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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 6, issue 10</text>
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            <text>sga elections results</text>
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            <text>sga election results&#13;
UW-Parkside Student Government Association&#13;
Spring Election Results — March 7 and 8&#13;
Recording Secretary&#13;
Becky Ecklund - w inner&#13;
Marry Peterson&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Steve Sulk&#13;
Senator&#13;
Greenquist Kenosha&#13;
20&#13;
Racine&#13;
n—&#13;
Greenquist Kenosha Racine&#13;
Tom Haack - winner&#13;
Mark Harris - winner&#13;
Mike Wickware&#13;
Harold Liss&#13;
Neil Lawton&#13;
Jan Michalski&#13;
Mike Mayeshiba&#13;
Mike Pecnic&#13;
Tom Garner&#13;
"55"&#13;
49&#13;
18&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
~53~&#13;
51&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
3&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
0&#13;
Total&#13;
'40&#13;
6&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
Total&#13;
54&#13;
55&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
163&#13;
155&#13;
19&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
2&#13;
Corresponding Secretary&#13;
Becky Ecklund - winner (o)&#13;
Nancy Robinson&#13;
Rick Barnhart&#13;
Mike Deutsch&#13;
Lynda Barnes&#13;
Kyle Barnes&#13;
Dave Walden&#13;
Carl Vinson&#13;
Cheryl Troeger&#13;
Greenquist Kenosha&#13;
5&#13;
Racine&#13;
0"&#13;
5 0&#13;
4 0&#13;
0 4&#13;
2 0&#13;
0 3&#13;
0 3&#13;
1 1&#13;
0 0&#13;
Total&#13;
Campus Totals 86 74&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
3&#13;
75&#13;
6&#13;
5&#13;
4&#13;
4&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
235&#13;
(o) In the corresponding secretary race, Becky Ecklund declined,&#13;
and the second place winner, Nancy Robinson, was declared&#13;
winner.&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
'free&#13;
Volume 6 Number 10&#13;
industrial mission&#13;
School of Modern Industry&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Crucial to the ultimate success&#13;
of Parkside is the&#13;
development of the School of&#13;
Modern Industry (SMI). By&#13;
state statute, Parkside was&#13;
given this special Industrial&#13;
Mission — and to the extent&#13;
which it fulfills it will be a&#13;
standard against which its&#13;
success will be measured.&#13;
The purpose of the school is&#13;
described as twofold: First to&#13;
educate men and women of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin for&#13;
professional work in&#13;
engineering and management,&#13;
and, secondly, to offer the&#13;
services of the school's industrially&#13;
experienced faculty&#13;
to the industrial and business&#13;
community.&#13;
But while the development of&#13;
Parkside's other academic unit,&#13;
the College of Science and&#13;
Society, has progressed, the&#13;
development of SMI till now has&#13;
been slight.&#13;
Despite this, and despite the&#13;
moratorium on new academic&#13;
programs imposed by the&#13;
recently merged Board of&#13;
Regents, both the acting Dean&#13;
of the School, William Moy, and&#13;
Vice Chancellor Otto Bauer are&#13;
highly optimistic about the&#13;
future of the school.&#13;
"We're going to get the job&#13;
done," Bauer told Newscope.&#13;
Acknowledging there has&#13;
been a lag in development —&#13;
only three of Parkside's 25&#13;
majors are in SMI, and there&#13;
are only nine regular faculty&#13;
members in the entire school —&#13;
Bauer asserted real progress is&#13;
being made this semester.&#13;
The school, as it exists now,&#13;
consists of three divisions,&#13;
Engineering Science, which&#13;
offers a major in Applied&#13;
Science and Technology,&#13;
Management Science, which&#13;
offers a major in Business&#13;
Management, and Labor&#13;
Economics, which offers a&#13;
major in Labor Economics.&#13;
Only Engineering Science is&#13;
relatively well-developed. It has&#13;
the nine full faculty members&#13;
and is headed by Divisional&#13;
Chairman Alan Grossberg.&#13;
Management Science, on the&#13;
other hand, has a staff of two&#13;
visiting professors and the rest&#13;
ad hoc instructors, while -Labor&#13;
Economics has only a visiting&#13;
professor.&#13;
Neither has a full divisional&#13;
chairman.&#13;
Faculty recruitment this year&#13;
is. being concentrated in&#13;
Management Science. Dean&#13;
Moy said four or five appointments&#13;
are being considered&#13;
here, possibly in accounting&#13;
and finance,&#13;
marketing, quantitative&#13;
methods, and personnel.&#13;
A Labor Economist may be&#13;
hired, too. There will be no&#13;
additions in Engineering&#13;
Science, he said.&#13;
"We're late in the recruiting&#13;
season now," Moy noted. He&#13;
said.&#13;
The candidates that have&#13;
visited the campus, he said,&#13;
have left impressed with&#13;
possibilities at Parkside.&#13;
"It's attractive for them to be&#13;
part of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin and its traditions,&#13;
and it's good to be in an environment&#13;
where you're not&#13;
hemmed in," he said. "To be&#13;
honest, that's what impresses&#13;
me about Parkside."&#13;
Moy will serve as acting Dean&#13;
only to the end of the semester.&#13;
assumed his position as acting&#13;
Dean at the start of the spring&#13;
semester, and has only since&#13;
then began work on recruiting.&#13;
"Management Science is one&#13;
of the more difficult areas to&#13;
recruit in," he added. "It's&#13;
difficult to find good people."&#13;
The emphasis is on&#13;
Management Science, he explained,&#13;
because of student&#13;
demand. Over 600 students have&#13;
indicated it as their major,&#13;
making it the biggest major on&#13;
campus (188 of these have offocially&#13;
declared it as their&#13;
major). "The students are&#13;
here," he emphasized. "They&#13;
have demonstrated their needs,&#13;
and they want help."&#13;
About 200 students have indicated&#13;
Engineering Science as&#13;
their major, while only 22 have&#13;
indicated Labor Economics as&#13;
their major.&#13;
At present, he is uncertain of&#13;
what the results will be in&#13;
recruitment — "I'll know more&#13;
at the end of the semester," he&#13;
W i llia m Moy , a c tin g dean of S M I.&#13;
He is a professor 6f Industrial&#13;
Engineering at Madison, and"&#13;
teaches two classes there. He is&#13;
at Parkside only Tuesday thru&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
His main priority is&#13;
recruiting. He adds though,&#13;
"I'm here to help them in any&#13;
way I can. When you have a&#13;
limited amount of time, you do&#13;
what is most feasible."&#13;
A reason often given why SMI&#13;
has not been developed was the&#13;
absence of a Dean and&#13;
Divisional Chairman; it was&#13;
thought unwise to recruit unless&#13;
the top men in the School could&#13;
have a say in it.&#13;
Reportedly, the position of&#13;
Dean was offered to two people&#13;
during the previous school year,&#13;
and in both cases it was refused.&#13;
Vice Chancellor Bauer says the&#13;
position is about to be offered&#13;
again — it's a matter of the&#13;
Regents deciding what role they&#13;
want to play in the selection.&#13;
Moy then is serving in the&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
Newscope Elections&#13;
In its second interim election of the semester, Newscope has&#13;
elected a new set of editors.&#13;
Jerry Socha was elected Editor; Jim Koloen Managing Editor;&#13;
and Paul Lomartire Associate Editor. All ran unopposed. They will&#13;
serve to the end of the semester.&#13;
An interim election was held because none of the candidates&#13;
were willing to serve a full term that would have ended in&#13;
November. Socha said of this: "I have no idea what will happen to&#13;
the paper in the fall. Most of the people working on it now will be&#13;
gone by then. There's a chance we might even collapse this&#13;
semester."&#13;
He said the only way to avoid this is if new people join the paper&#13;
immediately.&#13;
Socha worked previously on Newscope as Photo Editor and&#13;
Managing Editor.&#13;
The retiring editor, John Koloen, is journeying to Colorado to&#13;
begin working on a new paper. Other Newscope staffers are expected&#13;
to follow him during the next few months.&#13;
The new editors, besides constituting the Editorial Board, will&#13;
also function as the Board of Directors to handle the corporate&#13;
matters of the paper. Cleta Skovronski, who was elected by the&#13;
staff, also will serve on the Board of Directors.&#13;
Further editorial appointments will be made by the three&#13;
editors.&#13;
Womens Capsule College&#13;
KENOSHA — The second&#13;
annual Capsule College for&#13;
Women at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside will be held&#13;
