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            <text>SGA replies to CCC</text>
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            <text>The Electric Last Minute is a new feature. Any Parkside club,&#13;
organization, or group wishing to place a news item in this column is&#13;
asked to present the typed copy to Paul Lomartire in care of the&#13;
Newscope Offices before 4 p.m. on each Thursday for the following&#13;
Tuesday edition.&#13;
6&#13;
" 200 1: A Space Odyssey"&#13;
Space age travel authority, science fiction writer and inventor&#13;
Arthur C. Clarke will speak at Parkside on April 20th at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist Hall. The topic of the free lecture will be "Life in the&#13;
Year 2000", sponsored by the UW-Parkside Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee.&#13;
Author of "Reminiscences&#13;
of Norma" to Read&#13;
Martin Seymour-Smith, a London-born poet, teacher, lecturer and&#13;
free-lance writer who is a visiting professor of English this year at&#13;
Parkside, will read from his poems at a free public program sponsored&#13;
by the Parkside Poetry Forum at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, April&#13;
19, in the Greenquist Hall Whiteskellar.&#13;
Professor Seymour-Smith is the author of four books of poems,&#13;
the most recent, "Reminiscences of Norma", published in 1971. He&#13;
also has written several books of literary criticism and the soon-tobe-published&#13;
"Guide to Modern World Literature."&#13;
Herbert Kubly to "Hodag" Country&#13;
Herbert Kubly, professor of English at Parkside, has been&#13;
named writer-in-residence at the ninth annual two-week summer&#13;
Rhinelander School of Arts July 17 through 28 sponsored by UWExtension&#13;
Arts.&#13;
Professor Kubly, an award-winning author and playwright, will&#13;
conduct a series of seminars at the school's Writer's Workshop,&#13;
which has become one of the nation's foremost gathering places for&#13;
authors.&#13;
Other workshop instructors will include Robert Gard, on&#13;
play writing; Hoke Norris, Fiction; Marion Fuller Archer, writing&#13;
for children; Edna Meudt, poetry; Jerry Apps. article writing; and&#13;
Dale O'Brien, photography for writers.&#13;
Registration information from the Writer's Workshop can be&#13;
obtained from UW-Extension Arts 610 Langdon Street, Madison, or&#13;
from Professor Kubly.&#13;
Earth Week Speaker&#13;
Senator Gaylord Nelson (DEM. Wis.) will present an Earth Week&#13;
lecture, An Inventory of Environmental Concerns," to be followed&#13;
by a question and answer session, at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, April&#13;
19th, in Greenquist Hall. p&#13;
Senator Nelson was a founder of the original Earth Week two&#13;
years ago His campus visit is sponsored by the Parkside Lecture&#13;
and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
Buddy is Back&#13;
Parkside's Activities Board announced the ticket prices and date&#13;
for this year's Buddy Rich Concert. Reserved tickets (General admission&#13;
$2.50 and $3.50, Parkside students $2. and $3.) are available&#13;
at the Student Activities Office in Tallent Hall.&#13;
The concert will be April 22nd, at the Bradford High School&#13;
Auditorium in Kenosha at eight p.m. Each Parkside student will be&#13;
allowed to buy one student priced ticket per identification card&#13;
presented at the Activities Office.&#13;
Alternative Candidates find it&#13;
Difficult to get on Ballot&#13;
(CPS) — Socialist Workers&#13;
Party candidate for President,&#13;
Linda Jennes, has protested a&#13;
threat by Ohio Secretary of&#13;
State Ted W. Brown to rule her&#13;
off that state's November&#13;
presidential ballot.&#13;
Brown says that he "will not&#13;
be able" to put Jenness on the&#13;
ballot unless she states that she&#13;
is at least 35 years old. Ms.&#13;
Jenness is 31.&#13;
Jenness, in answering&#13;
Brown's notification of her&#13;
potential ineligibility, stated&#13;
that though the Constitution&#13;
states that the President must&#13;
be 35 years old, there is no age&#13;
requirement for running for&#13;
that office. She further stated&#13;
that the Constitutional age&#13;
requirement is "totally out of&#13;
line with today's political&#13;
reality" and that Brown's move&#13;
was "motivated by partisan&#13;
political interests."&#13;
9,767 signatures were filed on&#13;
behalf of Jenness in Columbus&#13;
before the February 2 filing&#13;
deadline. 5,000 signatures are&#13;
required by law.&#13;
M e a n w h i l e , U . S.&#13;
Representative John Ashbrook&#13;
may contest his elimination&#13;
from the Indiana primary slate.&#13;
Ashbrook has been ruled off&#13;
that state's ballot because he&#13;
had fallen short of the 500&#13;
required voters' signatures&#13;
from each district.&#13;
Ashbrook is the conservative&#13;
Republican challenging&#13;
President Nixon in the&#13;
Republican "race".&#13;
A spokesman for Ashbrook&#13;
said that enough signatures&#13;
were gathered in each district,&#13;
but that election officials had&#13;
ruled many of them invalid. He&#13;
said that Ashbrook would&#13;
probably appeal to the state&#13;
elections board, but would&#13;
probably not carry the dispute&#13;
any further if that appeal fails.&#13;
SGA replies t o C CC&#13;
The latest Student Government&#13;
meeting held in room 103&#13;
at Greenquist on Monday, April&#13;
10, heard reports on teacher&#13;
evaluation, the literature table&#13;
and the grievance committee,&#13;
and also acted on the Symposium,&#13;
appointed a Committee&#13;
on Admission Policy, and issued&#13;
a statement to the Campus&#13;
Concerns Committee.&#13;
SGA approved the following&#13;
statement to the CCC: "The&#13;
CCC should drop any mention of&#13;
qualifications for a candidate to&#13;
