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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 3, Issue 18</text>
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            <text>Letters to the Editor</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Clnir trsit1 QI i1(Q'11i11-P,11/.•itl,&#13;
" Journalll"' b l!lf,u!ur• I• a ln,rr)'" -lllaU..w,4.rnold&#13;
• ,~.&#13;
1~ ,~~~,m&#13;
1~ ~ v~ · ••&#13;
,.,..-&#13;
~&#13;
\II\ 31, lfll \Ol.l'\11 ,J ,1 \lllf.111• . .&#13;
THE LIBRARY&#13;
UWP, KENOSHA CAMPUS&#13;
~700 WASHINGTON RD.&#13;
.,&#13;
..,&#13;
.. &#13;
Photographs by Darrell Borger and Bill Jacoby &#13;
... .. 2 M1yJ1_ 1_,1&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
peopl•• Tholo pictw• &lt;ould"&#13;
been laken on Memorial O 'ff&#13;
any •=er S&gt;lnday •~· •t.b or July, l.abor 0.)&#13;
Wt •~ that the parking&#13;
AbJ•tklrl lel\"ts much to be&#13;
~1red. But please be-fair to the&#13;
WllVff$it)' poh&lt;.-e. In isswng&#13;
t1clttt1 thf')' dl1c.rirn1nate&#13;
a,a1Ml no one - not e,ft the&#13;
1t&lt;&gt;l&lt;k'n aged&#13;
To 111, p,cpw who 1tole 11w&#13;
[nru("allCftS adirtln..in&amp; po!ih:rt&#13;
A thou&amp;h • t- upttttd&#13;
IOffl«.IW' •auld att-al Cb. p011trn&#13;
v.t put up in , amlUI placn&#13;
lhrf&gt;u&amp;),out ~ campus. "e&#13;
6dn"I ,,q,oc: lh&lt;fl&gt; to b, stola,&#13;
tM ume day """ pul ttw&gt;m up&#13;
~" appnd.a~ )QUI'" ,...,.hnsiu m&#13;
but. ltntci •e are brci.r &amp;nd&#13;
ttnct thr m•1itH1ne and ptall"r&#13;
"&gt;tt prk NI .... ro, UK- bnd1I&#13;
o/. $tUdtlu al P •• ude and&#13;
a.inct lh&lt;' ...-Kt' "°ould ha\:t m bf!&#13;
cor,sk!ttably "'ah« lo non&#13;
c«M r at! to prmtifll N&amp;t!. ,..&#13;
c-an't rNll)' 1ffurd to It'"" tbrm •••1 SQ.. ll I.bf' burden ti rt.lilt&#13;
brcamn too .....,,_ ror ;ou&#13;
nwrt-1)' put hfl) centl ror M&lt;"h&#13;
pool« you i1&lt;N ond "'• Idly&#13;
kw teC"h mow:.ttd poatrt 1n an&#13;
Niul9{Jtt and mad it to lht&#13;
lddrfa _, U. potlN'&#13;
I ,;oic 4110,;&#13;
To the Edll«&#13;
Ha 1. mK hnaU) tracked down&#13;
ffl)' bn&gt;lhff Geora• I ,.oufd now&#13;
tiu lo 1rmU1ably lffllk• ond&#13;
condtmn his aclloru and&#13;
anarcbutk IC'ndt'flC1H&#13;
II• lla5 caus«I mu&lt;h p;.t to our family b&gt; rurunng around&#13;
U.. ..,..,.,,, ••ll•llJ up 1,.uddllO&#13;
., a''Gm • tfi UWir aws&#13;
for tomt' form ol ~..,oluUon.&#13;
PIH"' try to undentand thal&#13;
.._ - ...... llul unlll&#13;
afltt his tol.lr of wn,ct 1n , ... ttt&#13;
sam Ht c1mt hom~&#13;
dislD-.. ,111 the wv and&#13;
Id ,ountry. Thll disilluolooffiffil&#13;
and rrustnllon hH madf&#13;
lllln act 1hr way bt ..._ a.&#13;
AlUM&amp; lO atttpt tM ract that&#13;
th-a countl')· ha$ IO protttt Usell&#13;
from 111\U. by IUwdit fCll'Cea&#13;
U'v,rth \ wt l\ill"D)&#13;
llav1na reachtd tht&gt; con-&#13;
- lb.I G&lt;uJe and lua&#13;
reltow ccmp,n"'" must be&#13;
•l"f'p,d, I uk Y"" not lo&#13;
conpfralf with his mad&#13;
sd)Nnes tor peace and 110Cial&#13;
lJ'lnqUilll~&#13;
'!'hanky,...&#13;
Bill McteP&lt;)". Jr.&#13;
To lhf Editor&#13;
Wt •'"f'ff aurpntiNS to hear&#13;
from Peter J J-IMM&gt;jter Jr • thal&#13;
nil(hl d8"(. .. art K'hec!\iltd for&#13;
tht COO\ NUUCf of Goldt':O·&#13;
agen ""• apoiotptt 10 JIii'&#13;
Habtlter and his triendl loT&#13;
kttplllg thorn up pasl lhoir&#13;
hf&lt;lun•&#13;
And h.,.,, for good mea1ure,&#13;
isa httlt- motherly advit-t~ they tbDlllcl mMHler thal 1M tt.aoo&#13;
£or Jerry Rubin•• refettntt to&#13;
edutation at txcranent Is lhat&#13;
hr, l&gt;k• 111, ...., or the tum&lt;d...,&#13;
tt'O'Wd, gttt hia mtormatkln&#13;
lrom I.be ,m,ng end of the horse.&#13;
IF YOU WANT&#13;
SOMETHING&#13;
A UTTLI EXTRA •••&#13;
TR'II'&#13;
Budweiser.&#13;
MALT UQUOR&#13;
• • • but yo• u&#13;
know that! !!&#13;
It's the real thing. CQ.~e.&#13;
z: ADULT BOOK STORE&#13;
0 KENOSHA V,&#13;
,, 1-- BONDAGE DENMARK rn u z MAGS BOOKS ('""I u.J&#13;
_,.J - -i - 3: A ,I Pu~k\ d~ St,.,Jent\ )&gt; )&gt;&#13;
u.J r--&#13;
V, 0 Ch., 21 10-; Off a, 1-- SEX EDi.JCAT'ON r-- a, 1-- rT1 )&gt; V, z: BOOKS&#13;
. GAY7 ::::0 u.J - l!) SECTION I G') 1202-56 ST 652-9051 )&gt; l!) - C0 TALK OF THE TOWN&#13;
:z&#13;
IASl!y here is our .,..--•I&#13;
ni&gt;&lt;&gt;rl. b) 7 p m the btltred&#13;
and f1llhy student lounge5 look&#13;
lh-ecl 111 - bul not by anything&#13;
human. If v.e att capablf' ol&#13;
risina (lo our elderl)' le~ and&#13;
tottering th......,, the debris 10&#13;
the hall-6lled ~ IJ it&#13;
too much to e,pect neet-looted&#13;
)-Outh 10 do the same• Ecology,&#13;
bn - tlwliS, starts •t&#13;
home&#13;
Very lt\llyyours,&#13;
Evaod ...... 11111&#13;
( ParkAldo'• Golden-ager,).&#13;
Dear Editor&#13;
'lb~&amp; 1 Police state at&#13;
Petrifying Sprln111! The&#13;
Sber1tt's Department 11&#13;
cracking down on college.&#13;
students. The Kenooh• Nows&#13;
ran • phcn), ..,...,tied ooe&#13;
page artide on the Pets Park&#13;
situaUcm. Ont pictw-e showed&#13;
t,r..-O Sttte btffcans on the crass.&#13;
I c:he&lt;ked out the beer oans and&#13;
couldn't rmd (IDe Stite con&#13;
any,ti,'tw-re. J don ·t know an)'Ooe&#13;
that drinks the stull I eouldn"t&#13;
find more lhan a dozen S&lt;hlllt&#13;
and Pabst w,s, and a few pop&#13;
cans. More picures showed&#13;
tralllc jam&amp;, full parking lots,&#13;
m . What 1tt the) tryu,g lo&#13;
prove? Anyone in the park LI •n&#13;
"Wlde&amp;irable"" Undesired by&#13;
vmo• The &lt;0&lt;allcd "okttnl"&#13;
The Sherilr and the K""""h&#13;
~C\\·• says there's dope •&#13;
bcff dtmk1rc, oul \htro. si,;;;&#13;
Polana.ky is trying to make a bi fI&#13;
nam• for himself by Pt 1&#13;
secullng the lore hair&amp; }l '·&#13;
anti•ettablishment tYP-eti~·&#13;
using Certain cod,e 'll"Ol'd$. ~J&#13;
phn ... •« He wanis lo dn&#13;
out all lhe young people ,. ,;::&#13;
the m1ddl&amp;-elas. typeg do.,~&#13;
have to tote their picn10 bosl.&lt;1&amp;&#13;
so ror. Certain thing, are blo-..&#13;
completely out of proponio,&#13;
have driven lhroogh the par\~ ""·•a.I hmN and w,ilk_frd ~ trolls, and found that .,...,._ is cool. having tun lhrowi&#13;
lruby platters, ~ ~ dogs, playfflll ball u u,,,, 11&#13;
any dope lh,.-., why cloesn'o 11,.&#13;
Sberill just IO !her, aad • .._&#13;
the junkies on ~ rllhor&#13;
than raising lhe hu,e and tty&#13;
and making scattt:r-,~&#13;
statements.&#13;
Thia type ol ta&lt;llct is ..... to&#13;
mull In massn·e lliowdo,,,,&#13;
trashing, war, I think it wowd&#13;
makt- more sense to kcal tt&#13;
befflnthep,vk.A!Jo.lUret·,_&#13;
coonty make more JObl tor lt.o&#13;
youtha to take care of the put&#13;
The part ractblles '4Ctt la.."&#13;
apart bcforo Parkside ,..11&#13;
plan,..d.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
TUESDAY, J\. l'E I&#13;
Lee1Urt5 and Fine Arts Com•&#13;
111lUtt )ltttiag: 10 a.m in&#13;
Scae-nce o,,... Con.ference&#13;
Room, 344A, Grecnquisl.&#13;
\\EDM.SDA\',Jl:NE z&#13;
TIIVR~OAY. JV:-.E 3&#13;
s1udy Period, No cla•1H.&#13;
Studfflts prepare for exams.&#13;
FRIO\\', J\/Nt: 4&#13;
Exams R,-11n: Exams run&#13;
through June 12.&#13;
SAnllOI\Y, JV1''E$&#13;
Ma11,owu'1 •·Vouthpower";&#13;
Prt-regj1tt.r tor summer&#13;
employment. Ra&lt;tne Dodger&#13;
Room, 9 a.m. • 12 noon&#13;
SUND4Y, JUNES&#13;
Op,n Ho.., for the public on the&#13;
Parkside ca.inpua fr(lffl 1 to 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
SATl11DAY, Jl '&lt;E 12&#13;
Commencement: 2 p.m io&#13;
c_.t Hall c.onoo..-.e.&#13;
Spoakero will be c;.,,..,rnor&#13;
Patrick L.ucey and UW&#13;
PrtSldml Jabn Weaver.&#13;
~101,0AY, JU!,'E U&#13;
Concerned Studtnt.t CoaUtlon&#13;
,.,n present a &lt;oncert and&#13;
Altemalt 'CommenCffl'lcnt&#13;
fnvn 12 to 3 p m tr:anrirc&#13;
music by • The Gatherin~•.&#13;
student tllms and se\'ff al&#13;
swpnse nmts. T,nlatiwq&#13;
scheduled ror lhe KfflOllla&#13;
Fine Arts room.&#13;
Spec\11 E't-"'f'r&amp;U!&#13;
Four t:urop,an Ftlglit.s th»&#13;
swnmer. f"liCht C doplr1I&#13;
August 15 from ChKago to&#13;
London a nd rt:lurn.s Sep&#13;
temb..- 12 (n,m ~ to&#13;
Chicago. The coat " $197 • F1ight D doparts July JS (roll&#13;
Landon aod: ttluras S.-ptembcr&#13;
11 rrom Amsterd&amp;.""&#13;
to Chicago. The &lt;OIi is $19! 0l&#13;
Fltgltt I departs JWIO JS ,r.,,&#13;
Chicago to London and&#13;
«turns Augull Ill from&#13;
London to C111c,,go 11,tcmt ~&#13;
n1a.oo. Fllaht F ocporu Jrl1&#13;
30 from 1'tilwa~ee to Am&#13;
slffllam aad - A.C&gt;"'&#13;
11 from PariJ to Mlln.\lP'f&#13;
The COOi ii fllll 00 For o,I&#13;
dltlonal 1ntorm1t1• • 4&#13;
reservations, contact . .,&#13;
Stucleot Mtivid,. Olllct ~&#13;
Tallent Holl. tiiwwr1J=7/iJpi ';;::)I,'ti i:&#13;
Editor Warren Nedry PHOl'ES&#13;
~y ~tor Jabn Koloe,, Editorial 6$8-41181, E•1 ~ · ews ~llor Marc £.LSffl Business 6Sf-tl&#13;
FealureEdllor p ul Lom ,__.. BuslnessMa o arllre N('WSC'Opt 15 an an~&#13;
llllgor ,rudtnt =•pap&lt;r &lt;0111P~&#13;
Ad&gt;ertisin&amp; Mana•!~ts Solan by_ 11ude;nto of !bet 11~ • Wasc(lns,n•Parksidt, ~-=&#13;
Accountant John Lt'l&amp;hton weekl)' exctpt dur1na "acat:&#13;
NEWS STAFF John Gray penO&lt;ls. s,..i.111 ~~ .. verth,1ng funds art .,.. _,&#13;
Bob Borchardt. Darrell Borger sourtt (If revenue for ,r&#13;
Jam• Caper, BiU Jac:ob) Ju~ operabOll ol :,"""""' .,. Koloen, Ken Konkol. 'Mtke copits ,rt: pr1n1td lbt&#13;
Kur th, Du n Loumos Bob dislrlbuted Chrou1M1.11&#13;
toCI&#13;
llainlalld, Ktvtn McKa) Bill Kenosha ond Rad ot Iii'&#13;
Sor~nsen. M•rk T,rnpany' munlhes H -.t11 a.s II"&#13;
BIJSl:O.'ESS STAFF Unlvenity. f',.. &lt;&lt;&gt;t""&#13;
Barbar• Scou, Don Marja la avair.ble •!IO"~&#13;
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS &#13;
Mayn.1111&#13;
Newscooe is .now . one semester old&#13;
(we're not "Parkside's Newscope"&#13;
anymore). The present staff is a combiJUltiOn&#13;
of some of the old "Committee"&#13;
SA){lle of the old "Parkside's Newscope"'&#13;
SA){lle journalism buffs, a few interested&#13;
students, and some straights from the&#13;
l)USiness sphere. The paper you're reading&#13;
is their endea".or at creating something&#13;
unique in the field of college journalism.&#13;
Beginning in January (with a staff&#13;
revision in February) with a legacy of nonjournalism,&#13;
non-reporting, nonbc)Okkeeping&#13;
and non-readership, it's been&#13;
a steady uphill battle. Since there is no&#13;
pnnting facility on the campus and no&#13;
subsidy from the University, we are&#13;
required to print the paper off campus and&#13;
secure our own advertising revenue at 11&#13;
tiJlle when many college newspapers are&#13;
dipping into their reserve funds.&#13;
~hck, layed out, returned to Walworth&#13;
oddsere the headlines and pictures and other&#13;
• . anct. ends are finalized taken to&#13;
Dela van to be run off and finally brought&#13;
back to be distributed throughout the&#13;
campuses and the communities.&#13;
Througho.ut all this, the stare has&#13;
responded with much more than could&#13;
have been expected; long hairs got along&#13;
With short hairs, women got 8 long with&#13;
men, an~ writers got along with editors.&#13;
Cecchini: to the staff ol the Public In·&#13;
formation and Publications ofhce, Walt&#13;
Shirer. Bruce Weston, Mn. Rita Petttttl;&#13;
to Erv;in Zuehlke of the Business othce, to&#13;
the staff ol the Bursar office, TI)omas&#13;
