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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 6, issue 7</text>
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            <text>Lindsay in Kenosha</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>VOTER REGISTRATION DEADLINE FEB. 2 3&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parks ide&#13;
Volume 6 Number 7 February 21,1972&#13;
Lindsay in Kenosha&#13;
by Paul Lomartireand Marc&#13;
Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
For Jerry Bruno it was&#13;
another successful performance.&#13;
The legendary advance&#13;
man brought his '72&#13;
candidate home to Kenosha,&#13;
giving the locals a chance to&#13;
see, hear, and touch the heir&#13;
apparent to charismatic&#13;
politics, John Lindsay.&#13;
Bruno, long associated with&#13;
the Kennedys, orchestrated a&#13;
highly polished campaign stop&#13;
for the presidential hopeful,&#13;
before a packed crowd of 500 in&#13;
the Saint Joseph High School&#13;
cafeteria.&#13;
The public was invited to the&#13;
Sunday afternoon reception by&#13;
mailed invitation. The Kenosha&#13;
native was producing excitement&#13;
reminiscent of his&#13;
work during the Kennedy era.&#13;
"They're your guests," he&#13;
told a roomful of giddy junior&#13;
hostesses, referring to the&#13;
growing crowd, "you must be&#13;
courteous." The volunteers,&#13;
wearing smiles and "Lindsay"&#13;
sashes, were to form a human&#13;
corridor for their candidate&#13;
from the entrance of the&#13;
cafeteria to the podium.&#13;
Standing in the school's office,&#13;
temporarily labelled&#13;
"Press", were plain clothes&#13;
detectives quietly talking, as&#13;
reporters waited for their copy.&#13;
In the cafeteria, hostesses&#13;
served coffee and cookies to a&#13;
crowd of local politicos, hard&#13;
core Democrats, establishment&#13;
typ e s , on-t he-m ove&#13;
professionals, and the curious&#13;
citizenry in search of a handshake&#13;
and autograph.&#13;
Jerry Bruno had prepared&#13;
Kenosha" for the Mayor of New&#13;
York City.&#13;
He moved quickly, flashing a&#13;
movie star smile. His face was&#13;
tan, angular in shape, his hair a&#13;
sandy-gray hue. He -Wore a&#13;
(Continued on Page 4)&#13;
BOARD OF&#13;
DIRECTORS&#13;
MEETING&#13;
at the office&#13;
Tues. 7 pm&#13;
charcoal colored suit and vest, a&#13;
tie, unshined black shoes, and a&#13;
slightly wrinkled blue pinstripped&#13;
shirt. There was an&#13;
easiness to him, an outward&#13;
unconcern for the details of his&#13;
appearance.&#13;
He mounted the cramped&#13;
speaker's platform, shook the&#13;
hands of a few local dignitaries&#13;
and smiled through a short&#13;
introduction by Kenosha Attorney&#13;
David Phillips. He began&#13;
his verbal campaign.&#13;
The tax load in the country&#13;
must be restructured, he&#13;
asserted. "If elected President,&#13;
I intend to shift the burden of&#13;
taxation away from the&#13;
property tax to the federal&#13;
government."&#13;
It was a mistake, furthermore,&#13;
to use property taxes&#13;
to finance welfare programs.&#13;
Noting the number of&#13;
millionaires that pay no income&#13;
taxes, he said, "Every nickel&#13;
earned by working men and&#13;
women in this country is fully&#13;
taxable. This is not true of a&#13;
great many other Americans. I&#13;
intend to change a system in&#13;
which hundreds of Americans&#13;
go without paying taxes. I intend&#13;
to change a system in&#13;
Gay Lib organizing&#13;
at UWP&#13;
by Jim Koloenofthe Newscope staff&#13;
Political organizations with minority views are nothing new to&#13;
Parkside; the Young Socialist Alliance is a defunct example, the&#13;
YAF is another . A new minority group is presently in the process of&#13;
gaining recognition as a campus organization, that group is Gay&#13;
Liberation. Gay Lib is perhaps the only political organization (with&#13;
the exception of Women's Lib) which can find detractors on each&#13;
side of the political spectrum, an organization whose very name&#13;
elicits gut reactions of repugnance from some, and an uncertain&#13;
bemusement from others. It, like Women's Lib, represents a&#13;
sexopolitical movement, still an enigma in conventional political&#13;
thought.&#13;
Gay Lib may soon be a reality at P-side, and the two students&#13;
Newscope recently interviewed, Junior Dan Robeski and Fresh&#13;
man Nat Evanoff, are its guiding force. The two articulate&#13;
longhairs told Newscope they began the effort to gain recognition&#13;
two weeks ago, and were initially greeted with an "is it even&#13;
legal?" reply, followed by a suggestion that they "change the name&#13;
to something more obscure." Even so, they explained that so far&#13;
things have been going smoothly, and that they don't foresee any&#13;
major setbacks in their quest for recognition.&#13;
Evanoff explained the organization would be open to everyone,&#13;
gay and straight, and that its purpose for the present is both&#13;
educational and "necessarily political because we constitute a&#13;
minority." Evanoff further explained that "we want to help the gay&#13;
members of the university to establish a sense of identity and group&#13;
pride." "What we want to do," added Robeski, "is form some sort&#13;
of group cohesion, as well as educating the community and&#13;
possibly, in the future, allying ourselves with other Gay&#13;
organizations in the state."&#13;
They told Newscope that rather than go out and recruit&#13;
members, "we'll let them come around to us." The two Gay Lib&#13;
bers also expressed the hope that by organizing at Parkside, "we&#13;
can set an example to gay members of the smaller, private, more&#13;
restrictive schools in the area such as Carthage and Dominican."&#13;
Newscope asked how their idea had been received by fellow&#13;
students. They said the reaction was generally favorable. Evanoff&#13;
expressed the hope that a violent opposition wouldn't emerge such&#13;
as he'd experienced at Rice University while organizing a Gay Lib&#13;
there; "people weje getting beat up in dorms!"&#13;
Their advisor is Hal Stern, and though their membership is&#13;
presently composed of only themselves, they expressed the belief&#13;
that, in the near future their ranks will swell considerably. Once&#13;
recognized they hope to present speakers, and that other plans&#13;
depend upon what opportunities they will gain from being&#13;
recognized. Asked if their efforts were being aided from outside the&#13;
campus, they told Newscope that suggestions and encouragement&#13;
were coming from the Madison, Chicago and Milwaukee Gay&#13;
communities. They said one of the biggest stumbling blocks, as&#13;
well as a major reason for organizing a Gay Lib, is to combat the&#13;
"old queer syndrome". Evanoff said, "we'd like to see it die."&#13;
A new move&#13;
PARKSIDE ANNEXATION&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
ofthe Newscope staff&#13;
A new move is presently&#13;
underway to annex Parkside,&#13;
and some of the land that lies&#13;
between the campus and the&#13;
city of Kenosha to Kenosha.&#13;
This latest move is being instituted&#13;
by United States&#13;
General Inc., a Brookfield,&#13;
Wis., based land development&#13;
firm, in the form of a petition&#13;
requesting a referendum on the&#13;
issue. Unlike the last&#13;
referendum, which failed, Psi8e&#13;
students who reside in&#13;
Parkside Village are being&#13;
asked to sign the petition.&#13;
The first annexation move&#13;
(the referendum took place&#13;
October 12,1971) failed by a 11-4&#13;
vote. At that time only 17&#13;
electors of Somers were eligible&#13;
to vote; of this number ten&#13;
signed the petition requesting&#13;
the annexation be put on a&#13;
referendum. Heated debates&#13;
ensued between the City of&#13;
Kenosha (whose city council&#13;
approved of the annexation)&#13;
and the Town of Somers. A&#13;
threat was reported against the&#13;
well-being of one of the electors.&#13;
The 11-4 vote demonstrated a&#13;
dramatic turn of events, as&#13;
many of those who signed the&#13;
petition requested that an&#13;
nexation be put on a referendum,&#13;
voted against it. This turn&#13;
of events can be attributed to&#13;
either the more full airing of the&#13;
facts that occurred between the&#13;
time the petition was filed and&#13;
the final vote took place, or to&#13;
the reaction the voters felt at&#13;
the threat upon one of their&#13;
numbers. Mayor Burkee of&#13;
Kenosha, who vigorously&#13;
backed the annexation move,&#13;
was quoted in the Kenosha&#13;
News immediately after the&#13;