April 6 in Gr.eenquist Hall at the&#13;
Wood Road Campus.&#13;
Because of the popularity of&#13;
the initial Capsule College last&#13;
year — about 400 women attended&#13;
the all-day session — the&#13;
number of session topics has&#13;
been expanded from eight to 19&#13;
and an evening session has been&#13;
added for the convenience of&#13;
women who are employed or&#13;
have other obligations during&#13;
the day.&#13;
Capsule College is sponsored&#13;
by UW-Parkside, University&#13;
Extension and the Kenosha,&#13;
Racine and Walworth&#13;
University Extension Offices.&#13;
Complete information on the&#13;
program and registration&#13;
blanks are available from the&#13;
sponsoring institutions.&#13;
Deadline for registration for the&#13;
daytime sessions is March 23.&#13;
The $4 registration fee includes&#13;
a morning coffee break and&#13;
luncheon. No pre-registration is&#13;
required for the free evening&#13;
session.&#13;
Registrants may choose to&#13;
attend either one 2V2 hour&#13;
workshop and two 75-minute&#13;
seminars or four seminars.&#13;
Workshop topics and lecturers&#13;
are "The Dark Side of the&#13;
Marketplace: The Plight of the&#13;
Consumer" by Jerry Lamert,&#13;
associate regional director of&#13;
the Federal Trade Commission&#13;
and a Chicago Law School&#13;
professor, and "The Novel:&#13;
What Next?" by Robert Najem,&#13;
chairman of the liberal studies&#13;
functional unit of University&#13;
Extension.&#13;
Seminar topics and lecturers&#13;
are:&#13;
4- "Label Logic" by BlancheErkel,&#13;
consumer specialist of&#13;
the Federal Food and Drug&#13;
Administration, Minneapolis;&#13;
4- "Ecology, Morality and&#13;
Religious Traditions" by Wayne&#13;
Johnson, assistant professor of&#13;
philosophy at Parkside;&#13;
4- "Parent Roles: How to&#13;
Live With a Teenager" by Sam&#13;
Stellman, chairman of the&#13;
social work department of&#13;
University Extension;&#13;
+ "Reproduction&#13;
Engineering: Biological&#13;
Discoveries and Their Social&#13;
Implications" by Surinder&#13;
Datta, associate professor of&#13;
life science at Parkside;&#13;
4- "The Modern Hero: A&#13;
Good Man Is Hard to Find" by&#13;
Walter Graffin, assistant&#13;
professor of English at&#13;
Parkside;&#13;
4- "How Do You Cope With&#13;
Catestrophic Illness?" by Ann&#13;
L. St. Louis, RN, director of&#13;
education at St. Catherine's&#13;
Hospital, Kenosha;&#13;
4- "Movies: Now What" by&#13;
Robert Najem, University&#13;
Extension;&#13;
4- "Health for Women" by&#13;
Elizabeth Steffen, MD, Racine;&#13;
4- "Good Music Is Forever"&#13;
by Carmen Vila, pianist, artistin-residence&#13;
at Parkside;&#13;
4- "Investigation Into&#13;
Identity" by Agnes' Song,&#13;
clinical psychologist, Southern&#13;
Wisconsin Colony'&#13;
4- "The Black Woman in&#13;
Society: A Minority Within a&#13;
Minority" by Eunice Moss,&#13;
i n s t r u c t o r , soc iol o g y,&#13;
Dominican College;&#13;
4- "An English Couple Looks&#13;
at America — And Likes It" by&#13;
Martin Seymour-Smith, visiting&#13;
professor at Parkisde, and&#13;
Janet Seymour-Smith;&#13;
4- "Art Is All Around You"&#13;
by Stanley Walsh, assistant&#13;
professor of art at Parkside;&#13;
(Continued on Page 8) &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE March 13,1972 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
For The Record&#13;
' ''I I I N I r l 1 1 I \ i £ | \ » |&#13;
1 c | ( •&#13;
mm* Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Sp*' .&lt;o^&#13;
&lt;5*&#13;
AC\cf &lt;-e&#13;
# &lt;&gt;&#13;
&amp;&lt;StP&#13;
THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
^TENDERLOIN STEAK&#13;
AND TUMBLED ONIONS&#13;
Spmtlj&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
\ • SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
'Serving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DINING&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S C ABIN ROOM&#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 WINDJAMMER&#13;
DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
— HERBERT KUBLY&#13;
"WONDERFUL FOOD"&#13;
— SENATOR PROXAAIRj=_&#13;
help for child&#13;
care center&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
I would like to bring to the&#13;
notice of readers of Newscope&#13;
the work being done by a small&#13;
group of hard working and&#13;
committed people in operating&#13;
a Child Care Center for the&#13;
benefit of the students, staff and&#13;
faculty of UW. Parkside. In&#13;
spite of obstacles of varying&#13;
kinds, these dedicated people&#13;
are providing a much needed&#13;
service as evidenced by the 50&#13;
children now registered. The&#13;
use of rooms in the Parkside&#13;
Baptist Church has been kindly&#13;
donated by the congregation&#13;
and others have loaned or&#13;
donated playthings and&#13;
equipment. The center is at&#13;
present self-supporting by&#13;
reason of the small charge&#13;
made to parents using the&#13;
service, but funds are needed&#13;
for the purchase of larger,&#13;
permanent nursery equipment&#13;
and to hire additional staff.&#13;
Those involved in starting the&#13;
center have volunteered many&#13;
hours of their own time without&#13;
recompense and are concerned&#13;
only that the service provided&#13;
shall be of the highest quality.&#13;
In order to attain this goal we&#13;
need the support of ALL&#13;
Parkside people — those "not&#13;
interested" at the present time&#13;
may at some point in the future&#13;
be very glad such a service&#13;
exists. The SGA has helped in&#13;
many ways and this has been&#13;
much appreciated, also the&#13;
participation of the student&#13;
body at large in contributing to&#13;
fund raising. WE have many&#13;
plans for the future of the&#13;
Center and intent to continue&#13;
providing the very best service&#13;
we can but this will only be&#13;
possible with broad based&#13;
support from the Parkside&#13;
community both students and&#13;
faculty.&#13;
B. Lukas,&#13;
student and volunteer.&#13;
chisholm coming&#13;
to racine&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Congresswoman Chisholm is&#13;
one candidate that stands out as&#13;
being different. The real difference&#13;
that makes her stand&#13;
out is not that she is a woman,&#13;
and a black woman at that, but&#13;
that this dynamic woman is a&#13;
catalyst that can bring together&#13;
responsive women, struggling&#13;
minorities, the poor and the&#13;
young who see her as a new&#13;
hope for the system.&#13;
Shirley is fighting for:&#13;
Jobs for Veterans&#13;
A volunteer army&#13;
Consumer protection&#13;
Fighting hard drugs harder&#13;
An end to police control of&#13;
marijuana&#13;
Federal "Bill of Rights" for&#13;
workers&#13;
Free choice abortion&#13;
Amnesty for draft dodgers&#13;
Shirley will speak on these&#13;
topics and others March 17 at&#13;
10:00 a.m. in the Badger Room&#13;
at the Racine campus. If you&#13;
can't wait till Friday, Thursday&#13;
there will be a fund raising&#13;
Mexican dinner with music at&#13;
815 Silver St. (2 blocks east of&#13;
the Racine State St. Post Office)&#13;
from 5:45 to7:30 p.m. donations&#13;
$1.00, children $.50. Following&#13;
dinner a bus and car caravan&#13;
will leave for a rally at St.&#13;
Boniface Church, 11th and&#13;
Clark in Milwaukee.&#13;
There will be child care at the&#13;
Silver Street Day Care Center&#13;
until busses and cars come back&#13;
from Milwaukee.&#13;
Parkside Woman's Caucus&#13;
Shirley Chisholm for President&#13;
Committee&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
DAR SLAMS WOMEN'S LIBERATION&#13;
WASHINGTON, D.C. (CPS) — The National Convention of the&#13;
Daughters of the American Revolution, in its meeting last month&#13;
issued an eight-page declaration that the women's liberation&#13;
movement will lead to sexual promiscuity and destroy the morals&#13;
of American society.&#13;
a "XV*™ 5660 liberated for a long time," said Mrs. Nettie&#13;
Arnold Hawkins. "You don't see us leaving our homes to demonstrate&#13;
for abstract movements."&#13;
The DAR paper hinted that the women's liberation movement&#13;
may be a direct link to a communist overthrow of the country.&#13;
STATUE REMOVED FROM HARM'S WAY&#13;
CHICAGO 111. (CPS) — The statue commemorating seven&#13;
policemen killed in the Haymarket Square riot in Chicago in 1886&#13;
has finally been moved to a place where it will be safe from attack&#13;
inside the Chicago police headquarters. The 9-foot-tall statue had&#13;
been blasted from its pedestal by bombs twice within the last three&#13;
ycsrs.&#13;
The first bombing, on Oct. 7, 1969, marked the beginning of the&#13;
Days of Rage' in which radicals lead by the Weather people batt ed&#13;
police '"the streets of Chicago. The statue was patched togeta&#13;
but was bombed from its perch again in 1970&#13;