hold a student government&#13;
office other than is stated in the&#13;
SGA constitution." This&#13;
statement was issued in&#13;
response to the proposed rules&#13;
and regulations to be included&#13;
in the Student Handbook.&#13;
Elaine Birch moved and Tom&#13;
United Latinos&#13;
Organize&#13;
United Latinos Coalition of&#13;
Parkside, a newly formed&#13;
chapter of the United Latinos&#13;
students of the University&#13;
system of Wisconsin.&#13;
This organization is formed&#13;
for the purpose of creating selfawareness&#13;
among the Latino&#13;
students on the Parkside&#13;
campus, and is seeking to involve&#13;
all Latino students in an&#13;
effort to improve conditions on&#13;
the campus.&#13;
The first gathering of the&#13;
group will occur on Monday,&#13;
April 24, at 7 P.M. at the home&#13;
of Carmen Nute, 1629 South&#13;
Wisconsin St., Racine.&#13;
The faculty representative for&#13;
the organization is Dr. John Van&#13;
Willigin of the Anthropology&#13;
Department.&#13;
Haack seconded a motion to&#13;
grant the budget request for a&#13;
tentative amount of $1,200 to&#13;
come out of fund 128 to finance&#13;
various portions of SYMPOSIUM.&#13;
The motion was&#13;
passed with 14 votes for an 2&#13;
opposed. Tom Haack, Bruce&#13;
Volpintesta, and Jim Twist&#13;
were appointed to the SYMPOSIUM&#13;
committee.&#13;
Mike Lofton reported on the&#13;
progress of the teacher&#13;
evaluation project. A special&#13;
committee was formed to&#13;
decide on the effectiveness of&#13;
implementation of the teacher&#13;
evaluation if instituted before&#13;
the end of the semester. Mike&#13;
Lofton will chair the group&#13;
which includes Jim Bielfeldt,&#13;
Elaine Birch, Ken Konkol,&#13;
Bruce Volpintesta, and Jim&#13;
Symposium To&#13;
Begin Monday&#13;
The tentative schedule for the&#13;
upcoming Symposium sponsored&#13;
by Student Government&#13;
has been released. Dean&#13;
Loumos, President of SGA&#13;
emphasized that "some of the&#13;
speakers may be changed&#13;
because of other committments,"&#13;
but all activities&#13;
will run as scheduled.&#13;
The tentative schedule is as&#13;
follows:&#13;
Twist.&#13;
Concerning the literature&#13;
table in the Activities Building,&#13;
SGA President Dean Loumos&#13;
reported that a telephone will be&#13;
available for student use in&#13;
local calls. Newspapers which&#13;
will be available for sale at the&#13;
table include: The Racine Star,&#13;
The Wisconsin Patriot, The&#13;
Midnight Special and the Black&#13;
Panther paper.&#13;
Elaine Birch was given the&#13;
responsibility of setting up a&#13;
grievance committee with the&#13;
Parkside police. A motion was&#13;
passed to fund the purchase of&#13;
several pencil sharpeners for&#13;
the Greenquist Hall concourse.&#13;
The meeting was attended by&#13;
18 senators and officers, and&#13;
lasted over an hour.&#13;
TUESDAY, APR. 18&#13;
ZPG&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APR. 19&#13;
Penal Institutions 7:00 p.m.,&#13;
Cell Block Circus Players,&#13;
Project Acceptance - John&#13;
Jude Ex-Cons.&#13;
THURSDAY, APR. 20&#13;
Model Structures for Community&#13;
Organizing. Urgan&#13;
Concern - Fr. Murtaugh.&#13;
Urban League - Morris&#13;
J o h n s o n. S.- Sid e&#13;
Revitalization - Larry Hunt.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APR. 26&#13;
Women's Liberation.&#13;
Women's Caucus&#13;
THURSDAY, APR. 27&#13;
Radical Political Organizing.&#13;
Wisconsin Alliance&#13;
Madison. R.Y.M. - People's&#13;
Bookstore. Paul Soglin&#13;
Madison Alderman. Film&#13;
'Community Control'&#13;
TUESDAY, MAY 2&#13;
Living Theatre. Theatre X.&#13;
FRIDAY,MAY5&#13;
'Going Away Party' for&#13;
Racine Campus. Chicago&#13;
Blues Band.&#13;
SATURDAY,MAY 6&#13;
SUNDAY, MAY 7&#13;
Film Festival. Vogue&#13;
Theatre.&#13;
MONDAY, MAY 8&#13;
Black Cultural Day. Julian&#13;
Bond. Tony Courtney, Racine&#13;
Star. Ed Hales, UW-Regent.&#13;
Julian Thomas, NAACP.&#13;
Rocky Taylor, Black&#13;
Revolutionary Poet. Black&#13;
Panther.&#13;
You Deserve A Break Today, In the Name of Alice&#13;
Right After We Clear&#13;
That Forest Away&#13;
(CPS) — A study by Housewives Involved in&#13;
Pollution Solutions (HIPS) disclosed that the&#13;
McDonald s hamburger people have used up three&#13;
billion kilowatt hours and 890 square miles of&#13;
forest just to make the paper cups, bags, wrappers&#13;
napkins, etc., necessary for eight billion&#13;
hamburgers.&#13;
(CPS) — Alice Cooper, rock singer extraordinary,&#13;
has performed a wedding ceremony&#13;
in Atlanta, Georgia, as a preacher.&#13;
He joined in holy and probably illegal&#13;
matrimony Smokey Frisch and Debbie Bost.&#13;
Alice made up the vows as he went along,&#13;
using r Mad magazine instead of a Bible and inS&#13;
f&#13;
oke&#13;
y ana "ebbie wear lampshades&#13;
on their heads.&#13;
The marriage certificate was written on a&#13;
sheet of Holiday Inn stationery. &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE April 17,1972&#13;
PAB Sponsors&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
at the&#13;
MARTIN&#13;
SEYMOURSMITH&#13;
&#13;
Visiting professor&#13;
noted Author &amp; Poet&#13;
1:00 PM April 19&#13;
H We can aid and assist •&#13;
a limited number of&#13;
qualified senior or&#13;
graduate students to&#13;
9ain&#13;
admission&#13;
for the session starting&#13;
fall 1 972 in recognized&#13;
medical&#13;
schools&#13;
overseas&#13;
We offer the following program:&#13;
an intensive 8 week&#13;
orientation and highly concentrated&#13;
technical language instruction.&#13;
(90% of the difficulty&#13;
in attending &amp; r emaining&#13;
in a foreign school is the language&#13;
barrier.) The intensive&#13;
programs are given in the&#13;
country where you will a ttend&#13;
medical school.&#13;
For the qualified students who&#13;
wish to partake of this program,&#13;
admission can be secured&#13;
