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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 6, issue 11</text>
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            <text>Students Discuss Annexation</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>parkside village&#13;
by Jim Koloen,&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
Approximately 30 Parkside&#13;
Village residents, city&#13;
representatives, Somers&#13;
residents and a member of the&#13;
Southheastern Wisconsin&#13;
Planning Commission attended&#13;
a meeting last Sunday in a&#13;
corner of the Activities Building&#13;
to discuss annexation. Howard&#13;
Blackman, Henry Krause, Tom&#13;
Pitts, John Kolstad and Bill&#13;
Evenson presented explanations&#13;
and arguments in&#13;
support of and in opposition to&#13;
the annexation proposal.&#13;
The meeting which was&#13;
sponsored by the Young&#13;
Democrats and moderated by&#13;
student senator Jim Twist saw&#13;
Tom Pitts, assistant city&#13;
planner, introduce the detached&#13;
annexation proposal. The&#13;
proposal, which would allow&#13;
residents to detach their&#13;
property from the annexed&#13;
area, was met with skepticism&#13;
from the area residents in attendance.&#13;
When asked what&#13;
guarantee for detachment the&#13;
area residents would be assured&#13;
of once the annexation is approved,&#13;
Pitts was unable to&#13;
present an unqualified&#13;
statement. He said, "You have&#13;
my word." Pitts explained to&#13;
the still skeptical Somers&#13;
residents in the audience that&#13;
"there is a series of checks and&#13;
balances in this." Pitts later&#13;
addressed the students in the&#13;
audience asking them to&#13;
"consider the long-range implications"&#13;
of the annexation.&#13;
He explained that if the area is&#13;
annexed it would allow for&#13;
better planning and preservation&#13;
of the environment.&#13;
Howard Blackman, who was&#13;
a Somers Town Board member&#13;
at the time the Site Selection&#13;
Committee was scouring the&#13;
area for a suitable location for&#13;
the UW-P campus, predicted&#13;
that if the land is annexed "the&#13;
Students Discuss Annexation&#13;
farmers will have three&#13;
choices: They can lower their&#13;
standard of living; they can sell&#13;
their land immediately; or they&#13;
can borrow money until they&#13;
must sell their land."&#13;
Blackman expressed concern&#13;
over the ability of the city to&#13;
assimilate an area as large as&#13;
that proposed for annexation;&#13;
"It takes a year to develop only&#13;
sixty acres." Blackman appealed&#13;
to the students in attendance,&#13;
asking them if they&#13;
would want their parents to sell&#13;
their "family's land when&#13;
they're sixty years old."&#13;
Henry Krause, an area farmer&#13;
who opposes the annexation,&#13;
appealed to the&#13;
students, asking them not to&#13;
make a decision until they've&#13;
heard all sides of the issue.&#13;
Bill Evanson, a representative&#13;
from the Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin Regional Planning&#13;
Commission, explained that no&#13;
plan, including any presented&#13;
by the city, had yet been approved&#13;
by the Commission. He&#13;
revealed to the audience that&#13;
there are "at least six alternative&#13;
plans for providing&#13;
sewer and water services to the&#13;
area." He explained further&#13;
that there are many factors&#13;
involved in determining the&#13;
suitability of the various plans.&#13;
He said there is a possibility&#13;
that Parkside may never reach&#13;
the projected peak enrollment&#13;
of 25,000 students because of the&#13;
"zero population growth" and&#13;
changing attitudes toward the&#13;
desirability of a college&#13;
education. He concluded that&#13;
the projected capacity of a&#13;
treatment plant depends on&#13;
such factors.&#13;
Evenson revealed that one&#13;
advantage of a treatment plant&#13;
located on the Pike River would&#13;
be a benefit to the flow of the&#13;
river. He explained that such a&#13;
plant would force millions of&#13;
gallons of treated water into the&#13;
TOM PITT S, A SST . CITY P L A N N E R S P E A K IN G : B I LL&#13;
E V E N S O N, ST A TE P L A N NIN G COMMISSION R E P&#13;
presently slow moving and thus&#13;
help clean it up. Presently,&#13;
Evenson said, the area around&#13;
Parkside cannot be commercially&#13;
developed because of&#13;
the lack of adequate treatment&#13;
facilities.&#13;
John Kolstad, city planner,&#13;
spoke to the audience about the&#13;
desirability of changes in the&#13;
tax laws. He explained that land&#13;
should be taxed "according to&#13;
use" rather than by the present&#13;
method of assessed value. He&#13;
stated that part of the problem&#13;
in the annexation issue is&#13;
'located in an "antiquated tax&#13;
structure" which places the&#13;
burden of financing local&#13;
projects and services on the&#13;
shoulders of the property&#13;
owner.&#13;
When asked if Kenosha offered&#13;
agricultural zoning Improperly&#13;
in the city, Kolstad&#13;
replied no. He explained that&#13;
land couldn't be zoned for&#13;
agricultural purposes.&#13;
During the meet ing only a few&#13;
Village residents asked&#13;
questions of the speakers,&#13;
though ten villagers did follow&#13;
Somers Clerk's suggestion that&#13;
they register with her before&#13;
leaving the building. After the&#13;
meeting ended, all participants&#13;
were invited to attend a gettogether&#13;
in a Parkside Village&#13;
partment at which beer was&#13;
served, to continue discussion&#13;
on the topic.&#13;
University of W isconsin - Parkside&#13;
5 f r&#13;
Volume 6 Number 11 March 20, 1072&#13;
charity dance&#13;
SGA Plans Ahead&#13;
Final details of the Five-School&#13;
Charity Dance to be held this&#13;
Friday at Bristol Oaks on Highway&#13;
50 were given in a regular&#13;
meeting of the PSGA Senate&#13;
last Thursday. According to&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta and Mark&#13;
Barnhill, members of the SGA&#13;
activities committee, the event&#13;
will be a 'private party' open to&#13;
students of Parkside, Carthage,&#13;
Dominican, RTI and KTI.&#13;
Liquor will be served to&#13;
students 18 and over with ID's&#13;
assuming the age of majority&#13;
PfeiSHE&#13;
-oft cHAKumt&#13;
THIEU&#13;
"DICK, YOU'RE PROBABLY WONDERING HOW WE EVER GOT&#13;
THIEU TO AGREE TO THE PART ABOUT RESIGNING OFFICE&#13;
AND HOLDING FREE ELECTIONS IN SOUTH VIETNAM...."&#13;
bill is signed this week.&#13;
A rock band, nightclub act,&#13;
and coffee-house group will be&#13;
featured in three separate&#13;
rooms at the club. Scheduled to&#13;
appear are Dry Ice and Tony&#13;
and Jumbo along with another&#13;
group yet to be hired. Advance&#13;
tickets are $1 ($1.50 at the door)&#13;
are available this week at the&#13;
SGA office and Student Activities&#13;
Building and in ticket&#13;
booths in the Greenquist Concourse&#13;
and the lobbies of the&#13;
Racine and Kenosha campuses.&#13;
The SGA activities committee&#13;
also reported that several midweek&#13;
activities are being&#13;
considered for the Student&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
The Senate also agreed to cosponsor&#13;
a symposium with the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee&#13;
and the Black Student&#13;
Union. Georgia legislator and&#13;
black leader Julian Bond is&#13;
scheduled to speak on campus&#13;
May 8 and several other black&#13;
speakers are being invited to&#13;
speak and participate in&#13;
discussions throughout the day.&#13;
Other events also being looked&#13;
into include a program of other&#13;
American minority groups, a&#13;
two-day film festival and a&#13;
prison reform day:&#13;
In other action the SGA:&#13;
— voted to establish a&#13;
literature table in the Student&#13;
Activities Building to distribute&#13;
a variety of materials of interest&#13;
to students.&#13;
— formed a sub-committee of&#13;
the Academic Policies Committee&#13;
to investigate the&#13;
possibilities of a communityaction&#13;