Peltier, Mrs. Ruth Borchardt, Mrs Bia nee&#13;
Nitzke, and to all those not menlloned by&#13;
name.&#13;
Third, to the advertisers of the&#13;
Newscope, whose support enabled us to&#13;
bring what we hope JS an accurate student&#13;
voice and effecbve adverus,ng medium.&#13;
ThiS required a superior effort by a&#13;
rookie team. I.E. Enough ads have to be&#13;
secured to cover printing costs ($1,500 per&#13;
roooth), stories have to be covered,&#13;
written and edited, pictures taken and&#13;
developed, layouts ideas created, sent so&#13;
miles to Walworth, Wis., to be justified&#13;
(lined uo in printed columns) brought&#13;
Special thanks are extended to those&#13;
that made this controlled chaos possible.&#13;
First, to Mr. Fred Noer of The Walworth&#13;
Tun~ a!"d members of The Times&#13;
orgaruzation, Mr. Herb Miller, Mrs. Deone&#13;
Langston, Miss Viola Sherman and Miss&#13;
Shirley Schnitcke who worked Saturdays&#13;
late .n~t hours a'od went out of their way&#13;
to. aid m the production of Newscope and&#13;
\\1thout whose help- and understanding&#13;
Newscope would have been impossible.&#13;
Second, to the Administration of&#13;
Parkside, who made a difficult task easier&#13;
namely the Student Affairs omce ~&#13;
Dear_bom, Bill Niehbur, Tony Totero, Mrs. Sophie Graf; the Kenosha Campus Office&#13;
s1:9££, MJ:s· Ellen Toigo, Mrs. Fran&#13;
P1erangeh, Miss Celeste Toigo, Miss Val&#13;
And fourth, to the studenls and&#13;
members of the communities who have&#13;
supported us by bemg open enough to&#13;
recognize the need for an independmt,&#13;
student newspaper and who have and&#13;
hopefully will continue to support I.hose&#13;
who have supported us. Because without&#13;
sb.ldent support cl our advertisers a&#13;
sb.ldent newspaper will become a thmg or&#13;
the past.&#13;
And an extra special thanks to the&#13;
staff and contributors of Newscope.&#13;
Newscope looks forward to serving&#13;
you through lhe summer beg1nru11g June&#13;
28.&#13;
THE EDITOR&#13;
By Mark Timpany&#13;
ol the Newsc.ope Starr&#13;
lt is the right of any faculty member&#13;
wbo$ecOlllract bas been recommended for&#13;
ooo-renewal by his division to request a&#13;
bearing, either open or closed. to review&#13;
!tie iSSUeS relating tO that decisio11. At this&#13;
tune, one of the five Parkside raculty&#13;
whose contracts were recommended £or&#13;
tlDD-rtnewal has requested such a hearing.&#13;
Or James Russell Brokaw has requested an open hearing to resolve se,·eral issues&#13;
m\-otved in the termination of his contract.&#13;
lo a leller lo William Morrow. acting&#13;
Dea• cf the College of Science and Society,&#13;
dated May 24, Dr. Brokaw slated:&#13;
"In our conference ol May 4, I indicated&#13;
that the reason, staled for the termination&#13;
,i my contract are neither accurate nor&#13;
,alt. and that coosiderations other than&#13;
'!bole elaborated by the Scier.ce Division&#13;
Exttutive Committee motivated the&#13;
rttemmendation tor non-renewal. (The&#13;
ral reasons behind my firing w;ould not be&#13;
Cl'IISUrtble in the Open Society - I tried to&#13;
lfOVlde the-foundations for a respectable&#13;
JS}dlology deparlment; I have had a&#13;
dt("tnt regard for freedom of :speech. and&#13;
r.r the rights cf students.) I am, therefore,&#13;
nquesting that you arrange £or an open&#13;
bt.artng concerning lhe termination ot my&#13;
•ll'act with the University,&#13;
'ln )'OW' letter, you indicate that such a&#13;
.. annc would . . . of course. deal only&#13;
With the a.hove stated reasons for nonrtllN'l.l.&#13;
• These reasons, as staled In ywr&#13;
ltUer1•~ofsucha genent.l 11dl,urc as to~&#13;
almolt unanswerable. I am requesting.&#13;
illorefore, that you direct \he Science&#13;
Division Executive Committee to provide&#13;
'P«.ific information regarding the&#13;
lollowing staled reasons (or non-renewal:&#13;
"•&gt;•U student complllints regarding my&#13;
leiadllng perl&lt;rma.nce, the informa.Hon to&#13;
ON THE NON-RENEWALS&#13;
)f'ar's C('(', u1d that Brot,-. had fou;.bl&#13;
hard for $1.udf'l"lt &amp;0\-•ffnfflt'nl and that h~&#13;
• appr«11t&gt;d i.. .iron and contnbu_, •&#13;
on tbe comm1tttt&#13;
Include course, date. student name, and&#13;
tlle nature of the complainL&#13;
"bl the specifics ol. my alleged ·limited&#13;
and unsatisfactory participation in the&#13;
professional work or the psychology&#13;
(acuity and of the Sciet1ee Division.'&#13;
"c) how the coiclusion regarding 'lack or evidence ot 1eholarly tscth'lty' was&#13;
reached, and how my alleged lack or&#13;
·scholarly' performance differs from the&#13;
performance of the majority of teachers at&#13;
Parkside. (I " 1ill not, al this point. recount&#13;
OOw my efforts to do serious research were&#13;
of the unit. Thr Interact w1lh its. au.xi.liar)·&#13;
equipment would ha-.e ff.clhtated&#13;
poychologlcal mearch al both tht slUdent&#13;
and faculty le,;ol Al the pr6ent ~-· 0,,&#13;
tntu-act system, •long with su. operant&#13;
conditioning boxes, lS unavadable for ~&#13;
m psycholog1cal researclt The reasons for&#13;
Ulb wi11 be part of \he tatimOn)' &lt;..11 Or&#13;
Bt"Oka-.··s open hearing Or Brok.av, came to the umpus 1n&#13;
Septt!mber ot 1969 For his fir-St year. M'&#13;
was the only full bme faculty member m&#13;
Psycholotl)I He tau~t about 350 ,rudent&gt;&#13;
ln Junt: (t JV70, Of e~,.., ._u 1n&#13;
rormf'd by tht Cha.nce:U,r d a 1t.1t:.tant1.1l&#13;
ment pa) 1ncrate His Jr,(! M.lmff'lff&#13;
course 1n Elemtn\.a.l') Pl)&lt;.'holo&amp;) drf'Vi&#13;
coasid«ablo poolh\O f,-dbatk from h1&gt;&#13;
~rudtDI-$ ._. hich "'a, n-port,ed to U.. Dtan&#13;
by ,_ studftlta&#13;
Dr. James Russell Brokaw&#13;
:-. "", 1n op,n h&lt;anJll ii bnnC ac~kd&#13;
to C'00$1&lt;kr- ~ tSSUe. ,n.,,.h-..d ,a ~&#13;
C'ffle'V,alotDr BroUv. 1c:ontr1C't "•lham&#13;
Morro-., act&gt;ng Dnn ol 1M roll,g• ol&#13;
Science and Society. adrruttf'd Oat uwro&#13;
appeaD to ~ ~t amtq,uate to the&#13;
nghti ti ddendant.a ,n wch ~n11ts Hf&#13;
S\18ietted that whit -.oukl happtn i. that&#13;
the Soenc;-t 01vtJICM.'I (,;,cttUlJ\'f COffl•&#13;
mill.ff, v.tuth made lht rt'("Offlmtndatlon&#13;
recWln&amp; term1n.tlon.""ouldtnfft 1n oprn&#13;
rrustraled by the PerksJde administr,tion&#13;
and by the Sd,nce Division Executive&#13;
Committee,)"&#13;
According to l3rokaw. the actions taken&#13;
by the Science Division an the stated reasons (or termination prior to their&#13;
notification of their decision indicate that&#13;
their decision wa., based on reasons other&#13;
than the reasons stated in the notification.&#13;
Dr. Brokaw was never notified of an)·&#13;
student complaicts until Divlsional action&#13;
had already be&lt;n taken on those alleged&#13;
complaints. One o( the issues involved in the charges&#13;
of ••Jack of schc&gt;:.arly activity'' is involved&#13;
ln tho ...., nt the fifty-thousand dollar&#13;
Lehigh Valley Interact System. The ~•·&#13;
tcract system, which '5 an mterface with&#13;
the. University's POP..S computer, was&#13;
purchued by the University ln the spring&#13;
or 1970. Dr. Brak.aw, at that lune the onl}'&#13;
full lime faculty mttnber in Psychology,&#13;
was direcUy responsible for the purchase&#13;
bisflT$tM.'mesterandover2'0thtsecond session to a.pread on r«'OC"d tt\r fact•&#13;
ln adchhoo. he was a member of M"'ttal regarchng lhe tenran111on. \ft.Pr 1ht fact,&#13;
facult)' comm1ttees ,n rttorded. tht ('0Pm1tttt wU1 l"ff'OnMuch&#13;
of his \\Ofk on~ racili~ and ~r tht"lr ongmal rttommf'ndlllOf'I and&#13;
Planning Committee of the Sc1tnce nollf)' ~ Dttn ol thP Col)~"~ S('1t'PC't'&#13;
DhtSion was related to tht Un1\:er'S1l)' " and SOClel)' and lht Chlincdlor of lhetr&#13;
purchase of the Interact system B) dcasion and the O..n and U&gt;e O,:Onttllo&lt;&#13;
February of 1910, the committH mel to will act on lhal drds.121&#13;
consider p1•ns for pi.ycholog,cal \\hr:11 Wed about Ult Par11.11de F•Mt)&#13;
laboratory fac:1hties des1gn"1 b),' Or ~LlbOl't'I req\lftt f« .a m.orlhJMUm on&#13;
Brokaw around lhe capabi.hbe~ of the- terminations u.n.td 11,JCh 11m, as l\,ltdt&gt;hnC'$&#13;
S)'Stem. Dr STOka-.··s Ju1y. 1970. memo to for f6C:Ulty m,t..,,. art est.blW'lrd. Otan&#13;
Dean MacKinney outlines 8roka1J. '$ Morrow rTphed. ... un apptt&lt;11t~ U'Hpropo5ed&#13;
u,tegrauon of t.hoff labotatOf"} C'Ol'ICffn ttfleeltd 1n lbat rtsolutaon " Ut&#13;
racllitie$ unto a unifitd undergraduatf' °fll,rflt on to 11, I.hit ~ lhftr .c~oos.. lh4&#13;
progr•m £or Parks1de. At that time ht 'On1.Sl{'lnal Eiecul.J\'e&gt; CommUttt and thft&#13;
slated that Pa.rMidc. '" couJd have~ Ch,anttU« have condudt'ld I hat .. hatntt&#13;
d lll&lt; best undergraduate p&lt;Ol!l'8lTI$ ,n the thehmilJlli-cf thepromlurofor ,...,,.,.&#13;
counU)' .. il ...,..td necoaary to carry ""' the&#13;
Or. Brokaw"s v;ork: on last )Nr·, normal faculty ptn,oa11tl tt\1f"A' 1ncludl.n&amp;&#13;
Campus Concerns Comm1ttH v.as poaa:1blerecommf'l'datNW1Salnon ret\C'Wal&#13;
charactertud by an a.nterest lft $tudffil 1bt da~ of lM opt'fl hdn,C hu ~ )-.t&#13;
aU,irS PhiJltp Simpson. chatffl\lD ol LHI been Hl&#13;
By I u MtTagert&#13;
lacluded among tbo.e """'°" wbo have receh-«I&#13;
DQQ..renewal contract&amp; i•&#13;
Cl,1,1., Holzbog, 111l1tanl&#13;
ll'Ofeaor ol ,\rl,&#13;
Tht Humanities Executive&#13;
Olllmitt,e has stated lhat the&#13;
ruson ror Hobbog's t,er•&#13;
ll'Uftlhon is that his&#13;
'llllificalion, and skills do not&#13;
llllld, Parl&lt;side's program of&#13;
Arltducation because o( budget&#13;
tlltl. 1109,•ever, there remains&#13;
IQrQe Question u to how the ~°!! of Park&amp;ide's art&#13;
..._u.. is doflrial. Holibog&#13;
~ U..l dtrlng his association&#13;
to the university, written&#13;
Kendall College, and Laytocl&#13;
SchOol d Art.&#13;
Prior lo coming to Parkside.&#13;
Holzbo!t worked for &amp;everal&#13;
Architectural firms. eg. Nelson&#13;
and Associaln of Milw11Jkee,&#13;
and at one Ume operated hi,&#13;
OW1'1 firm, Environments. tnc.,&#13;
of Cambridge, Masoachus&lt;tlS&#13;
NaliOc'L8llY rec:ognittd proje,ctl&#13;
mllled numerous plans for&#13;
•development ol Um\-en.1ty and&#13;
commun1ty relat~ en•&#13;
viroomeotal projects whach&#13;
have had sut.a.a.nbal IUCCHI&#13;
As was hIS on'1-J\11 ,nt.en&amp;.&#13;
HolzbOI has shifted much cf tho&#13;
resp,on.\ibihbes to the Kadffli1c&#13;
area and now teaches ona .. twotlunls'.'&#13;
baslS, the mnauuna&#13;
considerable skill in the area d&#13;
design or modern u~~anindustrtal&#13;
commun1t!es.&#13;
Although he has betn trained&#13;
primarily a$ , landscape ar·&#13;
chltect, his experience and&#13;
competence cover all the fat·&#13;
tors that influence the environment&#13;
of modern rnan. He&#13;
will make a significaot con-&#13;
'a rare combination of taknts'· Wyllie&#13;
RKu&gt;••K--- arr• llolzbOI&#13;
lfd the h&amp;tutt erw1ronme!nta1&#13;
role d Pamld• a, one ,,&#13;
··,nttJh&amp;ently muh1n1 a&#13;
p,&gt;lffl~lly r1pid-1rowinc tn&#13;
dtilUiaJ sooety and ill Ml"\'~ ••th I still vruquf:ly NWral&#13;
en~,rorvnmc. •• Thal '°''" would ..... tude IUldin&amp; ,.ll&gt;e &lt;rMUOCI o(&#13;
a~ urban fn,.:e·• wbach wtll&#13;
dtv-e.Lop m:o • ma)Of ,r.tw,znal&#13;
t.a'banarea&#13;
