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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 4, Issue 2</text>
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            <text>The Wandering Troubadour</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>"Journalism is Literature in a Hurrv" - Matthew Ar~old&#13;
•IIWIJCOPll FREE&#13;
\ 01.L )IE ~ - \ l')IRE:R 2 July 6. 19;1&#13;
THE llBS?AFlY&#13;
UW,., KEt/ :sr1;. CAMPL!f&#13;
3, 00 WASHINGTON RD. 1 n 5 id e&#13;
Summerfest&#13;
Threatened&#13;
Parkside Annexation&#13;
Proposal&#13;
Ike t Tina Turner&#13;
Review&#13;
More&#13;
The Wandering Troubadour&#13;
See Page 5 &#13;
PageZ NEWSCOPE July 5, IJll&#13;
lndicnl ions11ll onted&#13;
INDICATIONS. the student llttrary&#13;
magulne, ts interested in obtaining student&#13;
t'onlribuUon1 ln the fltld o( tnallve $lUdtnl&#13;
tndu,·or1 1ncluding short storlts. pHlr)',&#13;
photography and olhtt' media of art suitable for&#13;
lht maguint formal.&#13;
.or iJ it nect-ssary (or a stcde:nt to attend&#13;
Parllskie in lhe fall, as long 'as he attended&#13;
('lassd during the summer. Co,1trlbutors .whost&#13;
"'°'k is accepted for publicalion wUI rec.en·e the&#13;
graUtude of the t.taft and h,·o tree copies of the&#13;
n111gadne sc-nt to their bomt address. Vn•&#13;
1ortuna1.ely, due to economic restrictions. no&#13;
material can be rewrned unle.55 •«omp.ani~ by&#13;
a seU-addrt-SJed sUi iuptd envelope.&#13;
No deadline has yet bffn stt. but due to the&#13;
Job ot tdiUng and la)out. de.., the sooner&#13;
material is submitt.td lhe belier to allow the&#13;
f'dilorS ample U.me l.O do • good job oo the&#13;
--Letter Policy--&#13;
N scope will print as maay letter!. to the&#13;
f:Jllitolte:s possible. The letters will be printed in&#13;
. 0&#13;
. ety as li t...dtcr5 s~ould be double- thmr en r , · d typed if possible, and iw longer than 400&#13;
spacde '•tl lt-lters ltlUSl be: signed. Names will be wor $.o . withheld upon requesL&#13;
Congratulations . are ex&amp;end~ t.o • those fol"t:iiighted,&#13;
II men in PJannmg and Construction who paved an&#13;
gen e ' b 'Id. d sphall waU&lt;way to Ille athelellcs •• mg an tore II up lbe&#13;
~ollowin,g day to lay a pipeline beneath.&#13;
Tht&gt; naturt ol I.ht magailne exprHSH&#13;
tutrtnt tnnds In studtnl &lt;:r'e'aUvlty. anylhlng&#13;
from tht nptrlmHLII \.o the mort tradhlonal&#13;
forms of f'XprtH\on. Ont ntf'd not be a masc.tr to&#13;
tontrlbult ma~rial: onl) lnterulNI enoug.h to&#13;
1ubmh. In lht put thttt hu bun a tibort.agt of&#13;
matf'r,al from studt::115. many ~ntlal con•&#13;
t.ributon httltaling atdisplaylng their work. But&#13;
tht magatint Is a rorum for scudent Ytork, a&#13;
plact " 'htrt ont can pu.bllsh htl material ud&#13;
pt'thap.s lta"n from II.&#13;
m•gatint'.&#13;
Those int.trested. st.ould •·tile In•&#13;
'1catlon5 care of Newscopt, UW·P Kt~osha,&#13;
Wis. S31'0, or phone ISS48'1, exL 443, (or further&#13;
information.&#13;
Centrex Comes To Parkside&#13;
It ls Ml nettnary &amp;o ~ a fall-lime 11.u.dent.&#13;
sorensen on sorensen&#13;
tn the June 28. 1971. ,ssue d&#13;
lht' Nt'-.5N)p(' m)· friend John&#13;
Koloen m,de ,t somewhat&#13;
painfully obvious thal he was&#13;
suHermg from a not-lo-~·e11•&#13;
knawn malad) called misin•&#13;
tcrpr1t1hs It i-1 brought about&#13;
b) an o-vtt'l"d,ng o( the lapP&#13;
tte:0rdt•r and mflamtd earlobe&#13;
In other words • • I talk&#13;
loo much&#13;
\\1lh all the rapping contained&#13;
on his poor httlt tape recorder.&#13;
a few mistakes in ipelhng and&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR&#13;
&amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
PIZZA - S6AFOQ0$&#13;
ITALIAN-AMERICAN FOOO&#13;
COCK.TAILS&#13;
e:;N T£RT AINME.NT&#13;
2112 - 14 - 12 ST.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
-&#13;
fact were accidentally put into&#13;
print., so wlthout any iU feehngs&#13;
to",&lt;·ard my good lriend John or&#13;
tov,,ard Mother Newscope, I&#13;
would hke to researc.h lhal&#13;
which has been reseatched.&#13;
L The publication name is&#13;
ETC .. not ETCETERA. 2 H L. Mencl.en has indeed&#13;
written for thts $8me&#13;
pubhcation but my area of&#13;
lnterest is not nocessarily in the&#13;
territory of his publications i.e.&#13;
conc:epl,;&#13;
3. Allred Kon.ybsky's name is&#13;
spelled as ilis here ... Alfred's&#13;
mother might object~ 4. In paragraph 9 while&#13;
discus.sing cdd media the word&#13;
'hot' was used rather lhall the&#13;
formerl)' mentioned&#13;
I would like Vtf'Y much to&#13;
thank Jol111 again for his&#13;
original interest in my&#13;
publication and to mention to&#13;
our readers that many mem•&#13;
bers of the Ncwscope staff are&#13;
overworked.&#13;
Record Summer Enrollment&#13;
Summer Session enrollment at the Unn·ersity of Wisconsin--&#13;
Parkside ha!&gt; reached an all•time high. John Vul.:t:..ke, Summer Session director, announced tMt ~um•&#13;
mer enroUml'nt ~tood al 1,790 last Tuesday afternoon and shouJd&#13;
l'xceed 1.800 by the close of rtgistration. That compares to a total&#13;
last summer of l ,ffl and the all-lime high or 1,189 in 1969.&#13;
Voices wlll be just that. Voices.&#13;
ll will be a column that witl appear weekly in these pages. It&#13;
will be written altcr-n..itely by John Koloer, and Marc Eisen.&#13;
What will be written wm not necessarily reflect the v1~ws of&#13;
this paper. or even necessarily the views of the columnist who is noL&#13;
writing th.ll w00:k. What 1t will reOect are the opinions of an individual at a particular&#13;
pomt in lime.. Nothing more. No guarantees of consistency&#13;
are made. We will say what we feel, andhope£ul1y be able to convey&#13;
wh,,t this is- no small task in itself,&#13;
OUr topics w1II beanylhingthat interests us, be it in life, morals.&#13;
art or polllics, U we do a1\)'Utlng it will be to approximate .&#13;
something Yea.ts said. To "cast a cold eye on life, on death ... "&#13;
Hopefully. ..&#13;
The open111g piece will be on LOtalitarianism, and will appear&#13;
next week.&#13;
SA YE $ ON ElECTRONICSI&#13;
WATCH FOR BARGAINS&#13;
WE UNDERSELL EVERYONE ON&#13;
• Color &amp; B+W TV&#13;
• Stereo Components &amp; Consoles&#13;
• Radios{AM-FM-CB-SW-PB MWLW-BFO)&#13;
&#13;
• Tape Equipment (Cass .. Cart.. R to R)&#13;
• Air Conditioners&#13;
Newscope Special:&#13;
Famcus Brand&#13;
Color Portable&#13;
Full 12" Screen&#13;
Slimline&#13;
O,t,ly&#13;
$194 lomous lo,&#13;
A new inward dialing&#13;
telephone system known as&#13;
Centrex will be put into effect on&#13;
Monday .. July 12. This new&#13;
system permits a faster and&#13;
more efficJent use of telephone&#13;
equlpmenl II should be noted&#13;
that au main campus telephone.&#13;
oumberS wlll b~ changing as&#13;
well as t.be special acc:ess codes&#13;
und between the: main Kenosha&#13;
and Racine campme:s. The&#13;
extension numbers on the two&#13;
outlying campust:::1 will remo.in&#13;
as they arc now. Dire&lt;:¢ inward dialing means&#13;
that callers rrorn olf campus&#13;
will be able to dial directly to&#13;
the individual or office they are.&#13;
b'ying 'lo , .. ch wiUlout going ·&#13;
throog)l a (elcphone operator.&#13;
Persons not knowing the&#13;
telephane number of tile ln•&#13;
dividw&gt;I they are calling m~y&#13;
still di&amp;! the Parkside telephone&#13;
op,&gt;rator and be connected to&#13;
the desired party.&#13;
In ccrect most tclcphone in•&#13;
struments will be. · similar to&#13;
home telephones. Even the&#13;
billing !or telepl)one charges&#13;
will be automatically charged&#13;
to the extension from which the&#13;
telephone call originates.&#13;
The new equipment in general&#13;
affects the main campus only,&#13;
although some minor changes&#13;
affect the Kenosha arx! llacin,&#13;
campuses. The rea$on lhat lbe&#13;
~~ system for the m0$t part ls&#13;
hm1ted to the main CMlJ&gt;Us is&#13;
