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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 6, issue 12</text>
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            <text>Parkside Today: more prone towards the administration</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>by Michael Kite of the Newscope staff&#13;
ther? aPPeared on campus a new publication&#13;
Parkside Today, about which very little was known. All that was&#13;
known about the paper was included in a "letter of purpose"&#13;
contained in the first issue.&#13;
, ,&#13;
Th&#13;
(? le&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
T&#13;
ter sta&#13;
^&#13;
ed 11131 1116 publication was sponsored and paid&#13;
or by the University. "It is a non-competitive publication aimed at&#13;
informing the campus community and the surrounding area of&#13;
special events and activities, and student, academic, and administrative&#13;
affairs."&#13;
The exact source of their&#13;
funds, and a more specific&#13;
purpose was not clear.&#13;
An interview with Mr. Anthony&#13;
Totero, Director of&#13;
Student Organizations, was set&#13;
up to seek out some of these&#13;
answers. But opon questioning,&#13;
Mr. Totero explained, "Because&#13;
Parkside Today is not a student&#13;
organization, I know very little&#13;
about it." He then suggested&#13;
Newscope talk to the&#13;
publications' advisor, Mr.&#13;
Kopriva, as the best source of&#13;
information.&#13;
But Mr. Kopriva was also&#13;
unable to produce any substantial&#13;
answers, not knowing&#13;
who had originated the paper,&#13;
exactly where the funds came&#13;
from, or how the staff had been&#13;
chosen. "By the time things&#13;
such as this work their way&#13;
down through the proper&#13;
channels," he explained, "I&#13;
usually don't know where they&#13;
originated." Kopriva added,&#13;
"All I know is it has Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie's full approval."&#13;
Concerning the staff, Kopriva&#13;
thought it consisted of only&#13;
Rudy Leinau and Sue Zietz (the&#13;
only two names prepresnted in&#13;
the publication to date), and he&#13;
said they worked for the&#13;
University under the work&#13;
study program.&#13;
About the possibility of a&#13;
conflict arising between&#13;
Parkside today and Newscope,&#13;
Kopriva had this to say, "I feel&#13;
that rather than conflict they&#13;
will compliment each other."&#13;
At this point it was brought to&#13;
Mr. Kopriva's attention that in&#13;
the last issue of Parkside&#13;
Today, there appeared a news&#13;
story concerning the land annexation,&#13;
which was fully&#13;
covered in Newscope. To this he&#13;
said, "Rudy has almost complete&#13;
control over what is run in&#13;
the paper and he must have had&#13;
good reason for running it."&#13;
As for the future plans of&#13;
Parkside Today, Kopriva&#13;
replied, "As far as I know, the&#13;
paper will remain as it is with&#13;
no major changes and will&#13;
continue to be a noncompetitive&#13;
publication."&#13;
Being able to supply only&#13;
these vauge answers, Mr.&#13;
Kopriva suggested presenting&#13;
the questions to Rudy Leinau or&#13;
Mr. Totero, who had initially&#13;
suggested Mr. Korpiva.&#13;
Rudy, a freshman, was more&#13;
responsive than either Mr.&#13;
Totero or Mr. Kopriva. He&#13;
began by explaining that the&#13;
staff of Parkside Today consisted&#13;
of Sue Zietz, who receives&#13;
a salary for her contributions,&#13;
and himself. He added that he&#13;
was paid through the workNewscope's&#13;
&#13;
next issue&#13;
out April 10&#13;
study program.&#13;
Mr. Lienau explained that he&#13;
had gained journalism experience&#13;
by working on his high&#13;
school newspaper, the Tremper&#13;
Tempest. Knowing this, Mr.&#13;
Totero (who originally said&#13;
"Because Parkside Today is not&#13;
a student organization, I know&#13;
very little about it.") approached&#13;
Rudy with the offer.&#13;
Rudy, who had been seeking a&#13;
way to use and increase his&#13;
journalistic knowledge, readily&#13;
accepted.&#13;
This raised the question as to&#13;
why the individuals involved&#13;
had not come to Newscope, to&#13;
possibly create a regular&#13;
column which would serve the&#13;
(Continued on Page 7)&#13;
'Scoop' Jackson&#13;
more photos on page 8.&#13;
Kenosha. Report and&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
CCC Hearings Raise Q uestions&#13;
by Jim Koloen,&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
In the first of two open&#13;
hearings sponsored by the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
concerning proposed rules for&#13;
Mochon, a number of questions&#13;
were raised concerning. the&#13;
regulations which were&#13;
presented in a rough draft&#13;
written on March 15.&#13;
The hearing, which lasted an&#13;
hit at credit load&#13;
CCC Chairwoman Marion Mochon at open hearing which few&#13;
students attended.&#13;
r e g i s t e r i n g stu d e nt&#13;
organizations, fifteen faculty&#13;
and students were present to air&#13;
their views. Most of the participants&#13;
in the Friday noon&#13;
meeting, held in the&#13;
Whiteskellar, were members of&#13;
the CCC. Chaired by Marion&#13;
hour, did not see the proposed&#13;
rules considered point by point,&#13;
rather rules considered during&#13;
the meeting were those on&#13;
which the individual participants&#13;
took exception. The&#13;
rules which drew the most&#13;
debate included the validity of a&#13;
minimum grade point average,&#13;
minimum credit load&#13;
requirements for SGA officers,&#13;
and the responsibilities of an&#13;
organization when it sponsors&#13;
various events.&#13;
Student Union Board&#13;
representative Jerry Murphy&#13;
opened the discussion by&#13;
questioning the desirability of a&#13;
2.0 gpa for the representatives&#13;
of an organization who file the&#13;
application for recognition as a&#13;
campus entity. Murphy also&#13;
questioned the practicality of&#13;
establishing a six credit&#13;
minimum course load for officers&#13;
of the Student Government.&#13;
Professor Larry Deutsch&#13;
replied that he thought a&#13;
student body could not be well&#13;
represented by a person with&#13;
only one credit. He added that&#13;
most campuses have such&#13;
minimum course load rules.&#13;
Student senator Elaine Birch&#13;
supported Murphy's contention&#13;
by explaining that she did not&#13;
believe in dictating to people&#13;
how they should vote. She said&#13;
she wanted nothing to do with&#13;
pre-choosing a candidate.&#13;
On the question of the grade&#13;
point requirement, Murphy&#13;
asked why it specified it be&#13;
attained during the previous&#13;
semester. He wondered why it&#13;
couldn't be cumulative rather&#13;
than based on one semester.&#13;
The question came up concerning&#13;
the possibility for a&#13;
person's cumulative gpa&#13;
making him ineligible, instead&#13;
of the previous semester's gpa.&#13;
When asked if any present&#13;
SGA officer was carrying less&#13;
than six credits, Murphy replied&#13;
that Dean Loumos, President of&#13;
SGA, was. He further stated&#13;
that the present SGA must&#13;
fulfill two years of work in one&#13;
semester because of the&#13;
previous SGA administration's&#13;
laxness.&#13;
Concerning the proposed rule&#13;
requiring a student to attend&#13;
UWP for a full semester prior to&#13;
becoming eligible for SGA&#13;
candidacy, faculty member&#13;
Tom Knight questioned its&#13;
constitutionality. He explained&#13;
that the Supreme Court had just&#13;
ruled that lengthy residency&#13;
requirements for voter&#13;
eligibility were unconstitutional.&#13;
Professor&#13;
Greenbaum indicated that the&#13;
Court ruling applied to voting&#13;
and not to the issue of candidacy.&#13;
Jerry Murphy pointed&#13;
out that first semester freshmen&#13;
would be ineligible to hold&#13;
an officership in SGA if such a&#13;
requirement is recommended.&#13;
Knight agreed that the rule&#13;
would be discriminatory,&#13;
stating that it would prevent&#13;
transfer students from running&#13;
for office.&#13;
It was generally agreed that a&#13;
semester is necessary for a&#13;
student to learn the idosyncracies&#13;
of the campus.&#13;
However, Knight expressed the&#13;
belief that many transfer&#13;
students could be capable of&#13;
comprehending the tasks of a&#13;
Parkside SGA officer in a few&#13;
days, after poring over campus&#13;
regulations and other pertinent&#13;
information.&#13;
When the issue of the guest&#13;
policy for the Activities&#13;
Building was questioned, Elaine&#13;