proS,^,^-^ r&#13;
c&#13;
„f g&#13;
hu&#13;
aar^„eg&#13;
n t&#13;
maintained&#13;
COLURT&#13;
HANT WI™ WH1PLASH AWARDED 54,500 BY&#13;
LOS ANGELES (CPS) — Bimbo the Daneina FiarvK »&#13;
$4,500 in damages for whiplash injuries she recefv&lt;^n&#13;
accident in 1969. received m a traffic&#13;
Superior Court Judge Julius Title made the ruling •&#13;
owner Ted de Wayne claimed $10,000 for injuries received hvT&#13;
rained 16-year-old elephant Bimbo Jr. in a car-truck^accM^n^&#13;
Los Angeles on March 30, 1969. accident near&#13;
The circus owner said that heranco&#13;
lost interest in danc ing and also in a unique wateStg MI*" ^&#13;
DEDENVER?cPS,&#13;
WNn&#13;
ERS BEAT D°&#13;
G C«CHER&#13;
when the d| S ' ~ Tr^ ciZ^V^&#13;
angry crowd of park visitors.&#13;
an Park by an&#13;
The dog catchers have been causing Denver&#13;
grief in recent months by handing out tickets in the mTk!? 3 ?&#13;
f&#13;
who permit their dogs to run around withoul a leash PC°&#13;
P 6&#13;
talent in&#13;
milwaukee&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Because Parkside does not&#13;
yet have a Theatre major, most&#13;
of our actors and technical&#13;
theatre people transfer to&#13;
Milwaukee or Madison. It is&#13;
unfortunate that Parkside is not&#13;
benefiting from these talented&#13;
people. However, it is consoling&#13;
to know that our Communications&#13;
faculty has done&#13;
such a fine job of teaching.&#13;
Marilynn Baxter's acting&#13;
training has evidently payed&#13;
off, especially for the students&#13;
that have transferred to UWMilwaukee.&#13;
&#13;
UWM's recent production of&#13;
Marat Sade, which was given&#13;
excellent reviews by all who&#13;
saw it, had five ex-Parkside&#13;
actors in its cast. Three of the&#13;
main charactors were portrayed&#13;
by Nick Angotti ) Marat&#13;
Sade), Mitch Herbert&#13;
(Coulmier), and Jerry Mathews&#13;
(Dulac); Ricky Donnelly and&#13;
Donnalee Bain Desmond were&#13;
inmates of the asylum.&#13;
Needless to say, this speaks&#13;
well for Parkside's acting&#13;
training and the students who&#13;
chose to transfer in order to&#13;
continue it.&#13;
If you missed Marat Sade, by&#13;
all means catch Nick, Jerry and&#13;
Mitch at UWM's next play, Man&#13;
of La Mancha, which runs April&#13;
21-23 and 25-30. Curtain time is&#13;
8:30 except Sundays when it is&#13;
7:30. Tickets are available at&#13;
the box office.&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
WEDNESDAY, MAR. 15&#13;
Poetry Workshop. Poet Robert Bly,&#13;
a National Book Award Winner, will&#13;
conduct an informal free public&#13;
poetry workshop from 9:30 to 11:30&#13;
a.m. in the Greenquist Hall&#13;
Whiteskellar.&#13;
THURSDAY,MAR. 16&#13;
Concert. Student-faculty opera&#13;
program will present "La Serva&#13;
Padrona" (in English) and selected&#13;
arias at 8 p.m. in the Racine Campus&#13;
Badger Room. Free.&#13;
FRIDAY,MAR. 17&#13;
Dance. "Stars and Stripes".&#13;
Baseball Club. 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Adm.&#13;
$1.50. Wisconsin and Parkside I.D.'s&#13;
required.&#13;
SATURDAY,MAR. 18&#13;
Track. UW-P at UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
SUNDAY,MAR. 19&#13;
Concert. UW Racine Alumni Club&#13;
will sponsor a program by the&#13;
University Singers of UW-Madison&#13;
at 2:30 p.m. in the Horlick Little&#13;
Theater, Racine. Adm. adults $2;&#13;
students $1. Tickets available at&#13;
Student Activities Office. Proceeds&#13;
to local UW Scholarship Fund which&#13;
includes UW-P.&#13;
"Don't beli eve everything you read.'&#13;
Robin David, Kathy Rasch, Pat&#13;
McDermid, Marc Eisen, Jean Frahm,&#13;
Larry Jones, Jim Koloen, Helmut&#13;
Ferber, John Koloen, Rich Lipke,&#13;
Paul Lomartire, Bob Mainland,&#13;
Kevin McKay, Fred Noer, Jr., Brian&#13;
Ross, Wolfgang Salewski, Andy Schmelling,&#13;
Barb Scott, Cleta&#13;
Skovronski, Jerry Socha, Bill&#13;
Sorensen, Mike Stevesand, Debbie&#13;
Venskus, Mike Kite, Sifton Winnow.&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial 553-2496&#13;
Business 553-2498&#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 advertising&#13;
funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 5,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout Ihe&#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;
,s 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;
within 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;
first meeting March 13,1972 NEWSCOPE&#13;
Gay Lib Attracts Few&#13;
Pago 3&#13;
by Helmut Ferber of the Newscope staff&#13;
It isn t at all hard for me to imagine why&#13;
there were only three persons in the audience at&#13;
the Gay Youth Coalition last Thursday. It isn't&#13;
hard to see why there weren't any constituents of&#13;
a Gay Movement present at the meeting. It&#13;
wasn t at all hard to see why the whole audience&#13;
left after about ten minutes of discussion. What&#13;
is hard for me to see is the feeling that I came&#13;
away with after the meeting had ended. I was all&#13;
ready to put a little more bias and resentment&#13;
into Newscope as I was sitting down there in that&#13;
little white Ratskellar. I couldn't have imagined&#13;
that a person who was Gay should have the&#13;
rights I have and be allowed to express himself&#13;
in the manner he desired. Well, I left that&#13;
meeting after an hour and a half and I felt that I&#13;
came a little closer to seeing a state of being. I&#13;
feel a little more comfortable in getting one step&#13;
closer to seeing that all people are human. I feel&#13;
somewhat more objective in writing a subjective&#13;
article as this is, than to write an uninvolved,&#13;
unfeeling report of discussion that took place.&#13;
Unfeeling Report of&#13;
Discussion and Topics Covered&#13;
On Thursday, March 9, there was a meeting&#13;
sponsored by the Concerned Student Coalition to&#13;
provide speakers and discussion on the subject of&#13;
Gay Liberation. Present at the meeting were two&#13;
members of the Gay Peoples Union from&#13;
Milwaukee as speakers, one member of the Gay&#13;
Youth Coalition from Parkside, one priest, two&#13;
other gentlemen from the Gay community, one&#13;
Newscope reporter, one Newscope&#13;
photographer, a journalist for the Young&#13;
Democrats in Milwaukee, and an audience of&#13;
three. A large-scale turnout to say the least.&#13;
Human rights and the need for progressive&#13;
change in our outmoded sex laws were the main&#13;
topics of discussion. The need for more pressure&#13;
on government officials and candidates was&#13;
stressed as a sound step for more freedom for&#13;
Gay life. The main point was that being gay in no&#13;
way changes the status of a human being.&#13;
End of Unfeeling Report&#13;
People need awakening in order to help&#13;
change old values and attitudes. People need to&#13;
take a good look at themselves in relation to what&#13;
is right, if anything. I sincerely wish that some&#13;
more students would have taken the time and at&#13;
least came and talked to these people. I sincerely&#13;
hope at some time you can talk to a person&#13;
without looking at the sexual beliefs in determining&#13;
if they are a good person or not. I sincerely&#13;
hope . . .&#13;
If you would like information or help call 414-&#13;
342-1722 or write Gay Lib, P.O. Box 90530,&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Kenosha Can-Do to Continue&#13;
On the night of - Tuesday,&#13;
February 22, the city of&#13;
Kenosha held a meeting with&#13;
some people of the Can-Do&#13;
organization. Can-Do is a nonprofit&#13;
organization whose&#13;
ultimate goal is the complete&#13;
recycling of waste in the&#13;
Racine-Kenosha area.&#13;
The purpose of this meeting&#13;
was to discuss the turning over&#13;
of the Can-Do facilities to the&#13;
city, who has appropriated&#13;
$10,000 f or the operation.&#13;
For a good part of the meeting&#13;
the subject of discussion was&#13;
the amount of money the city&#13;
could make from this program&#13;
rather than the benefit it would&#13;
give our environment. After&#13;
getting most of the minor points&#13;
straightened out, the city&#13;
decided it would be ready to&#13;
start operations on March 6.&#13;
At present about 2 per cent of&#13;
the city's population is participating&#13;
in the Can-Do&#13;
operation. The city would like to&#13;
up this total to 10 per cent by the&#13;
use of an extensive advertising&#13;
program. The present Can-Do&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
organization has offered its&#13;
existing funds toward publicity&#13;
for the endeavor. This help&#13;
along with the assistance offered&#13;
by the Jaycees and word&#13;
of mouth should give the city its&#13;
much needed publicity for the&#13;
project.&#13;
HOURS OPEN&#13;
Monday - Friday: 1 p.m. to 5&#13;
p.m. Except holidays.&#13;