that the two outlying campus&#13;
are not in the Cenu-.x ix.!&#13;
daries as established by 11.;&#13;
telephone company.&#13;
The new system will aUow&#13;
indivi~ual ~rs to perform&#13;
func.tions . not previou&amp;ly&#13;
possible with the old equ~&#13;
menl; for th1s reason Ceoll'e:\&#13;
t,tY.rintroductlon rlasses will be&#13;
conduete&lt;i by telephone "u,,.&#13;
pany representatives. AU&#13;
faculty and staff are urged to&#13;
plan to altend one II the&#13;
training sessions. Alt \I.ill be&#13;
held in Greenquisl Hall, room&#13;
• 03:&#13;
July7 • 9:00a.m.&#13;
July?• 2:00p.m.&#13;
July8· 10:00a.m. July 8 · 2:00 p.m.&#13;
T~ey will last approximalel)' 30&#13;
nurunes.&#13;
Interim telephone direc:toriet&#13;
!or lac11lty and stair w.U te&#13;
made available before July 12&#13;
1he new city telephone di.rec·&#13;
tory cwhicll comes out iB latt&#13;
July) will contain a dl\'Jsiandepartment&#13;
listing for C41lltrs u,&#13;
easily Identify area desired and&#13;
dial directly to that ollice.&#13;
Activities Building Open&#13;
The Student Activities buiJding has announced its summer&#13;
hours. They are: Monday - Thursday, 11 a.m. • 11 p.m.&#13;
Friday, 11 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. and8:00 p.m. - I :OOa.m. Sa,urday, 8:00 p.m. - 1 :00 a.rn. for programmed events ooh&#13;
The laclllties in lhe &amp;uildi~ includ• pool table, amusemeot&#13;
machines a juke box and a piano, ln addition to vending semc.ts&#13;
available for rood and soft drinks, Schlitz, Budweiser ond SchliU&#13;
Mall Liquor are served. The beer prices are 25c, 25C. and 30c&#13;
respectively. Durlng Uie summer dances will be s,:heduled oo Wednesdif&#13;
and Saturday nights. A dance schedule wlll be available this wtd.&#13;
Wednesday night hours will be ext«1ded to 1 :00 a.m. when daJ'IC'('$&#13;
are beld.&#13;
Dam.-e admissiotl policy includes second semester paJti.iOt&#13;
students with 1.0. cards, summer students with ft:e cards, a!KI&#13;
gueots. Guesl$ can only be admitled by Parkside siudents and,,.&#13;
limited to one guest per student. Also, once a student ~s beel&#13;
admitted to the dance, he forfeils his guest admission pr1vikd&amp;t&#13;
Hours and dances can be altered to betler accomm~tt&#13;
student needs. Questions concerning the student actJvities buiJdilC&#13;
can lbe an..c;:wered by contacting Mr. Martioe2 at the ~tudcot Jttivities&#13;
building or by calllng his office.&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Editor Warren Nedry&#13;
•&#13;
Copy Editor John Koloen&#13;
News Editor Marc Eisen&#13;
Ff:aturt Editor Paul Locmu·tire&#13;
Business Manager. John Gray&#13;
PHONES&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
iS •&#13;
11&#13;
1 Yr. Warranty&#13;
CARL'S/ PIZZA NEWS STAFF&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Darrell Borger.&#13;
James Casper, Jim Kolcie:n, Bill&#13;
Sorensen.&#13;
summer Newscope papd&#13;
independent s!Udent """;,.tll&#13;
compooed and p11blish,::., i!&#13;
through the summer. •ty d&#13;
s!Udents or the. Ulll'1iud&lt;'&#13;
Wis&lt;.-onsin-Partts1de. ur,dS ,rt&#13;
obtained advertisin~ f/ll&#13;
the sole source or 1..,&#13;
theoperollon ol N""'ff ,od&#13;
copies are prin b cbt'&#13;
distributed thro~e cot''&#13;
Kenoshri o nd Rat• •~ .,&#13;
rnunities as ~el~id II'&#13;
University . . free t&#13;
&amp;vaiJable upon requei.&#13;
3105 60th Street 657-31-42&#13;
•• fo4u Sun,... 12"' • 1, ... w·&#13;
•uo • lllS • s,AGHm1 • (HICK[N&#13;
C.MOCCHI • U.VIOll • LA SM.NA&#13;
• UA FOOD • S4"DWICHIS&#13;
CAUY -OUTS • OlllvtlY&#13;
"'rOU .,He • wr UIIU;"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
CONTRIBt.rrlNG&#13;
WRITl:;RS&#13;
Mike Slevcsand, Janet Sabol&#13;
Mike Starr&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella. Dave Kraus,&#13;
Don Marjara, Barb Scott &#13;
-------s ummerf est Threatened ---..&#13;
-=-&#13;
J:::lal)~•·.:.::'"~· ---~"t;e.!!:l\.=:M.~O•..::.·i: ____ .,--"•1•_•&#13;
Summer Institutes Still Open by Marc Eisen of the Newscope start&#13;
It's the only place in the area where college&#13;
age people can come lClgether weekly during&#13;
urnmer to lalk and dance oc l'I)' in the grass and&#13;
~ten to a band. And now the continuation ot it is&#13;
., je,)Plrdy.&#13;
It's the Racine Summeriest. It's held every&#13;
Tbw-sd•Y night i n the pavilion at John.,on•s Park&#13;
in catedOr'lia - therein Ues the problem.&#13;
Area residents are complaining that people&#13;
whO s.neak in tut acro.ss their lawns. There is talk&#13;
that Caldeoola may pass a noise ordinance that&#13;
~oold end the outdoor dances.&#13;
Summeriest is sponsored by the Racine&#13;
Parks and Recreation Departmen~ and while&#13;
Johnson's Park is part ol Racine, it is&#13;
surrounded by the Lown of Caledonia.&#13;
Jim Wardrip of the Park and Recreation&#13;
DeJ)arlment told Newscope that there have been&#13;
totnplaint.s and thrPJihl in pa.st ye.ars. but that he&#13;
tx-pects lhls to be the make or break year for&#13;
summeriest.&#13;
The rapid growth in popularity is the reason.&#13;
n,e nrstdance this summer drew a crowd of 850.&#13;
'Ibis is an increase of more than 300 compared to&#13;
the first dance last !iummer. Wardrip estimated&#13;
that another 150 sneaked in withoul paying.&#13;
He said there were 12 telephoned complaints&#13;
by J ohn Koloen&#13;
of the News:c0peStarf&#13;
AS a rcs.11Jt ()( Ull;: vrt.&gt;:Sence ot&#13;
ParksJCle in Kenosha county,&#13;
t nacres or land now lying in&#13;
SOmers township is likely to be&#13;
aMeXed to the city or Kenosha.&#13;
n,e move. inlllated by Parkside&#13;
Village Inc., developers or the&#13;
88 unit dormitory complex sooth&#13;
of the Student Activities&#13;
building, ls being done in order&#13;
ro secure an adequate sewer&#13;
ar&gt;d water system and olber&#13;
murucipal services for the area.&#13;
•boot P&lt;Ople &lt;Ulting across 1a,.,.. alter th• flnt&#13;
dance:. A number or cars were aho illegally&#13;
parked. He said license plate nunbers ,..ere&#13;
taken. a?d that notices will be sent to thp owners&#13;
expla,mng that by illeg,,Uy parki~ they are&#13;
helf)lngto put an end to Summeriest Tic:tets ~ill&#13;
be issued in the Future, be noted.&#13;
, He emphasiz.ed. "The situation is 1tttous. We re not crying wotr. We see the handwriting on&#13;
lhe "''all." He explained that last year a petition&#13;
was circulated in Caledonia urainl an md to&#13;
Sum.a,.enest.. and that on stveral occasions the&#13;
sound lev,,I ol the hands had to be lo"-ered.&#13;
A resurfacing o{ the petition wouldn't sur•&#13;
prise him. he said.&#13;
What the end result will be remains to be&#13;
seen. He describes Swnmerfest, wh:ch lS 1n its&#13;
fifth ,Year. u ~•one ot the smoothest rwming&#13;
fun,ctions the aty has". He u1d Ute- ltids arc&#13;
always weU-behaved - ex('f:pt ~hen they sneak ill.&#13;
Hesa.id,&#13;
11lt's up to the people at Summeriest&#13;
themselves. They have the pc,wer to keep 1t&#13;
going. I have no control ove.r it."&#13;
Wardrip acknowledged, thouah, that it iJ&#13;
Caledonia that wlll make the final decuion.&#13;
••n,ei' can do about anything they want. We'tt&#13;
CConbnued on Page 6)&#13;
Open1np sbll rnna1n for thf&gt;&#13;
summt-r ln.st,tutH 1n&#13;
Hum1ntiea ror h11.h school&#13;
studtllls 10 be l&gt;Pld at tl&gt;P&#13;
Uni1-·,rsny of YJ11com1n&#13;
Pa~1de. th&lt; achoo! announc,d&#13;
today&#13;
Three workshops or hw•&#13;
-ffl.S eac-h -.&amp;11 be M'Jd in an.&#13;
July 5-16, mUSJc. Juh 19--30: and&#13;
bter-ature, Aug 2·13 T'hey mttt&#13;
Monday thNlUgh ~·rKlay !Nm t&#13;
to 12 and att open to h&amp;gh SC'hool&#13;
students•ho..,.111 bt-SfflJOl"S Uw&#13;
tan The non-&lt;t"fldJt lll$l!tUtes&#13;
includo field lnPI lo Chk:ago&#13;
and M1h.-aukee for • regist~tion fee 9( SI$&#13;
n,e mu:ste: v. orb.hop v. di&#13;
feature l«tutts on music •~ precaation &amp;nd careers In&#13;