Birch replied that the rule&#13;
concerning the 18 year old&#13;
minimum age requirement was&#13;
required by stipulations set&#13;
forth when the present beer&#13;
license was granted. When&#13;
Knight asked why a Parkside&#13;
ID was required rather than&#13;
allowing for a more general&#13;
general policy requiring just a&#13;
(Continued on Page 7)&#13;
PARKSIDE TODAY&#13;
more prone toward&#13;
the administration" &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE March 27,1972&#13;
EpitoBJAL&#13;
The Presidency&#13;
— Don't look for a messiah at least for another&#13;
2,000 years, Gene McCarthy told his supporters in&#13;
1968. What he said holds true. Newscope views&#13;
with dis truct the coming presidential election. Call&#13;
it, perhaps, cynicism, but we see the leading&#13;
candidates as failing to comprehend the basic&#13;
problems of the United States. The election of any&#13;
one of them — from Nixon on the Right to Lindsay&#13;
on the Left — would be almost equally dangerous&#13;
in the long run.&#13;
The United States is in the midst of a transformation.&#13;
The old ideologies are crumbling, the&#13;
old political alliances are in disarray. There is a&#13;
fundamental restructuring of American beliefs&#13;
going on. Politically, it is manifested by the&#13;
growing dual realization that the liberalism&#13;
ushered in by Franklin Roosevelt is approaching&#13;
bankruptcy, while the traditional Republican&#13;
concept of laissez faire has gone the way of the&#13;
dinosaur.&#13;
We are then in a period of changing beliefs and&#13;
conditions. If we are to adapt successfully to them,&#13;
our political parties and their ideologies must&#13;
reflect these changes. A failure to do so now will&#13;
probably result in greater social violence in the&#13;
future.&#13;
One candidate, we feel, has an intimation of&#13;
the changes that are about. That man is Eugene&#13;
McCarthy. He has our endorsement in the&#13;
Wisconsin presidential primary.&#13;
In both his grasp of the situation and his style,&#13;
McCarthy is best suited for the presidency. He&#13;
holds a rightful suspicion of the office. For too long&#13;
we have voted for men who seem to be consumed&#13;
with meglomania, with a desire to remake the&#13;
country in their image. McCarthy, refreshingly,&#13;
does not seem to have the physical NEED to be&#13;
president the others have.&#13;
For example: after his defeat in 1968, the&#13;
University of Maryland offered him a teaching&#13;
position in Political Science. He refused it. They&#13;
offered him a teaching position in poetry, and he&#13;
accepted. A small thing maybe, but consider what&#13;
it means to have a serious presidential candidate&#13;
who has a love of poetry . . .&#13;
But there is more to his style than that. He&#13;
realizes the importance of policies. "The question&#13;
is not who will be elected," he has said, "but&#13;
rather the principles, the policies and the&#13;
programs to which the next president is committed."&#13;
&#13;
In rejecting the other Democratic candidates,&#13;
we feel that, with the exception of George&#13;
McGovern and Shirley Chisholm, their support of&#13;
the Democratic party as it is presently constituted&#13;
shows their lack of perception of needed changes.&#13;
In particular, we are unable to support either&#13;
Hubert Humphrey or Edmund Muskie becuase of&#13;
their conduct in 1968. Henry Jackson, we feel,&#13;
would have been a more creditable candidate in&#13;
1960. John Lindsay is unacceptable because the&#13;
selling point of his candidacy is his pretty face.&#13;
George McGovern, though responsible for&#13;
much of the reform in the Democratic party,&#13;
embodys too much of the beliefs of traditional&#13;
liberalism. Shirley Chisholm, we feel, lacks the&#13;
necessary background to be president.&#13;
President Nixon, though mellowing some with&#13;
the passage of time, still lacks a sufficiently&#13;
humanistic vision of the presidency.&#13;
The candidate we believe who is the best, the&#13;
one we trust, is Eugene McCarthy. "I announced&#13;
in Grant Park the night they nominated Humphrey,"&#13;
he said. "I told the people in the park I&#13;
would never allow them to be taken in again by the&#13;
politics of 1968. I said I would never lead a&#13;
movement under the current system where the&#13;
people were humiliated. I said then we have to&#13;
change the politics of 1972. And when I was in&#13;
Grant Park, Hubert Humphrey was at the convention&#13;
hall, standing on the stage with George&#13;
McGovern on his left and Edmund Muskie on his&#13;
right."&#13;
We have no great hopes for 1972, but we can&#13;
say in clear conscience if there is one hope, it is&#13;
Eugene McCarthy.&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
City &amp; County- just the facts&#13;
In recent weeks, Newscope&#13;
has presented a continuing&#13;
series of articles concerning the&#13;
proposed annexation of UWP&#13;
and its environs to the City of&#13;
Kenosha. Opposition to the&#13;
proposal has emanated from&#13;
area residents and a few&#13;
Parkside students, creating an&#13;
unlikely alliance. Though&#13;
Parkside Villagers are eligible&#13;
to vote on the matter, few of&#13;
them have vocalized their&#13;
concern, and perhaps there is&#13;
good reason for it.&#13;
The two opposing parties, city&#13;
vs. county, have both expressed&#13;
the belief that their plan will be&#13;
of most benefit to the University.&#13;
The city has stated that&#13;
Somers can't finance the&#13;
facilities and services which the&#13;
University must be provided&#13;
with. The Somers residents&#13;
have indicated that they can&#13;
finance the projects for which&#13;
they have undertaken a&#13;
feasibility study.&#13;
Area residents have expressed&#13;
the fear that their&#13;
property will be taxed at a&#13;
prohibitive rate, forcing them to&#13;
lose their land if the area is&#13;
annexed. The city has&#13;
responded with a detached&#13;
annexation proposal. However,&#13;
the guarantee that their&#13;
property can indeed be&#13;
detached from the annexation is&#13;
not legally binding, rather it is&#13;
based on the Mayor's word. The&#13;
Somers residents have expressed&#13;
skepticism toward this.&#13;
The county has charged the city&#13;
with profiteering as the motive&#13;
behind annexing the area; the&#13;
city has accused the property&#13;
owners of stifling the growth of&#13;
the University.&#13;
It is difficult for a student on&#13;
campus to decide on an issue&#13;
when neither side has yet&#13;
proven its contentions, in which&#13;
each side refuses to make&#13;
concessions, when each side&#13;
expresses the laudable wish to&#13;
help UWP, yet accuse the other&#13;
side of baser motives. Annexation&#13;
should not be a&#13;
political issue, it should simply&#13;
be a question of which plan will&#13;
be best for the area. Unfortunately,&#13;
this is not the case.&#13;
Both sides have agreed that&#13;
the fate of the annexation rests&#13;
in the hands of the students who&#13;
reside in Parkside Village. But&#13;
before they can decide the&#13;
issue, they must be presented&#13;
with less emotionalism, fewer&#13;
controversial statistics. The&#13;
issue must be separated from&#13;
politics and old grudges. The&#13;
ecological environment must be&#13;
considered, not the political&#13;
environment; the residents&#13;
must be guaranteed the right to&#13;
live their lives as they wish&#13;
before they can be expected to&#13;
agree to an annexation;&#13;
cooperation, not opposition,&#13;
must be fostered by both sides.&#13;
Until such time as each individual&#13;
elector in the Village&#13;
has been satisfied that all the&#13;
facts have been made available&#13;
to him; until the student has&#13;
been presented with the facts&#13;
rather than emotionalism,&#13;
politics and old grudges; until a&#13;
student can make his decision&#13;
from position of intelligence&#13;
rather than bewilderment and&#13;
ignorance as is the case now,&#13;
only then should they vote, after&#13;
the city and county have come&#13;
to meet rather than fight each&#13;
other. The facts, gentlemen,&#13;
just the facts.&#13;
WATCHES PERFUMES"&#13;
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Caravclle - Time.&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
France'*&#13;
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Perfume, and&#13;
Cologne*&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontoiogist&#13;
W_ Stir (Mi Ave.&#13;
Vi/fuufia, £&#13;