to a recognized European&#13;
Medical School.&#13;
group&#13;
interviews&#13;
&amp; seminars&#13;
in the follow ing areas&#13;
Call toll tree&#13;
(800) 6,15-12.V,&#13;
lor further information&#13;
and to register&#13;
ATLANTA - Sat , Apr. 22&#13;
Hyatt H ouse, 10:00 a.m.&#13;
See Mr. Ellman&#13;
CHICAGO — Fri., Apr. 21&#13;
Playboy Towers, 10:00 a.m.&#13;
See Mr. Schrager&#13;
COLUMBUS - Thurs., Apr. 20&#13;
Holiday Inn D owntown, 12:00 noon&#13;
See Mr. Schrager&#13;
CORAL GABLES - Sun., Apr. 23&#13;
University Inn , 2:30 p.m .&#13;
See Mr. Ellman&#13;
DALLAS - Sat., Apr. 22&#13;
Hyatt Ho use, 9:00 a.m .&#13;
See Mr. Schrager&#13;
HOUSTON - Sun., Apr. 23&#13;
Sonesta Hous e, 11:00 a. m.&#13;
See Mr. Schrager&#13;
LAS VEGAS — Mon., Apr. 24&#13;
Stardust, 11 :00 a.m .&#13;
See Mr. Levine&#13;
L.A.—ANAHEIM - Sat., Apr. 22&#13;
Hyatt H ouse, Anaheim, 11: 00 a.m.&#13;
See Mr. Levine&#13;
SAN FRANCISCO-Fri., Apr. 21&#13;
Hilton Towers, 11:00 a.m.&#13;
See Mr, Levine&#13;
SAN JUAN, P .R. — Tues., Apr. 25&#13;
Caribe Hilton, 11:30 a.m.&#13;
See Mr. Ellman&#13;
Write for further in formation&#13;
EUROPEAN MEDICAL&#13;
students placement service, inc.&#13;
3 McKinley Avenue,&#13;
Albertson. N.Y. 11507&#13;
There is no charge for application&#13;
form and interview&#13;
bitoRIAL&#13;
Last week we ran a story concerning the death by strangulation&#13;
of the Vogue Theater. It was strangled by Kenosha's "hip" subculture.&#13;
In Kenosha the word "hip" is spelled "hype". Kenosha&#13;
culture obviously suffers from senility, the disease is especially&#13;
prevalent among the young. The city has become a trap for artists,&#13;
writers and musicians, and it's set by the very people who claim to&#13;
support them.&#13;
On the other hand, Parkside is suffering the pains of maturing,&#13;
though at times it seems retarded. UWP in plain fact is unable to&#13;
adequately support a student newspaper. It has aaMAjNicATiac&#13;
department that is unable to interest its students in (student)&#13;
journalism; it has creative writing classes that can't stimulate&#13;
people to write creatively, except perhaps for one of the first four&#13;
letters in the alphabet.&#13;
These faults are admittedly in part caused by Parkside's&#13;
growing pains. Yes, there are going to be errors made, and maybe&#13;
that's good if we learn from them and correct them. To this date&#13;
Parkside's biggest error is in student journalism; the paper is&#13;
floundering due to $3,000 of unpaid accounts receivable; it is running&#13;
aground because only five people work with any consistency to put&#13;
an issue out each week; it is slowly sinking because the campus&#13;
community refuses to realize that a student newspaper is in the interests&#13;
of all members of the University.&#13;
We II put NEWSCOPE out til the end of the semester because&#13;
we're all crazy. But after that, NEWSCOPE will not have a single&#13;
trained layout man, not one person with managerial experience,&#13;
possibly two writers with experience and maybe one photographer.&#13;
And these people, if they stay with NEWSCOPE if it remains in the&#13;
same incredibly frustrating position it is now, they're crazier than I&#13;
am.&#13;
NEWSCOPE needs immediately a meaningful and productive&#13;
liaison with the journalism classes; it needs more people willing to&#13;
work for the paper.&#13;
Parkside students will deserve whatever they get, and that will&#13;
probably be nothing for a long time.&#13;
Presently, Parkside is a baby dinosaur, lumbering for a few&#13;
steps in the right direction and then falling flat on its ass, wallowing&#13;
for a while as it thinks to itself that it is already a real University. But&#13;
Parkside is still a baby dinosaur with a hard skin and myopia, and&#13;
I'm just a crazy editor who knows a dinosaur when he sees one. It's&#13;
just that a real University, a real student body, would never let its&#13;
student newspaper wither without a fight.&#13;
* * * * *&#13;
This is an editorial concerning an editorial. For the opinions&#13;
expressed above, I could be again criticized for "tearing down the&#13;
University". How can you tear down something that hasn't been built&#13;
yet; how can I really put down students when students haven't found&#13;
out who or what they are; how can I tear down an administration&#13;
that, for all practical purposes, exists in another dimension concerning&#13;
the overwhelming problems now faced" by NEWSCOPE?&#13;
Criticism is easy and NEWSCOPE has admittedly taken the easy&#13;
way out, simply for that reason. But those are rare instances; the&#13;
editorial above is critical because them's da facks. We would sincerely&#13;
like to report the "good news" that emanates from the&#13;
campus community, but with a writing staff of three or four regular&#13;
reporters, who must double on features, layout, advertising and&#13;
management, we just can't possibly cover the many good things that&#13;
happen, for the simple reason we lack the personnel.&#13;
So, NEWSCOPE asks any club or organization which desires&#13;
publicity for its activities, to please send press releases directly to&#13;
us. We take this measure reluctantly because ideally, all events&#13;
should be covered by regular staff reporters. But we can't, it's as&#13;
simple as that. So no more complaints on that ground; we've given&#13;
you the facts as they stand, and the responsibility is yours to tell us&#13;
what's happening with your organization. It's a student newspaper&#13;
so use it.&#13;
Beginning this week organizations may submit press releases to&#13;
The Electric Last Minute, a new feature — public service presented&#13;
by NEWSCOPE for the benefit of the campus community.&#13;
Rise to face UN other day&#13;
OA/ tht LAK£&#13;
SPORTS QAR&#13;
: H W Y 3 Z&#13;