music, hims, opporturuty for&#13;
per/onn.allCfS by sludfflts. and&#13;
trips to Ra,·1ru.a ror- a coocert by&#13;
the Clucago Symphony and to&#13;
the Mdwauktt Pfflormu~ Art,;,&#13;
Center for a pN)Gjct.1on ol "Tht&#13;
\1erry V. 1dow." Parkside&#13;
Parkside Village, Inc.&#13;
Requests City To&#13;
Annex University Newscope spoke with Robert&#13;
Kolstadt, city planner for&#13;
Kenooha, about the propo,ed&#13;
annexation. According tei&#13;
Kolstadt. "We've reached a&#13;
situation where the ruture&#13;
develDpment of the univerfity&#13;
itself, and its growth in&#13;
tlUdtnts, was going to be stifled&#13;
wir.hoot the provision of an&#13;
adequate sewer system.,.&#13;
f, -PROPOSED ANNEXATION&#13;
"When you take a look at the&#13;
uul i;ituatlon to where th~c&#13;
typt services would come rrom&#13;
there is no other solution but&#13;
Mnexation to the city. The&#13;
municipal seri.1 ices of water,&#13;
wnitary sewers, police&#13;
Jf'OU!Ction, lire p:otectfon and&#13;
other municipal amenities&#13;
&lt;aMot be provided by the&#13;
""'nship o! Somers."&#13;
According to Kolstadt the&#13;
(l'Obltm is one of economics.&#13;
Somers township is incapable of&#13;
~yu-.g ror Uie services and&#13;
1lnlf depend$ on a smaJJ&#13;
l'Olunteer lire department a.d&#13;
Che county sheriff for lire and&#13;
ll0li&lt;t protection. Ho noted that&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie became&#13;
«ncemed aboot fire protection&#13;
after fire str,,ck the Carthage&#13;
C.Utge lieldhousc last wint&lt;r.&#13;
8'cause Parkside is isolated&#13;
t_.. rnunicipal fire stations&#13;
Ind the Somers station is in·&#13;
capable of handling laree fires.&#13;
bt ren u..1 if a lire broke out on&#13;
campus it could do a great deal&#13;
of damage before lructs am_.ed_&#13;
kolsiadt expressed belie! that&#13;
'ftltbln the next several years it :i" be neces.sary to construct a ft &amp;talion on or near the&#13;
ctrnpUs in order to provide&#13;
•dtquate protection. He&#13;
-liooied Iha! after the an•&#13;
,.._tion lhe area will come&#13;
~ ttw- Jurisdiction of the city&#13;
JIOuce deportment rather than&#13;
rtlyinc on the sheriff's&#13;
:,S-nment as it does presently.&#13;
•dded_ however. that the&#13;
~ WOUid not "invade" the&#13;
tarnpus and would come only on&#13;
~ request of the unlversity.&#13;
..;,..._...., asked Mr. Kolstadt&#13;
.._ the Ptopooed annexalim&#13;
~~•n. lie said, " Parkside&#13;
~t Inc. petllioned U!e&#13;
•Pof Somers for building&#13;
~•ti to buUd apartments&#13;
· The town said the zoning&#13;
::.'"'P'Of)er so the developers lo th• tounty board, to gtt&#13;
i&#13;
L&#13;
-PARKS I DE UNIVERSITY -&#13;
. ',---- ., ~.&#13;
I I&#13;
--..J I n) /&#13;
\'\===::1!1======;:=-=~ :=--.... ' "fflll!,1'11fG / / ', • I :,&#13;
" :,&#13;
I&#13;
1&#13;
,...L .. - ..... , ·~· l&#13;
C I T)'.&#13;
.-&#13;
o,:&#13;
. - . . · ...&#13;
•&#13;
4 I -· r.tn•&#13;
·:&#13;
.•&#13;
..&#13;
• I, .. ~ ,t:;·· .&#13;
-I -· _,;,;_&#13;
'.'"· ~.: ~'-.'~:.J._.:.;:~--:A:·..::n!·:!= ..=·L!:·~·~&#13;
PropoSed Annt Xatlon.. Robert Kollta• city planner hase-o.&#13;
-'"ei.1601 pr, 'r Vlr , musk&#13;
0.JTtll 1-lu 10 """"-tor&#13;
11w l1tttat\n' ,.,-wkJ.h( p 111,ffl&#13;
l't\·ol\'earou.nd tht tMrru•, • Tbt&#13;
Ball~ ol tht, C:.f', ... \"a.rba&#13;
lorms o1 ,ittatw, ltaluring&#13;
that ll&gt;Pmt •Ill bo d&lt;KUSINS .-,th filf'ld lrlpa 1dwdulfd lO a&#13;
JUfflfflfT IIO&lt;'k lht•ltr&#13;
pn:Gl('tK111 and a pnwnc.tian&#13;
of ~tr} nad1n1,1 J1mt1&#13;
Dtan a'ISl&gt;,.nl pn,,....., d&#13;
i,;,ctJSh, b .-..i nalor&#13;
°Mw' art , orb.hop ._ I II lnfkklt&#13;
t«turff Ind d~. • 1th&#13;
opportunit) (o.- studio "'°"- 1n&#13;
cenm1cs 1.nd sculph.1~ f'"lf'Jd&#13;
lMJ» will ~ lakf'fl 10 1hr&#13;
M1l-.1UkN Art Cf'ftlt'1" and Ur&#13;
Chicago ,\rt ln1111u1ir F.r1t·&#13;
F'on-csl. l!St'l('fllf PfO{HS« ol&#13;
ar1 b coord1n11or&#13;
Su.mmf'I" 1n&amp;titutt, for hipi&#13;
Khool &amp;tudmu 1Jso ire- tldn~&#13;
hPkt tn ~ and &lt;"Offl?Jlitn&#13;
For m&lt;re lftfonnatloo rontaC't&#13;
Charlrs Kuge-1 lnshtutn&#13;
C'OOrdl.Nllnr, at l'\\ P.trksidr&#13;
11 re~ 'nw-n I.Jw-y wnal to&#13;
tht '""" boord for approval d&#13;
tht pro)&lt;d TM board cannot&#13;
appn)\'e 1t unJn.1, tbt~ att&#13;
adequate means for .-.er and&#13;
Yi:'ater ur ... •1ces," he em • phas11ed •·So unbd.nov.n to lhP&#13;
oty. the .,..._tloptta n,gohattd&#13;
'Allh ~ Ul'lil\:tt'51l) and lhf,y&#13;
ha\e an l&amp;J'tt~t v.ith thr&#13;
U111\"ft'Slt)' v,Mff tht: Unl\~nlly&#13;
grantfd lhem an eaumf"tlt&#13;
across un \"ef'Sll)' proptrty to&#13;
UlC ~"' ma,n U11 the- prvpirr1y&#13;
to permit limn !O h"oll up to lhP&#13;
uni,tt1.1ty M-wtr J) tle-m •&#13;
But Uwno, WH a htllf" hllch&#13;
~ u1d • 11w, un1,-crsit) bu no&#13;
authority to ~rant thas ptt&#13;
m.J.SS.lon btca,..m,,e lhas iJ a ~ t•r&#13;
brr that ts CM'ntd by lhr f"ih&#13;
and ll as coc,lrar)· lo UK" ell)&#13;
ordmanc't' and t'a against lhr&#13;
1tatlf" la" Ind f\•ttyUdnc lf'lMkittat.att&#13;
d l!htS a11ua1ion lhtcuy&#13;
finally gol draY.n ,nto lhis&#13;
thUllg ••&#13;
It - I.ht ffiBJOf pn,)&lt;'(1 (:Cl')C'('rninc munJC1pal l&lt;'T\ rn&#13;
roaa.u on thP """" ft' Juw Thr&#13;
36-,mch. tnl\k b.ne ii et1matt'd&#13;
to eot,t $1,500.0QO Tbffr b •&#13;
p&lt;&gt;S$1bihly U,.t IO por Cffll ol tl&gt;P&#13;
&lt;'al ffll) be sub&amp;1dn«t b)&#13;
fir-den I ~rant.I, bul thtrem11nuiat0&#13;
pe-r cent s...».cm•&#13;
-.oukl ha\t to bt madt ~,p b) _,.. Kobtadl txpla,nod, -n..&#13;
1Jru\:ttS1l) btln1 O'W' pnnc,paJ&#13;
...r, .tllluld pay ,,. P"'IJlll'&#13;
honalt lhatt Ind lbt) "f'N'&#13;
mort than .. nhnc to do u,..&#13;
Thllt "oulll amount ot S II . l&gt;,O&#13;
per yrar c,,,n- 1 17 )~ar ~r1od&#13;
TM ~ma nd..- o1 the C&lt;lal.&#13;
$21,000 per )'Nr, ~ould bl,-e to&#13;
be p,&lt;,kNI up by U.. t"'"nsl&gt;P ol&#13;
SomPn 11nd lhttr budget&#13;
v.oukln'l permit IL••&#13;
Hr admits 1.1\at toml! ,ncquit)&#13;
may Ul$t' d and •ben U.. an&#13;
nt,r;allon II f1nabttd. but et.&#13;
~ upt1m1-sm that in tht&#13;
long run 110 propert~ o,. nr,r&#13;
-.ould 11.ctually take I h1111ncl1l&#13;
loH He mentioned that&#13;
prope:rty \IIIUH haH•&#13;
sltyrock, .... u a rsill of the&#13;
locauon ol th&lt; Un1v&lt;r11ty and&#13;
that bes1del r11"u• the values&#13;
o/ lJ,e land lhf In tffal ol&#13;
pnva~ dtvtloptn an the 1ree LI&#13;
expec~ .. bnna }Ol,o and •&#13;
broader tax base to lht aty&#13;
Ho doesn't txpect • ceneral&#13;
IDC:reHe ln property ~XN IS I&#13;
result of the annexabon bttaUR:&#13;
the pnvat, developera "°"Id&#13;
make up most ol the d1rtttenCtfo,&#13;
paymelll ol ll&gt;P SOl'Vlt .. 11\at&#13;
the oty would prov1dt The&#13;
basic ca use of I nequ 11 y seems to&#13;
anso lrom the dol[onnc&lt; bot•&#13;
ween the Somers t1x&#13;
asso.smentol property and 11\at&#13;
ol Kenooha, but 1n mum !or a&#13;
higher rate of asseument the&#13;
property owner would also&#13;
receive additional H:rv1ces&#13;
,.-tuch the- township does not&#13;
proYlde. &#13;
NE\l'SCOPE&#13;
··Racing and hunting cause c:ine's mmd tobe&#13;
mad ·· - Lao-Tzu&#13;
One of the comments the American pmg•&#13;
po~ pla)el'S 'NhO VlSlted Red China kepl&#13;
repealmg was that the food was excellt:nl Even&#13;
though American dishes were offered, many&#13;
enjoyed the native cuisine&#13;
JUI) &amp;, 1911&#13;
slig)ttly higher. My dinoer was excellent. Rarely can I leave&#13;
8 restaurant as satisfied as 1 do when I ate at th.is&#13;
Chinese restaurant. Much or !his has to do with&#13;
the fact that Chinese food, m general, seems&#13;
more compatible with my stomach. Arter an&#13;
Italian meal t sometimes feel like sleeping for a&#13;
few days, and other ~tiona• dishes ha~e ~lated&#13;
effects. Although Chinese lood doesn I stick to&#13;
the ribS. so to speak, it saUsfys my fetlings of&#13;
hunger.&#13;
For those ol us not skllJed in table ttnnis, we&#13;
are left toenjoyChmesc rood a Lour favonte local&#13;