It does rmke » difference where you shop!&#13;
10% Disco unt to students and Facul ty w ith | . D&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
SILVERWARE |&#13;
Wallace - Lunt&#13;
Reed &amp; Barton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orrefort&#13;
Seneca - Lalique&#13;
Royal Worcester&#13;
mcgoyern&#13;
needs volunteers&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Those of us who heard&#13;
Senator Gruening when he&#13;
spoke at Parkside on Tuesday&#13;
— and even those who didn't —&#13;
must realize by now the&#13;
pressing need for an American&#13;
President who will tell the truth,&#13;
and act on it.&#13;
George McGovern is the one&#13;
candidate whose whole life and&#13;
legislative record promise that&#13;
he would be such a President.&#13;
The success of McGovern's&#13;
campaign is crucial to getting&#13;
this country back on the track,&#13;
and the Wisconsin primary is&#13;
crucial to McGovern's campaign.&#13;
&#13;
McGovern volunteers intend&#13;
to canvass every home in&#13;
Kenosha and Racine, but we&#13;
urgently need more people.&#13;
McGovern will be President if&#13;
we care enough. To volunteer to&#13;
help, no matter how limited the&#13;
time you can offer, call 657-5713&#13;
(Kenosha) or 632-7313 (Racine).&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Pete Selander&#13;
Parkside Students for&#13;
McGovern&#13;
canvassing&#13;
for george&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
Forty college and high school&#13;
students from Nebraska were in&#13;
Kenosha this week-end to&#13;
canvass on behalf of Senator&#13;
George McGovern. The young&#13;
people who made the 12 hour&#13;
bus trip from Omaha Friday&#13;
evening, spent their time when&#13;
they weren't working, at the&#13;
homes of local McGovern&#13;
supporters.&#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;
The local McGovern&#13;
headquarters stated that they&#13;
expected students from all over&#13;
the midwest to join local young&#13;
people in canvassing the next&#13;
two weekends before the April&#13;
4th Primary. If any Parkside&#13;
students would like to join in&#13;
this person-to-person contact&#13;
approach to politics, they can&#13;
volunteer by calling 657-5713.&#13;
Hope to see you there!&#13;
institute for&#13;
family planning&#13;
The Institute for Family&#13;
Service, a non-profit&#13;
organization, has been formed&#13;
by concerned citizens who feel&#13;
that individuals should be&#13;
allowed to deal with birth&#13;
control and problem&#13;
pregnancies in a way appropriate&#13;
to their individual&#13;
situations.&#13;
Medical science has provided&#13;
modern methods which are&#13;
physically safe and mentally&#13;
healthy, about which no one&#13;
need feel ashamed.&#13;
The services provided by the&#13;
Institute include: problem&#13;
pregnancy counseling, abortion&#13;
referral, and psychological&#13;
counseling and therapy, when&#13;
needed. It also offers alternatives&#13;
to abortion such as&#13;
referrals for adoption and&#13;
maternity homes, as well as&#13;
information on methods of birth&#13;
control.&#13;
The Institute assists, where&#13;
necessary, in obtaining&#13;
financial aid in relation to any&#13;
of the above situations.&#13;
Further information is&#13;
available by phone vya a 24-&#13;
hour a day Washington hot-line,&#13;
202-628-7656, or by mail. Institute&#13;
of Family Service,&#13;
Public National Bank Building,&#13;
1430 K Street, N.W., Suite 402,&#13;
Washington, D.C. 20005.&#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 c opies 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;
is 4:30 p.m. the Thursday prior to&#13;
publication. Manuscripts must be&#13;
typed and double-spaced. Unsolicited&#13;
-manuscripts and&#13;
photographs may be reclaimed&#13;
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;
It's the&#13;
real thing.&#13;
Coke. &#13;
March 27,1972 NEWSCOPE&#13;
by Jim Koloen,&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
In last week's Newscope, the city's side&#13;
of the annexation controversy was&#13;
presented in an interview with Mayor&#13;
Wallace Burkee.&#13;
This week Newscope held an interview&#13;
tith Somers Town Board Chairman&#13;
Howard Blackmon. As we sat in his&#13;
trucking firm's office, Blackmon talked&#13;
about Somers' side of the story.&#13;
Why do you think the city wants to&#13;
annex the area?&#13;
"My personal opinion is there's a fast&#13;
dollar somewhere in this deal. That's&#13;
only my personal opinion. I would ask&#13;
one question: Why does the mayor want&#13;
to annex the campus? There's no tax&#13;
revenue there, so why does he want to&#13;
annex the campus bought by the county.&#13;
Why does he want to annex some 614&#13;
acres of non-campus land?" As Blackmon&#13;
sat behind his desk, he explained&#13;
that 614 acres "is enough land for the&#13;
Page 3&#13;
Howard Blackmon opposes annexation&#13;
if the annexation proposal fails?&#13;
"We're going to arrange to do&#13;
whatever we possibly can to service the&#13;
entire area and, as I say, under the&#13;
feasibility study the City of Kenosha is&#13;
going to be servicing that portion&#13;
anyway."&#13;
Then do you see the problem as being&#13;
basically Kenosha's?&#13;
"Well, there's no one on the Town&#13;
Board of Somers, or any party involved&#13;
in this situation that wants to run the City&#13;
of Kenosha's affairs. We're not attempting&#13;
to tell the City of Kenosha how&#13;
to run its affairs." Blackmon explained&#13;
that the majority of Somers residents&#13;
"do not want to submit to a gross annexation&#13;
of this type." He added that "I&#13;
have not had one Somers resident tell me&#13;
he wants to be in the City of Kenosha. The&#13;
Board can do nothing more than support&#13;
the people we represent."&#13;
Would the area residents accept any&#13;
form of annexation?&#13;
"No, I don't think it's true at all. 1 think&#13;
the objection is based on the fact that the&#13;
landowners are in a position where they&#13;
do not have control over the choice of&#13;
government on their property." Another&#13;
reason, Blackmon later added, is the fear&#13;
that prohibitive taxes will result from&#13;
annexation. "As I stated in an earlier&#13;
meeting on this, the higher taxes will&#13;
leave the farmers with three choices:&#13;
They can sell their land immediately;&#13;
they can lower their standard of living so&#13;
they can pay the taxes; or they can&#13;
borrow the money to pay taxes until such&#13;
time as they would want to sell it."&#13;
Will Somers provide sewer service to&#13;
the campus if the annexation proposal is&#13;
defeated?&#13;
From the feasibility recommendations&#13;
that we have, more than&#13;
likely we will not be serving more than&#13;
the west half of the University. We can't&#13;
change that. And in each of these cases,"&#13;
Blackmon added, "Kenosha was&#13;
Interview with Somers Town Chairman&#13;
projected development of the area for the&#13;
next ten years." "So," he concluded,&#13;
"there must be some motive in the&#13;
background; though this is only my&#13;
opinion."&#13;
The city has indicated that Somers will&#13;
not be able to obtain the federal and state&#13;
grants which are necessary for the sewer&#13;
project. Would you answer this?&#13;
"Well, it's my opinion that the mayor&#13;
needs federal funds just as badly as&#13;
Somers needs them for the sewer project.&#13;
It's a question of mathematics as to&#13;
who's got the money to do it." Blackmon&#13;
further explained that the mayor is&#13;
"talking about servicing merely the&#13;
Parkside and annexation area; we're in a&#13;
long-range projected service to all the&#13;
area, not just the immediate Parkside&#13;
area. I believe," he concluded, "that&#13;
under the study that exists now, the City&#13;
of Kenosha is going to service that annexed&#13;
area in the end anyway."&#13;
Will Somers to ahead and begin&#13;
planning for servicing the Parkside area&#13;
"I would say that anyone owning&#13;
property adjacent to the city, who&#13;
petitioned to have it annexed, would not&#13;
find any objection. However, this is a&#13;
different case," Blackmon stressed.&#13;
"The people whose land lies in the area of&#13;
the annexation do not with to be in the&#13;
city. Sot it's a case of someone putting&#13;
them in a position they don't want to be&#13;
in. The annexation was previously&#13;
defeated on that basis."&#13;
How do the area residents view Mayor&#13;
Burkee's latest proposal, the detached&#13;