program which would&#13;
give students credit for their&#13;
work, in cooperation with a UWGreen&#13;
Bay federally funded&#13;
program.&#13;
— appointed Johnny Grimes&#13;
as SGA's representative on the&#13;
Campus Union Building&#13;
Committee.&#13;
— approved a request by Jean&#13;
Koehler of the Women's Caucus&#13;
for $42.94 for printing and&#13;
mailing costs to be allocated&#13;
from Fund 128.&#13;
— instructed the Finance&#13;
Committee to establish additional&#13;
guidelines concerning&#13;
the dispersal of Fund 128 funds&#13;
to student organizations.&#13;
New Radio Drama&#13;
MADISON (CPS) - There is&#13;
a scheme afoot to pump new life&#13;
into radio drama. WHA Radio in&#13;
Madison, Wisconsin, has a fiveyear&#13;
plan to produce from 400 to&#13;
800 radio dramas for noncommercial&#13;
radio.&#13;
The Corporation for Public&#13;
Broadcasting has provided&#13;
$150,000 for the first year of the&#13;
project, known as "Earplay."&#13;
Karl Schmidt, who left his job&#13;
directing the University of&#13;
Wisconsin's extension radio&#13;
activities to head up "Earplay",&#13;
says most of the&#13;
productions will be shorter than&#13;
they were in the old days —&#13;
most productions will be shorter&#13;
than 15 minutes, and many will&#13;
run only 5 or 10 minutes.&#13;
"The days when a family&#13;
would gather in a room and&#13;
listen to an hour of radio drama&#13;
together are gone," said Schmidt.&#13;
&#13;
"We'll do some half-hour&#13;
pieces, but nothing longer, and&#13;
our emphasis will be on the&#13;
shorter ones."&#13;
Schmidt's first task is to find&#13;
scripts. He said he hopes to find&#13;
60 to 100 scripts in the first year.&#13;
He has written literary agents,&#13;
is running ads in literary&#13;
magazines and is staging a&#13;
writing competition.&#13;
"Our script budget runs from&#13;
$200 to $700 a script, and all we&#13;
buy are the non-commercial&#13;
radio rights and, in the case of&#13;
the competition scripts, the&#13;
right to publish them in an&#13;
anthology that we hope to issue&#13;
each year. The author retains&#13;
the copyright and all the&#13;
commercial radio, TV and&#13;
movie rights.&#13;
"In England, movie, stage,&#13;
and TV producers make a habit&#13;
of listening to radio to find new&#13;
talent and material, and we&#13;
hope that's what will happen&#13;
here."&#13;
Writers interested in submitting&#13;
scripts for competition&#13;
or for direct sale are asked to&#13;
send their inquiries to Schmidt&#13;
at "Earplay" WHA, Radio Hall,&#13;
Madison, Wisconsin 53706. &#13;
NEWSCOPE March 20,1972&#13;
beer and&#13;
fried brains&#13;
Dear Sirs:&#13;
Although I am by choice no&#13;
longer a student of this&#13;
university, I feel the views&#13;
stated in this letter should be&#13;
read and possibly responded to&#13;
by the students, and so your&#13;
newspaper seems to be the&#13;
logical forum for my opinions.&#13;
From the beginning of the&#13;
1960's we have seen this country&#13;
become youth-oriented to the&#13;
point of absurdity. This concept,&#13;
mainly conceived by the media,&#13;
has left the American parents&#13;
devoid of a ny feeling of o neness&#13;
with their children, has split the&#13;
generations beyond repair, and&#13;
has left the majority of those 14 -&#13;
21 immature, irresponsible, and&#13;
lacking that crucial self-respect&#13;
which is the basis of a complete&#13;
life.&#13;
As a result of this we have&#13;
seen a phenomenon of human&#13;
nature: Instead of the young&#13;
looking to the maturity and&#13;
experience of the old for&#13;
guidance, the over 30&#13;
generation has lapsed into a&#13;
mass second childhood, trying&#13;
in vain to be "hip", trying to&#13;
gain some kind of secure place&#13;
in their childrens' society.&#13;
The politicians, who tend to&#13;
have sharper eyes and keener&#13;
ears than most people, are&#13;
getting into the act for their own&#13;
gain. Look at old LaFollette&#13;
when he was here. Bell Bottoms.&#13;
"Right on." And you&#13;
drank his beer and listened to&#13;
his bullshit, just as your&#13;
parents, conditioned by you&gt;,&#13;
will take the bullshit of&#13;
McGovern, Lindsay, McCarthy.&#13;
And old Georgy will probably&#13;
get the office. But what the hell&#13;
will you get, compared to what&#13;
you have lost? Will amnesty for&#13;
draft dodgers make it easier for&#13;
you to sit in a room with your&#13;
parents without embarrassment?&#13;
Will more rights&#13;
for women stop most men from&#13;
thinking of girls as pieces of&#13;
meat? Will looser drug laws&#13;
stop people from frying their&#13;
brains and making asses out of&#13;
themselves?&#13;
What is really important,&#13;
anyway? Why don't you sit&#13;
down for about 10 minutes of&#13;
you can stand the stress, and&#13;
think. Think of where the&#13;
problems really stem from.&#13;
Could they be from your mouth,&#13;
from your actions? Think about&#13;
it. Please.&#13;
D. Vallone&#13;
need&#13;
volunteers&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Volunteers are still being&#13;
accepted for the Easter party&#13;
for retarded children. We expect&#13;
to have between 40 a nd 50&#13;
retarded ranging in age from 4&#13;
to 21. They are primarily&#13;
mentally handicapped and&#13;
mildly to moderately retarded.&#13;
Parents who wish to volunteer&#13;
may also bring their children up&#13;
to 8 year olds. The party is from&#13;
1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Saturday,&#13;
March 25, in the activities&#13;
building. Contact Dave Bahr,&#13;
551-7653, if you would like to&#13;
volunteer your services.&#13;
Students United in Service&#13;
hasssle&#13;
with police&#13;
To the Editor;&#13;
One afternoon after class, I&#13;
was walking to my car, thinking&#13;
I would take a break from&#13;
school and drive up to Racine.&#13;
When I reached my car, I found&#13;
the car originally parked next to&#13;
me had left and another parked&#13;
within two inches of my left side&#13;
at such an angle as to prevent&#13;
me from backing out without&#13;
putting a big scratch in his paint&#13;
job. Not wanting to pay for a&#13;
new paint job on such a big car,&#13;
I immediately went to Tallent&#13;
Hall and put in a call to the&#13;
Security Police at Parkside.&#13;
The man on the hpone said he&#13;
would send someone out. I&#13;
rushed back to my car, afraid I&#13;
would miss the arrival of the&#13;
Security Police, only to find I&#13;
had to waint ten to fifteen&#13;
minutes for his appearance. I&#13;
was hoping he could in some&#13;
way direct me out of the&#13;
parking space or find the person&#13;
who owned the big, grey convertible.&#13;
&#13;
When the Security Police&#13;
arrived he immediately began&#13;
accusing me of throwing a&#13;
snowball at his car. At first I&#13;
thought he was teasing me but&#13;
then he asked me again why I&#13;
threw a snowball. He told me I&#13;
could get into a lot of t rouble for&#13;
throwing one. I informed him of&#13;
the fact that I never threw a&#13;
snowball and wondered why he&#13;
kept asking me that. But he&#13;
insisted that I threw one and I&#13;
was getting furious at the fact&#13;
that this man had the right to&#13;
hassle a person for something&#13;
they didn't do. I finally joked&#13;
with him and said, "You're just&#13;
WEb. L ADIES' OMNKS '/*.RAtCE&#13;
Se/uu+Uf tlte Qutedt&#13;
;mg, &amp;. 9icJUan fyoodi.&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Once before I made a plea for&#13;
student input concerning the&#13;
Student Activities Building. I&#13;
received a few questions and&#13;
some suggestions. Some items&#13;
have been worked on and many&#13;
more are being looked into.&#13;
What I still need is more input.&#13;
For this purpose we have&#13;
resurrected the suggestion&#13;
boxes in the Racine and&#13;
Kenosha lounges and if we don't&#13;
get any hassle, there will soon&#13;
be one in the SAB. If students&#13;
fill them with suggestions and&#13;
complaints they will be emptied&#13;
regularly and nothing will be&#13;
ignored. Anyone interested in&#13;