Chinese restaurant In Kenosha. the choice or&#13;
(I\TOnte Chinese restaurants involves eatin8, in&#13;
lhe Oriental Chop Suey R&lt;Stauranl at 5000 • 6th&#13;
Avenue. or not eating u Chinese meel in&#13;
Kenosha. t.ince it 1s the only such rest.aurant&#13;
w1thln the oty limit£&#13;
With ttus obv100s monopoly. It would seem&#13;
I.Ml the thing for me to do would be 10 take&#13;
htttary sw~ at lhis un•Amencan advantage. I&#13;
rMd somewhere monpolo.es are not tolerated in&#13;
this country&#13;
Tearing aparl this cabng place would be&#13;
hard for me because I tota.Uy enjoyed eatmg&#13;
thf."re There are a rew naws lbat immediately&#13;
stnke the We5tern "gourmet", but after an&#13;
exptanahon or two everything equals oul&#13;
by P•ul t..omar1lreof the NewscopesU1ff&#13;
Maggie and tale here on a night that wasn't&#13;
too busy We ate our meal slowly and found I.hat&#13;
it look a little over an hour. l ordered a complete&#13;
dinner of shrimp roo yong. A complete dinner&#13;
costs 75 cents more than a regular dinner. but&#13;
you get soup ( our chCQ.Sc wns c:hicktn noodle or&#13;
rice&gt;. an egg roU or egg roo yong, and de$SCrt (a&#13;
choice or vanilla .ce c:-eam or sherbet, a fortune&#13;
or almond cookie, AU tltis and a small pol or tea.&#13;
My meal came to$3.06 ctheshrirnp foo yong was&#13;
S2 00)&#13;
Magg1e ordtrcd a complete dinner of brown&#13;
chop suey, which Is chop ,uey with pork, that&#13;
c05t Sl.85. She ordered Pepsi no ounce ser·&#13;
vlng&gt; which cost 30 cents. So the two of us ale&#13;
(.'Omplele dinners for a little over six doJlars.&#13;
Maggie didn't like her brown chop suey too&#13;
mUCh. because there was too much celery in il&#13;
All the other aspects or the meal agreoo with her&#13;
but the celeey wasn' t appealing. (In the pasts~&#13;
bas ordered beef chop suey and enjoyed it very&#13;
much.) Realizing that this restaurant is a little oll&#13;
my ~ten path, I still felt that I should&#13;
recommend this restaura.nl for students on&#13;
dates. I hear people still go on thooe sort of&#13;
ve11t.ures. Many indJvitluals. don't agree with me&#13;
because they don't Jike any meal that isn't&#13;
·•meat ·and potatoes". Their eating haven l$ a&#13;
restaurant adjacent to the Kansas City&#13;
stockyards, and I $ce nothing wrong wilh that.&#13;
Bui for a fine Chinese dinner prepared by&#13;
individuals who seem to know what they are&#13;
doing, this is the place. lf this isn't an authentic&#13;
enough Chinese meal Cc&gt;r the money, I can only&#13;
suggest be-Coming an expert on throwing darts&#13;
playing croquet, or becoming good in any&#13;
p-ospective $port that might qualily for&#13;
dipl&lt;&gt;matiC" t'irc.lcs between Lhis country and Red&#13;
China. Myself. I've been practicing like eraty at&#13;
Chinese checkers. just in case my state depart•&#13;
ment needs me.&#13;
The complaint I had most often heard about&#13;
lh1s pla~"e 1s that tM)' are slow You ha\·e to wait&#13;
too long for your meaJ. For these people I have&#13;
.. tarCNI Uus column with an apt proverb. To be&#13;
h«&gt;rK'sl. t\·en I have compl:::uned a rew times,&#13;
Wllll I rcahied that every meal here ,s begun&#13;
from ,.cratch, "v"n lhe r1cc. There is no steam&#13;
table to ,~en lhc qu;)lit) or the food, and speed&#13;
up the service ll takes lime because time 1s&#13;
oc(.'(lt.-d to prepare the food. Ju:i.l like m someone's&#13;
kitchen at horr~.&#13;
At first this strikes one as a Jot of money to&#13;
spend on a meal. but it really isn't. When you&#13;
consider the volume o.f each serviog, the ,•aricty&#13;
of items that comprise the meal, and the quality,&#13;
you begln to thmk 1t's quite a bargain. Prices at&#13;
other Chi1lese restaurants in lhe area tend to be&#13;
r-or in any LIVING thing&#13;
TllF. ANOROM•:DASTRAIN&#13;
Or Jeremy Stone Arthur Hill&#13;
Or Charles Dutton David&#13;
Wayne&#13;
James01son&#13;
Kate Reid&#13;
Poul• Kelly&#13;
George Mitchell&#13;
Dr Mark Hall&#13;
Or Ruth Leavitt&#13;
Konen Anson&#13;
Jack:son&#13;
One or the more pleasant&#13;
mcmones lhal many or us can&#13;
recall from the earlier days of&#13;
TV were those of the Science&#13;
P1cuon thriller, 1-llr a rew&#13;
moments ll.'t .. ere t,,eld m 1hc&#13;
han~ of fate a.s the cntirie world&#13;
nearly succumbed to some ahen&#13;
beast from Alpha Ccntauri,&#13;
Gr,:-al mouth~opening scenes that bctr1,1.yed Korn Kurls&#13;
belll.een our leelh were not&#13;
uncommon as our r112ing&#13;
glasses or Coke ended up rn our&#13;
laps and the fiend sunk his&#13;
teeth devour~ bi$ guest.&#13;
1rampled the city or just burned&#13;
his way out ot town. With ,ome&#13;
sadness then we all bid thcxse&#13;
days or the great Science&#13;
Fiction thriller a tender&#13;
goodb)•e . but . . alas. my&#13;
p.1rano1d patriots .•. Not all is&#13;
10:SI 1&#13;
As though fN)m the murky&#13;
depths of the black lagoon&#13;
anothrr slimy monster makes&#13;
lus way toward yoo, not unlike&#13;
former O,:-shy friend$. The same&#13;
technique or abstracting from&#13;
existing dangers again Is dusted&#13;
otr and Jl'Jl back to us•. In the old days il used to be&#13;
the atomic bomb that spurn&gt;d&#13;
the monster back inlo hfe or the&#13;
eleclroi.tahc shock brouthl&#13;
forth from the heavens that put&#13;
the hle blood into tbe creature.&#13;
but now the eXJsting condition is&#13;
•brought from space m the rorm&#13;
cl micre&gt;-organlsms much like&#13;
those feared to contaminate tM&#13;
homecoming astronauts.&#13;
ln the film "The Andr&lt;amcda&#13;
Strain", we are confronted with&#13;
a ,overnmcot pl"Oj@cl called&#13;
'Wildfire' Lhat has the&#13;
monumental task of identifying&#13;
and destroy1ng an organism&#13;
that defies identification and&#13;
destNClion. Encompassing the&#13;
new danger brought from space&#13;
via satellite is a musive&#13;
bcehh•e Q{ sterility with all the&#13;
neces."wlry apparatus to do the&#13;
job The apparatus and the&#13;
photography are really quite&#13;
good, hint.ing that som~e had&#13;
qutte a set consuvctJon bill.&#13;
The satellite and ,ts&#13;
passengers ran directly on the&#13;
!.mall town of Piedmont where&#13;
everyone except an old man&#13;
v.ho has a taste ror sterno and a&#13;
smalJ baby who pre.rcrs milk,&#13;
dies from the unknown disease.&#13;
Or. Jeremy Slone &lt;Arthur Htlll&#13;
and Or. Mark Hall (James&#13;
Olsen&gt; go searching through the remams or the sm,a;II satellite&#13;
and for evitl~ne-e as t6 hOw the&#13;
townspeople died. Throoghout&#13;
this search split screen and&#13;
multiple image techniques are&#13;
used to the audience's ad.&#13;
vantage l or disadvantage&gt;,&#13;
showing the various p05itians&#13;
and situations that the unex•&#13;
peeling have assumed in death.&#13;
The mm goes underground as we follow the operation into the&#13;
'Wildfire' }Qboratories, an&#13;
earthbound operation&#13;
surrowided by Mllid rock. Stone,&#13;
Hall and No·o other scie:ntists&#13;
begin work and the i.ec!lnical&#13;
jargon begins. Terms like&#13;
spectometry. vector analysis,&#13;
and Zen&lt;an impressed this&#13;
reviewer. but don't ask him&#13;
what the de·ril they mean. The&#13;
enllre seUi~ is quite realistic&#13;
and vef'y reminiscent of the&#13;
previously mentioned moon&#13;
rock precautions. The&#13;
educational value is readily&#13;
seen if not glorified some\1,1hat.&#13;
Some character conflict iS&#13;
encountered between the three&#13;
straight scientists and the&#13;
single surgeon, who is the&#13;
ctosesl thing we have to a hero&#13;
1n this sterne environment. He&#13;
is gi\!en the only key that can&#13;
st.op the aut(lmatic self destruct&#13;
mechaol:-;m that goes oU in ca&amp;e&#13;
or contamh1alion because he is&#13;
the •odd man'; a term&#13;
describing a single, maJe&#13;
subject who, through stalh;lical&#13;
analysis, \\oOuJd make the best&#13;