Saturday: 8 a.m. to 5 p .m.&#13;
Material To Be Accepted&#13;
A. Tin cans cleaned and&#13;
flattened.&#13;
B. Glass&#13;
1. colored - all metal tags&#13;
removed.&#13;
2. clear - all metal tags&#13;
removed.&#13;
C. Paper - not to be accepted&#13;
until a semi trailer can be obtained&#13;
for storage and transport.&#13;
&#13;
ZJlie VJL eij S—&lt; &gt;upper ^&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
552-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan td.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
SetoHHf the, tyined&#13;
Ptyy* &amp; OicJicut Qoodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 656-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
Itolex - Accutron&#13;
UltrachrOn - Longine&#13;
Bui ova • Movado&#13;
Caravelle - Time*&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
PERFUMES&#13;
France's&#13;
Uneat -&#13;
Perfumes and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
s M/ sai7 au, Ave.&#13;
y&amp;fwuteu £ &amp;&amp;TIA&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
o% Dis count to s tudents and Faculty with \ .Q&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
Wallace • Lunt&#13;
Heed A Barton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAt.&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orrefora&#13;
Seneca • Lalique&#13;
Royal Worcester &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE March 13,1972&#13;
McLuhan at USC&#13;
by Mark Timpany&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
In his first public lecture in&#13;
the United States since 1970,&#13;
Marshall McLuhan had little&#13;
new to tell his audience at the&#13;
University of Southern&#13;
California. That's reasonable,&#13;
since, McLuhan points out, we&#13;
live in an eternal present where&#13;
past, present and future are&#13;
simultaneous. It's like going to&#13;
an antique dealer and asking,&#13;
"What's new?"&#13;
McLuhan now has black (not&#13;
grey) hair and wears a&#13;
mustache. He accepts his role&#13;
as "McLuhan", as opposed to&#13;
Professor McLuhan, though he&#13;
still is identified with the&#13;
University of Toronto. He now&#13;
plays the role of prophet, and&#13;
his audience last week did not&#13;
expect a typical college lecture.&#13;
What they got was typical&#13;
McLuhan — ty pical of a person&#13;
who is paid thousands of dollars&#13;
by General Motors to tell them&#13;
that, "The automobile was a&#13;
thing of the past."&#13;
The audience also got a large&#13;
collection of jokes, mostly puns.&#13;
The address could have been&#13;
titled "The Standup Humor of&#13;
Marshall McLuhan". "What is&#13;
a sick joke about Marshall&#13;
McLuhan? .... Who was&#13;
Marshall McLuhan?" Jokes,&#13;
McLuhan tells us, are an expression&#13;
of anguish. A comdeian&#13;
is one who puts on his&#13;
audiences grievances.&#13;
McLuhan did have some&#13;
comments on two other authors&#13;
writing on the contemporary&#13;
scene. Toffler, he said, was not&#13;
aware of breakdown as&#13;
breakthrough. Future Shock is&#13;
thus a look at the future through&#13;
a rear view mirror. B. F.&#13;
Skinner was described by&#13;
McLuhan as "a great man of&#13;
the nineteenth century."&#13;
Xerox was another topic for&#13;
comment. "The Gutenburg&#13;
cycle is completed by Xerox."&#13;
While, under conditions of print,&#13;
everyone could become a&#13;
reader, Xerox allows everyone&#13;
to become a publisher. It means&#13;
makes easy security leaks —&#13;
"the enema of the people".&#13;
These security leaks are&#13;
"anticipatory of participatory&#13;
democracy". Xerox, bv making&#13;
everyone a publisher, turns the&#13;
underground press into an elite&#13;
press.&#13;
The problem with McLuhan,&#13;
it seems, is that once you have&#13;
struggled with what he has been&#13;
saying (the last twenty years)&#13;
enough to understand it,&#13;
everything he's saying becomes&#13;
so obvious that you wonder why&#13;
the great controversy over&#13;
making it explicit. ("We're not&#13;
sure who discovered water, but&#13;
we're quite sure it wasn't a&#13;
fish.") Generalists are always&#13;
hard to work with this way.&#13;
McLuhan did mention several&#13;
uses of the information gleaned&#13;
from his media studies. While&#13;
radio has little effect when&#13;
applied to a literate culture, its&#13;
effects are enormous when&#13;
introduced to an oral culture.&#13;
(The dichotomy is literatevisual-civilization&#13;
— oralculture).&#13;
UNESCO's policy of&#13;
indiscriminately distributing&#13;
radios to "backward" areas is&#13;
akin to "pouring gas on a fire".&#13;
Similarly, the problem in&#13;
Northern Ireland could be&#13;
solved in a week by shutting off&#13;
the radio. This has nothing to do&#13;
with the content of radio, the&#13;
primary effect of any medium&#13;
being its effect as a shaper of&#13;
human sensibility. The medium&#13;
is the message — mass-age —&#13;
massage — mess-age.&#13;
It's been eight years since&#13;
Understanding Media and&#13;
nothing has changed. The&#13;
satellite (as proscenium arch)&#13;
has transformed the globe into&#13;
an art form which we are free to&#13;
program at will. McLuhan is&#13;
fond of recalling the Balinese&#13;
saying, "We have no art, we do&#13;
everything as well as we can."&#13;
The electric information environment&#13;
has made jobs obsolete&#13;
("roles not goals") and&#13;
revived the occult (Norman&#13;
Slater). In a service environment,&#13;
it is unnecessary to&#13;
work to be a productive&#13;
member of society. ("My&#13;
consumers, are they not also&#13;
my producers?") Hardware&#13;
loses primacy to software. Data&#13;
classification yields to pattern&#13;
recognition. Alcohol yields to&#13;
psychedelics. (The inner rather&#13;
than the outer trip.) There are&#13;
no more goals. "You're already&#13;
there."&#13;
In the eight years since Understanding&#13;
Media, McLuhan is&#13;
still the only name associated&#13;
with media study. All that time&#13;
he has said that he would be&#13;
happy to return to being a&#13;
professor of English literature&#13;
(grading papers in Toronto) if&#13;
someone else would become&#13;
interested in researching the&#13;
effects of media (Tom Wolfe&#13;
described McLuhan's field of&#13;
study as cognitive psychology.)&#13;
The effects of media are still&#13;
there. No one has seen fit to&#13;
program them to some human&#13;
end.&#13;
The point is that the media&#13;
don't have to be the message,&#13;
i.e. "whirled without amied'V&#13;
Through a critical awareness of&#13;
the effect of medi&#13;
Possible t 0 program a&#13;
of mmededia ia tno crreate a &lt;&#13;
ratio 0f sensory ex&#13;
'sensibility). While yo&#13;
escaPe rriedia effects,&#13;
P|ck which on es are us&#13;
given time. T o achieve&#13;
awareness, howevei&#13;
necessary to discard&#13;
mense backlog of&#13;
cultural assumptions&#13;
from the pi&#13;
technology). For the A&#13;
they include the woi&#13;
racism, sexism&#13;
nationalism. In the&#13;
(present), it can be&#13;
that one's allegiance&#13;
divided between the ti&#13;
end of the nu clear fan&#13;
the globe (the&#13;
nationalism). In the&#13;
(past), we experience t&#13;
(present) with an a'&#13;
defined by cultural la&#13;
than immediate rea&#13;
live, therefore, in a j&#13;
Frank Zappa's "Rubei&#13;
Jets" album does not&#13;
the fifties.&#13;
McLuhan addressed&#13;
audience last week wil&#13;
°f an Altec mic:&#13;
McLuhan's record albi&#13;
better use of his haltir&#13;
patterns than did hi&#13;
dressing this group. Or&#13;
commented, "You c&#13;
him, you might as&#13;
listening to the radio.&#13;
CRUDSTOPPERS TEXTBOOK&#13;
LONG HAIR LEADS TO FILTH, DEGRADATION, INSANITY,&#13;
DEATH,AND SOCIALISM/ IF YOU SEE A CRUD,&#13;
NOTIFY POLICE. OR, DO THE NEXT BEST&#13;
THING-SHOOT IT/ r&#13;
KENOSHA - The National&#13;
Shakes peare Company&#13;
production of "Twelfth Night"&#13;
will be presented under sponsorship&#13;
of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Lecture&#13;
and Fine Arts Committee at 8&#13;
p.m. on Tuesday, March 28, in&#13;
Bradford High School&#13;
Auditorium, Kenosha.&#13;
Tickets now are on sale at the&#13;
Parkside Student Activities&#13;
Office on the Wood Road&#13;
Campus, at Cook-Gere Co. in&#13;
Racine and Bidinger's House of&#13;
Music in Kenosha. There is no&#13;
mail order. Tickets for the&#13;
general public are $3 and $2,&#13;
with all seats reserved.&#13;
GRAF'S CAFE&#13;
8009 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
by Paul Lomartireof the Newscope staff&#13;
I decided to set up a vigil before the place became&#13;
a tourist attraction. I wanted to see the men who were&#13;
causing such a local commotion with the use of their&#13;
morning coffee break.&#13;
I p arked my car directly across the street from&#13;
Graf's Sausage Kitchen and Cafe in an empty parking&#13;