M L A Y P O O L - P O O S B A L L&#13;
B AR - S A A / O u / / C H £ S&#13;
' package c&gt;oot&gt;s . .&#13;
(we l come NEW AJOULTS'O '&#13;
. S A A / 6 S — S / ) A / £ ) S J P A / f i S ..&#13;
Y e s fri e n d s , NEWSCOPE is a g ain p u b l i s h i ng a&#13;
pho to e d iti o n a n d is a s k i ng a l l y o u ph o tob u g s o u t&#13;
ther e to s u b m it your h a n d i w o r k. P h oto gra p h s w h i c h&#13;
are a c c e pte d for p u b l ica tio n w i l l be jud g e d on com p&#13;
o s iti o n , a nd a p t n e s s of tho ugh t. D e a d l i n e is T h ur&#13;
s d a y , A p ril 2 7 . D o not m i s s i t ; y o u m a y win a v o m i t b a g .&#13;
America Moving&#13;
to Canada&#13;
OTTAWA (CPS) - The&#13;
United States was the largest&#13;
source of Canadian immigrants&#13;
last year, the Canadian Bureau&#13;
of Manpower and Immigration&#13;
reported March 30.&#13;
The agency said that for the&#13;
first time the United States was&#13;
the major source country in&#13;
1971, contributing 24,366 persons&#13;
or 20 per cent of the total immigration&#13;
movement.&#13;
While U.S. immigrants to&#13;
Canada remained the same in&#13;
1971 as in 1970, total Canadian&#13;
immigration declined 18 per&#13;
cent to 121,900 persons. "The&#13;
decline in immigration in 1971&#13;
"reflects reduced employment&#13;
opportunities in Canada&#13;
because of economic conditions,"&#13;
Manpower and Immigration&#13;
Minister Bryce&#13;
Mackasey said.&#13;
"strong economic conditions&#13;
in most of western Europe," he&#13;
continued, "were also a factor&#13;
in reducing emigration from&#13;
that area."&#13;
The flow of immigrants from&#13;
Britain decline 41 per cent from&#13;
1970 to 1971. By contrast, immigrants&#13;
from the U.S. totaled&#13;
24,424 in 1970, only 58 more than&#13;
the following year.&#13;
Lack of decline in the U.S.&#13;
figure is probably attributable&#13;
to draft evasion and the bleak&#13;
economic and employment&#13;
picture.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
Enand&#13;
&#13;
in&#13;
MONDAY, APR. 17&#13;
Concert. UW-P music&#13;
students will present at&#13;
concert at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts&#13;
Room. Free.&#13;
TUESDAY, APR. 18&#13;
Film. Feature film&#13;
"Metropolis" will be&#13;
presented by the Parkside&#13;
Film Society at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Room 103 Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Adm. 50c.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APR. 19&#13;
Earth Day Program. Sen.&#13;
Gaylord Nelson will report on&#13;
"An Inventory of&#13;
vironmental Concerns&#13;
conduct a question and an&#13;
swer session at 7:30 p.m&#13;
Greenquist Hall. Free.&#13;
Sponsored by Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
Poetry Reading. Parkside&#13;
Poetry Forum will sponsor a&#13;
poetry reading by Martin&#13;
Seymour-Smith, visiting&#13;
professor of English, at 1&#13;
p.m. in the Greenquist&#13;
Whiteskellar. Free.&#13;
THURSDAY, APR. 20&#13;
2001 Lec ture. Ar thur Clarke,&#13;
inventor of the communications&#13;
satellite and&#13;
author of "2001: A Space&#13;
Odyssey", will lecture on&#13;
"Life in t he Year 2001" at 8&#13;
p.m. in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Free. Sponsored by the&#13;
Lecture and Fine&#13;
Committee.&#13;
SATURDAY, APR. 22&#13;
Concert. Drummer Buddy&#13;
Rich and his Big Band will&#13;
present a concert at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Bradford Auditorium,&#13;
Kenosha. Sponsored by the&#13;
Student Activities Office.&#13;
Reserved seats S3.50 and&#13;
$2.50; UW-P students $3 and&#13;
$2. Tickets available at the&#13;
SA Office, Bidinger's in&#13;
Kenosha and Cook-Gere and&#13;
J8.J Tape Center in Racine.&#13;
SUNDAY, APR. 23&#13;
Concert. UW-P Band and&#13;
Orchestra will p resent a free&#13;
public concert at 7:30 p.m. in&#13;
the Greenquist Concourse.&#13;
Road Rally. Ragtime&#13;
Rangers Ski Club will&#13;
sponsor the second annual&#13;
Jimmy Clark Memorial Road&#13;
Rally with registration at&#13;
noon and the first car leaving&#13;
from the Tallent Hall lot at 1&#13;
p.m. Entrance fee of $5&#13;
covers driver and navigator.&#13;
Party follows the race.&#13;
Marc Eisen, Jim Koloen, John&#13;
Koloen, Paul Lomartire, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Brian Ross, Steve&#13;
Mazzarelli, Kathy Rasch, Wolfgang&#13;
Salewski, Cleta Skovronski, Mike&#13;
Kite, Mike Stevesand, "Red"&#13;
Widely, Roscoe Humus, Sifton&#13;
Winnow, Andrew Schmelling.&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
Arts&#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;
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;
Can t Blaspheme the Prexy&#13;
April 17,1972 NEIVSCOPE Page 3&#13;
(CPS) — The Fresno, California, city council&#13;
has voted to restore $200 to a high school paper&#13;
which printed an article so critical of President&#13;
Nixon that a local Republican leader referred to it&#13;
as blasphemous." But a local councilman who&#13;
defended the paper, looked up the word&#13;
"blasphemous" in the dictionary and discovered&#13;
the definition meant "indignities toward God or&#13;
King." The councilman said he wondered under&#13;
which classification the President fell.&#13;
Teacher Evaluation b y Students&#13;
From Princeton, New Jersey&#13;
— A new program that allows&#13;
students to evaluate the performance&#13;
of their teachers has&#13;
been developed by Educational&#13;
Testing Service (ETS).&#13;
Besides allowing students a&#13;
chance to express their views&#13;
anonymously about courses and&#13;
teachers, it also gives instructors&#13;
an objective way to&#13;
monitor their own performance&#13;
and progress.&#13;
Called the Student Instructional&#13;
Report (SIR), the&#13;
program is an effort to improve&#13;