working for the Student Union&#13;
Committee is invited to the&#13;
meeting this Thursday at 7:30&#13;
p.m. in the Student Government&#13;
Office.&#13;
Jerry Murphy, Chairman&#13;
Student Union Committee&#13;
"PSYCHOPATH" RELEASED IN MICHIGAN&#13;
HOWELL, MICHIGAN (CPS) - Bert Chapman, 68, has been&#13;
released from Pontiac State Hospital after spending the last 31&#13;
years in Michigan mental institutions for al alleged homosexual&#13;
offense. He was confined as a "criminal sexual psychopath" in&#13;
1940.&#13;
Chapman's case was twice appealed to the Michigan Supreme&#13;
Court, but he was twice deemed a "menace to society", and his&#13;
confinement upheld. The law under which he had been convicted&#13;
was repealed in 1967.&#13;
AjtQ&amp;JjUr S/Co^UL.&#13;
cm/&#13;
fj*rx&gt;&#13;
'Don't believe everylhin* you read.&#13;
Marc tisen, Helmut Ferber, Gary&#13;
Jensen, Larry Jones, Jim Koloen,&#13;
Rich Lipke, Paul Lomartire, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Steve Mazzarell; Pat&#13;
McDermid, Kevin McKay, Kathy&#13;
Rasch, Brian Ross, Wolfgant&#13;
Salewski, Andy Schmelling, Barb&#13;
Scott, Cleta Skovronski, Jerry&#13;
Socha, Bill Sorensen, Mike&#13;
Stevesand, James Twist, Debbie&#13;
Venskus, Mike Kite, "Red" Widely,&#13;
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 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;
phdtographs 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;
For The Record&#13;
„ / f ) i d i n a e r -&#13;
MUSIC HOUSE&#13;
Downtown Kenosha&#13;
e wcilleij —&gt;upper ^&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
1700 Sheridan kd.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
iWr iiNtstj&#13;
* m 4 M * 4 ^ &#13;
city's view on annexation M a rch 20,1072 NKWSCOPK Page 3&#13;
by Jim Koloen,&#13;
Interview With Mayor Burkee&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
In past weeks, Newscope has&#13;
presented articles concerning&#13;
both the past annexation efforts&#13;
and the present attempt begun&#13;
by United States General, Inc.,&#13;
a Brookfield based development&#13;
firm. This coverage has included&#13;
meetings and&#13;
discussions between the parties&#13;
opposed to the annexation and&#13;
those who support it; roughly&#13;
the dichotomy is city meets&#13;
country.&#13;
Mayor Wallace Burkee of&#13;
Kenosha, who vigorously&#13;
supports the annexation of the&#13;
Parkside area, has often been&#13;
singled out by those area&#13;
residents who oppose . annexation&#13;
as their major foe.&#13;
Beginning this week, Newscope&#13;
will present interviews with the&#13;
major proponents of each side&#13;
of the issue; this week&#13;
NEWSCOPE interviewed&#13;
Mayor Burkee, next week&#13;
Newscope will present an interview&#13;
with representatives of&#13;
the opposing viewpoint.&#13;
Why do you wish to annex?&#13;
"The only reason is to service&#13;
Parkside. Parkside wants the&#13;
annexation because soon they'll&#13;
have a sewer problem, among&#13;
other things. Somers can't&#13;
service it, they don't even have&#13;
a sewage treatment plant. They&#13;
(Somers) have said they can&#13;
construct a $19.5 million&#13;
treatment plant for $400,000&#13;
because of federal grants and&#13;
sharing the cost with Mt.&#13;
Pleasant. Well, I don't see&#13;
where they got their information.&#13;
The federal money&#13;
just isn't there. Right now&#13;
Kenosha is only eligible to&#13;
receive something like 50 per&#13;
cent federal aids for a project. I&#13;
can't get a million and a half&#13;
dollars for a sewer project here&#13;
in Kenosha; and they're talking&#13;
about ten million? I just don't&#13;
see where they get their&#13;
figures."&#13;
If the area is annexed what&#13;
would be the projected cost to&#13;
the city? "The sewer would cost&#13;
about a million and a half."&#13;
Tom Pitts, assistant city&#13;
planner who sat in on the interview&#13;
in the mayor's downtown&#13;
office, added, "Fire&#13;
protection will cost $1,495,000&#13;
including a fire station to be&#13;
ZU&#13;
IF you WERE A&#13;
SPOTTED PA/R. OP PANTS&#13;
OA t&gt;mrv COLLAR, YOU'O&#13;
LOVE US TOOF&#13;
QUALITY CLEANERS&#13;
1313- 66th St&#13;
J&gt;H. 65Y - 9355&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
Map of area proposed to be annexed picturing the area to be&#13;
detached after the annexation and the area to be retained.&#13;
located somewhere on the&#13;
corner of Wood Road in&#13;
Somers."&#13;
"We're not making a cent-on&#13;
this," the mayor continued.&#13;
"It'll be at least fifteen years&#13;
before we see a dime, and even&#13;
then I'll be surprised. The&#13;
problem is simple, Parkside is&#13;
in Somers and therefore they&#13;
should be providing sewer and&#13;
water, but they're not. They&#13;
can't, there's no way they can&#13;
do it. I even offered originally to&#13;
put in a sewer for them, and&#13;
they (Somers) could pay&#13;
Kenosha back over a period of&#13;
ten years. But they turned that&#13;
down, so now the problem is ir,&#13;
my lap. And if it isn't resolved&#13;
soon, well, by 1974 the sewers&#13;
will be overflowing and the&#13;
state will just walk in and order&#13;
us to annex the area."&#13;
Previously the area residents&#13;
had objected to the way in&#13;
which the various annexation&#13;
proposals were mapped out.&#13;
What was your reaction to this?&#13;
"Well, it's just a case of never&#13;
being allowed to be right.&#13;
Previously, when we excluded&#13;
homes, they screamed that they&#13;
weren't able to vote. Now when&#13;
we include their homes, they&#13;
scream just as much.&#13;
Why wasn't the area annexed&#13;
to the city when the Parkside&#13;
campus site was first chosen?&#13;
"I wasn't-mayor at the time, but&#13;
there is a state statute which&#13;
wouldn't allow it. We tried to get&#13;
the statute changed by instituting&#13;
a boundary review&#13;
board, but lost by one vote in the&#13;
Assembly. You see the big&#13;
problem here is the fact that&#13;
there are no laws which take&#13;
care of it, it's an unique thing.&#13;
We even. . . our latest plan, the&#13;
detached annexation is a&#13;
loophole we dug up."&#13;
Could you explain the&#13;
det ach ed ann exa tion ?&#13;
"Basically, the idea is to annex&#13;
the area as presently drawn up,&#13;
and then after annexing it, we&#13;
would detach the land of anyone&#13;
(Continue d on P a ge 7)&#13;
jAMM*&#13;
11&#13;
THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
^TENDERLOIN S TEAK&#13;
AND TUMBLED ONIONS&#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 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;
" OF FERI NG H I GH Q UA LI TY AT&#13;
R EA SO N A BLE P RI CE S, T HE W IN D ­&#13;
J AM MER D ES ER VES ITS P O P UL AR I T Y"&#13;
— H E RB ERT KUBLY&#13;
" WO ND ER F UL F O O D"&#13;
— S E NATOR P R O XM IRE&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Siies 9" - 12" - 14" - 16".&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
. SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RIN G . . . WE BING"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
Discussion of materials on student organization&#13;
procedures for handbook topics: Recognition,&#13;
•&#13;
Eligibility, Rules for Meetings and Events.&#13;
•&#13;
j March 24 &amp; March 27&#13;
: 12 Noon Whiteskellar &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE March 20,1972&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
at the&#13;
an&#13;
V foni&#13;
Coffee House 8. N ight Club&#13;
performers (from New York&#13;
March 21 1 - 3&#13;
March 22 1 - 3&#13;
free&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
For the First Time on our&#13;
Giant New 24 ft. Screen&#13;
42 MEMBER&#13;
COMMUNAL TOURING COMPANY&#13;
HAD DOCS &amp;&#13;
ENGLISHMEN&#13;
ICON BU5SCLL&#13;
(iTS A MOVING PtCTUBt))&#13;
I gp] 'MCW&#13;
March 24 8:00 PM&#13;
Adm. 75(&#13;
Time: 2hrs.&#13;
St. Act. Bldg.&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wis. ID Required&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
* ¥&#13;