referendum results were known&#13;
as saying, "It is unfortunate&#13;
that a handful of farmers is able&#13;
to stifle the growth of a great&#13;
university."&#13;
Now a new petition is being&#13;
circulated with a few significant&#13;
changes; the acreage concerned&#13;
is up from 1,340 to 1,417,&#13;
and there are more than 350&#13;
eligible electors in compariosn&#13;
to the 17 eligible during the first&#13;
referendum. A substantial&#13;
number of these new electors&#13;
live at Parkside Village.&#13;
Why annex? The basic issues&#13;
argued by the city include the&#13;
realization of the city's land&#13;
investment at P-side, concern&#13;
over fire and police protection,&#13;
and an uncertainty as to&#13;
Somers' ability to provide&#13;
adequate water and sewer&#13;
services. Perhaps an equally&#13;
substantial though less laudable&#13;
item, is future land development.&#13;
&#13;
Mayor Burkee has argued&#13;
about Kenosha's investment in&#13;
the land that the University now&#13;
stands on, the 748 acres it&#13;
purchased from the Somers&#13;
land owners, many of whom&#13;
were reluctant to give it up at&#13;
any price. He has spoken about&#13;
the uncertainty of Somers'&#13;
ability to provide adequate&#13;
sewer and water facilities.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie has gone on&#13;
record stating that Parkside&#13;
has adequate facilities for the&#13;
next few years, while Somers&#13;
and Mt. Pleasant have undertaken&#13;
feasibility studies in&#13;
connection with a proposed&#13;
treatment plant to be located&#13;
near the Parkside campus; a&#13;
plant (^signed to fulfill the&#13;
expected needs of the university&#13;
in the years ahead.&#13;
The Mayor and others have&#13;
pointed out the need for police&#13;
and fire protection. Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie has stated that Parkside&#13;
has its own security force, while&#13;
Somers has pointed out that it&#13;
has a firm agreement from Mt.&#13;
Pleasant to combine their fire&#13;
fighting forces in the event of a&#13;
(Continued on Page 5)&#13;
P R O P O S ED A N N E X AT I 0N -&#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE February 21,1972&#13;
Come visit our pizza&#13;
kitchens or have&#13;
some delivered'&#13;
ask about&#13;
our specials&#13;
Open 5—12&#13;
except Sunday&#13;
4615—7th avenue&#13;
in kenosha&#13;
654-7111&#13;
3a»*&#13;
i&#13;
tfzzA&#13;
jmuimuii' i ,• ii.i.i.'.i.'.i.'.i m u' i,u.M.i.i.'.cg:&#13;
RUBYS&#13;
A j Jjmaj&#13;
t&gt; tyty OJ^AKJ tie- U/uV (hyMj&#13;
5535-6 A ve. Kenosha&#13;
J O O O O O O O O O O O O O Q O O O O O O O O O O Q l f li&#13;
JOM sm&#13;
WINDJAMMER&#13;
TENDERLOIN S TEAK&#13;
*ND T UMBLED O NIONS&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
'Sefwing Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DININC&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S C ABIN R OOM&#13;
FOR P RIVATE P ARTIES&#13;
FREE FACILITIES WITH&#13;
OUR CATERING .&#13;
FROM 20 TO 100&#13;
4601 7th AVE. - KENOSHA&#13;
"OFFERING HIGH QUALITY AT&#13;
REASONABLE PRICES, THE WIND&#13;
JAMMER DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
- HERBERT KUBLY&#13;
"WONDERFUL FOOD"&#13;
SENATOR PRQXMIRE&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
( T H E F OL L O W I N G L E T T E R&#13;
IS A R EP L Y T O AN A R T I C LE&#13;
W H ICH A P P E A R E D IN L AS T&#13;
W E E K 'S N E W S C OP E. T H E&#13;
A R T I C L E E N T I T L E D&#13;
G O ES O N ' .&#13;
T H E CU R R E N T&#13;
B O Y C O TT O P&#13;
G R A P ES A N D&#13;
L A H UE L G A&#13;
C O N C E R N ED&#13;
N A T I O N W I DE&#13;
C A L I F O R N IA&#13;
R E L A T E D F A R M P RO D U C TS&#13;
Nine wineries in Northern&#13;
California are being subjected&#13;
to illegal secondary boycotts of&#13;
their products at certain retail&#13;
outlets. As part of the U.F.-&#13;
W.O.C. (United Farm Workers&#13;
Organizing Committee) effort&#13;
to force itself on our employees,&#13;
that Union has resorted to a&#13;
series of falsehoods and&#13;
distortions, and has completely&#13;
ignored one basic fact. The&#13;
U.F.W.O.C. has NEVER&#13;
presented convincing evidence&#13;
of employee support at any of&#13;
the firms involved and is not&#13;
even remotely interested in the&#13;
employee's preference in the&#13;
matter. Their propaganda&#13;
constantly overlooks the&#13;
following basic issues:&#13;
1. Employee wages, fringe&#13;
benefits, hospitalization and&#13;
housing at the wineries being&#13;
boycotted are among the best in&#13;
the agricultural industry and&#13;
considerably above those called&#13;
for in existing U.F.W.O.C.&#13;
contracts.&#13;
2. The wineries concerned&#13;
have consistently supported the&#13;
concept of a free secret ballot&#13;
election under Government&#13;
supervision to determine the&#13;
wishes of the employees in an&#13;
atmosphere free of coercion,&#13;
restraint or intimidation.&#13;
3. U.F.W.O.C. has refused to&#13;
allow employees to participate&#13;
in the secret ballot election&#13;
process and has refused even to&#13;
discuss a secret ballot election&#13;
in order to determine employee&#13;
desires. The Union wants the&#13;
wineries to sign a contract&#13;
which requires employees to&#13;
pay dues and fees to the Union&#13;
after seven days of employment&#13;
as a precondition to the employees'&#13;
ability to work. The&#13;
wineries feel that to force such a&#13;
contract upon their employees&#13;
without the employees' consent&#13;
violates a basic American&#13;
freedom, the worker's right to a&#13;
free choice under the secret&#13;
ballot. The wineries will continue&#13;
to extend this offer of&#13;
secret ballot elections to&#13;
U.F.W.O.C. in the belief that&#13;
such an election protects the&#13;
rights of the U.F.W.O.C., the&#13;
wineries, and most importantly,&#13;
wawa&lt;a&lt;as&gt;B&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Robin David, Pat McDermid,&#13;
Marc Eisen, Jean Frahm, Larry&#13;
Jones, Jim Koloen, John Koloen,&#13;
Rich Lipke, Paul Lomartire, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Kevin McKay, Fred&#13;
Noer, Jr., Brian Ross, Wolfgang&#13;
Salewski, Andy Schmelling, Barb&#13;
Scott, Cleta Skovronski, Jerry&#13;
Socha, Bill Sorensen, Mike&#13;
Stevesand, Debbie Venskus&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
THE EMPLOYEES. We do not&#13;
intend to succumb to illegal&#13;
boycott pressure nor do we&#13;
intend to sacrifice the rights of&#13;
our employees to improper and&#13;
immoral union demands.&#13;
We ask for your understanding,&#13;
your patience, and&#13;
your support to protect the&#13;
rights and privileges of our&#13;
employees, customers and the&#13;
public at large.&#13;
Beringer Brothers&#13;
Kornell Champagne Cellars&#13;
Louis Martini Winery&#13;
Sebastiani Vineyards&#13;
F. Korbel and Bros.&#13;
Charles Krug Winery&#13;
Robert Mondavi Winery&#13;
Weibel, Inc.&#13;
Wente Brothers&#13;
Dear John Koloen,&#13;
Editor of Newscope&#13;
In your February 7th T972&#13;
issue there was an article&#13;
written about the North Ranch&#13;
Restaurant. I am the proprietor&#13;
of the Ranch and very proud to&#13;
be so. I have been in the&#13;
Restaurant business in Kenosha&#13;
for 22 years, and have been very&#13;
successful at it.&#13;
A good part of my business&#13;
patrons come from Parkside&#13;
and Carthage. I enjoy their&#13;
patronage and I am sure they&#13;
must enjoy the North and South&#13;
Ranch or they wouldh't keep&#13;
coming back.&#13;
I employ nine students from&#13;
Parkside as waitresses and&#13;
cooks, and I must say they are&#13;
all good employees. Through&#13;
the years I have helped over a&#13;
100 students earn their way&#13;
through college and other&#13;
schools, and I intend to continue&#13;
to do so. There are five families&#13;
that derive their sole support&#13;
from the Ranch Restaurants&#13;
and I am sure that they want to&#13;
keep our reputation at a high&#13;
level.&#13;
Paul Lomartire wrote a very&#13;
prejudice article on the Ranch&#13;
Restaurant. I was working the&#13;
night that he was there at the&#13;
Ranch. The waitresses that&#13;
were on duty at the time are all&#13;
good waitresses. It is possible&#13;
that some of his complaints&#13;
were true, but if I did&#13;
everything wrong that he accused&#13;
us of, how could I possibly&#13;
be one of the most successful&#13;
Restaurants in town.&#13;
We serve over 500,000 people a&#13;
year at the Ranch Restaurants,&#13;
and we get very few complaints,&#13;
and a lot of compliments.&#13;
It is a sorry thing when&#13;
unqualified people can do&#13;