instruction based on responses&#13;
to an ETS-designed questionnaire&#13;
supplied to students by the&#13;
colleges themselves.&#13;
The questionnaire was&#13;
developed by ETS researchers&#13;
with the aid of college faculty&#13;
members and students. It is&#13;
composed of questions about&#13;
specific teaching practices and&#13;
more general topics including&#13;
such queries as:&#13;
— Did the instructor encourage&#13;
students to think for&#13;
themselves?&#13;
— Were the course objectives&#13;
made clear?&#13;
— W ere students informed of&#13;
how they would be evaluated?&#13;
The ETS questionnaire also&#13;
includes questions about a&#13;
Talky to be Shown&#13;
"Metropolis," a 1927 fi lm by&#13;
the German director Fritz&#13;
Lang, will be presented by the&#13;
Parkside Film Society on&#13;
Tuesday, April 18, at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Room 103 Greenquist Hall at&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Wood Road campus.&#13;
The showing is open to the&#13;
public. There is a small admission&#13;
charge.&#13;
One of the most famous expressionistic&#13;
films in the early&#13;
"talky" period, "Metropolis"&#13;
deals with the struggle between&#13;
management and labor in a city&#13;
of the future. The New York&#13;
Times said, "Nothing like&#13;
METROPOLIS .a.a. a film that&#13;
has created wide international&#13;
comment, has been seen on the&#13;
screen ... a remarkable&#13;
achievement. It is a technical&#13;
marvel . . ."&#13;
Free Public Concert&#13;
Music students of The&#13;
University of WisconsinPar&#13;
kside will present a free&#13;
public concert at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Monday, April 17, in the&#13;
Kenosha campus Fine Arts&#13;
Room.&#13;
Vocal soloists will be Judith&#13;
Bandor, soprano, Kenosha;&#13;
Beatrice Jacobson, Waterford,&#13;
soprano; and Joseph Gauchel,&#13;
tenor, Racine.&#13;
Instrumental soloists will be&#13;
Jill Reich, piano, Racine; Letha&#13;
Wood, piano, Marshfield;&#13;
Arline Dahlquist, violin,&#13;
Racine; Kathy Devine, piano,&#13;
Kenosha; Philip Ince, cello,&#13;
Racine; and Joyce Richards,&#13;
piano, Racine.&#13;
Accompanists will be pianists&#13;
Mary Gauchel, Racine; Rita&#13;
Melius, West Bend; Miss Wood;&#13;
and Frances Bedford and Frank&#13;
Mueller of the music faculty;&#13;
and guitarist Kurt Harff.&#13;
Academic Plan Session&#13;
During the week of April 24th&#13;
it would do you well to attend&#13;
one of the academic planning&#13;
sessions in your major or intended&#13;
major.&#13;
Each of the one-hour sessions&#13;
is designed to give you information&#13;
on University and&#13;
major requirements, to allow&#13;
you to meet informally with&#13;
major professors and the&#13;
counseling staff, and to help you&#13;
plan your academic schedule&#13;
for Summer and Fall.&#13;
All of the sessions will be held&#13;
in Greenquist Hall. A student&#13;
wide mailing listing the majors&#13;
by day-time-room will be&#13;
delivered the week of April 17.&#13;
If there are any problems or&#13;
questions concerning these&#13;
sessions, please feel free to&#13;
contact the Student Counseling&#13;
Office, 553-2121, extension K42,&#13;
room 135 Kenosha Campus, or&#13;
Information Center, 553-2345.&#13;
student's reasons for taking the&#13;
course and the grade he expects&#13;
to receive.&#13;
More information about SIR&#13;
may be obtained by contacting:&#13;
Institu tio nal R e s e a r ch&#13;
Program for Higher Education,&#13;
Educational Testing Service,&#13;
Princeton, New Jersey 08540.&#13;
THE&#13;
UPSTAIRS&#13;
"Highest bar „&#13;
in Kenosha&#13;
• •• , ,&#13;
Weds. *7-/o Swn./-6&#13;
/2 02. BOTTLE R&#13;
+ HIGHBALLS&#13;
L / v e A l u s i c —&#13;
IT Fri. ± 5gt,&#13;
ACROSS FROM T#E&#13;
AWE THEATER&#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 $2.50 &amp; $3.50&#13;
Parkside Students $2.00 — $3.00&#13;
Available at: student Act. Office&#13;
One Student Ticket&#13;
Per Parkside I.D.&#13;
PIZZA II&#13;
ustom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PARKSIDE VILLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
5021 - 30 fo Avenue Kenosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 days a week from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
jtom sttfrp&#13;
'JAMMER&#13;
COZY COMFORTABLE DINING&#13;
THE WINDJAMMER S»cci«J&#13;
^TENDERLOIN STEM O&#13;
AND TUMBLED ONIONS&#13;
• STEAKS&#13;
• SEA FOOD&#13;
• COCKTAILS&#13;
'Strving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#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 Q UA LITY AT&#13;
R EA SO NA BLE P RI CE S , T HE WIND ­&#13;
JAMMER DESERVES ITS POPULARITY"&#13;
— H E RB ERT KUBLY&#13;
"WON DERFUL FOOD'&#13;
SENATOR P RO XMIRF &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE April 17,1972&#13;
By Jim Koloen&#13;
THE UPSTAIRS&#13;
Recently, On the Nod has&#13;
been accused of presenting&#13;
"phony sophistication" to the&#13;
impressionable readers of&#13;
NEWSCOPE. Such false and&#13;
malicious accusation struck&#13;
Nod to the quick; hurry, tell me&#13;
where I went wrong, he pleaded&#13;
to his part-time shrink and&#13;
bartender. He cried in his beer&#13;
all that day, muttering I've&#13;
been struck to my quick; is&#13;
there a doctor in the house he&#13;
asked plaintively. He was&#13;
growing paranoid anxious when&#13;
the printout suddenly appeared&#13;
across his frontal lobes; if&#13;
music can soothe the savage&#13;
beast, music can soothe the&#13;
struck quick.&#13;
It was Upstairs at the Upstairs,&#13;
that Nod was to find the&#13;
audiobalm and wetsalve. The&#13;
"highest bar in Kenosha",&#13;
located above the Pussycat&#13;
Lounge across from the Lake&#13;
Theatre, afforded the tonedeaf&#13;
Nod with a rare, drunkard's&#13;
dream juke. The juke's juke,&#13;
located in a kind of alcove at one&#13;
