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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 6, issue 6</text>
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            <text>27 new teachers hired for College of Science and Society</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>27 New Teachers&#13;
Hired for College of&#13;
- Science and Society&#13;
by Mire Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Next fall should bring at least&#13;
21 new faculty members to the&#13;
College of Science and Society.&#13;
The recruiting season Is at Its&#13;
peak now, and the Dean of the&#13;
College, Eugene Norwood, has&#13;
authorized the !\Iring of ten new&#13;
people In the Humanities&#13;
division, ten In the Social&#13;
Sciences, and seven In the&#13;
Science division. Further&#13;
authorizations are posslble.&#13;
Norwood said of the progress&#13;
In recruiting, " I have considerable&#13;
hope for this year."&#13;
This stands In contrast to the&#13;
agony of a year ago. Last year,&#13;
the then Vice Chancellor tor&#13;
Academic Affairs and the then&#13;
Dean of the College of Science&#13;
and Society took recruiting out&#13;
of the hands of the faculty and&#13;
attempted to terminate t he&#13;
contracts of 27 faculty mem&#13;
bers. They falled, and a Her the&#13;
en5ulng uproar they reslgne&lt;l&#13;
their positions.&#13;
Following this. Governor&#13;
Lucey instituted upon his&#13;
election a hiring freeze&#13;
throughout the state In an&#13;
austerity m ove. Ultimately,&#13;
there were only three appolntmen&#13;
ts in the Social&#13;
Sciences, five In the&#13;
Humanities, and nine In the&#13;
Sciences. Many of these were&#13;
replacemen ts for faculty&#13;
resignations.&#13;
The year before that was a&#13;
bumper year with 46 people&#13;
being rec;ruited In the College -&#13;
11 In the Socia! Sciences, 13 In&#13;
the Sc, c ,n · 2 in • the&#13;
Humanll,es.&#13;
This year recruitment Is&#13;
being handled by the faculty,&#13;
and so far there is no hiring&#13;
freeze, and no subsequent delay&#13;
in tr ying to find qualified&#13;
people.&#13;
Social Science, the smallest of&#13;
the three division, presently has&#13;
25 members. It has&#13;
authorization to hire two people&#13;
In Anthropology, one ln&#13;
Economics, two In Geography,&#13;
two in Political Science, and&#13;
three In Sociology.&#13;
Its Chairman, Leon Ap&#13;
plebaum, explained this ls the&#13;
time of the year to recruit, and&#13;
while it is a buyer's market,&#13;
recruitment must be done'&#13;
quickly - before the good&#13;
prospects find positions. " I hope&#13;
Presenting&#13;
within the next six weeks we&#13;
have our recruiting finished,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
"We have offers out, and&#13;
people are c;omlng In. We have&#13;
some people who on paper look&#13;
very good," he noted.&#13;
The Science division, with SO&#13;
members, has authori zation to&#13;
hir e two new faculty members&#13;
in Psychology, two In&#13;
Mathematics, and three in&#13;
Earth Science. Further&#13;
authorizations are pending in&#13;
Life Science Md Chemistry.&#13;
Eugene Gaslorklewlcz, the&#13;
chairman, said he was pleased&#13;
how recruitment has&#13;
progressed so far. " We'r e&#13;
seeing better looking people In&#13;
terms of their back9round then&#13;
we ever have before."&#13;
He stated, " With these&#13;
authorizations we can provide a&#13;
solid program, and have t he&#13;
ability to dl verslfy ovr l&gt;f.&#13;
ferlng."&#13;
Humanl!IM, w ltn a staff of 58,&#13;
has authorization for three&#13;
people in Communications, two&#13;
in Phi losophy, thr ee (and&#13;
possibly morel In Music, and&#13;
two In Art.&#13;
There are no additions In any&#13;
of the foreign languages.&#13;
Chairman of the Division,&#13;
Stella Gray, descr ibed&#13;
recr uitment as "golng very&#13;
well . We've had many ap&#13;
pllcatlons." She sees Musk, Art&#13;
and Communlcations as being&#13;
parllcularly strengthened with&#13;
their additions.&#13;
The responsl blllty for&#13;
recruitment Iles within the&#13;
h1cully, the d1vlslonol chn1rman&#13;
said. It begins at the dlsclpllne&#13;
level where requests for new&#13;
authorizations are lnltlally&#13;
made. A critical 11nalyse1 of the&#13;
program is made in regards to&#13;
whether announced classes are&#13;
being gi ven. the needs based on&#13;
enrollment projections. actual&#13;
student demands, and&#13;
resignations of personnel.&#13;
From this, personnel needs&#13;
are decided, and then given to&#13;
the Divisional Chairman who&#13;
makes an evaluation based on&#13;
Divlsional needs. The Dean then&#13;
makes the decision - con&#13;
slderin9-alil he doe$, the needs of&#13;
the college In general.&#13;
It Is then up to the dlsclpllne&#13;
to generate a 11st of c:andldates.&#13;
This Is done by advertising in&#13;
prolesslonal magazines, senLindsay&#13;
&#13;
by Larry Jones of the Newscope stAff&#13;
The Activities Building was again the site for free beer on&#13;
Wednesday afternoon, February 9, as representat ives of&#13;
Democrat ic Presidenllal hopeful John Lindsay spoke out for their&#13;
candidate.&#13;
The main speaker for the event was for mer Wisconsin attorney&#13;
general Bronson LaFollette, who has been stumping the state for&#13;
Lindsay the past two weeks.&#13;
Approximately 250 students In the SAB gave very little of their&#13;
attention to Lafollette as he spent an hour trying to make himself&#13;
heard above the crowd.&#13;
Lafollette Interview p. 3&#13;
The focal point of LaFollette's remarks was what he terme&lt;l&#13;
"the courage of John Lindsay". He attempted to convince what&#13;
audlenc:e he had that Lindsay was the man for ' 72 by relating&#13;
several of the battles he had gone through as the l&amp;Jyor of New&#13;
York, and the courage he had shown In standing up to major&#13;
American pressure groups In his city.&#13;
While he admitted that Lindsay and Senator George McGovern&#13;
are almost Identical on the Issues, La Follette said that only Lindsay&#13;
carried enough appeal among young and old and minority&#13;
groups to defeat Nixon In '72.&#13;
La Follette then asked for questions, which brought a volley of&#13;
querrles which could only have been answered by Lindsay himself,&#13;
and which did very little to help the Impact of La Follette's&#13;
presentation.&#13;
Stella Gray&#13;
ding letters to departments,&#13;
sending representatives to&#13;
professional meetings, or by&#13;
word of mouth.&#13;
Invitations to visit the&#13;
campus are sent to those who&#13;
are ludged the most promising.&#13;
While on campus candidates&#13;
meet with faculty members,&#13;
talk with students, meet with&#13;
Dean (and the Vice Chancellor&#13;
and O,ancellor if he may be&#13;
offered tenure l and lectures&#13;
either In a class, In a seminar,&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiewicz&#13;
or in a colloquium.&#13;
All three divisional chairmen&#13;
stressed candidates would ha~&#13;
to lecture before an offer would&#13;
be made. Student reaction&#13;
would be important in their&#13;
consideration, they said.&#13;
The discipline would decide&#13;
who should bemadeanoffer. Its&#13;
decision would be evaluated by&#13;
the di visinoal Executive&#13;
Committees, who would then&#13;
recommend to the Dean who&#13;
should be made an otter, and at&#13;
U11frersity of W isconsi11 - P"rkJide&#13;
Leon Applebaum&#13;
what level . The Chair m an&#13;
would give the recommendation&#13;
to the Dean, along with a cover&#13;
letter saying why this per $00&#13;
should be hired.&#13;
Executive Committee&#13;
recommendations are&#13;
traditionally followed by Deans.&#13;
Recruiting this year is aimed&#13;
at best filling needs, rather than&#13;
recruiting senior {tenured)&#13;
level faculty, as opposed to&#13;
tree&#13;
lllB:W6JJffJJGPJII&#13;
Volume 6 Number 6 February 14, 1972&#13;
Service Main Aim of Security Force&#13;
by Fred Noer,tr .,ofthe Newscopestaff&#13;
A vlldl pcirl of any college campus is lhe&#13;
pro ind r.1:CUrny rare • I 1.. c. by R11nc&gt;IJ&#13;
Brinkman, chief administrative officer, the force&#13;
at Parkside Is ready 24 hours every day to help the&#13;
students, faculty administration, staff, and other&#13;
people on campus in any way within Its means.&#13;
" We would rather be more service-oriented&#13;
than enforcement-oriented, but we will enforce&#13;
when called lor/' says Brinkman. He continues by&#13;
saying, "We would llke to have a confrontation&#13;
across the desk rather than on the campus. I'm&#13;
sure a mutual agreement could be reached. Gas&#13;
masks and nightsticks don't solve any problem."&#13;
This philosophy has been effective so far&#13;
Decause thefe have been only small disagree&#13;
ments which have been solved by discussion of the&#13;
problem. However, Brinkman em phasizes that&#13;
"we will el'\force what we have to enforce."&#13;
Besides Chief Brinkman, the department&#13;
consists of one sergeant, seven police officers, five&#13;
security officers, and two part-time secur ity of&#13;
ficers. Each man must complete 240 hours of&#13;
tr aining at a certified recruit school and must hold&#13;
an advanced certificate In first aid.&#13;
Many of the men are taking extra steps to&#13;
advance themselves by taking the police science&#13;
program at KTI, or taking courses about report&#13;
writing and human relations at Parkside. This&#13;
extra work helps for promotion and personal&#13;
betterment.&#13;
The pollceofficers have full lurisdictlon under&#13;
the state statutes. They also follow the state traffic&#13;
code and the regulations established by the&#13;
Parking and Traffic Committee of the University.&#13;
The jurlsdicttonal powers apply to all of the UWP&#13;
property , Wood Road, and County Highways E&#13;
and A.&#13;
In c:ase of needed extra assistance, Parkside&#13;
relies heavily on the Kenosha Sheriff's Department&#13;
. Brinkman has a high regard for the KSD&#13;
bec11use many times they have provided valuable&#13;
technical Information and expertise sometimes&#13;
lacking on the Parkside force . For example, lust&#13;
two weeks ago there were three car s stolen from&#13;
the Parkside campus. Brinkman notified the&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff' s Department and t hey broadcast&#13;
the descriptions of the automobiles state-wide. As&#13;
a result, this helped to recover one of the cars.&#13;
Chief Brinkman urges students to come and&#13;
talk lo him or Sgt. Krough If there are any&#13;
problems about parking. If a student feels he has&#13;
been treated unfairly or Is unable to pay a ticket ,&#13;
many times agreeable arrangements can be&#13;
Ronald B"inkman&#13;
worked out.&#13;
In the future, Brinkman feels "if we can&#13;
promote and show what we are, then we can do a&#13;
lot of good for the students." When the sec:ur ity&#13;
office is moved into Tallent Hall probably in&#13;
August or Seplember, then Brinkman hopes&#13;
community relations will be better. He hopes to set&#13;
up a time and place where students could have&#13;
quesilons answered about parking and other&#13;
servic:es that the forc;e performs on campus. For&#13;
fall registration he plans on having a table&#13;
manned by two officers to hand out pamphlets and&#13;
onswer questions.&#13;
( On the Nod Goes to Town] &#13;
Page2 NEWSCOPE '1bruary 14, 1972&#13;
=LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
invite to lecture&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
For anyone and everyone&#13;
interested In children, "Parents&#13;
and Citizens Interested In&#13;
Emotional Child Advocacy"&#13;
wishes to Invite you to attend a&#13;
lecture at Lance Jr. High on&#13;
Feb. 17th at 8: 00 P .M. Our&#13;
speaker will be Or. Westman&#13;
who will speak on "Children Are&#13;
OJr Most Important Resourc~"&#13;
and the public will be invited.&#13;
capacities In which Jack C.&#13;
Westman, M.D., has served:&#13;