• • *&#13;
MAKING&#13;
OF THE&#13;
PRESIDENT&#13;
1968&#13;
An Historical Film of&#13;
Timely Importance in this&#13;
Year of Decision&#13;
Three Showings&#13;
Wed. March 22&#13;
11:45 A.M. Gr. 101&#13;
Thurs. March 23&#13;
1:00 P.M. Whiteskellar&#13;
Thurs. March 23&#13;
7:00 P.M. Gr. 101&#13;
FREE&#13;
by Steve Mazzarelli&#13;
Bree Daniels — Jane Fonda&#13;
John Klute — Donald Sutherland&#13;
Pete Cable — Charles Cioffi&#13;
Add "Klute" to recent films which scan New York City's&#13;
backside and inhabitants thereof. This low-keyed "who-dunit"&#13;
engages the viewer's cortex and gives the viscera a breather.&#13;
Bree is a high priced N.Y.C. call girl who is being shadowed by&#13;
a former client who years ago, in a sado-frenzy, almost killed her.&#13;
Klute is a colorless but competent small town private eye looking&#13;
for a missing friend who he suspects is the same person threatening&#13;
Bree. The "heavy", Mr. Cable, is the employer of Klute's missing&#13;
friend and finances the investigation. By mid-film we know the&#13;
exec is the real sadist and has murdered the missing person to&#13;
avoid future blackmail.&#13;
The real story, however, is Bree's transsformation into a more&#13;
human person. After a near-fatal encounter with the sadist she&#13;
visits an analyst regularly and in these scenes Fonda is superb,&#13;
giving a performance which got her the 1971 Oscar for best actress.&#13;
Tom complicate her identity crisis Klute, the near Christ&#13;
figure, drags Bree, his Mary Magdalene, into the search for the&#13;
sadis and along the way they seduce each other. Bree almost&#13;
throws away this chance to establish a lasting neural ling between&#13;
head and groin by trying to go back to her old junkie-pimp&#13;
boyfriend. Klute stops this from happening but she flees anyway&#13;
and is trapped by Cable.&#13;
Still a bit rational, he tells Bree that we all have "little dark&#13;
corners in our minds that should be left untouched." Bree realizes&#13;
that she was the vehicle and is now the victim of his ruthlessness.&#13;
It's an old lesson. The greatest Insanity is protecting and nurturing&#13;
the monster impulse once it is freed from Freud's super-ego.&#13;
Predictably Klute arrives in-the-nick-of and the trapped exec&#13;
self destructs in a slow motion fade-out. Klute and Bree are last&#13;
seen leaving New York and in a voice over sound Bree tells her&#13;
analyst that she is unsure of what will come next. Nice realistic&#13;
ambiguity.&#13;
As I left the theater I wondered about my own personal demon&#13;
sitting in the dark corner of my head. I look occasionally but don't&#13;
touch.&#13;
This tight psychological thriller will hold your interest all the&#13;
way and probably give you more bad vibes about "Fun City".&#13;
Next Week: Behind the scenes with the National Shakespeare&#13;
Company.&#13;
nuttin'!&#13;
by Jim Koloen, Managing Editor&#13;
Not many nationally known poets come to&#13;
Parkside, and when they do come not many&#13;
students go to see them. Such was the empty&#13;
case when Robert Bly held a workshop in the&#13;
Whiteskellar Wednesday morning to "jabber"&#13;
about poetry, poets, astrology, solitude,&#13;
the war and the inner and outer shells of the&#13;
mind.&#13;
Perhaps 50 in terested students and faculti&#13;
sat rapted around the quaint checkerclothed&#13;
tables in the Whiteskellar to listen, laugh and&#13;
reflect as Bly presented a theatrical, informative&#13;
and engrossing informal jabber&#13;
program. The poet kept his audience by&#13;
controlling the mood; he undulated between&#13;
humor and seriousness, presenting limericks&#13;
and anecdotes, sarcasm and satire, jumpint&#13;
from mood to mood like a magic frog jumping&#13;
from metaphor to lilypad in a poetry pond.&#13;
Bly, a non-teaching Minnesota poet,&#13;
brought to Parkside by the Poetry Forum,&#13;
massaged his facial muscles with fingers that&#13;
would later become seawaves, as he told the&#13;
audience that "we're the country with the&#13;
most brutality; no country can compare to&#13;
ours in brutality on television. A friend of&#13;
mine listened to television for children for two&#13;
weeks before Christmas and heard an advertisement&#13;
for a torture table for dolls. You&#13;
put your doll on and you turn this wheel and it&#13;
pulls off this one arm, and this wheel pulls off&#13;
a leg. How do you like that! How do you expect&#13;
to end the war." Bly further explained,&#13;
"think of the advertising people who put this&#13;
ad together, and the executives who have to&#13;
pass it through, and the other people who&#13;
work to put it out. Do you understand what we&#13;
mean by an insane country?"&#13;
"We're never going to end the war," Bly&#13;
said in a voice laced with resignation. "If you&#13;
really want violence, you practice it first in&#13;
fiction. You get a violent novelist like Mailer,&#13;
and Hemingway, and you fantasize it. But&#13;
then it's not enough, it doesn't satisfy that&#13;
longing for violence, so then you've got to do&#13;
it. So you kill people in Vietnam; but even&#13;
then it's not enough; it's too far away, it's just&#13;
on television, so hopefully one of your kids&#13;
comes home with his leg blown off." While&#13;
absentmindedly fingering a leather thong&#13;
suspended from the string of beads he wore,&#13;
Bly sarcastically predicted the next war "will&#13;
be in Brazil. It's only a thousand miles from&#13;
Miami. It's close enough so that American&#13;
citizens as well as journalists can come and&#13;
watch the helicopters drop napalm. That'd be&#13;
terrific."&#13;
Continuing on the subject of the American'&#13;
state of mind, Bly commented that "the level&#13;
of consciousness in this country is rather low.&#13;
An example is that you see no evil in yourself;&#13;
you project it on others. You know, we're not&#13;
the wicked ones, Russia is; we have a perfect&#13;
democracy, China's evil, it has communism."&#13;
Amplifying his statement, Bly observed that&#13;
"American men tend to die spiritually at the&#13;
age of 35 o r 40. Just look at the face of an&#13;
American man, you'll see that something's&#13;
gone." Bly then read his "Television Poem"&#13;
whose theme illustrated the connection&#13;
between the low level of consciousness in&#13;
America and the Tube. "Television does this&#13;
to a person because it doesn't require&#13;
anything of you, all you need is passivity. You&#13;
learn not to respond.&#13;
"Enough television kills your spirit. You&#13;
look at television and nothin', duhh; you don't&#13;
have to do anything. Gary Snyder who was&#13;
teaching at Humboldt State, told me two art&#13;
teachers resigned on the same day because&#13;
their new freshman students couldn't&#13;
respond. They'd show them a Van Gogh and&#13;
umm, nuthin'; Rembrandt nuttin'; what do&#13;
you think of this, nuttin'. So one day they just&#13;
said, 'this is it, I'm sick of teaching you&#13;
goddamn zombies, I'm going out and get a job&#13;
teaching ditches.' " Placing the story into the&#13;
perspective, Bly explained, "if you watch&#13;
enough television you'll think your teachers&#13;
are TV sets. But a teacher isn't a television&#13;
set," he said softly, "he's a human being."&#13;
"You can't have all this television and not&#13;
pay for it. There's this passive emotional&#13;
quality coming. When your parents read you&#13;
a story, you responded to it, you didn't just&#13;
stare. And that's what happened in the antiwar&#13;
movement. When it started in '67, it was&#13;
like someone telling horrible stories to&#13;
children; the children saying, oohh, that's&#13;
terrible, you gotta stop it, I'm gonna go to&#13;
Washington. They responded. But now it's&#13;
Nixon more like a television set, telling people&#13;
'you know we're killing people in Vietnam,'&#13;
duhh, 'we're dropping more bombs than we&#13;
did in WW II,' duhh. Nobody gives a damn,&#13;
that's what's happening how; it's insane."&#13;
Speaking on the poetic process, Bly explained&#13;