damage to a reputable business&#13;
and its many good employees.&#13;
Let's hope that the press in the&#13;
future is used for honest endeavor.&#13;
&#13;
I hold no anger towards&#13;
Parkside student or any of the&#13;
faculty,'but I think you as editor&#13;
should screen your material&#13;
before printing, so as tc&#13;
properly represent the people&#13;
that are responsible for&#13;
Newscope, and not represent&#13;
two irresponsible people.&#13;
Thank you,&#13;
Richard St. Germain&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained ad&#13;
vertising funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 6,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
manuscripts and&#13;
Photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
w.thm 30 days after the date of&#13;
submissio, after which they become&#13;
the property of Newscope, Ltd. The&#13;
Newscope office is located in the&#13;
Student Organizations building,&#13;
intersection of Highway A and Wood&#13;
Road.&#13;
local...&#13;
SGA ELECTIONS&#13;
The Parkside Student Government Association will hold an&#13;
election on March 7 and 8 to fill vacancies in the senate. Interested&#13;
candidates should obtain nominating petitions at the SGA office&#13;
(Hwy. Aand Wood Road, 553-2493or 553-2244) or at the Tallent Hall&#13;
Student Activities Office. Deadline for filing is February 25,1972 - 4&#13;
p.m. Additional information and instruction may be obtained at the&#13;
SGA office.&#13;
The following offices are vacant: Senator, Corresponding&#13;
Secretary and Recording Secretary.&#13;
Volunteers also are needed to work at the polls. If you are interested&#13;
please contact Jim Twist, Chairman of Elections, or sign&#13;
up at the SGA office.&#13;
Pre-Law Club to Write Election Laws&#13;
Last Wednesday, February 9, at a regular meeting of the PreLaw&#13;
Club, a special committee was formed to write the election&#13;
laws for the upcoming and future student government elections at&#13;
the request of the PSGA.&#13;
Members of the committee are Timothy W. Prostko, chairman,&#13;
Peter Gallo, co-chairman, Rebecca Ecklund, Mark Harris, John&#13;
Regnery, and Michael Baxter. The committee would welcome any&#13;
suggestions made by students or faculty members. Suggestions&#13;
may be made in a letter or in person to any committee member, or&#13;
to Professors Richard Rosenberg (ext. 51K) and Oliver Hayward&#13;
(ext. 35R).&#13;
$1/000 Grant for Parkside&#13;
MADISON — A $1,000 grant from the Standard Oil (Indiana)&#13;
Foundation to be awarded in recognition of outstanding teaching at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside was accepted Friday by the&#13;
UW System Board of Regents.&#13;
Mr* re9eu&#13;
TSrf&#13;
IS° aPProved an unrestricted grant of $100 from&#13;
Library °&#13;
n&#13;
°' Laguna HMIs&#13;
' CaMf&#13;
" f&#13;
°&#13;
r Parkside&#13;
nationalFormer&#13;
Narc Calls For&#13;
Decriminalization of Marijuana&#13;
John Finlator, recently retired Deputy Director of the Federal&#13;
Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs, today said he strongly&#13;
avors the immediate decriminalization of marijuana, and predicts&#13;
legalization&#13;
- And until this is done, Finlator said, he&#13;
aoubts that any of our efforts to combat the heroin problem in this&#13;
oun ry, or any other serious drug abuse problems can be effective.&#13;
Resolution to Impeach Rockefeller lnroduced&#13;
&#13;
A th&#13;
BU&#13;
^&#13;
F&#13;
t&#13;
LY' N Y* (CPS) ~~ New York state Assemblyman&#13;
rln « h8S introduced a resolution in the state Assembly&#13;
*f. '!n9 the irnPeachment of Governor Nelson Rockefeller for his&#13;
is an ing of the Attica prison riot last September which cost the&#13;
lives of 43 people.&#13;
Fe?r&#13;
Sp^&#13;
ky&#13;
.&#13;
Spy t0 SPot Fields&#13;
defprtoH k Marijuana and opium poppy fields are soon to be&#13;
launrh^H ?kV an earth resource&#13;
s satellite that is scheduled to be&#13;
Tho .&#13;
I&#13;
.xSpring&#13;
' accord&#13;
ing to a recent Associated Press story,&#13;
will ho I',"&#13;
9 *&#13;
atel,ite&lt; scheduled for launching in May or June,&#13;
says AP P3 6 detec&#13;
*'&#13;
n9 Pot or poppy fields from 100 miles up, &#13;
Educator Speaks in C oncourse&#13;
February 21,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
by Jim Koloenofthe Newscope staff&#13;
The big, wavy haired man dressed in a gray&#13;
striped suit, paisley shirt and yellow tie, told the&#13;
over 400 listeners in the Greenquist concourse that&#13;
Parkside's catalogue "has the word innovation in&#13;
every other line." He continued, "I just hope nobody&#13;
tor real is running around the campus thinking&#13;
Parkside is innovative." He explained to the by now&#13;
applauding crowd that the word is obviously "just&#13;
for the catalogue writer."&#13;
Dwight Allen, Dean of the University of&#13;
Massachusetts School of Education, spoke Wednesday&#13;
night at 8 p.m. on the topic of "Making the&#13;
Future of Education Less Certain." He was brought&#13;
to Parkside under the auspices of the Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee, and the free lecture was very&#13;
well attended.&#13;
Allen spoke for an hour and twenty minutes,&#13;
pacing back and forth on the podium while explaining&#13;
that the more certain the future of&#13;
education is, the worse off it will be. The educator&#13;
who bore a slight resemblance to Billy Graham,&#13;
presented a lecture to the sweltering audience that&#13;
was both humorous and serious, informative and&#13;
interesting. He spoke on the "freedom to fail",&#13;
"institutional racism", student participation in the&#13;
administration of the educational system, and the&#13;
need for teachers who are "biased, dedicated and&#13;
committed".&#13;
During the course of the lecture, Prof. Allen&#13;
explained that at his school, next year all grades&#13;
will be abolished; a person will receive a pass or a&#13;
no record grade, "we'll put on a student's record&#13;
what he can do rather than write down what he can't&#13;
do."&#13;
Another step he plans to take will be the&#13;
elimination of the semester system. He told the&#13;
audience that there is absolutely no reason a&#13;
specific class should require a standard number of&#13;
weeks to teach, that each instructor should set his&#13;
own time limits based on his own experiences. In a&#13;
direct reference to Parkside, Allen said there was&#13;
no conceivable reason for having required courses.&#13;
He explained further that if a student passes a&#13;
course which exacts required courses he hasn't&#13;
taken, that student should receive pass grades for&#13;
those courses as well.&#13;
After asking the audience for answers to some&#13;
of the questions he threw at them", and receiving few&#13;
replies, he spoke of the need for integrating as many&#13;
alternatives and choices as possible in education.&#13;
He said, "a school is where the most risks should be&#13;
taken", to be innovative requires experimentation,&#13;
and though this approach assumes the possibility of&#13;
error, it is also the only way one can discover the&#13;
best educational methods.&#13;
Varying the tone of his voice from a whisper to a&#13;
^hnut. the Massachusetts educator attacked the&#13;
"objectivity lie" that runs rampant in elementary&#13;
and secondary schools. He said a "teacher cannot&#13;
live and be neutral," that ideally a teacher should&#13;
be "biased, dedicated and committed, in&#13;
recognition of the pluralistic society America is".&#13;
He explained that a teacher can no longer teach&#13;
values because he is expected to be either "neuter&#13;
or neutral". "Even citizenship is too controversial&#13;
to teach." As far as subject matter is concerned,&#13;
Allen told the audience that "the school should&#13;
teach everything which is legal, in so doing you will&#13;
be assured of alternatives; allow for a choice."&#13;
But the topic Allen stressed most vehemently&#13;
during his lecture concerned institutional racism,&#13;
the need to destroy it but the primary need of&#13;
recognizing it first. "Scholars can no longer hide&#13;
from these realities if society is to continue."&#13;
"Lower admission standards do not combat&#13;
racism", he continued, "they perpetuate it. "Before&#13;
there can be equality there must be equity.'" To&#13;
emphasize his point Allen used the example of&#13;
"Winning the American West" as a typical subject&#13;
for American History. The textbook version, he&#13;
said, "is the sanitized, American white majority&#13;