M.D. University of Michigan&#13;
Medical School · 19S2&#13;
Internship, Duke Hospital in&#13;
Durham, North Carolina - 1953&#13;
Psychiatrist, U.S. Navy and&#13;
U.S. Marine Corp. - 1953,55&#13;
Residency In Psychiatry and&#13;
Child Psychiatry, Dept. of&#13;
Psych la try, Uni verslty of&#13;
Michigan Medical (.enter - 1955-&#13;
59&#13;
Associate Profeuor of&#13;
Psychlatry University of&#13;
Michigan Medical School - 1964&#13;
Professor of Psychiatry,&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Medical School and Director,&#13;
Oiild Psychiatry, University of&#13;
Wisconsin Hospltal • 1965&#13;
Co-ordinator, Diagnostic and&#13;
Treatment Unit. University of&#13;
Wisconsin Human Development&#13;
. 1966&#13;
Research interests In the&#13;
families of children with&#13;
learning dlsabl I ltles, the&#13;
psychiatric evaluation of young&#13;
children, individual differences&#13;
in children and the procus of&#13;
psychiatric consultation.&#13;
Child Advocacy Officers:&#13;
Mr. Donald Fir chow, Chairman&#13;
Mr. Robert Muzlnskl, Vice&#13;
Oialrman&#13;
Mrs. Gueflter Jud, Secretary&#13;
Publicity, Mrs. Kenneth Pfaff&#13;
Mrs. Donald Flrchow&#13;
Mrs. Mel HIiier&#13;
Mrs. Walter Stein&#13;
Phone 69-'-3462&#13;
P AB concerned&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
· I am writing this as an open&#13;
fetter to the students of UWParkslde.&#13;
My concern is the&#13;
recent concert presented by the&#13;
PAB featuring Sha Na Na. We&#13;
can all agree with the article In&#13;
NEWSCOPE (February 7l that&#13;
the show was excellent. In the&#13;
article were printed these&#13;
words: "The Parkside Activities&#13;
Board presented us with&#13;
our music, our heritage, our&#13;
theater, and It's about time."&#13;
The Board was pleased with the&#13;
response, but we may never be&#13;
able to hold a concert like thl!&#13;
ageln.&#13;
On Nv:,nday, Bradford called&#13;
and told us of the damage we&#13;
had caused. The brand new&#13;
carpeting In their auditorium&#13;
was full of cigarette burns,&#13;
there were a large number of&#13;
wine bottles and beer cans left&#13;
strewn about, and a large drum&#13;
from the Bradford Music&#13;
Department ttiat was backstage,&#13;
had been stashed.&#13;
They Informed us they are&#13;
not sure we will be allowed to&#13;
use their auditorium for our&#13;
next concert already scheduled&#13;
for this spring. This concert ls&#13;
going to feature the outstanding&#13;
drummer and band leader,&#13;
Buddy Rich. ( He appeared here&#13;
last year, and that concert was&#13;
sold out.)&#13;
The PAB had the Sha Na Na&#13;
concert ushered and supervised,&#13;
and provided for smoking&#13;
breaks during the show. The&#13;
fact remains that the crowd&#13;
didn't cooperate. Let me point&#13;
out a few examples of what&#13;
occurs when this happens at&#13;
other universities. At the&#13;
University of Miami damage&#13;
was done during a concert that&#13;
featured Jefferson Airplane.&#13;
The University Activities Office&#13;
Is no longer allowed to hold&#13;
concerts. And 1 ust last&#13;
weekend, Whitewater presented&#13;
Sha Na Na and the students&#13;
caused damage to their&#13;
fieldhouse. Whitewater was told&#13;
flat out, "No N-.ore Concerts."&#13;
So where does this leave UWP?&#13;
If Bradford refuses to let us&#13;
have a concert, why should&#13;
Case or Tremper take a chance&#13;
on us?&#13;
It's up to the students at&#13;
Parkside to conduct themselves&#13;
property. If they don't, they're&#13;
only hurting themselves. And&#13;
all that has to be done Is follow a&#13;
few simple rules.&#13;
1) Save your drinking till&#13;
after the concert, and don't&#13;
litter the bulldlng or parking&#13;
lots.&#13;
2) Keep your cigarette habit&#13;
In check during the concert, and&#13;
If you must smoke, smoke only&#13;
where It Is permitted.&#13;
3) Don't cause senseless&#13;
damage.&#13;
Remember, if there are to be&#13;
more great concerts at UW-P In&#13;
the future (llke O,lcago, Sha Na&#13;
Na, and Superstar) and If we&#13;
are going to be allowed to use&#13;
the new facilltles ne:d year&#13;
(Com-Arts building, fleldhouse,&#13;
etc) then It Is up to us, the&#13;
students and members of UWParkslde&#13;
to condud ourselves&#13;
accordingly.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Kim Rudat, President&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
ecology the issue&#13;
Mr. Editor:&#13;
The October 1969 Issue of&#13;
Landscape Archltedure has an&#13;
article about the ecologlcal&#13;
basis used In planning the&#13;
Parkside campus. The artlcle&#13;
states that the campus wlll be&#13;
bullt upon 'existing conditions,&#13;
rather than Imposing a predetermined&#13;
"design" upon the&#13;
landscape.'&#13;
Perhaps the plans aren't as&#13;
devastating as other plans for&#13;
campuses. But I see the existing&#13;
conditions tread upon by&#13;
bulldoiers and heavy&#13;
machinery. I've seen a whole&#13;
orchard of apple trees&#13;
destroyed. I see parking tots&#13;
where there was once green&#13;
land. I see gaping holes In the&#13;
earth. Trees have been cut&#13;
down. A forest has been wiped&#13;
out to make room for two&#13;
buildings.&#13;
So the people who brought 'the&#13;
University here can talk of the&#13;
ecological basis of the campus&#13;
plans. They can watch the&#13;
buildings going up. And they&#13;
can smile at 1he rnooey the&#13;
University Is bringing to the&#13;
area. This is good business. But&#13;
Is It ecology? I do not think so.&#13;
Barbara Scott&#13;
to the&#13;
music desk&#13;
This letter is a response to&#13;
last week's article on the Bread&#13;
concert at Carthage. As two&#13;
Carthage students who attended&#13;
the concert, we feel your artlcte&#13;
Is absolutely unfair and&#13;
unrepresentative. We would&#13;
like to know what you base your&#13;
Ideas on - Are you comparing&#13;
Carthage students' response to&#13;
Parkside's?&#13;
First of all In regards to the&#13;
comments on Judy Sill, this&#13;
performer did more to detrad&#13;
from her performance than the&#13;
audience did. Her negative&#13;
attitude was apparent and was&#13;
quickly communicated to the&#13;
audience, which subsequently&#13;
lost Interest. Furthermore, her&#13;
early exit from the stage was&#13;
her choice, not the audience's.&#13;
In short If she had come with a&#13;
more appropriate attitude&#13;
things would have gone&#13;
smoother.&#13;
Secondly, we would like to&#13;
clarify the fad that a large&#13;
percentage of those ln at·&#13;
tendance were not carthage&#13;
students. Therefore, we have&#13;
reason to resent your lnslnvatlon&#13;
that Carthege&#13;
students acted Immaturely.&#13;
Also is Is our opinion that the&#13;
audience, as a whole, was not as&#13;
1.r1responsive as you made It out&#13;
to be.&#13;
Thirdly, regarding Bread.&#13;
Everyone's taste In music Is&#13;
different. Since you mentioned&#13;
Grand Funk.and Black Sabbath&#13;
it Is apparent you are a fan of&#13;
hard rock. As we see It the&#13;
people who attended this con•&#13;
cert liked Bread or they&#13;
wouldn't have come. We really&#13;
are sorry it was a "downer&#13;
circus" for you.&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
Ruth Suckow and Lynda Novak&#13;
proud of Marines&#13;
That article printed In&#13;
February 7, 1972 Newscope Is&#13;
not the whole story. As a&#13;
deserter goes. I'm a Marine&#13;
myself as well as my future&#13;
husband. And PROUD OF&#13;
BEING A MARINE.&#13;
As far as the prayers, the&#13;
meal one Is true. But the h&#13;
discontinuance of the night time&#13;
prayer Is going Into effed&#13;
because It riled the men too&#13;
much. The reason for the Klll&#13;
KIii KIii .before mess hall&#13;
(which is just an ordinary&#13;
cafeteria l Is to have the men get&#13;
their "spirit" and "gun ho" up.&#13;
If they ever do go to war the&#13;
men aren't chicken.&#13;
The marine corps otters over&#13;
25 fields to choose from. And Its&#13;
procedures are the same as In&#13;
the Navy or Alrforce. Only&#13;
harder because If a man is no1&#13;
for the marines they are gonna&#13;
break afore becom Ing a Marine.&#13;
Yes. Marine Corps builds men&#13;
as well as women. 0 surprised&#13;
I'm a female. 0 yes. Its quite&#13;
t~h for us but I am a Marine.&#13;
A Women Marine. I made it and&#13;
the men are supposed to be able&#13;
to endure training of Marines&#13;
too. Men can take more than a&#13;
female. I've seen training on&#13;
action I think I can take most of&#13;
It. But I would never desert.&#13;
What has the Man who llves In&#13;
Sweden got to say to that.&#13;
A Woman Marine&#13;
lauds&#13;
book exchange&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
I would like to extend my&#13;
sincere thanks to the SGA and&#13;
the other students who provided&#13;
us with the book exchange. I&#13;
hope It was as much a success&#13;
for them as it was for my&#13;
friends and I.&#13;
We saved over 50 per cent on&#13;
books that would have cost us&#13;
$50 In the book store. There wes&#13;
also a good opportunity for&#13;
students to sell their books at a&#13;
higher rate than the book store&#13;
would have given them. I am&#13;
tired of being oppressed by&#13;
people interested only in their&#13;
own profit.&#13;
I'd also like to mention our&#13;
fine hockey club, they have&#13;
played some great games and&#13;
now have an outstanding&#13;
record. I urge you to attend one&#13;
of their games.&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
Lester Zangotowlcz&#13;
one of the foremost expanenfs of h1nov.teon III AmerlcM&#13;
educilion, University oj MasSM:huHtb School of Education DtM&#13;
Dwight W. AJlen, will pres..,t • free public IKfur• 1t • p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, '1b. 16, In GrNnqulst Hall 1t the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Wood Road campus.&#13;
Dean Allen' s topic will be " Making the Future of Education&#13;
Less Certain". His talk Is sponsored by the Parkside Ledure and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee •&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Under New Constitution&#13;
The Parkside Activities&#13;
Board Is now operating under&#13;
Its new constitution. The con&#13;
stltutlon calls for a boardcommittee&#13;
system. The PAB Is&#13;
made up of nine programming&#13;
committees. These handle the&#13;
programming In specific areas,&#13;
subJed to approval by the&#13;
executive council. The committees&#13;
meet as oflen as&#13;
necessary, but not less than&#13;
once a month, and the executive&#13;
council must meet every week.&#13;
This constitution was approved&#13;
by the original PAB members&#13;
on Jan. 17, 1972.&#13;
Nomination papers for&#13;
President and Vice-President&#13;
were then accepted and on Jan.&#13;
28, the first official board&#13;
elections were held. Kim Rudat&#13;
was elected President and Sue&#13;
Nevin was elec ted Vi ce,&#13;
President of the board.&#13;
Kim had been Acting&#13;
Chairman and Buz Faust Adlng&#13;
Vice-Chairman since the start&#13;
of the Fall semester.&#13;
The committees then met to&#13;
elect t~elr chairmen and&#13;
representatives to the executive&#13;
board. The members had one&#13;
6)000&#13;
PEOPLE&#13;
READ&#13;
TH\~&#13;
AD. -&#13;
week to do this. These are the&#13;
results:&#13;
Dance . Sue Wesley, Fine Arts&#13;
• Bea Jaglello, Special Events •&#13;
Pat Watte, Cof-feehouH • Kim&#13;
Rudat, Games • Sue Nevin,&#13;
FIim - Jerry Horton, House •&#13;
Jim Croxford, Pop and Mini&#13;
Concert . Buz Faust, and OJtlng&#13;
- Don Martata. They were approved&#13;
on Feb. •· The PAB works with the&#13;
Student Activities Office and ts&#13;
responsi ble for campus&#13;
programming.&#13;
Questions about the board are&#13;
asked to be directed to Kim&#13;
Rudat or any committee&#13;
chairman of the PAB. People&#13;
wlshlnliJ to totn the PAB should&#13;
contact Sue Nevin or stop up In&#13;
room 217 Tallent Hall and pick&#13;
up an application blank.&#13;
••••••••&#13;