end of the tavern featured the&#13;
classic works of the Doors, the&#13;
Dylans, the Stones and Beatles&#13;
to name a few. At present, it&#13;
may be Kenosha's finest juke.&#13;
The Upstairs is a compact,&#13;
dimly lit young peoples' bar&#13;
whose accoutrements include a&#13;
shocking thick carpeted floor, a&#13;
padded bench lining one wail,&#13;
tables and chairs, and a small&#13;
bar that seemed to roll every&#13;
time Nod put his elbow down.&#13;
Any time Nod believes that a&#13;
bar is rolling from under him,&#13;
he tends to get a bit flustered;&#13;
he thinks to himself that it must&#13;
be an earthquake, and being a&#13;
consume ever i» ,&#13;
quantities ot spirit&#13;
believes is true becaus t it&#13;
when Nod drops a n..f/&#13;
bar&#13;
f rest' ^ ^ discovers the* bar rests on wheels, then he&#13;
decides that drinking makes&#13;
one a good wheel.&#13;
hJJiir065 are un^&#13;
rm; I !n and miX(&#13;
* ^&#13;
inks&#13;
cost 50 cents, and on Wednesday&#13;
between 7:30 and 10:30 go for a&#13;
mere 35 cents. The uniformity&#13;
of prices takes much of the&#13;
complexity out of the already&#13;
ove r-c o m plic ate d c o n ­&#13;
temporary drunk.&#13;
J! th® tables which lined the&#13;
thJL Patr&#13;
°&#13;
ns 0ccupied&#13;
themselves with gin, both&#13;
FriH*&#13;
m9 h f? Playin9 if&#13;
-&#13;
0n&#13;
Friday and Saturday live music&#13;
s presented at which, at least&#13;
last weekend, a passel of anchor&#13;
clankers from Great Lakes and&#13;
the regular longhair customers&#13;
observed each other's behavior&#13;
from opposite sides of the bar.&#13;
Ray, the young bartender and&#13;
proprietor of the Upstairs,&#13;
supplied Nod with serviceable&#13;
gin and tonics, enough of which&#13;
were consumed by night's end&#13;
to purify Nod's hurt quick; the&#13;
next morning it would be&#13;
something else that would give&#13;
him pain. The clientele of the&#13;
Upstairs is composed of hippies&#13;
and others who equivocate the&#13;
word high, with an influx of&#13;
sailors on weekends. Weekdays&#13;
did not seem conducive to&#13;
crowds, though weekends do&#13;
present somewhat of a space&#13;
problem at the bar.&#13;
Nod, who had to query his&#13;
friends as to what kind of night&#13;
he had while reviewing the&#13;
Upstairs, floated out at closing&#13;
on a tide of gin, bellyup and&#13;
performing an inverted breast&#13;
stroke to the amazement of ail&#13;
his critics.&#13;
The Upstairs presents a&#13;
righteous deal for young&#13;
drinkers, especially on Wednesday&#13;
evenings, and the juke,&#13;
well, you can just sit and listen&#13;
to it for hours, walking hand in&#13;
glass down memory lane, and&#13;
still not hear enough.&#13;
BOOKS&#13;
By Jim Koloen&#13;
TITLE: THE JOB&#13;
AUTHOR: William S. Burroughs and Daniel&#13;
Odier&#13;
PUBLISHER: Grove Press Inc. ($5.95 hardcover)&#13;
&#13;
Wild Bill Burroughs, author of Naked Lunch,&#13;
hipster pioneer of the fold-up cut-up technique of&#13;
writing, former fifteen year junkie, world&#13;
traveler, and intimate peregrine of the Beats, is&#13;
the subject of this 188 p age "inlerview". In The&#13;
Job, Dan Odier is listed as the in+erviewer, though&#13;
the author's foreword, and fh fact the entire&#13;
composition of the book is Burroughs', which&#13;
makes one wonder what Odier has to do with it.&#13;
Actually, it seems he has very little to do With it,&#13;
and the terse questions he asks for the most part&#13;
do not measure up to Burroughs' lengthy answers&#13;
and explanations.&#13;
Not just a leatherchair interviewee,&#13;
Burroughs has interjected selected passages from&#13;
his fiction and quotes from outside sources into the&#13;
text to aid in delineating his responses. Unfortunately,&#13;
Burroughs did not edit his interviews&#13;
very well, there is a marked tendency toward&#13;
sloppy redundancy throughout the text: identical&#13;
phrases continually pop up, and particular&#13;
passages from his fiction occur in more than one&#13;
place.&#13;
The main topics upon which Burroughs&#13;
speculates are education, drugs, Scientology and&#13;
concepts of nation and family. He explains quite&#13;
logically that the concepts of nation and family&#13;
should be abolished since they are most responsible&#13;
for war and the decadance of Western&#13;
society. He explains that the nation is an&#13;
outgrowth of the family, and that in today's world,&#13;
a child is forced to develop the same neuroses as&#13;
his parent, thus crippling him before he could even&#13;
walk. His suggested alternative to the vamily is&#13;
fog vague, relying on the institution of&#13;
"academies" for the education of children.&#13;
Burroughs explains the theory behind his cutup&#13;
and fold-up technique of writing and its application&#13;
with tape recorders to "break down the&#13;
barriers of consciousness and enlarge the field of&#13;
preception." He explains, somewhat less than&#13;
lucidly, that by taping sounds and words and then&#13;
cutting them up and splicing them together in&#13;
different orders, one can break the "old&#13;
associational blocks" which people develop&#13;
toward words. This, he says, expands ones consciousness,&#13;
it places words in new and different&#13;
contexts, it breaks down the emotional content of&#13;
various words. New words will appear from the&#13;
spliced sections of tape, words which weren't even&#13;
recorded; you can control the past, he states.&#13;
What he means by controlling the past is again too&#13;
vague; to control time by tape recorder is a bit&#13;
fatuous.&#13;
In other sections of the book, Burroughs&#13;
examines the relationship between language and&#13;
awareness. He explains that Western iang'uages&#13;
are responsible for many of the faults of Western&#13;
society. The aristotelian either-or statement is a&#13;