lot owned by Piggly Wiggly. I slo uched in the front seat&#13;
noting the stillness, the early morning tranquility. It&#13;
was a cold, crisp Thursday.&#13;
I listened intently for the rumble of the big red and&#13;
green "Keep the City Clean" machines, i w as ready to&#13;
record the event for all of mankind and posterity in a&#13;
simple journal. Needless to say, I w as very nervous.&#13;
A little past eight thirty the first monster appeared&#13;
on Twenty-Second Avenue. Then a second, a third. In a&#13;
few minutes the street was partially lined on both sides&#13;
by the mechanical garbage eaters, with fruits of past&#13;
battles affixed to the fronts of the trucks; stuffed&#13;
animals, cardboard signs and pictures, strange tatoos&#13;
of the trade.&#13;
The men climbing out of the cabs of the vehicles&#13;
were burly, husky, steam mouthes in the cold air. They&#13;
tunneled into the small Cafe in search of d aily papers,&#13;
hot coffee, rolls, eggs and pancakes. The scene&#13;
reminded me of a Hell's AngelS - Labor Day - invasion&#13;
of a small, innocent, defenseless town. I di dn't leave&#13;
my car.&#13;
As I watched the events transpire, I thou ght of the&#13;
contributors to the Kenosha News "Voice of the&#13;
People" column, those who had complained about the&#13;
city workers converging on local restaurants during&#13;
their morning breaks. One citizen asked why the men&#13;
couldn't simply carry coffee in thermoses and drink&#13;
during break-time in the truck. Other Kenoshans offered&#13;
advice and opinions in print condemning or&#13;
defending the sanitation engineers and their "on duty"&#13;
habits.&#13;
If th e garbage men could only face their accusers&#13;
right in the middle of Twenty-Second Avenue this&#13;
bright crisp morning, my simple journal would instantly&#13;
blossom into a best-selling novel.&#13;
I w aited quietly, remaining unnoticed while the&#13;
men ate, then re-entered the cold and mounted their&#13;
trucks, twentieth century chariots of waste. The big,&#13;
awkward vehicles faded into the distance north and&#13;
south on the avenue, east and west, invading sleepy&#13;
side streets. I jotted down a few final notes and headed&#13;
into the Cafe.&#13;
Andy Warhol once said that a time would come&#13;
when everyone in America would be a Superstar for&#13;
ten minutes, before fading into oblivion. I think the&#13;
time has come, thanks in part to "Voice of the People"&#13;
type columns. I beli eve Bud Graf, the proprietor of the&#13;
Sausage Kitchen and Cafe, will be propelled into Super&#13;
Stardom if the "garbageman controversy" continues. I&#13;
even think he may be a Superstar for more than ten&#13;
minutes; at least a half hour.&#13;
He is the individual who prepares the food, cuts the&#13;
meat, and serves all the customers under the small&#13;
square roof in the Sausage Kitchen-Cafe. He is a large&#13;
man who looks like he could sling hash in the toughest&#13;
corner of Hells' Kitchen in New York.&#13;
There are only about four booths in his place, and&#13;
as many tables. Next to the dining area is the typical&#13;
neighborhood jammed-packed grocery store — which&#13;
offers everything from potato chips, penny candy and&#13;
goSds^ SaUSageS t0 0003 Co,a&#13;
' che&#13;
ese and bakery&#13;
Judy, the waitress serving the four booths and&#13;
tables, took my order of pancakes and coffee minutes&#13;
after I had selected a place to s it. There&#13;
students, a coffee salesman, two housewi&#13;
man eating alone in th e Cafe; making the&#13;
full.&#13;
For fifty-five cents I got th ree p ancakes,&#13;
of butter and all the coffee I desired. Bud&#13;
had a little of the pancake batter left from tl&#13;
of the he-men earlier in the mo rning, as hi&#13;
three big, fat pancakes, fit fo r th e hungrii&#13;
berjacks, garbagemen or whoever.&#13;
Judy left a bottle of Log Cabin sy rup o&#13;
instead of t hose nasty, sticky plastic contai&#13;
places use. I r ead the Sun-Times w hich \&#13;
table, also appreciating the Tribune and Sen&#13;
disposal.&#13;
Graf's though small, also serves chicker&#13;
a dollar forty-five), steak (one be ing a R&#13;
$2.55), veal parmisan (a buck and a quar&#13;
(.95), shrimp (1.95), and hamburgers, chei&#13;
pizzaburgers. Not to mention any com!&#13;
breakfasts utilizing eggs, bacon, ha m sau:&#13;
cereal, etc.&#13;
Also available to any f oBu d s customer&#13;
Bud Super Special", which c®f&#13;
s&#13;
asked Judy what it consisted o f. She the&#13;
minute and told me it had something to&#13;
cheeseburger and a pizzaburger.&#13;
I at e what I could of the three Pancakes&#13;
I left e nough to permit serious thoughts on&#13;
sending the remains to someone^starving .r&#13;
place. It was definitely worth fifty'-five a&#13;
Before I left Grafs, I wanted sot&#13;
testimony from Judy concerning e ga&#13;
breaktime-"Voice of the Peopte affair,&#13;
this was indeed the Cafe w J &lt;&#13;
hang-out." wanted.&#13;
3&#13;
As" He" I th ought about w riting a&#13;
KenMha News^ice of he t&#13;
suggest that the payers wn k&#13;
the sanitation engineers ^&#13;
situation; on garbagemen s&#13;
coffee during breaktime so &#13;
March 13,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
of media it is&#13;
rogram a balance&#13;
create a desirable&#13;
nsory experience&#13;
While you cannot&#13;
a effects, you can&#13;
nes are useful at a&#13;
ro achieve such an&#13;
however, it is&#13;
} discard an imklog&#13;
of obsolete&#13;
jmptions (derived&#13;
ie preceding&#13;
For the American,&#13;
i the work ethic,&#13;
sexism and&#13;
In the future&#13;
can be expected&#13;
allegiance will be&#13;
reen the tribe (the&#13;
uclear family) and&#13;
(the end of&#13;
In the present&#13;
iperience the future&#13;
ith an awareness&#13;
cultural lag rather&#13;
diate reality. We&#13;
re, in a junkyard,&#13;
j's "Ruben and the&#13;
i does not refer to&#13;
addressed the USC&#13;
t week with the aid&#13;
tec microphone,&#13;
-ecord album made&#13;
f his halting speech&#13;
an did he in adi&#13;
group. One woman&#13;
"You can't see&#13;
might as well be&#13;
the radio."&#13;
National&#13;
ompany&#13;
th Night"&#13;
ider spon-&#13;
,-ersity of&#13;
Lecture&#13;
littee at 8&#13;
irch 28, i n&#13;
School&#13;
sale at the&#13;
Activities&#13;
&gt;od Road&#13;
;re Co. in&#13;
s House of&#13;
here is no&#13;
s for the&#13;
S3 and $2,&#13;
ed.&#13;
i sit. There were two&#13;
wo housewives and a&#13;
making the place half&#13;
} pancakes,three pats&#13;
(Sired. Bud must have&#13;
• left from the invasion&#13;
irning, as he produced&#13;
the hungriest of lumiver.&#13;
&#13;
ibin syrup on the table&#13;
astic containers many&#13;
nes w hich was on the&#13;
•uneand Sentinel at my&#13;
rves chicken (a half for&#13;
5 being a Rib Eye for&#13;
and a quarter), perch&#13;
urgers, cheeseburgers,&#13;
i any combination of&#13;
n, ham sausage, toast,&#13;
I's customer is the "Big&#13;
&gt;ts seventy-five cents. I&#13;
of. She thought for a&#13;
Jmething to do with a&#13;
er.&#13;
ee pancakes served me.&#13;
thoughts on my part of&#13;
e starving in a far away&#13;
fifty-five cents,&#13;
wanted some sort of&#13;
ling the garbagemen -&#13;
ie" affair. I asked her if&#13;
ere all the garbagemen&#13;
nd said, "a few of them&#13;
I wanted.&#13;
writing a letter to the&#13;
^eople" column, I could&#13;
vere complaining, meet&#13;
falk over the whole&#13;
urf over hot cakes and&#13;
e morning.&#13;
paid for by Wisconsin Students For McGovern and Wisconsin McGovern for President Committee. 728 N. Jefferson. Milwaukee. Frank Nikolay, Ch.&#13;
AND WHAT&#13;
ARE YOU DOING&#13;
ABOUT IT?&#13;
FOR OVER A DECADE ONE MAN IN AMERICAN POLITICS HAS HAD THE COURAGE TO SPEAK OUT —&#13;
ALONE — ON THE MAJOR ISSUES FACING THE COUNTRY.&#13;
• in 1963 George McGovern was the first man to oppose the War in Indochina.&#13;
• McGovern has pledged to appoint a woman to the first Supreme Court opening, as well as other major judicial and executive posts.&#13;
He supports all legislation guaranteeing equal rights for women.&#13;
• in 1968 he led a "one-man" crusade which revealed the extent of hunger and malnutrition in America. Out of this effort came Food&#13;
Stamp and School Lunch legislation.&#13;
• only McGovern is committed to grant a general amnesty to all those forced to flee the country rather than fight in an unjust war.&#13;
• only McGovern has spelled out an alternative defense budget for America which would reduce Pentagon spending by $30 billion.&#13;
• McGovern is the only Senator to endorse the 60 points of the Congressional Black Caucus. He co-sponsored every major piece of&#13;
civil rights legislation since he entered the Senate.&#13;
• in 1969 McGovern submitted legislation calling for the termination of the draft.&#13;
