;
TIle unanswered question is now what is the&#13;
•• of the committee since it urged its own&#13;
IIIoIIlioa but lacks the power to accomplish it by&#13;
.... Chairman of the committee, Eugene&#13;
r.iortiewicz, life science, has indica ted he will&#13;
.. tile Faculty senate to place the item on its&#13;
...&#13;
Be said if the Senate doesn't consider it, the&#13;
-wee itself would have to investigate faculty&#13;
...... 18 to see if there is any stipulation stating&#13;
lietlIIUIlitteemust exist.&#13;
Clouding the issue more, and possihly&#13;
)IIpudizing the legality of the dissolution, is a&#13;
.... e to the right of the five students to sit on&#13;
lieCGIIUIlittee.Allen Dearborn, Dean of Students,&#13;
~11eUerto Gasiorkiewicz pointed out the selection&#13;
• tbe .ludent members was not done in the way&#13;
IpIdfiecI by faculty documents.&#13;
Facultydocument No.9 states the president of&#13;
llelludent government and the president of the&#13;
IlIdent union (an office which presently doesn't&#13;
- are automatically members of the comIIIIlBe,&#13;
whilea third memher is to be chosen in a&#13;
...-.J election by the student body.&#13;
1'be other two student members are to be&#13;
by Man T1mpany&#13;
" tileNewscope sta If&#13;
D.~~ recent dismissals of five&#13;
;,: .. ide facUlty was one of the&#13;
....I~ disCussed at the May 12&#13;
D1eetlng of the Executive&#13;
~OD1mittee of the Parks ide&#13;
ba~ty AsSOCiation. The P.F .A.&#13;
requested a mora torium on&#13;
"'orr 0" 1I011-renewa/s&#13;
See page 3&#13;
lUdI actions until acceptable ~I~-&#13;
,,--"""'for faculty review had&#13;
...... adopted. 1Ili't P.F .A. Executive Comfro&#13;
moved, "That a letter&#13;
Assm .tb~ Parkside Faculty&#13;
~I~hon be sent to the&#13;
II hve Committees of the&#13;
IlUDlanties and Science&#13;
Iy i .&#13;
~ons expressing&#13;
"dis .m~nt with their actions&#13;
ill ViewIlIisslng faCUlty members&#13;
!Plir of the lack of faculty&#13;
~ed evaluation criteria.&#13;
IIIat ,the letter will request&#13;
the Executive Committees&#13;
. selected by the Chancelior from a panel of six&#13;
prepared by Student Government.&#13;
What happened instead was that Student&#13;
Gover?men~ submitted a list of five students to the&#13;
comml~tee Itself at the last meeting. They were&#13;
recognized as provisional members of the committee.&#13;
until such time when the requirements&#13;
governing these positions could be met.&#13;
The intent behind this action was to allow the&#13;
committee to officially begin to function with&#13;
student representation .&#13;
The cce, after discussing the "Dissolution&#13;
Resolution". for more than two hours, adjourned&#13;
before considering the issue raised by Dearborn in&#13;
his letter.&#13;
The resolution was placed before the committee&#13;
after it voted to suspend its regular order of&#13;
business. The committee soon after voted to ternporarily&#13;
form into a comIJlittee of the whole in order&#13;
that students present might give their views.&#13;
The crux of the student arguments was that the&#13;
committee was used to repress students, that&#13;
students have their natural right to govern their&#13;
own affairs, and that the committee serves 00 real&#13;
purpose since its functions have been, or can be,&#13;
absorbed by student government, and the Office of&#13;
Student Affairs.&#13;
A student, Dave denHartig, argued, "I think&#13;
repression exists just in the way the committee is&#13;
set up. The.re are seven faculty members. five&#13;
students and the Dean of Students. That's an 11-5&#13;
ratio.&#13;
"If I were sitting on this committee." he continued,&#13;
"I'd make a motion that we set up a c0ncerns&#13;
committee to deal with faculty problems .&#13;
Except it would be eigbt students and five faculty&#13;
members."&#13;
Madeleine Thielen, a member of the committee,&#13;
said, "It seems that the cec has come into&#13;
existence with a grand spurt because student&#13;
government has come into existence."&#13;
Joseph Balsano, life science, objected to this.&#13;
He pointed out the committee had met previously tn&#13;
the year, and had, in fact, arbitrated the con-&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
-&#13;
Led by Alaska Senator Mike&#13;
Gravel, an attempt to kill the&#13;
draft by filibuster is underway&#13;
with support from a diverse&#13;
group of other sena tors. A&#13;
coalition 01 peace groups has&#13;
organized a lobby to support the&#13;
senator's actions.&#13;
They are asking that lobbying&#13;
activities, including letters,&#13;
wires, phone calls and cormng to&#13;
Washington, be focused on the&#13;
final three weeks of June, when&#13;
the first vote to cut 011 debate is&#13;
expected.&#13;
The filibuster aims to talk the&#13;
2-year draft extension bill CH.R.&#13;
6530 to death by preventinl! it&#13;
from coming to a vote, leavmg&#13;
the present draft authorization&#13;
to expire on June 30th.&#13;
The move requires support&#13;
from 34 senators to be effective;&#13;
and it can be stopped only by a&#13;
cloture vote to cut 011 debate.&#13;
Two-thirds, or 66 senators, are&#13;
needed to cut olf debate, and the&#13;
fU"St cloture vote will come up&#13;
sometime around the middle of&#13;
Summer comes la Par1t .. e&#13;
lo.l. eo_. JIl&#13;
June.&#13;
Exptration 01 ~ draft may&#13;
"the last chance bdore 0&#13;
1971" to get the . out 01 the&#13;
Vietnam war, accordIng to&#13;
Gravel. Endmg the draft would&#13;
cut olr the IimitJess upply 01&#13;
manpower whIch malt COIltinua&#13;
tion 01 the war pou,ble, be&#13;
reasoos.&#13;
PF A Calls For Moratorium&#13;
On Non-Renewals&#13;
Gravel Leads Attempt To&#13;
Filibuster Draft Extension&#13;
The filibuster is being used&#13;
because anti-war senalor&#13;
cannot must the 51 votes&#13;
necessary for outrighl defeat 0(&#13;
the draft&#13;
The sena tors pn!SeI1t1y allied&#13;
with Gravel are: William&#13;
Proxmire &lt;D.-Wis), Alan&#13;
Cranston ID.-ealif.), Vance&#13;
Hartke lD.-Ind.), Marlow Cook&#13;
CR.-Ky.), and Harold Hughes&#13;
CO.-Iowa). Coordinator 01 the&#13;
steering committee for the anti·&#13;
draft coalition is Ann Pallie.&#13;
Approximately 88 per cent 01&#13;
young men in front-line active&#13;
combat duty in Vietnam are&#13;
draftees_&#13;
immediately rescind the termina&#13;
tion decisions pending the&#13;
consideration by the Parkside&#13;
faculty of the criteria developed&#13;
by the Committee on Personnel&#13;
Policy, in view of the fact tha t&#13;
there is time vto delay these&#13;
decisions while waiting for&#13;
criteria to be adopted."&#13;
The motion was passed by the&#13;
Executive Committee and&#13;
sixteen members of the P.F.A&#13;
present at the meeting. It has&#13;
since been adopted by a&#13;
majority vote of the membership&#13;
of the P.F .A. The letter&#13;
is now being drafted.&#13;
Regent Gordon WaIker, a t a&#13;
raIly last December, referred. to&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie'S ten pomt&#13;
program of December 10, 1970,&#13;
as a Magna Charta for the&#13;
students. Published criteria for&#13;
faculty review was on~ of&#13;
Wyllie'S promises at that ~~&#13;
There is as yet no orgaruz&#13;
student reaction to .the rece~&#13;
faculty dismisS8;1s .m the a&#13;
sence of such cntena.&#13;
"Journalism is literature in a hurry" -Mathe!! :~~e;:sity of W isconsin-P arksidt ~,'!E!t'e@epa MAY 24, 1971&#13;
Assemblymen&#13;
On Merger&#13;
Pa&#13;
CCC Votes To Recommend&#13;
Its Own Dissolution&#13;
by Marc Eisen of The Newscope Staff&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee will no&#13;
r exist - if the members of the committee&#13;
1-e their way. TheY voted last Friday, 6-1, to recommend to&#13;
Ille Faculty Senate that the CCC be dissolved&#13;
t,ecau.se Student Government no~ fills the needs&#13;
(ormerly provided by that committee.&#13;
The committee did this after rejecting another&#13;
inn of the resolution that said, in addition, the&#13;
((llllllittee should be dissolved because it has been&#13;
med as a repressive instrument by the ad-&#13;
. · tration.&#13;
The "Dissolution Resolution", as it was called,&#13;
sponsored by Luddite members of the comttee,&#13;
Ian MacTaggart, Edmund Gilday, and&#13;
Madeleine Thielen. The three are among the five&#13;
rettnt student appointments to the committee.&#13;
Toe other students, Dennis Cashion and Student&#13;
Government President Tim Eaker, were absent&#13;
!run the meeting.&#13;
The unanswered question is now what is the&#13;
tus of the committee since it urged its own&#13;
abolition but lacks the power to accomplish it by&#13;
. Chairman of the committee, Eugene&#13;
orkiewicz, life science, has indicated he will&#13;
the Faculty Senate to place the item on its&#13;
enda.&#13;
He said if the Senate doesn't consider it, the&#13;
canmittee itself would have to investigate faculty&#13;
6&gt;cuments to see if there is any stipulation stating&#13;
committee must exist.&#13;
Clouding the issue more, and possibly&#13;
~rdizing the legality of the dissolution, is a&#13;
cballenge to the right of the five students to sit on&#13;
committee. Allen Dearborn, Dean of Students,&#13;
a letter to Gasiorkiewicz pointed out the selection&#13;
ri the tudent members was not done in the way&#13;
ll'Cified by faculty documents.&#13;
Faculty document No. 9 states the president of&#13;
student government and the president of the&#13;
lllident union (an office which presently doesn't&#13;
l are automatically members of the comwhile&#13;
a third member is to be chosen in a&#13;
ra1 election by the student body.&#13;
The other two student members are to be&#13;
, selected by the Chancellor from a panel oC&#13;
prepared by Student Government.&#13;
What happened instead was that Student&#13;
Government submitted a list of five students to the&#13;
commi~tee itself at the last meeting. They were&#13;
recognized as provisional members of the committee.&#13;
until such time when the requirements&#13;
goverrung these positions could be met.&#13;
The intent behind this action was to allow the&#13;
committee to officially begin to function with&#13;
student representation.&#13;
The CCC, after discussing the "Dissolution&#13;
Resolution". for more than two hours, adjourned&#13;
before considering the issue raised by Dearborn in&#13;
his letter.&#13;
The resolution was placed before the committee&#13;
after it voted to suspend its regular order of&#13;
business. The committee soon after voted to temporarily&#13;
form into a committee of the whole in order&#13;
that students present might give their \iews.&#13;
The crux of the student arguments was that the&#13;
committee was used to repress students. that&#13;
students have their natural right to govern their&#13;
own affairs, and that the committee serves no real&#13;
purpose since its functions have been, or can be,&#13;
absorbed by student government, and the Office of&#13;
Student Affairs.&#13;
A student, Dave denHartig, argued, " I think&#13;
repression exists just in the way the committee i&#13;
set up. There are seven faculty mem 1v&#13;
students and the Dean of Students. That's an 8-5&#13;
ratio.&#13;
"If I were sitting on this committee," he con·&#13;
tinued, "I'd make a motion that we set up a concerns&#13;
committee to deal with faculty problems.&#13;
Except it would be eight students and five faculty&#13;
members."&#13;
Madeleine Thielen, a member of the committee,&#13;
said, "It seems that the CCC has come into&#13;
existence with a grand spurt because student&#13;
government has come into existence."&#13;
Joseph Balsano, life science, objected. to ~ - He pointed out the committee had met preVIously m&#13;
the year, and had, in fact, arbitrated the con-&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
m&#13;
PF A Calls For Moratorium&#13;
On Non-Renewals&#13;
Gravel Lead Atte&#13;
by Mark Timpany&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The recent dismissals of five&#13;
Pa~kside faculty was one of the&#13;
topic~ discussed at the May 12&#13;
meeting of the Executive&#13;
~0mmittee of the Parkside&#13;
~~ulty Association. The P .F .A.&#13;
requested a moratorium on&#13;
More on non-renewals&#13;
See page 3&#13;
~~h _actions until acceptable bee ena for faculty review had&#13;
n adopted.&#13;
rni~e P .F .A. Executive Comfro&#13;
ee moved, "That a letter&#13;
As~ _th~ Parkside Faculty Ex oci~tion be sent to the&#13;
Ii ecutive Committees of the&#13;
D ~~~n!ies and Science&#13;
dis 1s1ons expressing&#13;
in i~m~nt with their actions&#13;
In Vi rtliss1ng faculty members&#13;
ap r ew of the lack of faculty&#13;
~~Ved evaluation criteria.&#13;
that ther, the letter will request&#13;
e Executive Committees&#13;
immediately rescind ~e termination&#13;
decisions pending !,he&#13;
consideration by the Parkside&#13;
faculty of the criteria developed by the Committee on Personnel&#13;
Policy, in view of the fact that&#13;
there is time .to delay these&#13;
decisions while waiting for&#13;
criteria to be adopted." The motion was passed by the&#13;
Executive Committee and&#13;
sixteen members of the P .F .A&#13;
present at the meeting. It has&#13;
since been adopted by a&#13;
majority vote of the membership&#13;
of the p .F .A. The letter&#13;
is now being drafted.&#13;
Regent Gordon Walker, at a&#13;
rally last December, referred_ to&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie's te~ point&#13;
program of December 10, 1970,&#13;
as a Magna Charta. fo~ the&#13;
students. Published cntena for&#13;
faculty review was on~ of&#13;
Wyllie's promises at that ~e.&#13;
There is as yet no orgaruzed&#13;
student reaction to . the rece:&#13;
faculty dismis~ls .m the a&#13;
sence of such cntena.&#13;
Filibuster Draf&#13;
Led by Ala a nator 1i&#13;
Gravel, an attempl to ill&#13;
draft by hlibu ter · und. I'\\ y&#13;
with support from a di ·&#13;
group of other ena to -. coalition of peace grou ha&#13;
organized a lobby to upport&#13;
senator's actions. They are a ing that lobb)ing&#13;
activities, including letter·,&#13;
wires, phone calls and coming to&#13;
Washington, be focused on the&#13;
final three week of June, w en&#13;
the first vote to cut off d bate ·&#13;
expected.&#13;
The filib~ter aims to talk the&#13;
2-year draft extension bill ~H.~. 6531) to death by preventin~ 1t&#13;
from coming to a vote, leaving the present draft authorization&#13;
to expire on June 30th. The move requires support&#13;
from 34 senators to be effective;&#13;
and it can be stopped only by a&#13;
clob.lre vote to cut off debate.&#13;
Two-thirds, or fi6 senators are&#13;
needed to cutoff debate, and the&#13;
first cloture vote v.ill come up&#13;
sometime around the middle of&#13;
D••&#13;
t&#13;
5 &#13;
... 11,1171&#13;
SIIPPO"&#13;
YOIIr Local&#13;
LIIWIbtr Yam&#13;
pnme&#13;
The way&#13;