annexation?&#13;
"Well, the detached annexation is a fox&#13;
and a rabbit game, where the fox says to&#13;
the rabbit, 'Why don't you come in my&#13;
trap; if you don't like it in here, I'll let&#13;
you go.' "&#13;
One of the theories that has been given&#13;
some credance, concerning the reason&#13;
for the Somers residents' opposition to&#13;
the annexation, is that many of them&#13;
bear a grudge against the University. Is&#13;
this true, do you think?&#13;
recommended to service their portion of&#13;
it."&#13;
During the interview, the affable&#13;
Blackmon told Newscope that of the 160&#13;
eligible voters who will decide the fate of&#13;
annexation, the bulk of them live at&#13;
Parkside Village. Between interruptions&#13;
by telephone calls, the Town Board&#13;
Chairman expressed the belief that the&#13;
earliest date sewer service could be&#13;
increased in the campus area is "late&#13;
1973 or early 1974."&#13;
Blackmon explained this was his&#13;
estimate because "We're working with&#13;
other municipalities on it, and on an&#13;
overall plan that has to be approved by&#13;
the Southeastern Wisconsin Planning&#13;
Commission, along with several other&#13;
government bodies before any of us&#13;
(Kenosha or Somers) could provide&#13;
services. Both of us," he continued,&#13;
"have to rely on federal and state grants&#13;
and approval, and so on."&#13;
In these grants, is Somers competing&#13;
with Kenosha for them?&#13;
No. Each one of them, if it were split&#13;
up between Kenosha, Racine and&#13;
Somers, would be responsible for a&#13;
certain acreage of the entire area and&#13;
would then file individual applications&#13;
for grants for their portion."&#13;
Did the first annexation move come as&#13;
a surprise?&#13;
"No, we heard talk of it before it was&#13;
proposed. In fact, we held several&#13;
meetings, arranged by newspapers, at&#13;
which we tried to see if there was a&#13;
reasonable way to handle this. But it&#13;
seemed there was no other way in the&#13;
city's mind, other than outright annexation.&#13;
So there was no means of&#13;
negotiation at all there."&#13;
Blackmon continued on the topic of&#13;
negotiating with the city, stating that the&#13;
land owners would have to be included in&#13;
any meetings "because the Town Board&#13;
as such cannot designate what a certain&#13;
farmer may desire for his land. I, in turn,&#13;
and my two supervisors, represent the&#13;
Town of Somers, and we can only take a&#13;
petition for annexation of the property to&#13;
a public Town meeting." He explained&#13;
that "We found no one agreeing that the&#13;
land should be annexed to the city."'&#13;
What do you feel of the present sewer&#13;
facilities serving Parkside?&#13;
"I feel certain they (Kenosha) didn't&#13;
put out a sewer to the campus that&#13;
wouldn't take care of the campus, at&#13;
least as proposed at the time. But if&#13;
you're talking about servicing all the&#13;
area around the campus, then I would&#13;
say that the city is correct when they&#13;
stated that it would soon be inadequate."&#13;
"You see," Blackmon continued, "we&#13;
want cooperation. I believe problems&#13;
should be mutually handled between the&#13;
two governments; we should avoid a&#13;
situation where one government is trying&#13;
to take over the other one. I think that, if&#13;
somewhere along the line, we agree to sit&#13;
down to work out the problem mutually,&#13;
it could all be worked out to everyone's&#13;
satisfaction. But so far it's been a&#13;
situation of we'll serve you, but we'll lake&#13;
you over, and of course, the residents are&#13;
not going to buy that."&#13;
Youngest Regent to Visit&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Regent John M. Lavine will&#13;
visit UW-Parkside Tuesday,&#13;
Mar. 28, to solicit "ideas,&#13;
concerns and solutions about&#13;
the problems of higher&#13;
education."&#13;
Lavine, who is the publisher&#13;
of daily newspapers in Baraboo,&#13;
Chippewa Falls and Portage,&#13;
will spend the day at Parkside&#13;
talking to students, faculty and&#13;
other staff. He has made&#13;
similar visits to other UW&#13;
campuses.&#13;
Lavine, who at 30 is the&#13;
youngest member of the UW&#13;
Board of Regents, will hold&#13;
what he calls "an informal news&#13;
conference in reverse" from 10&#13;
to noon in Parkside's&#13;
Whiteskellar in the lower level&#13;
of Greenquist Hall on the Wood&#13;
Rd. campus.&#13;
"By news conference in&#13;
reverse," Lavine said, "I mean&#13;
that instead of me as a&#13;
newsman asking the questions,&#13;
I would like members of the&#13;
Parkside community to ask me&#13;
questions, to tell me about their&#13;
concerns, or to offer their&#13;
solutions to the problems of&#13;
education that are facing all of&#13;
us."&#13;
"I hope that people who come&#13;
to this rap session will realize&#13;
that it will be entirely informal&#13;
and unofficial," he said. "I am&#13;
not coming to Parkside as a&#13;
representative of the Board of&#13;
Regents, nor will I say that I&#13;
will support or not support the&#13;
views that are put forth at these&#13;
session.&#13;
"What I am trying to accomplish&#13;
is to gain an understanding&#13;
of what the concerns&#13;
are in our universities,&#13;
and to learn of ideas for possible&#13;
change in the policy that the&#13;
Regents set. Students, faculty&#13;
and administrators should have&#13;
an opportunity to express their&#13;
views directly to their&#13;
Regents."&#13;
In addition to the "reverse&#13;
news conference," Lavine will&#13;
spend the day exploring the&#13;
campus on his own.&#13;
PIZZA I&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
F REE DELIVERY TO PARKSIDE VIEEAUl&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE 0CMBERS&#13;
5021 - 30 th Avenue Ken osha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
ALADDIN&#13;
FLOWER SHOP&#13;
in west&#13;
Rac ine&#13;
3309 Washington Ave&#13;
633-3595&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL&#13;
• , lb C,ROUND BF.EE&#13;
ON FRF.NCH CRUST&#13;
BR FAD DRF.SSFD&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
LETTUCE AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
C,RILLED COUNTRYHAM&#13;
A CHEESE 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;
ONNAISF. ON TOAST 9Qc&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
N O RTH 331 1 SHERID AN R O AD SOU TH 7 5 0 0 SHERIDA N R O AD&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sixes 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 RING . . . Wf B H I N C -&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922 &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE March 27,1972&#13;
Parkside Acfivities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
at the&#13;
OVER 100&#13;
Film T r a i l e rs&#13;
Film Previews from Major&#13;
Motion Pictures&#13;
HELP PAB&#13;
CHOOSE NEXT&#13;
YEAR'S FILMS!&#13;
View these and&#13;
Write your choices&#13;
on blanks that will&#13;
be provided by the PAB&#13;
Two Showings&#13;
Wed., Mar. 29 ^&#13;
Noon - 3 P.M. %&#13;
QOOOOQOOOOOOO&#13;
IMPORTANT NOTE&#13;
The PAB is able to Announce&#13;
that there will be a special&#13;
showing of LOVE STORY on&#13;
MAY 5. We will also be running&#13;
that movie twice, due to the&#13;
heavy demand.&#13;
ooooooooooooo&#13;
BUDDY&#13;
RICH&#13;
and his big band&#13;
Sat. April 22, 8 P.M.&#13;
Kenosha Bradford Auditorium&#13;
Reserve Seat Tickets&#13;
General Admission&#13;
$2.50 8. $3.50&#13;
P arkside Students&#13;
$2.00 — $3.00&#13;
Available at:&#13;
Student Act. Office&#13;
One Student Ticket&#13;
Per Parkside I.D.&#13;
by Jim Koioen&#13;
Many gin and tonics ago, On the Nod&#13;
decided that hippies were just as good as&#13;
people: Sure they looked like girls with&#13;
mustaches; sure they smelled like one of his&#13;
old rubberized, heat-sealed-at-the-sole boots.&#13;
But Nod had to face up to reality, more and&#13;
more parents were for hippies. Why there&#13;
were so many of them that they were even&#13;
able to support and operate their own bars. It&#13;
got so that in almost any bar he stumbled into,&#13;
or onto, he'd bump into one of their numbers,&#13;
at first muttering a muffled excuse me&#13;
madam, and finally coming to mumble&#13;
goddamn drunk freak.&#13;
And so it came to pass that hip begat hip bar&#13;
and Racine's result of this incest is the spunky&#13;
year and a half old CCR. Located on the&#13;
northwest corner of Main and High Streets,&#13;
which right away tips you off, the first thing&#13;