Robin O.vld , Pat McO.mld,&#13;
Marc E11,n, Jean Frthm, Larrv&#13;
Jonu , Jim Koloen, John Xoloen, ~ lch Lipke, Paul Lomartire. !lob&#13;
Mainland, Kevin McKay, Fred&#13;
Hoer, Jr , 8rlan Ross, Wolfgang&#13;
Sal•wskl. Mdy Schrnl'lllng. B•b&#13;
Scoll, Cleta Skovronski, Jerry&#13;
Socha, BIii Sorenaen, Mike&#13;
Str.,esand, Debbie Venskus&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
BuslnH$&#13;
Newscope 11 an independent&#13;
student newspaper compoSed by&#13;
students of tht University of&#13;
Wl1con1 In-Parks Ide pu bllshed&#13;
week I y except during vacation&#13;
periods. Studitnt obtain~ ad&#13;
venlli"9 funds are the 101• sour« of revenue for tht operation of&#13;
Newscx,pe. 6,000 copies are printed&#13;
and dlstrl bUtltd throughout th•&#13;
Kenosha and Racine commun1tl•&#13;
as well as the University. FrH&#13;
00p111 we available upon request.&#13;
Deedllne for all manuscripts and&#13;
Ph0tograp111 su1&gt;mltted to *WIC'OPlt&#13;
Is .C:lD p.m. Iha ThUl'JdaY prlOr to&#13;
publlcatlon. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and CIOUble-1pac1td. Un· IOllclted menuKrlpts and&#13;
Photographs mav be reclefmed&#13;
Within 30 days •tt• the Clet• of&#13;
Stlbmlsslo, after wtllCII they bllCl)ffl8&#13;
the property of N•wsO&gt;J)e, Ltd. Th8&#13;
NltWIO'lpt otflC. II loc•t8d In th•&#13;
Stude,,t Oroanlzatlons bullding,&#13;
lnterSKtlOn of HlghWIY,,. and WOOd&#13;
Ro&amp;d. &#13;
-La Follette and Lindsay&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The modishly dressed,&#13;
compactly built, somewhat&#13;
impish looking young man had&#13;
just finished his speech on how&#13;
greiit John Lindsay Is, what a&#13;
great President he'd make. He&#13;
was fielding questions that&#13;
came from the jaw of the beast,&#13;
the couple hundred students&#13;
who came to the Lindsay rally&#13;
for whatever sundry reason one&#13;
goes to the union between the&#13;
hours of three and five; many&#13;
tables were littered with the&#13;
papercup evidence of free beer,&#13;
some of the questions asked by&#13;
the beast were grunts, others&#13;
artlcul11ted but hard to hear.&#13;
L11ter, the fatigued former&#13;
Attorney General of the sober&#13;
St11te of Wisconsin would say he&#13;
was lucky to escape with his&#13;
skin.&#13;
Newscope asked Bronson&#13;
LaFollette for an interview, an&#13;
interview which, as it turned&#13;
out, lasted almost an hour and a&#13;
half. The Interview was punctuated&#13;
with periodic phone&#13;
calls; he'd be late for his next&#13;
engagement, he'd try to make a&#13;
staff meeting, he couldn't get l!I&#13;
plane before 7: 30, planning tor&#13;
another hectic day, another&#13;
sleepless night.&#13;
"The thing Is they expect me&#13;
to know the mayor's record In&#13;
New York and they throw all&#13;
this shit, but he's not running&#13;
for mayor of the country. For&#13;
Oirissake, I don't give a ...&#13;
you know he's had some balls&#13;
and 11111 these dudes are for other&#13;
candidates, so, you know, they&#13;
get all these poop sheets out,&#13;
ask this question, ask that&#13;
question. The question that&#13;
ought to be asked Is why Is a&#13;
senator more appropriate t han&#13;
a mayor to run for the&#13;
Presidency."&#13;
" In this crowd I was lucky to&#13;
get out with my skll'\, but ah&#13;
... " another phone call,&#13;
another Interruption. "Dudes&#13;
up there were passing me&#13;
messages that I' ve got a phone&#13;
call, I mean what the hell, I'm&#13;
sorry operator, the number Is&#13;
• • • I mean that's f ust u,, _&#13;
believable. Well , It's not going.&#13;
"to happen on my tour up north,&#13;
because It's going to be handled&#13;
• .. better."&#13;
Newscope asked the tired&#13;
campaigner what he thought of&#13;
the crowd. "There's one couple,&#13;
f ust making out, right In the.&#13;
middle of the audience. How&#13;
long have they been here?&#13;
Because 1 was In the area&#13;
before three, but It took me&#13;
another hour to find the place."&#13;
I told him the rally began at&#13;
three, that's when the beer&#13;
started flowing. "That's what&#13;
blew It, because my people&#13;
didn't everi give me the right&#13;
directions. God that got me so&#13;
pissed off, just driving around&#13;
and around and around. And&#13;
they've got all these buildings&#13;
going up, and there's no, ah, and&#13;
this place (Student Activities&#13;
Bldg.) looks like the back hall of&#13;
a " ... phone rings again.&#13;
"The man's going to do it. I'm&#13;
out of politics. I'm In real estate&#13;
development." Newscope asked&#13;
the former Attorney General&#13;
why he was campaigning for&#13;
Lindsay. "Well first of all, he's&#13;
got everything Bobby hdd plus a&#13;
whole lot more. He's got the&#13;
administrative experience&#13;
basically, and his ability to cut&#13;
through. He understands the&#13;
bureaucratic mess that we're&#13;
In, because he's fought It at two&#13;
levels. He understands the basic&#13;
problems of this country more&#13;
than any other human being&#13;
allve today, because he's II ved&#13;
'em every day In his city. You&#13;
know, he walks the streets of his&#13;
city." Yeah, I retorted, but with&#13;
an armed guard. "Come on,&#13;
in the jaw of the beast&#13;
armed guard? Come on." The&#13;
short man with an Infectious&#13;
smile asked me if I'd read&#13;
Lindsay's book. Nope. "Well&#13;
then, you don't know where of&#13;
you speak. It just ain' t true. The&#13;
fact is Lindsay's the f irst person&#13;
to come elong in a long time&#13;
who has been on the front line&#13;
battle line facing the problems&#13;
of urban America, and fighting&#13;
the difficult crisis of where the&#13;
money's coming from : What to&#13;
do with the bureavcrafh .. me!'&gt;::.&#13;
from state to city to federal, and&#13;
to take It on with guts and try to&#13;
make ft work. What turned me&#13;
on when I got to thinking about&#13;
his political phllosophy Is what&#13;
he's doing In New York right&#13;
no~. He's putting to work the&#13;
votes. So I went back and said,&#13;
gee whiz this isn't a life for me. I&#13;
don't wanna be In the public&#13;
eye; the challenge of the admini&#13;
stratlve part and the sense&#13;
of accomplishment, that wa:o:.&#13;
great, but as far as going out&#13;
and having lo go through the&#13;
kind of things you have to do In&#13;
the campaign, and the compromises&#13;
you have to make,&#13;
forget it. Like on that statement&#13;
I made on gvn control a month&#13;
after Bobby was kltled, I was&#13;
ready to just say screw It, I&#13;
made whet I thought was a&#13;
reasonable statement at lhe&#13;
time. We register cars, boats,&#13;
all kinds of things so why not&#13;
guns. But It didn't go over very&#13;
well In this state because It's&#13;
uTHE QUESTION THAT OUGHT TO BE ASKED ISWHY&#13;
IS A SENATOR MORE APPROPRIATE THAN A MAYOR&#13;
TO RUN FOR THE PRESIDENCY"&#13;
old La Follette progressive&#13;
tradltlonal political philosophy,&#13;
which made this state a leader&#13;
In the counfl-y."&#13;
I asked LaFollette about his&#13;
own po~ltl cal experiences.&#13;
"After I got In office In '68, my&#13;
intention was to run again In ' 70,&#13;
through the primary and I ust&#13;
carry it all forward. There's a&#13;
good chance I'd be In Madison&#13;
now If I'd have run, but I walked&#13;
away from It after getting my&#13;
head back together, after what&#13;
I'd gone through in those four&#13;
years. When I was elected I was&#13;
28, and In ' 66 I was the only&#13;
Democrat In a state office with&#13;
a Republican legislature and a&#13;
Republican governor. They&#13;
threw every damn hot potato at&#13;
me, and I handled it the best&#13;
way I could. And we had a great&#13;
time, we had a great bunch of&#13;
young, bright attorneys, and I&#13;
think we did a reasonably good&#13;
job. But after I went through It,&#13;
I said to myself what Is 1thls&#13;
doing to me as a per~. I was&#13;
complete bananas, I had to get&#13;
my head together. My mother&#13;
always said never go Into&#13;
politlcs; my father committed&#13;
:suicide In 19-46 after being&#13;
defeated by McCarthy by 5,000&#13;
like a frontier In places, I'm a&#13;
hunter myself."&#13;
" Take Lindsay on gun con -&#13;
trol. In terms of population,&#13;
New York City ranks 16th In&#13;
homicide. He pushed through a&#13;
hand gun law for those Saturday&#13;
Night Specials ; 25,000 legally&#13;
registered handguns and not a&#13;
slngle homicide has been&#13;
committed with a legally&#13;
llcensed gun. This kind of ex•&#13;
perlence McGovern simply&#13;
doesn't have, Bobby didn't have&#13;
It until he went Into New York&#13;
as a senator.&#13;
What cire you're political&#13;
aspirations? "None, none&#13;
whatsoever, I'm only c11m -&#13;
paigning for Li ndsay now&#13;
because he's the best man for&#13;
the (ob. I'm paid travellng&#13;
expenses, and get to generally&#13;
pick out the things I want to do.&#13;
If Lindsay doesn't win the&#13;
nomination, I' d probllbly work&#13;
for whoever the Democratic&#13;
candidate might be."&#13;
Another phone call and the&#13;
interview came to an end.&#13;
Bronson LIi Follette, Lindsay&#13;
man, was off and rushing to&#13;
ful fl II another appointment,&#13;
exhausted, worn out with no end&#13;
In sight.&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin 'Pli•mMpc~m, Un,&#13;
&amp; $ave&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVEi&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash&amp; Carry&#13;
10W -'1.0W - JOW&#13;
lOW - 20 W • 'JOW&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12oz. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
3«: per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47cpercan&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on OIi FIiters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Sub(ectto 4 Per Cent &amp;ales Tax&#13;
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE&#13;
February 14, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page3&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD KENOSHA&#13;
PEPSl·COLA&#13;
Non. thru Thurs.:&#13;
5 7 p.m. - All the beer&#13;
you can drlnk $1.00&#13;
7 . closing - Pitchers $1.00&#13;
tes&#13;
Mon.: 8 closing - "College Night" Food&#13;
Wed.: Beer and pretz.el night&#13;
Thurs.: "Ladles' Night"&#13;
½ price for women&#13;
Fri.: 4 • 7 p.m. -&#13;
"Double Bubble" Double mixed drink for the price of one&#13;
Sat.: 2 - 6 p.m . - All the beer you can drink $2.00&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
M.on . . Thurs. - 4 - closing&#13;
Sat. and Sun. - Noon . closing&#13;
--~ - - - --&#13;
82.31 Sheridan Road&#13;
Kenosha., lJ;scons&gt;r\&#13;
Telephone: &lt;o57-3 311&#13;
R1CHARD G. CAPELLI I prop. &#13;
Page4 NEWSCOPE February 14, 1972&#13;
NEVWS BRIEFS&#13;
Maior Education Reform Supported&#13;
WASHINGTON, O.C. (CPS) - The concept of a federal&#13;
foundation to promote major reform In higher education has won&#13;
strong endorsement from II task force formed to study the possible&#13;
objectives and activities of such II foundation.&#13;
The task force views the proposed National Foundation of PostSecondary&#13;
Education as working towards general educ11tlonal&#13;
reforms as opPosed to the curref'\t piecemeal reform felt only by&#13;
students In e1&lt;perimental programs, a recently released task force&#13;
report states.&#13;
Avoid Genital Deodorants&#13;
Advises Consumer Reports&#13;
MOUNT VERNON, N.Y. (CPS) - &lt;:onsumer Reports&#13;
Magazine announced last week It wlll give Its two million readers&#13;
three words of advice about genital deodorant products: "Don't use&#13;
then,."&#13;
The non.profit magazine's rePQrt finds fault with the medlcal&#13;
nature of "feminine hygiene sprays," and Is hlghly critical of the&#13;
premarket cllnlcal test ing by the largest maker of such products,&#13;
Alberto.Culver C.o.&#13;
Private Schools Exempted From Controls&#13;
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS) Tuition and room and board&#13;