version. This is racist! What we need to do is incorporate&#13;
as many viewpoints as possible; the&#13;
French, the British, and Spanish." He continued the&#13;
list of viewpoints by adding the Indian, and the&#13;
"Coolie" viewpoint of the "Winning of the American&#13;
West". He told the audience that if the educational&#13;
system doesn't end its institutional racism, racism&#13;
will never end.&#13;
He spoke briefly of the objective of education.&#13;
"One is sheer, crass status." He pointed out the&#13;
recent merger of the UW system and said that the&#13;
status is gone from a UW degree "because there are&#13;
so many around." "Now we are trying to discover a&#13;
new status symbol to take the place of the degree."&#13;
Professor Allen ended the lecture with an explanation&#13;
of what he wanted to do during the&#13;
evening. "I want to make you feel uneasy about&#13;
education at all levels, and I w ant to help you feel&#13;
powerful, make you feel we can change things."&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Black Newsman to Visit Campus&#13;
The Black Student Union, in&#13;
cooperation with the Racine&#13;
Commission on Human&#13;
Relations, and UW-f^arkside&#13;
Student Services, is bringing&#13;
Mel Goode, nationally known&#13;
black news commentator and&#13;
analyst, to Parkside.&#13;
Goode joined ABC as one of&#13;
its UN correspondents in 1962,&#13;
after fourteen years with the&#13;
Pittsburgh Courier and many&#13;
years of broadcasting experience&#13;
in radio and television&#13;
with Pittsburgh area stations.&#13;
He was educated in the public&#13;
schools of Homestead, Pennsylvania,&#13;
and graduated from&#13;
the University of Pittsburgh.&#13;
He was employed for twelve&#13;
years as a laborer in the steel&#13;
mills while in high school and&#13;
college, and for five years after&#13;
graduation.&#13;
After working for many of the&#13;
local medias in Pittsburgh, his&#13;
big break finally came when he&#13;
was employed by ABC in 1962.&#13;
He was the first Black&#13;
newsman employed as a&#13;
regular network correspondent,&#13;
and the first Black to hold&#13;
membership in the National&#13;
Association of Radio and TV&#13;
News Directors, and the&#13;
Association of Radio and TV&#13;
News Analysts.&#13;
Goode covered both the&#13;
Democratic and Republican&#13;
conventions with the ABC news&#13;
team in 1964 and 1968.&#13;
During ABC's intensive&#13;
coverage of the aftermath of&#13;
Dr. -King's death, Goode&#13;
distinguished himself with&#13;
interviews of those who had&#13;
come to Atlanta to mourn the&#13;
death of the famed civil rights&#13;
leader.&#13;
Goode has interviewed many&#13;
of the world's top figures including&#13;
President Johnson,&#13;
President Nixon, Ambassadors&#13;
Zorin and Malik of the Soviet&#13;
Union; Sir Patrick Dean and&#13;
Lord Caradon of Great Britain;&#13;
the late Adlai Stevenson, former&#13;
UN Ambassador Arthur&#13;
Goldberg, Governors Scranton,&#13;
Rockefeller, Maddox and&#13;
Wallace; Senators Eastland,&#13;
Brooke, Javits, Fulbright,&#13;
Goodell and the late Robert&#13;
Kennedy.&#13;
Goode will speak in the&#13;
Badger Room of Racine&#13;
Campus Monday, February 28,&#13;
at 8:00 P.M. The public is invited&#13;
to attend.&#13;
CORRECTION&#13;
Mockus Tap is owned by June&#13;
Johnson and operated by Cliff&#13;
Meyer. Last issue's On the Nod&#13;
stated that Meyer was owner of&#13;
the Tap. We apologize for this&#13;
error.&#13;
U-W.&#13;
ELasfcr Break&#13;
Trips To:&#13;
ROME&#13;
(2nd plane)&#13;
ACAPULCO&#13;
Information Available at&#13;
Student Activities Office — Tallent Hall&#13;
m***********************************************************&#13;
—Honest George Sale — during February&#13;
smm a free cherry tree with purchase of any major ite i m&#13;
Freezers — start at $194&#13;
Admiral Color TV start at $199&#13;
18" Color start at $299&#13;
Heavy duty washers start at $169&#13;
Apartment size washers start at $109&#13;
Refrigerators start at $179&#13;
Warehouse Discount Prices&#13;
micro-ovens, air conditioners&#13;
R. C. Service&#13;
One Main Street&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 633-6453&#13;
Ron Casperson - owner&#13;
VK W IAIIAI IAI IAI IAIIA4104IAIIAIIAIIAIIAIIAIIAIIAI IAI IAI IAI IAI IAI IAIIAI IAI ITU Vtf MM MM &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE February 21,1972&#13;
Help Fight Heir Pollution&#13;
Zero Population Growth is a nationally known non-profit&#13;
organization founded by Paul Ehrlich for the purpose of stopping&#13;
the population explosion through education and political 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;
£*\porhrs of&#13;
/mers&#13;
7&#13;
/ H O I W ^ U o j + o n / U .&#13;
5 0&#13;
I r\ up+own Ro^ci ne&#13;
Tky I v\C£,&#13;
•—d*K)rvffor&#13;
ood-&#13;
£e/uu*Uf the fytitedt&#13;
Pvpy* £ 9taiUm Qoodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
LldUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
CALL FOR CANDIDATES&#13;
+ + +&#13;
SGA Spring Election&#13;
March 7 and 8&#13;
-f + +&#13;
The following positions are open:&#13;
Senator (1)&#13;
Recording Secretary (1)&#13;
Corresponding Secretary (1)&#13;
Nominating Petitions are available at SGA office&#13;
or Student Activities - Tallent Hall&#13;
(Filing Deadline February 25,1972)&#13;
Humphrey speaks in Milwaukee&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Speaking at a non-partisan&#13;
voter registration rally in&#13;
Milwaukee last Saturday&#13;
Presidential hopeful Hubert&#13;
Humphrey told several hundred&#13;
young people that "Nothing&#13;
comes easy. Nothing is instant.&#13;
People who have power do not&#13;
relinquish that power easily and&#13;
it will be the task of the new&#13;
voter to make the changes that&#13;
are required in this land."&#13;
The rally, sponsored by the&#13;
Boston Store, featured former&#13;
Senator and Governor of Alaska&#13;
Ernest Gruening who Humphrey&#13;
called "the Ben Franklin&#13;
of modern America", st&#13;
State Senators James Devitt&#13;
and Niles Soik, and other&#13;
representatives of the various&#13;
Presidential candidates.&#13;
In a short speech Gruening&#13;
warned the audience that&#13;
"we're in danger of becoming a&#13;
police state if we have four&#13;
more years of Richard Nixon."&#13;
Devitt, a Republican, spoke of&#13;
the power of the youth vote&#13;
stating that "young people will&#13;
be the salvation of o ur nation."&#13;
Supporters for most of the&#13;
candidates attended the rally&#13;
bearing placards and trumpeting&#13;
support for their candidate&#13;
during the speeches, but&#13;
until Humphrey arrived the&#13;
meeting was relatively quiet if&#13;
not attentive. Gruening's&#13;
speech was interrupted to allow&#13;
Mr. Humphrey to speak. The&#13;
extraneous noise dropped&#13;
dramatically as he took the&#13;
podium and for the first time&#13;
the television cameras turned to&#13;
the stage.&#13;
Referring to legislation that&#13;
would provide universal voter&#13;
registration Humphrey said,&#13;
"We intend to use the very same&#13;
services of government that&#13;
send a tax blank to the&#13;
American citizen — the Post&#13;
Office, Census Bureau and the&#13;
Revenue Service — to provide&#13;
registration for every citizen of&#13;
this country."&#13;
He encouraged young people&#13;
to become involved in the&#13;
political process, urging them&#13;
to participate in party&#13;
caucuses. "That's exactly what&#13;
is needed today. Young people&#13;
entering the political process&#13;
and having something to say&#13;
about platforms, programs and&#13;
candidates."&#13;
He warned them not to expect&#13;
immediate results pointing out&#13;
that Gruening had worked for 25&#13;
years to get Alaska its&#13;
statehood. "I ask you to be the&#13;
distance runner, I ask you to&#13;
stay with what you believe and&#13;
not give up, but more importantly&#13;
I ask you to go to&#13;
(Continued from pac&#13;
which oil companies an&lt;&#13;
giants come forward eac&#13;
without paying their fail&#13;
of taxes."&#13;
Moving to the war, he f&#13;
to end it immediately u&#13;
election.&#13;
As for a national he;&#13;
surance program, he s&#13;
strongly favored one.&#13;
Confronting the ques&#13;
whether a Mayor is qua|&#13;
be President, he declai&#13;
was in the federal gove&#13;
for upwards of ten years&#13;
can tell you that any&#13;
week as Mayor of Nev&#13;
City teaches one more&#13;
HUMPHREY B ACKER ENJ OYING HERSELF AT RALLY&#13;
work."&#13;
After his speech Humphrey&#13;
indicated that present&#13;
legislation affecting welfare&#13;
reform was not adequate adding&#13;