fundamental mistake; Burroughs points out that&#13;
this statement has lead the Western thinker into&#13;
viewing the world in a false light, it gave rise to&#13;
concepts of absolutes which have hindered more&#13;
than helped the advancement of Western man.&#13;
Ideally, he would construct a hieroglyphic&#13;
language which would give a more complete&#13;
control of oneself to oneself. He explains that a&#13;
given statement can be presented in a number of&#13;
ways in English, but would make sense in only one&#13;
way in glyph. This is so, he says, because the&#13;
statement in glyph is locked in time, it requires a&#13;
particular order of pictures to make sense,&#13;
whereas in English many juxtapositions of words&#13;
are possible to present the same statement. Increased&#13;
awareness would result through*&#13;
hieroglyphs because a definite order and time is&#13;
inherent in a nieroglyphic statement. He uses the&#13;
prosaic example of getting dressed. Normally&#13;
when you get dressed you simultaneously do other&#13;
things, you are preoccupied with future events&#13;
when you're dressing. This is exemplified in&#13;
language, which also expresses more than one&#13;
thought in a statement. If one learned to think in&#13;
glypf, one would concentrate his entire awareness&#13;
on the action at hand; you would get dressed and&#13;
nothing more until you're completely dressed. Not&#13;
bothered by thoughts directed toward the future, a&#13;
person can do things properly, could get dressed&#13;
properly for example, and thus enjoy whatever he&#13;
does because he is doing it properly.&#13;
At times I got the impression that Burroughs&#13;
was suffering from paranoia; he blamed the&#13;
media for creating bad situations by publicizing&#13;
them, his crusading attitude toward Scientology&#13;
and his reaction to its alleged official suppression&#13;
by the U.S. government did not seem quite&#13;
believable. Many of his explanations were far&#13;
from lucid, when he resorted to his cut-up, fold-up&#13;
technique to illustrate examples it became&#13;
mountain climbing difficult to follow him. But, I&#13;
don't think its is raving paranoia that characterizes&#13;
his ideas, it's more like a mad originality.&#13;
As confusing as some of his explanations are, one&#13;
can glean the gist of what he's saying, and much of&#13;
it makes sense, in fact there's a certain deja-vu&#13;
phenomenon involved insome of his concepts; the&#13;
tape recorder concept is one. The whole idea of&#13;
destroying associational blocks by not employing&#13;
conventional contexts is what happens when you&#13;
first get stoned and everybody laughes at&#13;
everything; Firesign Theatre also employs it, so&#13;
do the absurdists.&#13;
So there are far-fetched and paranoidal views&#13;
expressed in this book, and there are strikingly&#13;
reasonable ones also. The Job provokes thinkinq-f&#13;
on the reader's part and that's enough to justify&#13;
reading it; it is also a William Burroughs book and&#13;
that, too, justifies it.&#13;
b f&#13;
MICHAEL'S BAR&#13;
AND RESTAURANT&#13;
2500 - 52nd St&#13;
by Paul Lomartireof the Newscope staff&#13;
"Listen Mike," a man wearing a London Fog&#13;
raincoat was saying, "I called for a table over an&#13;
hour ago. My wife and I get here and there's&#13;
nothin'." He motioned toward a wall lined with a&#13;
half dozen or so tables.&#13;
Mike Witkauskis, the owner of the combination&#13;
bar and restaurant was wiping his hands&#13;
with the bottom of a white bartenders apron. He&#13;
really had not time to listen to the man's long&#13;
winded complaint. It was Friday night and his&#13;
place was jammed.&#13;
"Now Mike, you know we're regulars. Why&#13;
isn't there a table for us?" asked the man, not&#13;
bothering for an answer. "We'll be back about&#13;
eight, Mike, now make sure there's a table for us."&#13;
A waitress excused herself as she cut between&#13;
London Fog and the proprietor. Someone from&#13;
across the room was calling Mike. The waitress&#13;
placed two plates on a table. Mike nodded his head&#13;
at the man and his wife, then broke away toward&#13;
the voice calling him. The couple, forced to&#13;
postpone their dinner, were already out the back&#13;
door. It was a little after six p.m. at Michael's Bar&#13;
and Restaurant.&#13;
Two couples sitting in the bar were talking&#13;
loudly about the evening ahead of them. One, a&#13;
woman with cotton candy white hair, suggested&#13;
that the quartet go to the movies. A man sitting&#13;
opposite her shook his head. He wanted to go to a&#13;
local cabaret. The waitress interrupted them as&#13;
she began to clear the table. Before removing any&#13;
dirty dishes, she placed a small plastic "reserved"&#13;
sign on top of the napkin dispenser.&#13;
Sitting at a table under an oil painting of a&#13;
carnival scene, a long haired kid was struggling to&#13;
get a quarter out of his tight pants pocket. With the&#13;
coin pinched between his thumb and forefinger, he&#13;
wormed his way to the silent jukebox. He glanced&#13;
a few feet to the right and left of the machine and&#13;
saw the giant chrome speakers. With two hands&#13;
holding his weight on the music machine, he read&#13;
the type-written slips of paper naming the artists.&#13;
Jane Morgan, Artie Shaw, Neil Young, Eddy&#13;
Arnold, Count Basie, Pete Fountain, the Carpenters,&#13;
Perry Como, the Mills Brothers, Donny&#13;
Osmond, Bing Crosby, T-Rex, and so on. He&#13;
dropped the quarter into the device, beginning his&#13;
three selections with "I Wish I Were Single Aqain"&#13;
by L'l Wally.&#13;
Mike was now behind the bar taking reservations&#13;
over the phone, which he wrote on a piece&#13;
of paper pinched on a clipboard. He was struggling&#13;
to hear the correct spelling of a name. A big man&#13;