fees of private, non profit colleges and universities have been&#13;
exempted from price controls by the Cost of Living Council.&#13;
The action affects thousands of church related schools and&#13;
other private schools nationwide The Council justified Its action by&#13;
saying that fees charged by such schools "are usually insufficient&#13;
lo cover educational costs_"&#13;
Army Cross With Cross&#13;
(CPS) - Private James Stephen Cleghorn of Huntsville,&#13;
Alabama, was sente,1(.t=d lu four months In Army prison because ot&#13;
ornamentation worn on his uniform. The ornamentation was not&#13;
the now-lamlllar peace symbol, but the crossFor&#13;
The Record&#13;
q;).idi&#13;
&amp;MUSIC 00~&#13;
I ti t I I '\, 1 I ' I I I '- 1o !" I \ I lt&#13;
._ _____ Dou·ntou·11 Kenosha----•&#13;
VAtEO'S- {" ~ \&#13;
(!iIZZAtJ&#13;
Custom made fur you&#13;
I· ltH·. 01·.Ll\'l-'.H\' TO PAttKSIJJI,' \'II I . \W·&#13;
ALSO OilO&lt;EN 011'-t-JERS&#13;
/'' JO ITAUN I ~AUSACE COf3ERS&#13;
Open 6 days a v,eck from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
[)nlis Wea-.. of 'Mcdouct will be in K..,._, 'Thur.day ~ng to&#13;
attand 1he McGo""'"" rally sd,.l,led b the loboJ union 1731 hall.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
SUNDAY, FE•. 1)&#13;
Conc..-t: James Y09hourt1ian,&#13;
claulcal guitarist. U'llv~r,11y Ar&#13;
tlsts SfflH. GrN:nquist Hell con•&#13;
course. 4.00 p.m. Genral ldm,ulon&#13;
SI; student admission SOC ; children&#13;
12 and under free.&#13;
Hockey: uw p VI. llllnols Slate&#13;
University at Pa,rla, 10·00 a.m.&#13;
Track: uw p In llllnols Open Meel&#13;
at Cham~lgn.&#13;
Poetry Reading : James 5eay Dean,&#13;
Parkside faculty member, reading&#13;
his own poetry and other setect10n1. 5',orl-,red 1JV the Perkslde Po.rry&#13;
Forum, Kenolha Public MUwum,&#13;
2:00 and 4 00 p.m.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, F•• .16&#13;
Lecture: "Making tt,e Future of&#13;
Education L"• c .. taln", Ow,ght&#13;
Allen, Dean of the university ol&#13;
Massacnusetts School of Education.&#13;
~sored by the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts CommlttH. a 00 p m .&#13;
Ifs the&#13;
real thing. Coke.&#13;
... •r&#13;
GrNnQUIII H•II. Room IOl. Free 10&#13;
the public.&#13;
THURSD4Y, F •• 17&#13;
Basketball: Ranven vs. uw Gr-,&#13;
S.y •I Gr1«1 8ey.&#13;
FRIDAY, FE a. 11&#13;
Oymnutlcs: uw.p v,. Stevens&#13;
Poinl •nd St. Cloud (Minn,) State at&#13;
Stevens Point.&#13;
SATURDAY, FIE• It&#13;
•allletball: uw p "'· Lakel•nd&#13;
COiiege •t Sfleboygan.&#13;
,.,nclng: UW P v,. ~troll, llllno11,&#13;
MATCandWayneStateat Bullen Jr. Hi&lt;;lh School, 1(-lfla 10 CIO e m. Tracl11 UW P at Tlton Open,&#13;
Osnkolh,&#13;
Wre1tt1n11 : uw.p vs. Mlch,gan State&#13;
Ind Lake Super,or State at&#13;
Houghton, Mich.&#13;
Dance: "STarbOys.. sponsored by&#13;
INDICATIONS Literary MaQaline,&#13;
SIUClent Ac:tlvltiH Butldlng, NJ.&#13;
mission ll.25 1 :00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m .&#13;
uw.p and Wisconsin 1.0. required.&#13;
!Ka.nur,;}.&#13;
BEER&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Women's&#13;
Caucus&#13;
Meets Thursday&#13;
The Wisconsin Women·s&#13;
Polltlcal Caucus (WWPC) will&#13;
hold en Informational me.ting&#13;
at the Racine YWCA Thursday,&#13;
February 17, at 7:30 p.m .&#13;
Patti Nowak of Milwaukee,&#13;
WWPC state CO.()rdlnator, Will&#13;
,peak on tht Caucus's&#13;
t,eckground and alms. Eight&#13;
Racine women rumlng for City&#13;
Council and County Boerd seats&#13;
have also been Invited to give&#13;
campaign stat ements. They&#13;
are: County Bo.rd - Ruth&#13;
Gewardt (Incumbent), 1st&#13;
district ; All at Sorensen, 13th;&#13;
Opal Hammes, 16th ; and&#13;
Constance Barrington (In.&#13;
cumbent), 18th. City Council -&#13;
Qleryl Lofton and Helen Patton,&#13;
both In the :2nd ward;&#13;
0,arlene Kulpuo, loth: end&#13;
Setty Rowley, ISth.&#13;
The meeting Is ~ to t he&#13;
public.&#13;
The WWPC, a branch of the&#13;
Natlonal Women's Polltlcat&#13;
Caucus organized last summer&#13;
In Washington. wll I "seek an&#13;
ectlve voice and place for&#13;
women In politics and work for&#13;
an end to sexism. racism,&#13;
poverty and Institutional&#13;
violence," according to Ms.&#13;
Nowak. Women of both polltlcal&#13;
partlH, and of all races, ages,&#13;
occupations and educational&#13;
backgrounds are welcome to&#13;
par-tlcl~te&#13;
Pi an ist Petit&#13;
to So lo&#13;
in Milwaukee&#13;
French pianist Annie Petit, a&#13;
member of the music faculty of&#13;
the University of Wisc:onslnParkslde,&#13;
wlll appear as soloist&#13;
with the Wisconsin College&#13;
Con~valOf"Y Orchestra In a&#13;
benefit concert at 7:JO p.m. on&#13;
Feb. 29 In Bradley Pavilion at&#13;
MllwaukN's Performing Arts&#13;
c.enter.&#13;
M iss Petit also ls on the&#13;
College Conservatory faculty.&#13;
Miss Petit wlfl play a&#13;
movement from a Rach•&#13;
manlnoff concerto with the&#13;
orchestra, conducted by&#13;
Kenneth Schermerhorn.&#13;
The bene11t concert, which&#13;
also wilt feature the Conservatory's&#13;
O,amber Players&#13;
and Jau QJlntct. 1s part of the&#13;
first annual Corinthian Concert&#13;
Ball being sponsored by the&#13;
Board of Trusten and Women's&#13;
League of the school.&#13;
During the recent holidays&#13;
Miss Petit returned to her&#13;
native France to appear In&#13;
concert with the LIiie&#13;
Phllharmonlc Orchestra, In a&#13;
Paris radio recital and a .-ecltal&#13;
In Strasbourg.&#13;
M iss Petit, who joined lhe&#13;
Parkside music faculty In fall.&#13;
1970. previously taught at the&#13;
Indiana University School of&#13;
~le&#13;
While a student at the&#13;
National Conservatory of Paris,&#13;
she won first prize medals In&#13;
piano and chamber music and,&#13;
In 1956, received the In•&#13;
terpretatlon prtie at the Franz&#13;
Lint International Competition&#13;
In Budapest. She has appeared&#13;
In concert throughout Europe.&#13;
ALADDI&#13;
FLOW=R SHOP&#13;
1n west&#13;
Rocine &#13;
February 14, 1972 NEWSCOPE Pages&#13;
Blood Money in Waukegan&#13;
by Doglips Calhoun&#13;
For centuries Redman and Whiteman lived in America, off the&#13;
land. If you listen closely you can almost hear the voices of our&#13;
ancestors, "Bartholomew get off your fat ass and get us some&#13;
meat," or "Sna~e Eye you no good savage, go stalk some buffalo.&#13;
It was a fried and true way of life, living off the land. But then&#13;
civilization struck with all Its glory and splendor and pollution and&#13;
asphalt. Redman has since turned pink and Whiteman, well, let's&#13;
just say he's not as white as he used to be. But the question does&#13;
arise, Is it possible to live off the asphalt as our forefathers I lved off&#13;
the land?&#13;
No, no, and Hell no. Deer don't thrive on a diet of DDT and&#13;
asphalt and as for the buffalo, you can count them on one hand. So&#13;
what do you do when a thought like 'I need some bread, money,&#13;
coins,expendable capital, scratch .. .' flashes through your head?&#13;
Well my friend you can work (the word makes you shudder&#13;
doesn't ltl beg, steal, plunder, pillage, rip off, starve, move home,&#13;
join the marines, become a monk, or, if you're of age, you can sell&#13;
some blood.&#13;
The reputable blooclletters will only accept 'donations' once&#13;
every two months but the extra $10.00 has never done me any harm.&#13;
How are these places where they suck your blood? Well, I can only&#13;
speak from experience.&#13;
My pals and I walked In. They Immediately gave us a number&#13;
and made us fill out a registry which included name, address, and&#13;
S.S. number. After that they took my phallic middle finger and&#13;
stuck a pin into it. Blood Immediately appeared and they drew it&#13;
into a narrow glass tube thru capillary action.&#13;
The people running the place (nurses and technicians) ran a&#13;
test on it to make sure I wasn't anemic or drunk or high on drugs. I&#13;
passed for some reason and was assigned the number -4. Next came&#13;
the questions and they asked alot. ~est Ions about hepatitis,&#13;
leprosy, V.D., heart murmers, operations, and other diseases I&#13;
could accept. But no, I've never been pregnant or even had my&#13;
period because you see I'm a male according to clinical and&#13;
( Continued from Page 1)&#13;
junior level faculty.&#13;
Applebaum said, "We have&#13;
not been told by the Dean to look&#13;
specifically for senior people.&#13;
We're looking for the best&#13;
people to fill our needs." He&#13;
added, "My hope Is that we can&#13;
find some senior people,&#13;
though."&#13;
Mrs. Gray said slmltarly,&#13;
"We go for the best person we&#13;
can find. We'd llketo hire senior&#13;
level people - but not some old&#13;
stodgle. It's future performance&#13;
that counts."&#13;
The divisions are also seeking&#13;
to eliminate ad hoc positions.&#13;
Applebaum explal ned, "It's not&#13;
that they're bad 'klachers, btJI&#13;
that their only obligation ls to&#13;
show up three times a week. to&#13;
teach. A faculty member's&#13;
function Is more than to meet&#13;
with his class."&#13;
The recruiting process Itself&#13;
was summarized by Dean&#13;
Norwood as "a juggling act.&#13;
You try to keep as many options&#13;
open as p0sslbl c at the&#13;
Discipline, Division end College.&#13;
levels. Yet you want to move&#13;
with dispatch when the right&#13;
candidate appears. If a wellquellfled&#13;
person appears, you&#13;
take him. You take advantage&#13;
of the situation.''&#13;
Scholarship for&#13;
Engineering Science&#13;
Students&#13;
The Society of Manufacturing&#13;
Engineers Chapter No. 2 has&#13;
announced the Robert N. Freres&#13;
Scholarship lo go lo a $lu~nl&#13;
entering his third or fourth&#13;
year, maforlng In any&#13;
curriculum related to tool and&#13;
manufacturing engineers. The&#13;
award Is In the amount of three&#13;
hundred dollars ($300).&#13;
Selection will be made on high&#13;
schotastic standard with emphasis&#13;
in mathematics and&#13;
science. For further In•&#13;
formation contact the Office of&#13;
Flnancial Aids and Placement&#13;
oo County Trunk A, Telephone&#13;
553.2291 ~&#13;
tl~e NeVIJ~pf!.e ~ dass tf ,ec.t '{ols,. ~&#13;
~ They're Fl&lt;EE..&#13;
practical definitions.&#13;
I passed the question and answer session like a charm by&#13;
merely saying "no, I never had that," to everything. (Oneot my&#13;
buddies wasn't accepted because he'd been in Viet Nam where they&#13;
have a lot of really bad diseases.)&#13;
For the next part you absolutely must have your S.S. card and&#13;
drivers license or state 1.0. The lady behind the desk checked my&#13;
papers and then stuck an electronic thermometer in my mouth. The&#13;
gadget started a digital computer running and my score, 99.1&#13;
degrees, appeared on a viewer. I was high but not too high.&#13;
She stuck my finger In something that looked like a thimble.&#13;
That gave my pulse on a gauge and low and behold I passed that&#13;
too.&#13;
You lay down on a couch with your feet elevated and the&#13;
sanitation process began. They pat your vein and pinch them and&#13;
become ecstatic when they see you really do have them. After&#13;
about four drenchings of antiseptic they stick the needle in you. The&#13;
needle is connected to a little rubber hose which is connected to a&#13;
plastic bag which Is connected to a mild form of vacuum cleaner.&#13;
It's al I over ln four to eight minutes and you're left laying there&#13;
feeling high In a loony way. The nurse took the needle out and layed&#13;
the bag of blood next to my stomach. I was quite frankly surprised&#13;
to see that it wasn't blue in color. I said. "That's really warm. I&#13;
never had my own blood laying next to me before."&#13;
The nurse, an old army nurse, said, "It's not yours anymore,&#13;
Honey."&#13;
For Mike "the Roach" Stevesand and I it was nothing. But&#13;
some people do feel a I ittle dizzy so the center gives away soup and&#13;
coffee for fortification. The only fortification we needed was the&#13;