that he opposed compulsory&#13;
work provisions for&#13;
women with families. He voiced&#13;
a need for "child development&#13;
centers" and denounced&#13;
President Nixon's veto of the&#13;
Child Care and Development&#13;
Center Program as "cruel and&#13;
outlandish."&#13;
Following his speech Humphrey&#13;
left the rally to meet with&#13;
his supporters at his campaign&#13;
headquarters on Wisconsin&#13;
Avenue. While there Newscope&#13;
asked his opinion of legalizing&#13;
marijuana. Humphrey said, "I&#13;
would and do recommend a&#13;
very sharp reduction in&#13;
penalties. I think the idea of&#13;
making the user a felon is&#13;
ridiculous and that at the most&#13;
it should be down as a&#13;
misdemeanor and really with&#13;
no court orders or sentences on&#13;
the first offense."&#13;
Reacting to the controversial&#13;
Drug Commission report he&#13;
said, "I think that when we get&#13;
our full reports then we have to&#13;
act accordingly, I mean from&#13;
the scientific and medical&#13;
community, that's when we&#13;
act."&#13;
Responding to President&#13;
Nixon's much publicized opposition&#13;
to the Drug Commission's&#13;
suggestions he said,&#13;
"The President said that he&#13;
doesn't care what the evidence&#13;
shows, what kind of President is&#13;
that? That's like saying you&#13;
don't care what the court&#13;
rules."&#13;
Lor/p&#13;
ON THE NOD SPEAKS OUT&#13;
by Jim Koloen of the IN&#13;
(The following speech was presented at the qu&#13;
My fellow Americans, you are all painfully i&#13;
spirocy" presently being foisted upon us, we the A&#13;
price public. First we gave "the kids" (howdec&lt;&#13;
the privilege of wearing the proud uniform of th&#13;
provided them with a war so they could distingi&#13;
combat. But were they satisfied? You bet your s&#13;
offspring demanded, yes friends, demandedthey&#13;
our wishy-washy, kneejerk, liberals in the Nation&#13;
called "kids". What these hippy, jobless wonderhi&#13;
prospect for the hard-working, right-thinkinjfAme&#13;
Were they satisfied then? No! Yes, my fri&#13;
barricades, it's time to show these kids where we&#13;
our state house, this pernicious progeny, the bet&#13;
our democratically elected legislators into passlnj&#13;
be lowered to 18. I ask you, is this not thestra&#13;
ultimate corkscrew?&#13;
Marihuana wasn't good enough for them, no, i&#13;
and guts, the very elbows of the meat and potatoe&#13;
them their pot and give us the glass. In the imm&#13;
unsung heroes, "Millions for lids but not an ou i&#13;
remain nameless as he fears the almost certain&#13;
kids".&#13;
To the mothers of America, I ask you do you&#13;
company is seldom the exception rather than the&#13;
the evil brew, taught how to use profane language&#13;
out, NO! It is a proven fact that beer leads to here&#13;
dupes of the "youth conspirocy" smoke thegenth&#13;
addict.&#13;
You fathers, do you want your daughter deba&#13;
little girl from the ruffians who occasionally (an&#13;
What about your son? Do you want him to lose his&#13;
inspired such statues as David; the strength that&#13;
to those locked behind the iron curtain? Then si&#13;
belly, whose affects are only now being discoverei&#13;
And to you, my hearty comrades, to you the ;&#13;
your carefully cultivated haunts invaded by a g-c&#13;
students and giggling girls? Yes, you too are the&#13;
youth are let loose to drink wherever they pleas'&#13;
devasting. I foresee in the days ahead a serioi&#13;
perienced during the dark days of the prohibition&#13;
I therefore beseech you, the more rational y&#13;
leave your leaders, renounce them, stamp their v&#13;
flagon, be a true rebel, and stay in school kids. t&#13;
waiting for. I rest my case.&#13;
ecm of &#13;
DSAY&#13;
Page ^&#13;
; and other&#13;
I each year&#13;
fair share&#13;
he pledged&#13;
ly upon his&#13;
health lnhe&#13;
said he&#13;
s.&#13;
question of&#13;
qualified fo&#13;
eclared, "I&#13;
jovernmenf&#13;
ears, and I&#13;
any single&#13;
New York&#13;
nore abouf&#13;
communities and people than do&#13;
all those years put together.&#13;
"I'm running for President&#13;
because change must come,"&#13;
Lidsay said. "This great&#13;
country of ours must stand for&#13;
justice. It must be a country&#13;
that properly rewards a man for&#13;
the sweat of his brow, and give&#13;
the next man in line a chance to&#13;
be rewarded equally."&#13;
Lindsay smiled as the&#13;
audience cheered his last&#13;
campaign promise. Standing&#13;
about twenty feet behind the&#13;
podium to the right, in a crowd&#13;
was Jerry Bruno.&#13;
The advance man had&#13;
presented his candidate to&#13;
Kenosha. He could do no more.&#13;
F the Newscope staff&#13;
the quarterly meeting of UFO post 5.)&#13;
Fully aware by now, of the vicious "youth conthe&#13;
American tax paying, peace but-not-at-anyv&#13;
de ceiving, that seemingly innocuous phrase)&#13;
i of the American military man, why we even&#13;
stinguish themselves on t he honorable field of&#13;
your swe et biped they weren't. The avaricious&#13;
1 they be given the right to vote! And what did&#13;
lation's Capital do? Why they coddled these soiderhogs&#13;
will do with the vote is too terrifying a&#13;
g American breadwinner to even consider,&#13;
ay friends, it's time to once again man the&#13;
re we, the American drinking class, sits. Up in&#13;
le betrayers of their fathers, have hoodwinked&#13;
assing a bill calling for the legal drinking age to&#13;
- straw that broke the winemaker's cask, the&#13;
i, no, now they want to sit next to the very, heart&#13;
otatoes of the American dinner table. I say give&#13;
immortal words of one of America's foremost&#13;
in ounce for drink." This unsung hero asks to&#13;
^rtain reprisals which will emanate from "the&#13;
o you want your daughte r in a bar where polite&#13;
in the rule? Do you want your son corrupted by&#13;
guage and to play pool? American mothers sing&#13;
0 heroin addiction. Let the innocent victims and&#13;
gentle weed, without fear of becoming a crazed&#13;
• debauched? Then protect her, protect daddy's&#13;
v (and once is enough) fre quent drinking halls,&#13;
ise his supple, trim, athletic build, the build that&#13;
1 that brought peace to the world and gives hope&#13;
hen shield him from the dreaded disease beerovered,&#13;
affects akin to the dreaded beri beri.&#13;
J the seasoned veterans of the vat, do you want&#13;
^ ^ gangling horde of longhair hippietypes, shy&#13;
e he victims. Rememb er this, if the millions of&#13;
p ease, the resulting shortage of spirits will be&#13;
serious shortage of spirits not unlike that exjition&#13;
holocaust.&#13;
jnal youth caught in the "youth conspirocy" to&#13;
tieir vile ideas into the ground. Do not pick up the&#13;
ii s. After all, anything worth wanting is worth&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke.&#13;
w&#13;
SL VJlif Supper CfuL&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
551-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan td.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Annexation&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
major fire at Parkside. This&#13;
force includes a hundred foot&#13;
laddeK Those people who&#13;
support the annexation move&#13;
have pointed out that in the&#13;
event of a disaster, Somers and&#13;
Mt. Pleasant could not even&#13;
together combat it. Jerome&#13;
Gumbinger, the recently retired&#13;
Fire Chief of Kenosha, had&#13;
stated earlier that in the event&#13;
of a catastrophe at Parkside,&#13;
his department would help out&#13;
anyway. It is believed by some&#13;
citizens that if Kenosha is to&#13;
afford fire protection to the Pside&#13;
area it would have to invest&#13;
in a new fire station.&#13;
The Somers residents&#13;
themselves fear that if annexation&#13;
were to come about, a&#13;
prohibitive rise in their taxes&#13;
would drive many from their&#13;
land, much of which they htfve&#13;
worked for generations. They&#13;
also fear the imminent&#13;
possibility of rezoning ordinances&#13;
being passed, which&#13;
would open the way for commercial&#13;
exploitation of the land.&#13;
Money-making is a central&#13;
item in the issue, the mayor has&#13;
stated that the city wants to&#13;
cash in on the anticipated $100&#13;
million investment that&#13;
Parkside will represent in a&#13;
decade, land developers such as&#13;
USGI want to build apartment&#13;
houses, shopping centers, etc.&#13;
Newscope spoke with some&#13;
area residents who voted&#13;
against the annexation&#13;
referendum last year. They said&#13;
that beside fears of prohibitive&#13;