decision under those cir•&#13;
cumstances. Eventualty this&#13;
thing doe• go orr but total&#13;
contaminaHon of the entire&#13;
·Project Wildfire' is impossible&#13;
so he is given the task of&#13;
reachlng the abort keyhole in&#13;
five mlnut~s ... a successfully&#13;
h&amp;ir-raising battle with lasers&#13;
and gas follows. Somehow' OU.r&#13;
hero makes It and aborts the&#13;
destruc.tioo of the place and&#13;
comrades in.side.&#13;
To avoid spoiling the story,&#13;
the end wLll have to wait until&#13;
the rtade-r get:5 a chance to see&#13;
the mm. While it certainly Is not&#13;
the best picture this revlev.·er&#13;
has seen so far this ye:ar, it still&#13;
carries 3 rath~r high recom-&#13;
~endatio.n. because it's always ruce to vLstt an old (riend.&#13;
Wllllam Sorensen&#13;
"Tile old labels, Jazz-rock&#13;
and Lhe like, are gone, repJaced&#13;
hy the simple, straight-forward&#13;
ideas o( making music . . , how&#13;
can any other description be&#13;
adequa~e?", Don Heckman in&#13;
Liner note. on BS&amp;T IV&#13;
Finally, arter a three )'ear&#13;
stretch in a musical limbo&#13;
brought on as a result or a&#13;
coUeetive case of "capo&#13;
grandus", BS&amp;T have dcdded&#13;
to admit their humanity and&#13;
give us more or the music they&#13;
promised when they rcJcased&#13;
"Child Is Father To Tbe Man".&#13;
They apparenUy had 1001&#13;
sight of the ract that II&gt;• rock&#13;
influence was just as appealing,&#13;
and in its own way, sv.,mg just&#13;
as hard. They've also abandoned&#13;
their attempts to In•&#13;
tellectua1fae their mus:ic to tht&#13;
po:lnt where they become&#13;
sterile. You won't hear any ume&#13;
rows or overly structured&#13;
arrangements..&#13;
fhe music is honest and&#13;
sitteere.&#13;
Possibly, the slight pe.......el&#13;
change had S&lt;&gt;meting lo do wilh&#13;
their metamorphosis. Jerry&#13;
Hyman was Ji.fled ror Da,'t&#13;
Blood, Sweat and TearS IV&#13;
Colu,ubia KC :,esoo&#13;
By Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope.Stafr&#13;
If successive LP's follow any&#13;
kind o( pattern and considering&#13;
-the fact that in my opinion their&#13;
first was great, their second&#13;
disappointing, and their third&#13;
di.sgwting. you can understand&#13;
why l was Jess than anxious lo&#13;
pay good money for their&#13;
fourth. It might suffice to say&#13;
~t I was very happily surpn.sed.&#13;
&#13;
First of all, they've given up&#13;
the two things that hurl their&#13;
elforl$ most on I.he last two&#13;
albums. They no longer try to&#13;
swing by molding themselves&#13;
into a small Count Basie. While&#13;
it's true that their jut. was&#13;
alwa)'sa very attrac.llve aspect&#13;
the abundanoo of it left the,,;&#13;
with few published examples ol&#13;
the great rock-based things that&#13;
Kooper showed them how to&#13;
play.&#13;
Bargaron, who proves to be 111&#13;
ama1Jng bitch on trombolle. oml&#13;
the addition of 000 H~&#13;
cclarine~ bass clarinet&gt;&#13;
Mlcltael Smith (co~061 '"'&#13;
lributed some m,.IY sol06•&#13;
Finally, I try not lo niakt:.&#13;
habit of reviewing tti.e 1&#13;
11 d,vldual songs, but• ,..,.,-::.,&#13;
this album wooldo'l_ be ,,&#13;
plele wiU,Out m,ntionillll..,&#13;
least one. Cl ... your "'°wll1"&#13;
listen to "Mama Of. . ilJld (slow, raunchy, ,x,_ roc.kl. When you open ,.;,,p,'11&#13;
you'll !ind yourself all cJu1&gt;&#13;
table at the smo_ke•r&#13;
•&#13;
1&#13;
t doil•&#13;
Chi-Chi, watch&gt;DS ~' ~ Maud's Jaybird ,ewe, 10,.;,.,&#13;
grasp for a dtflll' re ..... br.us:ie-t'P. while saiome&#13;
tbe ..-,enlh veil. .....&#13;
The album ii .,.,..,&#13;
worth the price. &#13;
Jul.&gt;•· a,n&#13;
by Marc Eben&#13;
of the News.cope:ataff&#13;
1be wandering troubadour Jives.&#13;
Except now he travels &lt;and lives) in a&#13;
1,attered Checker Mara then, singing his&#13;
songs to those who wlll Usten, carrying&#13;
yovet:nent l'l&lt;M'S Crom one outpost to&#13;
,not.her like an cvangellst riding his&#13;
circuit, and hoping all ~e: time tc, get&#13;
enc,.igh g;,gs to keep goang.&#13;
rerence in Milwauk&#13;
week and had ee ear)icr in the&#13;
playing and eas:::f'ped here •• hope of&#13;
such luck. He tried ~i'::,:'':;";;,- No&#13;
:!Jominican College he me.° s~~e&#13;
han~ple, but still came up °"'pt)··&#13;
flrtlew Yont .. ntten all over him Sli_JJJI m &amp;'I He bt-l.1eve11trongly n IIOIIMitanig 1&#13;
budd. "-llh long black ba1t and a kq fraend once t.okl him. •·nw.-t-•a oo rfl.l&#13;
run board. be looks unprewmpt,w. alternate rul~ n~pt bard -.on&#13;
SomNl!M to be linottd. )'OU lh1nlc Ht- 11 cornm1ttN1 10 Uw- !l.tm'f'fflffll&#13;
He's • folk&lt;mger He's bo&lt;n on the and ._ his 11\UIIO 111111 to lllo od&#13;
roed Hite this ror nff.rl) two ,ea.n VJ,ncflrlt-nt ol ~• Ht rir:,«ts the Idea&#13;
Tra\'eling ...,,Oun a tr~g,lt: marked by that ht- 1s et.her a.at to furt.brr hlS&#13;
solivesTedWarmbrand. The present&#13;
day troubadour refu5"5 to die.&#13;
He was at Piu·kside last wee:k.. He had&#13;
attended the May Day Tribe ConT~cn&#13;
be talked to the people 01 the&#13;
~; f.e 0&#13;
f:~-~er1ca c'1ub in Rndne.&#13;
he •= g,g. He played and then&#13;
_was on his way. To Katl.58s City he&#13;
su,a1d. There would be othtt stops aJ~no&#13;
e way. ·•&#13;
Upstate Ntw vcn, Wtih.l.n.g1on. D.C.. mu&amp;1t-. or- t:M to furthtt 1-flf fflOl.~mmt.&#13;
•nd Iowa. and &amp;toppmg at as many ··1th1nktt·1afa1R&lt;S1C'Otcmy ,oucan1&#13;
coll'lff u pou1ble. t ffe calla it davtdt- the ,.._o ol them • "cam""" hopping•• I P,op~ are twc:omlng apau,.tJc and&#13;
Berore this. he chd tmdff'CJ'aduatt- Arf' tuma..ng lmurd.. ht fH-ls tltr think.I&#13;
wort in drama and ~ommunicahou at the)· IN' ~h-n u lnap&amp;ble ot Who is he? He's • !Nak and he has Syrao.i~ Uru,·ers.1ty He '4fflt on rnm ~attng to lM -.orLd arrund lhm1 llt&#13;
Dlnld Ellsberg, supposedly&#13;
•bclAtted by hi$ con5ctenc;e,&#13;
iltaded lo become a link bel•&#13;
Wftll the people and govern•&#13;
mtnt He alJcgcdly leaked&#13;
ll'tl'et documents on the Viet&#13;
Ham_ war policy from previous&#13;
ldoun1Strations to The New&#13;
Yori! 'llmes. Tlm Cullen also&#13;
.,.ided I&lt;! become a link bel·&#13;
ween&#13;
_,&#13;
the people and govern•&#13;
'l"im C\JtJen comes to Kenosha&#13;
uually two Wednesdays a&#13;
Ted Warmbrand.&#13;
serving in other than go·,emrnenUII&#13;
ugenci~. The c.:,.mJ)\l&amp;&#13;
at Berkeley has a professor&#13;
serving as one. and a prison in&#13;
Oregon has a prisoner who is a&#13;
go-between between the&#13;
prisoners and the warden.&#13;
Congressman Aspin's ombudsman&#13;
comes from&#13;
Janesville., where he held a&#13;
similar p0sitlon bet"'een the&#13;
City Council and the prople.&#13;
Tim Cullen worked for Les&#13;
Aspln throughout his campaign&#13;
for Congress, and after hts&#13;
Working Class H ero:&#13;
Tim Culkn,&#13;
Ombudsman&#13;
By P aul Loma tire of&#13;
The NeWJcope Staff&#13;
:-:".th• as Congressrnan Les&#13;
~ 1 ombudsman . Tim&#13;
"'1.. Is the valuable link&#13;
lit """ the C&lt;&gt;ngressman and r.-.i P&lt;ople who comprise tile&#13;
Oln D1$tricl.&#13;
let&#13;
~&#13;
budisman is a Swedish&#13;
Which means a&#13;
1'ie fi tative or a liaison man.&#13;
~lttl ombudsman was in&#13;
~ in 1809, and now au&#13;
llnieo vian . countries havt&#13;
"ill&gt;&#13;
~ "' "'"""8 this function&#13;
&amp;Overmient. Even New&#13;
!Jlt,., and Australia use tre&#13;
.... · In the United Stato,&#13;
are a few ombudsm~&#13;
victory Aspin asked Cullen to&#13;
hold the lull time position ••&#13;
ombudsman.&#13;
Striking a vein or honesty as 1&#13;
began the interview with him,&#13;
he said, "It's just kind or a fact&#13;
cl life that a Congressman has&#13;
more puU when he cont.sets a&#13;
federal agency Ulan you and I&#13;
have as individual&amp;."&#13;
With this realistic approach.&#13;
Tim CUiien comes to the lobby&#13;
of the main Pest Olfice down•&#13;