that strikes you is that this bar is for hardcore;&#13;
second thing strikes you is there ain't no&#13;
strangers; third thing strikes you is illegal,&#13;
and the fourth thing that strikes you is the&#13;
wooden bar which On the Nod la unched an all&#13;
out offensive against, utilizing his most effective&#13;
weapon as a battering ram, his formica&#13;
topped skull.&#13;
From the beginning, Nod knew he ran the&#13;
rist of being corrupted by the hippies; indeed,&#13;
it took two of SGA's staunchest anarchist&#13;
magpies (who are an endangered species on&#13;
campus) to shanghai him and bring him to&#13;
CCR. The ex-highschool wrestler put up a&#13;
doozie of a fight, throwing the conspirators&#13;
against the walls of the Student Organization&#13;
Building, smashing their plaster heads with&#13;
plastic chairs, using everything in his arsenal&#13;
(from rubber bands to broken 45 records and&#13;
plowshares) to deck them flat on their arses,&#13;
dedicating each punch: This one's for&#13;
Okinawa, Pinko; This one's for Dean Dearborn,&#13;
Troublemakers. It wasn't until Nod&#13;
called for a cessation to the hostilities, when&#13;
he pointed out, hey wait a sec you guys, I'm&#13;
wearing glasses, that they subdued him. The&#13;
two co-conspirators used the lull to their&#13;
advantage as they punched Nod out, forcing&#13;
him to plea for a halt to the fracas. Besides,&#13;
he said, I'm thirsty now. The exertion of&#13;
fending off the evildoers had left a parched&#13;
impression on his tongue, Nod realized he&#13;
would have to lift a few in order to relubricate&#13;
the old sluice: duped into a thirst by a couple&#13;
of magpies.&#13;
So Nod ended up in Racine at the rowdy,&#13;
crowded, smoke-filled CCR, a bar that&#13;
features the thing that makes the freak life&#13;
what it is today: Poverty. Like Hardman's in&#13;
Kenosha, CCR don't offer up no frills. Chunks&#13;
of plaster from the dirty green walls have&#13;
either been kicked out or simply eroded, the&#13;
wooden bar is decorated with cigarette burns,&#13;
and though it's supposed to open at six in t he&#13;
evening, as the bartender tod Nod,&#13;
"sometimes we don't upen up on time." It's a&#13;
class bar.&#13;
The pool table was a hotly contested field of&#13;
competition, pinballs bounced their way into&#13;
bells that rang in Nod's head long after he&#13;
finished playing the game, in fact, rang in h is&#13;
tcnute (dcinne'i and eaAy fwemb&#13;
by Jim Koioen, Managing Editor&#13;
Knute Skinner, an American poet who has been&#13;
living in t he bogs of County Claire in Ireland for the&#13;
past nine years, held a poetry reading in the&#13;
Whiteskellar on Tuesday afternoon. The audience,&#13;
consisting of perhaps twenty students, listened&#13;
silently as Skinner read selections from three of his&#13;
published poetry collections including A Close Sky&#13;
Over Killaspuglonane, In Dinosaur Country and&#13;
Stranger with a Watch. The tone of the poems undulated&#13;
between hills of humor and ruts of sentimentalism,&#13;
obscenity and anecdote, and bore such&#13;
self-explanatory titles as "Blackheads," "In&#13;
Praise of Urine," "Phlegm," "October Morning,"&#13;
and "The Beautiful White Cow."&#13;
Brought to Parkside by the Poetry Forum,&#13;
Skinner read with little zeal, reflecting the dearth of&#13;
imagery and metaphor, as well as the often blatant&#13;
conversational tone of his poems. Relying on&#13;
heavyhanded irony as the anvil upon which to pound&#13;
into worthless shapes the baaing of his sheepish&#13;
sentimentalizing, the poet demonstrated a basic&#13;
inability to cope with more than the streetcorner&#13;
obvious as he pointed out, in one of his more striking&#13;
similes, the shared characteristics of piss and flat&#13;
gingerale.&#13;
Skinner, sporting a spiffy goatee flecked with&#13;
gray, who is presently teaching at Washington State&#13;
College, explained that he doesn't "believe in making&#13;
poetry too difficult". Aptly demonstrating his point,&#13;
he read poems whose subjects included his children,&#13;
Irish cows, the Irish landscape and nightshirts, thus&#13;
resurrecting the mud poetry of Rod "the fraud"&#13;
McKuen, laureate of warmed-over mediocrity and&#13;
big bucks, in his own compositions. Again relying on&#13;
irony in order to compensate for a dearth of almost&#13;
everything, Skinner informed the audience that two&#13;
new collections of his poems would soon be unleashed&#13;
for public indigestion. Ho-hum.&#13;
cT&#13;
V K&amp;&#13;
\° *&#13;
&lt;»v /y A°"&#13;
V&#13;
TWO "SOCIE&#13;
OVER SPR&#13;
Featuring Two Na ti&lt;&#13;
Thursday, March 31&#13;
Student Activities E&#13;
Parkside and Wiscc&#13;
and on the following Th&#13;
Milwaukees Own&#13;
Black&#13;
With Their Dynamic Sh&#13;
Thursday, April 6, 9 p .n&#13;
Student Activities Buildi&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin &#13;
March 27,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
%&#13;
I |0ng after the bar closed. At CCR, pits&#13;
of beer go for a reasonable $1.25, while&#13;
11aSses cost 20cents; shots go for 40cents&#13;
mixes 45 cents from an austere selection&#13;
irits. Wine costs 30 cents a glass; 50 cents&#13;
iuffino Chianti, which is a brand few bars&#13;
k. Shorties cost 30 cents while cans go for&#13;
)nts a welcome feature at CCR is the free&#13;
iuts; toward the end Nod cracked them&#13;
, jUS't to re ad his fortune.&#13;
&gt;r Nod , toward the end meant from 10 till&#13;
ng, as his pickled brain finally paid its&#13;
jover dues for an • earlier foray;&#13;
odically he would nod his head in&#13;
gnition of Volpentesta as he chewed his&#13;
off. It was one of them nights.&#13;
ie juke at CCR is, as in most hippy bars,&#13;
quality, flowertops for the most part. The&#13;
itele was composed of hardcore freaks&#13;
enjoy a good time when they drink&#13;
juse they can't afford to go o t a bar simply&#13;
are in the mirror. Free drinks pop up. Al&#13;
I, the bartender, explained to Nod as he&#13;
dy tilted off his axis that the whole reason&#13;
2CR is to get people drunk, and to see that&#13;
•yone has a memorable time.&#13;
; stated earlier, toward the end Nod was&#13;
ler blitzed, his last audible words were&#13;
ided to Loumos, I'm no longer ripped, he&#13;
, I'm ruined. After that, Nod recreated an&#13;
izingly believable portrayal of a zombie.&#13;
&gt;e quite honest, he would be ruined for the&#13;
&gt;wing two days, having run out of the little&#13;
id mind alterer, the asprin. CCR, on its&#13;
i nights, and I assume Nod hit it on a good&#13;
it, is a numbing experience.&#13;
HUGE &amp; WILD DISCOUNTS&#13;
STER EO R E C O R D S &amp; TAPE S&#13;
SPEEDY SERVICE - S END F O B YOUR FREE LI ST&#13;
THE STUD ENT STORE P . O . BOX 6 4&#13;
RED OND O BEACH, CAL IFO RNI A 9 0 2 7 7&#13;
NAME&#13;
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THE WINDJAMMER&#13;
"TENDERLOIN STEAK&#13;
AND TUMBLED ONIONS&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
'Serving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
JN other da y&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DINING&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S CABIN ROOM&#13;
FOR PRIVATE PARTIES&#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 PROXMIRJ=_&#13;
-jjooks J&#13;
University bookstore&#13;
de McUmtieA dtcmd&#13;
Presents&#13;
I&#13;
• IETY" DANCES&#13;
PRING BREAK&#13;
National Recording Artists&#13;
rch 30, 9 p.m. - l a.m.&#13;
ties Building Adm. $1.50&#13;
Wisconsin I.D.s Required&#13;
vg Thursday&#13;
tun&#13;
ck Society&#13;
ic State Show and Soul Sounds&#13;
Q&#13;
9 ?•*. - 1 a.m.&#13;
Budding Adm. $1.50&#13;
onsin I D. Required&#13;
The Spotlight Kid — Captain Beef heart&#13;
from the Music Desk&#13;
Captain Beefheart is either a transcendant&#13;
musical genius or a dilletante with dogged eccentricities&#13;
and a freak voice, depending on who you&#13;
argue with. His fans are mysterious because undefined&#13;
and probably undefinable but certainly a&#13;
small minority, and the popular reaction to mention&#13;
of the Captain's name is distaste.&#13;
Not without some reason. The Captain's earlier&#13;
albums were challenging in their originality to the&#13;
point of endurance and succeeded remarkably in&#13;
polarizing listeners by ambushing the errant ear with&#13;
harsh complexities and impressionist lyrics which&#13;
demanded more attention than the average fan&#13;
wanted to give it. The fact that a good part of the&#13;
audial weirdness was the Captain's unadorned voice&#13;