taxes, rezoning, and the belief&#13;
that Somers is capable of&#13;
handling the needs of P-side at&#13;
this time, they also expressed a&#13;
firm disagreement with the way&#13;
in which the annexation is&#13;
presently drawn up. They told&#13;
Newscope that it was too&#13;
irregular, that it was a bits and&#13;
pieces affair. If presented with,&#13;
an uniform annexation of the&#13;
area, instead of the irregular&#13;
form, they would be more&#13;
amenable to it. The way it is&#13;
drawn up now is unacceptable,&#13;
they said.&#13;
This time 350 electors will be&#13;
in on a vote, many of them&#13;
students, some of whom may&#13;
continue to live near Parkside,&#13;
many of whom won't, many of&#13;
whom won't fear being driven&#13;
from their land.&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
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in w e st&#13;
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REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
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5617 6th Ave.&#13;
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It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
10% Dis count to students and Fa culty with | . q&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Wellact • Lunt&#13;
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Seneca • Ialique&#13;
Royal Worce*ter &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE February 21,1972&#13;
^ pL Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
O N S O U TH S H E R I D A N RO A D I N K E N O S H A 6 5 4 - 04 11&#13;
MISSED THAI FIRST ONE!&#13;
U.W.P. Ragtime Rangers&#13;
announces -&#13;
A Second Trip To&#13;
Whitecap Mt.&#13;
March 17-19&#13;
$32.50 for ski club members&#13;
$37.50 for students and faculty&#13;
$42.50 for registered guests&#13;
Sign up at room 217 Tallent Hall&#13;
$ 1 0 00 NO N - R E F U N D A B L E D E P O S I T R E O U I R E D&#13;
includes:&#13;
Transportation, lodging, lift tickets, meals,&#13;
beer party, beginning ski lessons and A GOOD TIME&#13;
. — — - - — &lt;-a~iri 111 I_ii w •&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
1&#13;
, Ih V,HOUND BF.KF&#13;
ON FRENCH CRUST&#13;
BREAD DRESSED&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
I.ETTUCE AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
DRILLED COUNTRY&#13;
MAM A CHEESE ON&#13;
WHOLE WIJEAT BUN&#13;
WITH LETTUCE.&#13;
TOMATO AND&#13;
MAYONNAISE&#13;
-80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPLE. DECKER OE BURGER. CHEESE&#13;
BACON LETTUCE TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISE ON TOAST 9QC&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
N ORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROA D SOUT H 7500 SHERIDAN RO A D&#13;
, , , i 11 -,, „ , n , - I , , , ,, n&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Vi Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line&#13;
Pump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
10W - 20W - 30W&#13;
AFSCON.O. 10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12OZ. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prices on Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Per Cent Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
forum&#13;
Newscope Today&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
We missed two stories this week. We missed&#13;
them because we didn't have the people to cover&#13;
them, and that's why you won't read about the&#13;
Women's Caucus and the Faculty Senate meeting,&#13;
and that's why there may not be a Newscope in a&#13;
few weeks. We don't have the personnel.&#13;
It's ironic really when you consider that we feel&#13;
the paper has finally jelled. Contentwise, we're the&#13;
best we've ever been. Financially, we're in a&#13;
relatively stable situation. But it's for nothing&#13;
because we're going to die - possibly this semester,&#13;
almost assuredly by next fall — unless new people&#13;
join the staff.&#13;
Our present Editor and Managing Editor will&#13;
probably leave their positions during the first week&#13;
of March. They were elected last December to serve&#13;
on an interim basis then — at which time we&#13;
had hopes of electing new editors who would serve&#13;
for the remainder of the spring semester and for&#13;
part of the fall semester.&#13;
It's not going to be like that. Right now, there is&#13;
no one to whom to hand the paper over. Hopefully,&#13;
we'll try to patch things together with existing&#13;
personnel, and hold another interim election to&#13;
finish off the semester — an obvious result of which&#13;
would be a decline in the quality of the paper.&#13;
Writing personnel will be forced to do management&#13;
and production work.&#13;
But even if things are patched together, or even&#13;
if the current editors do stay, it will mean nothing&#13;
for the continuation of the paper in the fall. The bulk&#13;
of the current staff will have gone either to live on&#13;
the sides of mountains, transferred to other schools,&#13;
ventured (however timidly) out into the REAL&#13;
WORLD, or, perchance, even have graduated.&#13;
The future of Newscope then depends upon new&#13;
staff members — and there are none.&#13;
We've tried to recruit over the past three&#13;
semester, and have failed almost totally in our&#13;
efforts. We've called meetings, explained that we'ie&#13;
jerks in handling people, told you to ignore our&#13;
bumbling efforts, pointed out that if you want to&#13;
write and have a modicum of talent to go ahead, you&#13;
have carte blanche to do what you want.&#13;
Nothing. Almost no results ... Do you realize&#13;
the posibilities, the potential of this paper? They're&#13;
going to be blown, the opportunities will disappear&#13;
unless they are utilized. It's all very easy to see. The&#13;
paper is going to die because the student body&#13;
doesn't give a fuck, or else it's too stupid to supply&#13;
the personnel requirements of a paper.&#13;
I say that seriously. SEVEN current Newscope&#13;
staff members worked three years ago on a campus&#13;
underground paper called the Committee. The&#13;
same people handle the writing, production, and&#13;
management responsibilities of Newscope. They&#13;
are, in effect, Newscope.&#13;
Seven people who worked three years ago on the&#13;
Committee. Seven peddle who work today on&#13;
Newscope. There has not been, aside from Warren&#13;
Nedry, anyone else who has approached Newscope&#13;
and has had similar newspaper talent, initiative,&#13;
leadership.&#13;
It would seem reasonable to expect at least one&#13;
or two people with a similar interest in journalism&#13;
to join the paper each semester. Even the law of&#13;
probability would indicate this.&#13;
That's all it would take and Newscope would&#13;
have a chance in the fall. But, having been around&#13;
here for a while, you learn not to expect too much.&#13;
Wisconsin Ballet in Kenosha&#13;
The Wisconsin Ballet Company will present a program of&#13;
classical and contemporary dance under sponsorship of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Lecture and Fine Arts Committee&#13;
at 8 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 26,fn Kenosha's Bradford High&#13;
School Auditorium. The program is free and open to the public.&#13;
The Madison-based company of 25 dancers is directed by Tibor&#13;
Zana and currently is on a ten-city state tour.&#13;
The Kenosha program will include "Hungarian Rhapsody"&#13;
choreographed by Zana to msuic by Liszt; "Huapango"&#13;
choreographed by Enrique Martinez to music by Moncayo;&#13;
"Concert Champetre" choreographed by Zana to music by Lecocq;&#13;
and "Dello Joio", a modern dance choreographed by Anna Nassiff&#13;
to music by Dello Joio.&#13;
Fellini Film to be Shown&#13;
Nights of Cabiria, a film&#13;
directed by Federico Fellini,&#13;
will be presented Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 23, at 8 p.m. in room 103 of&#13;
Greenquist Hall on the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside's&#13;
Wood Road campus.&#13;
The showing is sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Film Society.&#13;
Winner of an Academy Award&#13;
for Best Foreign Language&#13;
Film in 1957, Nights of Cabiria&#13;
stars Fellini's wife, Giulietta&#13;
Masina,as Cabiria, a prostitute&#13;
living on the outskirts of Rome.&#13;
Fellini's film is the third part of&#13;
his unofficial "trilogy of&#13;
solitude". The first two were La&#13;
Strada and II Bidone.&#13;
Neighbors will be the short&#13;
film following the feature. It&#13;