that it is a product of the "inner shell&#13;
of the mind." He said there are two shells; the&#13;
inner and the outer. "The outer is the&#13;
rational, the conscious, the inner is the unconscious,&#13;
where poems and dreams come&#13;
from." When someone in the audience pointed&#13;
out that the theory was very Freudian, Bly&#13;
replied that he'd been reading a great many&#13;
Freudian works: "Freud was the greatest&#13;
man produced in the past 500, 1,000 years."&#13;
"We should take dreams seriously," he&#13;
continued, "we should write them down;&#13;
dreams are poems that don't get into words."&#13;
Bly told the audience that a good poem is&#13;
one which "you've never heard before." He&#13;
explained that it is a true poem because it&#13;
"came from your inner shell," it effuses&#13;
spontaniety. The poet wearing a poncho and&#13;
picking up bits of sugar that had fallen on the&#13;
table from a donut he'd been eating, explained&#13;
that the outer shell, "the rational&#13;
shell is too overdeveloped in the Western&#13;
world." That's why it takes so long for poets&#13;
to develop in America, they have to break&#13;
through to the inner shell. Bly's first&#13;
published book was produced when he was 36.&#13;
Using a Haiku poem as an illustration, Bly&#13;
told the audience a poem should be just&#13;
"verbs and nouns". He explained to some of&#13;
the aspiring poets in the audience that "one&#13;
adjective every three lines is enough".&#13;
Broaching the subject of astrology, Bly told&#13;
the audience that in future editions of his&#13;
magazine (the "Seventies"), he would&#13;
criticize poetry from an astrological&#13;
viewpoint. He explained that the New&#13;
Criticism is overdone, and that he'd like to try&#13;
something new.&#13;
Speaking on the subject of women, Bly&#13;
pointed out there are "almost no women in&#13;
the American novel". He said that men have&#13;
a "fear of women"; "when we've raped&#13;
mother earth, what effect does this have on&#13;
men's relationship to women?" He said t a&#13;
the historical places of men and women have&#13;
been reversed: Man was the hunter an&#13;
always alone, now it's the woman w o s&#13;
alone, locked in a house in the suburbs w i e&#13;
the man goes out with the boys.&#13;
Again addressing the young poets in&#13;
audience, Bly recommended that they spe&#13;
at least six months in the woods alone. ^&#13;
illustrated the point by utilizing his Pers0&#13;
.&#13;
experience in which he had spent two y&#13;
ear&#13;
„&#13;
the woods alone, "two too few I think no •&#13;
He counseled male and female poets o&#13;
perience the solitude of months in thes w &gt;&#13;
and not to get married until they d 9&#13;
through this solitary experience. He&#13;
plained that many of his works now com&#13;
of long hours of solitude on his farm n&#13;
With a reading of "Counting SmallI Boned&#13;
Bodies" and the Russian poem &lt;*7 »&#13;
during which he stood up and read wi ^&#13;
intense, gruff foice, emulating a hQUr&#13;
peasant, Bly concluded a two and a a&#13;
workshop that weemed two hours s o » ^&#13;
seemed a shame because only 50 peop&#13;
to see him. &#13;
March 20.1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
THE WORLDS ,Nr&#13;
tV.&#13;
W*°r'*°&#13;
WT&#13;
y °&#13;
0t&#13;
J&#13;
\ , - THAWM&#13;
CT vow I.T.TJ&#13;
JVQOgS&#13;
OU6C&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD KENOSHA&#13;
Ml P PIE; EVEN THE PREZf&#13;
It's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
Coke.&#13;
&gt; /v^u. \ L y©&#13;
Ay&amp;fcMtl R&#13;
-/sen L o ,&#13;
THW&#13;
btrFzmny&#13;
/also* \_ 3 v&gt;&#13;
PIZZA in&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PAKKSIDI! VILLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 — 30tti Avenue Kenosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
by Jim Koioen&#13;
While memorizing the page numbers in one&#13;
of the Newscalps papers they got lying around&#13;
in the union, On the Nod noticed an ad for a&#13;
place called Capie's. He swelt for a while on&#13;
the part about one dollar pitchers of brew,&#13;
with slow visions of double dubbles rising in&#13;
his desert like brain. "Ah needz irrigation,"&#13;
he exclaimed. He spoke to two cohorts; hey&#13;
Hermann, Socha, youse guys wanna go to&#13;
Capie's? Thunderstruck, they fled; but to no&#13;
avail. Nod would track them down in the&#13;
winter's blizzardry and point the beer glass&#13;
the other way; hands up Neptune, he would&#13;
say, this ain't no beef glass in your back, this&#13;
here is a shot glass. Get moving, creep.&#13;
Capie's is located at 8237 Sheridan Road in&#13;
Kenosha, away from all the other bars and&#13;
offers the two best extremes in contemporary&#13;
drinking; a cheap drunk as well as a very&#13;
exotic regal drunk. Cappie's offers one dollar&#13;
pitchers after 7 while at the same time&#13;
presenting complex* mixed drinks in the two&#13;
dollar range. It's unusual when, a bar,&#13;
especially a small bar, proffers the least as&#13;
well as the most, which to say the least is a&#13;
lot.&#13;
Capie's is indeed a bar of contrasts; Capie&#13;
provides a three acre parking lot although the&#13;
tavern is farily compact. Replete with a&#13;
padded formica topped bar, plush carpet,&#13;
tables with wrought iron chairs, a gas&#13;
powered fire place, lanterns and candles&#13;
hanging from the ceiling, the general ambiance&#13;
is one of rusticity. During the course of&#13;
the evening, Nod would come to appropriate&#13;
the padding on the bar, mistaking it for a&#13;
glorified pillow.&#13;
Capie offers three taps, two of which are&#13;
Schlitz (14oz. glass for 30 cents) and the other&#13;
leading to the source of Chablis. Legend has it&#13;
that this tap was once connected to a sea of&#13;
cold duck. Nod had to admit he'd never seen a&#13;
wine tap before, even though he wasn't quite&#13;
sure he was seeing it then; Nod suggested the&#13;
tap be brought in a little closer for inspection.&#13;
Capie who cinfided in Nod that he was in&#13;
business to help people enjoy themselves, also&#13;
pointed out that a pitcher of Harvey&#13;
Wallbangers could be purchased for $5.00 on&#13;
special nights. Upon measuring the capacity&#13;
of the metalic vessel with that of the beer&#13;
, KOFFLL&#13;
G) ENTION ALL STUDENTS g&#13;
c? BREAKFAST INSIDE&#13;
&gt;3 From 6 A.M. to 11 A.M., Monday thru Friday r$&#13;
Visif Our Neu, FnsiJe C-drpetec)&#13;
DBJLMJC.MC KCCtl 3&#13;
30th aue. and Roosevelt Road %&#13;
&lt;0 Open: (5&#13;
rp Mon. thru Thurs. — 6 A.M. -11 P.M. (x&#13;
rD Friday — 6 A.M. to Midnight ^&#13;
(p Saturday — 9 A.M. to Midnight&#13;
Sunday — 9 A.M. to 11 P.M. 0&#13;
TUESDAY, MAR. 21&#13;
Poetry Reading. Knute Skinner,&#13;
Irish poet-in-residence at Western&#13;
Washington State. Sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Poetry Forum. Greenquist&#13;
Hall, Whiteskellar. 4:00 p.m.&#13;
Coffee House. Morgan and Jeni.&#13;
Sponsored by the Parkside Activities&#13;
Board. Greenquist Hall,&#13;
Whiteskellar. 12:00 to 3:00 p.m.&#13;
Free.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, MAR. 22&#13;
Film. "Making of a President, 1968". &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE March 20,1972&#13;
^ -&lt;P&#13;
» / /&#13;
A &gt; ^&#13;
°&gt;&#13;
# ^&#13;
&lt;/&#13;
&amp;&#13;
3$&gt; cV&#13;
••&amp;£• &amp;&#13;
v&#13;
V&#13;
Mon. thru Thurs.:&#13;
5 - 7 p.m. — All the beer&#13;
you can drink $1.00&#13;
7 - cl osing — Pitchers $1.00&#13;
&gt; Sunday: 1-5 p.m. — All the beer you can drink $2.00&#13;
|AAon.: 8 - c losing — "College Night" Food&#13;
Wed.: Beer and pretzel night&#13;
Thurs.: "Ladies' Night"&#13;
V2 pr ice for women&#13;
Fri.: 4 - 7 p.m. —&#13;
("Double Bubble" Double mixed drink for the price of one&#13;
Sat.: 2 - 6 p.m. —All the beer you can drink $2.00&#13;
OPEN:&#13;
Mon. - Fri. — 4 - closing&#13;
Sat. and Sun. — Noon - c losing&#13;
8237 SWictar* Road&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Telephone: 457-3311&#13;
RICHARD G . CAPELLI, prop.&#13;