check.&#13;
The place we went to is known as the Beverly Blood Center,&#13;
Inc. located in Waukegan on 226 North Genesee St. It's right down&#13;
town and it doesn't open until 4 p.m. during the week. It's the only&#13;
place I know of that pays cash on the line for blood from the veins&#13;
and personally it wasn't bad at all.&#13;
~&#13;
Faculty Bookstore Committee -· '&#13;
Some of you have seen a Bookstore complaint&#13;
--,questionnaire, some of you have even filled them out. If you&#13;
are not aware of this and cannot find a questionnaire, write&#13;
down your complaints on a sheet of paper and drop it off, or&#13;
mall it to the SGA office.&#13;
• I&#13;
. ---- ----------&#13;
~ ~~,&#13;
~&#13;
HOT FUDGE BANANA&#13;
BIG TOP Creamy hot fudge over&#13;
A big sundae loaded with ice cream ond&#13;
RANCH'S BANANA SPLIT&#13;
IT'S SCRUMPTIOUS&#13;
80c&#13;
fresh strawberries, whipped bananas&#13;
creom, nuts and cherry 70c&#13;
75c&#13;
NORTH ~311 SH ERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
of the [W&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Fuh\re&#13;
at&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at. 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAU.KEE&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
0&#13;
111 Fo11r Sites 9 .. - 12" • 14'' • 16" l&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHO.TI • CHICKEM&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SJ.GJ.14&#13;
• ~EA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARllY-OUTS - DELIVElY&#13;
"YOU tm•r; • . Wf BIIING"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
0 -Lip~i &#13;
Page6 NEWSCOPE February 14, 1972&#13;
SUCH GOOD FRIENDS&#13;
circuit got a hold on a good product It all&#13;
becomes a beautiful story, totally original&#13;
and double chic. Be aware and heep your&#13;
Cor11ette I Karma and Clldll lacs J&#13;
MORE OF THE SAME, with the comic&#13;
Doctor Spector (James Coco) who carries the&#13;
fllm like a shoe salesman carrying a pair of&#13;
size 9 pumps (A cross between Hubert&#13;
Humphrey and Trumein Capote), pretty&#13;
funny.&#13;
Julie Messinger - Dyan cannon&#13;
TO ME THOUGH, Genre was stretched to&#13;
generality In this fllm, something the guys&#13;
might mention between holes at the club, or&#13;
the girls could discuss with their beauticians&#13;
whlle having their faces chromed. It has the&#13;
look of Big Bucks all over It, without much&#13;
strain.&#13;
WHILE WRITER EDITOR HUSBAND&#13;
lies dying, Mrs. Messinger Is stoned by&#13;
revelation after revelation finding ou1 about&#13;
side tine activities, (all of the female good&#13;
friends) with these discoveries we see her&#13;
past, flashbacks from nowhere, Lesbian&#13;
encounters and near climaxes all rushing In&#13;
as not so sensuous woman, a large helping of&#13;
remorse at no extra cost.&#13;
Dr. Timmy Spector James Coco&#13;
Produced and directed by Otto Preminger&#13;
A Paramount film&#13;
ON THE MONEY .. : Dyan Cannon Is&#13;
fondling delicate sensibilities again as Julie&#13;
Messinger, upper middle class heroine.&#13;
Directed by Otto Preminger, (the same mM&#13;
who has brought other film classics to us - In&#13;
Harms Way and Hurry Sundown - plastic&#13;
sea bat1Ies and contemporary Uncle Tom's)&#13;
the film repeats a commoo theme from a few&#13;
days ago ... Living for today. This theme&#13;
was side glanced when the Beats came up&#13;
with If. back In the 50's, and considered cu1e,&#13;
by this set, when the Beatles comment sung&#13;
about it in the 60's, and when Hoffman and&#13;
Ruben began to talk about doing It, NOW.&#13;
They near Iv Qot the shaft. But since the TWA&#13;
THIS BELATED IN NESS follows with a&#13;
M.A.S.H. like treatment of hospital&#13;
bureaucracy, when buxom Dyan's husband&#13;
has a mole removed from the side of his neck,&#13;
complications set In, and all is chaos for&#13;
awhile after they give the patient blood with&#13;
the wrong RH fl!lctor, sending him Into a&#13;
coma, necessitating the removal and&#13;
replacement of all his blood. Some funny&#13;
things happen as Kidney men &amp;nd Liver men&#13;
enter Into It, the biggest bro-ha-ha of all,&#13;
coming when Dyan gathers her friends&#13;
together at the bloodbank, where these&#13;
Dorian donors start. playing coctall party:&#13;
everybody consoling .. themse,ves.&#13;
THE ENO .•• Husband dead now .•&#13;
Dyan and her two boys walking Into Central&#13;
Park (God, I hope they don't get mugged) no&#13;
sunset. (She thinking . . • Scarsdale) A&#13;
symbolic exit marked by 0. C. Smith who Is&#13;
straining "Life is not for waiting, not for hide&#13;
and seeking." Walt a minute! The only guy&#13;
who had a good time and was consistent with&#13;
the film's Jive for today theme Is the dead&#13;
husband I ~I me a rewrite man I&#13;
Next week . • . A Oockwork Orange!&#13;
TITLE: Who Owns America?&#13;
AUTHOR: Waller J. Hickel&#13;
PUBLISHER: Prt&gt;ntice Hall Inc ($6.95)&#13;
by Jim Koloen of the Newscope staff&#13;
'Ntlo Owns America is one of those books born of&#13;
mediocrity and destined for obscurity, the author is in&#13;
the political limelight for a brief moment and then&#13;
returns to his home slate to tend to his own garden. I'm&#13;
trying to figure out how all this relates to the reader,&#13;
what if makes me. It was Indeed a hesitant moment&#13;
when I picked out this bool&lt;, now l realize I should have&#13;
he:-.liloh:d o ,:,midgin longer.&#13;
Anyway. who owns America? We all do. Ha, ha,&#13;
ha. That's a rich one, oboy is that funny Hickel, former&#13;
Secretl'lry of the Interior, and former Governor of&#13;
Alaska, takes 328 pages out of our lives In order lo&#13;
describe his; explaining his Job, what he accomplished&#13;
and what he wanted to do, how he was fired, where he&#13;
grew up, how he made his way by building houses and&#13;
motels in the undeveloped state of Alaska, how he&#13;
fought for statehood, and how he became the Walter J.&#13;
Hickel. If Nixon Is a Mr. Hyde, Wally is the Hickel.&#13;
Who OWns America is flooded with optimism. old&#13;
Wally says some people look for reasons not to do&#13;
things, " I look for reasons to do things." He did a&#13;
creditable lob In D.C.; he Instituted reform In the&#13;
Bureau of Indian Affairs, forced oll companies to&#13;
initiate tougher safeguards to prevent oil well blowouts&#13;
of the type seen on the coast of sunny Cllllfornla, set&#13;
drawing by Richard Lipke&#13;
aslde more public lands for park purposes, aided Earth&#13;
Day programs, why he even pointed out to Dick the&#13;
error of his inflammatory and alienating ways. He just&#13;
wasn't the kind of politico Dick wanted around, he&#13;
didn't llke being told hP wi.c; f"llible.&#13;
The most interesting aspects of this book deal with&#13;
Hickel 's relatlonshlp with the Prexy; moving from the&#13;
Intimate relationship of surrOQate candidate. In which&#13;
he represented Nixon during the Presldentlal cam,&#13;
palgn, to 22 months later when the President com&#13;
pletely cul off communications with his Secretary of&#13;
the lnlPrlor.&#13;
Hickel came to office under fire from environmentalists&#13;
and the media, he was sub(ected to l!ln&#13;
unusually harsh and lengthy Senate Cooflrmalion&#13;
Hearing, and stayed around long enough to disprove&#13;
the reasoning behind their opposition. He wl!lsn•t a yes&#13;
man. nor was he a no man, he tried to strike a balance&#13;
between resource development and conservation l!lnd&#13;
its explollatioo. He lost his balance when four students&#13;
were murdered at Kent State, a day after he walked&#13;
out of a Cabinet meeting exploding inside at the&#13;
Cambodia incursion, he fell from grace with a crash&#13;
that Impressed many people. Ultimately, the fact that&#13;
he was fired for doing a good fob reveals more about&#13;
his employer than abou1 himself, and for that reason,&#13;
perhaps this book Is almost worth reading. It depends&#13;
on how much time vou've got, I suppose.&#13;
(Courtesy of The Bookmart, wherever they are.)&#13;
BARMYTHOLOGY: A&#13;
Mockus Tap&#13;
Chris's Tavern&#13;
... !Io's Wonder Bar&#13;
by Jim Wol&#13;
0, the Nod decided thl&#13;
wanted to travel, see ttlew,&#13;
bottle, he wanted to emller&#13;
head was beselged by III er&#13;
be In heroic proportions. O&#13;
would be Achlllesand Mike&#13;
work ou1 perfectly, the lire&#13;
the pin ball cyclops at MK&#13;
knNs in abeyance, sw111o,&#13;
Mockus, Olrls's and Nill&#13;
neighborhood corner bers, ~&#13;
recognize each other, wlltr&#13;
whole point. All three bars c&#13;
pointless jukes (usually lie,&#13;
and Nelles, decade5 of 111J&gt;t&#13;
are operated by the farnfly&#13;
(11 Indeed he exists) blllln&#13;
Neighborhood bars HIit&#13;
working-drinking class. ft&#13;
practice of mouthing a ,_r&#13;
weaker sex Is present, 11 fr,&#13;
the refrain; one more time&#13;
these bars courteo~ly a,&#13;
aged folk. O,ce In a whtll:&#13;
somesuch drunk topic, Ir\&#13;
tensive mou1h to shut uppr&#13;
Mockus Tap (located It&#13;
block, by the time you 11&#13;
.---&#13;
above the street; a sm&#13;
Mockus wa!&gt; the first&#13;
warriors of the biker m&#13;
spiffy first place tavern&#13;
played and as fatewo!Ac&#13;
along was a bad om&#13;
I consulted the 0-&#13;
coffers yielded an art&#13;
Lincoln, a fin but one I&#13;
heavily, bu1 we coul&#13;
had succumbed to te&#13;
Old Style and PabSt&#13;
shorties for JOc. Har&#13;
more. Top shelf rangeq&#13;
operated by Cliff tMvei,&#13;
of alcohol ; other fea&#13;
topped bar, and a hlg &#13;
bowling machine.&#13;
The elder /IAeyer a form team lost that he c~uld ,, er race car driver, told our crew before hls&#13;
pool "'While K&#13;
I whip anybody under a hundred years old In&#13;
pool · Cfinal out~;~=~~ the Mockus team were losing on the felt fleld of&#13;
f1nallysworebltt i) Mike, Jerry and I cafoled, carressed, and&#13;
were dwlndli er ~aths at the reluctant pinball machine. The coffers&#13;
mockery of 0&#13;
:~• s:~ :,~;h~.yclops simply winked its flashing eye In&#13;
I beseeched my two st t 11·&#13;
bef ou a Ies of the need to continue our ·Iourney&#13;
ore a mol'tal blow to O ff • on a fo h ur co ers was visited upon us We embarked&#13;
R&#13;
ur-w eeled vessel and navigated to Chris's Tap l~cated at 2724&#13;
oosevelt Road I disco ed • that I'd · ver as we mounted the barstools at O,ris's&#13;
od somehow lost my notebook In our travels, the epic strains of&#13;
~i;ned ~~sey somewhere singing their refrain to the dirty snow. I&#13;
11 my companions and Informed them that we'd have to start&#13;
a&#13;
I&#13;
o~er · However, before retracing our steps back to our embarkation&#13;
~t~ w~ 5&#13;
':,"1 two beers time bathing in the amber llght of Chris's It&#13;
~sc;;,~) t;• t\~~r as I know, In Kenosha (or perhaps In southe~st&#13;
mere di a s served a tap beer (Hamms or Old Style) for a&#13;
lesson hme, and a schooner for 20c. The world can be taught a great&#13;
ere. Bottom shelf hard liquor costs a mere 30c; I asked the&#13;
:~tg ~~:n:er '!, he co~ld make a daiquiri, his curt reply was " we&#13;
Jo em· The Iuke featured such musical luminaries as&#13;
1&#13;
ann Paycheck, the PoOI table was set off in a separate room of the&#13;
arge tavern, along the wall opposite the solid wood topped bar&#13;
wooden booths were made available to the patrons. This bar, perhaps'.&#13;
?ii has the largest stock of hard liquor of the three reviewed, though the&#13;
:S service on review night wasn't quite up to the level one expects •t b Olrls's. "'&#13;
t Oirl s's Tap Is lneeed a working-dJlnklng class bar, the patrons were&#13;
A DRUNK ODYSSEY&#13;
(oloel'I of the Newscope staff&#13;
!hat one bar a night just wasn 't enough, he&#13;
wcrld filtered through the bottom of a beer&#13;
ark on an odyssey; If the next morning his&#13;
army of hangover demons, it would at least&#13;
o, the Nod would be Ulysses, Jerry Socha&#13;
ce Stevesand could be Henry Aaron ; It would&#13;