Until ,_ Holtbo&amp; had ..,.&#13;
miontd t.tw ,b&gt;denta' Nik on&#13;
dtwlopuC the tftVH"Ol'\ffifflt U&#13;
lnduchna I concrete elf ort 11 ttcltt1""in1&#13;
vanout ••l)O&lt;b d tho&#13;
ph)'11&lt;:ll tnvinJnmfflL Al atlvJ~or&#13;
to the Ludd,t•&#13;
orpmuuon bt had also boped&#13;
that Studfflta would becom•&#13;
involved tn solvtng social&#13;
problems as wdl&#13;
n:ununicalion rrom the&#13;
:llalli•e committee in regard&#13;
~' role ln the Art Depart• ·-this been "sadly lacking".&#13;
When fint hired in t969,&#13;
~~or lNin Wyllie was&#13;
11 . In a local newspapu 35&#13;
Yina "Charles Hokbog&#13;
~ts a rare combination&#13;
ents. He brings to Parkside&#13;
Hol1bog Dropped Because of Budget Cuts . . . · d NS n,m included WJut,ha\l ooe-third cf two nm• is devoted&#13;
~but~on ,!n our new campu.S V 111 age , A mes bury. to pta.nnm&amp; ~nd tonS~on.&#13;
situation. M chusett:. which ..-on an With a gra.r from Amenc•n&#13;
Ho&#13;
t .. N&gt;O received a Master's a!~ from the American Moton. It~ has beftl u,. """" I · t .. , Design strumental 10 selecunc a degree In landscape ar- nsutu e ,,,. . computtt procram whJch wtU&#13;
chitecture from Harvard h ~ -•b'· Par•·1dt, in a JOlllt ' 1965 a Holzbog hrSt btgan IS .. ~ - ~ ~ Graduate schoal in ' at Parkside as a mtmbe.r d the relationship wilh the&#13;
Bachelor of Pine Arts delJ'Oe d c 1· Southeast- R-•o-•I ~·- d&#13;
or Planning an onslruc ,on ~.. -.- ,_ r,..,- rrom Cranbrook Aca em)' d t •h' a mn• Commwion. to mue a&#13;
nd h I ludl'ed Department an au. .. . ., Art in 1958, a as a so 5 course entitled Man and hts definiti\'e ex.amin1ibon of tbe&#13;
at the Uniyer5ity or WisconSin, 1 H ~ envaronmental mak~up d the&#13;
Northwestern University, Visual En'lironrnen . e su&#13;
ln other educational tn•&#13;
deavors, Holzbot has hdped&#13;
dtvt.lop rtl!'N degree programs&#13;
descnbtd H being re-la ltd to a.n&#13;
i.nterchsciplinary approach to&#13;
educauon&#13;
Newscope congratulates Th• Class of t 71 ' &#13;
UPTOWN&#13;
RESTAURANT&#13;
Ind LOUNGE ~ QC&#13;
. .&#13;
PUl#tUtlf " J-1],&#13;
uwltli.t ., INntt[,ut,&#13;
N&gt;-'JIN me/I.&#13;
v,/J 6.u-c)I13&#13;
BEER&#13;
&amp; WATER&#13;
24-7 oz. bot.&#13;
$1.ll&#13;
PdCAl(lRffTAUIIAHT&#13;
&#13;
Sunday • Thursday&#13;
6 • J\fidnight&#13;
Friday • Saturday&#13;
6·- 3 A.J\f. _ J61' ,0 AVE -&#13;
PANCAKES&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
STOP&#13;
12-24 oz. bot.&#13;
$1.39&#13;
plus cax &amp; deposit&#13;
2-f!B lf'ashm ton Rd., Kenosha&#13;
YOUR&#13;
'1rt$10ttt&#13;
S TOR ES&#13;
IN KENOSHA AND RACINE ARE GIVING YOU&#13;
01'1 ol I ovtomotiv., urvic:el.&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
That's besides their normal&#13;
greot tms bvy1 Just b&lt;ing&#13;
in this ad&#13;
''BRAT'' 1 The is ·&#13;
Where It's At!&#13;
DAIi. Y SPE CIA L&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.&#13;
A Bottle of&#13;
BiNJTmlE&#13;
l New lrmd of&#13;
Akoholk ltvtragt&#13;
ood •BEEFBURGER S~~AK99&#13;
BRAT&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
HOUR&#13;
MONDAY thru FRIDAY&#13;
6 p .m. to 7 p .m.&#13;
PITCHER'S $1.00 GLASS 20¢&#13;
Avo ilobil• For Parties&#13;
l"d1.1di"g F,oternity ond So,o,itv Por1t•s&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M. - 12 P .M.&#13;
8)' PHI Lomartire ot the r,:ewscoptSUff te - .• th,,-~ti$sue for the second semes r, a&#13;
rnlS... l,O.l&gt; ds and take ood bme for me to tie up lose en '&#13;
g •~•·nd-the-., .. enes tour oC the column. e,1eryone on I ucul -&#13;
my mlnd and stomach. t to&#13;
Any fat kJd reviewing restatmrnts has go ncl&#13;
t a few. e]b,0..-\·1 toward the ribs, snickers. a :'~ts but even 1 have to admit it 'bas it umes ~ a 'tough four months and nine restaura~ts.&#13;
Gerlerally all my c-omments w~ ~en recewed,&#13;
,as most everyone respected my opmion a~~con· sumer in lhe restaurant field. Many comme me on my 'middJe of the road opinions when it came to&#13;
By Jim Kol~n ot a.be Newscope.St.aff&#13;
Title: ,ndicalioos, Vol. II, No. 2 , Having re.td through this latest 1ssu0 of lndlcalion,&#13;
I've come to the conclusion that ~is&#13;
public•bon must be judged on two points&#13;
separately· Namely, the art-wort-production. and&#13;
the litt=rary content&#13;
Erotic is :i. good word tn de.\Cribe the theme of&#13;
the drawings and chapter Ulustrations, what also&#13;
comes to mind an more judge-mental wocdi s.uch as pcofeS5ional, captivating, etc. 'l"her:e ls ~o doubt&#13;
in my mind tb3t Matt Golden and Kns Tr1bys. the&#13;
artjsts. Juave presented the reader with surprisingly&#13;
good G"awtngs. Thtte is no doubt 1n my n'!.ind that&#13;
the people involved 1n layout and pnxluction have&#13;
created the most proressional and \'isually arli$lic&#13;
publication that has ever borne the stamp of&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
Parkside on its cover.&#13;
The Contents. Diane Lawler has three poems&#13;
included in this final i1»ueof the school year, o( the&#13;
three .. Poem JI" impressed me the most Her style&#13;
seems to have.softened somew-hat, tht poem doesn't&#13;
move quite as quickly as pre\•ious poems of hers, we&#13;
aren't rushed. a.nd the imagery seems to be much&#13;
more consciousJy chosea&#13;
Pat Nelson, the editor, has two poems in this&#13;
issue, or wruch "BifocaJs for a blind man'' seems to&#13;
be the superior. He has eliminated the indefinite&#13;
and di!luUte articles (a, an, the) and thus creates a&#13;
collision or ideas and rhythm which work&#13;
progr,essively toward the end of the poem.&#13;
Peter Back.Nielsen has one pQtm included in&#13;
tndica\ions. lt is entitled "Voodoo Assasination".&#13;
1be poem ls surrealistic in imagery and theme, and&#13;
voodoo assasination is impossible. don't worry.&#13;
There are five short stories in this issue of Indications&#13;
Ted Wilson·s 0 The Runaway" opens the&#13;
magazine, The ste&gt;ry concern~ o 36 ye:ir- old s.ingle&#13;
woman who resents the (act that she has to Lake&#13;
care of her 70 year old father. It is written in first&#13;
pefS(lCl and tells the story or the Last time the old&#13;
man ran away, and the en.suing firs.l week$ of his&#13;
stay 'In an old people's home.. The story is at times&#13;
l\l,,k1,1,•ard and the conc.luston leaves us somewhat on&#13;
a preC.tpic:e; $he caught the bus yet she missed iL&#13;
Next comes, "The Short Circuit" written by&#13;
writing about a field where I have&#13;
education. But one incident involving It! hO ~ the Bill or Fare. restaurant deserves:gorny, 1&#13;
as rm sure that was their motive t~&#13;
When I reviewed the Bill or f"~e&#13;
was critical. but I backed every SI•~-..&#13;
faclS that led me to write what J di~.~&#13;
eluding employ= and former empio,,-·"ti,"&#13;
was lair and the complaints I lcxlgedha~:. 1111&#13;
before. So I thought no one would bt "oi&#13;
returne\l tothe reatauranttose.;: it they had._ I&#13;
any of their ways. 111111,j&#13;
Alter I sat down, I saw the .,.&#13;
proaching me. I figottd the p...,,den, or;'°"' ,. had called him and told him it wasn't..,. 'l&gt;lic:.i,&#13;
the public with is product. Tbe small sari•-~""&#13;
large ooes are relatively the same Silt .711111., prices. I thought be would tell me u,. ~ ..... been sol\•ed. .. . ...._. ._&#13;
1 figured the worst that he -.Id 18&#13;
he wished I would reconsider my ,~11:lni_;.u ..&#13;
would oiler new facts that would "'"'1aclt "I~&#13;
evaluate my stand. Dltla~&#13;
The first thing he said was that J&#13;
elsewhere to be served because he didll;'::&#13;
myself, It is suwooed to be the lint five..,._ a much longer work-in·progr~s. CriUeisiri 1&#13;
£icult for me when I approach my O\\"Q 1"0tt. ~ *&#13;
needs revision, it is too sentimental 11&#13;
pretentious and ultimately emban-a...;.,;. 1111,a&#13;
Next in line is "The Birthday" bl' Jciu,""'-&#13;
The story concerns a is year old', flil~&#13;
rrontatlon with sex, wine, and asb the,-: "hOw do you do n1·· Tbls story comes Off 121!&#13;
successfully of all the stories contained • ,_ magazine. The writer basically cap,t,.ua h ta&#13;
noc&lt;?nce and naivete or the •dols«t.t.&#13;
characterization i• good and the story Is,_,,: "YOU ate the wind, and I the shadow,• • 1&#13;
page story by Peter Back-Niels,,,. It -., to,,&#13;
lesbian losing her virginity, i.s 1,T111rt1 ~ pressionislically and is somewhatesotenc 11-.&#13;
into poetry and paradox, creates no charlCltt&#13;
lacks a £irm continuity. ll is d&gt;\iousl)' 11 •&#13;
perimenla) story and as such is intemtm&amp;,&#13;
SaUy Mengo ls the last entrant in a field ct&#13;
with "Whal's In the News, Henry'?" It 11 Vint»I&#13;
straightforward concrete styJe aOO tht SlOl"f ca&#13;
cerns a bank teUer murdering hii wde Pedall&#13;
lacks some &lt;fepth in the characteriz.ation ,at•&#13;
presentation ol the c,,nlral action ( U.. ...,.,&#13;
utilizes too much irony as a major fOl'f.SbadMI&#13;
devide which teods to make the ccdM&#13;
somewhat anti-climatic. JJ you t'ind tbt ~&#13;
to be somewhat con£usingil is becaustUit,-&#13;
view i:;cems to shift without w11rruog Still. I•&#13;
interesting story.&#13;
This issue of lnd.Jc1tions is a ~l artla&#13;
production, the artwork ultimately 1t1ird a.t •&#13;
superior to the literary content. I \ulb 1t ccam:l ll&#13;
d.irrerent but that's the way it i:s. lt take:J Stt•&#13;
years for a writer to develop his taleot and 1Dlr.a1:&#13;
enough about t.echrti(lue and st~t\D'e IO~&#13;
good story. But an i.ncipient \\Ttter alst&#13;
confidence and the only way he cao g.a!.D. U.1&#13;
fidence is through publishing his earl)• s~.,&#13;
ju.st too bad that the most memorabataspK1&#13;
issue of Indications wiU be the _artwork. I--:&#13;
you simply can' t have tvel')'lh~ )"OIi •d 11&#13;
you want iL But it's still a t,mal&lt;d• blrpi:&#13;
cents.&#13;
Parkside Open House Offers Music and Tours&#13;
TIie umversity oC WlsconslnPa,,ulde&#13;
will ],old a public open&#13;
hous.e featuring a number or&#13;
spe,cial programs and tour from&#13;
t tos p.m on Sunday, June 6, at&#13;
the Wood Road campus midwar&#13;
between Kenosha 1.rnd&#13;
Racine.&#13;
About MOO pe.-.ons attended&#13;
Parkside'• lint open house last&#13;
iprrng.&#13;
The open house is planned as&#13;
afamdy &amp;£fair. with both indoor&#13;
and outdoor activities.&#13;
GN!Onquist and Tallent Halls,&#13;
the lw&lt;l major buildings completed&#13;
50 far on the new cam•&#13;
Pll'- will be open for Inspection&#13;
and sidewalk. superintendents&#13;
art invited to (.beck con•&#13;
structton progress on the&#13;
Library•Learning Ceriter.&#13;
permanent neanng and crw11ng&#13;
plant and various Site&#13;
de\-elopment pra)eC"llll ('Urrtontty underway&#13;
Special demonstrations are&#13;
planned in the chemistry.&#13;
computer science, earth&#13;
science, engineering,&#13;
geography, Hre science,&#13;
physics. p•ychology and&#13;
language laboratories in&#13;
Greenquist HaU.&#13;
A student art fair will be held&#13;
on the lawn near Tallent Aall&#13;
and a studtnt rode group, "The&#13;
Warrior Potato" , will play near&#13;
Greenqui~t Hall (Rnlh IN" art&#13;
fair and the CO(l(..'er'i wiJl be&#13;
moved Wide in case of rain.)&#13;
Members of the Ule science&#13;