town in Kenrw..ha about twice a month, set$ up a card table, a&#13;
name plate, and earnestl_y&#13;
listens to Kenoshans and the.r ..&#13;
the.-. lo the PILO procnm at lhe v,,hemNtll) .-.,..ta this "Thtt&lt;-'• a lol&#13;
Unl\en1ly of fll,nou Follo,.;,. tJus he of v. orlt to he cl-. and mmt ltido - t&#13;
taught communications ror Uvtt ye.n knov. ~ to ~~ 10 11&#13;
at lht University ol J&lt;14·a To thf, pt'rWM \&amp;.1,o U)I Iha&amp; Ow, onl)'&#13;
But he nt'\'er boa.shed ht.s master's thuc that c-ounb Is mus&lt; M ans,rn&#13;
lheslS, and art..- bolJ1l told he v.owd II. - INt t:,·,nthnc ~OU do .. havt to l"tVIH ll one mort' htnf'. ht conn«1f:d to ~ v.~d arc:a.,nd \OU&#13;
~ldl'd he would bum around lo, a lndn""1al ll1111i5 don I rn,an &amp;n) Un,C&#13;
yeu and then teadt the following) ear unliea lhe) ·re related to a 1.,-J:('r ordc-r&#13;
He had concluded that v.o&lt;I&lt; on theis of lh,np&#13;
was "a sterile exttt"ise•• He nhtt has He rt)l'.'Cta the idf9 thll 1,r111p tnfort&#13;
m.adt it back to teachmg He txplauled nttuunl) 1ubordin11es thf' 1n&#13;
it•~ ''A piece of ,tut J.S a patte ol slut dai" 1du.l I The W andering Troubadour I&#13;
Wort.1ngon1llom.ake1tapttftttp1ttt \\htn •--k~ '. ht' v.ould ('l.)',t nuto&#13;
of slut ,a abeurd H doarc 'Wml tw- hu donie 1n the, paa1 . hr&#13;
Ht Utd that he reahzed that thtrf' MW-.-ettd You pt t.o t don·t thira&#13;
was £rict1on bthl.:N!'l hunself and an\:bod\1nthtmo,tfflffl1,u111.~togJ\~&#13;
un,wrshy htc He knt'A he"'" dotng up. ua:f tti.- sa~ln.&amp;. ·KN'p on !kt"f'Pu~&#13;
v.«t that he t:nJOY~. s.o the 5CIW'tt or on' • He bf'lif'\.ta tt•t \\ r mUtt \ttp&#13;
lbt prob~m c.-ould not be ham..'tlf our nuncb to at Wt&gt; nttd o,e c.-oufai.l" co&#13;
Obv,ousl:) tbt problem •N in the &amp;n- confront "hat b bad&#13;
sbtubon.&#13;
He went on the road and began&#13;
sinl&gt;ng professionally He found he&#13;
could support himself&#13;
The currt&gt;nl under&amp;round cllC'h&#13;
phrue • Su:1'1,•I through M'l"'K'I 10&#13;
the people," , u.,.. up lu phlloouph)I&#13;
HIS music he descnbed simpl) as&#13;
··good oongs. Singable - · I '-•· He refuses to ha ... e them cop)-..Titcd. ore\'en&#13;
wnllcn do....,·n. He sa)'S the form of&#13;
them ts ton.Stantly evol\'ing.&#13;
W&amp;.rmbrand has bft..- on lhc road no-c&#13;
for nrarl) two )t'l.n and M'• 1tm&#13;
scratching for f'I\ON') a..t his c-ar ts 1n&#13;
the C"Ond1hOn 1t b . )'it-\ ht-'• op• m.tstk&#13;
and M still bd C,,t'S tn I~ mou·mmt&#13;
Lnstn.unents he play$ m~tudt- 12&#13;
strmg guitar. auto harp, banjo and&#13;
recorder. Wann.brand says he pe-rlorms rai.rl)&#13;
comtantly Though he adm11A be ma)&#13;
go th.rough a couple ol -."ttk~ without a&#13;
Ht 1r1 ... ,b. •loaw. and U)'1, about his&#13;
ltfe-calberoad. "'1 maloneallrtght bul&#13;
I don'L ~r m)idf .apart rrom&#13;
Olh•rs Propk- ask mo I I ~•I lon,ly&#13;
o-a,ehng by myself task thrm ln turn&#13;
d' l.M) 're- not IOOf'ly "'ht''" they re et •&#13;
problems He .sees that each&#13;
per-son has an equal cont.act&#13;
with the Froeral agericies that&#13;
serve lhem.&#13;
His job is to wri le a report on&#13;
each individual problem and gel&#13;
in touch with the Corcressman&#13;
or his staff. "When he 11..6&#13;
Aspin) comes back to the&#13;
distnct, I generally try I&lt;! •pend&#13;
a day or so with tam e\'ff)'&#13;
c-ouple: of weeks," CUilen said.&#13;
"He and I can talk about some&#13;
or the C"&amp;st$ I've been dealin&amp;&#13;
wilh eod be ean g.ive me some&#13;
Conc~man ti.till finck tune ~o&#13;
work on 1nd.1"td.&amp;al probl,ems&#13;
from the Fu-st Dis-tnct&#13;
Commenting on th•• 1n&#13;
,-olvement. run Cullen s1ud.&#13;
'Tm surpnR&lt;! at the amount of&#13;
bme he has sptff on theM' 1n--&#13;
di,·1dual ca.!4!':I '&#13;
When Henr) Schadeberg&#13;
ter'Ved the Fine OaJ.lnct 1n&#13;
Coo3r,ss. he UP&lt;! the ··c•I&gt;&#13;
secretar)" 5)1Slftn to kffp up&#13;
wilh problems of his con~&#13;
sliluenh, 1-hnv other&#13;
Mr. Tim CuJl~n. LH Asptn's Ombudsman.&#13;
suggestions as to how to better&#13;
handlt thf&gt;m from my enc1.·· be&#13;
ooricluded.&#13;
For quite awhile. Con.grel,$"&#13;
man Aspin has been wrestlin,g&#13;
wjth the defense budge~ as a&#13;
member of the Armlld ServieeS&#13;
Committee. He is working on&#13;
percentaae cuts &gt;n lbe budget,&#13;
and '"'orking toward a&#13;
&amp;ystematic control of that&#13;
budget He is also s,tting up •&#13;
Lake Pollution Conference at&#13;
the KTJ campus in Elkhorn on&#13;
August 13th. With tirne at an&#13;
obvious minimum. the&#13;
Cong,-e$$men utihu ~ same&#13;
system.&#13;
·•The problem ,uth th1J&#13;
system i$ the pt'OPle from the&#13;
smaller eommun.lUes have no&#13;
one to go to w,thout tra,·ehng a distance;· Ttm CUlltti potnled&#13;
ouL A$ ombudsman. he tra,-els&#13;
to each commu111ty and meel.5&#13;
..-,th the pe&lt;lple He relys on&#13;
nobeff ,n local pa~ he said,&#13;
and so far Kenosha has been tho&#13;
best city 1n the dtstnct as rar as.&#13;
public respons,, llas been.&#13;
Speak,ng or ,.,. ~ the u,-&#13;
d,vidual proh- he &lt;On1ft&#13;
into f;'Oftla&lt;"l • th_ Tim C'ulk-n&#13;
mrnUont'd 10C1al lf'C'ur11y&#13;
\\-bPn thf ttpOrt JtOH to lhft&#13;
AJ.pin o{htt 1n \\Mbln(1on,&#13;
DC . lM CorcNSSman l'fll ID&#13;
1-'1 "'th tlr Fedoul Soci,,I&#13;
Sttunt) offitt and th,n ho&#13;
mu.all)' 1.N..,ert by mid lhr&#13;
1ndt\ ldual •-hi&gt; loot hts probltm&#13;
to \1 r &lt;"llllffl&#13;
·Dunng a tame v.hNI mtf\)'&#13;
ad\'ocale- rtlurn1na Uie&#13;
l')\'t"fflfflf'f\l to thir- pt'Qpl&lt;- and&#13;
d t1Ybh5l11nc mott r,ncnal&#13;
aint.l&lt;·h v.1th JO\ttnmrnl ot&#13;
fic,ab I thou,chl that ll..- •hokKlet&#13;
al an omhud1m11n •• a&#13;
S(f'S) II\°"' nghC d,n,rti«I .-hal,t,&#13;
•ociurc ,.,1bln UaC' ayslr.m ·•&#13;
1 Nk&lt;d \Ir 0.11"' II he&#13;
lhoucht thf' eenf'ral pubhc&#13;
would lc»e rn,;Pf(:t for tht1r&#13;
ito,~rnm,nt artitr r~ad1n1 lht!&#13;
paper• l::ll~ra: supposrdl)&#13;
lnkNI.&#13;
·•Pe,_..lly I think tho poopte&#13;
have I n&amp;ht to kl'M1'4 I think&#13;
tho,e p•pers trt bu.1cally&#13;
hi'\tory and "'' ha"e a rt&amp;ht to&#13;
t:nc,....,. I th,,. that that 1n&#13;
format.ion lS h11lor) .. he N•d&#13;
.. 1 th, nk the people a re a I,~&#13;
smarttT tha.n the pohlla•n.&#13;
IP'" them crecbt lot I think the&#13;
people can htndlt: the ,n,&#13;
formtbon and that the) ,houtd&#13;
get all !NI the)- can." he concluded&#13;
&#13;
Tim Cullen conhooaUy used&#13;
the v,.'Qrd ''v.'f'' •hen he spoke of&#13;
The people in aeneral • ....,h1ch&#13;
slNCk me as a Ytry \'aluahle&#13;
ch.a.r1ctfflsbe ol ht$ approach&#13;
to ht£ ,ob. With thts. altitude&#13;
toward hi, v.-ork and the people.&#13;
I thank lh1.s makes him an ex&#13;
ce-llen\ '""orcing clas.s h(&gt;r0' &#13;
!lo E\\SC'OPE Jutyti, 191'1&#13;
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4:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.&#13;
For Finl T wo Wu.ks of Class&#13;
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SIXTH&#13;
ot&#13;
WISCONSIN&#13;
S·- 1 k&#13;
Ike and Tina Turn er Review&#13;
By Mike Sle\.'esand nasties · J mes Brown gym ' S14•eet sad music, 3 f I Otis phrasings,&#13;
rhythm_ and blues, m~s~~rh~ve it, man - Ike&#13;
screaming fun, - you . . Jay hard-on music.&#13;
and T1!1'3 Turner P th hot and eager crowd at&#13;
Fnday, Juoe 25 ' 8 t vicariausly&#13;
the Milwaukee A~~ ~:.e;{;~e~ into sutr&#13;
debased ard oxa ed b strobe-light&#13;
mission, c:osmicalJr tefrustr~~s aid ultimately and smok~bomb m rrup ' l le t . fed beyond fantasy by the fastest, see es J&#13;
sat1.s '1 hol damn- m05t accommodating cat• sex1es - . woman in al of rock music. . . h&#13;
The Ike and Tina Turner Review JS one oft~ = i . 1 acts to be perceived as rock music, a ::SOI\$ for this ore an intrinsic pai:t o~ thcl~&#13;
success John Mayall once char~ctcrIZe ~&#13;
music a~ "aD showmanship .. , and, although ~s&#13;
was typically purist of him, he made a ·,alid&#13;