depicts a conflict over a flower&#13;
growing between the properties&#13;
of two neighbors.&#13;
Sen. Gravel&#13;
to Speak&#13;
The Parkside Coalition for&#13;
Muskie and the Parkside Young&#13;
Democrats are co-sponsoring&#13;
the appearance of Senator Mike&#13;
Gravel (D-Alaska) as a&#13;
representative and supporter of&#13;
Senator Muskie — the&#13;
Democratic presidential frontrunner.&#13;
&#13;
Gravel is the out-spoken&#13;
junior senator from Alaska who&#13;
officially entered the Pentagon&#13;
Papers into the Congressional&#13;
Record. Gravel is especially&#13;
concerned with problems of the&#13;
environment and is a&#13;
congressional leader in the area&#13;
of environmental reform.&#13;
Gravel will speak in this area&#13;
because of the out-standing&#13;
response to Parkside students&#13;
to a petition, circulated by the&#13;
Parkside Coalition for Muskie,&#13;
which requested "Senator&#13;
Muksie or his representative"&#13;
to speak in this area.&#13;
The talk will be held Saturday,&#13;
February 26, at 2:30 in&#13;
Local 72 Union Hall, across&#13;
from Kenosha Campus on&#13;
Washington Road.&#13;
I/ALEO'S&#13;
(jPIZZAt.&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PARKSIDE VILLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
5021 -r 30th Avenue Kenosha 657—5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at. 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE &#13;
Shussing at Playboy&#13;
bv John Koloen of tho M0...0 . .. &amp;&#13;
February 21,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
by John Koloen of the Newscope staff&#13;
A haven for big spenders, friends of big spenders and thoi&#13;
families, lies nestled in the hilly outskirts of Lake Gen^l&#13;
Protected by fences and accessible by a guarded blactop road th*&#13;
Playboy Club attracts thousands of guests weekly, some black&#13;
some white, but all with a purpose. For as many reasons as there&#13;
are people the club mv.tes its guests to relax, entertain and be&#13;
entertained to their pocketbooks' content.&#13;
Newscope visited the club last Sunday to review one of its&#13;
malor winter attractions - its ski facilities - and came away&#13;
unimpressed and puzzled by its popularity. y&#13;
A Playboy brochure advertises six ski runs serviced by two&#13;
chairlifts capable of lifting 1,900 skiers per hour. The six runs in&#13;
elude one for beginners aptly dubbed Bunny Run, one for the novice&#13;
called Little Annie Fanny and four runs for the intermediate skier&#13;
Together with a long wood trough used for tobogganing and areas&#13;
set as ide for snowmobiling, the facilities appeal to a spectrum of&#13;
cold weather sportsmen.&#13;
Newscope tested the intermediate runs and found them at&#13;
best, unchallenging. This writer had not strapped on skis in years&#13;
so I depended on the opinion of my companion who has been attached&#13;
to hers for sixteen. Her comment was, "the Playboy Club is&#13;
no Iron Mountain."&#13;
It is easy to see once one overcomes the illusory hype of the&#13;
typical Playboy experience. There are superlatives and there are&#13;
superlatives, and then there is Playboy. One does not simply go&#13;
skiing at the club because one must first be a card carrying&#13;
member, or at least go with someone who is, and then only if you&#13;
are willing to tolerate some of the extravagant prices. At 75 cents&#13;
for a hog dog one must think twice before satiating his appetite&#13;
following an afternoon of skiing. It is enough to make Oscar Mayer&#13;
enter the retail market.&#13;
Back at the slopes, and after a half-dozen runs, we realized that&#13;
the runs were pretty much straight and down hill, ending conveniently&#13;
near the lifts. The average skier might find the hills&#13;
worthwhile for the $7 weekend charge, but for any accomplished&#13;
Slow Week l or&#13;
Parkside Sports&#13;
schusser worth his wedeln the big advantage of the Playboy Club&#13;
lies in what stands at the bottom of the hill, the chalet.&#13;
On the day we were there a guitarist, accompanied by an accordion,&#13;
played smoothed over jazz in the Jug of Wine bar while&#13;
others swarmed to the Loaf of Bread cafeteria warming their toe;&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
the ultimate trip!&#13;
at the fireplace or simply loaving. I have heard a great deal about&#13;
the social life one finds at exclusive clubs, particularly the Playboy&#13;
Club, and the activity in the bar seemed to support this, but my&#13;
meagre expense account would not allow me to prove it.&#13;
I suppose if you're interested in more than skiing and have the&#13;
money to do it, the Playboy Club could turn into a bargain, but as&#13;
for myself the kind of money it would take to have a good time could&#13;
better be spent in Aspen, or on the rent. However, in all fairness, if&#13;
you want to try the club go there on a weekday after seven, the cost&#13;
for a ticket is a reasonable $3 and who knows, the social life may be&#13;
more accessible.&#13;
\ SPACE ODYSSEY&#13;
Friday, Feb. 25, 8 p.m.&#13;
Admission 75c 160 min.&#13;
Student Act. Bldg.&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wis. ID'S required&#13;
It'lll be a "slow" week for&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
winter sports teams&#13;
as the basketball squad completes&#13;
its season Monday night&#13;
at Dominican and the gymnasts&#13;
are idle, while the three others,&#13;
wrestling, fencing and track, all&#13;
will compete on the road.&#13;
The Parkside wrestlers, still&#13;
battling sickness and injury,&#13;
will travel to Allendale, Mich.,&#13;
to take on Grand Valley State&#13;
and Hillsdale in a double dual&#13;
meet Friday night.&#13;
Coach Jim 'Koch has five&#13;
wrestlers who have managed to&#13;
stay uninjured and sicknessfree&#13;
throughout the season and&#13;
it's from them that he needs&#13;
wins Friday if the Rangers are&#13;
to close out their dual meet&#13;
season on a winning note. The&#13;
only competition remaining for&#13;
Parkside after the duals is the&#13;
NAIA Tournament March 9-11&#13;
at Klamath Falls, Ore.&#13;
The Parkside fencers also are&#13;
winding down their season and&#13;
will battle three tough foes this&#13;
weekend on a swing through&#13;
Ohio. The Rangers will face&#13;
Bowling Green State Friday&#13;
afternoon and then take on Big&#13;
Ten power Ohio State and the&#13;
University of Chicago some 24&#13;
hours later in Columbus.&#13;
John Tank, a sophomore&#13;
foilist from Kenosha, has been&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Coach Loran Hein's big gun&#13;
lately, taking five of six matches&#13;
against tough Michigan&#13;
State and Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
opponents in the Rangers'&#13;
recent narrow 15-12 losses to the&#13;
Big Ten strongmen. Parkside&#13;
will return home next week for&#13;
its last home meet of the year, a&#13;
10 a.m. Saturday encounter&#13;
with Illinois-Circle, Tri-State&#13;
and Milwaukee Tech at Bullen&#13;
Jr. High in Kenosha.&#13;
The UW-Parkside track team,&#13;
with its first taste of Invitational&#13;
competition last week&#13;
at Oshkosh, will jump into it&#13;
again Saturday as the Rangers&#13;
face UW-LaCrosse, UWPlatteville,&#13;
UW-Oshkosh and&#13;
Loras at LaCrosse.&#13;
Three-event school recordholder&#13;
Lucian Rosa will again&#13;
anchor the Parkside attack,&#13;
with the barefoot freshman&#13;
likely to be entered in the mile&#13;
and two mile runs.&#13;
The Rangers will stay on the&#13;
road the following weekend and&#13;
compete on Illinois' 260-yard&#13;
track in an open meet at&#13;
Champaign.&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
BLVHTISER&#13;
J A •* % \&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
"lone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE&#13;
Hours - Effective Feb. 28, 1972&#13;
Mon. thru Fri. 8 A.M. to 4:30 P.M.&#13;
Kenosha &amp; Racine Campus&#13;
Mon. &amp;Thurs. only&#13;
10 A.M. to 1 P.M. &#13;
B KOFFEE&#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE February 21,1972&#13;
Sb*5r P®T&#13;
Dennis W eaver in Ke nosha&#13;
by Michael Kite&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
When asked to represent the&#13;
Newscope at the Senator&#13;
McGovern fund raising rally&#13;
featuring Dennis Weaver I&#13;
immediately accepted. After all&#13;
it isn't everyday that someone,&#13;
such as myself, has the opportunity&#13;
to meet a well-known&#13;
Movie and Television personality.&#13;
Anyway there would&#13;
be free refreshments,&#13;
something I rarely pass up.&#13;