to buy the&#13;
insurance&#13;
you need&#13;
but may&#13;
feel you&#13;
can't&#13;
afford.&#13;
For Further&#13;
In/ormation Coli:&#13;
JOHII J. SCHfl'ITZ&#13;
152-4020&#13;
.. n. c.. ,on btl ••&#13;
r--------------, Jdm J. Schmitz I&#13;
612 15th Place I&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140 I&#13;
Yn. I em Inleresled In&#13;
getting further Infor·&#13;
melion on "PRIME."&#13;
..... I&#13;
-.-- I&#13;
ClTY _&#13;
LlTATt %1' _ _&#13;
HOXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY&#13;
STORE&#13;
302 Green Bay Rd,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
634-1536&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
LETTERSTQ&#13;
To the Edllol": .&#13;
The purpose of this letter is to&#13;
express openly to both students&#13;
and faculty our deep concern&#13;
over Ibe non-renewal of the&#13;
contract of Mr. Darrell&#13;
Douglas, Assistant Professor,&#13;
UW-P Music Departmenl. We&#13;
reel in a case such as this, that&#13;
ev,;,y means possible must ~&#13;
utilized in order that this&#13;
serious injustice to both Mr.&#13;
Douglas and the music students&#13;
themselves may be known and&#13;
rectified.&#13;
We know of no olber educator&#13;
held in a position of such high&#13;
es teem by virtually every&#13;
student in his department, as IS&#13;
the case with Mr. Douglas. Tbe&#13;
sincere respect and admiration&#13;
lelt lor him both within and&#13;
without the department is&#13;
clearly apparent and could not&#13;
be more deservedly so. The fact&#13;
that in his six years here he has&#13;
averaged a 25 credit hour&#13;
teaching load, while the school&#13;
average is between 12 and 15&#13;
would attest to his sincerity and&#13;
dedication. As for his competency&#13;
and ability as a&#13;
teacher, every student who has&#13;
ever been fortunate to have&#13;
You Ow. It&#13;
to&#13;
Yourself&#13;
to Drink&#13;
FRESH&#13;
BEERDrink.&#13;
, ,&#13;
Budweiser..&#13;
RINaOf" .UItS&#13;
been in one of his classes will&#13;
leU you that it is far beyond&#13;
questioning.&#13;
Wben we inquired as to ·tbe&#13;
reasons for his non-renewal, we&#13;
were told that he had not heen&#13;
publishing enough and had not&#13;
yet completed work on his Ph&gt;&#13;
D. Concerning his Ph.D, we&#13;
know of extenuating circumstances,&#13;
that through no&#13;
lault of Mr. Douglas, have&#13;
delayed the awarding of his&#13;
doctorate until, at the latest, tbe&#13;
fall of Ibis year. And as we see&#13;
it, publishing is not a maj~r&#13;
contributing factor to his&#13;
teaching effectiveness, which&#13;
is, above all, his primary 0bjective.&#13;
We believe in the importance&#13;
of our education and we know&#13;
that men like Mr. Douglas are&#13;
essential 00 us in achieving that&#13;
end. But when a man of his&#13;
calibre is dismissed, we cannot&#13;
belp wondering if the students&#13;
are the only ones so concerned.&#13;
Finally, we feel that in order&#13;
to have an accurate teacher&#13;
evaluation, it must come as the&#13;
result of a combined facultystudent&#13;
body effort, In this case,&#13;
we cannot help but leel that the&#13;
wisbes 0( the sludenb&#13;
!t'v~n the importance ...,.. ..&#13;
if, In fact, such w'S&#13;
considered at all. IShes ~&#13;
We are asking YOU .&#13;
name of any honor0 .. Ill!&#13;
claim are the b~val ... ,.,&#13;
universi ty, to re~e cI ....&#13;
Douglas' contract in "lit&#13;
we and future stUdllrdot tI1I(&#13;
benefit from him. enta "'"&#13;
MUSic~&#13;
NationalCoor '-'&#13;
U.W.Parksideo,'::&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Poet-philosopher K&#13;
Gunderson was not still&#13;
by the Humanities OJ """""-&#13;
reported in the ~.&#13;
Calendar. The Parksid p..,.&#13;
. Forum was able to b~ ...,&#13;
young poet to UWp&#13;
=&#13;
Iloo&#13;
help of Student Activitilo'"&#13;
the cooperation of the Dao.-&#13;
Students. (&#13;
====CAMPUSEVENTS====~a&#13;
ThaEb,&#13;
A.Ma..&#13;
Monday. May 24&#13;
Tennis. NAJA Regional in&#13;
Whitewater. Also May 25.&#13;
Meeting. Milwaukee Circuit·&#13;
Court Judge Robert Landry&#13;
will speak on "Criminal&#13;
Delays in the Criminal Court&#13;
System." Sponsored by the&#13;
Pre-Law Club. 7:30 p.m. Rom&#13;
Dill. Greenquist Hall.&#13;
5021 30lh Ave.&#13;
K Et-!OSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Open 6 Doys a Week From 4 p.m.,. Closed Mondays&#13;
but you&#13;
know that!!!&#13;
• • •&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
ALSC&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE • • •&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
In sound equipment, plus over 3,000Albums&#13;
and -tS's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop In and blow your mind, not your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark. our&#13;
Department Mariager, who Is a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk yoUr' language, both In&#13;
equipment purchases, records and mciney.&#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.8.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 Whil&#13;
are here, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and .Glf~ you&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's lowest prices. .at.&#13;
Thursday, May 27&#13;
Dr. Myron Kaufman, chief&#13;
transplant surgeon at&#13;
Milwaukee County General&#13;
Hospital, will speak. Sponsored&#13;
by Pre-Law Club. 8&#13;
p.m., Room 101. Greenqusit&#13;
HI!.&#13;
Friday, May 28&#13;
Dance. "Bulldog Harry" 9 p.m.&#13;
to 1 a.m, Student Activities&#13;
Building. Parks ide and&#13;
Wisconsin O.D. 's required..&#13;
Admission: $1.00&#13;
The Grievance and Clearing&#13;
House Committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Senate will&#13;
hold a public meeting at 10: 30&#13;
a.m. Friday, May 28, in room&#13;
D105 Greenquisl. Persons interested&#13;
in pro"'ll1I&#13;
grievances to the St_&#13;
Sena te and studenb in!enllol&#13;
In becommg voting members&#13;
the committee are invited :&#13;
attend.&#13;
Saturday, Mayll&#13;
Track. UW-P [nvilttiCllll&#13;
Tremper High Scbo1l,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Dance. 9-1 p.m. StudEltAttivities&#13;
Building. W*,-&#13;
and Parkside I.D.' nqIirIl&#13;
During the period JlIIlef.ll,&#13;
1971, (Final Examinalicll&#13;
the regular inter-aqll&#13;
buses and shuttle bus will III&#13;
operating as usual.&#13;
r:.;snc:ss· .i jjj::iXF C&#13;
Newscope •&#13;
BUSINESS PHONES&#13;
658-4111,Ed&#13;
lIMJI&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
W"!'"en 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, BiB&#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.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Narees Socha, Don Marjala, John&#13;
Gary, Barbara Scoll.&#13;
Newscope is an ~&#13;
student newspaper compaoll&#13;
students of The Univlt1lllWisconsin-Parkside&#13;
pdiIlII&#13;
weekly except during.'''":&#13;
periods. Student oblJmoI&#13;
vertising funds are tilt ..&#13;
source of revenue r« .,&#13;
.operation of New~ ';:&#13;
copies are prmted&#13;
distri buted throughOU'':&#13;
KenoS"ha and RaCine&#13;
munities as well as tilt t;:&#13;
sity. Free copies are IV&#13;
upon request.&#13;
--.... -. ----&#13;
Pa eJ&#13;
Support&#13;
a H, lt71&#13;
HOXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY&#13;
STORE&#13;
LETTERS.TO&#13;
Your Local&#13;
Lumber Yard&#13;
bu ufJodm dou els&#13;
302 Green Bay Rd,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
634-1536&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
You Owe It&#13;
to&#13;
Yourself&#13;
to Drink&#13;
FRESH&#13;
BEER&#13;
Drink •••&#13;
Budweiser.&#13;
KING Of 9[£11S&#13;
To the Editor: . The purpose of this letter 1s to&#13;
express openly to both students&#13;
and faculty our deep concern&#13;
over the non-renewal of the&#13;
contract of Mr. Darrell&#13;
Douglas, Assistant Professor,&#13;
uw-P Music Department. We&#13;
feel in a case such as this, that&#13;
eve~ means possible must ~ utilized in order that this&#13;
serious injustice to both Mr.&#13;
Douglas and the music students&#13;
themselves may be known and&#13;
rectified.&#13;
We know of no other educator&#13;
held in a position of such high&#13;
esteem by virtually ever_y student in his department, as 1s&#13;
the case with Mr. Douglas. The&#13;
sincere respect and admiration&#13;
felt for him both within and&#13;
without the department is&#13;
clearly apparent and could not&#13;
be more deservedly so. The fact&#13;
that in his six years here he has&#13;
averaged a 25 credit hour&#13;
teaching load, while the school&#13;
average is between 12 and 15&#13;
would attest to his sincerity and&#13;
dedication. As for his competency&#13;
and ability as a&#13;
teacher, every student who has&#13;
ever been fortunate to have&#13;
been in one of his classes will&#13;
tell you that it is far beyond&#13;
questioning. When we inquired as to the&#13;
reasons for his non-renewal, we&#13;
were told that he had not been&#13;
publishing enough and had not&#13;
yet completed work on his Ph.-&#13;
D. Concerning his Ph.D, we&#13;
know of extenuating circumstances,&#13;
that through no&#13;
fault of Mr. Douglas, have&#13;
delayed the awarding of his&#13;
doctorate until, at the latest, the&#13;
fall of this year. And as we see&#13;
it, publishing is not a maj~r&#13;
contributing factor to his&#13;
teaching effectiveness, which&#13;
is, above all, his primary objective.&#13;
We believe in the importance&#13;
of our education and we know&#13;
that men like Mr. Douglas are&#13;
essential to us in achieving that&#13;
end. But when a man of his&#13;
calibre is dismissed, we cannot&#13;
help wondering if the students&#13;
are the only ones so concerned.&#13;
Finally, we feel that in order&#13;
to have an accurate teacher&#13;
evaluation, it must come as the&#13;
result of a combined faculty- student body effort. In this case,&#13;
we cannot help but feel that the&#13;
wishes of the stude&#13;
~v~n the importan: We~&#13;
if, m fact, such w· ~ - considered at all. 18hes&#13;
We are asking&#13;
name of any honor /OU In&#13;
claim are the b r_valu~&gt; . . asts &lt;i umvers1ty to D gl , ' renew 1.,_&#13;
ou as contract in "ll'&#13;
we and future stud order&#13;
benefit from him. ents&#13;
The way&#13;
to buy the&#13;
insurance&#13;
you need&#13;
but may&#13;
feel you&#13;
can't&#13;
afford.&#13;
====CAMPUS EVENTS===,,..&#13;
For Further&#13;
Information Coll:&#13;
JOHN J. SCHP!CITZ&#13;
652-4020&#13;
tr uu coupon below&#13;
r--------------, Jclm J. Schmitz I&#13;
612 15th Ploce I&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140 I 1&#13;
Yet, I am interesied In&#13;
gettlng further lnlor·&#13;
m11lon on "PRIME."&#13;
NAME __ _&#13;
A00IIESS_&#13;
CITY ___ _&#13;
STATE ___ ZIP___ J L----_.... _______ ..J&#13;
• • • but you&#13;
know that! ! !&#13;
ALSC&#13;
Monday, May 24&#13;
Tennis. NAIA Regional in&#13;
Whitewater. Also May 25.&#13;
Meeting. Milwaukee Circuit&#13;
Court Judge Robert Landry&#13;
will speak on " Criminal&#13;
Delays in the Criminal Court&#13;
System." Sponsored by the&#13;
Pre-Law Club. 7:30 p.m. Rom&#13;
D111. Greenquist Hall.&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KE~OSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Open 6 Days o Week From 4 p.m.,_ Closed Mondays&#13;
QRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE • • •&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
In sound equipment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
and ~·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 wlll talk your language, both In&#13;
equipment purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY - Tape recorders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
K&#13;
PA0 N5 ASONIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
S - Headsets&#13;
KENWOOD - Receivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANTZ - Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC - Speakers&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.y.c. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntables&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories wh·1&#13;
are here, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and -G:f~ ~:~ ~ Southeastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
Thursday, May 27&#13;
Dr. Myron Kaufman, chief&#13;
transplant surgeon at&#13;
Milwaukee County General&#13;
Hospital, will speak. Sponsored&#13;
by Pre-Law Club. 8&#13;
p.m., Room 101. Greenqusit&#13;
Hll.&#13;
Friday, May 28&#13;
Dance. "Bulldog Harry" 9 p.m.&#13;
to 1 a.m. Student Activities&#13;
Building. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin O.D.'s required. Admission: $1.00&#13;
The Grievance and Clearing House Committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Senate will&#13;
hold a public meeting at 10:30&#13;
a.m. Friday, May 28, in room&#13;
D105 Greenquist. Persons inWarren&#13;
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.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Narees Socha, Don Marjala, John&#13;
Gary, Barbara Scott.&#13;
te~ested in presen grievances to the Stu&#13;
~nate and students int , m becomin~ voting members&#13;
the committee are imiled ID&#13;
attend.&#13;
Saturday, May?t&#13;
Track. UW-P InvilaU&#13;
Tremper High Sch&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Dance. 9-1 p.m. Studeot&#13;
tivities Building. W1&#13;
and Parkside I.D.' requittd&#13;
During the period June 4-1&#13;
1971, (Final Examinatioos&#13;
the regular inter-ca!DIU&#13;
buses and shuttle bus will&#13;
operating as usual.&#13;
BUSINE~ PHONES&#13;
658-4861, Ext I&#13;
Newscope is an ind&#13;
student newspaper com~&#13;
students of The Univ&#13;
Wisconsin·Parkside&#13;
weekly except during_,;&#13;
periods. Student obt.a1ntd&#13;
vertising funds are lhe&#13;
source of revenue for&#13;
· operation of Newscopt. li&#13;
copies are printed&#13;
distributed throughou1 Kenosha and Racint&#13;
munities ·as well as the l:&#13;
sity. Free copies are 11&#13;
upon request.&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
• &#13;
THE EDITOR&#13;
Ibe Editor, ,&#13;
11 , Arthur M, Gruhl s&#13;
R"Le!ler of ,May 17,&#13;
Gruhl says that he adlit·a&#13;
rotten, hateflll"&lt;;l,article&#13;
,.ues describes as a candid&#13;
iblt ~tfUI weekly" called&#13;
,.d, Talk" about "Three&#13;
,.I~S 'dG"&#13;
IP ""Hooks' an oons,&#13;
~inlltheir environment as&#13;
de¢' lingtn!ally of "dirt, pot,&#13;
....... "and "lazy-do-nothing&#13;
II&lt;':.'~ as they laugh their way&#13;
.,. lb.ir "potted pads. and&#13;
to " I wonder If this IS&#13;
~ib1e, factual reporting.&#13;
• calling and unfounded&#13;
=ations, whether by a&#13;
hin Erdman, or Gruhl Ru t t •&#13;
'bUleS nethlng.&#13;
",,11'1 Patrick Nelson&#13;
11Ibe Editor:&#13;
When he was at Parkside,&#13;
Ifff'I Rubin spoke of an international&#13;