was interesting but not a selling point. So he didn't&#13;
sell.&#13;
Well, the Captain cooly observed all this and&#13;
retaliated with The Spotlight Kid, the most accessable&#13;
album he's done since 1967, and if ev en this&#13;
album seems hard to get into at first hearing, wait till&#13;
you hear him do his Howlin' Wolf voice on side two.&#13;
The tortured and broken rhythms of his earlier work&#13;
have resolved themselves into lopsided but oddly&#13;
appropriate sketches of the more traditional forms&#13;
he's using here, greasy boogie and free blues&#13;
structures. The Captain's lyrics are mellower, too,&#13;
and he even rhymes a couple words while not losing&#13;
the rush of associations like a movie at triple speed.&#13;
And the Cap's voice charges through its multi-octave&#13;
range which cuts the Doppler Effect to ribbons.&#13;
The first side contains some of the cleanest,&#13;
oddest guitar work this side of the AAothers, a comparison&#13;
strengthened by Ed Marimba's flying mallet&#13;
riffs tripping into many of the cuts reminescent of&#13;
Zappa's munchkin arias. The steel appendage guitar&#13;
is stroked by one Zoot Horn Rollo while Rockette&#13;
Morten wields the bass in the manner of a man&#13;
pouring cement. Over this the Captain lays his pipes&#13;
which must qualify as another instrument for the&#13;
amazing sounds he gets and his mutant Southside&#13;
harmonica. "Alice in Blunderland" finds the Winged&#13;
Eeel fingerling guesting on guitar and spinning such&#13;
hot fuzztone lines that it's really a shame we'll never&#13;
know who he is.&#13;
Side two finds the Captain prowling the edges of&#13;
Chicago blues as his grunts and growls slide up&#13;
through the ionosphere to meet dropping bomb pitch&#13;
throat falling back down. But form is not content. The&#13;
verbal pictures carry themselves out with perfect&#13;
logic in the salty "Grow Fins":&#13;
I'm gonna grow fins&#13;
Go back inna water again&#13;
If yo u don't leave me alone&#13;
I'm gonna take up with a mermaid&#13;
Leave you landlubbin women alone&#13;
Worthy of consideration are "Click Clack" in the&#13;
fine old train song tradition and "There Ain't No&#13;
Santa Clause on the Evening Stage" for its vocal&#13;
rifting around the venerable "ho ho ho".&#13;
If thi s commentary sounds hesitant, it's because&#13;
the Music Desk has only recently suspected that&#13;
Captain Beefheart's music improves with time and&#13;
the album has not been lying on the Desk for a sufficient&#13;
time to make worthy comment possible. Try to&#13;
listen to it and behold a man who knows what he&#13;
wants. &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE March 27,1972&#13;
MONDAY, MAR. 27&#13;
Meeting. Psychology Club. 6:30 to&#13;
9:30 p.m. Greenquist Hall, Room&#13;
106.&#13;
TUESDAY, MAR. 28&#13;
Rap With A Regent. John M. Levine,&#13;
UW Regent, will meet with interested&#13;
students and staff. 10:00 - 1 2&#13;
noon, Greenquist Hall, Whiteskellar.&#13;
Play. Shakespeare's "Twelfth&#13;
Night". Presented by the National&#13;
Shakespeare Company. Sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee. Bradford H.S.&#13;
Auditorium, Kenosha. 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Gen. Adm. $3.00 &amp; $2.00 UW-P&#13;
students and staff $1.50 and $1.00&#13;
Women's Track. At Carthage&#13;
Fieldhouse 4:00 p.m.&#13;
WEDNESDAY,MAR. 29&#13;
Film. "Freaks" and "An Andalusian&#13;
Dog." Sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside Film Society. Greenquist&#13;
Hall, Room 103. 8:00 p.m. Adm. 50c.&#13;
Film Clips. Coming attractions of&#13;
recent films will be shown in order to&#13;
get student input into next year's&#13;
PAB Feature Film Series. Students&#13;
' /v&#13;
&amp; Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
o n S O U T H S H E R I D A N R OAD IN K E N O S HA 6 5 4 - 04 11&#13;
^ M m M&#13;
- - i"h—i—a—u ii—j- —j—j—j—li~_i~i_tij—Lr"i_n_r~Lf~Lj~&gt;_rxj—ltd—u~u&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
V2 Block " "South vw,,,of v. ixKeno ^iivasha iio -Ra rvCcinlonie c Co\ unty 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 - 2 0 W - 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;
slimy creeps in pentagon&#13;
will be asked to indicate preferences.&#13;
Sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Activities Board. Greenquist Hall,&#13;
Whiteskellar. 1:00 to 3:00 p.m.&#13;
THURSDAY, MAR. 30&#13;
Films. Nickelodeon featuring W. C.&#13;
Fields films ("The Great Chase,"&#13;
"The Fatal Glass of Beer," and&#13;
"The Pharmacist.") Sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
Greenquist Hall, Whiteskellar. 12:00&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Dance. "Love Society." Sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
Student Activities Building. 9:00&#13;
p.m. to 1:00 a.m. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin I.D.'s required. Adm.&#13;
$1.50.&#13;
FRIDAY,MAR. 31&#13;
Vacation. Easter Vacation begins.&#13;
Classes resume Monday, April 10.&#13;
THURSDAY, APR. 6&#13;
Dance. "Black Society". Sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Activities Board.&#13;
Student Activities Building. 9:00&#13;
p.m. to 1:00 p.m. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin I.D.'s required. Adm.&#13;
$1.50.&#13;
Dick Gregory Speaks at Carthage&#13;
His voice echoing among the&#13;
basketball hoops and the steel&#13;
girders of the Carthage College&#13;
Fieldhouse, Dick Gregory told&#13;
an audience of about 700 that the&#13;
destiny of America depends&#13;
upon its young people.&#13;
Calling this generation the&#13;
best America has seen, he&#13;
asserted, "Any problem we&#13;
have can be solved by the&#13;
young." He repeatedly contrasted&#13;
them to "the vicious,&#13;
degenerate, stinking, slimy&#13;
creeps in the Pentagon."&#13;
He said these people were old,&#13;
sick, diseased and sexless —'&#13;
"When they wake up in the&#13;
morning, they want to attack&#13;
somebody."&#13;
Gregory, who began in the&#13;
early sixties as a nightclub&#13;
comic, has evolved into one of&#13;
the Movement's leading&#13;
commentators. Regrettably,&#13;
much of his style and finely&#13;
honed delivery was lost in the&#13;
rumblings of the Carthage p.a.&#13;
system.&#13;
His weight down to a lean 99&#13;
pounds (from a high of 288&#13;
pounds) because of his fast&#13;
against the War, he warned&#13;
agoinst polluting the body with&#13;
processed food.&#13;
He stressed, too, dope&#13;
smoking wasn't the anti-social&#13;
act the young think it is — "If&#13;
being cool solved problems,&#13;
niggers would have solved&#13;
theirs 50 years ago."&#13;
He further advised,&#13;
"Everytimeyou got to cement a&#13;
love affair with a reefer, it ain't&#13;
gonna last."&#13;
About George Wallace, he&#13;
said, "If he's as serious about&#13;
bussing as he was about integration,&#13;
why doesn't he stand&#13;
in front of a bus?"&#13;
Lager, he added about busing&#13;
opponents, "Where was their&#13;
concern when they were busing&#13;
black children pass white&#13;
schools to keep them&#13;
segregated?"&#13;
Gregory warned violence was&#13;
not the answer to America's ills.&#13;
He called it a short term&#13;
solution to a long term problem.&#13;
"They want you to be violent,"&#13;
he said. "Then they can handle&#13;
you.&#13;
"Moral force is the one thing&#13;
that scares America, not guns,&#13;
not rifles," he continued.&#13;
Urging the audience to&#13;
research the rise of naziism in&#13;
Germany and its use of terror&#13;
tactics, he suggested, "Look&#13;
around today, and you might&#13;
see the same tactics being&#13;
used."&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
presents&#13;
at the&#13;
PEPSI-COLA i»tetelkr&#13;
JVicJcelodeon&#13;
NOTICE NOTICE&#13;
BREAKFAST 6=A.M. TO 11= A .M.&#13;
Viyf Our Neui, TnsiJe&#13;
C.MC RCCI1&#13;
A&amp;W RESTAURANT&#13;
30th ave. and Roosevelt Road&#13;
i ^ k«.Kosk.^&#13;
Open:&#13;
Mon.thru Thurs. — 6A.M.-11P.M.&#13;
Friday — 6 A.M. to Midnight&#13;
Saturday — 9 A.M. to Midnight&#13;
********* Sunday — 9 A.M. to 11 P .M.&#13;
W.C. FIELDS&#13;
in&#13;
The Great Chase&#13;
The Pharmacist&#13;
The Fatal Glass of Beer&#13;
Thurs. Noon&#13;
Admission - One Nickel&#13;
NEWSCOPE FREE CLASSIFIEDS&#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 saw one. Ph. 652-&#13;
2538 - 553-2496 ask for Jerry.&#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;
Matching Refrigerator (Admiral)&#13;
and Stove (Premier), $125 each,&#13;
olivegreen. 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 — Ski Boots. Ladies, size&#13;