faculty will conduct tours or&#13;
nature study areas on the 700-&#13;
acre campus and guests are&#13;
Invited to walk across the&#13;
country trail which traverses&#13;
the campus and affords views&#13;
not available from any other&#13;
vantage poinL&#13;
A l"Ugby match is scheduled&#13;
for 2 p.m, 11t. the Athletic Field&#13;
on Wood Rood where Parkside'$&#13;
first nigby team will meet the&#13;
Chicago Lions. • K '&#13;
team. ··""" Or A slide sl&gt;"" d.,...... 11&#13;
master de,•elopn&gt;t"' S:-,&#13;
the campus _1u'ld vt~&#13;
acUviUes "~ ~" - II&#13;
at G~q111sl .,.. ,...&#13;
and a Dixieland B•~ ;_..&#13;
ol UW·P swdeots "'CIO"""&#13;
tn the GreeoqUJSt&#13;
I ' l1f Several dliP .;;a. J1&gt;1&#13;
scheduled for the "" ti •&#13;
Ubrary and • ,.,., nJt'&#13;
minlstrati, .. olfi&lt;d .':,. 11'&#13;
Hall also will be_. r,t ,,,-&#13;
c,unpus bo(llcslD" 11 -.ii 1,1&#13;
and re£rt~h1&#13;
nt"e Atb..,-&#13;
available &gt;D tJI t,OJDCl'lf&#13;
Building, ss \I.ell as&#13;
the ch~dret&gt;-&#13;
. ··'" be .,.IJIII'....: ParktDS ww .,,, .-:.&#13;
the Tallent Hall IOI ~&#13;
.,... """""' .. ,u "'..,,..- between Oft'tD'IU111&#13;
Halls. &#13;
--&#13;
eotumn I had done about his restaurant. t had to&#13;
d,eCk with a friend who had come with me to see if&#13;
he really said~ could hit me with a slan~r suit if&#13;
he wanted to, I didn't think anyone in a manager;aJ&#13;
position ol even a hamburger stand could convlnce&#13;
memselves that I })ad writ.teD anything slanderous&#13;
n,en 1 _heard him say that he didn' t want any d~&#13;
fiends m his place, I checked to sec if anyone was&#13;
shuddering m the corner. T~n t ~lized he meant&#13;
...&#13;
be-ca~sheisanex.waitresswho helped me handle&#13;
certain aspects of evaluations&#13;
. _This: column was born one ·e\·enifli v.hen twas&#13;
Silting around an apartment dressed in cupboards&#13;
that were naked enough to get an ·•x" ratinc&#13;
anywhere. I thought 1t a good idea co guarantee&#13;
myself one free meal a week by tt\·1ewu1g restaur-anllS.&#13;
His behavlor wasn't as unbelievable as I first&#13;
thOUght after I re-read the specific review. I did&#13;
~ke the statement about the Pepsi, and invited&#13;
0nyone to try it theinselves; I did say that the food&#13;
_,...,e&lt;J to me was unimaginative, and I made the&#13;
wild generaliiation Uu,t notling at the BUI of Fare&#13;
oclted me. I would imagine that all this quali£ies me as an irrHponsible youth ot today but to think&#13;
when I sat listening to the manager ~r the Bill 0(&#13;
Fare restaurant I didn't even have long hair.&#13;
I decided lo handle most m the writing in a li,ght&#13;
vem. so the paper would have a reatutt that ... -as&#13;
simply. entertaining. 1 ha\,e no formal ttstaurant&#13;
oduc~tlon as the Galloping Gourmet does I trltd to&#13;
&amp;tay m ~ middle Of the road, which should ansv.er&#13;
the queslion of OOf MadiS()ft student raised as to why&#13;
1 generally wrote good things about restaurants&#13;
I~ has proven to be interegtina for me, but tho5e&#13;
few ~e,s when t was uneasy did make me question&#13;
the hrespan of this ~umn. Because somewhe-re I&#13;
still have_f~i~ ln human beings and their ability to&#13;
accept cr1llcasm, t have decided to continue wrihna&#13;
re1tauranlreviews 1 mayevengobacktotheBUI or&#13;
Fare, bu.t on)y when my lawyer's scheduJe permits&#13;
him to join me. There 1.sn't always safety in number$&#13;
as the irresponsible youth lCd.ay sometim4!S&#13;
think.&#13;
The rest of Lile writing in ".t;aUng our went all&#13;
right. 1 made a rew mist.lkes, like not telling&#13;
eYeryone that Andy's Restaurant is located at 2301 • 13rd Street. And t failed to identify Maggie a few&#13;
times as my companion on all my re-st.au rant jaunts&#13;
-powering. He was, ln that&#13;
particular bag. the best horn&#13;
player anywhere.&#13;
But now, along w1th the&#13;
dancing sangers singing dan•&#13;
cers and comedian acl0f$, Bdl&#13;
&lt;llase, Jazz musician, reveals&#13;
his suppressed desire to be a&#13;
n&gt;ek and roll star. The initial&#13;
attempl is extremely sad. Sure,&#13;
there is some fant.a.slic horn&#13;
worlc: and a few inspired solOi&#13;
("Invitation to a River··. "Get&#13;
By Bob Borchardt • virtuoso at something the)' It On",), OOt there is too much&#13;
oftheNewscopeStaff k new nothing about. Un• pure garb8ge or this album to&#13;
RECORD REVIEW: fortunately this album does make it worth listemng to&#13;
"Chase·• of """"'c J II B1·11y Chase lltU e more th an a dd er ed'b I i I1ty ' W ho' s h e tryini to kid with&#13;
Rocka•Rocka Really Growy to lhat observation. lyrics hke "Get It on In The&#13;
Brass Ensemble". Bill Chase., cm th.is album, is Mormn , ··tt's Got to be Jei'&#13;
Epic Records E30472 the proverbial fish out of water. You and Me in Extaseeett" and&#13;
1 once knew a man wbo was 1 can remem~r him playing wte Jillie inserts or "Sunshme&#13;
involved in writlng music lor a lead trumpet with Woody or Your Love'"? The rock&#13;
lol of well-known TV and :novie H~n'$ band i.n the midcUe audience is just not that&#13;
people when they put an act '60's, unquestionably the besl in ~ceptib1e to circa 1955 lyrics&#13;
together for a tour. His biggest his trade. To me, he was CIJf. anymore. H's too bad that h,s&#13;
problem, he said, was that no ford Brosn. Maynard Ferguson idea of rock is doomed to alwa)·s&#13;
one wanted to do what they and a hydro--electric power ~ a sloppy welding of rock and&#13;
were best at. Singers wanted to ~ant all in one. To see hun .)a.it with the accencs in an the&#13;
dance~ dancers wanted to sing, s1n,gle-handedl)' ta1ce char'J(e ol •,vrong place!. ~c let the dancers&#13;
and actors wanted to be that group, pushing it, swinging dance, let the singers sins. and&#13;
~medians. Everyone, it it., demanding every last ounce let Cha.-.e get bock to where he&#13;
5temed, was a frustrated or energy from it, was over• belongs..&#13;
~~::::.~:~:~:;:;:::::..~::::,:,:.~::::;:~-:-::•:•::-~-:-:-:-,-:-:❖••❖,"!~:~": ll)• ~: %.: •• ' • ;:::;~:~;::;.;.;~~i&#13;
t Alice laquinta Wins $10,000 Fellowship ij&#13;
I A senior at the University or includes stipends and tuition. credit exchange between the~&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Alice EDPA feUows.hips are funded two insLitutions. She will;;&#13;
l&#13;
laquinta of 3706 Roosevelt by the Officeof Educabon of the recei\'e a bachelor of arts&#13;
Road, Kenosha, has been Department or He.11th, degree in Englis., w,th distinc·&#13;
awarded a £ederal Education Education and Wel!are. tion in commencemtrtt ~xer•&#13;
Professions Development Act cises at UW•P on June L2&#13;
CEPDA) Fellowship worth Miss Jaqulnta was ooe of 1.be&#13;
r&#13;
boul $10,000 by th&amp; UW• Or,;t •ludent• to transl..- to AL UWM $hP ,.;n study ro~ a&#13;
Milwaukee graduate school. Parkside in 1969 from the masterolart5degree,n .:::~J The fdlowship C()'Vers tY..'O l(enosha Technical Institute in preparation for a career as a ,&#13;
~~~: or :.~~i~-=:~~:~~::¼!1t~::~~.~~: .. ~ a ~=~ ... ~=~-~f.~~~:.~=?~~~:~~ . ~&#13;
'The End' Features 'Your Father's Mustache'&#13;
"Your Father's Mustache"&#13;
will be back !or "The Begjnning&#13;
or the End" al the University of&#13;
Wiscoos:in•P:J.rkside this sp-ing.&#13;
fl a U that sounds more than a&#13;
little confusing, here's a bit&#13;
more background.&#13;
'"Your Pather's Mustache" ls&#13;
a road show remlniscent of the&#13;
Roanng T\l;·enties billed as "a&#13;
cross between Alice·s&#13;
Restaurant and Mountain&#13;
Dew". (D..,.n't that help to&#13;
clt,r things up?)&#13;
•·The End" is just lhat -&#13;
Parkside students' annual&#13;
webnltion o( the end o( cla..,s&#13;
for the spring semester. And&#13;
"11le Beginning of the End" i~ ihe opening ol the two-day&#13;
event, which this year Is&#13;
Saturday and Sunday, June 12&#13;
and 13.&#13;
The two-day event will be held&#13;
lo the 1'aUent Hall parking lo«,&#13;
with the shows being presented&#13;
under a big.top tenL&#13;
"Father's Musu1che01 will&#13;
perform Saturday evening from&#13;
9 to 1 ht also was the featured&#13;
group at last year's "The End"&gt;&#13;
and several rock groups wall&#13;
play in a ,e3rnival almosphere&#13;
COfllplete with booths spo~red&#13;
by various student&#13;
organizations on Sunday.&#13;
Groups and tines will be an·&#13;
nounced £or Sunday. "The End" as open to&#13;
Pnk.Jtde stude!lCS, raculty &amp;nd&#13;
staff members and their guests&#13;
(Uc~ets SLl&#13;
Additional European Flight Scheduled&#13;
An additional 1&amp;-day flight to&#13;
Europe has been added to the&#13;
package or £lights being&#13;
•J&gt;OflSOred this summer by tJ,e&#13;
University of WiS&lt;'Onsin-~&#13;
Parttside for students and staff&#13;
members, and their immediate&#13;
families, from throughoot the&#13;
l.:rv.1 system.&#13;
l'he new flight will lea ... e MUwii.uktX fur Am:,terdollm July&#13;
~ and rebJ.rn rrom Paris to&#13;
ll!Uwaukee Allg,\!jt 17. CO$! ol&#13;
the !light (called F) is $240&#13;
round trip including tax.&#13;
'lbe new llighL also is th• only&#13;
one leaving {rom Milwaukee.&#13;
The other three UW•P summer&#13;
charters originate rrom and&#13;
rel trn to Chicago. They are:&#13;
Fligbt 1-round trip Otlcago&#13;
to London, Juno 13 • August 18,&#13;
$221 including tax. Tills n,ght&#13;
origlru, Uy had been scheduled to&#13;
leaive June \.5.&#13;
Flight D - Chicago to London&#13;
Amsterdam to Chicago,&#13;
July 15. SepL It. $®O inclucling&#13;
tax. This flight originally was&#13;
listed from July 15. August 11.&#13;
but has been extended one&#13;
montll&#13;
Flight C - Chicago to L..,_&#13;
don. Amsterdam to Chicago,&#13;
August IS • $&lt;pl J2. $100 in·&#13;
cuding tax&#13;
Neibuhr emphasited that&#13;
students and stall and their&#13;
ammediate famllies on all UW&#13;
campuses are ehgi~e ror the&#13;
flights, which cover Jet air fare&#13;
onl)' He said openin8,,\ exist on all fligh\~. Additional in•&#13;
formition is available lrom&#13;
Niebhur al UW-Parkside's&#13;
Student Activities Office,&#13;
KenO&amp;ha. Wis.&#13;
'11) ll, tt71&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
"Chtck Ou,&#13;
P,·irts Lflst''&#13;
4801 ilh \\r,,.&#13;
k~ ,O~II \ "l'-tt"0''"&#13;
Of UNOINA&#13;
MEMIU f.0.1.C.&#13;
WEST&#13;
SIDE&#13;
SWEET&#13;
SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St,&#13;
6 o.m. till 11 p.111.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phon• 657-97'7&#13;
Open Seturdr,s&#13;
9 A.M. to Noon&#13;
For Your Conven,enc.e&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FREE CHECK/ NG&#13;
ACCOUNTS TO STUDENT&#13;
AND RETIREES&#13;
SftS~Sftttl t&#13;
Ktrcsbe&#13;
I ... SPACE ... l 1111 ••• , ... .,.,~,...._.,, n ,-n,r&#13;
IF YOU WANT&#13;
SOMETHING&#13;
A LITTLE EX TRA . . TRY&#13;
Budweiser.&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
• • . but you •&#13;
know that!.!!&#13;
lamous to,&#13;
CARL'S/ PIZZA&#13;
Inf--,, S.nt , ... 12 ... 14". 16"&#13;
..... • lllS • ltACMO.ll • (IOC:UN&#13;
GMOCCHI • U'YIOU • L4 SM;MA&#13;
• Sl.A ,000 • S4NOWICH[)&#13;
CU lY-OUTS • DtLIVUY ••rou 11..c; Wf I IIHC ..&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922 &#13;