uwp policy questioned&#13;
Book Mart Bankrupt&#13;
by Jim Koloen, Managing Editor&#13;
The Book Mar in Kenosha is closed, gone,&#13;
bankrupt, its shelves are, if not barren, decimated&#13;
of books, its atmosphere is a flourescent light left&#13;
on in the back of t he wtore to warn burglars away.&#13;
Kenosha no longer has a store where people can&#13;
buy bestsellers, new releases, or any book with a&#13;
hardcover. In short, Kenosha no longer has a real&#13;
bookstore.&#13;
Why? Newscope asked that question. Why?&#13;
Grace Anderson, former proprietor of the Book&#13;
Mart, told Newscope that one of the major factors&#13;
in the bankruptcy was the non-availability of a list&#13;
of required texts and suggested reading for&#13;
courses at UW-P. In a telephone conversation,&#13;
Mrs, Anderson told Newscope that since Parkside&#13;
moved to its present location in 1969, s he had not&#13;
been able to obtain a book list. Bookstores in&#13;
Racine afso told Newscope that they had not&#13;
received book lists.&#13;
When asked of the Parkside policy toward&#13;
releasing booklists, Erwin Zuehlke, director of t he&#13;
Business Office, told Newscope that as far as he&#13;
knew, no book list was compiled after 1969. He&#13;
explained that the campus bookstore, which will&#13;
eventually relocate in the Libarar-Learning&#13;
Center, does not receive a booklist. "They send out&#13;
forms to instructors based on the information they&#13;
' obta in through the timetables. It's all voluntary, if&#13;
the instructors wish to fill out the form they can."&#13;
I He emphasized that there was no official book list,&#13;
and that "the policy for the present" is not to&#13;
compile one.&#13;
In a fit of journalistic research, Newscope&#13;
talked to a few instructors. When asked how they&#13;
make the required texts available to the students,&#13;
they explained that the campus bookstore sends&#13;
them questionnaires well in advance of each&#13;
Contents of these Prohtees&#13;
In Custody of&#13;
United St ates District Court&#13;
FOR THE £ASl£KlLMSW&lt;Z^_t**&#13;
IN BANKRUPTCY&#13;
MIUIAH •'gf .. S^vQ'-Tcy'&#13;
ADDRESS loxoj[fel&#13;
&lt;V«/ojwrf w*c.«W.&#13;
-TJ.,L~ I# *'"•&#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;
A P P L Y E A R L Y . ..&#13;
Vila to perform&#13;
Carmen Vila, Spanish pianist&#13;
and artist-in-residence at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
who recently returned&#13;
from a highly-acclaimed&#13;
European concert series, will&#13;
present a free public lecturerecital&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday,&#13;
March 23, in Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall at the Wood&#13;
Road Campus.&#13;
The program will be built&#13;
around 25 Brahms variations&#13;
and fugue on a theme by&#13;
Handel.&#13;
Miss Vila's concert series&#13;
included an appearance with&#13;
the Barcelona Orchestra in a&#13;
Bartok Concerto which one&#13;
critic praised for her "fluid&#13;
technique, vehement approach&#13;
to rhythmic passages and&#13;
suave, poetic phrasing." Said&#13;
another critic: "She is a pianist&#13;
of great natural gifts and&#13;
wonderful technique . . . shows&#13;
fire and strong esthetic temperment&#13;
perfect for romantic&#13;
pieces."&#13;
Miss Vila also appeared with&#13;
the Valencia Orchestra and was&#13;
cited by critics for the "beauty&#13;
and illumination" of her&#13;
"seductive, dense and&#13;
passionate" Brahms.&#13;
Scholarship Offer&#13;
The Business and&#13;
Professional Women's Club of&#13;
Kenosha is offering a $200&#13;
scholarship to female residents&#13;
of Kenosha who will be&#13;
sophomores or juniors and who&#13;
indicate strong academic&#13;
potential and are in need of&#13;
some financial assistance.&#13;
For further information and&#13;
appropriate forms contact the&#13;
Financial Aids Office on&#13;
Country Trunk A (553-2291).&#13;
RFUUNM&amp;.&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Students who are descendents&#13;
of J. I Case Company employees&#13;
are eligible to receive a&#13;
scholarship. Grants are also&#13;
available from the Kenosha&#13;
Branch of American&#13;
Association of University&#13;
Women. Any adult women&#13;
residing in Kenosha County who&#13;
has completed at least one&#13;
semester and has the objective&#13;
of obtaining a bachelor's degree&#13;
is eligible to apply.&#13;
Gruening&#13;
to Speak&#13;
Former senator Ernest&#13;
Gruening of Alaska will appear&#13;
at the Whiteskellar Tuesday,&#13;
Mar. 21, from 10 to 11:30 a.m.&#13;
He will give a short talk&#13;
followed by a rap session.&#13;
Gruening has the distinction&#13;
of being the first governor of&#13;
Alaska and the first editor of&#13;
The Nation. He was also one of&#13;
the two senators who voted&#13;
against the Gulf of Tonkin&#13;
resolution in 1965.&#13;
The program is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
Gruening also will hold an&#13;
informal coffee hour with the&#13;
faculty in the Social Science&#13;
conference room Tuesday from&#13;
9 to 10 a.m.&#13;
semester. When asked if they were in any way&#13;
coerced to rely on the campus bookstore as the&#13;
sole means for making the texts available to&#13;
students, they replied they were not. One instructor,&#13;
who had previously taught at three&#13;
different institutions, told Newscope "this was the&#13;
procedure used on the other campuses I've been&#13;
on."&#13;
The death of a bookstore is never a welcome&#13;
event, when it is a city's only bookstore it approaches&#13;
travesty. Mrs. Anderson had indicated&#13;
that the Book Mar may be re-opened under new&#13;
management in a short while. But there is a cloud&#13;
hanging low. The campus bookstore is a monopoly&#13;
on campus; This, of&#13;
course, makes it quite economically feasible to&#13;
compile an exclusive booklist, which, of course,&#13;
places area bookstores at a distinct disadvantage.&#13;
Exactly how much of an advantage (and why) the&#13;
campus bookstores holds over area competitors&#13;
remains to be seen. &#13;
28 Letters Awarded March 20,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
Twenty-eight University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside athletes&#13;
have earned letters in four justcompleted&#13;
winter sports,&#13;
athletic director Tom Rosandich&#13;
has announced.&#13;
Those who earned varsity letters&#13;
in basketball include Racine (Park)&#13;
freshman Chuck Chambliss;&#13;
Kenosha (St. Joseph) freshman Tom&#13;
Heller; Greendale sophomore Mike&#13;
Joyce; Greendale freshman Tom&#13;
Joyce; Jefferson freshman Pete&#13;
Nevins; Cudahy sophomore Mark&#13;
peck; Burlington junior Bob Popp;&#13;
Ewen, Mich., junior Dennis&#13;
Routheaux; and Racine (Case)&#13;
freshman Phil Stewart.&#13;
In fencing, letterwinners include&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford) freshman&#13;
Charles Christensen; Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper) senior John Hanzalik;&#13;
Sturtevant (Kenosha Bradford)&#13;
lunior Don Koser; Kenosha&#13;
(Bradford) junior Peter Shemanske;&#13;
Wauwatosa (East) sophomore&#13;
John Tank; Racine (Horlick)&#13;
sophomore Bernie Vash; and&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford) freshman Steve&#13;
Vepraskas.&#13;
Gymnastics letterwinners include&#13;
Burbank, Cal., senior Warren&#13;
McGillivray; Kenosha (Tremper)&#13;
freshman Kevin O'Neil and Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper) freshman Kerry Pfeifer.&#13;
For the women's squad, Racine&#13;
(Horlick) freshman Kathy Kramer&#13;
earned a letter.&#13;
Gymnasts Compete&#13;
Three UW-Parkside gymnasts will compete Friday and&#13;
Saturday in the NAIA national gymnastics championships at&#13;
Eastern Illinois University.&#13;
Senior Warren McGillivray and freshmen Kevin O'Neil and&#13;
Kerry Pfeifer have qualified from Coach Dave Donaldson's squad&#13;
McGillivray, a native of Burbank, Cal., whose best mark in allaround&#13;
this year is 45.10, will compete in the rigorous all-event&#13;