rensof the juke at Nello's would tempt him,&#13;
ockus' would defy him and force him to his&#13;
lowing dimes, glvlng no quarter.&#13;
ello's, three neighborhood bar s, two of them&#13;
i, where everyone knows everyone or at least&#13;
ere fellowship and an Inexpensive time Is the&#13;
softer sandwhlches, pool tables, mediocre to&#13;
,eavlly country), and in the cases of Mockus&#13;
1perience behind the bar. Mockus and Nello's&#13;
ly more or less, white I've yet to catch Chris&#13;
1ind h (s bar.&#13;
e these are the backbone of the American&#13;
they are the last bastion of morality; the&#13;
ur letter word denoting Intercour se, while the&#13;
rrowned upon . Many are the times I've heard&#13;
1eyou use that word and out you go. Yet all of&#13;
accommodate hopsters as well as middle&#13;
e some dude might pop off about long hair or&#13;
ind always the bartender will order the of&#13;
pronto or leave. There's no par anola.&#13;
,t 4619 · 8th Ave.) I~ stuck In the middle of the&#13;
1it down at the bar you're already five feet&#13;
~II stairw 1 sto ay eads the patron up to bar level.&#13;
•t ~ ~ our agenda, here we three hearty&#13;
· 1 " n McKay who shoots the cue on Mockus'&#13;
1 :Vue pool team. That evening a match was&#13;
. ve It, Mockus lost, perhaps bringing Socha&#13;
le (Soch l tree a ii$ to our flnanclal condition, his&#13;
'kt sure, 11 pointillist portrait of honest Abe 1&#13;
1 bra ~ ark's; we could look, the oracle said&#13;
ptat~ It. By night's end the Oracle himself&#13;
on.&#13;
ras 15c a 1 r $pl It ap while 12 oz. bottles went for AS&lt;:,&#13;
frornr s cost .-&gt;c and when ml~ed, a nickel&#13;
Bl'ld h~ to $1.00. Very reasonable. Mockus ls&#13;
·es 1 ~ son Darrel, and offers a good selection&#13;
ly C:.. ude • plal'lO and an organ, a formic&amp;&#13;
J&gt;e11tlve Pinball m achine as well as a&#13;
all regulars, most middle aged; the refreshments are incredibly&#13;
Inexpensive, one dollar here could go a long way in changing one's&#13;
general attitude of the world outside.&#13;
We had, nowever, yet to retrace our path from Mockus', On the Nod&#13;
had lost his notes, we had to start at the beginning again, a fate worse&#13;
than • • • my mind was boggled soggy, I couldn't think what fate ours&#13;
was worse than, I couldn't even remember our fate. Oi Zeus, why hast&#13;
thou bewildered me?&#13;
Wlth the expert guidance of the gods, our party managed to return to&#13;
Mockus' Intact. By this time my brain was so soggy that I had to enlist&#13;
the aid of Darrel Mockus (the younger) as a sci;lbe. Soon I found that&#13;
my compatriots had h.id enough, I alone was to enter the portals of the&#13;
Wonderbar. My final Bacchanalian task.&#13;
Nell o's Wonder Bar, located on the corner of 52nd St. and 19th&#13;
Avenue, Is a newly built bar featuring a pleasant, subdued, for the&#13;
most part, atmopshere, a bowling machine, pool table, juke and color&#13;
TV set. The reasonably priced stock of hard spirits is ample and a tap&#13;
Bud costs 20c, wh ile bottle beer goes for 45 or 50c. It's the only bar of&#13;
the three On the Nod visited t hat wasn't equipped with tables, this&#13;
because there's no room . Nelle's is my home bar since It's across the&#13;
street from my apartment, I have spent many early mornings and late&#13;
evenings at the bar ; in the mornings llstenlng to a crew of garbagemen&#13;
joke about their new t itle of ecologists, reading the&#13;
newspaper, and in the evening, after nine, watching the tube and (ust&#13;
plain wondering.&#13;
Nello Is an unassuming bartender who knows the ways of tending a&#13;
bar Inside out having been engaged in the noble art for more than two&#13;
decades. Nello's most noisy, crowded hours are between three and&#13;
nine, when the workers come In for a I ift, otherwise it's a quiet restful&#13;
establ lshment. Nello's is a good place to top off a night of drinking, writing, pum&#13;
ping gas, anything, because of the Inherent serenity of the place. It,&#13;
like the two other bars 01 the Nod visited, is a bar you don't have to&#13;
cope with, you are assimilated; service is friendly and the cllentele ls&#13;
generally amiable. Mockus, Chris's and Nelle's are representative of the great majority&#13;
of watering places In Kenosha, they all have their own per sonality,&#13;
their prices are generally reasonable and their bartenders are&#13;
basically pros. The lights were being turned off, the door was being&#13;
locked, It was time for On the Nod to open the old aspirin bottle, the&#13;
odessey was over.&#13;
!&#13;
February 14, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page7&#13;
1••······························ • • • •&#13;
: CALL FOR CANDIDATES :&#13;
• + + + •&#13;
: SGA Spring Election :&#13;
• March 7 and 8 •&#13;
• + + + •&#13;
: The following posltions are open: :&#13;
• Senator ( 1) • I Recording Secretary (1) ;&#13;
• Corresponding Secretary ( 1) • • • • Nominating Petitions are available at SGA office •&#13;
; or Student Activities . Tallent Hall ;&#13;
• •&#13;
; ( Filing Deadline February 25, 1972) ;&#13;
• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
( C YOU&gt;R E A&#13;
\?OOD MANJ&#13;
CHARl.\E BROWN.')&#13;
COZY COMFOllTABLE DINING&#13;
~ THE WINDJAMMER ~eo.oe&#13;
\&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• S£A FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
~ 658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S CHIii ROOII&#13;
FOR PRIUTE PARTIES&#13;
flEl FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OVI CATllllNG . ,&#13;
FIi.OM 10 TO 100&#13;
''°' 7th AVt. • KlMOSNA&#13;
" OFFERI NG HIGH QUALITY AT&#13;
REASONABLE PRICES, THE WI NDJAMM&#13;
ER DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
- HERBE RT KUBLY&#13;
" WONDERFUL FOOD" - SENATOR PROXMIR ______ _ &#13;
Page a NEWSCOPE February 14, 1972&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
WE LIKE IT&#13;
IN&#13;
SOMERS&#13;
Government Steps up&#13;
Search for Loan Defaulters&#13;
SANDWICHES AT&#13;
ALL TIMES-BAR and&#13;
PACKAGE GOODS&#13;
TH E SANDS&#13;
SPQR rs BAR&#13;
Hwy 32&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••&#13;
~me 1·is1i our pizz11 J kitchens or hm·e&#13;
~ome deliz·ered'&#13;
,,sk t1bo11I&#13;
our speci,tls&#13;
Open 5-_12&#13;
&lt;.:xcc.:pt sunday&#13;
4615- 7th avenue&#13;
in kcnosha&#13;
6547111&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
(CPS) - Q\ every major&#13;
campus In the country there are&#13;
students who are going to school&#13;
with the federal govcrl'mont&#13;
footing the bill. In most cases,&#13;
though, these students have&#13;
obtained loans, not scholarships,&#13;
and are t herefore&#13;
obi lgated to pay back the&#13;
money.&#13;
But now the federal government&#13;
Is worrying about these&#13;
loans. From January 31 to&#13;
September JO there was a threefold&#13;
Increase In the number of&#13;
defaulted loans. The actual&#13;
number of defaulted loans&#13;
jumped from 3,0A9 to 8,963.&#13;
Under the provisions of the&#13;
loan, the student Is obligated to&#13;
begin paying back the government&#13;
nine months after college&#13;
graduation. A slight Interest Is&#13;
added to the loan, but this does&#13;
not take effect until the student&#13;
begins making payments.&#13;
The Office of Education, a&#13;
subsidiary of the Department of&#13;
Health, Education and Welfare&#13;
(HEW) and the government&#13;
body which supervises the loan&#13;
program, blames Its Inability to&#13;
catch debtors on underS'tafflng.&#13;
In °"der to make up for th\s&#13;
deficiency, HEW's 1972 budget&#13;
rf'(JUE!St calls for 52 additional&#13;
claims collectors. At present&#13;
there are only three employees&#13;
working In this area.&#13;
This beefing up of the&#13;
colledlon arm of the department&#13;
slgnals a crack-down on&#13;
defaulted loans.&#13;
Comptroller General Elmer&#13;
8. Staats, who oversees the use&#13;
of federal funds, has recommended&#13;
a tightening up of the&#13;
administration of the loan&#13;
program. In a report to&#13;
Congress two weeks ago, Staats&#13;
pointed out the proliferation of&#13;
loan defaults and said that&#13;
federal law requires prompt&#13;
processing of clalms.&#13;
Staats criticized the Office of&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20th Ave.&#13;
Phone· 657-3911&#13;
Kenoeha.Wllconm&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
111111'111 M "'"'-"MM IIIIIM MM M MM 1111111111 """'" M "-" 11111 M"IUl.11 "" """" 11111 "-""""'" M Mf\11&#13;
.·,·············· -Honest George Sale - during February :::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::: a free cherry tree with purchase of any major item ~\\\\llsri:}\&#13;
micro-ovens,&#13;
R. C. Service&#13;
One Main Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 633-6453&#13;
Ron Casperson - owner&#13;
Education for not proceeding&#13;
against all llable parties,&#13;
"Collection action was being&#13;
taken against the student&#13;
borrower and not against cosigners,&#13;
such as parents or&#13;
spoUffs."&#13;
He said, too, that form letters&#13;
used to celled the debts "are&#13;
not sufficient! y forceful to&#13;
Impress the debtor of his legal&#13;
obligation to repay."&#13;
Staan' study of the loan&#13;
program showed that as of&#13;
January Jl, 1971, Sl billion In&#13;
over one mllllon loans had been&#13;
awarded.&#13;
Ole of the most glarlng&#13;
defects In the program that&#13;
Staats found was the lack of&#13;
uniform pollcy for participating&#13;
schools to refund money when&#13;
students died, dropped out or&#13;
stopped attending school for&#13;
various reasons.&#13;
Staan pointed out that "In&#13;
some cases, no refunds are&#13;
made unless Inquiries are sent&#13;
directly to the schools. In other&#13;
cases, schools make refunds&#13;
directly to students."&#13;
HEW hopes that Its new hardllne&#13;
stance wl II discourage&#13;
would-be debt evaders and&#13;
catch up with the almost 9,000&#13;
outstanding debtors. In ad&#13;
dltlon, there may now be fewer&#13;
loan applications due to the&#13;
slighter chance of evading, or&#13;
postponing, HEW.&#13;
Help Fight Heir Pollution&#13;
Zero Population Growth Is III nationally known non-profit&#13;
organization founded by Paul Ehrlich tor the purpose of stopping&#13;
the population explosion through education and polltlcal activity. A&#13;
Parkside chapter is being started and all Interested people are&#13;
encouraged to see Bob Moore on the Kenosha Campus Room 116-B.&#13;
The telephone extension Is 34K.&#13;
Merger Implementation Group&#13;
Welcomes Suggestions&#13;
MADISON, Wis. - A committee&#13;
studying the best ways to&#13;
merge the state's two former&#13;
university system&amp; wll I&#13;
welcome ideas and suggestions&#13;
from all Interested persons and&#13;
groups.&#13;
,qThat Is the word from&#13;
President John C. Weaver of the&#13;
new University of Wisconsin&#13;
System. He also Is serving as&#13;
secretary of the Merger lmplementatlon&#13;
Study Committee&#13;
established by the Legislature.&#13;
"Faculty and student groups&#13;
In the former University of&#13;
Wisconsin and former&#13;
Wisconsin State Universities&#13;
systems are preparing reports&#13;
and recommendations for the&#13;
Implementation Committee,"&#13;
Weaver said. "We also wlll&#13;
welcome suggestions and&#13;
recommendations from any and&#13;
all Interested persons and&#13;
organizations."&#13;
Written suggestions should be&#13;
sent before March 1 to&#13;
President Weaver, Van Hise&#13;
Hall, Madison, Wis 53706.&#13;
Catering to 1111 types end size oroups&#13;
1700 Sheridan llr.l.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
n .CoM1NG sooNJ&#13;
ANNUAL&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
Wat,h Our Ad&#13;
for Date&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE &#13;
.February 14, 1972 NEWSCOPE Pagef forum--------------------------~&#13;
by Robin Dnld&#13;
These are transltlonal years&#13;