C.ndic»le for lb# bedwlor o/. arts degl'ft&#13;
1r• ~MIi A~I. IOU 17th Avenue, Keno1ha , Guy T Addlffl. ;~ 1511&gt; Avmut K.-ha,&#13;
EdNI Anderson, 7019 :17th A••au•. K....i..&#13;
LawrOl!a P Arentz, 9146 24th Avenue,&#13;
Kfflooba , Den C "'11Gidini, Slit !Jler1dln&#13;
Roacl. Kenooha Le5he Arthur, Cur.-, Ill&#13;
Bar1&gt;1r1 Backlund 7'41 s,xu, A•enue,&#13;
Keno.hi. Dani Ben,,djct, South ~llwa,.ee.&#13;
!lhtblelJ Bone111.4901 XthAvenue, Ke-ha:&#13;
Undl Bllndlard, ~116 Pttiht,c Boule•·lnt&#13;
KtrlOIM, George R,chard Rtt1wa Ill, 4'02&#13;
31U1 Avonue Kenosha, Donald R Borwntll,&#13;
Jr , )13$ 1- Wisc&lt;lmln Slrffl 'RKIM. Ma.-.111&#13;
Lavon Bn1tnn1ng, $31l -r.1h A,onue K~&#13;
Jam" J Casper, 3417 Undtrmann A•enue,&#13;
RadlW', La- A Cbrootolffflffl. lfl 22nd&#13;
Slreet, Kenc,gha ~n,. R Conll a14 32nd&#13;
A••nue. KfflOOhl , £uaen• Cooper, 1108 Park A-. RxiM Paul OIi&gt;~ i.auk-. °"'""&#13;
~lerk 043 ShOreha•tn Lane, Racuic; £&lt;1na&#13;
l&gt;Hrbom !1137 Spnng Strfft Rac,n.,, ~Mt&gt;&#13;
J t:Uung T40:?30lh A,...., •• Kenoolla , '.11lliam&#13;
R t:vans -'827 Zllh Avenue, Ke-ha ;&#13;
Jolln Thomas f wunmons Y:IICA Ra•u~. Qlrolyn )Iara• CaMilWI). 1116:' 16th A,onue,&#13;
Keno.Ila Colleen K Cic-ntt Pleasanl Prair,e,&#13;
LalT) L CN,rge, :loo: 871h Slrtd. k'.•-ha Br. Tt-rttnce Gorslu. or:.,1, St fi'nntu Fraar).&#13;
Burlington, Jobft I( (lotUredsen 7803 22nd&#13;
~,~mw. Kenosha, Carl Cnswold )lcnomcxiee&#13;
t'all&amp;, Gnce Paine a llall. Selem, Greg F.gon&#13;
Hamm 15(77 711111 -• Kffi&lt;4ha lklen ,\nn&#13;
Harmon 7903 22nd A\tnue ~• Lenora&#13;
t: It•)" 21128 Roc...velt Road Kenooha: Ardis&#13;
E H.aycrman 26 01:10 Sllttl, Racine:&#13;
R1dlard P Hrbtrt. 1()67 Sheridan Road.&#13;
KfflOlha &lt;'hark,i Alan Henkel, 7116 Grove&#13;
A •=ue, HKille Karl 0. eo ll•rbrechsrne1er.&#13;
r.627 se.enth A• tnue Keno:iha, Robert R&#13;
Horaby, &amp;lN 49th A-enuc. Kmc,gt,a , Terry L.&#13;
Horodlffla JU:11 IClth Strttt, K•-ha . Roeer&#13;
t: tlundt, ~14 '8th A\.t:nue kPnOti.ha; AMa&#13;
)lay Hu1d11nson. 701 IUmo,s Stttel. Racine:&#13;
Alice B laqwnll. 37U6 ~•II Rold&#13;
Ktnooha, t'ranres A Jaesrhke. 6220 Third&#13;
A,tt1ue, Kffl05ha . J•mes C Johl\$on, 2712&#13;
Lln&lt;'Oln Road. KellOSb.t . James D JohDIOO.&#13;
5401 32nd Avenu•. Kenosha , Da,'id Juclt1k1. ;01, 5th Avenu• Kenosha:&#13;
Abe• L Ke111ne Ml7 :r,u, A•enue. Keno,,ha,&#13;
e.vt-rly Ann f11lt:nilltr, 5138 Sixth AVt&gt;nue,&#13;
Kenmlla, ll chol klabo, 113:! RbChke A,·enue.&#13;
Racine . David A Klimek, 4().1$ Montery Dr1,·e,&#13;
!Ycine. Ann K Kline j(ll$$ Green Day Rood,&#13;
Rae,.,... }l;l~ra Jo Kloet, 2022 3.'&gt;lh Place.&#13;
KenOfoha, JamH I. Koloen. 4323 3111 Avenue,&#13;
KftlGObl, '&gt;lkba~ '1 Kurth, Waukegan. IU :&#13;
David A Lauer. ~ll Luedtke Avenue Areme.&#13;
Theodore I. Lrinenweber. 2108 64th Street,&#13;
Kenosha , \'ale11 A ~"'"· 12811 \\,aslulljlton&#13;
~\tnue, Murltvanl. Thomas J. Lukas, 1815&#13;
Jerome Bou ltnrd, Racine. Freder1c R.&#13;
M•dson 1816 H•llmes \,enue, Racine: Edna&#13;
Way.,.. Mathe..,., 1508 Tiffany Drive, Racme:&#13;
9 DorSel Avenue, Kathf)D A Mauer. 561 bs 6329 21111&#13;
R.acme; KaU,lttn Mary McCom M • rill 912&#13;
Avenue Kenosha; John I, er 'd c&#13;
CJ~vel~nd Av~nue, Ractn~. Davi . :&#13;
Mickelsen, 1534 Melvio Avenue, Racine,&#13;
arleoo AM Miller. o/111 36th Avenue, :,nooba l,,nda Lee MuuJ&lt;el, 5226 40UI Avenue.&#13;
Kenosha; Ma,iarel Munz, ~05 "'7th ~~• Keooaha Jamel T. Munay, Jr., . .&#13;
Chatham° Street. Rac,ne: Mary A. MavOIC%)'k..&#13;
1700 ltsl Street, Keno&amp;ha; Kent New""!', ~123&#13;
£icbth A,.,,.... Keno&amp;ha: Michael G O Br en,&#13;
720 Cool&lt;I Street, Racine; ~o...-ard C. Olsoo,&#13;
5010 Biscayne Avenue, Racme; !'°lorence C.&#13;
OnnJnlr; 45%7 Blut!,ide Drive Rael.De, Marsha&#13;
Role Chvens, 490136th Avenue, r&lt;eoosha;_ Ferne&#13;
L Paul 2315 $3rd Street, Kenosha; Nicholas&#13;
Anlhony Pemn•. !I005 45th Stree!, Kenosha;&#13;
Daruel Petersen, 1337 w,sconstn A\'tnue,&#13;
R•&lt;in•. Ell•n Claire Petersen, 4123&#13;
Wash1ncton Avenue, Racine; Dett.Y A.&#13;
Peterson, 4014 56th Strtet, Kenosho; l&gt;bchael&#13;
H Popansltl. Uruon cro,e. Julla W. Pur".'ance,&#13;
5328 Valley Trail, Racine. Donna E Quin, 412&#13;
Melvin Avenue, Racine, Vick, Ann Rem, 1705&#13;
75u, Street Keno.hi Janet Ly1U1 Richards.&#13;
Union Grove, Lotttta Marianne Richards,&#13;
Zioo, UI Brenda Sue Robinson, 1812 83rd&#13;
Street. Konosha w,lbam Lavmonce RoUa,&#13;
South Milwaukee; DoMa Morie Salemo, 2010&#13;
s;;rd Sll'ftl. Keno,sha, John Schlax, Salem;&#13;
Jane \I Sclumu. 7617 Cooper Road, Kenosha·&#13;
Kal't'n Ann Schueller, 1415 Grand Avenue,&#13;
Racine: Paul John Sdwlz. Janesv1Ue; Helen&#13;
Lou11e Schumacher, 19Z4 38Ul Street, Ken011ha;&#13;
Patricia Peterson Schwall, Mukwonago;&#13;
~hchlel Jay Scott, 10302 Sheridan Road,&#13;
Kenosha, David Earle Sco,1Ue, 1919 45th&#13;
Stttet, Kell06ha Janis Anne Scoville, 1204 60th&#13;
Slrttt, Ken06ba, ~ M. Sielslu, 4118 75th&#13;
Street , Kenosha; Shoron S. Silk, 2301 Golf&#13;
A•'Onue. Racine. Ema H. Sippola, 5548 331'd&#13;
Avenue, Ken06ha, James Jay Skarda, Lake&#13;
Geneva; James 8'&lt;rtloy Smith, 6406 ?8th&#13;
Avenue, Kenllliha. Stephen A. Smith, 1422&#13;
Blame Avenue, Racine, Susan R. Smith, 3223&#13;
47th A,enue, Kenosha, William G. Smith, 1209&#13;
Grand A,,.nue Racine Dorothy M. Sl&lt;olow•ki. Lake Villa, 111.: Sandra I. Spitzer, 8013 Cooper&#13;
Roacl, KenOtiba. Robert E. Stonich, 3205 18th&#13;
Avenue, Kenosha; .Lawrence B. Thielen, Jr., 1640 College Avenue, Racine; Dione Lynn&#13;
Thomas, 117 71st st~t, Kenosha; Mark&#13;
\\llliam Timpany, 209 W. Racine Street.&#13;
JanesvlllP · Kalhleen A. Todish, 2\JOS Douglas&#13;
A,,.nue. Racine, Howard R Turtle, W . 6801&#13;
75th Street, Kenosha; Carie Ruth Whalen, 2152&#13;
Rodney Lane. Racine; Susan Nan Welner, 7917&#13;
18th A,·enue, Kenosha , Florence Paul&#13;
We!ll!elius, Route 3, Kenosha; Demus R.&#13;
Wheeler. 1927 We&amp;t Boulevard, Racine; Vernon&#13;
L. W1enlte, 5813 23rd Avenue, Kenosba : Br.&#13;
Thomas A Wojciechowski, OFM, St. Francis&#13;
Fnary. Burlinaton.&#13;
candidates for the bachelor of science&#13;
degree are: Jolin S. Gray, 5000 G&#13;
Boulevard, Racine; James \I, NG!aa raeoi..,.&#13;
Avenue, KenOlha; Robert Axtell · '1kt ... Avenue; Thomas J. Balo, 75~ 241JJ ~ a..&#13;
Kenosha; James Braun, 46:IO Taylor A""'-.&#13;
Racine; Rex Harley Br01&lt;11, IS21 o.~&#13;
Drive, Racine; Sharla Ann Burgin -~ A,-enue, Kenosha; Mlc:hael P. Can,,jJ llcl&#13;
Avenue, Kenosha; Michael cou;::Z, 1111&#13;
Kearney Avenue, Racine; Martha' LIU.&#13;
Dearborn, 702 Lake Avenue, Racine-J.., ha&#13;
Denzine, 1428 Hayes Avenue, Rael~- T~&#13;
J Devine, 1330 Quincey Avenut ' R~--&#13;
Palricia Ann Ericksen, 1812 cartaie -,,-&#13;
Racine; Waller C. Cayan, Sr., 5403 53rd ~- KNiosha; James E. Gollfreclse,i, • ---.&#13;
Avenue, Kenosha; Rochlty Gnt1s Rou Ill&#13;
Ken06ha; Neil Austen HagJov. 1117 ~&#13;
Avenue, Racine; B~ F Hennan. 1813 Street, Kenosha; David C, Hout, 5011 ~ Avenue. Kenosha; Dennis H Ide &amp;ru..;;," Stephen C. Irving, 3'l20 Tobin Road K...._&#13;
Alfroo Lee Jantz, 3411 Wasb111&amp;1on "-•&#13;
KenOtiba. William James Jorano1t. 11:i'""'&#13;
Avenue, Kenosha; Marilyn o Johnoo,, -&#13;
Norman Street, Racine: Barry E J-: =&#13;
31st Avenue, Kenosbl. Larry E. Kacm, 4,&#13;
7200 '75th Street, Kenosl&amp;; t.nch Ka,. 4&#13;
-&#13;
93rd Street, Kenosha; Calvin Kapb •&#13;
Middle 1111 Road, Racine, Gat; D K,iJer&#13;
Arlllur _Avenue, Racine; Rlia R, Ktliey,.:&#13;
Park Ridge, Racme: Florence M. Kti"Ur •&#13;
33rd A venue, KeJ'IOSha , Thomas xi.m )Ill&#13;
23rd Avenue, Kenosha; Jerry E Ko0t, Oil&#13;
Creek: James H. Krupp,~ Ll&gt;!dll,. ~ ....&#13;
Racine; Peggy A. Kruse, 1018 61111 ~&#13;
Kenosha: Peggy Ann LaCoursler 11114 er._ Avenue, Racine; Timo-hy Paui ~&#13;
Waukesha; \~ilHam R. Loendorf, 14111 S....&#13;
Avenue, Racine; James Maddocb. Jr&#13;
SheralDn Drive. Racine; Mart Elll&lt;&gt;tt lloat,&#13;
4910 Biscayne Avenue, Racine; Dan Cwla&#13;
Miner, Route 3, Racine; Donald V w.i.&#13;
3515 48th Avenue, KenG6ha, Paul I. M,-.&#13;
Waukegan, Ill : David Potniu. 7411 •&#13;
Avenue, Kenosha; Enk Prentnieb, u a&#13;
Street, Kenosha; John v. Reg,euna, MU -.i&#13;
A venue, Keooehl, LiJ'lda M Roberts 11111•&#13;
Street, Keooeha, Daruel J Ruffalo. 7lll •&#13;
Avenue, Kenosha; Jane Rynders, San Flit&#13;
clsco, Caltf.; Nancy Jean ScblielNewman&#13;
Road, Racine, RICl!anl f&#13;
Seidemann, 2608 32nd Street, Kenooha llu:J&#13;
Arthur Seidman, Roule 2, Kenaslla . .,._,&#13;
Sisak, 1122 Goold Street, Racine, RoouJ P&#13;
Slagter, 1907 Carlisle Avenue, Rarlllt Jllllll&#13;
P. Smith, 1916 Deane &amp;wevanl Rlaa&#13;
Robert L. Sternberg, 637 58th S~t. Kmllil.&#13;
Karl Edward Stomner. 102 I0IJJ S!rMl Rm.&#13;
Kevin L. Tagaart, 2029 West Lan ARacine;&#13;
PauJThiesen, West Bend; Karin..&#13;
9305 Caddy Lane, Caledonia. Sw,lr) A M&#13;
4627 37th Avenue, Kenosha, Betty J \1111,•&#13;
21st Avenue, Kenosha: Jerome H Zellmir •&#13;
11th Stttet, Kenc,gt,a.&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE GRADUATES&#13;
From&#13;
CJ WAVRO ANO SON INC 3637-30 AVENUE KENOSHA&#13;
P'~OWERS DY .JOSCPH 473'1-..2 AVLNUE KENOSHA&#13;
AMERICAN STATE BANK 3928-60 STREET KENOSHA&#13;
KROK'S HIGHWAY 32 BETWEEN KENOSHA AND RAC NE&#13;
VALEO'S PIZZA KITCHEN !iOZl-30 AVENUE KENOSHA&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS 512 MAIN STREET RACINE&#13;
E F ,..,DR1GRA'IO 1831-55 STREET KENOSHA&#13;
MIKE 0'-V15 SPEED CITY 4807-7 AVENUE&#13;
MARGUFliTTE'S 6207-22 AVENUE KENOSHA&#13;
VILLA O'CARLO 5140-6 AVEN rE KENOSHA&#13;
CHAT'N CHEW !5204-40 AVENUE KENOSHA&#13;
VILLAGF.: INN 3619-30 AVENUE KENOSHA&#13;
SPARCO BEVERAGES 2428-WASHINGTON ROAO KENOSl&lt;A&#13;
VENTURA AND SONS JEWELERS 5617-6 AVENUE KENOSHA&#13;
UPTOWN REST6, URANT ANO LOUNGE 6216-22 AVENUE ~EN09-'&#13;
SUNNYSIDE FLORISTS AND GREENHOUSES 302t-7$ STREET K~.,o9t'&#13;
KEHL AND NELSON ROOFING AND INSULATION CO.&#13;
I ANO A SHEET METAL INC 1010-ST. PA PllCK STREET RACINE&#13;
830-RACINE STREET&#13;
SUPERIOR-KUETEMEYER&#13;
S231-N 12• STREET MILWAUKEE&#13;
0 TIRABASSI ANO SONS INC&#13;
8539-39 AVENUE KENOSHA&#13;
KOOS AND CO.&#13;
4S00-13 COURT KENOSHA&#13;
Nl'=LSON IRON WORKS&#13;
142(;-13 STREET RACINE&#13;
PARKSIDE VILLAGE INC.&#13;
T.C. ESSER&#13;
566-STATE STREET RACINE&#13;
GORDON LUMBER AND SUPPLY CO&#13;
2929-75 STREET KENOSHA&#13;
NELSON INC Of WISCONSIN&#13;
4~-MAIN STREET RACINE &#13;
Reflections of a Graduating Senior&#13;
8y Ma.te Elten&#13;
ef 1.M' N•wseete Stan&#13;
Aff\Ong the t84 grac1uau,,_ ,_ion Is Jim Smith. Jim has&#13;
Mffl active, « at leMt at the&#13;
periphery, a, most of Ou: ,n•jcr&#13;
-1tr0,wsiel that have &lt;K'•&#13;
c,irttd OCl campus clmJll 1111!&#13;
ov• y,ars he'a been here.&#13;
TW• years ago be wu&#13;
..,..,d&lt;nt of the ad ho&lt;: student&#13;
P'·era.meot He reslaned .,.,, amona ocher tlungs,&#13;
,-PSGA as a governing body Is&#13;
ool .,,_., ll II a JNppd&#13;
,oYff'nment • • . ..&#13;
1n a memorable letter to the&#13;
c.-•ktet be outhned hlil own&#13;
p1u1oooimy and why he thought&#13;
1&#13;
t aettssar&gt;' to r,sl,gn. "My&#13;
pi, tu pr•ldenU have been&#13;