conspiracy with&#13;
clredion from Hanoi and said&#13;
.. sbOOldnot be ashamed of it.&#13;
/oJ Luddilies, operatmg at&#13;
Putside we are not.&#13;
AfewPeople were surprised&#13;
dill !bere was no official or&#13;
lIIDi-dficialresponse to the&#13;
IIlti-Ludditeletters appeanng&#13;
in the last few weeks issues of&#13;
Newscope, As a Luddite, Iview&#13;
theseletters as Luddite letters,&#13;
Luddites are interested in the&#13;
manipulation of media in&#13;
quantitative rather than&#13;
qualitative terms. A letter from&#13;
Art Gruhl is every bit as good as&#13;
a letter from George Melesky&#13;
I Would like to quote from t~&#13;
Firesign Theatre, in contrast to&#13;
the quotes last week from Jake&#13;
Erdman's death culture&#13;
column, "I'm not talking about&#13;
hate, I'm talking about eight.&#13;
Dinner at eight. Let's eat!" The&#13;
saccharine response to this is&#13;
of course, "More sugar!" •&#13;
Luddites role on this campus&#13;
has always been that' of a&#13;
Feenichts Playhouse, That&#13;
means you don't pay, We advocate&#13;
a free country. That&#13;
means you don't pay,&#13;
Luddites do not believe that&#13;
death is a refutation of life. The&#13;
only Marshall we shall support&#13;
is Marshall Mcl.uhan All power&#13;
to the imagination! There is no&#13;
freedom for the enemies of&#13;
freedom,&#13;
Verbosely yours,&#13;
Mark Timpany,&#13;
Luddite Conspira tor&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Let's not be ludicrous IDCI&#13;
verbose this time, We are&#13;
fortunate to have Mr, Arthur&#13;
Gruhl as a student at Parbide&#13;
if ~ly as an example of w&#13;
afn,cted with what Nietzche&#13;
terms consumption of the seal.&#13;
To explain this malady further&#13;
let us quote from TIl... S~&#13;
Zaratbustra.&#13;
"There are those with conswnption&#13;
of the soul: hanlly are&#13;
they burp when they begin to die&#13;
and to lbolt for the doctrines of&#13;
weariness and renunciation.&#13;
They would like to be dead, and&#13;
we should welcome their wish.&#13;
Let us beware of waking the&#13;
dead and disturbing these living&#13;
coffins!"&#13;
Perhaps Mr. GruhJ's affliction&#13;
is not irreparable. As a&#13;
first step in his possible&#13;
awakening, we suggest that be&#13;
begin to see that education goes&#13;
beyond satisfying the economic&#13;
interests of the University and&#13;
its capitalist superstructure.&#13;
The hopes of all the Luddites go&#13;
with you, Mr. Gruhl, for a&#13;
speedy recovery,&#13;
Sincerly,&#13;
Ian MacTaggart&#13;
1965, then the Kenosha Ex- chamber group in competition&#13;
ension of the Center System, he against the 11 other centers&#13;
'Nas the only full-time member system schools for the first&#13;
of the Music department, a time, his group placed second..&#13;
situation that continued for the The following year in that same&#13;
next two years. At that time the competion he entered four&#13;
Music department consisted of groups and captured the first&#13;
a 13 member choir, one student four places.&#13;
enrolled in Music theory. and no . Under his guidance by 1967&#13;
school band. By the end of his choral enrollment had in.&#13;
first year at UWK he had creased to over one hundred&#13;
Darrell Douglas:&#13;
Parkside's Architect&#13;
In Music&#13;
by Warren Nedry&#13;
and Bob Borchardt&#13;
Ytor's Note: The Humanities&#13;
Divisional Executive com·&#13;
IIIUee has voted not to renew&#13;
1ft toIltractof Darrell Douglas.&#13;
SfWICOpehas learned "there is&#13;
1101or politicalmaneuvering in&#13;
cHpluslcdepartment". Using&#13;
lewsclippings, timetables. a&#13;
porl conversation with&#13;
,refessor Douglas. and the&#13;
1eltlm000y of many students in&#13;
lIIe music department Ne.scope presents the r--------------------- "&#13;
.... wlDgarticle,&#13;
This article is intended to be&#13;
• ..ua documented history as&#13;
(IllIIibleof the background of&#13;
lIIrrelDouglasand his service&#13;
IDtbe university during his six&#13;
J!IJ'S with the institution.&#13;
1Ir, Douglas received his&#13;
bocheIorofScience degree from&#13;
IIIe Universityof Minnesota and&#13;
• MAfrom Arizona State at&#13;
Tempe, In 1965 he completed&#13;
tiftually all course-work&#13;
-ry for his Doctora te but&#13;
_Ihe aummerof that year, his&#13;
lredemicadvisor died. Due to&#13;
• _ficient staff at Southern&#13;
Cal. DOadvisor was available&#13;
.w 11167,&#13;
WithIhe cbange of an advisor L_...._!"" ~ ....~~-~~~~~::~"::::::':-::::~:::-::::::__:~&#13;
..... a corresponding change established a performing and the first Kenosha chapter of contact hours taught b)&#13;
.. coursew k R t . t concert band, increased the the National Music Educators Douglas compiled u n&#13;
_rn .... L Cal eve or, e urmng 0 chol'r to 47, initiat a secon ed d Conference was formed. In it's ti'melables from 1 to 1971&#13;
ry summer, .th bersh'p (The a"erage gem Ie.- eonllct .... the ' th se formed a I'nl'tia}year WI a mem I&#13;
-'.. exception of 1970, he musIc eory cour , mNC hour load at 'WP 12,15) llIalp1&lt;ted tbe' permanent pep band that of less than a dozen, ~=&#13;
IftrQrk in 1969reVlsededco~. performed at atheletic events, established an annual faU. ~ "'M_ ,pass t e and established several scholarship award program and 196$-U JO 3'&#13;
~ ... examinations, and s,'nce has increased it's mem- 1~ 30 30 ..... WlH'kon a d" t t' chamber groups, while spen- 27 _ lit lsser a lOn, t bership to 75 and has awarded 1967-68 _&#13;
"Peels to receive his PhD ding approximately 30 contac 1_ 30 30&#13;
"later tha thi f II hours Wl'th his students, 17 scholarships,&#13;
U n sa, Also ,'n 1967Douglas initiated 1969-70 -0 POnarrival in Kenosha in In 1966, entering a UWK&#13;
....... "''' ~.~".' , ~_;.; .. 1 • '" ...... "'. "-",... "c&#13;
You Owe It&#13;
to&#13;
Yourself&#13;
to Drink&#13;
FRESH&#13;
BEER&#13;
Drink ••&#13;
Budweisec.&#13;
lUNG0' eUM&#13;
"'laal Is il! • tWa .. _ ...... 1 to H. U l.t~ ..&#13;
WIs..... Io-P.rt&lt; rt '-"" \tart&lt; J... P.rt&lt; " ••&#13;
Radna (I.m 41RkUni L..... 41"- ".. K""", '"&#13;
dncribla&amp; 111m II s ,. fOOlmarat .. ~f ~ I H.aD .&#13;
""'Ie ..I t..".P. The I•• Mop. l lr ··pkter1.a1 .'" ~&#13;
coa~" .. AprU MI H it _ill eevee W n. brf4 We.&#13;
lhtoyarecoa lanll)addlalKW'MSe .nto q~ t.b~ ••• iLt'4 ..... \f&gt;&#13;
the IIMntl somethiDl f•• to 'I ... W ... * plat. • if&gt;&#13;
«meat block .. U~E,tor')OM'. rttS to: H\W ttl ,,"N. ,."an&#13;
andgreens eire .. tit. _ " andtIt.ld.. pre dia .. elller&#13;
.. ails 01 t.be room .-eU.&#13;
the annual v.riel) show.&#13;
established stage band competition.&#13;
served as chairman&#13;
of the Leelure-&lt;:on&lt;::ert sen ,&#13;
was a founding member oflhe&#13;
nivers.it)' of WlSCORSln .A.rb&#13;
Council, and had one of h&#13;
worl&lt;s published, a ~lled&#13;
"Simple GlflS"&#13;
The (ollowing is a conservatl\'e&#13;
eshmate of lhe&#13;
2&#13;
o&#13;
•&#13;
•1&#13;
•o&#13;
•2&#13;
1970-7' 20&#13;
GRADUATING?&#13;
i'Jell a 1'1,,' ad l!f&#13;
UNIVERSIT&#13;
(~BOOK STORE&#13;
THE EDITOR&#13;
the Editor, , toe· Arthur M. Gruhl s&#13;
R '1,etter of May 17.&#13;
Gruhl says that he adir.&#13;
rotten hatefilled article !lllresa b describeS ' " d'd as a can 1&#13;
1h11 ;oughtful weekly" called and , Talk" about "Three&#13;
•Let 5 ., "Hooks" and Goons", ms . t b·ng their environmen as&#13;
~ ti~g totally of "dirt, pot,&#13;
((t!Sl~x" and "lazy-do-nothing&#13;
fretlds" as they laugh their way&#13;
their "potted ~ads . an.d&#13;
to ., I wonder 1f this 1s&#13;
'-~ible, factual reporting.&#13;
e calling and unfounded&#13;
~:gations, whether by a&#13;
b·n Erdman, or Gruhl Ru 1 , • tributes nothing. cal Patrick Nelson&#13;
To the Edi tor:&#13;
When he was at Parksi~e,&#13;
Jerry Rubin spok~ of an .mroational&#13;
conspiracy with&#13;
mrection from Hanoi and said&#13;
,e should not be ashamE;d of it.&#13;
AS Luddities, operating at&#13;
Parkside, we are not. . A few people were surprised&#13;
that there was no official or&#13;
semi-official response to ~he&#13;
ti-Luddite letters appearmg&#13;
Edilor's Note: The Humanities&#13;
Divisional Executive commiltee&#13;
has voted not to renew&#13;
lht contract of Darrell Douglas.&#13;
:\tw cope has learned "there is&#13;
a lot of political maneuvering in&#13;
tJJlUSicdepartment". using&#13;
t11sclippings, timetables, a&#13;
ort conversation with&#13;
pro!essor Douglas, and the&#13;
1n1imony of many students in&#13;
lilt music department&#13;
St'liScope presents the&#13;
lowing article.&#13;
This article is intended to be&#13;
ell a documented history as&#13;
ible of the background of&#13;
Darrel Douglas and his service&#13;
the university during his six&#13;
J ars with the institution.&#13;
Ir, Douglas received his&#13;
chelor of Science degree from&#13;
University of Minnesota and&#13;
.tA from Arizona State at&#13;
T_ pe. In 1965 he completed&#13;
mtually all course-work&#13;
ry for his Doctorate but&#13;
the summer of that year, his&#13;
ICedemic advisor died. Due to&#13;
an ufficient staff at Southern&#13;
Cl!, no advisor was available&#13;
in the last few weeks issues of&#13;
Newscope. As a Luddite, I view&#13;
these letters as Luddite letters&#13;
Ludd.ites a~e interested in t~&#13;
manipulation of media in&#13;
qua~trt~tive rather than&#13;
quahtabv~ terms. A letter from&#13;
Art Gruhl 1s every bit as good as&#13;
a letter from George Metesky&#13;
.I w~uld like to quote from t~&#13;
F1res1gn Theatre, in contrast to&#13;
the quotes last week from Jake&#13;
Erdman's death culture&#13;
column. "I'm not talking about&#13;
hate. I'm talking about eight&#13;
Dinner at eight. Let's eat!" Th~&#13;
saccharine response to this is&#13;
of course, "More sugar!" '&#13;
Luddites role on this campus&#13;
has always been that · of a&#13;
Feenichts Playhouse. That&#13;
means you don't pay. We advocate&#13;
a free country. That&#13;
means you don't pay.&#13;
Luddites do not believe that&#13;
death is a refutation of life. The&#13;
only Marshall we shall support&#13;
is Marshall McLuhan. All power&#13;
to the imagination! There is no&#13;
freedom for the enemies of&#13;
freedom.&#13;
Verbosely yours,&#13;
Mark Timpany,&#13;
Luddite Conspirator&#13;
l965, then the Kenosha Exension&#13;
of the Center System, he&#13;
·Nas the only full-time member&#13;
of the Music department, a&#13;
situation that continued for the&#13;
next two years. At that time the&#13;
Music department consisted of&#13;
a 13 member choir, one student&#13;
enrolled in Music theory, and no&#13;
school band. By the end of his&#13;
first year at UWK he had&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Let's not be ludicrous and&#13;
verbose this time. We are&#13;
fortunate to have 1r. Arthur&#13;
~ruhl as a student at Parkside,&#13;
if ~nly as an example of one&#13;
afflicted with what 'ietzche&#13;
terms consumption of the soul&#13;
To explain this malady further&#13;
let us quote from Th ;&#13;
Zarathustra.&#13;
"There are those with consumption&#13;
of the soul: hardly are&#13;
they borp when they begin to die&#13;
and ½&gt; lbnR for the doctrines of&#13;
wearmess and renunciation.&#13;
They would like to be dead, and&#13;
we should welcome their ..., ish.&#13;
Let us beware of waking the&#13;
dead and disturbing these living coffins!"&#13;
Perhaps Mr. Gruhl' affliction&#13;
is not irreparable. As a&#13;
first step in his possible&#13;
awakening, we suggest that he&#13;
begin to see that education goes beyond satisfying the economic&#13;
interests of the niversity and&#13;
its capitalist superstructure.&#13;
The hopes of all the Luddite go&#13;
with you, 1r. Gruhl, for a&#13;
speedy recovery.&#13;
Sincerl_.&#13;
Ian facTaggart&#13;
chamber group in competition against the 11 other centers&#13;
system schools for the first&#13;
time, his group placed second.&#13;
The following year in that same&#13;
competion he entered four&#13;
groups and captured the first&#13;
four places.&#13;
Under his guidance b · 1967&#13;
choral enrollment had increased&#13;
to over one hundred&#13;
Darrell Douglas:&#13;
Parkside's Architect&#13;
In Music&#13;
by Warren Nedry&#13;
and Bob Borchardt&#13;
z&#13;
0&#13;
..&#13;
...&#13;
l&#13;
I:&#13;
0&#13;
...&#13;
z&#13;
ayH.1921&#13;
til 1967.&#13;
With the change of an advisor L--------------~~~-----~~~~----~--~~~-:'~ ame a corresponding change established a performing and the first Keno.5ha chapter f&#13;
coursework. Returning to concert band, increased the the National tusic Educators&#13;
rn Cal every summer, choir to 47, initiated a second Conference was formed . In it'&#13;
th the exception of 1970, he music theory course, formed a initial year with a membership&#13;
CO!llpleted the revised cour- permanent pep band that of less than a dozen, • IE. ·c ork. in 1969, passed the performed at atheletic events, established an annual lifymg examinations, and and established several scholarship award program and&#13;
n work on a dissertation. chamber groups, while spen- since has increased it' memla&#13;
expects to receive his PhD ding approximately 30 contact bership to 75 and has awarded&#13;
,, !er than this fall. hours with his students. 17 scholarships. "P00 arrival in Kenosha in In 1966, entering a UWK Also in 1967 Douglas initiated&#13;
.. ' ............ .&#13;
You Owe It&#13;
to&#13;
Yourself&#13;
to Drink&#13;
FRESH&#13;
BEER&#13;
Drink •••&#13;
Budweiser.&#13;
KJNG OF IIUJIS&#13;
• but you&#13;
know that! 11&#13;
GRADUAT&#13;
UNIVERSIT&#13;
BOOK STORE &#13;
Recycle&#13;
This Paper&#13;
CHAT&#13;
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CHEW&#13;
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SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
. l' A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRi. &amp; SAT TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERSJ&#13;
40~ &amp; 24( i&#13;
SUPERCHEW ~&#13;
(triple decker) 1&#13;
5S( tN&#13;
~~~.,":-'''''-':~t S be:. ~~&#13;
"""."~l'· _-::--&#13;
-,j.l .. ", 'iW...~r---'&#13;
1O! WISCONSIN AVE.&#13;
RACINE Ul-!5!1&#13;
Open 7:30 a.m. - 8 p.m.&#13;
Monday - Friday&#13;
saturday 10 5 p.m.&#13;
(~&#13;
go~ep&#13;
~ «37. 22nd Ave'&#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 657-9747&#13;
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS&#13;
Scholarship awards to be made at&#13;
graduation, June 12&#13;
A variety of awards available to&#13;
qualified students on basis of&#13;
G.P.A (at least 3.25)&#13;
and financial need.&#13;
Applications available at:&#13;
Tallent Information Center&#13;
Main Office Kenosha &amp; Racine campus&#13;
RETURN TO CHARLES KUGEL&#13;
BY MAY 28&#13;
FULL 4 ·PLY NYLON&#13;
CORD CONSTRUCTION&#13;
4125 2U2 ::::&#13;
SEOONDTIRE&#13;
1/2-PBIOE&#13;
,&#13;
•&#13;
Umitedf- Hurry!&#13;
time&#13;
r:=;::~~~~d~~~~~~U K'ftollUt-u&#13;
offer&#13;
;..- 5l1O 25.87 ::l:&#13;
5715 28.87 :::&#13;
59.50 29.75 u.&#13;
101160th St.&#13;