~d the dies wlll be heavy.&#13;
Change ls quick but revolution&#13;
will take a while.&#13;
America has not even begun as&#13;
yet.&#13;
This continent Is seed.&#13;
Diane de Prima&#13;
"Revolutionary Letter 10"&#13;
Remember the grape strike?&#13;
It began In 1965 In Delano,&#13;
California, when farm workers&#13;
nnally shouted. Basta( . . .&#13;
Enough I •.. and walked out of&#13;
the fields. The purpose of the&#13;
strike was to enable the farm&#13;
worken, who conslstet: mostly&#13;
of O,lcano migrants, the opportunity&#13;
to form a union thus&#13;
receiving minimum wage and&#13;
other benefits. Today's greatest&#13;
non-violent leader, Cesar&#13;
O,avez. lead the migrants to&#13;
victory.&#13;
Atter five very long years of&#13;
plcl(etlng, boycotting, ~tings,&#13;
and some near to starvation the&#13;
strike came to an end. UFWOC,&#13;
United Farm Workers&#13;
Organizing Comm ittee. affiliated&#13;
with the AFL-CIO and&#13;
became a reality with growers&#13;
signing contracts w ith the&#13;
laborers. However. this was not&#13;
the beginning of the end, this&#13;
was not even the end of the&#13;
beginning.&#13;
La CAUSA continues and la&#13;
La Huelga Goes On&#13;
HUELGA goes on.&#13;
Although the table grape&#13;
Pickers have come under&#13;
contract the wine grape pickers&#13;
have not. Their strike began in&#13;
1966 and, even though&#13;
negotiations are near ending, It&#13;
Is still going on. Boycotttn; of&#13;
products by non-union companies&#13;
Is happening throughout&#13;
the country. And It has come to&#13;
Racine and Kenosha.&#13;
Luana Boutilier and her&#13;
husband Gene, now head of the&#13;
Racine Urban Ministry, have&#13;
been with the strike since lb&#13;
origin. Mr. Boutilier had a&#13;
church in the area of the&#13;
original grape strike and when&#13;
Chavez called for clergy to join&#13;
the picket lines Gene and Luana&#13;
began to march. Gene even.&#13;
tually lost his job with the&#13;
church because of his activities&#13;
so the family devoted full time&#13;
to the movement. Later the&#13;
Boutlllers were asked to be&#13;
registered lobbyfsts for the&#13;
workers In Washington.&#13;
Having moved to Racine&#13;
Luana was contacted by UFWOC&#13;
to organize boycotting in&#13;
this area. Since the end of&#13;
January she has called&#13;
meetings at the Racine Spanish&#13;
Center which were open to the&#13;
public and she and other&#13;
volunteers have checked liquor&#13;
stores for the selling of scab&#13;
wine. As of now two stores are&#13;
being plcketted In Racine,&#13;
Timer Liquor and Supply Co.&#13;
located at UOl Washington Ave.&#13;
and Shorecrest Liquor Store at&#13;
3900 Erle St. Plckettlng has&#13;
gone on for three weeks of thne&#13;
stores and will continue until&#13;
the wine Is either removed from&#13;
the shelves or negotiations&#13;
come to an end. The plckettlng&#13;
Is usu.ally done on Friday,&#13;
Saturday and Sunday when&#13;
stores have the most business.&#13;
Luana has sent out a request&#13;
for the help of Parkside&#13;
students. Help Is needed on the&#13;
picket lines for there are stores&#13;
that will soon be plcketted In&#13;
Kenosha. Also, students are&#13;
needed for office work.&#13;
research, and speaking to&#13;
groups. With enough student aid&#13;
the fol'"matlon of a Freedom&#13;
School Is a very good&#13;
posslblllty. People are needed&#13;
who would be Interested In&#13;
volunteering their time for this&#13;
project, she Is especially Interested&#13;
In getting students who&#13;
are Into education and art&#13;
although all are welcome. For&#13;
those who would like credits for&#13;
their work Luana has stated she&#13;
will try her best to arrange this.&#13;
Nan Freeman, an eighteen&#13;
year old college student In&#13;
Florida, was killed on the picket&#13;
lines two weeks ego. She was&#13;
•••••••••••&#13;
• • • Ed,toria( •&#13;
FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
• Board • • t •&#13;
• M.ee in~ •&#13;
• • • • • Tvesda'1 •&#13;
e 1:~o p,m. :&#13;
• • • • .A, ,-llE •&#13;
: ~FFICE :&#13;
• • • • •••••••••••&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOA SALE - Marimbl, 21&#13;
h oct. $100; Sct,wlnn b icycle. 1 speed,&#13;
couter brake etc. etc. $25; double&#13;
bed, handsome, $20. Call 694-1535 or&#13;
write 2030 N. Oal(land, MIiwaukee,&#13;
Wis.&#13;
SKIS - H•t camaro With Cubcle&#13;
bindings. s200 new, sell tor S15. Also&#13;
Gerard turntable, sell at cost. Ph.&#13;
652 8N6,&#13;
Snowtilres for VW, sin 5.60&gt;&lt;15, used&#13;
700 ml. cost $55 new, make an offer,'&#13;
call 632-8929.&#13;
3 Room Apt. North side Keno.&#13;
Privacy assu&lt;ed. Situated well tor&#13;
4'11 campuses. can 552-8970.&#13;
To whom It may concern - We want&#13;
our 3 dlSh pans bllck now.&#13;
WORK WANTED&#13;
EXPERIENCED TYPIST - Will&#13;
type term papen, assignments etc.&#13;
at my hOme. Pl1. 552 8773.&#13;
LOST AND FOUND&#13;
DOG L.OST- Near east Serryvilte&#13;
Road. Black Labr1dor Male. Ph.&#13;
552 883S&#13;
plckettlng the Talisman Sugar&#13;
C-ompany when a company&#13;
truck ran her over. She believed&#13;
In la CAUSA and La HUELGA&#13;
and gave her life. We at&#13;
Parkside can at le..s\ "t,lve a&#13;
little of our time.&#13;
If lnh:rested In helpl"SI In any&#13;
way contact Luana Boutilier at&#13;
632..0U,.&#13;
Mon-Unlon N•~ Valley Wines&#13;
1. Beringer Brothers, Inc.&#13;
Brands: (wtnes) Uvas, Medal&#13;
Royal; (champagne) Louis A.&#13;
Boneslo; (vermouth) Uvas&#13;
2. F . . Korbel &amp; Sons. Inc.&#13;
Brands: Korbel&#13;
3. Kornel I Champagne&#13;
Cellars. Brands: Hanns Kornell.&#13;
Third Generation&#13;
4. Charles Krug Winery.&#13;
Brands: Olarles Krug. Nappa&#13;
Vista, C. K., Mondovi Vintage.&#13;
5. Louis M. Martini. Brands:&#13;
Louis M. ·Martini&#13;
6. Robert Mondavi Winery.&#13;
Brands: Robert Mondavl&#13;
Winery&#13;
7. Samuele Sebastian I.&#13;
Brands: (wines) Sebastian!,&#13;
Vino Augusto; (champagne and&#13;
Vermouth) Sebastian!&#13;
8. Weibel, Inc. 9rands:&#13;
Weibel. Chateau Napoleon,&#13;
Chateau Du Chevalier, Chatuea&#13;
Lafayette&#13;
9. Wente Brothers. Brands:&#13;
• Valle de Oro, Wente&#13;
Dennis Weaver&#13;
Garrard SL.X-2 "Module" series&#13;
tumtan,e; con,ole stereo. Celt Rey&#13;
6548178. WHEEL~ 2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
at McGovern Rally&#13;
6758 - Uth Ave,&#13;
Labor Union&#13;
737 Hall&#13;
Thursday, Feb. 17&#13;
at 7 p.m.&#13;
Sl.00 donation&#13;
Also&#13;
Reggie McLean&#13;
Detroit folksinger&#13;
Authorized and paid tor&#13;
by G . M. Hansen.&#13;
51123 , 61111 Ave.&#13;
Kenosha, W,s&#13;
Diana&#13;
DRUMS FOA SALE - L.Udwick&#13;
a,mplete set, excellent condition.&#13;
Best offer over S125. Ph 633-5666&#13;
after 4:00. Jerry or Bob.&#13;
STEREO TAPE RECORDER -&#13;
Sorty 252 o One year otd. List S135.00,&#13;
wit for S70.00. Ph. Jerry 652.2538 or&#13;
553 2,,196.&#13;
CAMERA - Rikot, "Nikon type"&#13;
35mm. f 1 ~ IMS. Alt black pro&#13;
model. with haze filter, 2X zoom&#13;
extender, cll5e SJ75 new. Seti for&#13;
5175. used only twice. F'l1onc Mel&#13;
Meulna 65A 6771&#13;
FOR SALE - Snowmobile l!JolenS&#13;
Husky St)rlnt. Brand new 18 hp, List&#13;
$795. S~I for U25. Won in a r1Hlt.&#13;
Phone 652•2538 after 12 noon.&#13;
C--W•TCHt~ _JC •01•• • AC(\ltfffl&#13;
l,,l lttacftrOn • L.oAG•n•&#13;
• 111~• "' ,...., ...&#13;
ca,,_,v•il• • T•ffl•• LA-Co i.tl t1•&#13;
1960 GTO. New tires, mags, A speed,&#13;
excellent a&gt;ndltlon. Must sell. $1,200,&#13;
· willing to talk. 633-1069 any time&#13;
after 5:00.&#13;
1967 Opel Rally• s,peed, "40,000 miles,&#13;
1850. Call 654-5032 ask for Sarb or&#13;
Do119.&#13;
STUDENTS- If you had ii locker on&#13;
tne Racine Campus last semest«&#13;
ar1&lt;1 are not 11~ing It this seme!&gt;te.-&#13;
please inform the Racine Mi!lil&#13;
Office (SSJ 2121, exv. 20) so we can&#13;
reassign i t&#13;
EMPLOYMENT SALES&#13;
PEOPLE WANTED - Male or fll!male. Part time. Lots ot work.&#13;
t nts of mooey. Ph. 652,3833.&#13;
PERFUM!S&#13;
,,..~···&#13;
f11,w,tt • ~,,..,fl'l ••• , ..c1&#13;
cotoe,w,a&#13;
Rfl'AIR DFPT&#13;
W1tchH • Jrwelty&#13;
Dr4mond Scf!ing Cvmvlctc R1!'p•,r&#13;
Oopt&#13;
Ring Oeu9n1n9&#13;
Craduate Gemo1Dg1st Certified O,amontolor.•~t&#13;
Intermezzo&#13;
Jl'~ii''g~ I&#13;
It does ,,..Ice • diffelfnce wlu:re YDU shop! I&#13;
I 0% o iscount to students and F ac.ulty with 1-D.&#13;
~IL VERWARE-:J&#13;
W all~ - Lv"t&#13;
........... ,. Sft ..... ld•.U•&#13;
IRIDA1•&#13;
RECISTRV&#13;
L__CRYSTAL ~ Tiffoft • Ol'f'9'f.,•• ~"41C-A t•l•tU,.1•&#13;
• .,..1 -~,.,. &#13;
Page lO NEWSCOPE Febt-uary l4, 1972&#13;
An Advance Man With a Grin&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Jerry Bruno sat In the Viking Room&#13;
of the Kenosha Holiday Inn. Outside it&#13;
was nine degrees below zero, windy,&#13;
clear and very brlgh I. He was seated at&#13;
a table next to a large picture window&#13;
overlooking a dormant harbor. He was&#13;
finishing the last few spoonfuls of&#13;
Special K cereal. Next to his chair, on&#13;
the floor, were two morning papers, the&#13;
Chicago Sun -Times and the Milwaukee&#13;
Sentinel.&#13;
He was quietly talking to the man&#13;
sharing the table wlth hin'l, Spencer&#13;
Dickenson from Rhode Island, who also&#13;
was finishing breakfast, mopping up&#13;
egg yoke with a piece of toast The&#13;
dining room was almost empty, save&#13;
for a half dozen other people eating.&#13;
The hands of the clock p0inted to a&#13;
quarter of eight.&#13;
Both men were temporarily living at&#13;
the downtown motel In connection with&#13;
the upcoming Presidential primary.&#13;
Mr. Dlcke"lson, reminding one of the&#13;
bespectacled character Atticus Finch&#13;
in "To Kill A Mocklngbord", was&#13;
handling Jchn Lindsay's Presidential&#13;
bid, specifically in the First District.&#13;
Jerry Bruno, described by writer Jeff&#13;
Greenfield as " Bull1 l!ke a fire&#13;
hydrant", was also tn Kenosha working&#13;
for Lindsay, as a Political f'.onsultant.&#13;
In a January 31st National Affairs&#13;
story, Newsweek labeled Jerry Bruno&#13;
"a near legendary figure" as "the most&#13;
celebrated advance man in American&#13;
politics." Bruno's book, " The Advance&#13;
Man", Is in Its third hard cover prln&#13;
ting, first paper-back printing. He was&#13;
an advance mon for the Kennedys,&#13;
John and Robert . He handled&#13;
everything for them from campaign&#13;
stops In the early 60's, to Robert's&#13;
funeral In 1968. Sitting In the dining&#13;
area on this Mronday morning, Jerry&#13;
Bruno, a part of contemporary history,&#13;
did not attract much attention.&#13;
A waitress came to the table and&#13;
began clearing empty dishes. She asked&#13;
if there was anything they would like.&#13;
Spencer Dickenson asked for another&#13;
glass of grapefruit juice, Jerry Bruno&#13;
requested a second cup of coffee.&#13;
After returning with both, the&#13;
waitress, Chris, walked over to a cord&#13;
controlling the large curtains on the&#13;
picture window. She pulled one cord,&#13;
closing the curtains, blocking the&#13;
sunlight that had been drenching the&#13;
Consultant.&#13;
"There, how ls that," asked the&#13;
waitress, expecting no answer. It was&#13;
better the other 'fl/JY, Jerry Bruno said,&#13;
sitting ln a shadow, II was better open.&#13;
Somewhat surprised, Chris reopened&#13;
the curtains letting the sunshine wash&#13;
over Jerry Bruno. That's good he said,&#13;
That's It.&#13;
He began talking about the days In&#13;
Kenosha when he was a forklift driver&#13;
at American Motors, the times he hung&#13;
around the Italian American with his&#13;
core of friends. He remembered all of&#13;
their names, and a few stories about&#13;
each, shoving to the back of his mind&#13;
the Presidents and other people he has&#13;
known.&#13;
You know, he continued talking about&#13;
Kenosha, people tried to change the city&#13;
manager form or government fourteen&#13;
times before my friends and I got involved&#13;
and chal"lged it the first time we&#13;
tried. The hends of the clock spelled&#13;