1,0deVt!op a.n awareness among&#13;
111e atudfflll, to e~urage&#13;
lruli.ati,·e and inquiry so II to&#13;
create an 1Lmo1pbere con•&#13;
cl.iavt to tht maxunum at•&#13;
tainm•nt or each Individual's&#13;
poi,nllal by o."PO'lng him to&#13;
new vtstas of thought, and a&#13;
a,ullitudt or dfrtrst opinions.&#13;
--u 11t abo my Klea thl't rn&#13;
attain the~e goals, It is&#13;
_..,ry to encow-age the&#13;
c1ove1opmen1 or orw,niutltns&#13;
and to worlc with and wllhln&#13;
a-to de,~lop tbe aunoapl:&lt;tt&#13;
conducive to acade.nic&#13;
lrtfdom&#13;
"It IS becallle of these Ideas I&#13;
decided to aeelt the office of&#13;
Ptt,,dent or the Park5ide&#13;
Student Government&#13;
Auodalloo; toatta&lt;h tho status&#13;
tJ{ that offl&lt;e to tile rule ol&#13;
18.der or the movement for&#13;
lkldtnl ~ll and academic&#13;
lretdom.&#13;
'"!'ht rec&lt;'llt actions or tho&#13;
Stll&lt;MDl Allalrs Olrice bas&#13;
lllfl•d this role, and redllctd the&#13;
llallll of President. and tbe&#13;
•tirt Student Go·H~:rnme:nt&#13;
As~l1tlon to that of a&#13;
powerleas Adminlatrative&#13;
puppet." nothlQ&amp; lAOO\rlbvt •bout It. u ·, restr1ctave - it·• b&amp;rd lo A)'&#13;
lnlditlon-bound .,.,._ - are oo tracLu- hero. but then&#13;
ha&gt;tbNn tradJ-lrwn etber&#13;
pl.ei;eit Im~ un ...._&#13;
• He cited th.n a number of&#13;
mddenta of what ht laid v,.a,&#13;
lbt admln!s1t11Uon ba,_,,, student o-rcanluti0t\a. &lt;The&#13;
Luddltes can take comfort In&#13;
lbat the charges or ha,..._ Thtre's a lrtmendous lad: o(&#13;
qmabty here. Mc,,t a 1t. I&#13;
think, llem1 from the albtud,, of&#13;
1hr adminlltrabatl lft'lrd the&#13;
la&lt;ulty and the lludenta. ll'a&#13;
- of d11trus1 and I lad,, of&#13;
CODOde :e&#13;
Jomes Smith&#13;
they make ,_ .n IUlU!ar to&#13;
L~e charges or the Young&#13;
.S...ahst ~- th, c,.,,,.&#13;
mittee for an Open Fon.im, and&#13;
the Committee made two years&#13;
ago.I&#13;
ln way of bockground in•&#13;
formation, pnor to &lt;01111:e Jim&#13;
,.ortced •• • bu~ding e!&lt;ped,"r for four y,ars, and thcn enliJtod&#13;
and seirvs tine yean u, tho&#13;
army. In the future he plans to&#13;
go to iJ'a&lt;Wte echool, tbo&lt;t&amp;h&#13;
next year ht will be m Kleadl&#13;
ng two philosophy&#13;
~uu gn:,upt at Kn&#13;
H11 reOectJons on h1s )·ean at&#13;
Paruide are as lollows.Smlllo:&#13;
Tho thinl that probabb&#13;
disapl)Oints me molt about&#13;
Parkside II that ~·bH It llrst&#13;
bttame a ruUt&gt; lhere .... re au&#13;
ldnd1 of promisu about how It&#13;
W'N gotn&amp; to be an imovatwe&#13;
university Actually, there·,&#13;
1 Newa.cope: \1,-'hol,e (au.It ia lh~'!&#13;
I Sralttii I've always bff:n&#13;
1 reluctant to pef'IOnl.Oy blame&#13;
Wylli1 lor tbis. Maialy bta-&#13;
• his)Ob1n~Parb;df&#13;
~ ~r'ft bun to be IGll'le moat ot&#13;
the Ume. He has the mt.N&#13;
resJ)Oaalbthly for :lie UNYff·&#13;
111y, but the nin11U11 of the&#13;
unl,·trsll)' ls dome by h11&#13;
,ubonlmalel - 111 a ngid&#13;
bureaucracy&#13;
U an)-0.,,, 1-....,,.. yua&#13;
axe the guy who is rapo1U1bie&#13;
Jl·s an ampersonal&#13;
dobumanntd 1ys1em 1r1 1na,&#13;
or any umv,n1ty Th,&#13;
&lt;nticisms of Par(qjde an not&#13;
umque&#13;
Nt."'SC:ope: The fault LI th,,&#13;
llrud'utt thffl4'&#13;
Smtih: Yes Some peopif': tt&#13;
cuse variout poeple in lhe ad&#13;
mu1islration of cbnc lm,eJ&#13;
wnlll8 - as II to U) if you g&lt;t&#13;
rid of llus - lhlnp -~1 be&#13;
au n&amp;)ll. I dllagno&#13;
'1ews,opo: Do Yell think the adm..-..- boa pci,_iy&#13;
watch.cl out ror Jam Smith'!&#13;
Sm.ilia: I know they havt. I haw&#13;
beffi , •• ,rnc1auy told tbat 1&#13;
have been lnves~iCAltd The&#13;
lmplkatica, •as that up until&#13;
last spnng the) -,, try1111 to&#13;
Ue me to IOfflt IUb\'e:fll\-"t&#13;
,._ Whal the oa,~&gt;t'llllllon&#13;
round was that I -.·isn't&#13;
I alt0 know I.bey have a l1Je on&#13;
COHTtNUIEO 0"'1 PAGE 10&#13;
Ferrall Quizzed on Merger&#13;
Oy Ktn Konkol&#13;
of the Ne"scopt-SLart&#13;
\IICHAL FERRALL is&#13;
ll&amp;emblyman from Racine&#13;
llr Fernll opened ,.,tu, his&#13;
op1mon on the impact of I.be&#13;
mtrgtt 11Whether lhe merger&#13;
llurla • hell" d._t, on """ it&#13;
11 implemented. The more&#13;
lmporunt issue is ~ho is comg&#13;
to be on the board of Rel,'etlt.s.&#13;
On• 54!ll o( ti men would .net&#13;
*lertJltly than another The&#13;
mttg&lt;r Impact depend$ on th&lt;&#13;
II mtn determining policy.&#13;
llr Ferrao looked II the&#13;
merger In terms of higher&#13;
tduca1100 a.od aaid he hoptd tbe&#13;
-ier .,'llUld nOC be made&#13;
a&amp;orw political considerations&#13;
liut rathtr oa the balis of Its&#13;
Impact on education.&#13;
lit ca,-e lhree prime , .. sons&#13;
""7 U. merger bothers poope.&#13;
11 lt ll bemy pushed aloog&#13;
"'IU...t pn,per cons1deratl0t&gt;.&#13;
Wt ahould delay Im·&#13;
P1tmtntation for a year or so to&#13;
f&gt;alaat, Its ,mpact. 2) It is hard&#13;
lo Wldentand the total impact. lit can't doltrmine how ea&lt;h&#13;
campus ...UI be afft&lt;ttd. 31 We&#13;
doo't know how it will aflec:l the&#13;
niabanalup betio'ffll the two&#13;
l)lt.ema. Tberc are differences&#13;
•tlh adm111lons te.nure.&#13;
~l and faculty recnuUng. -N lrall$ler of credits, All of&#13;
thtse dtffertoces musl be&#13;
'l'Oned out so the preeent symm • neitlltr damaged or hurL A&#13;
dr-lay would at,·e •~me to lrm&#13;
•.a 1)1'6bltms."&#13;
When asked if he ... any&#13;
llltnl to the &lt;onttpl of me,aer&#13;
::. replied, "There II merit to&#13;
&lt;lln«pl of m.,...er. The&#13;
~er &lt;culd be accomplished ,. • ~n difltrenl ways. The&#13;
~ .,._an eould bike • lot&#13;
at different shapes,"&#13;
Wile,, asked in parti&lt;Ular .._t Lu«&gt;·• morger, be ''"led. "Lucey•s shape is loo&#13;
vague. Ho ..-ould havt a sin!Oe&#13;
Board, would ehmlnotc the&#13;
CCHE, and sot up eampus&#13;
councils. Beyond that tr,&#13;
vacue. People don't know what&#13;
the md rerull "ould be " I have malntaintcl as • edutat« that Wf' ha\"t the DNd&#13;
!or some agen&lt;y to plan and&#13;
coordjnate higher tducatlon&#13;
throughout Wlscocsln We&#13;
should h•v• coordinauon and&#13;
planning nol only for the uw&#13;
and wsu. but lor the ttdtn,eal&#13;
schools, the two year schools.&#13;
and tht private acholls "&#13;
,. . . . The governor ...,. the&#13;
argument that a me,aed board&#13;
would result in bolter plannl"I&#13;
ln ~ucation In Wlscenstn. , .&#13;
A mlnorily f1 people have said&#13;
Parkaide aad Gr.,n Bay&#13;
shouldn't have been lormed I&#13;
haven't beord the ,.,wnor&#13;
artul!.. • , . I can't vi.suahze the&#13;
leglalature voti"II for • me,aed&#13;
S)~t•m harmful to aay camou.&#13;
To the question, .. 19&#13;
Parbkie'I C,,,Wlh ,..,,. to be&#13;
stymied lo 1111 dorms al&#13;
Whltewater?'•. he replltd,&#13;
•-n,,,t deptr&gt;ds .., tho CUlure&#13;
Board. I can see piclullll and&#13;
cboosina: with one campus&#13;
getung sorntthtna and aac,thtr&#13;
aomclhing tlse."&#13;
Wheo uttd what lhe&#13;
governor .. m do aince d• Board&#13;
of Regtnt1 voted aga1nIt m0f111'. he said. ·'1be ..,,_,&#13;
eould hit the merger out ol tht&#13;
budgtL Bui COlll;dffln&amp; lhe&#13;
decision of the Board of&#13;
Regents. I can imagine •. ~:.&#13;
1a,n amount of ..U-Mr'\'lllg&#13;
"Any •cency about to under&amp;O&#13;
1ranarormalloa to al"r&#13;
,ts powers and malleUp la likoly&#13;
to oppose iL 1 am not certain&#13;
this ditcmOn •·as madt on • sound educatumal bD ..&#13;
"Ther~ww bf- 1ememberl on the ,_ Board of ._ts. five&#13;
from each of toe ex1sun1&#13;
___ ,,_, ....... llOrlal&#13;
and technical 1chooll, one&#13;
of&#13;
IO!)I&#13;
the&#13;
e&amp;&lt;ntaU,·e&#13;
11n1nn,ty,&#13;
f1&#13;
and&#13;
the ~&#13;
lour aew&#13;
membtrs appointed by th•&#13;
coveroor Any •ppoentmtat mado by lhe ,.,.....,. ., ill be&#13;
&lt;0ntrolled by lhf l\ep&lt;Jbhcan _,lrolltdStnat,&#13;
In reply to Iha queolioo,&#13;
"Wbat about tht campus&#13;
tounc,1 concept"•". he an,.&#13;
1wcred, "0r1&amp;tn1Uy IN"y had no&#13;
po,,...-. then •1'&gt; ha,-,, them. I&#13;
am not SUN ft rull&gt; need&#13;
thtm They n:ighl h&lt;1f to&#13;
maintlu.o lot.al autOD&gt;my. I&#13;
would llke to see tM counell&#13;
-pt mo,e clarly dollMd&#13;
V.'ho are !My, -t do the)&#13;
advise. how olle,i do they m""'&#13;
rd hate to - the &lt;OUDdl lJ&gt;.&#13;
"rfere ,.,;th the gowmna of the&#13;
unlvenlty. I'd bate to sot •&#13;
clminJSbed role of &lt;tadonll «&#13;
racuhy, uaurpin1 them in&#13;
I0\'!'111111C lilt t:niv...,ty '&#13;
"U rundin&amp; la&lt;Ul bac:k to W'Sll&#13;
levels. Partu.ldo aod Crt&lt;ll Bay&#13;
,.111 ~rUlllly bo burl. Wt haft&#13;
noguar11nteeth1t thty won•t be&#13;
I ffllldn'l support a reduction of&#13;
l\tndS until the) an IObdly ..,&#13;
lhffl fttL II is mott acceptsble&#13;
10 Dlt to bl,·e OM •d·&#13;
mmistrath-. board and Nn tbe&#13;
ry5tem olheN~ lhe samt than&#13;
h,ure 13 l 11verslli• ol&#13;
WilcMSln. We should allow&#13;
Neb camp.at lo mamWI\ its&#13;
own ml111on.&#13;
Senator JOMpb Louripn was&#13;
too busy lo do a &lt;Omplt.. ioltn'lew,&#13;
but I did lalk to h,m on&#13;
the phoot the day alter&#13;
Gov..- 1..u&lt;,y·s •- belott the senate to d111&lt;UN the&#13;
merger He ~t.ated. ..,.. I&#13;
batentd to the gD\ffllOI', I gOC&#13;
the unpreuloo that Parkside Uni,.._..,,,-~ bt tt.ltuted&#13;
to t.M statua of an m1wanted&#13;
,tepch11d ln the mtraer&#13;
l)'Meffl t&#13;
"-lll.1'11&#13;
SUMMER NEWSCOPE&#13;
BEGINS J UNE 28&#13;
HUXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY&#13;
STORE&#13;
302 Gmn Bay Rd.&#13;
Kt111Rha&#13;
634·1536&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
De/it:try Frtt ; -&#13;
654-0774 a.a~&#13;
You Owe It&#13;
to&#13;
Yov.--lf&#13;
to Drink&#13;
FRESH&#13;
BEER&#13;
Drinlc •••&#13;
Bucht-eiser.&#13;
t11•011 •us&#13;
. . . but you&#13;
bow Mil&#13;
•&#13;
UW PARKSIDE&#13;
STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES&#13;
SUMMER&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
••HfW Ft..l~HT orFER "flC• •&#13;
IIILlfAUKH TO AIASTUOAII&#13;
,-A'-IS TO MILWAUM[C.&#13;
JULY SO-AUCUST U&#13;
$24) .. cl ti•&#13;
""Ef OTHE• DE•••Tu•Es&#13;
JUNE - JULY • AUCUIT&#13;
,11ot1 SlOO lftc I I•-'&#13;
FOIIII: INFO,tr1AT10,;&#13;
CONTACT:&#13;
STUDt:IIT AC flVtTIU&#13;
OFFICE - fALENT HALI.&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN THRU THURS,&#13;
11 A II. TILL IJIONITE&#13;
FRI &amp;SAT.TILL2A M,&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40( &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
,. ,, ,,.,........... .,,,,mai&#13;
HAYE A 600D TIMI WITH&#13;
Ii&#13;
• Cl &#13;
Pa •• M• JI, 1'11&#13;
June 12-13&#13;
,, -,:--.- ... ........ '. .&#13;
fun • Food • Entertainment&#13;
----SATURDAY----&#13;
COMING . . . . IN PERSON&#13;
\'Ulm rlTHtKl Mmmlll&#13;
THE WORLD'S WORST BANJO BAND&#13;
' LIVE FRO~ NEW YORK CITY&#13;
9:00P,M, 101:0'.l A,M,&#13;
t.t!OER THE TEH - TALLENT HALL PARKING LOT&#13;
* AUIISSIOH: ~¢ FOR STUDENTS. FACULTY&#13;
~ STAFF WITH PARKSIDE 1, 0.&#13;
l ll9¢ FOR GUESTS&#13;
* FREE flll.!STAQ\ES&#13;
* FREE flJSTAGlE GARTERS&#13;
* Flff ~USTAQIE tV\TGIES&#13;
* FREE PEAi'lJTS&#13;
* FREE 1.AUiHS&#13;
• BEER Aflll SODA (PAY AS YOU CONSUME)&#13;
-----SUNDAY-----&#13;
3:00 P .M. - FREE CONCERT FEATURING&#13;