KENOSHA 654-2186&#13;
Open 8:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.&#13;
Monday - Friday&#13;
Saturd~l' to 5 p.m.&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers&#13;
PANCAKE HOUSE&#13;
REUAURANT&#13;
Sunday - Thursday&#13;
6 - Midnight&#13;
Friday - Saturday&#13;
6 - 3 A.M .&#13;
-361930 AVE._&#13;
PANCAKES&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
....&#13;
lamous 'or&#13;
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I. four Silft'" -·12" - 1." • 16"&#13;
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• I'IS • S'''GHBTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GMOCCHI 10 UVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD. SANDWICHU&#13;
CAllY ·OUTS • OEliVERY&#13;
""ou lIN(; ~ .. WI IIIHr-'"&#13;
657·9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
Keith Gunderson:~&#13;
by Jim Koloen dungeon, as the war .&#13;
ollheNewscopeStafl came '?"t syllable to ~I~&#13;
Have you ever seen a poet a traffic Jam. He rere y table io&#13;
almost running out of breath, poems and prose I'redlo""&#13;
his larynx running. over a "rhy.l!.'m .(lOems" :,,", ..&#13;
crosscountry course set In mea rung IS sometim ere tht&#13;
rhythm poems, or a poet the rhythm. Seemin es lost II&#13;
reading a poem on fis~ng ~nd unwritten music th g set to III&#13;
throwing his line out while doing read in a singing'vot floet &lt;tte.&#13;
it while simultaneously rm- a flowing river alce&#13;
, creath..&#13;
, ? the-' prisoned in a dungeon. Jams. He threw a few ~&#13;
Lucky 13 was the number of concrete poems on ~~&#13;
people who can answer yes, I which Iwas stupid eno e ~&#13;
have seen, I have heard, yes I copy down and therefo~!lOt1o&#13;
am one of the chosen, I was reproduce here Of c C&amp;JIIat&#13;
there. poet-Philosopher Keith of you were stupid en"Jrse, ......&#13;
Gunderson held a reading at come to the dungeon&lt;&gt;ugh !lOt10&#13;
7:30, no 7:35, no 7:45, in RO&lt;!m vie. ., SO,If: II&#13;
101, no lOlD in Greenqwst The poet read in a&#13;
Wednesday night and nobody shaky voice for an h som"",*&#13;
came. . tuating the reading w:' ......&#13;
Keith Gunderson IS a young, hand went up to ne~l&#13;
blond haired, dark eyed, stocky, questions and just ta~IlI'"&#13;
student·looking North Country poetry in general. Near lbooa&#13;
poet and profe~sor of philosophy ~f the reading he Pres:: tid&#13;
at the UniverSIty of Mmnesota. color poem" which be ted I&#13;
His mouth barely opened that called a "merry. ...&#13;
night, in the near empty poem", the concept w::-~&#13;
YOUTHPOWER Announces&#13;
Registration and Clinic&#13;
Numbers, etc.)&#13;
B. John Beige, Assist...&#13;
Employment Manager of thr S&#13;
C. Johnson &amp; Son, will dIoaa&#13;
the attitude which youngP"IIt&#13;
should be considenng wIiIt&#13;
summer job hunting, pi.. ~&#13;
right and wrong ways of •&#13;
plying for summer jobs.&#13;
C. Mary Husby, PenGlllll&#13;
Secretary of the J. L C.&#13;
Company will talk about ...&#13;
grooming and appearanee 8Ir&#13;
comments will be directed •&#13;
both young men and wlllllOlllll&#13;
will cover the grooming k",.&#13;
success.&#13;
YOUTHPOWER will hold its&#13;
registration and Clinic at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside-Racine, Saturday,&#13;
June 5. The Registration and&#13;
Clinic will operate continually&#13;
from 9:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon for&#13;
youths ages 16-21.&#13;
The Clinic will feature a&#13;
training session for young&#13;
people looking for summer&#13;
work. Itwill also give those that&#13;
were signed up last year an&#13;
opportunity to r .. register. All&#13;
that will be necessary is to&#13;
check and make a notation on&#13;
their last year's card.&#13;
Schedule&#13;
1 Registration.&#13;
2. 'Special Gift given at the&#13;
session "Right Start in the&#13;
Business World".&#13;
Clinic&#13;
1. Right Start in the Business&#13;
World. .&#13;
A. M. M. Michael Connolly,&#13;
Director of Corporate Personnel&#13;
and Industrial Relation&#13;
Service at Western Publishing&#13;
will talk abou t the job interview:&#13;
what information&#13;
young people should be&#13;
prepared to offer (resumes,&#13;
references, Social Security&#13;
Registration for new .,.&#13;
plicants and those •&#13;
registered with Youtbpooer&#13;
last year will check in for It'&#13;
registering. Those woo atlllll&#13;
Clinics will be given flrlt ..&#13;
.opportunities. Please ..&#13;
register at the Clinic.&#13;
This summer in RaciDf.&#13;
Youthpower will be ope!! J.&#13;
7th througb August 27th .,.&#13;
9: 00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Theallit&#13;
will be located at 222Nt&#13;
Street and the lelel'l*'&#13;
numbers are 637-5461and 17-&#13;
5822.&#13;
This Space For Sale&#13;
Phone 652-41777&#13;
-&#13;
The Grievance &amp; elearint&#13;
House Committee of the&#13;
Parlcside Student Senate&#13;
'will hold a public mee~ng&#13;
at 10:30 a.m. Friday, MaY&#13;
28 in room 0105 Greel1-.&#13;
quist. Persons interested&#13;
becoming votingmember5" ... on the committee or Phi&#13;
senting grievances to t.&#13;
.~,&#13;
Student _SenaJe-Dl'e-'"&#13;
Recycle&#13;
This Paper&#13;
C'HAT&#13;
1N&#13;
C EW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
1&#13;
ENOSHA&#13;
S T. TILL 2 A.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40( &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
(triple decker}&#13;
55(&#13;
f~&#13;
Jo~ep Y 4437 - 22nd Ave•&#13;
WEST SIDE.&#13;
SWEET&#13;
SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 o.m. till 11 p.m.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97 47&#13;
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS&#13;
Scholarship awards to be made at&#13;
graduation, June 12&#13;
A variety of awards available to&#13;
qualified students on basis of&#13;
G.P.A (at least 3.25)&#13;
and financial need.&#13;
Applications available at:&#13;
Tallent Information Center&#13;
Main Office Kenosha &amp; Racine campus&#13;
RETURN TO CHARLES KUGEL&#13;
BY MAY 28&#13;
Patronize Our&#13;
Advertizers&#13;
SEOONDTIRE&#13;
1/2-PRIOE&#13;
109 ISCONSIN AVE.&#13;
RACINE 637-9591&#13;
Open 7:30 a.m. - a p.m.&#13;
Monday - Friday&#13;
Saturday io 5 p.m.&#13;
• '&#13;
•1-._, ___ __ _ ..,.. __ • __ w lllllldld ~ pau the mtire b.d "'",_.,...._ __&#13;
·..n.i.-i&lt;!o.......,.i1up1eo•1&#13;
FULL 4-PLY NYLON&#13;
CORD CONSTRUCTION&#13;
1011 60th St.&#13;
KENOSHA 654-2186&#13;
Open 8:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.&#13;
Monday - Friday&#13;
Saturdij~ to s p.m.&#13;
PANCAKE HOUSE&#13;
RHTAURANT&#13;
SundaJ - Thursday&#13;
6 - Midnight&#13;
Fridn:y - Saturday&#13;
6 - 3 A.M.&#13;
-3619 30 AVE . _&#13;
PANCAKES&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
111 Four Si&amp;es 9'" • ·12" • 14" • 16 ..&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIIS • SPAGHOTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LASAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CAltlY-OUTS . DELIVERY "YOU •IHG .. , . Wf HIN"''&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
Keith Gunderson: A&#13;
by Jim Koloen dungeon, as the wo ds&#13;
of the Newscope Staff came out syllable tor I QUi&#13;
Have you ever seen a poet a traffic jam. He refe~ labl&#13;
almost running out of breath, poems_ and prose ed to&#13;
his larynx running . over . a "rhy_t!_}m poems" ,:ltli&#13;
crosscountry course set m meamng is sometim ere&#13;
rhythm poems, or a poet the rhythm. Seemin es last&#13;
reading a poem on fishing ~nd unwritten music th g set to&#13;
throwing his line out while do~ng read in a singing'vot P&lt;&gt;et U&#13;
it, while simultaneously 1m- a flowing river of.ce, crea&#13;
prisoned in a dungeon? jams. He threw a few the&#13;
Lucky 13 was the number of concrete poems O ~IJJno&#13;
people who can answer yes, I which I was stupid ~no e boa&#13;
have seen, I have heard, yes I copy down and therero~ not&#13;
am one of the chosen, I w_as reproduce here. or cou ca~&#13;
there. Poet-Philosopher . Keith of you were stupid enou rse,&#13;
Gunderson held a readmg at come to the dungeon gh net&#13;
7:30, no 7:35, no 7:45, in Room vie. · ' so,&#13;
101 , no 101D in Greenquist The poet read in a Wednesday night and nobody shaky voice for an h orn&#13;
came. tuating the reading w°i:· Keith Gunderson is a young, hand went up to tle\era&#13;
blond haired, dark eyed, stocky, questio!ls and just ta;~&#13;
student-looking North Country poetry m general. Near~&#13;
poet and professor of philosophy of the reading he presen&#13;
at the University of Minnesota. " color poem" which he led 1&#13;
His mouth barely opened that called a "merry-g .&#13;
night, in the near empty poem" , the concept w~ ~&#13;
YOUTHPOWER Announces&#13;
Registration and Clinic&#13;
YOUTHPOWER will hold its&#13;
registration and Clinic at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside-Racine, Saturday,&#13;
June 5. The Registration and&#13;
Clinic will operate continually&#13;
from 9:30 a .m. to 12:00 noon for&#13;
youths ages 16-21.&#13;
The Clinic will fea ture a&#13;
training session for young&#13;
people looking for summer&#13;
work. It will also give those that&#13;
were signed up last year an&#13;
opportunity to re-register. All&#13;
that will be necessary is to&#13;
check and make a notation on&#13;
their last year's card.&#13;
Schedule&#13;
1 Registration.&#13;
2. 'Special Gift given at the&#13;
session "Right Start in the&#13;
Business World".&#13;
Clinic&#13;
1. Right Start in the Business&#13;
World. .&#13;
A. M. M. Michael Connolly,&#13;
Director of Corporate Personnel&#13;
and Industrial Relation&#13;
Service at Western Publishing&#13;
will talk about the job interview&#13;
: what information&#13;
young people should be&#13;
prepared to offer (resumes,&#13;
references, Social Security&#13;
Numbers, etc.)&#13;
B. John Beige, A ill&#13;
Employment Manager ol the&#13;
C. Johnson &amp; Son, will&#13;
the attitude which young&#13;
should be considering&#13;
summer job hunting, pl&#13;
right and wrong way of&#13;
plying for summer jobs.&#13;
C. Mary Husby, Pe&#13;
Secretary of the J I.&#13;
Company will talk aboul&#13;
grooming and appearance.&#13;
comments will be directed&#13;
both young· men and women&#13;
will cover the grooming kc,&#13;
success.&#13;
Registration for new a&#13;
plicants and those&#13;
registered with Youthpowlast&#13;
year will check in r« reregistering.&#13;
Those who at&#13;
Clinics will be given first&#13;
opportunities. Please&#13;
register at the Clinic&#13;
This summer in Rae&#13;
Youthpower will be open J&#13;
7th through August 27th&#13;
9:00 a .m. to 4:00 p.m. The&#13;
will be located at 222&#13;
Street and the Lele&#13;
numbers are 637-5461 arxl&#13;
5822.&#13;
This Space For Sale&#13;
Phone 652-41777&#13;
The Grievance &amp; Clearing&#13;
House Committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Senate&#13;
will hold a public meeting&#13;
at 10:30 a.m. Friday, M0Y&#13;
28 in room D105 Green-.&#13;
quist. Persons interested 1&#13;
· be~ becoming voting rnern&#13;
,, ....&#13;
on the committee or P&#13;
senting grievances '? t~;J.&#13;
Student. Senate are ,n~ &#13;
poet in a Dungeon&#13;
it consisted Of words re~o~i.ng the readings from the&#13;
"", ~ in different colors and Activities BUilding. If you can't&#13;
""tle, the form of a merry- bring poetry to where the people&#13;
paced; read faster and faster are I suppose. a dungeon is an&#13;
... "" ~rry_go-round picks up Ideal place for it to whith&#13;
~ m People ha ve to he exposed e~&#13;
sp&lt;"-' hour went quickly, a poets, especially the public&#13;
",. of it was spent trying to drunks, which many poets are&#13;
qIlrtertand how to listen to his themselves. Mayhe next tim&#13;
~ delivery of "rhy:thm the Humanities Division COUI~&#13;
qUIC and the remaining time pass ,around a cassette tape of a&#13;
poern~nt searching for the clue reading to the lucky 13 who&#13;
... ~. title philosopher-poet. would attend the next reading&#13;
to his poems named anyway I this would save a great&#13;
~~ ... pI1ers, other than that 'deal of expense, then maybe the&#13;
I;title poet seemed the most savings could be donated to&#13;
validone. . some more worthy cause such&#13;
It is somewhat parado~lc~l as stocking the library with a&#13;
for'Ibe Division of Humam~tic recorded volume of James&#13;
StUdies to bring. poe~ to P-slde Dickey's poems as read by Burl&#13;
and them imprison him out of Ives, or an autographed sel of&#13;
!ightin a far flung corner of the the complete philosophical&#13;
Greenquist basement. Why works of Snoopy.&#13;
I:I'inJ him over at all, if the (ED: Mr. Gunderson was not&#13;
ciJjeclis merely to see how well presented by the Humanities&#13;
poet can be hid. It was ex- Division, but by the Parkside&#13;
Ilained to me that public Poetry Forum with assistance&#13;
~ess was amajor factor in from the Student Affairs oUice.)&#13;
~-,::~:!=,»:";:~::::::~-=i:::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~:!:::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::!:::::::::::::~~::::::::::::~:::: i Suggestion Box !~l&#13;
:::~&#13;
Place ttRraslh&#13;
l&#13;
cans at each end of tile walkway to .~·.:~::.:1&#13;
Greenqws a.&#13;
Patrick Nelson .,&#13;
»,:.,::::::::;:::~~::;:~:;:~;;:~:;:~:::~::::;:~:~~::::::=::~::::;:~:::~:;::::::::::::::::JII&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
.IThe Newscope Staff&#13;
The third of a series of four&#13;
articles on our legislators and&#13;
lb. merger. This week&#13;
Assemblymen Dorff and&#13;
Brown.&#13;
Eugene Dorff is the freshman&#13;
Assemblyman from Kenosha.&#13;
Mr. Dorff started with&#13;
background on Parkside.&#13;
"Parkside was slated to be in&#13;
the UW system, not the state&#13;
lIliversity system. In the year&#13;
II its inception the ci tizens of&#13;
Kenosha contributed ten to&#13;
eleven million dollars to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin·&#13;
Parbide, not to WSU Parkside.&#13;
Nowwe have a move to regula te&#13;
it into mediocrity."&#13;
"We should allow Parkside to&#13;
develop. Here we have the&#13;
potential for advancement,&#13;
reoearch, and development into&#13;
I post-graduate institution.&#13;
Madison is stymied&#13;
etonomicaUy. Here we have the&#13;
available land and the&#13;
possibility of 40,000 students."&#13;
Mr. Dorff continued with how&#13;
he {elt lbe merger would affect&#13;
the entire system. "The merger&#13;
wouldtend to freeze the level of&#13;
tbeUWsystem and bring up the&#13;
I,vel of the thirteen state&#13;
lIliversities." Mr. Dorff looks&#13;
til this as a mistake because of&#13;
the differences -of missions&#13;
between the UW and WSU&#13;
IyItems. The WSU system' is&#13;
~e up mostly of teacher&#13;
\'uueges.&#13;
'IMadison and Milwaukee will&#13;
DOtbe immediately hurt by the&#13;