almost eight thirty. Mayor Burkee was&#13;
probably getting ready to begin his day&#13;
as INJyor of the city. We were radicals&#13;
back in the fifties he said.&#13;
Jerry Bruno began his Involvement In&#13;
politics helping William Proxmire&#13;
become Governor of the state. When&#13;
Senator Joe Mccarthy died, he helped&#13;
Proxmire become Senator. From there&#13;
he worked for John Kennedy. The rest&#13;
Is history and discussed In his book coauthored&#13;
by Jeff Greenfield.&#13;
Jimmy Breslin was going to coauthor&#13;
my book, he said talking about&#13;
" The Advance INJn", but the publisher&#13;
thought he was too big a name.&#13;
Spencer Dickenson had pushed&#13;
himself away from the table, llstenlng&#13;
intently. Jerry Bruno Is very easy to&#13;
listen to. Hts manner of talktng tends to&#13;
Involve all those within earshot.&#13;
The fact he Is a national figure came&#13;
up. Just after nls memoirs were&#13;
published, he made an appearance on&#13;
the Johnny Carson Tonight Show.&#13;
I was petrified, he commented, I had&#13;
only been on televislon once, In&#13;
Syracuse, New York, a few days before.&#13;
Talking about the Tonight Show, he&#13;
went on, I sat In their Green Room for&#13;
over an hour waiting to go on, then they&#13;
took me up to an entrance just behind&#13;
the curtain.&#13;
I was told to llsten for my name, then&#13;
go oristage. There I was, my knees&#13;
shaking. Then I thought, Robert&#13;
Kennedy used to ask my opinion on Viet&#13;
Nam before people llke Schlesinger or&#13;
McBundy. I decided I could handle&#13;
nationwide television and Johnny&#13;
Carson. He went onstage, answered&#13;
questions about his book, mentioned his&#13;
hometown, and flt right Into the flow of&#13;
conversation, all went fine.&#13;
Oller an address system In the motel&#13;
came the name Jerry Bruno. He had a&#13;
telephone call waiting at the desk. A&#13;
few heads turned from the breakfast&#13;
tables In response to the name.&#13;
Upon returning to his seat, another&#13;
waitress, named Josie, asked him If he&#13;
had enjoyed skiing the day before. He&#13;
said he had, as she poured more coffee.&#13;
Spencer Dickenson asked If he had gone&#13;
to Wilmot. Jerry Bruno said he had&#13;
gone to INJf estlc HIiis. He had to check&#13;
It out as Lindsay said he wanted to ski&#13;
when he visited. It was the second time&#13;
Jerry Bruno had skied.&#13;
Josie, her attention focuse,d on the&#13;
man In the dark blue suit, walked over&#13;
to the cord controlling the curtains and&#13;
closed them for the second lime of the&#13;
morning, not knowing about the first&#13;
episode. No, no he began, but she&#13;
needed no more, quickly reopening&#13;
them, allowing In sunshine. Spencer&#13;
Dickenson began to laugh.&#13;
Conversation et the breakfast table&#13;
had been bouncing around for almost&#13;
an hour and a half. After another phone&#13;
call, Jerry Bruno announced that he&#13;
had lo do a radio show from his motel&#13;
room at nine a.m. He asked for the&#13;
P.:1rks,Je Student Gov~rnmcm T ~ GOVERNMENT&#13;
1s Sfonsor-,11:1 d&#13;
CO-OP LIJN(H ;;T noon,&#13;
F~brv~ry l61 /9 ? .J.. at +1-,. Student'&#13;
Adivifle5 Bu,·/cJinJ fo cl ~k ft&gt;r&#13;
Coniri'bvtions of- money, ioys1 .1n d&#13;
VOI..VNTEER HE.LP for the d;)y - c.&gt;rc - cel"lh:r.&#13;
We v&lt;~e st11deot ~ -\-c, br'ioj breaJ,&#13;
chH.s~ -f &lt;vi+ or w r,Q1eve (.&#13;
2 #·&#13;
C&gt; ~o&#13;
z ~&#13;
~ ~~ o ~o&#13;
g~&#13;
see back paqe for further information&#13;
check, signed It, left a tip, and led the&#13;
way to room 204 and a telephoned radio&#13;
show.&#13;
Kathy, his personal secretary, was&#13;
waiting In the room. She had taken a&#13;
few calls for him and jotted down lnformstlon&#13;
on a pad in her lap. It was&#13;
almost nine a.m. Jerry Bruno look off&#13;
his sportcoat, sat on his unmade bed,&#13;
and took a powder blue phone off the&#13;
nlghttable.&#13;
The question and answer show was to&#13;
be aired over station WROC radio In&#13;
Rockford, 111\nols. He was talking to the&#13;
host of the show, Bill Taylor, minutes&#13;
before he was to be introduced.&#13;
Earller in the dining room, he said&#13;
the questions on this type of show were&#13;
usually similar. Jerry Bruno predicted&#13;
someone would ask about Dallas; they&#13;
always did, he added.&#13;
On the third call into the show,&#13;
someone asked what part he played In&#13;
the Dallas Kennedy visit. He answered&#13;
he had done the advance work for the&#13;
trip, he didn't go Into detail.&#13;
Someone then asked a question about&#13;
an advance man. He's the guy In the&#13;
back of a packed hall listening to his&#13;
candidate speak. He's usually sweating&#13;
with a grin on his face, he answered.&#13;
At one point, the telephone hookup&#13;
was Interrupted by a call placed by a&#13;
salesman from Salem, Wisconsin, to&#13;
another party. During the short delay,&#13;
Bruno said, with a hand over the&#13;
receiver, he always forgot to plug his&#13;
book. His publisher had to remind him.&#13;
The Interrupted question concerned his&#13;
book.&#13;
The rest of the radio show went along&#13;
smoothly. Questions concerned past&#13;
experiences, Nixon's 1968 campaign,&#13;
Humphrey, LBJ, etc. People wanted to&#13;
know why he supported Lindsay, why&#13;
Lindsay should be President, and when&#13;
Lindsay would be In the area&#13;
After the show, Spencer Dickenson&#13;
asked Bruno If the last chapter of his&#13;
book, predicting Lindsay as the next&#13;
President, had anything to do with&#13;
Bruno's working for the candidate a&#13;
year later. The Polltlcal Consultant&#13;
said he did not know he would be&#13;
working for Lindsay when the book was&#13;
written, It was lust the way he sized up&#13;
the 1972 race at the time.&#13;
Kathy, sitting on a radiator next to a&#13;
window, began talking to Mr. Bruno&#13;
about the day's business. He was back&#13;
on the powder blue phone In minutes,&#13;
dialing someone In New York.&#13;
Spencer Dickenson excused himself,&#13;
he also had many details to work out&#13;
concerning Lindsay's first visit to the&#13;
area within the next two weeks. Jerry&#13;
Bruno waved good by while on the&#13;
phone.&#13;
After the short conversation to New&#13;
York, he listened to the secretary rattle&#13;
off names, times and places. He stood&#13;
In the middle of the room listening, tie&#13;
loosened, cuffs partly rolled up.&#13;
He looked like the sort of guy standing&#13;
In the back of a packed hall,&#13;
listening to his candidate draw cheers&#13;
from the crowd; a sweating advance&#13;
man, with a grin on his face. &#13;
'1bruary 14, 1,12 NEWSCOPE P•ge 11&#13;
Cagers Face Tough Climax&#13;
"I've really been pleased with Winter Sports Melting&#13;
our effort In the last two games&#13;
and most especially against&#13;
UW-Mllwaukee."&#13;
That's how Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens of the University of&#13;
wisc00sln-Parkslde assessed&#13;
his team •s performance as the&#13;
young group of Rangers&#13;
prepares for Its final three&#13;
games of the season.&#13;
Parkside will meet UW Green&#13;
Bay Thursday night at the&#13;
erown County Arena In Green&#13;
Bay, Lakeland Saturday night&#13;
at the Sheboygan Municipal&#13;
Armory and Dominican&#13;
MondaY night at Racine at the&#13;
1.akers· Theater-Gym complex&#13;
All three begin at 8 p.m.&#13;
The Rangers lost to UWMllwaukee&#13;
last week at the&#13;
~ena, but Stephens expressed&#13;
pleasure with his freshmandominated&#13;
squad. which held&#13;
the Panthers to a 39-30 half-time&#13;
tead and was not out of the&#13;
game until about eight minutes&#13;
remaining. UW-M won 94-60.&#13;
"It's a real credit to a group&#13;
of young players with the kind&#13;
of record that we have (3-161&#13;
thattheystlll have enough pride&#13;
and desire to play to the finish of&#13;
f!Vlf'Y game."&#13;
O,uck Chambllss, with 17&#13;
points against UW-M, remains&#13;
the Rangers' top scorer with a&#13;
16.Javerage for 18 games, while&#13;
Bob Popp, with a 1-4.0 average&#13;
for eight games, Is I ust ahead of&#13;
starting guard Tom Joyce, who&#13;
has a 13.9 average for 19 games.&#13;
Stephens sees the Rangers&#13;
having no easy time with any of&#13;
the three opponents. Green Bay&#13;
defeated the Rangers 103-66 In&#13;
early Decemberwhlle Lakeland&#13;
and Dominican are leaders In&#13;
the Gateway Conference. The&#13;
Llkers are a big, ph yslcal team&#13;
and outrebounded UWMllwaukee&#13;
despite losing to the&#13;
Panthers.&#13;
"We expect three real tough&#13;
oames," Stephens said, "and&#13;
we'll just be going out there to&#13;
do our best and end up the&#13;
The UW-Parkslde track team, paced In the early season by two&#13;
miler Lucian Rosa, miler Dennis Biel and walker Mike DeWitt, wlll&#13;
jump into competition at Oshkosh Saturday with the host sc~t,&#13;
Whitewater, Stevens Point, Platteville and Lawrence In the Titan&#13;
Open meet.&#13;
The UW-Parkslde fencing team, with a 5-4 season mark&#13;
heading Into last weekend's battle against Michigan State and UWMadison,&#13;
will host lllinols, Detroit, Tri-State and M.A.T.C. at Bullet&#13;
jr. high in Kenosha at lOa.m. Saturday.&#13;
The UW-Parkside gymanstfcs squad will close its dual season&#13;
Saturday at Stevens Point with St. Cloud State and the Pointers as&#13;
Its opponents. Then senior captain Warren McGilllvray, freshman&#13;
vaulter Kerry Pfeifer and freshman rings man Kevin O'Neil wilt&#13;
begin practicing for the NAIA national meet March 24-25 at&#13;
Eastern llllnols University in Charleston.&#13;
Dogged by forfeits because of Injuries and resultant lack of&#13;
depth, the UW-Parkslde wrestling team is readying for another&#13;
double dual this weekend at Houghton, Mich., against Lake&#13;
Superior State and Michigan Tech. Ken Martin, with a 15•2-l won•&#13;
loss record, continues as the team's top wrestler and must be&#13;
considered a good bet for top national honors, as last year, when he&#13;
placed in second in the NA IA at 134pounds.&#13;
0&#13;
z&#13;
&lt;&#13;
i&#13;
i&#13;
m&#13;
·- 2 .. season on a good note." ,ppg ; forwards, Bob Popp,&#13;
Burlington j&amp;Jnlor, 1.t.O, and&#13;
Chuck Chambliss, Racine&#13;
freshman, 16.3; guards, Tom&#13;
Joyce, Greendale freshman,&#13;
13.'9. and Denn Is ( Oeke)&#13;
Routheaux, Ewen, Mich.,&#13;
junior, 7 .s.&#13;
. , .. . - .. Stephens wlll probably go&#13;
with the same lineup that has&#13;
carried the Rangers recently,&#13;
one which Includes the team's&#13;
top five scorers: Center, Tom&#13;
Heller, Kenosha freshman, 11.,&#13;
EIGHT RACINE AREA JAYC~ RECENTLY BRAVED&#13;
-6 DEGREE WEATHER TO COLLECT FUNDS TO FIGHT&#13;
CYSTIC FIBROSIS. THEIR "TOLL ROAD" IS PART&#13;
OF ASTATE·NATIONAL FROJECT.&#13;
H; Fol ks! T"e beenthe&#13;
circ.ulati~n r,~najer to-r NE'WSCOPE for&#13;
+he lasi half ~edr or so. We U +he. s~d news&#13;
jc.; T'm 3oin~ -hi ha"e -b 9i\le up 4\\is 'P.festi~io1J5&#13;
pos ,tion -for an under h"rs st..\tus Q-+ 4-he.&#13;
TIMES- REPORTER.&#13;
NE.\JSCOPE.'5 9oin__1 -\o be need\t'\_3 a rep\acerri'-nt&#13;
for me ancl ~.!tu cou\cl ~ ir H ! .:c.P 'iov ha"e Q cdr&#13;
8C\d are. -tre.e. on Tuesd.a'1 morl'\inqs or ~~tet"noo ns ~ n-e.e c\ ~ ou. ~ .a tu r a n1 NEW SC.crPE ('o \I~~ '-f out'&#13;
+, a.ve..l e~ pen., ~.s.&#13;
J:.f "lo"'re. inte,~st(!c!1 ple.l~~ phone. SS:!.--.2'¾&lt;fb&#13;
and. "to"'l\ be wh,skEd +o -\-\,Q +op ot a&#13;
pi\e o-f newspcl pers. &#13;
?resents ~&#13;
THE&#13;
Saturday, FebruarJ I 'lfh ·&#13;
9 f'•m. - J_ a.m.&#13;
*&#13;
STUDENT AlTIVITIE~ BIJILDING&#13;
Admission - $ /, 2 5&#13;
/Jrh;Je anQ 1/isconsin ID. 's Re'i-vired </text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 6, February 14, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text>1972-02-14</text>
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              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
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