Johnny Yoalll&#13;
&amp; HIS SOUTH SIDE BLUES BAND&#13;
NT 6'&#13;
6:00 P .M. TO 12:30 A .M. - CONTINUOUS LIVE ENTERTAIN~E&#13;
THE GENEVA coNVE¢10&#13;
PASSION&#13;
SOUP&#13;
ADM. $1.00 STUDENT, FACUL TY &amp; STAFF&#13;
$1,50 GUESTS ACCOMPANIED BY ABOVE&#13;
STARTING 4:11 P.M. - BURGERS - BRATS - BEER &#13;
NORMAN MAi l.ER TO&#13;
DEAN DEARBORN&#13;
DESI ARNEZ TO&#13;
VERN MART INEZ&#13;
euoOHA T O&#13;
CHANCELLOR WYLLIE&#13;
LUCILLE BALL TO&#13;
KAREN BAYER&#13;
WALTER MATH EAU TO&#13;
BOB OLSEN&#13;
PAUL NEWMAN TO&#13;
TOM ROSANOICH&#13;
Faculty Senate Honors Retirees&#13;
Resolutions honoring rour&#13;
retiring faculty members ol the&#13;
University of Wisconsin•&#13;
Parkside for devoted and cf.&#13;
fecti\·e ttaching were approved&#13;
Thw-sday by the UW·P Senate,&#13;
the principal racuJty govern- ment unit.&#13;
The resolutions clte Henry L.&#13;
Mann, assistant professor of&#13;
English; Bernard C. Poru,k,&#13;
ass1s1&lt;1nt prol~r of Engl!sh;&#13;
Mrs. Elizabeth Poriak, lecturer&#13;
1n English; and Arthur N:&#13;
Ogden. lecturer in physics.&#13;
Mann, who has taught 22&#13;
years in the University Center&#13;
'1:::l&#13;
p&#13;
c,,&#13;
c,,&#13;
~ ~&#13;
~ ~ ~&#13;
;i ~&#13;
~ p C")&#13;
..... ..... ~ ..... ;:s&#13;
~ ~&#13;
ac;· ~ O"&#13;
~&#13;
~ ~&#13;
~ c,,&#13;
~ ~ ....&#13;
~ (f.) ...... ~8 ......&#13;
'1:::l ~ '1:::l ..... ~~ C")&#13;
~&#13;
c5 ~ ~ ... . ~ 0 2 0&#13;
~ "'!&#13;
"1 -§ A..&#13;
.... . 0 0 c,, p ;:s C")&#13;
~ "'! ~&#13;
A&#13;
~ ~ ~ ~ ~&#13;
c,,&#13;
..... . ,_&#13;
"'-·-&#13;
System and at Parkside, wilJ be&#13;
one of four recipients or&#13;
distinguished teaching awards&#13;
at UW~P commencement&#13;
exercises o~ June 12.&#13;
Porzak has UU!8hl in the&#13;
Center System and at Parksjde&#13;
for 25 years :.and Ml"6. POl"Ulk&#13;
t&gt;ej:an her UW teaching career&#13;
in 1946. Both have been active in&#13;
a number or area civic&#13;
organizalions including the&#13;
Racine--Kenosha Chapter of the&#13;
Wisconsin Civil Liberties Union&#13;
and the United World&#13;
Federalists:.&#13;
Ogden, who joined the UW&#13;
faC\llty in 1962 after a career lo&#13;
private industry. served as&#13;
acting dean of tbe Kenosha&#13;
Center from February, 1966, to&#13;
June, 1967, lheperfodwluchsaw&#13;
the completion ol lhie addition to&#13;
the Cen~rOgden&#13;
and Porzak share&#13;
cliaUt1g1.u.ffled records of l!RTYicc&#13;
to the Universlt), both as&#13;
teachers and u active par~&#13;
ticipantS in faculty gO\•emance.&#13;
Cleden was was a mtmber ol the&#13;
faculty executive committee&#13;
~d facult,• oarhmentui.an at&#13;
the Kenosha Center a,,d Panak&#13;
tffVed for 18 yeBr1 as lacull)&lt;&#13;
secretary at the Racine Center.&#13;
CASH&#13;
FOR YOUR BOOKS&#13;
WE WILL BE&#13;
BUYING BOOKS&#13;
ON&#13;
JUNE 4 - JUNE 12&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
'". t "4 co, h· ~ •!, ~Cl •&#13;
,t\~"-1••• \Jn:x\~c~,o1,1S&#13;
JCI 2:'. c.11 ... _,v A--,ve&#13;
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CHICKEN DINN ERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
FREE DELl\'fRY&#13;
4:00 ,.,.._ TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
5021 30th Ave. KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Open 6 Ooy s a Weelc From 4 p.m .• Cloud Mondaya&#13;
SECOND TIRE&#13;
1/2-PRIOE&#13;
109 WISCONSIN AVE,&#13;
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Open 7:30 a.m. - 8 p.m.&#13;
Monday - Friday&#13;
Saturday lo 5 p.m.&#13;
• '&#13;
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·----·----- -----.... -- .. ...,. ___ '-&#13;
....... .............. --.. FUU.4 ,PLY NYLON&#13;
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1111 6Dltl SI,&#13;
KENOSHA 554-2111&#13;
Open 8:00 a.m. - 9 :00 0.m.&#13;
Monday - Friday&#13;
Saturdsy to 5 0.m. &#13;
.,. •.. Mayll,Hfl&#13;
Smith Raps&#13;
CONTlttUE.0 FRO-.i. PAGE 7&#13;
towards ~e destructtv_e&#13;
upheaval nu.l's n:ticulous U 1t&#13;
does come about, it will&#13;
p.-obably be th&lt; .....,11 ol ad1ons&#13;
ol the ad1mmstrauon.&#13;
:--.f"KKOpt-: \\1')' are &amp;tudents so&#13;
apatht'Uc at ParltSide"&#13;
me de..,...,.. at lk Kfn(IS,ha Poli~&#13;
Orpartmmt Latd to my K ¥&#13;
tav1tin hen&#13;
'•• ..,.,., Ho,, dJd )VU ru,d&#13;
l.hct out ..&#13;
s..,u., I happen to he , ecy good&#13;
ft1tnds -..1th a touplt of&#13;
pollt'fflltn 13111&lt;:all) 1·,-.&#13;
bttn U)'Ull th&lt;! sarnt th._. m&#13;
pubbc. in • r lh.ftl. in stvdtnt&#13;
Sovt-rND-tnl. lft '°nt Commtl~.&#13;
u, ,t&lt;a..co,t' to anyone•• will&#13;
taa1m t.o nw: Some of LheN&#13;
prolll•ma could bo IOlvtd&#13;
for lm1111&lt;·t I .,.,.. that&#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;
lnlor,not,on Co/I;&#13;
JOHN J. SCHMITZ&#13;
CS2-4021&#13;
l&#13;
\&#13;
I&#13;
Ir-~~~~:·~::~::_,&#13;
I Jenn J Schmit, I&#13;
612 ISlh Pio&lt;• I&#13;
Kono,ho. w;, 53140&#13;
't'n, I .,. lnte,uted In&#13;
getting IU:rtfltf lflfOf·&#13;
ffllbOO on "PRIME."&#13;
.... , -&#13;
\&#13;
AOOflU,I&#13;
e,r, ___ _&#13;
I II ,ran _ _ _ ,,,.. _ _ _&#13;
L------------&#13;
Doan Dtarbom this P6St !all&#13;
""" bragc,n&amp; to p&lt;OPle that he -.·u the only Dean of Students 1n&#13;
the Vnt\-ers1ty ,ystem th.at v.as&#13;
Ill\ en a ralw lnt )ear btt&amp;U&amp;e&#13;
,,_., have no problems or&#13;
d,sotders at PifJSJde&#13;
U ht really btllt\'t1i this i$ so&#13;
hecaust ol lus pal1cy. he resll)&#13;
haS a chstort.td conception ol&#13;
1tudtnts at Parkside 'Ibne&#13;
people are really paranoid&#13;
hecaU.W ol th&lt;! lhlnC,S that t,a,t&#13;
happtn('d at Mad1sai Cnlic1sm&#13;
bf,rt " 5N'll as the fint step&#13;
You Ow• It&#13;
to&#13;
y-,wlf&#13;
to Drllllk&#13;
FRESH&#13;
BEER&#13;
Drink •• •&#13;
Budweiser.&#13;
• • • but you&#13;
know that!! I&#13;
Smllb: First. you have to go&#13;
back to tht old centtr system. 1&#13;
,..,,t to high schoOI UI both&#13;
Ktno&lt;eha and Racine. and&#13;
there's a difference l)er,ir,·cen tbe&#13;
two cities. Racine has more&#13;
wtute collar peop.e. and more&#13;
parents with coHege&#13;
bac~ground5 than Kenosha. The&#13;
,ndustry 1n Kf:l'losha is basically&#13;
absentee-owned. v. hile Racine&#13;
industry for the m06l part ha~&#13;
A professional&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
that is safe&#13;
legal &amp;&#13;
• • 1nexpens1ve&#13;
can be set up on an&#13;
outpatient basis by calling&#13;
Tho 1'1111blem Preguncy&#13;
lteferr.t Service&#13;
21s-n2-s360&#13;
24 hou.n-7 days&#13;
for proftfl.lONI, conHdtnt,-11&#13;
1nd c,,ing help.&#13;
Recycle&#13;
This Paper&#13;
f7arno«4 fin, fJ'i,,ud&#13;
fY&gt;ena gt' .91a1«u,, fJ'oO&lt;M&#13;
Liquor Store&#13;
::::=~&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE ...&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
In M&gt;tJnd equipment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
and ~ •s at discount prices.&#13;
Stop In and bl- your m ind, not your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk lo Marl&lt;, our&#13;
Department Mllriager, who Is a Parl&lt;slde&#13;
111Jdent and will talk yoiJr' language, both In&#13;
equipment purchaMI. records and money.&#13;
SONY- Tape rec«den, 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, Speaken, Record players&#13;
AZTEC - Speakers&#13;
J.a .L. - Speake.-1&#13;
J.V.C. - Recelven &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntables&#13;
G. E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are here, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin"s lowest prices.&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS&#13;
117MAI N STREET&#13;
RA(IN ~';J&#13;
GRE;.. T&#13;
DCiJ..-'\ T U,V"'-J&#13;
r f'&gt;~~ .,r·, l'-l&#13;
·ts home offices in that city. 1 Whal you had in the mid •so•s&#13;
were kindi in Kenosha who&#13;
we.re not really colle~e&#13;
motivated I noticed the di!·&#13;
with a \en foot Pol&#13;
somt good f)CO!)te ~- ~ "-&#13;
!"'•I, but lhe) •,.&amp;oat'°'-"'' JUSI =lly a l'Oor ,._ no,,&#13;
News&lt;1&gt;pt: Wbat -.-, you give lncomin 14'1&lt;., Smlth:lnthefallJ-~&#13;
fiut raninto0..,~"1-t,.&#13;
us were sold 00 u..-"-,&#13;
iMovative SChool" ~ • decided to stay. ft•aU- C&#13;
r rence wheB I transferred&#13;
(~m Bradford to Hor-lick Hi~,&#13;
"['he kids who were talltin~&#13;
ot&gt;out going to eollegc weren I&#13;
talking about going to the center&#13;
system, they were talking ab?ul&#13;
Madison, selo1t, etc. 'J'.he kids.&#13;
who went to the n.acine and&#13;
Kenosha ceniers didn't really&#13;
know lf college was for them or&#13;
not. so they 'A'ent to the c;:e'lter&#13;
schools.&#13;
WhaVS happening now is th•l&#13;
the sam• ~ind ol people come to&#13;
Parkside. 1 think very rew&#13;
people who would have gone to&#13;
:Madison during the center&#13;
system days go to Parkside&#13;
now. The kids who en to Parkside&#13;
now corne from a blue collar&#13;
background. They see ~Uege&#13;
as an opPOrtunity to get a )'lb, to&#13;
be better orfthan their parents.&#13;
n,ey're career oriented. You&#13;
talk to them and what they say&#13;
is "I w•nl lo be an engjneer. I&#13;
~n•t s,ee why I ba,.,e to take all&#13;
these soc. course!."&#13;
To me. gelUng an education&#13;
means more than just getting a&#13;
job. My id .. iS that il should&#13;
develop a person's ability to&#13;
think. ll's supposed to teach&#13;
you what to think, but how to&#13;
lhlnk. This is the difference&#13;
t,eh\·een a W1iversity and a&#13;
t,chnh;al school. Newscope: How do you&#13;
evaluate the education you've&#13;
gotten from ParkSide'?&#13;
Smith: I've always said I'm&#13;
getthtg a degree from Parkside&#13;
and got my education from&#13;
sitting over at the Ranch&#13;
reading books. I've got between&#13;
800 and 900books; most of them&#13;
aren't coUege oriented. To me, a.n instructor at the&#13;
college level is not a teacher~&#13;
he's more like a guide. He's a&#13;
critic, He gives you the fun•&#13;
damental framework from&#13;
which to attack the problem.&#13;
To mt, a tremendous&#13;
example c,f this is Lee Air&#13;
plebaum. My nrst economics&#13;
~urSe was from him. t.ee&#13;
Applebaum stimulaled me to go&#13;
beyond what w"" oflered in the&#13;
classroom, He's the reason why&#13;
I took $0 'Cl\8ny econ courses&#13;
afler that lle's the epitome or&#13;
an instructor. The man knows&#13;
his field inside and out.&#13;
I told lhe Chancellor this- let&#13;
me teU yru what happened. One&#13;
night a couple or years ago after&#13;
we bad a program for high&#13;
school SEOiors in Racine, we&#13;
were sitting in the Big Boy, and&#13;
Wyllie was asking some of the&#13;
students .,hat we thought of the&#13;
faculty at Parkside.&#13;
I told him about Lee Applebaum,&#13;
and how he&#13;
stimulated me to study more.&#13;
His reply was "Do you really&#13;
think that's important?" I said,&#13;
"Yes, don't yout'' He said. .. No!" I didn't know what to&#13;
say. I was dumbfounded. His&#13;
reply reminded me what you&#13;
would get !rom a faclory&#13;
worker.&#13;
Newscope: What majors do you&#13;
have'?&#13;
Smith: l have a major in&#13;
philosophy completed, and I'm&#13;
just shy of majors in economl&lt;$&#13;
and sociology.&#13;
Newsco;rt: How Would you rate&#13;
the departments'?&#13;
Smilh: I think the eeonomic&#13;