• McGovern calls existing penalties for posession of marijuana inequitable and unrealistic.&#13;
• McGovern led in congressional support for Cesar Chavez' efforts to ensure a fair income for farm workers.&#13;
• since 1963 McGovern has been proposing national programs which would shift the economy from military to civilian production.&#13;
• in 1972 McGovern stated the heart of his plan for a better America when he called for a dramatic program of income redistribution and&#13;
tax reform. His plan would have the effect of shifting $29 billion from those at the highest income levels to the vast majority of Americans&#13;
at lower levels, those earning under $12,000. Now, that's radical change!&#13;
McGovern's record on the issues is testimony to what he's been doing about the problems facing our country.&#13;
NOW, IT'S YOUR TURN TO DO YOUR SHARE!&#13;
George McGovern needs your help in the Wisconsin Presidential Primary. He needs two things from you. Your Vote . . . and Your Spring Vacation.&#13;
YOUR VOTE —&#13;
If you have not registered to vote yet, do so before the deadline, March 22 (March 15 in Milwaukee). If you are registered in a city where you will&#13;
not be present on Election Day, April 4, then clip the coupon, which is an application for an absentee ballot. Send this form to the Clerk at the o'fice&#13;
where you register. You will get an absentee ballot in the return mail. Please vote this ballot and return it to the Clerk before April 3.&#13;
ABSENTEE VOTING — APPLICATION FOR BALLOT&#13;
Election Clerk, City Clerk's Offices, Wisconsin&#13;
I hereby certify that I am a citizen of the United States and have been a legal resident&#13;
of the state of Wisconsin for six months, and of the precinct of the ward&#13;
of the city of . ; (or of the Village or Town of );&#13;
County of for ten days next preceding; that I am a duly&#13;
qualified elector therein; that I expect to be temporarily absent from such legal residence&#13;
and cannot appear at the polling place on said date. I, therefore, hereby apply for official&#13;
ballots to be voted by me at such election.&#13;
Dated 1972. Signed&#13;
Residence City or P. O&#13;
(Street and number or rural route)&#13;
Zip&#13;
Mail ballot to No Street&#13;
City or P. O.&#13;
YOUR SPRING VACATION&#13;
For Georae McGovern to win the Wisconsin Primary he needs the volunteer help of many people to canvass the cities and towns and rural areas of the&#13;
state. There is nothing you can do over your Spring Vacation which is as important as electing the next President of the United States. Please help!&#13;
There '1®.?^?.^''®one"of&#13;
3&#13;
these McGovern offices and sign up for a week's work which can be crucial in turning the country around once and for all;&#13;
MadisonMcGwmoffice: 630 W. Washington 608-257-8896 Milwaukee McGovern office: 728 N. Jefferson 414-273-3263&#13;
McGOVERN FOR&#13;
PRESIDENT &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE March 13,1972&#13;
Madison Program on Jewish Experience&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
fSt u f-wk i&lt; j. z.oo ^-y&#13;
AA&#13;
re e&#13;
a.4&#13;
M«-VJ Voqi\« TUJ&#13;
ld2 0 - S 2St&#13;
&lt;t r&#13;
I I ~ ^ Co.^yon .&#13;
/^tJsC)Sr\o, / /-•/{, Corr-iggn \&#13;
Rise to face UN other day&#13;
U.W. Parkside&#13;
SUMMER&#13;
IN&#13;
EUROPE&#13;
Chicago To Amsterdam&#13;
Two Plights&#13;
OR&#13;
JUNE - JULY 3 3&#13;
JUNE 4 - AUGUST 10&#13;
Complete price $214.00 ( Transportation On ly)&#13;
MADISON - The Hillel&#13;
Foundation at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Madison is sponsoring&#13;
a series of programs&#13;
March 11-24 on the campus to&#13;
study the Holocaust, the extermination&#13;
of six million Jews&#13;
in Europe.&#13;
The schedule is as follows:&#13;
Saturday, March 11 — 8 p.m.,&#13;
"The Shop on Main Street," the&#13;
film on the elimination of Jews&#13;
from a small Czech town; to be&#13;
repeated Sunday, March 12, 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Monday, March 13 — 4 p.m.,&#13;
workshop on writings about the&#13;
Holocaust with David Roskies&#13;
of Brandeis University, noted&#13;
young Yiddish scholar; 8 p.m.,&#13;
multi-media show on "The Rise&#13;
and Fall of the East European&#13;
Jew," presented by Roskies.&#13;
Friday, March 17 — 9 p.m.,&#13;
Prof. Georges Haupt, visiting&#13;
lecturer in the UW-Madison&#13;
history department, discusses&#13;
the Jewish response to the Nazi&#13;
occupation with emphasis on his&#13;
own native village of Falicia.&#13;
Saturday, March 18 — 8 p.m.,&#13;
presentation of the films&#13;
"Border Street," "Sighet,&#13;
Sighet," and "Night and Fog";&#13;
to be repeated at 8 p.m. March&#13;
23.&#13;
Tuesday, March 21 — 8 p.m.,&#13;
Czech author and film producer&#13;
Arnost Lustig screens his film&#13;
"Diamonds in the Night," then&#13;
discusses film making.&#13;
Friday, March 24 — 9 p.m.,&#13;
Prof. Raul Hilberg, University&#13;
of Vermont, author of "The&#13;
Destruction of European&#13;
Jewry," will discuss "The&#13;
Uniqueness of the Holocaust."&#13;
During the two-week period&#13;
special seminars will be held,&#13;
mini-exhibits on the revolt of&#13;
the Warsaw ghetto will be on&#13;
view, and pertinent books will&#13;
be on display ai campus&#13;
bookstores and the Madison&#13;
Public Library.&#13;
All programs will be held at&#13;
the Hillel Foundation, 611&#13;
Langdon st., and are open to the&#13;
"public. A program booklet can&#13;
be obtained by calling 256-8361.&#13;
Teaching Awards&#13;
to be Presented&#13;
Two University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
faculty members will&#13;
be presented with $500&#13;
Distinguished Teaching Awards&#13;
to be made at Commencement&#13;
Exercises this spring. The&#13;
awards are made possible by a&#13;
bequest for that purpose from&#13;
Standard Oil Company. The&#13;
Awards Committee desires&#13;
student nominations with a&#13;
statement of supporting:&#13;
evidence for the nomination not&#13;
to exceed a page in length. The&#13;
letters of support should emphasize&#13;
teaching effectiveness&#13;
and success and how the&#13;
professor contributed to the&#13;
student's learning experience,.&#13;
The awards are not meant to be&#13;
a popularity contest based on&#13;
the charisma of the instructors.&#13;
Next week nomination forms&#13;
will be mailed to each student&#13;
and will also be available to&#13;
students in the three Student&#13;
Services Offices, in the Library&#13;
and in the Divisional Offices.&#13;
These nominations will provide&#13;
the basis of selection of the&#13;
recipient. The Awards selections&#13;
are made by a committee&#13;
of 15. Committee members are&#13;
Professors Herbert Kubly,&#13;
Chairman, and Professors&#13;
Stella Gray, Gene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, Leon Applebaum,&#13;
Alan Grossberg and&#13;
Martin. Professor Martin was a&#13;
1971 winner of the Distinguished&#13;
Teaching Award. Student&#13;
committee members are Jerry&#13;
Grimes, Wolfgang Salewski,&#13;
Robert Lindstroth, Lois Bauer,&#13;
Robert Fornal, Curtis&#13;
Sahakian, James Twist and&#13;
Michael Baxter. Mr. Twist and&#13;
Mr. Baxter are representatives&#13;
on the committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association. The fifteenth&#13;
member of the committee is&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger of the&#13;
Student Services Office.&#13;
PAB Needs Members&#13;
The Parkside Activities&#13;
Board, responsible for advising&#13;
the Student Activities Office in&#13;
the area of programming on&#13;
campus, is inviting more&#13;
students to become members.&#13;
The Board helps to organize and&#13;
work on activities on campus.&#13;
Sue Nevin, Vice President of the&#13;
Board and in charge of applications,&#13;
has announced, "The&#13;
Parkside Activities Board has&#13;
been operating for slightly more&#13;
than a year. Now the possibility&#13;
arises for expanding our&#13;
programming, and subsequently,&#13;
our membership."&#13;
The PAB has a series of&#13;
committees that program for&#13;
specific areas. The particular&#13;
committees listed below still&#13;
have room for new members.&#13;
They are:&#13;
Special Events - It is&#13;
responsible for organizing such&#13;
events as "The End",&#13;
Parkside's end of the year&#13;
festival. They also are interested&#13;
in new ideas for activities&#13;
of this type next year.&#13;
Outing - It hopes to offer&#13;
students hiking, skiing (in&#13;
ESqbs'&#13;
cooperation with ski club),&#13;
trips, etc. The possibilities are&#13;
endless but the committee&#13;
needs students to work in these&#13;
areas.&#13;
Games - It recently ran&#13;
tournaments for billiards and&#13;
chess, plus it sent the winners to&#13;
regional tournaments. Plans&#13;
are now being made for foozeball&#13;
and ping pong tournaments&#13;