point .. I ~ul music has always been C?mmerc1a •&#13;
from the earliest James Brown Revtew,. all the&#13;
boys in beret-shaped conks, to Sly al1d. lhe&#13;
.Family Stone; all polish~, stylized&#13;
choreography; lhe nasb is the thing: T?e result&#13;
is total accel:Sibility; all you gotta do is hsten and&#13;
you can' t miss the mes.sage.&#13;
Black acdiem..'es have never had an_y trouble&#13;
with this, especialJy since the message is usJaJ.!Y&#13;
black pride, all the things _blacks are besl at, 1~&#13;
funky splendor. White audiences, however, cant&#13;
Identify with the philosophy as completely, and&#13;
insist on examining the medium for the com·&#13;
pJexities and ironies that white music has t.s.~ht&#13;
them to expect, and which simply don'_t ~XJ~l&#13;
here. Which is not to say that soul music 1sn t&#13;
&lt;..-omplex; some of the tightest, most comP_etent&#13;
playing is foi1ncl here. It's just that the ambience&#13;
is the most vital element.&#13;
Ike and fir1a, while retaining complelely the&#13;
mu1o-ic~l ',l.-uct.ures' of soul mu~k. (WP.rlay the&#13;
sound with a healthy layer of sex, which im•&#13;
mediately brings it all back home for everybody,&#13;
black or white, who sees them .. They've _been&#13;
kicking around the soul circuit for a Jong d me,&#13;
getting outrageous, and only came into real rock&#13;
promi1lence after backing up the RoJling Stones&#13;
on their 1969tour. SUH, they're 100 per centsouJ,&#13;
which means a planned end paced show.&#13;
The M.C. stro1led out and introduced the&#13;
band, which cooked alone for two numbers, establishing the musical ground rules. Here it's&#13;
all riff-dependent, chopped chords, big braS1 and&#13;
chunky drums wiLh a truly incredible alto sax&#13;
man who he.'d one fantastic note for all or three&#13;
minutes. to cries of delight from the other&#13;
members.&#13;
T'hen tht lkettes, three beautiful backing&#13;
singers, porty out for a teaser, tossing oif e[·&#13;
rorUess harmony and good~nnturcd cracks. This&#13;
Was maybe fifteen minutes Into the shMY, and&#13;
already they were doing "Piece of My Heart".&#13;
Confidence.&#13;
But the moment was at hand lk&#13;
from the wings, stone face, au I~ ~,&#13;
shades, the man himself, br ... ,.,th11,, i-.&#13;
hot damn - nna boiled out, The .,.., Ille.&#13;
seemed to _stand a liUle straighttr 111'"°Pioo.&#13;
Tin~ is every lush dream You•~&#13;
the promise or all the wondrous •.._bi,&#13;
read about, but could n~ver fiod bicts Yaw',&#13;
knew, She knows, and she's Pl'olld •oy.., lb&#13;
strate: muscular lei($, mlni up to to &lt;i.,,,;&#13;
and undulating like ripples in a P&lt;&gt;od, lliere, "'-&#13;
spring, bursting with pu.-., sex..:"" lit,&#13;
cares~ing the micropbo~e in a $.500., . ~&#13;
prowling the stage, barmg jungle 1"11,"'Chl"&#13;
·growl, shr-iek in .:i liquid sandpaper, .. lo Pllr&#13;
Superwoman, Name your proclivity Olot, i.._&#13;
satisfy it, maybe e.ven teach you a'~ ..,_&#13;
One big black woman right in froot 0/ U-.&#13;
tuated every song with cries or "Right"''-&#13;
honey, do whatcha know." '"- Tito,&#13;
''Come Together," on. thedQJbl!e nna shaking it, " ... come l&lt;lg,ti.:'r....,,_&#13;
stamping feet. raisi~ her arms in 111 " .. , right now ... ", re« planted~ "'111t&#13;
back, arms out,'' .. . o"er ine!"Toa~&#13;
sighs. "Proud Mary", '\ . . we ne,·er do If&#13;
nice and easy. We do 'em nice ... aDd ._&#13;
Ob, hit me again. A long, slow ,1 .. ,.::.,&#13;
rap, black stage, one spotlight on Tioa ~"'&#13;
most bizarre things to the miel'OJl.lx,ne II&#13;
cJ,uckling from tho _ darkoes,;, odd ,..__ sounds, not one man m the auditnce .;-,..&#13;
stage with her. Sigmund himseU WOlld t:&#13;
gotten hot.&#13;
And where is Ike during all lltis! &amp;ct lllt&#13;
audience, punching the band with bu ._&#13;
they caJJ him the 0 musicaJ direckr' ~ illtllt&#13;
really sort of, well, a pimp'? But na,.'Ht'11'11&#13;
old man, after all, lhat ought to say""'"-'&#13;
and he's smug enough to bl·ing it &lt;if. At Uie ead.&#13;
lhe seduction number he jived, "I got -&#13;
hope you got yours." You people .. n loot 111:,,,&#13;
want, but oh, boy. On the back ol °"" ol •&#13;
early albums there's a gassy pielffl "i.&#13;
playing the piano while Tina washes aou...,&#13;
big old tub.&#13;
Having brought the audiencealmo1l '-•&#13;
quite to the pot of gold at lheend, Tina hid•&#13;
fun. While smoke engulfed the stage,,,,.,_&#13;
be Sffn in strobe-light slow motion. ,_&#13;
steppio' away, and the house light, cam,• Tumult ensued, and the barxl, 'Aitb ._.&#13;
casualness, sbulned bacl: on and plUlfld&#13;
Then Tina sweet stepped right back 11111•&#13;
"Wanna Take You Higher", which. of COllll&#13;
was what we all wanted, too. Withthel,ghb11,&#13;
was somehow more apparent that she""'•&#13;
and right there, and . : . hot damn.&#13;
I would go far fl"Orn where I ,m 1.0 • •&#13;
and Tina Turner igain. I would suggest tmi •&#13;
do tbe sam~ . .&#13;
Summerfest Threatened&#13;
(Continued from Page 3) and Recrea'tion Departments. In Une•1&#13;
lil9:&#13;
Racine is sponsoring a pilot program U.I&#13;
out there on the good ur-aces of Caledonia." He have activities that resemble Haym.arbl ... JIU\"11 likened the situation at Summerfest wlth tt'.at of Square. It begins Sunday aftemoon. •&#13;
West Berlin in relation to East Germany. Pershing Park. . • lie stressed the success and uniqueness or A "soapboxn will be provided for ,.&#13;
lhe pr011ram. Racine is the only city south or people who wish lo speak, a band will:;·_. Wisconsin Dells to have such a program. an area will be provided for artiSts 10&#13;
Kenosha has nothing that matches it. wares. Siardi&#13;
The program is unique In that you must be at He said he got the idea .rrom ~-,_.&#13;
least 18 to be admitted. A similar program is run Arti~t.!'I Fair held once a year in RaCUl&#13;
m the city for high school youths, but bas met annually wasn' t often enough. Dt-"'..., 1&#13;
with much Jess success. ..The Park and Recreatioo . ~ 1 •&#13;
The reason for this., Wardrip feels, is that it's going to lose money on ~t, •: he sa:~· sutf dull&#13;
held inside. This makes the location of Sum~ waywecancbargeacbmss1onfor 1&#13;
fflerfestot prime importance. If Johnson's Park· can really work out"&#13;
00&#13;
!btr'!&#13;
is lost he knows of no other outdoor area to Admission to Sumrnerfest !' $1.~ ea"&#13;
~epljce it: He noted, "If we had held Summerfest hos remained C&lt;)nstant for_ live ) ,,,_&#13;
ma hall, •t would have died two years ago." scheduled to play later this sullllll&lt;' ~&#13;
The Put?O$e of Summerfest, he said, was to Siegel-SChwall R.E.O. Speedwagoo,&#13;
serve the people usually Ignored by most Park and the Boweey Boys.&#13;
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1' .. Jag..,.. XKE Coupe. Call 632·&#13;
6110.&#13;
lt,M Doil9t Super • Vee 313, 4:Sp .,&#13;
OC1n10le, vlnvt top. new Goodyur tires. $2 . .0CO. Call 652-U,M) fitter 5.&#13;
1"t Olten GT Sliver S,2,AOO or bfft&#13;
offer. 652-1312 after 4.&#13;
------ MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE &#13;
byJamesKol~n&#13;
of the Newscopesla..ff&#13;
"The M b err) Menu, o1 May" is narrated&#13;
J'~~~~~~ lruUey, an American in Paris&#13;
&lt;whicb. es • small hterary ""''"' _ 'd • ol course, Just simply every~&#13;
...,ns, ers to be better than the Paris&#13;
Review). Old crotchet)· Jack b looi.:&#13;
back on lhe May Revolution and at :&#13;
!'aJlagher family wluch has JIJ.'I been&#13;
informally dissolved&#13;
Jor, •• ltil 'E"~'OPt,; PaJc-7&#13;
OC cord 1 n c to _::...:_:_:_ Hartley, IS j\llt. ____ p1,a .. the ___; --------- ('GfflH •ff'OM u an ~t:ably good&#13;
canatureol 1hr •••~ he'1 the old moth&#13;
bolled rMn reminisdnJ on his past ,.htl,&#13;
IUllult.lntOlaly JudgtJll II• l OWi&amp; from his&#13;
fa\onte table- in ttalur) old bin&#13;