merger. Green Bay and&#13;
Parkside have been singled out&#13;
for cuts and will definitely&#13;
suffer under the present&#13;
proposal. No other departmental&#13;
budget was cut like&#13;
Parkside's $3.5 million to $,7&#13;
million."&#13;
On the WSU system he said,&#13;
"The increase in teacher wages&#13;
there will help the morale. I do&#13;
not think there will be any&#13;
phase-out of any state&#13;
universities. I feel they are&#13;
more compatible with each&#13;
other than with an individual&#13;
mission as in the UW."&#13;
Mr. Dorff commented on the&#13;
cost of the merger. "As to save&#13;
.,M..111 P.,e5&#13;
today The m.., ... produced on a l}p.""nlCr, 1M&#13;
dime store ~pnnts 01 famous plon~nas on 1M&#13;
Wills, a pi" of hlndmade "",Is b the I Ihlndlcrlft&#13;
expert (Gene"e"" Turltl, the mall all&#13;
capecity, the ,mple cberee d. foods.1Ild '01'&#13;
dressed tn whue umforms ""th plA,d and aclld&#13;
colored aprons, all ref) t th m,ddl Ammcan&#13;
culture&#13;
I especially bked th '" a,&#13;
They blend tnformahty ""th good nee. rm&#13;
many regular cu tomers ror the lhree mlln mt'8ls I&#13;
day, Kay Bennett, Anne Popp, her motMr tt"f&#13;
and others. help reduce the uneasln 10m peopl&#13;
experience eaung oot. But tt l$n·t ev rdo,..&#13;
I ordered a shnmp dinner and .Iaggl hid a&#13;
PIlot pecial w hicb tncluded a lad. teall nd·&#13;
"ich and French tn for a dollar twenty.five ""&#13;
both found nofaults "Ith the meal The food fl&#13;
atmosphere or the r laurant ~ery v.~l,&#13;
pleasant.&#13;
The place ",a preuy busy durIng the m"ldle of&#13;
the week. v.hen we ale lllere Icier people 10 coupJ&#13;
and groups d. four ale their hot dinners which COOl&#13;
about a dollar on the a...·era e for thtn hke&#13;
speghetti and hoI beef . laggle made th obsenat,on&#13;
thaI there seemed 10 ,,'gel8 I ed&#13;
with most of the meals, v.hlch Itold her V.a \; I"}&#13;
thoughUul on the part of the managemcn~ n to&#13;
it lhat tl)Clr customers "ere health&#13;
While obser"mg the LUn .. e II te:ned to&#13;
\\"L1P. "hich played throughou'lhe tauranl The&#13;
un was setl1ng.a v.e reaht.ed It "'. a little "arm&#13;
InsIde. I asked for a second cup d. coif and I&#13;
noticed the old lady next to me didn't fln. h her&#13;
peas It "a all "e&lt;)' qulel, ~Iaxtng and ,nl ... ling&#13;
I paid the bill and walked OUl pa,t th bubbl&#13;
gum machine, askmg. taggJe If thou~ht It would&#13;
be stupid to call Jack. ',cholson and ,ell hIm about&#13;
Andy·s. It "ould be a . hame for anyone 10 I up&#13;
this fine slice of American Me.&#13;
basis for increased&#13;
enrollment. ..&#13;
"All building in the state has&#13;
heen affected by the budget and&#13;
we have to save money by&#13;
holding back on the athletic&#13;
bUilding to stabilize. The&#13;
governor has not shown that the&#13;
merger would sa ve money."&#13;
Mr. Dorff gave his opinion on&#13;
the politics of the merger. "By&#13;
establishing an educational&#13;
super board we would put too&#13;
much authority in the hands of&#13;
one particular group to dictate&#13;
policy. t,&#13;
"There is a lot of nit-picking&#13;
in the house. But when it comes&#13;
to the real issues the legislators&#13;
the merger ". (ecllt would be a&#13;
good thing I'm tired d. com·&#13;
petition for dollars for hIgher&#13;
education. Ican see merit to the&#13;
plan if it's worked out&#13;
properly."&#13;
When asked if he felt an)&#13;
university would be hurt by the&#13;
merger he answered.. ". '0. t&#13;
don't. Jusl because the) sa) so&#13;
doesn't mean irs gOing to&#13;
happen thal way_ l"m gelting&#13;
sick and tired or people Ii\,jng In&#13;
ivory towers thinking that&#13;
they're untouchable because&#13;
they're so hIgh and mighty·'&#13;
Mr. BrOVo'n had a dlrferent&#13;
opinion on the cost of the&#13;
merger also. "1 don't lhink the&#13;
By P~uI Lomatire of The :\'e"scope Starr&#13;
I Jack NIcholson has said thaI his movies have no&#13;
p at; ~ey ~re just an attempt to show a slice of&#13;
American life. Other producers and wTiters have&#13;
caught .on, and. realize that there is art in the&#13;
mannensms and life styles of the everyday people&#13;
who make America what it is.&#13;
10 many movies, locations have gone from&#13;
elatorate sets to truck stops, bus stations and&#13;
sldestreets. This doesn't seem strange to many&#13;
people because the secondary highways of America&#13;
have taken them from the all· night truck stop in&#13;
West Wombat, Iowa, to the diner in 'O\lo'here Ohio&#13;
. If Jack Nicholson is looking (or another ;Ii~or&#13;
life r.epresenting the city, I have a fine restaurant&#13;
f?r hlffi. On location in Kenosha, Wisconsin. he can&#13;
fIlm an eV~ing at ~ndy's Restaurant This place&#13;
has every mteresting characteristic or middle&#13;
America.&#13;
Andy's Restaurant is a Cine place to eat The&#13;
food is good, but the atmosphere and people ~ke It&#13;
what It IS. The simplicity makes it one of the mo t&#13;
}X&gt;pular restaurants in town, according to a random&#13;
sampling I tool&lt;.&#13;
Just one visit here points out the simple&#13;
characteristics or a restaurant in middle America&#13;
1~._D-:"o_r"":""'tT..,...' ..,...B_r,":,:,",O_W-:,n-::-_o~p-=p_o_s __it,:,"","es-:--::o:-:::n:::"7':'":M=e:-:-.:r-:::g~er::=1&#13;
money by elimina ti ng the do the job. There may be a merger is going to cost money.&#13;
CCRE to create a super board, I deadlock on the merger. The When you consolidate funcII"""&#13;
don't think it would work. This final count will be close." you'll always sa\'e."&#13;
is just a move to create a "Bureaucracy is getting too Mr Brown gave the example&#13;
bureaucracy to give ad- damn big, too powerful, too. We of the lew York Unh:ersHy&#13;
ministrators jobs, and would be should maintain a high stan· system a a fine educational&#13;
uncontrollable. Establishing 13 dard or educational opportunity s)'stem. This is the very system&#13;
individual councils on cam· and even step beyond." that Senator Devitt has gl\·en 8&#13;
puses wouldn't save too much." "People want the develo~ an example of the type of&#13;
"Presently Parkside is being ment and expansion of system to guard agalOst&#13;
funded at $17 per credit hour by Parkside. There is good rapport Mr Brown "ould like to&#13;
the state at the Junior-Senior between students and citizens. the criteria and gUIdeline&#13;
level. The merger would reduce We should work to maintain a implemented and would like to&#13;
h&#13;
. g ey program of exceUence." see a lesserung of autonomy for&#13;
this to $15, t us savIO man each campus He does not feel&#13;
but hurting curriculum, + + +&#13;
students and the quality of Manny S. Brown is Chairman any indwlduaJ school would&#13;
education. There is a proposed of the Assembly Educational hurt by the merger; he feel alt&#13;
th&#13;
o ty t hi g Committee. classroom pace on all cam·&#13;
cut of about Ir eac n eel he puses should continue In&#13;
P k'd This Mr. Brown does not f t positions at ar Sl e. When asked if he felt the&#13;
would save money but leaves no same way as others in regard to&#13;
NEWSCOPE IS MOVING IT'S OFFICES TO&#13;
STOP&#13;
HIGHWAY 'A' AND WOOD ROAD AND SEE US&#13;
quality or education '" ould&#13;
diluled he replied. "I don't lIunk&#13;
LI\ quahly "ould be dllu{ '"&#13;
We "ould oontlnue to ha\ thesame&#13;
program Lhc:. .. wid J\1\t&#13;
under dlrreT('nt TIl('&#13;
late um\"er'S111 ... 111 h IPfd&#13;
by enhghlened educatlonll&#13;
leade ....lup ,.&#13;
~Ir Br n ta'ed that tlk&#13;
gro" th and th quahl) of Gr" n&#13;
Bay and Parkslde would not&#13;
affected even though the ~ h 1&#13;
uDlverslt)' ) tern .. a ta 109 I&#13;
run m,lllon doltar cut .' d Ibt'&#13;
level of fundIng for 1h&lt;'S&lt;' t" 0&#13;
school !'Chool. In particular&#13;
"ould he reduced&#13;
~Ir Bra"'" g8\ hl rt'as«&#13;
for . uppo&lt;t of the m -rgor .. ,&#13;
will only supporl thc m rg flf"&#13;
I prop rly dIalled, 1m&#13;
plemcnled, and planned I do&#13;
not v. nt m I1t r pt'r I&#13;
,",ouldn'l . upport a morRor&#13;
C()rthn (0 th KO" 'rOOf",&#13;
onglnal oUllln I" uldn'l&#13;
upport ('\ t"ry hool 'InK&#13;
n8m d nl\:f"r II)' or&#13;
WISconsin' a t t v.ould&#13;
d,m,n, h Ih quality of a&#13;
d&lt;-(l«'e ••&#13;
"r Ol"Q",lonhk tht' l'1('\('O&#13;
m mbe'r campu council Ide&#13;
He "ould hk '0 0&#13;
member 0( l- h ('OlU)('11 an&#13;
x.&lt;:J.flc'o m"mher of th R rd&#13;
d. Regent.!&gt; II, fl· I th t the I&#13;
app0lnled m ·mt&gt;cn. to" h nl&#13;
the counc,1 "ould be appointed&#13;
fairly by th 0\ 'rnor ...ho&#13;
"ould not th apPolntm nt&#13;
to gam conlrol of th UOl\' '~It}&#13;
(Continued on P I&#13;
STUDENTS t#f'~lIr4I/ __ .&#13;
it's the MIKE real thing EMIL GERLACH get Red Carpet treatment DAVIS&#13;
/~_1886 of the SPEED&#13;
Fruit Baskets' BANK. OF CITY&#13;
Corsages ElMWOOD "Check Our&#13;
=:::e&#13;
Prices Lasl"&#13;
(everyone else does!)&#13;
4807 71b AVE:\I'F&#13;
OA.:,_.,.- -•.••.._~ ~/ 2704 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Roci ... , Wis-&#13;
-&#13;
IF YOU WANT&#13;
SOMETHING&#13;
A UnLE EXTRA&#13;
TRY&#13;
Budweise&amp;&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
• but you&#13;
•&#13;
know thatl!!&#13;
• •&#13;
poet in a Dungeon&#13;
·t consisled of words re~o~i_ng the readings from the&#13;
Ill~· ~ in different colors and A~tiv1ties Building. If you can't&#13;
;ritte ·n the form of a merry- brmg poetry t h&#13;
..iacedndt read faster and faster O w ere the people&#13;
~rou , d . k ~dre 11 suppose. a dungeon is an e- the merry-go-roun pie s up I ea place for it to whith&#13;
.......t People have to be exposed er&#13;
-1"'·-· hour went quickly, a poets, especially the publi~&#13;
Th~ r of it was spent trying to drunks, which many poets are &lt;flr e tand bow to listen to his themselves. __ Maybe next time&#13;
un f delivery of "rh)'.thm the Humaruhes Division could&#13;
qutc and the remaining time pass _around a cassette tape of a&#13;
piem~nt searching for the clue reading to the lucky 13 who&#13;
as ;e title philosopher-poet. would attend the next reading&#13;
~ne his poems named anyway, this would save a great&#13;
..i.;iosophers, other than that ·dea~ of expense, then maybe the&#13;
~; title poet seemed the most savings could be donated to&#13;
\'lllid one. . some more worthy cause such&#13;
It is somewhat parado~1c~l as stocking the library with a&#13;
for The Division of Humam~tic recorded volume of James&#13;
U(!ies to bring a poet to P-s1de Dickey's poems as read by Burl&#13;
;d them imprison him out of Ives, or an autographed set of&#13;
ighl in a far flung corner of the the complete philosophical&#13;
Greenquist basement. . Why works of Snoopy.&#13;
t,ring him over at all, 1f the &lt;ED: Mr. Gunderson was not&#13;
objeCt is merely to see how well presented by the Humanities&#13;
a poet can be hid. It was ex- Division, but by the Parkside&#13;
plained to me that public Poetry Forum with assistance&#13;
drunkness was a major factor in from_ the Studen~ Affairs office.)&#13;
)~·.·-~·-·=··-&lt; .' ........ _._._._.- -._._ . --. --. --·;:: •.•.. -. ·-·-·-·-·-·--------- -- ---·---~::::: .•• ::_; ..••.•••.... •:.•~·=&#13;
-~ Suggestion Box ii~&#13;
I ",~'.~::;::;~~::~:;~~~;,~~;:::J by Ken Konkol&#13;
of The Newscope Staff&#13;
The third of a series of four&#13;
articles on our legislators and&#13;
the merger. This week&#13;
A semblymen Dorff and&#13;
Brown.&#13;
Eugene Dorff is the freshman&#13;
Assemblyman from Kenosha.&#13;
fr. Dorff started with&#13;
background on Parkside.&#13;
"Parkside was slated to be in&#13;
the UW system, not the state&#13;
wiiversity system. In the year&#13;
ri its inception the citizens of&#13;
Kenosha contributed ten to&#13;
eleven million dollars to the&#13;
t.:niversity of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
not to WSU Parkside.&#13;
• ow we have a move to regulate&#13;
it into mediocrity."&#13;
merger. Green Bay and&#13;
Parkside have been singled out&#13;
for cuts and will definitely&#13;
suffer under the present&#13;
proposal. No other departmental&#13;
budget was cut like&#13;
Parkside's $3.5 million to $.7&#13;
million."&#13;
On the WSU system he said,&#13;
"The increase in teacher wages&#13;
there will help the morale. I do&#13;
not think there will be any&#13;
phase-out of any state&#13;
universities. I feel they are&#13;
more compatible with each&#13;
other than with an individual&#13;
mission as in the UW."&#13;
Mr. Dorff commented on the&#13;
cost of the merger. "As to save&#13;
By P~ul Loma tire of The. 'e" c pe. taU&#13;
~ack N1chol~on has said that hi mo,·i ha\'e no&#13;
~t, ~ey ~re Just an attempt to h~ a lice of&#13;
encan life. Other producers and writers ha,·&#13;
caught _on, and realize that there i. ar in the&#13;
mannerisms and life styles of the e\'ervday I&#13;
who make America what it i . •&#13;
lo many movies, locations have gone from&#13;
~atorate sets to truck stops bus tatio . nd&#13;
s1destreets. This doesn't seem !range to many&#13;
people because the secondary highwa) o{ merica&#13;
have taken them from the all-night true top in&#13;
West Womba~ Iowa, to the diner in. ·~·her~. Ohio. . If Jack Nicholson is looking for ano her Ii of&#13;
life r~presenting the city, I have a fine re taurant&#13;
f?r hun. On location in Kenosha, \\ isconsm, he can&#13;
film an eve~ing at ~ndy's Restaurant. Thi plac&#13;
has ~very mteresting characten tic of middle&#13;
America.&#13;
~ndy's Restaurant is a fine place to eat. The&#13;
food 1~ g_ood, but the atmosphere and people m ke 1t&#13;
what 1t 1s. The simplicity makes it one of th mo t&#13;
popular restaurants in town, accordin to a random&#13;
sampling I took.&#13;
Just ?n~ visit here points out the 1mpl&#13;
characteristics of a restaurant in middle Am rica&#13;
basis for increased&#13;
enrollment."&#13;
"All building in the state has&#13;
been affected by the budget and&#13;
we have to save monev bv&#13;
holding back on the athletic&#13;
building to stabilize. The&#13;
governor has not shown that the&#13;
merger would save money."&#13;
Mr. Dorff gave his opinion on&#13;
the politics of the merger. "'By&#13;
establishing an educational&#13;
super board we would put too&#13;
much authority in the hands of&#13;
one particular group to dictate&#13;
policy."&#13;
"There is a lot of nit-picking&#13;
in the house. But when it come&#13;
to the real issues the legi lators&#13;
"We should allow Parkside to&#13;
develop. Here we have the&#13;
potential for advancement,&#13;
research, and development into&#13;
a post-graduate institution.&#13;
lad is on is stymied&#13;
I Dorff, Brown-Opposites On Merger&#13;
economically. Here we have the&#13;
available land and the&#13;
po ·ibility of 40,000 students."&#13;
Ir. Dorff continued with how&#13;
he felt the merger would affect&#13;
lhe entire system. "The merger&#13;