7. Buckle boots made in Austria.&#13;
Worn twice - $20.00. Call 552-8469 -&#13;
ask for Linda.&#13;
SIX SIAMESE KITTENS — pure&#13;
bred - 7 weeks old - cute and&#13;
adorable - m ust have a good home -&#13;
$10.00 each. Call 552-8469 - ask for&#13;
Linda.&#13;
WOMAN'S FUR COAT — Lamb. Ph.&#13;
694-4720. Terry Fuller.&#13;
TYPEWRITER — Smith-Corona&#13;
"Classic 12". 12 inch carriage and&#13;
case. $30.00. Call 658-1249 evenings.&#13;
PERSONALS&#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;
BABYSITTING — mornings. 7:30 -&#13;
12:30. Jones school area - South&#13;
Racine. Ph. 554-7538 after 1 p.m.&#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;
RIDE NEEDED — to New York or&#13;
thereabouts on March 30th at noon.&#13;
Call 564-1684 after 9 p.m. if headed&#13;
that way.&#13;
LOST — Brown wallet in Student&#13;
Union last Friday. I need the papers,&#13;
you can keep the money. Please&#13;
return to the information center. No&#13;
questions asked.&#13;
FREE KITTENS — (Good Eastergift)&#13;
6 weeks old, litter-trained, used&#13;
to children. Black and white male,&#13;
black and gray "tiger-striped"&#13;
female, and a multi-color -"calico"&#13;
female. Call 634-6215 evenings, or&#13;
553-2121 ext. 20 days.&#13;
WANTED — Scrap lead pipe an&#13;
fittings. Congact George Meteskv &#13;
Trackmen to Compete&#13;
March 27,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
Two UW-Parkside spring&#13;
sports teams will head south&#13;
this week to prepare for the&#13;
outdoor campaigns up north.&#13;
The Ranger track squad will&#13;
head for Arkansas and run in&#13;
the Arkansas Relays Saturday,&#13;
while the golf squad will travel&#13;
to Tampa, Fla., and practice&#13;
there for a week.&#13;
The Ranger trackmen also&#13;
will face Arkansas Tech and&#13;
Arkansas A.M.&amp;N. in a&#13;
triangular before returning&#13;
home April 7 for the USTFF&#13;
Indoor Meet April 8 in Madiosn.&#13;
The trackmen will be facing&#13;
some rugged competition down&#13;
souty. More teams are making&#13;
the southern treks regularly&#13;
each year and teams the likes of&#13;
Drake, Minnesota, Indiana,&#13;
Harvard and many others have&#13;
been competing the last two&#13;
weeks in Louisiana, Texas and&#13;
Arkansas.&#13;
Distances are expected to be&#13;
the Rangers' forte in the south,&#13;
with freshman Lucian Rosa due&#13;
to get some big tests against&#13;
major college competition.&#13;
Rosa will run the three mile, six&#13;
mile and marathon this outdoor&#13;
season.&#13;
Track coach Bob Lawson was&#13;
unsure as to who would make&#13;
the trip but among men expected&#13;
to travel and see plenty&#13;
of action were Jim McFadden,&#13;
Steve Erspamer, Dennis Biel&#13;
and Leonard Bullock. All have&#13;
been mainstays for the Rangers&#13;
during the indoor season and&#13;
PAID F O R BY ED W ARD R EMICK&#13;
8719 SHERIDA N RD. KENOSHA&#13;
if you are&#13;
18&#13;
or over&#13;
get out and&#13;
VOTE&#13;
YOU ASKED FOR&#13;
IT N OW U SE IT&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave. .&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Lawson wuj look to them for&#13;
relay help on the southern tour.&#13;
l he golfers, coached by Steve&#13;
Stephens, will attempt to get&#13;
their game sorted out and&#13;
ih!f&#13;
are !°L 3 rugged season&#13;
that includes such foes as&#13;
Northern Illinois. WisnnnC;„_&#13;
HEARING&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
University ID from any state&#13;
campus, Mochon replied that it&#13;
was partly a problem of limited&#13;
space in the existing facility.&#13;
She explained there simply isn't&#13;
en°&#13;
ugh space to accommodate&#13;
all college students with the&#13;
same privileges UWP students&#13;
possess.&#13;
When the question arose&#13;
concerning the extent of&#13;
responsibility an organization&#13;
incurs when conducting a&#13;
function on University&#13;
property, Mochon answered&#13;
after a brief debate, that it was&#13;
possible University insurance&#13;
would cover any damages&#13;
which may be incurred during&#13;
club functions; she commented&#13;
that the University "can't sue&#13;
the_French Club" for damages&#13;
it may incur during a dance.&#13;
Knight stated that the matter of&#13;
an organization's responsibility&#13;
for the safety of University&#13;
facilities must be clarified&#13;
further.&#13;
The hearing was concluded&#13;
rather haphazardly when the&#13;
participants trickled off, one by&#13;
one, soon after one o'clock, It&#13;
was generally agreed that&#13;
further recommendations and&#13;
Madison, Northwestern and&#13;
Bradley.&#13;
The tennis squad, coached by&#13;
Dick Frecka, will not head&#13;
south but has been practicing&#13;
indoors for much of the year&#13;
and should be in good shape for&#13;
a season with a loaded schednlP&#13;
are still clarifications&#13;
necessary.&#13;
TODAY&#13;
Continued from Page 1)&#13;
same purpose, as the editors&#13;
had repeatedly requested&#13;
student input. "I was told&#13;
Newscope was presented with&#13;
the idea," Mr. Lienau replied.&#13;
As to the source of their funds,&#13;
Mr. Lienau explained, "The&#13;
whole thing is paid for by the&#13;
state, not publicly funded."&#13;
Concerning the possibility of&#13;
conflict between Parkside&#13;
Today and Newscope Rudy&#13;
stated, "In so far as duplication&#13;
of stories is concerned I feel&#13;
they will conflict." He justified&#13;
his last statement by saying,&#13;
"In comparison with Newscope,&#13;
we present a different view in&#13;
the sense that we are less prone&#13;
to criticize Parkside, and more&#13;
prone towards the administration."&#13;
&#13;
Finally, when questioned as&#13;
to whether there were any&#13;
changes planned for his&#13;
publication, Mr. Lienau answered,&#13;
"Yes, I definitely plan&#13;
to broaden the publication by&#13;
including some feature articles&#13;
and hopefully student contributions&#13;
and also more news&#13;
stories."&#13;
Senouif the fyinedt&#13;
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KENOSHA, WISCONSIN &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE March 27,1972&#13;
SCOOPERBOWL&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of t he Newscope staff&#13;
The old man suddenly starts&#13;
banging on the piano and before&#13;
you know it everybody is&#13;
standing up and singing&#13;
There's a moment of co nfusion.&#13;
What's happening? You're&#13;
startled.&#13;
It's strange to be in the Elk's&#13;
club in the first place, and to be&#13;
sitting in the midst of a Kiwanis&#13;
luncheon makes it positively&#13;
weird. And the music — oh,&#13;
wow. It comes to you like a bolt.&#13;
America the Beautiful.&#13;
Henry "Scoop" Jackson, the&#13;
Senator from Washington, the&#13;
longshot entry in the&#13;
Democratic presidential derby.&#13;
He's about to make his initial&#13;
campaign speech in Kenosha.&#13;
But first there's the pledge of&#13;
allegiance, the benediction, a&#13;
few songs by an accordion&#13;
player, and an introduction by&#13;
the President of the Kiwanis&#13;
club.&#13;
Lying in your stomach,&#13;
uneasily at that, in the meantime,&#13;
is some meat loaf and its&#13;
accompanying sauce. The stuff&#13;
is wicked. It reminds you of&#13;
some cheap Salisbury steak you&#13;
had once that greased you out&#13;
for a day and a half.&#13;
Henry Jackson is busy&#13;
making small talk with the&#13;
people at the head table. He's a&#13;
friendly man, smiling comes&#13;
easy to him. He nods vigorously&#13;
as he converses. You take a&#13;
liking to him. He can be trusted,&#13;
you decide.&#13;
He's coming off a third place&#13;
finish in the surprising Florida&#13;
primary where he gathered 13&#13;
per cent of the vote to Wallace's&#13;
42 per cent and Humphrey's 18&#13;
per cent. But he beat Muskie,&#13;
and as the most moderate of the&#13;
Democratic liberals he has a&#13;
potential audience as large as&#13;
any of the front runners. It's&#13;
just a matter of becoming&#13;
known . . .&#13;
"Wisconsin voters are&#13;
stubborn, independent people,"'&#13;
he tells the businessmen. "Just&#13;
like the people in Washington."&#13;
His campaign literature&#13;
compares him to Harry&#13;
Truman, and he works hard to&#13;
cultivate the image.&#13;
The overiding issue of the&#13;
campaign, he says, is the&#13;
economy. It touches so many&#13;
aspects of daily life: inflation,&#13;
taxes, welfare. "We have the&#13;
greatest economic system in the&#13;
world, properly managed,&#13;
properly handled," he stresses.&#13;
He cuts hard into Nixon: "We&#13;