to be held in the Activities&#13;
Building.&#13;
Fine Arts - Lectures,&#13;
documentary films, and the&#13;
more cultural activities are&#13;
their responsibility. PAB would&#13;
definitely like to go deeper into&#13;
this area.&#13;
Coffee House - Whiteskellar in&#13;
the basement of Greenquist&#13;
Hall has become the base of&#13;
operations for their successful&#13;
activities and their new concept&#13;
of daytime programming.&#13;
However, more interested&#13;
people are needed.&#13;
House - anyone interested in&#13;
sound or lighting systems or in&#13;
spending many hours preparing&#13;
for concerts are needed. They&#13;
help in physical aspects of the&#13;
Board.&#13;
The PAB asks any student&#13;
interested in any or all of the&#13;
above mentioned committees to&#13;
stop in at the Student Activities&#13;
Office, rm. 217, Tallent Hall.&#13;
Students can ask questions and&#13;
hopefully pick up an application&#13;
form.&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PARKSIDE V ILLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
5021 - 30 th Avenue Kenosha 657-5181&#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;
KENOSHA — Five home&#13;
tennis meets, three home golf&#13;
meets and participation in the&#13;
Drake Relays and the NAIA&#13;
national championships by the&#13;
track squad highlight the 1972&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
spring sports&#13;
schedules announced today by&#13;
Tom Rosandich, director of&#13;
athletics.&#13;
Spring sports coaches are&#13;
Steve Stephens, golf; Dick&#13;
Frecka, tennis; and Bob&#13;
Lawson and Vic Godfrey, track.&#13;
Barbara Jo Morris will coordinate&#13;
the women's tennis and&#13;
track teams, with their&#13;
schedules to be announced at a&#13;
later date.&#13;
The schedules follow:&#13;
Golf: Mon., April 10: Lake&#13;
Forest and Rockford at Lake&#13;
Upcoming Sports Schedule March 13.1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
Forest, 111.; Wed., April 19: UWWhitewater,&#13;
Dominican UWMilwaukee&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
(Petrifying Springs);. Fri&#13;
April 21: Milton and Ripon at&#13;
Janesville; Sat., April 22:&#13;
Northwestern and UW-Madison&#13;
at Wilmette, 111.; Wed., April&#13;
26: Loyola, Carthage, UWWhitewater&#13;
at Parkside&#13;
(Petrifying Springs); Fri.&#13;
April 28: Roosevelt Univ at&#13;
Chicago, 111.; Tues., May 2:&#13;
Lake Forest, Dominican, UWGreen&#13;
Bay at Parkside&#13;
(Petrifying Springs); Thurs. -&#13;
Sat., May 4-6: NAIA District 14&#13;
Tournament at Green Lake.&#13;
Tennis: Mon., April 10: UWMilwaukee&#13;
at Milwaukee;&#13;
Wed., April 12: Marquette at&#13;
Parkside (Pershing Courts,&#13;
Racine); Fri., April 14;'&#13;
Dominican at Parkside; Sat.,&#13;
April 15: UW-Green Bay at&#13;
Parkside; Wed., April 26:&#13;
Milton at Parkside; Fri., April&#13;
28: at Dominican, Racine; Sat.,&#13;
April 29: St. Norbert at DePere;&#13;
Fri., May 15: UW-Milwaukee at&#13;
Parkside; Sat., May 6: at UWGreen&#13;
Bay, Green Bay; Wed.,&#13;
May 10: at Milton.&#13;
Track: Sat., April 8: USTFF&#13;
(Indoor) at Madison; Sat., April&#13;
15: at Stevens Point Invitational;&#13;
Sat., April 22: at&#13;
LaCrosse Invitational; Fri.-&#13;
Sat., April 28-29: Drake Relays&#13;
at Des Moines, Iowa; Sat., May&#13;
6: Northern Illinois Relays at&#13;
DeKalb, 111.; Tues., May 9: UWWhitewater&#13;
at Whitewater;&#13;
Wed. - Fri., May 29 - June 2:&#13;
NAIA National Meet at Billings,&#13;
Mont.&#13;
UWP All-Stars vs. Packers&#13;
KENOSHA, Wis. — Six&#13;
faculty and staff members from&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will be on Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens' squad Sunday, March&#13;
19, wh en the Parkside All-Stars&#13;
take on the Green Bay Packers&#13;
in a 1:30 p.m. contest at&#13;
Tremper High School.&#13;
They'll have to be brave,&#13;
because the Packer five will&#13;
carry a huge weight advantage&#13;
in against the All-Star&#13;
squad,wchih will also include&#13;
alumni of recent Ranger squads&#13;
and some from the current&#13;
outfit. But they're out for fun,&#13;
just as are the Packers, and&#13;
UW-P Vice Chancellor Otto&#13;
Bauer is typical of the breed of&#13;
faculty player fans will see on&#13;
the hardcourt.&#13;
But Bauer, like the rest, is&#13;
ready to give it a good go. The&#13;
rest are all basketball buffs and&#13;
include faculty from the various&#13;
educational divisions, with Bob&#13;
Lawson representing education,&#13;
Gene Gasiorkiewicz from&#13;
science, John Buenker from&#13;
social studies, and Peter Martin&#13;
and Walt Graffin from English.&#13;
Tickets are priced at $2 for&#13;
adults, $1 for high school and&#13;
college students and 50 cents for&#13;
children under 12. Ticket outlets&#13;
include Tyson's, Chappie's&#13;
Sports Center, Chet's Sports&#13;
Bar and Nehlsen Sporting&#13;
Goods in Kenosha and&#13;
DeMark's Tavern, Cozy Lounge&#13;
and Mike's Sport Shop in&#13;
Racine. They are also on sale at&#13;
the Parkside Office of Athletics&#13;
on Wood Road.&#13;
Fast 2 Mile for Rosa&#13;
KENOSHA, Wis. — The two&#13;
mile run's "nine-minute"&#13;
barrier can be just as real as the&#13;
mile's more-famed four-minute&#13;
block.&#13;
Just ask University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside trackman&#13;
Lucian Rosa.&#13;
The barefoot phenom&#13;
traveled the route in 8:55.3 at&#13;
the Illinois Open in Champaign&#13;
recently and not only smashed&#13;
his own varsity record but built&#13;
up self-confidence.&#13;
And Coach Bob Lawson,&#13;
pleased with the time,&#13;
pronounced it Rosa's best race&#13;
since early in the cross country&#13;
season.&#13;
"It was the first relaxed race&#13;
he's had since he became sick&#13;
last fall and had to drop out of a&#13;
cross country race," Lawson&#13;
said. "It's the first time this&#13;
indoor season that he's really&#13;
looked like the runner he was&#13;
when he came here. That's a&#13;
good sign because it shows he's&#13;
regaining strength and is&#13;
coming along."&#13;
Rosa admitted that he lacked&#13;
self-confidence and had doubts&#13;
as to whether he would get&#13;
under nine.&#13;
"I didn't think I was running&#13;
that fast," Rosa said. But fast it&#13;
was and his time cracked his old&#13;
Parkside standard by better&#13;
than 10 seconds — and that with&#13;
a lapped runner blocking his&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
V2 Blo ck 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;
AFSCON.O.&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
120Z. 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;
way and causing him to lose&#13;
valuable time as he moved up.&#13;
Rosa has been learning to&#13;
pace himself easier these days&#13;
because the Rangers have been&#13;
working on the indoor track at&#13;
Park High School.&#13;
"With just long distance&#13;
running and road work I can't&#13;
do fast workouts," Rosa pointed&#13;
out, "but now I can do intervl&#13;
work twice a week."&#13;
Lawson said Rosa's endurance&#13;
is great and that he'll&#13;
be able to handle a faster race&#13;
pace once he is able to achieve a&#13;
sense of pace.&#13;
As for the barefoot running,&#13;
Rosa said he wouldn't have it&#13;
any other way, although&#13;
Lawson has tried to talk him&#13;
into wearing shoes.&#13;
"I used to run barefoot on the&#13;
roads in Ceylon," he relates.&#13;
"And If I wear shoes I can't run&#13;
as fast. Tracks don't bother me&#13;
even if they're cinders but the&#13;
board tracks do."&#13;
The slender (104 pounds on a&#13;
5'6V2" frame) Rosa will likely&#13;
head to Germany this summer&#13;
to prepare for his 10,000 m eter&#13;
and marathon runs in the&#13;
summer Olympic Games.&#13;
mi/,&#13;
Nearing completion is the University of WisconsinParkside's&#13;
$2.1 million multi-use physical education&#13;
building, which will be in use for the first time during the upcoming&#13;
summer session June 19 through August 12. The&#13;
building is located at the southwest corner of the central&#13;
academic area of the 700-acre campus adjacent to the&#13;
athletic fields. The building contains a main gymnasium&#13;
housing three basketball courts, auxiliary gymnasium,&#13;
natatorium with eight-lane pool, handball courts, conditioning&#13;
facilities, locker rooms and faculty and administrative&#13;
offices. The building, with a seating capacity of&#13;
3,000, will be used for various all-school activities as well as&#13;
the physical education program, intercollegiate and intramural&#13;
athletics and recreation programs.&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL&#13;
1&#13;
, lh C.ROUND BEEF"&#13;
ON FRF.NCH CRUST&#13;
BRF.AD D RFSSFD&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
LF.TTUCF AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