·ould tend to freeze the level of&#13;
the UW system and bring up the&#13;
le~el of the thirteen state&#13;
uruversities." Mr. Dorff looks&#13;
on this as a mistake because of&#13;
tbe differences of missions&#13;
tween the UW and WSU&#13;
S) terns. The WSU system is&#13;
tna&lt;le up mostly of teacher&#13;
colleges.&#13;
" ladison and Milwaukee will&#13;
not be immediately hurt by the&#13;
money by eliminating the&#13;
CCHE to create a superboard, I&#13;
don't think it would work. This&#13;
is just a move to create a bureaucracy to give administrators&#13;
jobs, and would be&#13;
uncontrollable. Establishing 13&#13;
individual councils on campuses&#13;
wouldn't save too much."&#13;
"Presently Parkside is being&#13;
funded at $17 per credit hour by&#13;
the state at the Junior-Senior&#13;
level. The merger would reduce&#13;
this to $15, thus saving money&#13;
but hurting curriculum,&#13;
students and the quality of&#13;
education. There is a proposed&#13;
cut of about thirty teaching&#13;
positions at Parkside. This&#13;
would save money but leaves no&#13;
do the job. There may be a&#13;
deadlock on the merger. The&#13;
final count will be close."&#13;
"Bureaucracy is getting too&#13;
damn big, too powerful, too. W&#13;
should maintain a high tan- dard of educational opportunity&#13;
and even step beyond.''&#13;
"People want the development&#13;
and expan ion of&#13;
Parkside. There is good rapport&#13;
between students and citizen . We should work to maintain a&#13;
program of excellence."&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Manny S. Brown is Chairman&#13;
of the Assembly Educational&#13;
Committee. Mr. Brown does not feel the&#13;
same way as others in regard to&#13;
NEWSCOPE IS MOVING IT'S OFFICES TO&#13;
HIGHWA y 'A' AND WOOD ROAD&#13;
STUDENTS it's thel"f'K~/~&#13;
&#13;
EMIL GERLACH get Red Carpet treatment&#13;
real thing&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886 ot the&#13;
Fruit Baskets BANK Of&#13;
Corsages ElMWOOD&#13;
Candy (everyone else does!)&#13;
2704 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
RaciRe, Wis.&#13;
STOP&#13;
AND SEE US&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
"Check Our&#13;
Prices Last"&#13;
-1807 7th \t-,tf'&#13;
IF YOU WA T&#13;
SOME HING&#13;
A LITTLE EXT A&#13;
TRY&#13;
u&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
• • • but you&#13;
-&#13;
know that! ! ! &#13;
PSI pa:9P!. MayU.lI11&#13;
eee e&#13;
'&#13;
the life of the student"&#13;
ont 'd (Continued from Page Il A review of the explicit ",,,poses~f ':':t c"'::r&#13;
mtttee. which include determlDlIlll s. ~ s&#13;
troveny over the student governmegt constitution. student clubs, evaluating student publication c:&#13;
1lIat the CCC had served as an arbiter in the establishing rules and procedures for gr':'i :;'e&#13;
pest was the bIggest faculty argument against tivities, presenting a combined club budlje o. I&#13;
chssoluhon Propooenls of the dissolution conceded administration, and supervIsing fman:1&#13;
8&#13;
that there was a need for this type of body procedures for the clubs, revealed the une ons&#13;
. . ti or were so&#13;
Mark Tympany, student senator present at the could be bandIed by other organlZ8 ODS, been hanmeeting.&#13;
said. "1 Uunk student government is vague as to mean nothing,· or had never&#13;
perfecUy capeble of taking over all of the stated died at all by !be CCC. d its&#13;
purpoIeS 01 the CCC. It 15 the proper organization to The committee then voted to recommen&#13;
deal WIththese functions slDee they dIreCtly affect own dissolution.&#13;
excepted&#13;
c:=:E!!- I&#13;
'!::-,-=- -e:-&#13;
lOP •• Dirl. I&#13;
w--. -"'"*'&#13;
--~t.~ ....&#13;
....,.&#13;
.... Dor~&#13;
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MALT LIQUOR&#13;
• • • but you&#13;
•&#13;
know thatll!&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
FREE&#13;
CLASS FlED&#13;
Dorff, Brown&#13;
system. Mr. Brown is of the&#13;
froZen at any level. The State&#13;
same political party as the&#13;
governor.&#13;
When asked if he felt the&#13;
criticism of the merger was&#13;
unwarranted, he answered,&#13;
"Criticism is proper. Compromise&#13;
makes the be~t&#13;
legislation. We need to beat It&#13;
out meet the opposition and get&#13;
mutual points of view."&#13;
When asked if he felt any part&#13;
of the merger needed changing,&#13;
he answered, "We need a&#13;
detailed bill with guidelines and&#13;
criteria defining the mission of&#13;
each school, planning commi&#13;
ttees tenure and faculty&#13;
relatio';ships, pay differentials&#13;
and other things. This can't be&#13;
done overnight."&#13;
When asked to comment on&#13;
Parkside in particular, he&#13;
stated, "Parkside was made a&#13;
member of UW. It was planned&#13;
as a research center rather than&#13;
as a liheral arts college to be put&#13;
into WSU. Parkside is committed&#13;
to keep growing. It will&#13;
have a major role in&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin."&#13;
In regard to the merber&#13;
freezing the university, he said,&#13;
"I don't think education sball be&#13;
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mattress fdr dOuble bed, $75.· Clill&#13;
~OSll.&#13;
TAPE DECK-SonY - TC· 355. List&#13;
price $219. Sacrifice for SlOG. PhOne&#13;
6rU-lnl an... .. or He Fr.... k&#13;
OIl_a. .&#13;
BED - Blond, Hollywood 3/&lt;1 size.&#13;
Rollers, box spring &amp; headboard&#13;
bookcase. $150 new. Will sell for $60.&#13;
Call 633-9331.&#13;
(Continued from PI&#13;
115)&#13;
University and U&#13;
continue to be f W ~&#13;
present levels. ~ al ~&#13;
no cbange in the wa IboI,jj&#13;
are being run. ~~&#13;
upgrade the quality __&#13;
campuses." ..&#13;
When asked his ..&#13;
board which WouId'tlllioo..&#13;
of the system he rtf" ~&#13;
don't favor suPerboanl.""l&#13;
there is a c_ti ....&#13;
I&#13;
. On boo....~&#13;
po ICY makers ~&#13;
ministrators. Tbe lDd '"&#13;
councils willacl"~"'"&#13;
agamst a slate .... _.1&#13;
education." -.ra "&#13;
Mr. Brown d... llOt&#13;
merger as the sm lit&#13;
Sena.tor Devil! d.... ,~&#13;
talking in order '.&#13;
something. Ithink ~&#13;
merger are oneandthe III&#13;
the merger does nollO_I&#13;
the hudget might llOt10=::&#13;
either, The merger is&#13;
Integral part of the ~&#13;
"The merger migtt-'"&#13;
follOWing party Ii lid ,&#13;
assembly. voting ror It&#13;
senate votlDgagainsl It.,.&#13;
entire budget will wind&#13;
conference commiUee."tt ••&#13;
(Next week ~&#13;
Michael Farrah. And, d lit&#13;
lind the time, Senator ~&#13;
Lourigan.)&#13;
WH •• U&#13;
1970 c.m.-o. Snow T......&#13;
639·8863 .tt. 4:.&#13;
1962 Pontiac Convert. SUI. CII&#13;
1443 after S.&#13;
1969 Dodoe GTS 4tO Auto. til.&#13;
4786 between 5-6:30.&#13;
1961 Jeep CJS. call 6f'.S'6l&#13;
1963 Impala Convert. 317.CII&#13;
5649.&#13;
1964 VW, $.450or beSt otMr (II_&#13;
6482 after 5.&#13;
1949 Harley·OavidSOn. WlI&#13;
Call 652-6335 betWeen .4'''_&#13;
1967 Triumph TR4-A... _&#13;
IRS, radials. wires: 11,_&#13;
652.8419 after 6 p.m.&#13;
1963 VW 1_ ml.l ...&#13;
Dodge Co&lt;onet 11 ,.u&#13;
12911 WaShington Ave ~&#13;
1965 Chevy Be1. • f!I. ~'&#13;
Rad. Ree, ..&amp;J»"l&#13;
1960 Rlim. OK. N/iO.",:&#13;
7075.15 8FGtlr •• ri""~'"&#13;
990-15 OBFGtl ... tllO...&#13;
Bal. $40. l59-2A53 I"" ~&#13;
p ,,, OPE M ) 2~. 1971&#13;
_...._ ____ '_/ ______ -------_.;..-::===~:::,~:.:.-:.-- ··*~-=~:~:::::.::~~:::--:--:::::~::$::::::::;:;:;:;:;:~:=::&#13;
V~aSMU ~~ ~ Sunnyside I • • 'iHetftff ·,()1%,.. ~ 1 --·-=--~~---~ ii Florists I&#13;
~o~~::,~~t~':~OtJnt ·=e.-=·· i&amp; Greenhouses ~l.&#13;
F I UrAtl Dl,t. X• .•••&#13;
acu t Y w.-..- . ,_.,., ~3. ,,_11 _ Frvit Wets - Gifts [~)&#13;
ust Show I.~,) D---' s.ttat ~t• lo•"&#13;
Fairtrade 1 .., ~.~.1111 A,&#13;
excepted DOWNTOWN KENOSHA w&#13;
a1nouJ /&lt;n, f!l'ind&#13;
~ gt g1a1t,&lt;M't fke&lt;M&#13;
Liquor Store&#13;
r==--~0----&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KFNOSHA 658 1ll1&#13;
YOUR&#13;
,irt$fOftt TORES&#13;
IN KENOSHA AND RACINE ARE GIVING YOU&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
on all automotivir services.&#13;
That's besides their normal&#13;
great tire buys. Just bring&#13;
in th is ad .&#13;
I _ ___ , ..._ ..................... _ .., ...... -.......... '"'&#13;
1~!BRAT~'&#13;
1&#13;
l&#13;
Where It's At! I&#13;
DAILY SPECIAL ~&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4 .P.M. I&#13;
A Bottle of ~&#13;
BiBIIIIIIE&#13;
A New Kind of&#13;
Alcoholic Beverage&#13;
0nd 0BEEFBURGER S~~AK99·&#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;
;:&#13;
Avoiloble Far Parties j I"""""' F .. , ... ;,, aod s.,.,;,y Pa,he• I I&#13;
Op~~.,h~~_i,1&#13;
~.:.. ~;~:d :;!~.,~;~&#13;
VI and FRANK WEINSTOCK&#13;
3021 • 75TH ST.&#13;
}]~ KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140 ([))&#13;
l:m. ·:.P~~0~~' -~~~J~---:--··:.)f:&#13;
A professional&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
that is safe, legal &amp;&#13;
• • 1nexpens1ve&#13;
can be set up on an&#13;
outpatient basis by calling&#13;
The Problem Pregnancy&#13;
Referral Service&#13;
21S-722-S360&#13;
24 hours- 7 days&#13;
for professional, ·con'idential&#13;
and r.aring hel_p.&#13;
~~&#13;
IF YOU WANT&#13;
SOMETHING&#13;
A LITTLE EXTRA • • •&#13;
TRY&#13;
Budweise:c&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
• • • but you&#13;
-&#13;
know thatl!!&#13;
Dorff, Brown&#13;
system. Mr. Brown is of the&#13;
frozen at any level. The State&#13;
same political party as the&#13;
governor. When asked if he felt the&#13;
criticism of the merger was&#13;
unwarranted, he answered,&#13;
"Criticism is proper. Compromise&#13;
makes the be~t&#13;
legislation. We need to beat 1t&#13;
out meet the opposition and get&#13;
mutual points of view."&#13;
When asked if he felt any part&#13;
of the merger needed changing,&#13;
he answered, "We need a&#13;
detailed bill with guidelines and&#13;
criteria defining the mission of&#13;
each school, planning committees&#13;
tenure and faculty&#13;
relation'ships, pay differentials&#13;
and other things. This can't be&#13;
done overnight."&#13;
When asked to comment on&#13;
Parkside in particular, he&#13;
stated, "Parkside was made a&#13;
member of UW. It was planned&#13;
as a research center rather than&#13;
as a liberal arts college to be put&#13;
into WSU. Parkside is committed&#13;
to keep growing. It will&#13;
have a major role in&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin.''&#13;
In regard to the merber&#13;
freezing the university, he said,&#13;
"I don't think education shall be&#13;
(Continued from pa te S)&#13;
University and U&#13;
continue to be run W&#13;
present levels. Th~ed at&#13;
no change in the wa are being run WY ca&#13;
d . e&#13;
upgra e the quality campuses." ~&#13;
When asked his op· . board which WOUid :)oo ~ of the system he o( 111&#13;
don't f_avor super~ertd.&#13;
thel~e 1S a connection&#13;
po icy makers&#13;
ministrators. Th and&#13;
councils will act as 1~ . ca&#13;
against a state \ISOO I&#13;
education." Oard&#13;
Mr. Brown does not&#13;
merger as the srnct&#13;
Senator Devitt does "H ,&#13;
talking in orde~ ~'&#13;
something. I think ~&#13;
merger are one and the&#13;
the merger does not go&#13;
tl.te budget might not go&#13;
~1ther. The merger is 1&#13;
m!~gral part or the rn&#13;
The merger might&#13;
following party Jin&#13;
assembly . voting for ard&#13;
senflte votmg against. 11&#13;
entire budget will wind&#13;
conference committee ..&#13;
(Next week, A~·l!lh,. ...&#13;
Michael Farrall. And if&#13;
find the time, Sena~ J&#13;
Lourigan.)&#13;
NE1NSCOPE&#13;
FREE&#13;
CLASSFIED&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
MADISON-Summer sublet, 2 bed.,&#13;
near VIias Park. call 608-~1-86:J2,&#13;
165 1:1er person.&#13;
ROOM - MM! ~iy, $9.00 per wk. ~&#13;
blocks from Racine Campus.&#13;
Inquire 132 S. Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
FOR RENT - Office Space&#13;
Modem; Carpeted, Partitioned, Air&#13;
COnd. Ideal tor Acctg., Insurance Of'&#13;
Sales. Goad proximity to Parkside&#13;
and carthage . ..059 7th Ave. Call 652-&#13;
3945 or 6SC-7'10.&#13;
DUPLEX, unfurn. 3 bedrm. l½&#13;
baths off street parking, 4-6 girls.&#13;
Avail. June 10. 4612 . 35th Ave. Can&#13;
be seen after 4 :30 &amp; weekends.&#13;
MISC. FOR SALE&#13;
FOR 5AL1:- Poodle Puppies. 6 wk!&#13;
old, AKC, 2 male, 1 female. cream,&#13;
Toy. Excellent blood lines-. $100 ea.&#13;
171-2992.&#13;
AMP - Sllvertone 4 channel. Also&#13;
mike. Best offer. Call Cathy, 694-&#13;
2169. Must sell.&#13;
ELECTRIC RANGE - Westlng- hDuse 30", $75; Refrigerator -&#13;
Westinghouse, S75. Box spring&#13;
mattress fdr muble bed, S75. · call&#13;
~o.sn.&#13;
TAPE DECK- Sony . TC. 355. List&#13;
price $219. Sacrifice for $100. PhOne&#13;
654-1731 after -' or - Frank&#13;
Ollapetta. ·&#13;
BED - Blond, Hollywood 3/4 size.&#13;
Rollers, box spring &amp; headboard&#13;
bookcase. $150 new. Will sell for $60.&#13;
Call 633-9331.&#13;
P.0.0.G.0.: Would be dtl&#13;
permanently compltlt IO&#13;
therapy of 28 ~ - Hwmen&#13;
WHHU&#13;
1970 Camaro. Snow Tim 11111&#13;
639-8863 after -4: 30&#13;
1962 Buick 2 dr hardtop, $~&#13;
634--4-445 or 633-2791.&#13;
1969 Dodge GTS 440 Auto. Cl&#13;
4786 between 5-6:30.&#13;
1961 Jeep CJS. Call 69H1'4&#13;
1958 Ford 6 cyl. auto. Mau&#13;
657-7'5/J7.&#13;
1969 Chevelle 396 auto. Sl&#13;
657-3128.&#13;
1963 Impala Convert. 377&#13;
5649.&#13;
1967 Triumph TR4-A.&#13;
1 RS, radials, wires. Sl,&#13;
652-8-419 after 6 p.m.&#13;
1963 vw uo,ooo ml.I&#13;
0oc1ge eoronet (12,-&#13;
12911 Washington Avt, ~ &#13;
by Jim Casper or The ~ewsc~pe Staff&#13;
rt&lt;side'S&#13;
tennis team ran mto stiff competition in&#13;
PI against UteUW-M and UW-Green Bay. losing to&#13;
",atdl&lt;" tile identical score of 9-0. The Rangers found&#13;
bOIl&gt; by ore to their liking. defeating them 7-0 at the&#13;
1IiI~ m park courts.&#13;
persJ1il''!tangersknew they would be in for a rough time&#13;
. Th;' road matches against the two UW schools&#13;
.,111 UteY had lost to both of them at home earlier in&#13;
beC"useson. So in lour matches against these schools this ;,- __ "-&#13;
lbesea Ute Rangers came up WIth only one individual&#13;
~ whichcame in th.IH loss to UW-Green Bay back&#13;
vIC ril 24. .&#13;
'" AP 'nst UW-Green Bay. Mike Safago, th~ Rangers' :~nesingles player. was the only Parkside netter&#13;
..un hiS match to three sets before losing. Safago had&#13;
II&gt; run ted for parkside's only victory over a Green Bay&#13;
~ this year --in the earlier home match. He had .....H'+W_&#13;
playted highly regarded Larry Kropp in three sets. but&#13;
:: lime.after winning the first set. Mike lost the next&#13;
llf&lt;I'All the matches against UW-M were dropped in two&#13;
sets, as thePanthers scored their second shutout against&#13;
PafkSide. The team bounced back from the two one-sided&#13;