have had phony price controls.&#13;
Crime is a major issue, he&#13;
states. The other candidates&#13;
gloss over it. He ticks off a three&#13;
point program: speed up the&#13;
administration of justice; penal&#13;
reform — "We better be concerned&#13;
because we're turning&#13;
out hardened criminals right&#13;
now," and more&#13;
professionalism in police work.&#13;
He switches the focus of the&#13;
speech now. His delivery slows.&#13;
"I believe in a strong&#13;
presidency," he says. "I believe&#13;
it's important to look at the man&#13;
as well as the issues. You have&#13;
to find out if the candidates tell&#13;
it how it is. You'll know where&#13;
Scoop Jackson stands," he&#13;
concludes. It was an effective&#13;
members resigned, he says.&#13;
Nixon only wanted to give&#13;
appearance of wage-price&#13;
stabilization.&#13;
"I have here a waffle iron,"&#13;
he says, pointing to it. "It is&#13;
waffling on part of the president&#13;
that caused the resignations. It&#13;
was a failure to take a tough&#13;
position and to stay with it in&#13;
order to bring about wage and&#13;
price stabilization. This is an&#13;
example of weak leadership, of&#13;
what can happen when you&#13;
waffle."&#13;
(For what it's worth, a&#13;
definition of waffle is: a batter&#13;
cake with a grid of deep indentations&#13;
formed by baking it&#13;
in a metal appliance having two&#13;
We have had phony wage&#13;
guidelines. We need sound&#13;
economic direction in this&#13;
country." Looking across the&#13;
room, he checks for support.&#13;
He moves on to unemployment&#13;
— "we have never&#13;
before had such qualitative&#13;
unemployment. Ph.D.'s are&#13;
pumping gas." The federal&#13;
government should take over&#13;
the management of welfare, he&#13;
says. Training programs should&#13;
be established. Day care centers&#13;
should be set up.&#13;
He talks forcefully to the&#13;
audience as they listen, to him.&#13;
This will be his best campaigning&#13;
of the day. He calls for&#13;
larger federal assistance to&#13;
education. Education and&#13;
welfare hit local property taxes&#13;
the most, he points out. His&#13;
programs would reduce the&#13;
burden of property taxes.&#13;
speech and he's applauded&#13;
warmly.&#13;
Next, it's to the Holiday Inn&#13;
for a press conference. The&#13;
Secret Service Men are in&#13;
evidence here. They're unfriendly&#13;
fellows, grim and&#13;
taciturn — it's as though they're&#13;
all nursing stomach ulcers.&#13;
They all have tiny buttonlike&#13;
triangles on their lapels. Sort of&#13;
like the logo Citgo uses, except&#13;
they're black, white and blue.&#13;
The men eye everybody&#13;
suspiciously and some of them&#13;
have tubes running into their&#13;
ears — radios of some sort. One&#13;
of them sits in the limousine&#13;
reading the Valacchi Papers.&#13;
For some reason there is a&#13;
waffle iron by the podium.&#13;
Jackson begins by cutting into&#13;
Nixon again. He calls the wage&#13;
price freeze a tinkertoy&#13;
operation. That's why the labor&#13;
hinged parts . . . addenda: the&#13;
Time article on the Florida&#13;
primary described Hubert&#13;
Humphrey as having waffled on&#13;
the busing issue, so . . .)&#13;
— "Attention, bowlers,&#13;
Senator Jackson and Mrs. Mary&#13;
Lou Schneider are now bowling&#13;
on lane 38." The Senator had&#13;
walked across the street from&#13;
the Holiday Inn to Guttormsen's&#13;
to bowl a few frames before&#13;
leaving to go to American&#13;
Motors to meet the workers&#13;
when the shifts changed.&#13;
A woman's league is playing&#13;
and a gaggle of excited&#13;
housewives are busy fluttering&#13;
about. The television lights are&#13;
set up and the Senator takes off&#13;
his grey suit coat.&#13;
There is a slight paunch to&#13;
him, but yet he is handsome.&#13;
When he's not talking politics&#13;
there is a twinkle in his eyes and&#13;
W WW iyi RW ft* M M ft* RW M M W* ** W* Rrt RW P.* R* RW ft* RW RW Wrt ** RW WA pm HJH im mi HJI HJI M w w w,&#13;
"Your vacation party headquarters"&#13;
PABST r 12 pack $2.19&#13;
MICHELOB 6 pack $1.39&#13;
A —2qts. f or $ 9.35 ristocrat Brandy —&#13;
New Yorker&#13;
Champagne and Cold Duck —&#13;
Mateus Rose Wine —&#13;
^2-19&#13;
,/! M.98&#13;
Would your clufe or organization&#13;
like a&#13;
Wine Tasting&#13;
Contact Mr. Cook, 637-4101 „&#13;
'/&#13;
2gal&#13;
$1.77&#13;
Gallo wines&#13;
Rhinegarten&#13;
Vin Rose&#13;
Chianti&#13;
Spanada&#13;
PRICES GOOD THROUGH SAT.. APF^IL 1ST.&#13;
IN RACINE AT WESTGATE ON HIGHWAY 20, WASHINGTON AVENUE AND OHIO STREET"&#13;
DAILY 9 A.1VL TO 9:30 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY • SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M,&#13;
an easy smile. He circulates&#13;
among the sparse crowd&#13;
shaking hands, introducing&#13;
himself. He talks to the women&#13;
he is to bowl with, and then rolls&#13;
up his sleeves and selects a ball.&#13;
He sets himself, approaches&#13;
the line and lets go. Two&#13;
bounces arid the ball is slicing&#13;
off to the left. The Senator is&#13;
very definitely not a bowler. A&#13;
1-5 sleeper. His next ball is&#13;
gutter-bound to the right.&#13;
Marshall Simonsen, the&#13;
photographer for the Kenosha&#13;
News, sets himself midway&#13;
down the alley now. He's going&#13;
to get himself some alright&#13;
shots of the Senator. Jackson,&#13;
still smiling, lets go with&#13;
another hefty two bouncer, and&#13;
misses Marsh by about four&#13;
inches. Hotdamn, Marsh mush&#13;
have said to himself.&#13;
Jackson bowls a few more&#13;
frames and then quits to press&#13;
the flesh a little more. There's&#13;
not many people here and soon&#13;
he leaves to go shower.&#13;
What do you think of S enator&#13;
Jackson, Mrs. Schneider is&#13;
asked.&#13;
"He seems to be a very nice&#13;
person," she replys. "I enjoyed&#13;
talking to him."&#13;
Will you vote for him?&#13;
For a moment there is indecision.&#13;
"Probably," she&#13;
answers.&#13;
For Senator Jackson it turned&#13;
out to be a low key half day of&#13;
campaigning in Kenosha. The&#13;
subsequent coverage of the&#13;
Kenosha News, a picture with&#13;
no story buried in the inside&#13;
pages, magnified the lack of&#13;
exposure.&#13;
The fate of the presidential&#13;
aspirations of the man both&#13;
Lyndon Johnson and Richard&#13;
Nixon wanted in their cabinets&#13;
seems uncertain. Time will give&#13;
him his answer.&#13;
"K ' &lt; 1 ^ —;&#13;
v Hiqhest Bar in K^nos/ia&#13;
UPSTAIRS&#13;
Peopled Hours -&#13;
We d s. *7-/0 Sun. l~ 6&#13;
/2 02. B OTTLE B EER&#13;
* HIGHBALLS 35 t&#13;
live Mustc ~z ,&#13;
Fri. 5dt.&#13;
ACROSS FROM TttZ&#13;
lAfKB Ttt£Al£ R&#13;
•mAnnnnnnnnnniinimiiniiminiinnniiniiniiniiniiniinnnitftiinimiinnruumruwuiruuuuuwuuuiruuuum^yM^^^t^ysST^&#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 </text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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    </elementContainer>
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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63720">
              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 12, March 27, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="41">
          <name>Description</name>
          <description>An account of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63721">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="40">
          <name>Date</name>
          <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63722">
              <text>1972-03-27</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="42">
          <name>Format</name>
          <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="63725">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63726">
              <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="63727">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="51">
          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="63728">
              <text>Text</text>
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        <element elementId="45">
          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63729">
              <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="63730">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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    <tag tagId="217">
      <name>campus concerns committee</name>
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    <tag tagId="255">
      <name>marion mochon</name>
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