DRILLED COUNTRY&#13;
MAM A C UFFSF ON&#13;
WHOLE WHEAT BUN&#13;
WITH LETTUCE&#13;
TOMATO AND&#13;
MAYONNAISE&#13;
80c&#13;
RANCH SPECIAL SANDWICH&#13;
A TRIPLE DECKER OF BURC.ER CHEESE&#13;
BACON LETTUCE TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISK ON TOAST 9^&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
NORJH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
— — - -&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1968 Plymouth Valiant top-of-theline&#13;
model "Signet" - 2 dr. Club&#13;
Coupe, 1 owner, auto, trans., pwr.&#13;
steering, radio, air cond. $875 - Call&#13;
654-4982.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
Polaroid Camera - Used 4 times.&#13;
Case, timer, dependable. Truely a&#13;
fine instrument. $25. Ph. Kevin 658-&#13;
4746.&#13;
STEREO TAPE DECK — Sony&#13;
252D. List $135. It's yours for $70. A&#13;
tape deck if ever I s aw one. Ph. 652-&#13;
2538 - 553-2496 ask for Jerry.&#13;
1955-1963 Chevy trans., 4 speed and&#13;
positraction for 11 rear end. Pin-ball&#13;
machine best offer, or trade for ten&#13;
speed bike. Call 552-8987.&#13;
i i f t v . ' i A - ' C : ; . . A . .&#13;
FOR SALE — Mosrite Bass Guitar.&#13;
Double pickup. Double cutaway,&#13;
hollow body. With plush-lined&#13;
hardshell case. Was S450 new. Excellent&#13;
condition. $100. Call Larry,&#13;
552-8347 or come to P-Village, apt 109&#13;
(The Swamp).&#13;
Matching Refrigerator (Admiral)&#13;
and Stove (Premier), $125 each,&#13;
olive green. Practically new, owners&#13;
moved out of town, must sell. Both in&#13;
excellent condition. Call 634-6215&#13;
after 5 p.m. or weekends.&#13;
TAPE RECORDER — Reel to reel.&#13;
Like new. Orig. $100 sell for $50. Ph.&#13;
657-5992 after 4.&#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;
PERSONALS&#13;
WANTED — People who would like&#13;
to help other people. Free training.&#13;
Contact Joe Baker, director Racine&#13;
Hotline, 637-1112. Mon.-Wed.-Fri.&#13;
1:00 P.M. - 10:00 P.M.&#13;
Photographer wanted — Should be&#13;
available for June 10th wedding,&#13;
reasonable rates. Call 639-8863,&#13;
evenings.&#13;
Female Bartender Wanted — one&#13;
night a week. The College Inn. Ph.&#13;
552 8465.&#13;
WANTED - STAMPS — Collections,&#13;
Accumulations, Mint or Used, On&#13;
Cover or off, First Day covers or&#13;
what ever! U.S. or Foreign. Phone&#13;
694-3398. Ask for Jim or leave&#13;
messate at Newscope office.&#13;
WAITRESS WANTED — The Loom,&#13;
3919 Washington Ave., Racine. Ph.&#13;
634-9676. &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE March 13,1972&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
interim. He said, "Four or five&#13;
years ago it would have been&#13;
better to first bring in a Dean&#13;
and Divisional Chairman, and&#13;
then recruit faculty. But it's not&#13;
four or five years ago, and the&#13;
students are here now, and we&#13;
have to act now."&#13;
Bauer similarly described the&#13;
lack of program development in&#13;
the same context, "There is a&#13;
tendency to hold back on&#13;
program development till you&#13;
have the people who know what&#13;
they are doing."&#13;
Program development will&#13;
also be slowed down by the&#13;
Regent's moratorium on new&#13;
academic programs. A request&#13;
for a major in Computer&#13;
Science will have to be put off&#13;
because of this.&#13;
Vice Chancellor Bauer&#13;
dismisses the possible effect of&#13;
the moratorium. "Everybody&#13;
gives the moratorium too much&#13;
credit. It's too short lived to be&#13;
that important. It will end in&#13;
July of 1973. Even if we add&#13;
good personnel in the Fall, there&#13;
is no way they can offer new&#13;
programs by July. It takes time&#13;
to work on new programs. New&#13;
faculty members need time to&#13;
work with one another."&#13;
Both Bauer and Moy&#13;
acknowledged other UW schools&#13;
have been jealous of Parkside's&#13;
bo uer, moy anc/ smi&#13;
School of Modern Industry —&#13;
particularly of Engineering&#13;
Science.&#13;
Bauer said, "Everyone is&#13;
looking over their shoulders at&#13;
us. I know the other institutions&#13;
are looking at us to see where&#13;
we are going."&#13;
Moy pointed out a great deal&#13;
of jealousy exists among all&#13;
schools — especially where&#13;
student demand for a program&#13;
is limited.&#13;
If Parkside can demonstrate&#13;
a need, he feels, it should get the&#13;
program — except if a school&#13;
with an existing program can&#13;
absorb more students.&#13;
"It's impossible for me to&#13;
conceive of SMI not being&#13;
supported," he said.&#13;
Bauer echoed him: "Granted,&#13;
there was a flat spot in the&#13;
development of SMI, but I'm not&#13;
worried about the growth and&#13;
development of the school. The&#13;
prophets of doom are always&#13;
around the corner. This is a new&#13;
ins tit uti on deve lopin g&#13;
beautifully."&#13;
Dean Moy possibly summed&#13;
things up best: "Potentially, the&#13;
school is one of the most exciting&#13;
things around. It just&#13;
needs a little more time."&#13;
Whether the school gets the&#13;
time and the opportunity to&#13;
develop, and whether Parkside&#13;
is able to realize its ambitions of&#13;
serving the industrial southeast&#13;
of Wisconsin remains to be&#13;
seen.&#13;
Bearing in mind the&#13;
moratorium, the Governor's&#13;
austerity program, the&#13;
Regents' desire to avoid&#13;
duplicating programs, UW&#13;
politics and the present undeveloped&#13;
status of the school&#13;
( p a r t i c u l a r l y L a b o r&#13;
Economics), you realize the&#13;
future well-being of SMI is not&#13;
all that assured.&#13;
capsule college&#13;
i Continued from Page 1)&#13;
+ "The Middle East: Perspectives&#13;
on Crisis" by Robert&#13;
Schacht, director of intern&#13;
atio nal sem inar s,&#13;
University Extension; and&#13;
+ "Vacant Lot: Who Will Be&#13;
Your New Neighbors" by Sam&#13;
Clemens, director of housing&#13;
m a n a g e m e n t, H U D ,&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
The daytime sessions will be&#13;
conducted from 9:15 a.m.&#13;
(following a half-hour&#13;
registration) to 3:30 p.m.&#13;
Two lectures will make up the&#13;
evening program, beginning at&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
Su^an Davis of Chicago,&#13;
editor of "Spokeswoman," vice&#13;
president of Urban Research&#13;
Corp. and women's rights activist,'&#13;
will lecture on&#13;
"Discrimination Against&#13;
Women in Business and Industry"&#13;
and Arvonne Fraser,&#13;
vice president of the Women's&#13;
Equity Action League (WEAL)&#13;
and educational and political&#13;
leader, will lecture on&#13;
"Discrimination Against&#13;
Women in Education."&#13;
Members of the Kenosha,&#13;
Racine and Walworth Extension&#13;
Homemakers will serve&#13;
as registrars and hostesses for&#13;
the daytime sessions.&#13;
One of America's best-known&#13;
contemporary poets, National&#13;
Book Award Winner Robert&#13;
Bly, will conduct an informal&#13;
poetry workshop at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
on Wednesday, March&#13;
15.&#13;
The free workshop, open to&#13;
the public, is scheduled for 9:30&#13;
to 11:30 a.m. in the Whiteskellar&#13;
at the north end of D-l level in&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
SUMMER JOBS&#13;
Guys &amp; Gals needed for summer&#13;
employment at numerous locations&#13;
throughout the nation including&#13;
National Parks, Resort&#13;
Areas, and Private Camps. For&#13;
free information send self-addressed,&#13;
STAMPED envelope to&#13;
Opportunity Research, Dept.&#13;
SJO, Century Bldg., Poison, MT&#13;
59860. APPLICANTS MUST&#13;
APPLY EARLY . . .&#13;
iM* MHHW*&#13;
on St. Patrick's Day&#13;
(at the Student Activities Building)&#13;
9&#13;
1 ii &amp; li&#13;
•&#13;
22&#13;
i M&#13;
free popcorn with&#13;
every purchase of&#13;
GREEN BEER&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S-" PIZZA&#13;
Jjfffl In Four Sixes 9 " - 12"&#13;
*«&amp;*** J ALS0&#13;
//»Pitf J" • RIBS * SPAGHETTI •&#13;
• v ^ GMOCCHI • RAVIOLI •&#13;
j/J ^ * SEA F00D * SAN0&#13;
In Four Sixes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
LA S AGNA&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"*nu RING ... WE BRINr"&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922 </text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 10, March 13, 1972</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>1972-03-13</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="63701">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63702">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="38">
          <name>Coverage</name>
          <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63703">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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