de!"ts to administer a sound thrashing to the Milton net&#13;
d. The score in this match was 7-0.&#13;
"""Thevisiting school was short handed for this match,&#13;
so cWy five singles and two doubles matches were&#13;
played. Withthe easy victory, the Rangers continued their&#13;
UWP Tennis Lose,Win&#13;
The UWP 1978-71 Tennis Team&#13;
trend of either winning big or losing big. Close con~ts&#13;
have been lacking in this up and down season.&#13;
Coach Frecka noted that there are some very strong&#13;
teams on the schedule. Apparently the tough comgugtch,&#13;
Maschott, Fechhelm&#13;
and Merritt teamed up to take&#13;
thirds in both the 480 low hurdle&#13;
shuttle and Ute high hurdle&#13;
shuttle of the same distance.&#13;
The team 01 McGilsky. McFadden.&#13;
Dettman. and Mike&#13;
DeWitt took lourth in the two&#13;
mile relay.&#13;
In field events Leonard&#13;
Bullock leaped 22 leet2'. inches&#13;
which was good lor lourth place&#13;
in the long jump. John Patten&#13;
set a Parkside record in the pole&#13;
vault with a 13leet6 inch erlort.&#13;
Trackmen Place In Relays&#13;
Several Ranger trackmen&#13;
placed in the first annual&#13;
Wisconsin Relays held at&#13;
StevensPoint. Team scores&#13;
.ere not available in the 12&#13;
Ie8m fieid. .&#13;
EugenePrince ~as sec~nd 10&#13;
Ibe high jump wiUta 6'4" Jump.&#13;
His jwnp was the same height&#13;
IS the winner's, but he had&#13;
moremisses.&#13;
The metric hurdles team 01&#13;
Mike Zugich, Dennis Fechhelm,&#13;
Dean Mascholl and Keith&#13;
Mer!':'itt set a school record en&#13;
route ,to a second place finish .&#13;
Their time was 3:54.5. .&#13;
Jim McFadden. Chuck&#13;
Dettman. Gary Lance. and Tim&#13;
McGilsky comprised the lour&#13;
mile relay team whIch also took'&#13;
second place.&#13;
pelltion has Mlped the Raa&amp;en when !hoy meet&#13;
lormidable oppaoenlo.&#13;
UW-MI, P..... IIk.&#13;
Siegel. UW-M. over Safago. &amp;-9. 6-41&#13;
N...... onIti. UW-M. over MIeCZIt_i. 6-3. 6-2&#13;
Sc~iber. UW-M. over Haase. 6-41. 6-1&#13;
J.tczak. UW-M. over Kaplan, 6-41. 6-1&#13;
Bernstein. UW·M. over HereMn, 6-1. 6-1&#13;
Runle. UW-M. over Ka~. 6-0. 6-2&#13;
Schreiber-Bernstein. UW-M. over Safago-M,e&lt;:Zkowolu.&#13;
6-1, 6-2&#13;
J.tczak-Gordoo, UW-M, over Haa~mlth. 6-1.6-3&#13;
Felm-Runte, UW-M. over HereMn- elaoo. 6-3. 6-1&#13;
UW.(;reeD Bay I. P ..... ..., •&#13;
KropP. GB. over Salago. U. 6-1. 6-3&#13;
Meru, GB. over Mie&lt;:Zk_" 6-2, 6-2&#13;
Adams. GB. over Kaplan, 6-0. 6-3&#13;
Brautigan. GB, over Smith, 6-2, 6-0&#13;
Thielman, GB. over Kangas, 6-2. 6-41&#13;
Engelbrecht. GB, over eIsoo. 6-3. 6-0&#13;
Mertz-Adams. GB. over Sal.go-Mleczk_i, ~, 6-1&#13;
____ Thielman-Brautig.n. GB. over Kaplan-Kangas. 6-0. 6-l&#13;
.Engelbrecht-Schultz. GB, over Smith-Nelson, 6-1. s-r&#13;
P..... id.7. MUloa'&#13;
Salago. P. over Gibson. 1-6. 6-2. W&#13;
Mieczkowski, P, over Skaggs. 6-2. 6-2&#13;
Haase, P, over Zimmerman, 6-1, &amp;-1&#13;
Kaplan, P, over Mccanna 6-0. 6-0&#13;
Herchen, P, over Celio. 6-0. 6-1&#13;
Salago-Mieczkowslti. P, over Skaggs. 6-1. 6-4&#13;
Haase-Smith, P, Over Zlmmennan-Ge:hn. &amp;-l, 10-8&#13;
COURTESY 0'" PU8L.1C: IN FO"""A.T10N&#13;
Rogers To '"end UWP&#13;
Ted Rogers. EH) forward Irom&#13;
10nooa Grove high school, has&#13;
become lhe second state&#13;
basketball star to announce h1s&#13;
intention of attending the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
next season, UWP&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens announced&#13;
today.&#13;
Rogers averaged 16 pomts&#13;
and a team-leading 14 rebounds&#13;
per game in leading Coach&#13;
Frank Hlavac's . tMona Greve&#13;
team lo a 12-2 Badger Conference&#13;
record. runntrup to&#13;
unhealedn Sun Prairie He ....a&#13;
named AII-Conlerence. second&#13;
team AlI-.lad,son and MVP at&#13;
tanona Grove.&#13;
Tom Heller. 6-6 CBthohc&#13;
Conference sLar from Kenosha&#13;
l. Joseph, recenUy announced&#13;
his intention to aU nd W·&#13;
Park ,de. UWP ~9'Split Doubleheader&#13;
The visitors broke a scoreless tie in the third Golfers Lose to UWM&#13;
inning by coming up with three runs. Parkside got&#13;
one of the runs back in their hall 01 the third, making&#13;
it three to one.&#13;
The Rangers. however. could not get any closer&#13;
as 81. Norbert scored two more in both the fourth&#13;
and fifth innings. To complete their scoring, the&#13;
visitors added three in the sixth and one in lhe&#13;
seventh.&#13;
byJim Casper of The Newscope Staff.&#13;
Behind the sharp pitching 01 Rick Jackson,&#13;
Parkside'sb~ball team edged 51. Norhert in the&#13;
~er or a doubleheader at Parkside's athletic&#13;
Ileldby a 2-1 score. •&#13;
81.Norbert, however, came up with a thun~&#13;
derws barrage 01 timely hilling which enabled&#13;
Ibem to lake the nightcap 11-3..&#13;
In thetight first game. the Rangers broke a 1-1&#13;
lie in thelast inning by pushing across the winning&#13;
nil 00 a triple by Carl Talsma and a single to lelt&#13;
put the pulled in infield by winning pitcher Rick&#13;
Jackson.The Rangers' first run came on Dennis&#13;
Serpe'sinfield hil.&#13;
Pacing the Ranger olfense in the low scoring&#13;
affair was Joe Johnson, who went two for three,&#13;
includinga double.&#13;
.WhileParkside was able to get out 01 a number&#13;
ci tightsituations in the first game, that was not the&#13;
case in the second. The st. Norhert olfense got&#13;
1I:Itrackedas they pounded. out 11 runs on ten hits.&#13;
Ranger gollers lound a tough&#13;
opponent at Milwaukee as tM&#13;
UW-M Panthers scored a 37&amp;-&#13;
403 victory over Parkside.&#13;
with a 78.&#13;
Other PBrkside scores were&#13;
Tom Bothe WIth eo. Le,I Guttormsen&#13;
81, Randy Onefke 81.&#13;
and Rick Willem 13&#13;
The defeat gave Porks,de Its&#13;
fourth loss again t nine VIC·&#13;
Lones&#13;
Roo Barry of UW-M won the&#13;
medal with a 73. Pacing the&#13;
Rangers were Dan Weyrauch&#13;
Parkside was only able to manage lone runs in&#13;
the third, fourth and sixth innings, as they failed to&#13;
get a sustained attack going.&#13;
Carl Talsma ran into serious trouble on the&#13;
mound and absorbed the loss. Talsma was the&#13;
starter, while Tom Jaehne came in to hurl the final&#13;
inning.&#13;
The split lelt the Iledgling learn with a 4-2-1&#13;
record for the year with two games left on the slate.&#13;
The team, therefore, is already assured of a winning&#13;
s~ason in its first year of existence.&#13;
::O~II'n.Am.,.. Con. 780t3 • 20th. FOR SALE-sail Boat, Snipe Class.&#13;
Make oHer. Call6S7·676Safter'' p.m .&#13;
... PlY. Rdrm'r," 'Pd. 313-335 hp.&#13;
FIll, htr. 637-5520 after 5:00.&#13;
RIDES NEEDED-WANTED&#13;
DR'IVE a pugeot to MIMeapoils.&#13;
Mlat get there ... tore June. Call a.o.&#13;
2225 after'S or 657-5121 ftl. 36.&#13;
NEED ride to seettle or AnchOrage.&#13;
Mayor June. Will split cost. call&#13;
Barb 6$4·9631.&#13;
Ita 0kIs II HoI ... " 3 tM1. high&#13;
~ ..... offer. 654-67-46after 5: 30&#13;
::.. Opel GT SlIv GAM» or beSt&#13;
_ . 152-3312after ...&#13;
WANTED TO BUY 2 used 3 br 5&#13;
speed bicycles. call 633-3131 after 5.&#13;
'WANTED - Hot "26" blcY~le. c.lI&#13;
6.12-7307 or. lewe }nfO.&#13;
::: MG M1_ Conv. New Batt.&#13;
Lnie,2lII.s.th.K_. R. Smith or C.&#13;
:, JtIp 4-Wheel drive Red cOny.&#13;
_ up; like new. Racine 633-3367&#13;
.. ,,'- IoItftt-e Mk III. Conv. Low&#13;
~ ~-7tf4 or _"71 I.fter a&#13;
_ - MlrtICalo.&#13;
WANTED _ New Boyfriend for&#13;
personal interview. Call Margaret at&#13;
(608) 252-9502, or wr1te: 661 Mendota&#13;
Ct., Apt. 301, Madison, Wis.&#13;
BEER&#13;
&amp; WATER STOP&#13;
24-7 oz. bot. 12-24 oz. bot.&#13;
$1.11 $1.39&#13;
plus tax &amp; deposit&#13;
_ '4,_~Kenosha&#13;
.50&#13;
lndiculions&#13;
is 1tvailable&#13;
al l~e llookslore for&#13;
LAST CHANCE DANCE&#13;
(Lost Social Ev.nt of ,he S.mes'.r) music by&#13;
--&#13;
~&#13;
-4&#13;
.. ::I:&#13;
0- m&#13;
~&#13;
-4&#13;
&gt;- ::I:&#13;
« -::a&#13;
:e c&#13;
... ::I:&#13;
•&#13;
.... 0&#13;
« c&#13;
en '"&#13;
m&#13;
-- ACTIVITIES BUIWING • 9·1&#13;
ADMISSION $1.50&#13;
with PARKSIDE &amp; WIS. I.D.&#13;
by Jim Ca~per of The ~ewsc~pe Staff ..&#13;
k 'de's tennis team ran mto stiff competition in&#13;
par 5~ainst the UW-M and UW-Green Bay, losing to&#13;
tche5 :he identical score of 9--0. The Rangers found&#13;
th by re to their liking, defeating them 7-0 at the&#13;
UWP Tennis Lose, Win&#13;
1Ut~ m~ark courts.&#13;
pershin~ngers knew they would be in for a rough time&#13;
. T~ road matches against the two UW schools&#13;
\\,th theY had lost to both of them at home earlier in&#13;
i,ecause n so in four matche~ against these schools this r,'&#13;
the seast~ Rangers came up with only one individual ___ ,,__.&#13;
~son which came in the 8"1 loss to UW-Green Bay back 1,ctol"Y&#13;
April 24. 'k Saf ~ ainst UW-Green Bay, M1 e ago, the _Rangers'&#13;
! one singles player, was the only Parkside netter&#13;
oum his match to three sets before losing. Safago had&#13;
to run ted for Parkside's only victory over a Green Bay .&#13;
,ccoun this year --01 the earlier home match. He had . +l-W n&#13;
plr~d highly regarded Larry Kropp in three sets, but "it' t1' :&#13;
de ~:"'e after winning the first set, Mike lost the next •·4 4 ! Hit&#13;
thiS UJU , " ~· t •4-,&#13;
two.All the matches against UW-M were dropped in two :?ttf;7f;&#13;
sets, as the Panthers scored their second shutout against&#13;
Parkside. The team bounced back from the two one-sided&#13;
def ea ts to administer a sound thrashing to the Milton net&#13;
ad The score in this match was 7-0.&#13;
COURTESY OF PUBL IC INFOR,...A T ION&#13;
The UWP 1970-71 Tennis Team&#13;
squ The visiting school was short handed for this match,&#13;
50 only five singles and two doubles matches were&#13;
trend of either winning big or losing big. Close con~ts&#13;
have been lacking in this up and down season.&#13;
Coach Frecka noted that there are some very strong&#13;
p1ay~tll the easy victory, the Rangers continued their teams on the schedule. Apparently the tough comth&#13;
m t I&#13;
3, 2&#13;
1, l&#13;
Trackmen Place In Relays&#13;
The metric hurdles team of&#13;
Mike Zugich, Dennis Fechhelm,&#13;
Dean Maschoff and Keith&#13;
Mer~itt set a school record en&#13;
route _to a second place finish.&#13;
Their time was 3: 54.5.&#13;
Zugich, Maschoff, Fechhelm&#13;
and Merritt teamed up to tak~&#13;
thirds in both the 480 low hurdle&#13;
shuttle and the high hurdle&#13;
shuttle of the same distance.&#13;
Rogers To Attend UWP&#13;
Several Ranger trackmen&#13;
placed in the first annual&#13;
Wisconsin Relays held at&#13;
Stevens Point. Team scores&#13;
v,·ere not available in the 12&#13;
team field. . Eugene Prince was second m&#13;
the high jump with a 6'4" jump.&#13;
His jump was the same height&#13;
as the winner's, but he had&#13;
more misses.&#13;
Jim McFadden, Chuck&#13;
Dettman, Gary Lance, and Tim&#13;
McGilsky comprised the four&#13;
mile relay team which also took'&#13;
second place.&#13;
The team of McGilsky, tcFadden,&#13;
Dettman, and Mike&#13;
DeWitt took fourth in the two&#13;
mile relay.&#13;
In field events Leonard&#13;
Bullock leaped 22 feet 21 4 inches&#13;
which was good for fourth place&#13;
in the long jump. J ohn Patten&#13;
set a Parkside record in the pole&#13;
vault with a 13 feet 6 inch effort.&#13;
Ted Rogers, ~ forward from&#13;
, lonona Grove high chool, ha&#13;
become the econd _ tate&#13;
basketball star to announce h"&#13;
intention of attending the&#13;
'niver ity of \ 'i con_inPark&#13;
ide next sea on, '\ 'P&#13;
Coach Steve tephen announced&#13;
toda)&#13;
Rogers averaged 16 point&#13;
and a team-leading 14 reboun&#13;
per game in leading Coach&#13;
UWP '9' Split Doubleheader&#13;
by Jim Casper of The Newscope Staff The visitors broke a scoreless tie in the third&#13;
inning by coming up with three runs. Parkside got&#13;
one of the runs back in their half of the third, making&#13;
it three to one.&#13;
Golfers Lose to UWM&#13;
Behind the sharp pitching of Rick Jackson,&#13;
Parkside's baseball team edged St. Norbert in the&#13;
opener of a doubleheader at Parkside's athletic&#13;
field by a 2-1 score. •&#13;
St. Norbert, however, came up with a thunderous&#13;
barrage of timely hitting which enabled&#13;
them to take the nightcap 11-3. ·&#13;
ln the tight first game, the Rangers broke a 1-1&#13;
tie in the last inning by pushing across the winning&#13;
nm on a triple by Carl Talsma and a single to left&#13;
past the pulled in infield by winning pitcher Rick&#13;
Jackson. The Rangers' first run came on Dennis&#13;
Serpe's infield hit.&#13;
Pacing the Ranger offense in the low scoring&#13;
affair was Joe Johnson, who went two for three,&#13;
including a double.&#13;
While Parkside was able to get out of a number&#13;
rx tight situations in the first game, that was not the&#13;
case in the second. The St. Norbert offense got&#13;
untracked as they pounded out 11 runs on ten hits.&#13;
The Rangers, however, could not get any closer&#13;
as St. Norbert scored two more in both the fourth&#13;
and fifth innings. To complete their scoring, the&#13;
visitors added three in the sixth and one in the&#13;
seventh.&#13;
Parkside was only able to manage lone runs in&#13;
the third, fourth and sixth innings, as they failed to&#13;
get a sustained attack going.&#13;
Carl Talsma ran into serious trouble on the&#13;
mound and absorbed the Joss. Talsma was the&#13;
starter, while Tom Jaehne came in to hurl the final&#13;
inning. The split left the fledgling team with a 4·2-1&#13;
record for the year with two games left on the slate.&#13;
The team, therefore, is already assured of a winning&#13;
season in its first year of existence.&#13;
Ranger golfers found a to h&#13;
opponent at iilwau ee a the&#13;
UW- f Panthers scored a 375-&#13;
403 victory over Par ide.&#13;
Ron Barry of UW- I "°" the&#13;
medal .,.,.;th a 73. Pacing the&#13;
Rangers were Dan \\ e Tauch&#13;
LS&#13;
o.l the&#13;
ndic nlion&#13;
nilnble&#13;
ook lore for&#13;
1"' Ram. Amer. Con. 7M3 - 20th,&#13;
Ktno.&#13;
1'tt Ply, Rdrnn•r,, spd, 313-335 hp.&#13;
rid, hlr · 637-5520 after 5:00.&#13;
f'OR SALE- Sall Boat, Snipe Class.&#13;
Make offer. Call 657-6765 after, p .m.&#13;
. RIDESNEEDED-WANTED&#13;
DRIVE a Pugeot to Mlmeapolls.&#13;
Must get there before June. Call UJ. 2225 after '5 or 657-5121 ellt. 36.&#13;
LAST CHANCE DANCE&#13;
10Q Olds ea Hot. 495 3 brl. high&#13;
comp. Best offer. 654-67"6 after 5: 30&#13;
P-m.&#13;
1'tt ()pef GT Sliver S2AOO Of' best °"" · '52-3312 after ,.&#13;
: : Midget Conv. New Batt, ~ · 54th, Keno. R. Smith Of' C.&#13;
tr.&#13;
:;' hep "-'IIWtleel drive Red c:onv. 11 up; 11kt new. Racine 633-3367&#13;
:.Tri&#13;
- . Spiffire Mk Ill, CAinv. Low&#13;
P.111 1• R637·79'6 or 654-9'71 (after 6 · Dd Mlrescalo.&#13;
NEED ride to Seattle or Anct,orage.&#13;
May or J'-"le. WIii split cost-. call&#13;