competition, while Kenoshans O'Neil and Pfeifer will stay with&#13;
their specialties. O'Neil, captain of the squad, will be going on the&#13;
rings and parallel bars and Pfeifer will be entered in the long horse&#13;
vault.&#13;
It's the final competition of the season for the Rangers.&#13;
Burkee says Annex&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
who doesn't want to be included&#13;
in the annexation. They'd be in&#13;
and out. All it would take would&#13;
be the approval of the city&#13;
council and the Somers town&#13;
board. The only land that&#13;
wouldn't be detached would&#13;
belong to the people who want to&#13;
be annexed, and a 200 foot wide&#13;
corridor which would connect&#13;
Parkside with Kenosha. We&#13;
have to keep the corridor to&#13;
make the area contiguous with&#13;
the city and to provide sewer&#13;
lines." Pitts added that the&#13;
precedent for the corridor&#13;
retention was established in a&#13;
case between Madison and a&#13;
suburb in which the state&#13;
required a minimum width for a&#13;
corridor to make the annexed&#13;
area contiguous with the city.&#13;
You've said that farmers who&#13;
don't want to be included in the&#13;
annexation can detach their&#13;
property from it after the annexation&#13;
has been passed. What&#13;
guarantee do they have that&#13;
they'll actually be able to do it?&#13;
"I would recommend to the city&#13;
council, as soon as the area is&#13;
annexed, to detach the&#13;
property. You see there are&#13;
checks and balances to this&#13;
thing. The voters have the final&#13;
say. They can petition for a&#13;
referendum if they don't like&#13;
something that is happening,&#13;
and pull out. When this&#13;
(detached annexation) goes&#13;
back to the state, they're going&#13;
to flip. They're going to say this&#13;
is a kind of connived deal.&#13;
Somebody could even go to&#13;
court on this."&#13;
Does the city have to annex in&#13;
order to service the campus?&#13;
"If I extend sewer and water&#13;
outside the city limits, I could&#13;
get a taxpayers lawsuit. I could&#13;
have gotten a taxpayers lawsuit&#13;
when I put the original sewer in.&#13;
But people were so anxious to&#13;
help Parkside that nobody was&#13;
going to sue for that. Now they&#13;
would. I'd get a suit because I'd&#13;
be spending the taxpayers&#13;
money of the city of Kenosha&#13;
out in Somers."&#13;
Why do you think the area&#13;
residents are so vehemently&#13;
opposed to the annexation? "It&#13;
all goes back to the fact that&#13;
they don't liknee Pparkside,&#13;
because they can't say they&#13;
don't like me; what have I got to&#13;
do with it? I don't have a sewer&#13;
problem, Somers doesn't have a&#13;
sewer problem. They simply&#13;
resented the fact that their land&#13;
was sold for the Parkside site.&#13;
That's what I think anyway.&#13;
You see the city is doing&#13;
everything it can to solve this&#13;
problem, and they're (Somers)&#13;
not cooperating. If this thing&#13;
falls through, I don't know&#13;
what's going to happen; we've&#13;
done everything we can.&#13;
Somers says they can build a&#13;
treatment plant in conjunction&#13;
with Mt. Pleasant, but I just&#13;
don't see how they'll pay for it.&#13;
And if they can come up with $10&#13;
million in federal aid along with&#13;
the other $10 million they'll&#13;
need, that other ten million will&#13;
have to come out of their taxpayers&#13;
pockets. I think these'&#13;
taxpayers should realize this."&#13;
What happens if annexation&#13;
fails? "I don't know what we'll&#13;
do, when the sewers are&#13;
overflowing in 1974 I might not&#13;
even be here. Then we'll have&#13;
an emergency and the state will&#13;
come in and under Bill 50 they'll&#13;
order an annexation because&#13;
we'll have a pollution problem.&#13;
But then it's too late."&#13;
irish poet here&#13;
Knute Skinner, Irish poet, will&#13;
appear Tuesday at 4 p.m. with&#13;
Poetry Forum. Mr. Skinner,&#13;
spending most of the year in&#13;
Ireland, is currently in the&#13;
Creative Writing program at&#13;
Western Washington State. In&#13;
1961 he won the HuntingtonH&#13;
a r t f o rd F o u n d a t i on&#13;
Fellowship in poetry. His latest&#13;
book will be released shortly&#13;
called "Hearing of the Hard&#13;
Times" Mr. Skinner will read&#13;
selections of his poStry. Admission&#13;
is free.&#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;
Eight Rangers won letters in&#13;
wrestling. They include Peshtigo&#13;
freshman Kyle Barnes; Kenosha&#13;
(St. Joseph) junior Mark Barnhill;&#13;
Kenosha (Bradford) junior Jeff&#13;
Jenkins; Coleman sophomore Ken&#13;
Martin; Racine (Case) freshman&#13;
Rick Schoeffler; Peshtigo freshman&#13;
Steve Sulk; Racine (Parkp) freshman&#13;
Frank Velasquez; and Kenosha&#13;
(Tremper) sophomore Bill West.&#13;
Elected captains for their&#13;
respective squads are Dennis&#13;
Routheaux, basketball; Peter&#13;
Shemanske, fencing; Kevin O'Neil,&#13;
men's gymnastics; Kathy Kramer&#13;
and Mary Jo Giannottl, women's&#13;
gymnastics; and Jeff Jenkins and&#13;
Ken Martin, wrestling.&#13;
MVPS&#13;
Chuck Chambliss, Peter&#13;
S h e m a n s k e , W a r r e n&#13;
McGillivray, Kathy Kramer&#13;
and Ken Martin have been&#13;
named most valuable for their&#13;
winter sports at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Chambliss, high-scoring&#13;
freshman from Racine, was&#13;
named the cagers' top player in&#13;
a vote of teammates as were&#13;
fencing captain Shemanske, a&#13;
Kenosha junior, and Burbank,&#13;
Cal., senior McGillivray, who&#13;
will compete in all-around in the&#13;
upcoming NAIA national&#13;
gymnastics championships.&#13;
Miss Kramer, who placed&#13;
fifth in the state in floor exercises&#13;
for Parkside's first&#13;
women's gym squad, was&#13;
picked as MVP in that sport&#13;
while Martin, who claimed ailAmerican&#13;
wrestling honors for&#13;
the second time last weekend,&#13;
was named the grapplers' top&#13;
man. Miss Kramer is a Racine&#13;
freshman while sophomore&#13;
Martin hails from Coleman.&#13;
&amp;a.r l*&gt;&#13;
Mm.SU&#13;
'PtopWs u&#13;
UJtd,&#13;
St*io.&#13;
IX az Bottle Beer&#13;
H i W * *&#13;
Ltoe Music-F^i.&#13;
iHT.&#13;
hotS 1"*oryf +hl&#13;
l4k.t rKto.Tt)r&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Vi Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line Pump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
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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;
WATCHES^&#13;
Role* • Accutron&#13;
Ultrachron - Longine&#13;
Bui ova • Movado&#13;
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PERFUMES&#13;
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Perfumes and&#13;
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REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
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ft4 f •«» »-•&#13;
VwuWuc &amp; S&amp;ru,&#13;
It does make » difference where you shop!&#13;
0% Discount to students and Faculty with |.o&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
SILVERWARE&#13;
Wallace • Lunt&#13;
Meed &amp; Barton&#13;
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BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orr.forl&#13;
S.nec. - Clique&#13;
Roy.I Worcetter &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE March 20,1972&#13;
The Great Salad Controversy&#13;
AT L E F T T H E SM A L L ER A C TIV ITI ES SALAD:. AT RIG HT T H E R A CIN E P O R T I ON I&#13;
A L I T T L E MO R E S AL A D WITH OUR BOW LS P L E A S E .&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Dave Bishop appeared to be&#13;
visably shaken. He stood in his&#13;
office staring at two salads on&#13;
his desk, his chin slowly&#13;
massaged by his left hand.&#13;
"Hmm," he said, "isn't that&#13;
something."&#13;
I stood next to him as he&#13;
thought over what I had named&#13;
"the great salad controversy"&#13;
On his desk were two lettuce&#13;
salads bought by myself at two&#13;