department is basically sound.&#13;
There are some fine pMp!e in it.&#13;
In p,ilosophy ii runs the gamut.&#13;
Sociology. which was my&#13;
original major, I wouldn't touch&#13;
1l soonded &amp;OOd Y. t...,;&#13;
Uriving a lcb~&#13;
into contact With • ~ 1...., scl100l kid\ alld Ii •&#13;
wbenllalkedtou;;. .. "'&#13;
was goi,. to bt I llilll&#13;
"!'lversity SOlne&lt;by T! ..,. kid ask• me lf he - Parkside, 1 would~ II&#13;
He should go to II hai - Milwoukee. 1 ttll lht .... are already hert lbt kill, II&#13;
they get out, the btot., ~ are. 111111&#13;
Ne-scope: Is Pa.rbidt&#13;
tellectual communrt , •&#13;
Smith: There's I i:...,__ lack ol it here. Tht _ -~ that moot Sl\ldelll$ ::'-&#13;
their !acuity memb,n (:&#13;
looked at thetr Ilia!, a.&#13;
teach..-s; as ,m_ 'ioo&#13;
I have gOOd c:ontoa, llill&#13;
ol laculty memi,.,.. ~• an individual bba, h •&#13;
like facult)' manbcr, ._&#13;
:-imng to intmc:t n,, Plllio&#13;
~s that $0 many sflldieda&#13;
,n. go to clas&lt;, u..., i..,,&#13;
U you talk 10 - ""lfl&#13;
members their g-• ,._ ol ';•11csi~• sl .... • II&#13;
lhey re unmteres:led •&#13;
care . Ntwstopt: Whltdo,-w&#13;
Parkside studmls'&#13;
Smith, It's like an)'llloc-.&#13;
youhavetohesel""" IIII&#13;
there•, a 101 rt d,amaod, 11 .,&#13;
rough here. 1 lot d p,1 •&#13;
interesting peopl, Bli ,-11o&#13;
to dig them ..,L&#13;
What holds l)f&lt;&gt;pl, llocl la&#13;
is that Ibey still hl,e _._&#13;
high sdlool lrlenda. I Ila•&#13;
thing that could 1'111) - Parkside would lit aa tlll&#13;
bring in out of 1ta\t ...&#13;
U you're IOl"IJ ~ - here ~ith a group d ...&#13;
rigl&gt;I out ol big)&gt; ~ •&#13;
you chum around wlll - people IOI' four ,...,. _,&#13;
expose )ou...U lo ..,..&#13;
else. that's iL You'lt • your hed and )'Olll k1 a&#13;
Unfortunalely, Olal'l'dtt&#13;
ol students are dole •&#13;
E,•entuaUy •'hat will'"""&#13;
th•t they will spend 111t • their lives in this &amp;rel&#13;
Whal'sreallY ~•&#13;
you took a ranclall - about 1oostuc1a&gt;1Sud11U•&#13;
~ 11st 111• larthdl pd•&#13;
west, north and """' W"&#13;
traveled. I'd l'emwt•ll/11&#13;
better lhan 90 per""' .. have lived tber ...,. 111&#13;
within an are. ota&amp;.-.•:&#13;
west, northem 11-ia-::., north, Cmcago to the&#13;
about 30 fffl "'l 1 (jt&#13;
Michigan to ll&gt;&lt; .- Ill'&#13;
That's tl!t P=--,,.&#13;
people hav• lbt ...W , 11&#13;
that the enttre&#13;
l{eilOlha, Wi- - A last note. I speot•&#13;
degree ol authOl'lcy • ""'""&#13;
been here I'°'" llilll&#13;
anybody else. 1 lik;:;L11&#13;
sort&#13;
been&#13;
ol&#13;
here&#13;
groVl!I&#13;
so I"°'&#13;
111' ~&#13;
toes. ...... l•&#13;
Bui I c1on•t --,,.i,i!&#13;
sense you can say tbli.&#13;
and the problt:" s&#13;
frustrations ~ ., fl,&#13;
companied i~ ~&#13;
preparaUOO for lllt ,_, ti'&#13;
you rind in . ~ "'&#13;
ntat•s how it lt.&#13;
Pike River Cleanup ,,&#13;
share&#13;
Let's&#13;
cl&#13;
do&#13;
the&#13;
OW'&#13;
Pike&#13;
share&#13;
River.&#13;
lor&#13;
Help&#13;
our&#13;
name&#13;
worlt -&#13;
eod&#13;
"°&#13;
pb~&#13;
pal ~ 111&#13;
clean up the portion oC Pike R...,, 3119, G .,.ti~~ ..&#13;
River lhal Dows through our en,1roomental ~ ~ campus. Dale: Saturday, June contacl. T•"' ,~&#13;
19. Til'le: Meet in front of Tom KrOl!t, 111"9 •&#13;
Greenquist Hall al 8:30 a.m: Gaslorki..,..'""&#13;
______...... &#13;
,:och Named 'Coach of the Year'&#13;
l{och. park.side wresUing or w!estlers. Besides his&#13;
c~ac~ing, his overall con .. tr1but.1on to wrestling is out•&#13;
standing.&#13;
'Insects' Defeat 'Non-Sequitors'&#13;
Jilfl v.·as named Amat~r .-c"Ulll8 News' College Rookie&#13;
t~,,. 8 coach o1 the Year.&#13;
l~n in the NCAA '-'?aJOr&#13;
~ cb\Pision were eligible&#13;
~r, 1.,...,rd a.li.o.&#13;
p,,t-&lt;IP for this national os Buddy Wilkerson of&#13;
IOI"'; tee! states International ., v01,. san Diego.&#13;
~ding to Jesse Hoke,&#13;
_-of the Amateur Wrestling ..- o,ach Koeh was chosen&#13;
'i,tn,-.- ,t the time he was&#13;
~ 1l was too late to recruit&#13;
ht ,...estled a winning&#13;
~ with a limited number&#13;
Koch directed the Firs'. An•&#13;
nu~I Parkside Wrestling Clinic&#13;
which attracted, more than ,oo&#13;
high school wrestlers and&#13;
coaches. This was only one or a&#13;
series of clinics he has con- ducted.&#13;
In an atternpt to promote the&#13;
wresUing program at Parkside&#13;
Koch developed a corps oi&#13;
twelve mat maids who$e&#13;
responsibility was to su;,port&#13;
and promote the program by&#13;
advertl•ing matches and acting&#13;
as officials and cheerleaders.&#13;
r&#13;
•&#13;
Cooch Koch&#13;
Ranger '9' Lose Doubleheader&#13;
By Jim Cuptr or the News.cope Slaff&#13;
Parkside concluded its initial baseball eam-&#13;
""1 by dropping both ends of a doobleheader to&#13;
:I' v ,-oand6-1 at Liocoln Part in Milwaukee. lb&lt; pitching ol Tom Tanski stymied the Ranger&#13;
11~en in the opener as the UW·M hurJer per.&#13;
a:l!d just four hits en rout&lt;; to a shulool Tanski&#13;
tit not $lllrt strong as the first two Rangers had&#13;
,..., followed by a walk whtch loaded the bases.&#13;
Belilell pitched his way out ol trouble by striking&#13;
1111 i. side, a feat which he repeated in the second&#13;
~en Rangers went down via strikeouts and&#13;
ParU1de had no extra base hit,.&#13;
UW,!tJ also managed onl,f four hits. but two of aer were doubles. The Panthers picked up two&#13;
c in the third atxl completed their scoring with • 111 the fourlh. Cad Talsma was the Ylclim of .. pport and picked up the toss.&#13;
Cycle Club Holds 1st&#13;
th In thenightcaptheUW-Mofrense~rretoureat&#13;
e exl:"'nse of starting pitcher Rici&lt; Pet~t. drillir«&#13;
IS hits mdudiog two triples and a double by IJW-111'&#13;
Cary Stephan. 8&#13;
. Th~ Panthers scored three times in the third.&#13;
twi~e i~ the fifth, and once in the sixth to atcOWll for&#13;
thelr SlX tallies.&#13;
The lonP MJn of lhe game for rark.sidt cam, in&#13;
lhesix_lh ~he~ PetJt cameupv.-itha run s«ringhJl . ~mnmg P•.kher Kevin King allowed the Ranger&#13;
Six ~ts. including doubles by Pettil and Otan Kans_&#13;
Pettit and Tom Gedeme.r led Parkside batters with&#13;
two hits ~a.ch. Gedemcr totaled tour hill in the&#13;
doubleh .. d.,..&#13;
Despite a lack of depth this year &lt;Parkside had&#13;
only ten men at UW•M&gt; the team had a &amp;+2 record&#13;
which was comprised mosUy agamst varsit)&#13;
competilion. In Its initial year the club team showed&#13;
that it ca:1 play varsity calibre ball.&#13;
Race&#13;
miles. was sponsored by lht&#13;
Parkside C}'cle club.&#13;
S.hiod 1M •lr\q .. -i., cl&#13;
8111 h}' the Shldfflt lll&gt;«'b&#13;
deteattd lbt f'acult&gt; • ,cm&#13;
Stqu1torJ ' bi-• lu•l ocor, in 1&#13;
be~fit pmf' for lt&gt;e Hulcrw&#13;
MlUs SCbola.rstup tu.nd.&#13;
Jumparc olf to •n earl)' leed&#13;
lhe 1tl.adent1 mai.ntat.Md an&#13;
edge throughout the came-&#13;
""h'th U'W freq\llt'lll subs,btuliOD&#13;
by both IJd ..&#13;
W1th1 Jl.13 hall•me ltlld, tho&#13;
students ap...,,.1rtd to b•"~&#13;
command. but the. r1cu.lty&#13;
tllmod 10 I ,.....,. t«&lt;llld half&#13;
Alter the Stlldall lltttcbed&#13;
their lead to 37-111, the l1C'Ult)&#13;
poured 1.D taffie Wlllnt•'1!'nd&#13;
points, ~ ,1 :17-32&#13;
The pine got noclote, u tho&#13;
students put on a 1Cor1n1&#13;
4splay, outpo,nbllJ the l1C'Ulty&#13;
15-9 the rut ot UM ••&gt;&#13;
Ivy, .,bo INIQ\lffltly &lt;lvppod&#13;
an ..,,lh key bltkN •-hen tbt&#13;
pme got ~lo&amp;tt .. paced 1todtnt&#13;
ac«i.ng with ti PQ1nl$&#13;
Mike Olandtr 1uth 10 and&#13;
Jolin Krummtl. sna,. -,,,..&#13;
----&#13;
lYJI chM'f Ulbt~ U( ul&#13;
I~ P:(et.l lludmll broil• Into&#13;
tho ll«lrlq &lt;du1&lt;,c&#13;
The f1Nlty bad a balarred&#13;
at11da,. tb II S:U)&lt;n - tiiu t nonr- .n 0i:ubftt nt;urn.&#13;
J•n-y Mialdl bad .,.. ta ,1,it,,&#13;
\\allu Gr1ff1a and )I Z&#13;
\lo illiams eacti had ll•&#13;
Alt"°'Ch tho pby •u lflll•&#13;
racgtd II times, tllm! "&lt;ff&#13;
some lpN:laculair lndnldual&#13;
puyo, iodudil1l oe&lt;ul&lt;mal klOC&#13;
""'I• -... and ad'I)( blU&#13;
handl,ng. pha a &lt;r....S pitas 111&#13;
behind-lhf'back pua by Carl&#13;
undor&#13;
Al!tt talkuC with sntnl of&#13;
tbt pa~1pani. arltt tM s,,nw&#13;
,t lppeln IS ., the ront.rst WM&#13;
en,oyabk and l1:litHt ,. a!. in-,&#13;
tttftl tn makln&amp; ll • tt~r&#13;
.,..,l Ctnaloly the fO&lt;Ult&gt;&#13;
would hM lo N"ent tht oul&#13;
CClll"-f' UI futurt 11'\N'llap.&#13;
The faculty,_.,,.., plllfd&#13;
scanlf torWOla 1 ion duri.na: • abort&#13;
Mt.n.1me pmt •Mm • tHm ol&#13;
•omen fat111ly mNnb-ff1&#13;
lhul40Jt • a,rlsflUda&gt;t ••m 7-0&#13;
The winning tune was tv.-o&#13;
hours, nine minutes, and 39&#13;
seconds. Coming in second&#13;
place was a team captamed by&#13;
Dennis Craves Graves• team&#13;
was llmed in two hours.. 28&#13;
mmutes, and $4 seconds&#13;
Ken Mort 1n&#13;
8y Jim C.tper&#13;
lfTbt .Newscope Starr&#13;
Pubtde's eye.le club com•&#13;
pltt,,I • 2111 lap race at the&#13;
lllllangtm Bowl in Kenosha in&#13;
..... ' ...................... . : :&#13;
FREE ' . .&#13;
r,jjet aJ the .&#13;
. NEWSCOPE .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. . qffice . .&#13;
.&#13;
. : . ""ring finals . . . . .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. i """IJ trunk A l . • &amp; wrxxl road : 1-o......... . ··················•&#13;
- '#MIILS&#13;
.......&#13;
--••· h:lw Tlrn ~d Rims.&#13;
- "'· , :30 ...... "-. . Arn.-, Con. 7&amp;4J • 20th,&#13;
which the team of Kari&#13;
Llekoski, tom .Krummel, Ron&#13;
Wilson and SoMy Richmond&#13;
emerged victorious.&#13;
Martin Voted Outstanding Athlete&#13;
The e,·ent which ran 40.2&#13;
SPORT SHORTS&#13;
The new Rugby team dropped an 18-9 dec1s1on to IJW.&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Kari Llekoski was named to the All-Mid American ski team.&#13;
He was selected by the Central Intercollegiate Ski Coacheo&#13;
Association.&#13;
Kt:n Martin. tnshma ·&#13;
v.-restler from Cdeman. w"'&#13;
wu named the outatandif\l&#13;
•thf.ete- at the l'l'll\ft'llly d&#13;
Wuc-on.sin,Parltside at th•&#13;
annual 1.;'W P Awudl Banquet&#13;
Salllrdoy &gt;U&amp;ht&#13;
Some 200 pe.n,om attended&#13;
the banquet II BNIOI O.u&#13;
Ccunlr) Club whi&lt;II hotiGttd&#13;
athletes in l'W Ps to \'arstt)&#13;
sports Most Valuable Pla)t:N&#13;
UniYersity of Wisconsin•Parksidt skitt Kari Liekoski has been in ucb sport tttt11vfd awa.rdl,&#13;
named to the Central lntercoUe1Pate Ski Associabon AJl~~Ud- and at Jetter -.,nnen -~ American ski team voted by Association coaches. announced&#13;
Fred Lonsdorf, Ass.oc;iation president and Michigan Tech ~di. ca r1 Maddox, atlaJelic&#13;
ru1nouneed theseleclion.s. Liekos.k1 wtlS Ortf" nr five skittS named 10 lhe director at Loui•iana St.ate&#13;
men's Nordic team, Other teams were chosen in men and "''omen't Unt\ tts:1ty, •as the taturtd&#13;
AJpinc and women's cross country. Northern Michigan dominated lhe speUtr. Speoal uurd&amp; •ett&#13;
choices with 10, Michiaan Tech had three, and Michigan S!.ltt, Lake presented to Alfritd S&#13;
Superior· and Parkside one each. OtS1mone ar Ktn01ha and&#13;
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 18, May 31, 1971</text>
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