r;Ue: The Mtrry Month ol May (J7.95l&#13;
AIILh«: Jarne11 Jonts&#13;
Publlsber: Oelacourte&#13;
students are umpl)· IO'li\ me their $ttCII t to&#13;
u,,,.e one of the aut.hor·s c:hldla,.&#13;
James Jones once wrote a noveJ called&#13;
•rrom !!ere to Eternity". Its subject was&#13;
ftllrl Harbor and the pre--war barracks&#13;
life of Hawaii. .. The Merry Month or May"&#13;
&amp;150 written by Jones, concerns the May&#13;
Pens Revolt or 1968. The cast of characttrs.&#13;
au of them types, incbde a famous&#13;
Aroerican direct.or, his student son, Danny&#13;
u,e Red. lesbians, liberals, nymphos, and&#13;
u,e Great N06e.&#13;
. Thcn,'s Harry Gallagher a fan,ous&#13;
director al'Kl notorious: bbcral.'hi.s son. }Ml&#13;
In_ a eonK1ou~ attempt lo ~&#13;
Hem1~ay, the author points out Uwntuats&#13;
m hre For H4rtJty-Jones tht ntm.l&#13;
lS sha\·1rw:, that'• "-'ht-tt f'\'tt)L""Unc- i.n a&#13;
man·_, hie comes to I Cclll!) pOHlt&#13;
1ha""1.flC Tht ntu111 oC &amp;ha\1na as w nt.xus&#13;
ti ma1CUlm1ty ms probably the f1nt blat,;nt&#13;
1nd,cator ol Jones· hterary bufToontt&gt; u,,&#13;
Th,~ ,n I.hit book r&lt;all) std Qlt Tho&#13;
pn.raw • my dnr da.rlinC a, •• «, l..GuLN'" l.CJuLM h Ow •il• of Harr) the&#13;
dlr«:tor and mothtr "' Hill Ibo 1tudmt&#13;
She &lt;n&lt;I&gt; up •r,,111 to commit IUlcidt-ar,.,.&#13;
•naa1ing iD lub&amp;an ICh\ 1Uts led&#13;
somehow ,..,,. her husl»nd to "'"&#13;
l&lt;sbtan AO DC Mt p,..- l.ou1'.1 ' 1t·1 •&#13;
t«hniqu, ,tr11ght wt ol lhe 19th c,,n,ury&#13;
On• cwtdN) that Jo,,.,. Jon,, II 1lta;g]&gt;t&#13;
out ol the 19th C&lt;ntury&#13;
J onre thought that it would be an easy&#13;
~asure to review a bad, bad novel WeU&#13;
ft ain't. it's dirricull because it seems lik~&#13;
~h• waste of time. What can I say? I can&#13;
say that this book should nev,er have been&#13;
piblisJ1ed for a num_ber of reasons.&#13;
Jamn Jone1 Is VWTihQI badly. hit'1 an&#13;
· One, it wastes a lot of paper that could be&#13;
p.1t to betler use; two, it makes the author&#13;
~ llke an clfctc bastard; three its&#13;
contribution to literature ga..s no fu;ther&#13;
tbaJl p,..enting the reader with :JOO pages&#13;
d cbches, stereotypes, stock characters.&#13;
[c,,u', old men should not write young men•;&#13;
stCJ"ies. What Norman Mailer did (or the&#13;
)lardl on the Pentagon In .. Armies o1. th~&#13;
Sight" Ja.mes Jones undoes tor the Paris&#13;
su,lent Revolt.&#13;
a srudent. who rejects daddy's ideas, and&#13;
Louisa, wife ~ Harry and~ mother of Hill&#13;
The Gallagher:, are the most typed tiber I&#13;
f~mily I've ever encountered in literatu.r:_&#13;
nght down to lhe subU,- double-.tandaNb&#13;
and the originals by as yet unkno\vn arhsls&#13;
nailed to the walls.&#13;
old. old man "'"bftl a youna man·• 1t.ory.&#13;
novel l! rmed with indicators 11 the book tu view ol tbe !\lay kevolut.on. or ol &gt; ounc&#13;
v-ereauoreJonesv.outdbtuplh&lt;tt,.,th ptopl• for !hit mau ... , ts• produ&lt;"' ol&#13;
&amp;rib or Vonnogu~ unfortunately Janos 11 tcaM1ng thNtUgh the ,.,...,, tnd ol lhe&#13;
Siel'IOUS, f'alstaft lS not \li.'Nring lhe ~,,. bm~ulara. He llJUll toolar a-·&amp;) from hb&#13;
J:ftll04Vpber'$ maa, 00 f'alstalf bas hit M~ and ~ pocM" q\l,al1ty ot wnh"I&#13;
pants dc:r,,.-u, mtrtl) tmphHltH ht.s d11t1n«&#13;
Jack HarUev is \ellina us the swr, ol his&#13;
txpenences during the May Pans Re\·olt.&#13;
and of the dissolution ol the Gallagher&#13;
family. _Jack's treatment and analys1.s of&#13;
the Pans Revolt accurately indicates just&#13;
how far out of Louch \,l,ith the students the&#13;
old fart really_ b. l/ltima~y the Revol~&#13;
Hartley is uuensallve Whim Hlll goes Ullimat.Ny, Jones 1.1 a dy1ng fo,h. Mtl)up&#13;
tltroullh the trauinatic oxp,nence ot loouw and gasptng for au-, blind tAl u,.. (act !hit&#13;
Ju [11'$t love and ftnally in despair tAl drop air .. all aNtUnd htm ti he·d )'Ill di\ .. boct&#13;
out to meditate With the tupp,ec. Jad, can ul.&#13;
merely say that 1&gt;e·11 get o,-.,r •~ tho lov• - ------------- th..l~ and the meditation lhlng. •h&gt;' J TIit Mf'M") '10lllh of ,1.,. NVldh of&#13;
remember back v,1l,en J ,u.s. f'tc .• ad n~ Book \lar1,, m-.st1h Stred, Mtnc,,:;.h, nauseum. Personally, I th.mil Hinley&#13;
...&#13;
-. -&#13;
.. tt&#13;
...iiil7&#13;
l -&#13;
Speaking for nearly thre:e hours before tht Stien« Oh•ision Execudu: Commitlff in •n tlfM""&#13;
hearing, Dr. James Ru~seu Brokaw. assist.an, professor of pshcholo«), rtbullitd lht charges madit&#13;
against hlm in lhe Committee's l'ff0mmendation fnr lhe non•rtne~al of hls contract bt)Nd thP Jt1l•&#13;
7Z academic year.&#13;
Eating In&#13;
8ar~td Spareribs always&#13;
makf' An e;ia.y and tasty meal.&#13;
Hm is a basic recipe which&#13;
1'rve&amp; six&#13;
What you need:&#13;
1 Ibo P0rk spareribo • tup water&#13;
'&gt; &lt;up catsup&#13;
I tablsp. sugar&#13;
1 tablsp. vinegar&#13;
I tabbp. lemon juiel)&#13;
II cup chopped onions&#13;
: 1'bbp. chopped gr. pepper • ci,p chopped celery ~ tta,p. l1ry mustard&#13;
~ t.a,p. Worcestershire sauce&#13;
How to Prepare the spareribs:&#13;
r Pr.heat oven to 350 degrees&#13;
P~ spareribs in a shallow&#13;
RELAX&#13;
baking pan ( a small rack might&#13;
be useful here). Roost t\1, hours&#13;
(or until tender). Remove&#13;
excess rat from pan, but save&#13;
•one tablespoonful aside.&#13;
To prepare sauce: Cook green pepper, ,celery&#13;
and onion in the tablespoonful o1&#13;
(at in a frying pan for about S&#13;
minutes (until lightly brOMled).&#13;
Add the other ingredients&#13;
(except meat) and simmer for&#13;
10 minutes. Pour sauCE- over&#13;
sparer-ibsi return to ove:n and&#13;
bake uncovered for another :tO&#13;
minutes.&#13;
Serve on platter with green&#13;
beans and coleslaw. Ma)'be an&#13;
orange sherbet for desser~&#13;
MO LB EC K'S&#13;
COMPLETE LINE&#13;
OF tiEAi, TH FOO OS&#13;
ffFRR T EAS&#13;
STONF GROUND&#13;
FLOURS&#13;
NA f tJRAL VITAMINS&#13;
And many other&#13;
Organic Food•&#13;
1304 ORANGE AV'&amp;.&#13;
RACINE 633- n69&#13;
Sports Shorts&#13;
Tom and Mike Joyce. the two&#13;
highest scorers in Greendale&#13;
high school basketball history.&#13;
will be rtun1ted al the&#13;
University ur W i5consin•&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Tom, a 5-11 guard, led&#13;
Greendale w its thu-d straight&#13;
1-'au1an&lt;1 conference c-.hamplonship&#13;
last season aHer&#13;
teaming with his bro&lt;her Mike,&#13;
a 6-1 guard. the 1..-0 previous&#13;
seasons. Miko attended Stevens&#13;
Point State University last&#13;
year, but both announced they&#13;
will enroll at IJW-Parkside this&#13;
£all. Ounng the last three years&#13;
Coach Ron Barb1an·s Greenc1ale&#13;
team has won 42 conference&#13;
games tn a row.&#13;
Both started for Greendale&#13;
£or three seasons, earned all·&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
get Red Corpet treotment&#13;
ot the&#13;
BANK OF&#13;
ElMWOOD&#13;
(e ve,yon• else does!)&#13;
2704 Loth,op Ave.&#13;
Roci"e, Wis.&#13;
s.tate mention &amp;!I. ~mon and&#13;
....-ere all-conren-nce both tht1r&#13;
jwlior and 5e1Uor seG!!Oni. Tom&#13;
seottd 1.176 p,;;llnb 1n lhrtt&#13;
yea~andM,k~ 1.1:..z. forcarttr&#13;
a\·e-rages ol nearly 2Q pou~ts per&#13;
g;,me Tom I«! Gr«n&lt;Lile in&#13;
assjsts for thfft )·tars. and als.o&#13;
holds the school '1ngle cam•&#13;
rttOrd ltl 48 poull.&gt;. Jilln&gt;I&#13;
Oidahy as a 111ruor Mtl&lt;t hid&#13;
his carttr high d • tht s.am,&#13;
year. Both ~~re ciiptJi1nt and&#13;
MVPs for Greendale a, seroon&#13;
l:W-Parutde -.tll optn ,ts&#13;
lhtrd varsity basketbell 'ifftan&#13;
against Western '-hchigan 1n&#13;
Kalamaioo&#13;
Richard Voss. Jr 5-2 guard&#13;
and most valuable player on&#13;
Wauwatosa West's Suburban&#13;
conference team, has</text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 4, Issue 2, July 6, 1971</text>
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