Barb 654-9631.&#13;
WANTED TO BUY - 2 used 3 br 5&#13;
speed bicycles. call 633-3131 after 5.&#13;
'WANTED - Hot "26" blcy~le. call&#13;
632-7307 or, le~e ·'"'°&#13;
·&#13;
WANTED - New Boyfriend for&#13;
personal interview. Call Margaret at&#13;
c6081 252-9502, or write : 661 Mendota&#13;
ct., Apt. 301, Madison, Wis.&#13;
21 FLAVORS&#13;
BEER ,,,,, POP&#13;
..,.il=- - : ..•&#13;
&amp; WATER z::J))}II\'''''"" STOP&#13;
24-7 oz. bot.&#13;
$1.11&#13;
d. ,. Kenosha&#13;
....&#13;
(Lost Social Event of the Seme ster}&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING - 9-1&#13;
ADMISSION $1.50&#13;
with PARKSIDE &amp; WIS. I.D.&#13;
music by&#13;
-&#13;
-I -&#13;
:c&#13;
m&#13;
-I&#13;
:I:&#13;
-,a&#13;
C&#13;
:I:&#13;
0&#13;
C&#13;
V,&#13;
m&#13;
--&#13;
Pap' NEwSCtWE Mal 14. 1171&#13;
ol Ecology • wisdom. and Amun AmunRa_Hoffman-Rubin&#13;
the God ol Street&#13;
Roits." 1be myth is a strung out ca talogue&#13;
ol gods and goddesses, earthlmgs, honkpork&#13;
space1ings, etc, etc.&#13;
Sa~ders knows the language .and .approacheS&#13;
the novel with poetry m mind,&#13;
the very nature and scope of the theme&#13;
view of Yippie. Only the Db&#13;
been changed to protect the~ '-&#13;
and liberals from themsel~ :s&#13;
us a measure of the absurd ,llld ..&#13;
the truth and the myth of y~ ~&#13;
Shards of God is written in'IlPit.&#13;
first person, heat and if y ~ ....&#13;
enough you'll be hlided f::: S&#13;
and your own hand-ups just 1m ~&#13;
see how ullimately true it .ong ~&#13;
acco~plishes its task, how~eUboa&#13;
Yippie and the Chicago 0'1al U&#13;
I declare that the Universe m.&#13;
itself as life. l¥II1&#13;
I declare that Iggdrasail is a ""-I&#13;
God! hail force share! haiI&#13;
music! PDrIII&#13;
Cop, 01 resolut,ons opposing the proposed&#13;
merger of the University of Wisconsin and&#13;
\\ lst'Ql'lSin Slale University systems and supporting&#13;
the budgets submitted by regents 01 the two&#13;
unl\'erslly systems over the "drastic cuts" in the&#13;
gO\' rnor's proposed budget have been forwarded to&#13;
GO\'ernor Palrick Lucey. UW President John&#13;
Weaver and state legislature by the Wisconsin&#13;
Ol\'i Ion o( !.he American Association of University&#13;
Women&#13;
The state AAUW adopted the resolutions at its&#13;
annual convention in Wausau recently, accorcting to&#13;
Irs Arlhur Rothe, 1214Lorraine Ave., Racine, the&#13;
newly elected state president.&#13;
The resolutions werl~ introduced by Mrs.&#13;
Francis Wendt of Racine, who was state president&#13;
of the AAUWin 1936-38.&#13;
Mrs. Rothe said that since the resolutions were&#13;
not on the convention agenda. a two-thirds vote of&#13;
IIle 250 delegates was required to bring the&#13;
resolutions before the body and a three-fourths vote&#13;
was required (or adoption.&#13;
~J"'K_&#13;
of lIle ... cepe Staff&#13;
SU" of God IS a 179pag. modem&#13;
poeudo-lliad Ithere are references to Ajax&#13;
and Achill.. ) mto Y'pp,e. and Ed Sandon&#13;
lleader 01 IIle Fogs, editor·publisher of&#13;
Faell V..,- a magazine of the arts, poet,&#13;
proprietor of Peace Eye Bookstore,&#13;
Ylpp", "TIter) is shouling-smging the&#13;
mylh olllle great American m)1hmakers.&#13;
H. portrays Yippl. ,n all Its splendorsuck,&#13;
new mytho-culture pasted over the old&#13;
myth-ce::wnerslone01 the Amencan ...·ay of&#13;
lile What com" to mond is the phra"&#13;
'only 10 Amenc.'&#13;
When I \Was InChicago for the Festival of&#13;
Ufe. or Maller put I~ the "Surge of&#13;
C1ucago", "luch IS the primary subject 01&#13;
the novel. I kepi my eye on Sanders, I&#13;
lollowed tum around because he was the&#13;
only YIp I could relat. to, aod .veryone in&#13;
Chicago \Wa a Yip althat lIme Abbie and&#13;
RubIO ....ere too electriC. too Yip for my&#13;
POlche till bathed m the ml&lt;ho.eslem&#13;
mnlOhC nuu!5 of Keno, DeUlOger was too&#13;
tnl)). 100 fatherly and one is enough,&#13;
Hal den and Dav .. ere too polilical,&#13;
ales too violently rhetoncal, Froines&#13;
and W("lntr too in\,tSible. but Sanders, well&#13;
.. a poet. a calm ,n the eye of the&#13;
clich and the chaos, a warm and totally&#13;
mullt r. led human rather than a oneIdtd&#13;
oratOl'"or an electriC )·o-yo champ&#13;
such a Ablll Another Yip lunnamed)&#13;
....he I relaled to was a long hair who kept&#13;
)' lling oul 'God BI Captain Vere', at&#13;
four In lhe- morning&#13;
SIlar* begins with the "".,..,ism of the&#13;
Pentagon and eods on the saucer zagreus90&#13;
alter the bIea~ liberals and tearY&#13;
eyed McCarthy virgins came down to&#13;
Grant ParI&lt; to sit next to IIle dirty&#13;
hunhonls. Perhaps the best way to review&#13;
a myth is to let it perpetuale Itself ~n&#13;
nunor, but I'm paid to wnle reviews so 111&#13;
.....&#13;
-&#13;
disallows the possibility for a subtle&#13;
presentation 01 satire and parody, butthe&#13;
satire is, if not particulary subtle, striking,&#13;
original and humorous. The facts of&#13;
August 1968 are manipulated, the&#13;
characters are parodied, one-sided god~ or&#13;
demons precisely what one expects t? fInd&#13;
in a myth, they are giants, Euc~lde~n&#13;
characters, a type not necessarily In&#13;
existence in re, but still valid in so far as&#13;
their functions in the myth are concerned.&#13;
The more I think of it, and the less sober&#13;
Ibecome, the more Irealize that this is the&#13;
only real way the Festival of Live could be&#13;
depicted, in myth, in fantastic. parodIC&#13;
computer-poetry myth of the coming Aeon&#13;
01 Yippie. Do~notpick this book up to find out what r-------------&#13;
happened in Chicago during the 1968&#13;
Democratic Convention, nay. pick it up to read a mcxlern myth and one poet's eye,o- -'&#13;
say this much about the mytho olYippie as&#13;
SWIgby bard-parodist sanders, it contains&#13;
The Council 01 the Eye; I-mouthed&#13;
saucerlings, porn flowers, smut ape&#13;
commie freakos, suck and suck trysts,&#13;
exorcism of Puritan guilt, subversives, the&#13;
psycbcodelic concentration camp of the&#13;
United Stales, nying saucers, hellsoup.the&#13;
wraiths ol Che, Tom Eliot, Bob Brownmg,&#13;
a lot 01 radical good guys both dead and&#13;
undead, Akhnaton, Oral Annie, She-WhoSuell-Ir,.A.Skirt-Of-Snakes,&#13;
Madame BWl&#13;
Doctor, Pearpuke the undercover porke~.&#13;
Complete wristwatches, the farmer s&#13;
daughter or wife, galactic vibrators, a stud&#13;
robol for the pentagon in "The Great&#13;
Pentagon Hunching Contest", weregenerals,&#13;
PARODY, mammal, Danger&#13;
lucking, spread shots, "Thoth the God of&#13;
Gnosis &amp; Emanation, Jesus the God or&#13;
Sharong and GenUeness, Buddha the God&#13;
WP. weep for the chaCfi we&#13;
lension and blood ~t bl~eep !It&#13;
sacrifice .' iI -.&#13;
for we are eternal, .weare the&#13;
we are the people ~&#13;
we are marijuana&#13;
we are mascon SUckers&#13;
•'Nt"&#13;
mold for you a new civilizationor&#13;
and love -..&#13;
&amp; you! you will haveit ""----.&#13;
In your face. -.&#13;
Shards of God courtesy of the Boot ••&#13;
622-59th Street, Kenosha. • IIlI&#13;
Merger Opposed&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Therefore, we recommend that the&#13;
issue be assigned to a legislative interimm:::&#13;
committee for an in-depth study.&#13;
The resolution dealing with the bUdget staIIt&#13;
We, the Wisconsin Division of the A.rncftII&#13;
Association of University Women, go on ~&#13;
supporting the budg7ts aspresented bythe 8Ganlll&#13;
Regents 01 the Umverslty of WisconsinlIld ..&#13;
Board of Regents of the Wisconsin State UnMnIr&#13;
system. The drastic cuts proposed in theGover-.&#13;
budget would very seriously impair lIld ...&#13;
necessitate cutting out.present programs lIldWllM&#13;
seriously jeopardize the research programsudlit&#13;
graduate .schools. Wisconsin, through the "&#13;
its leaders and the support of its taxpay III&#13;
developed one of the great universities".&#13;
country and is internationally recogni2led.II&#13;
Wisconsin citizens realize that quality educItiII&#13;
costs money - we wish to go "forward" UDder.&#13;
stale motto. The Governor's· budget would .....&#13;
backwards.&#13;
by the Wisconsin AA UW&#13;
The Wisconsin Division of AAUW has 4B&#13;
branches and some 5,000 members.&#13;
The resolution on the proposed merger states:&#13;
We. the Wisconsin Division of the American&#13;
Association of University Women, go on record as&#13;
opposing any legislation at this time merging the&#13;
University of Wisconsin and the Wisconsin State&#13;
University system, on the grounds (1) that such a&#13;
merger would create a giant, centralized system&#13;
under which individual campuses would tend to lose&#13;
their identity, be less responsive to local needs, and&#13;
reduce the variety of educational choice for&#13;
students; (2) that such a merger might be more&#13;
costly than maintaining the separate Boards of&#13;
\&#13;
its i~~S'€cOt\. d c.oMit\~&#13;
of' BuJI d03 f-I Qrr r&#13;
. , .&#13;
\&#13;
\&#13;
J H, 1'71&#13;
ants begins with the exorcism of the&#13;
Pentagon and ends on the saucer Zagreusafter&#13;
the bleating liberals and teary&#13;
eyed tcCarthy virgins came down_ to&#13;
Grant Par lo sit next lo the ~ty&#13;
hunhords. Perhaps the best way ~ rev1e_w&#13;
a myth is to let it perpetua~ itself ~ rumor, but I'm paid to write reVJews so I II&#13;
say this much about the my tho o~ Yippie_ as ung by bard-parodist Sanders, 1t cont.ams&#13;
Th Council or the Eye; I-mouthed&#13;
saucerlings, porn flowers, smut ape&#13;
commie freakos, suck and suck trysts, e orcism of Puritan guilt, subversives, the&#13;
psychcodelic concentration camp of the&#13;
nited States, flying saucers, hellsoup_ the&#13;
v.ntlhs of Che, Tom Eliot, Bob Browmng,&#13;
a lot of radical good guys both dead and&#13;
undead. Akhnaton, Oral Annie, She-Whouck-In-A-Skirt-Of-Snakes,&#13;
Madame Bun&#13;
Doctor, Pearpuke the undercover porke~,&#13;
Complete wristwatches, the farmer s daughter or wife, galactic vibrators, a stud&#13;
robot for the pentagon in "The Great&#13;
Pentagon Hunching Contest", weregenerals,&#13;
PARODY, mammal, Danger&#13;
fucking, pread shots, "Thoth the God of&#13;
Gnosis &amp; Emanation, Jesus the God of&#13;
Sharong and Gentleness, Buddha the God&#13;
of Ecology &amp; Wisdom, and odAm~ ~un~&#13;
Ra-Hoffman-Rubin the G O ee Roits." The myth is a strung ou_t catalogue&#13;
of gods and goddesses, earthlings, honkpork,&#13;
spacelings, etc, etc.&#13;
Sanders knows the language _and _approaches&#13;
the novel with poetry m mmd,&#13;
the very nature and scope of the theme&#13;
disallows the possibility for a subtle&#13;
presentation of sat~e and parody, ~t.the&#13;
satire is, if not particulary subtle, str1k1ng,&#13;
original and humorous. The facts of&#13;
August 1968 are manipulated, the&#13;
characters are parodied, one-sided god~ or demons precisely what one expects to fmd&#13;
in a myth, they are giants, Euc!ide~n&#13;
characters, a type not necessarily m&#13;
existence in re, but still valid in so far as their functions in the myth are concerned.&#13;
The more I think of it, and the less sober&#13;
I become the more I realize that this is the&#13;
only real 'way the Festival of Li~e could ~e&#13;
depicted in myth, in fantastic parod1c&#13;
compute~-poetry myth of the coming Aeon&#13;
view of Yippie. Only the b. been changed to protect ~ lectiVity&#13;
and liberals from themselv e · us a measure of the absurdes, a~ 14&#13;
the truth and the myth or y~nd_ ·&#13;
Shards of God is written in PP1.e.&#13;
first person, heat and if y ~hitt, a&#13;
enough you'll be blided fr:i OOk_ c and your own hand-ups just I ob&#13;
see how ultimately true it . ong e~&#13;
accomplishes its task how is, ~~&#13;
Yippie and the Chicago or;: •t&#13;
I declare that the Univers Ill:&#13;
itself as life. e ~1n&#13;
I declare that Iggdrasail is&#13;
a Spflld&#13;
God! hail force share' hail&#13;
music! · l&gt;Orn'&#13;
WP. weep for the chaos we&#13;
tension and blood ix;t bl~~ for&#13;
sacrifice · ' IS o«&#13;
for we are eternal, .we are the we are the people&#13;
we are marijuana we are mascon suckers, we&#13;
mold for you a new civilizaUon of&#13;
and love&#13;
&amp; you! you will have it m your face.&#13;
of Yippie. r----- -------- Do·not pick this book up to find out what&#13;
happened in Chicago during the 1968&#13;
Democratic Convention, nay, pick it up to&#13;
Shards of God courtesy or the 8&#13;
622-59th Street, Kenosha. read a modern myth and one poet's eye, ______________ _J&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Merger Opposed Therefore, we recommend that the m&#13;
issue be assigned to a legislative interim&#13;
committee for an in-depth study.&#13;
by the Wisconsin AAUW&#13;
The resolution dealing with the budget&#13;
We, the Wisconsin Division of the Amen&#13;
Association of University Women, go on&#13;
supporting the budgets as presented by the Boardd&#13;
Regents of the University of Wisconsin and&#13;
Board of Regents of the Wisconsin State Unh&#13;
system. The drastic cuts proposed in the Governcr 1&#13;
budget would very seriously impair and er&#13;
necessitate cutting out.present programs and&#13;
seriously jeopardize the research programs and&#13;
graduate schools. Wisconsin, through the effonsd&#13;
its leaders and the support of its taxpayers&#13;
developed one of the great universities ol aur&#13;
country and is internationally recognized&#13;
Wisconsin citizens realize that quality educatian&#13;
costs money - we wish to go "forward" under&#13;
state motto. The Governor's budget would lead 11&#13;
backwards.&#13;
The Wisconsin Division of AAUW has 48&#13;
branches and some 5,000 members.&#13;
The resolution on the proposed merger states:&#13;
We, the Wisconsin Division of the American&#13;
Association of University Women, go on record as&#13;
opposing any legislation at this time merging the&#13;
University of Wisconsin and the Wisconsin State&#13;
University system, on the grounds (1) that such a&#13;
merger would create a giant, centralized system&#13;
under which individual campuses would tend to lose&#13;
their identity, be less responsive to local needs, and&#13;
reduce the variety of educational choice for&#13;
students; (2) that such a merger might be more&#13;
costly than maintaining the separate Boards of&#13;
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 17, May 24, 1971</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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              <text>Text</text>
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          <name>Publisher</name>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
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          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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