different eating facilities under&#13;
his temporary authority. One&#13;
salad, heaped in a blue glass&#13;
bowl, was comprised of four&#13;
healthy wedges of tomato, bits&#13;
of c elery, slices of radish, and&#13;
fresh, crisp lettuce. The other&#13;
salad, housed in a smaller white&#13;
styrofoam bowl, had no raddish&#13;
or celery, but a thin strip of&#13;
green pepper and the butt-end&#13;
of a tomato.&#13;
"You're sure they're the&#13;
same price," he asked me. "I'm&#13;
positive," I said, "Twenty-five&#13;
cents and a penny tax, the&#13;
healthy one from Racine, the&#13;
scrawny salad from the Student&#13;
Activities Building lunch&#13;
counter." He shook his head&#13;
slowly, seemingly amazed.&#13;
One of Mr. Bishop's duties as&#13;
a Parkside Administrator is to&#13;
keep a watchful eye on the food&#13;
services on the three campuses&#13;
he serves as an interim liaison&#13;
between the students' stomachs&#13;
and the Canteen Company.&#13;
The "great salad controversy"&#13;
was born in a casual&#13;
conversation I once had with&#13;
another Parkside employee,&#13;
Shirley Schmerling. She asked&#13;
me why I, as author of Eating&#13;
Out, didn't review the eating&#13;
facilities at Parkside. I admitted&#13;
at that time the idea had&#13;
been haunting me for quite&#13;
awhile.&#13;
I explained that I didn't want&#13;
to get involved with administrators,&#13;
although I had&#13;
once interviewed Vice Chancellor&#13;
Dearborn concerning the&#13;
food available to students. It&#13;
seems that when Parkside was&#13;
just a suckling, a contract was&#13;
made with the Canteen Company.&#13;
The contract stated&#13;
Parkside could not initiate any&#13;
new food program until it expired.&#13;
Because I could say little&#13;
or nothing good about the&#13;
present set-up, I told Shirley&#13;
Schmerling that I would review&#13;
eating facilities at Parkside&#13;
when the Administration got&#13;
serious about feeding the&#13;
students.&#13;
Injecting a bit of trivial&#13;
detective work on my part, I&#13;
asked her if she knew that the&#13;
salads in Racine were bigger&#13;
than the ones at the Kenosha&#13;
campus or the Activities&#13;
Building. She didn't accept my&#13;
testimony as fact; she wanted&#13;
me to bring her a Racine salad.&#13;
When I did a few weeks later,&#13;
she insisted Dave Bishop, her&#13;
boss, see them.&#13;
He stood over the salads,&#13;
somewhat amazed, I think, and&#13;
a bit bewildered.&#13;
I realized while standing next&#13;
to him, that although I brought&#13;
the salads to him just for the&#13;
sake of proving a point, I was&#13;
still a Newscope writer, and in&#13;
charge of "Eating Out". He&#13;
wasn't in the same league as the&#13;
secretaries and others who had&#13;
been amused by my demonstration.&#13;
He was an Administrator.&#13;
&#13;
Adm inis trat ors and&#13;
politicians have one common&#13;
fear, and that is "unrehearsed&#13;
dialogue", which crops up when&#13;
they are questioned by a hostile&#13;
constituent, student or reporter.&#13;
Nothing is as nightmarish as a&#13;
statement off the top of the&#13;
head, when the statement is&#13;
binding and recorded by a&#13;
machine or mind. That's how&#13;
images are shattered — ask&#13;
George Romney. In this&#13;
respect, the President of the&#13;
United States and the man who&#13;
is to watch over a college food&#13;
program have a common bond.&#13;
I couldn't decide, standing&#13;
next to Mr. Bishop, if he thought&#13;
I was there to reveal a flaw in&#13;
his operation, or if h e realized I&#13;
was only casually proving a&#13;
point, though it had gone beyond&#13;
Shirley Schmerling and a&#13;
casual conversation.&#13;
After staring at the salads for&#13;
a few minutes, burrowing&#13;
through a garden of thought,&#13;
Dave Bishop told me that he&#13;
would personally make a tour of&#13;
the three lunch counters in&#13;
order to straighten out "the&#13;
great salad controversy". He&#13;
told me to call him in a day or&#13;
two.&#13;
Two days later, Dave Bishop&#13;
explained over the phone that&#13;
he had indeed toured the&#13;
campuses and found the salads&#13;
to be different sizes. He had&#13;
called a representative from the&#13;
Canteen Company in&#13;
Milwaukee. The "great salad&#13;
controversy" had now spread to&#13;
three counties in the state I&#13;
realized.&#13;
The salads were in different&#13;
containers, he went on to explain&#13;
over the phone, because&#13;
they were bought at different&#13;
times. There is no dishwasher&#13;
at the Activities Building, so the&#13;
Canteen personnel use&#13;
styrofoam containers, while&#13;
Racine and Kenosha use plastic&#13;
and glass. (Somewhere in&#13;
Parksideland I thought, Doug&#13;
LaFollette, the ecological&#13;
knight, was cringing at the&#13;
mention of styrofoam. "If you&#13;
bury a dead cat, a nail and a&#13;
sytrofoam cup, he tells his&#13;
ecology classes, then dig them&#13;
up years later, which do you&#13;
think will prove to be non biodegradable?")&#13;
&#13;
Bishop went on to say that he&#13;
felt the Kenosha Campus had&#13;
reached a "happy medium" in&#13;
the salad question, a smaller&#13;
version of the Racine model, but&#13;
a bit bigger than the Activities&#13;
Building salad. He would bring&#13;
this all to the attention of the&#13;
Canteen person coming down&#13;
from Milwaukee.&#13;
I asked if he had found any&#13;
other discrepancies on his&#13;
jaunt. He said something about&#13;
hot dogs and beans, and the fact&#13;
that someone somewhere&#13;
wasn't serving bread with the&#13;
meal.&#13;
In perfect politicaladministrative&#13;
rhetoric, he said&#13;
he would "strive for consistency"&#13;
in the lunch program,&#13;
and see to it the students got&#13;
their money's worth.&#13;
There would always be&#13;
complaints, Mr- Bishop&#13;
rationalized, prices and the like,&#13;
but those are the "nature of t he&#13;
beast" gripes. Concluding the&#13;
phone explanation he said a&#13;
"happy medium" had been&#13;
found and the salad affair was&#13;
over. Ceasar Chavez would&#13;
have been proud, I thought, no&#13;
more sickly lettuce salads.&#13;
The "great salad controversy",&#13;
which had begun in a&#13;
casual conversation, spread&#13;
into three counties, and taken a&#13;
few hours of out a couple&#13;
people's lives, was over.&#13;
Although I hadn't reviewed&#13;
the lunch program, I had done&#13;
something, I concluded after&#13;
talking to Dave Bishop. In fact,&#13;
he thanked me for bringing the&#13;
matter to his attention. It appeared&#13;
to have worked out&#13;
alright, but there were losers,&#13;
as in all controversies.&#13;
The vegetarians in Racine&#13;
would now have to be content&#13;
eating "happy medium" salads&#13;
instead of bargain-basement,&#13;
heaping, healthy herbage.&#13;
They would complain, I&#13;
realized, but that would come&#13;
under the "nature of th e beast"&#13;
gripes.&#13;
m mm 'X-Xv.v.v. n&#13;
SH liiMi v.v.v.v&#13;
•X-M-X-:-&#13;
vX;X; jg&#13;
^ Student Activities Built inj (^j) 1 Z 5&#13;
PARKSIDE t ( JI SC. X.b.'S REQUIRED # </text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 11, March 20, 1972</text>
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              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
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              <text>1972-03-20</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="63713">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63714">
              <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="63715">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63716">
              <text>Text</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63717">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63718">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="231">
      <name>annexation</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="222">
      <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="158">
      <name>parkside village</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