Last Thursday evening I&#13;
found myself and some friends&#13;
standing before the offices of&#13;
the Construction Laborers&#13;
Local 237. As we neared the&#13;
entrance we saw five black&#13;
youths peering in the windows&#13;
but unable to pay the $1.50&#13;
admission.&#13;
Upon entering, we were&#13;
greeted by the well-known&#13;
smiling face of Shirley Schmerling,&#13;
who was responsible&#13;
for the rally. The smile quickly&#13;
faded into "Tickets please."&#13;
Surrendering my ticket, I&#13;
proceeded past a police officer,&#13;
sporting a well-waxed handlebar&#13;
moustache, standing&#13;
ready to thwart any evil doers.&#13;
Glancing around at the crows,&#13;
consisting mostly of older&#13;
couples and families, I was&#13;
surprised at how few young&#13;
people of the 18-21 category&#13;
there were.&#13;
The meeting hall itself was&#13;
rather small, as a crowd of&#13;
close to 200 pa cked it. It was&#13;
adorned with the usual political&#13;
paraphernalia, the walls held&#13;
those posters of a smiling face&#13;
that have infiltrated into every&#13;
phase of American life, now&#13;
smiling for McGovern.&#13;
While waiting for the rally to&#13;
begin I decided to sample the&#13;
refreshments, which consisted&#13;
of soda, coffee and popcorn.&#13;
Finding it difficult to eat popcorn&#13;
out of a shoebox, I stuck to&#13;
the liquids.&#13;
Preceding Weaver was&#13;
Reggie McLeon, a folk singer&#13;
from Detroit, who did fair&#13;
renditions of songs by Bob&#13;
Dylan, Neil Young and others.&#13;
Due to the obvious rudeness of&#13;
the audience, busy talking&#13;
amongst themselves, he was&#13;
very difficult to hear.&#13;
When the singer finished, I&#13;
attempted to ask him a few&#13;
questions, which I found very&#13;
difficult as Mr. McLeon would&#13;
not take his eyes off a young&#13;
lady in the audience. After&#13;
finally gaining his attention&#13;
long enough to ask why he&#13;
supported McGovern, he&#13;
replied, "I got tired of walking&#13;
to work; they pay my transportation.&#13;
He (McGovern) says&#13;
it straight, with no shit. And I&#13;
get good vibes when I hear him&#13;
speak." As the last word was&#13;
uttered, he turned back to the&#13;
girl. Knowing when to give up, I&#13;
headed back to a chair to await&#13;
Weavers' arrival. A few&#13;
moments later the back door&#13;
opened and in he strode, without&#13;
his stetson, but his fans were not&#13;
disappointed.&#13;
On his way to the meeting&#13;
room where his admirers were&#13;
awaiting him, he was asked why&#13;
he supported McGovern, to&#13;
which he replied, "Why&#13;
shouldn't I support him, his&#13;
beliefs are the same as mine.&#13;
Even Mr. Weaver, a star of&#13;
rrfovies and television, did not at&#13;
first command the full attention&#13;
of the audience. But it was not&#13;
long until he not only had their&#13;
attention but their loudly&#13;
cheering support.&#13;
In the course of his speech&#13;
Mr. Weaver related Senator&#13;
McGovern's beliefs, future&#13;
plans and policies that he would&#13;
enact if given the chance.&#13;
Speaking most forcefully on&#13;
McGovern's promise of a shift&#13;
in national priorities, by placing&#13;
our economy in the top spot, to&#13;
be done by bringing an end to&#13;
the conflict in East Asia, he&#13;
pointed out that McGovern was&#13;
the first Senator to take an&#13;
active stand against the conflict&#13;
in Vietnam.&#13;
After touching lightly on some&#13;
of the other issues such as&#13;
pollution and inequality, he&#13;
forcefully stated, "We need a&#13;
man like McGovern to solve&#13;
these problems. And to achieve&#13;
this he needs our support. We&#13;
can change things if we will just&#13;
get up off our apathy and do&#13;
something about it!"&#13;
He then left the cheering&#13;
crowd for a small room where&#13;
he would be photographed with&#13;
about 150 of the 200 people&#13;
present. Pictures were sold for&#13;
$1.00 fo r black and wljite and&#13;
$1.50 for color. Also during this&#13;
period some young ladies were&#13;
"giving away" McGovern&#13;
teeshirts for a minimal donation&#13;
of $2.00.&#13;
McLeon returned once again&#13;
to a much more receptive&#13;
audience, as most of the elders&#13;
were in line for their pictures.&#13;
Across the room I saw the five&#13;
young blacks who were once on&#13;
the outside, they must have&#13;
finally found an open door.&#13;
After about an hour of constantly&#13;
flashing camera bulbs,&#13;
the bleary eyed Weaver entered&#13;
the room where the&#13;
representatives of the press had&#13;
been patiently waiting.&#13;
He discussed McGovern's&#13;
fight for the support of&#13;
minoirites. Weaver said that&#13;
they were doing better than&#13;
expected. At this time a&#13;
colleague, digesting this last&#13;
piece of information pointed out&#13;
to Mr. Weaver that even though&#13;
this rally was held in a&#13;
predominatly black neighborhood,&#13;
there was not one&#13;
adult black at the rally. Mr.&#13;
Weaver contributed this to&#13;
apathy and ignorance on the&#13;
part of the black community.&#13;
Shortly after this, he bade&#13;
farewell and was gone. On my&#13;
way back to the meeting hall, to&#13;
'ind out if my friends were still&#13;
there, I ran into Shirley Schmerling&#13;
once again, smiling&#13;
even bigger this time. She w as&#13;
very pleased with the turn out&#13;
for the evening.&#13;
I finally got back to the&#13;
meeting room to find that&#13;
almost everyone was gone, gone&#13;
home with their autographed&#13;
pictures and their tales of when&#13;
they met Mr. Dennis Weaver.&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE C LASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS1960&#13;
GTO. New tires, mags, 4 speed,&#13;
excellent condition. Must sell. $1,200,&#13;
willing to talk. 633-1069 any time&#13;
after 5:00.&#13;
1967 Opel Rally 4 speed, 40,000 miles,&#13;
$850. Call 654-5032 ask for Barb or&#13;
Doug.&#13;
DRUMS FOR SALE — Ludwick&#13;
complete set, excellent condition.&#13;
Best offer over $125. Ph 633-5666&#13;
after 4:00. Jerry or Bob.&#13;
FOR SALE — 69 Plymouth Wagon -&#13;
Custom Suburban. 1 owner. V-8, 318&#13;
engine, air, power brakes and&#13;
steering, 57,000 miles. Excellent&#13;
condition. Call 658-1285.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE — Marimba, 2Vi oct.&#13;
$100; Schwinn bicycle. 1 speed,&#13;
coaster brake etc. etc. $25; double&#13;
bed, handsome, $20. Call 694-1535 or&#13;
write 2030 N . Oakland, Milwaukee,&#13;
Wis. "&#13;
Garrard SLX-2 "Module" series&#13;
turntalbe; console stereo. Call Ray&#13;
654-8878.&#13;
STEREO TAPE RECORDER —&#13;
Sony 252 D One year old. List $135.00,&#13;
sell for $70.00. Ph. Jerry 652-2538 or&#13;
553-2496.&#13;
MODEL NEEDED for life drawing&#13;
class. Contact David Zaig, Room&#13;
217, Gre enquist Hall - A rt Dept.&#13;
BABY-SITTER NEEDED 4 2 boys,&#13;
ages 20 months and 10 months.&#13;
About 6 hours a day, 2 weekdays.&#13;
Days and time flexible. My home -&#13;
North side of Kenosha. Call 654-4593&#13;
afternoons or evenings.&#13;
Will the lady that phoned in the&#13;
classified ad for typing last Wed.&#13;
please call us again ... we lost your&#13;
phone number.&#13;
3 Room Apt. North side Keno.&#13;
Privacy assured. Situated well for&#13;
all campuses. Call 552-8970.&#13;
To whom it may concern — We want&#13;
our 3 dish pans back now.&#13;
SKIS — Hart Camaro with^Cubcle&#13;
bindings. $200 new, sell for $75. Also&#13;
Gerard turntable, sell at cost. Ph.&#13;
652-8796.&#13;
WANTED — '63, 64 or 65&#13;
Volkswagen. Good running condition&#13;
- reasonable. Call 654-1684 or 658-&#13;
3998.&#13;
PERSONAL — BILL THATCHROOF&#13;
— Come home or call&#13;
callect - all is forgiven - we love you -&#13;
you don't have to get a haircut. Mom&#13;
and Dad.&#13;
FOR RENT — 1 furnished bedroom&#13;
with kitchen - off street parking.&#13;
$50.00 per month including utilities.&#13;
552-8172. 5306 South Lake Shore Rd.&#13;
(just off Sheridan Road), Racine.&#13;
FOR SALE — Roth violin with case.&#13;
Very good condition. $260.00 new,&#13;
$125.00 or best offer. Electronic&#13;
adaptor also available. Phone 654-&#13;
1731.&#13;
Snowbires for VW, size 5.60x15, used&#13;
700 mi. cost $55 new, make an offer,&#13;
call 632-8929. </text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 7, February 21, 1972</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text>1972-02-21</text>
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              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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