wearing a red, white and blue vinyl windbreaker&#13;
with "Javelin" spelled across his heart was&#13;
waiting for Mike to get off the phone. The man had&#13;
an American Motors paycheck in his hand, and a&#13;
family waiting to eat.&#13;
Like other small taverns that surround*&#13;
American Motors, Michael's goes beyond being a&#13;
place,where food and drink are served. Checks are&#13;
cashed for the regulars, baseball teams are&#13;
sponsored, bowling teams, maybe a party at one&#13;
time or another.&#13;
It is a neighborhood affair really. Mike&#13;
inherited the business from his father, whose&#13;
picture hangs in the dining room. There have been&#13;
more than a few generations of Kenosha families&#13;
who have had a beer and dinner on this corner&#13;
over the years The place is a tribute to the best&#13;
form of advertising known this side of Madison&#13;
Avenue; word of mouth.&#13;
The menu is different everyday. While Friday&#13;
is traditionally fish night, one can count on excellent&#13;
home made meals sprinkled throughout&#13;
the week.&#13;
Baked ham, pork hocks and sauerkraut, chop&#13;
suey, scalloped potatoes with ham bits, hot beef&#13;
sandwiches, hamburgers, pork chop sandwiches&#13;
on Italian bread, beef stew, etc. Besides these&#13;
featured items, there is home made soup daily,&#13;
thirty cents a bowl. Prices for the dinners rarely&#13;
go over a dollar seventy-five, for workingman's&#13;
proportions.&#13;
The atmosphere is comfortable, nothing&#13;
strained, especially in the bar area where there&#13;
are only about a half dozen tables. The dining&#13;
room is a bit crowded with tables, but it is&#13;
warranted because of Friday nights.&#13;
Throughout the establishment there are&#13;
several paintings done by Mike, very fine pain&#13;
tings that add a novel touch. There is one done in&#13;
pastels of Kennedy Drive, a picture of Pershing&#13;
Plaza which has the effect of seeing it through a&#13;
sheet of water, and others, a couple of men&#13;
standing in front of an old store, a building in&#13;
Florida. The stained knotty pine walls and the&#13;
paintings are friendly to the eyes.&#13;
I found the best time to appreciate the food&#13;
and atmosphere at Michael's is during the&#13;
weekend, on a Saturday night.&#13;
The color television is usually on, maybe just a&#13;
hockey game with no sound. There are only a&#13;
handful of people in the bar, sipping beers, talking&#13;
with the bartender.&#13;
This is the best time to drop a quarter into the&#13;
jukebox, find a favorite and sit down to enjoy a&#13;
home cooked meal with a beer, over in Mike's&#13;
neighborhood. &#13;
April 17,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
SYMPOSIUM 1972&#13;
m&#13;
presented by&#13;
U.W.P. Student Government Association&#13;
MONDAY, 24 APRIL — Penal Institutions&#13;
Cell Block Circus Players&#13;
Project Acceptance — John Jude, Supervisor&#13;
TUESDAY APRIL — Model Structures for Community , 25&#13;
Organizing&#13;
Urban Concern — Fr. J ohn Murtaugh&#13;
Urban League — Morris Johnson&#13;
S-Side Revitalization — Representative&#13;
WEDNESDAY, 26 APRIL&#13;
Women's Caucus&#13;
Women's Liberation&#13;
THURSDAY, 27 APRIL — Radical Political Organizing&#13;
Wisconsin Alliance — Political Party, Madison&#13;
R.Y.M. — People's Bookstore, Racine&#13;
Paul Soglin — Madison City Councilman&#13;
TUESDAY, 2 MAY — Living Theatre&#13;
THEATRE X — Milwaukee&#13;
WEDNESDAY, 3 MAY — Panel Discussion&#13;
Should Private Sex Between Consenting Adults be Legalized? —&#13;
Pre-Law Club&#13;
FRIDAY, 5 MAY — 'Going Away Party'&#13;
For Racine Campus — Blues Band&#13;
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY, 6 &amp; 7 MAY — Film Festival&#13;
At site of old Vogue Theatre&#13;
MONDAY, 8 MAY — Black Cultural Day&#13;
Black Student Union&#13;
Julian Bond — Lecture &amp; Fine Arts&#13;
Tony Courtney — Racine Star&#13;
Ed Hales — UW Regent&#13;
Julian Thomas — NAACP&#13;
Rocky Taylor — Black Revolutionary Poet&#13;
Little Greg and the Concepts&#13;
*&#13;
tentative&#13;
The purpose of Symposium '72 is to provide Parkside students and&#13;
the surrounding communities with alternative educational&#13;
opportunities not available in most existing institutions. The&#13;
Symposium will try to deal with the term 'educational&#13;
relevance' with a number of non-conventional and provacative&#13;
speakers and groups ranging from a Blues Band to a member of&#13;
the Revolutionary Youth Movement. We will be utilizing almost&#13;
all forms of media featuring THEATRE X, an innovative&#13;
theatre group from Milwaukee, and a 24-hour film festival. If&#13;
you would like any information please call our office — 553-2244.&#13;
jjv!&#13;
M&#13;
V.V.&#13;
**$:&#13;
M&#13;
i &#13;
Pagett NEWSCOPE April 17,1972&#13;
Ragtime "Rangers Ski Club&#13;
Presents&#13;
2nd Annual&#13;
Jimmy Clark Road Rally&#13;
Sun April 23&#13;
Entrance Fee $5.00&#13;
(covers driver &amp; navigator&#13;
Registration 12 noon&#13;
Back Lot - Tallent Hall&#13;
1st car out - 1 :00 PM&#13;
Trophies + Special Faculty Awards&#13;
Party After - Food and Beer&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL&#13;
1&#13;
, lh f,ROUND BF.FF&#13;
ON FRF.NCH CRUST&#13;
BRFAD DRFSSFD&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
l.FTTUCF AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
('•RILLED COUNTRYHAM&#13;
A CHHFSF. ON&#13;
WHOLE WHF.AT BUN&#13;
WITH l.FTTUCF&#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;
ONNAISE ON TOAST 9Qc&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
NORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
M ^ - ~i~n-irin 11 • »&#13;
0?'&#13;
^ A&#13;
A ?&gt;&#13;
*Vy&gt;&#13;
&amp; J?&#13;
A*&#13;
iROotos,&#13;
Boms,&#13;
„ JACKETS,&#13;
SWCATSRS, L&#13;
SHIRTS H SHJ&#13;
Sue f or Right t o H onor H itler&#13;
(CPS) — The Arlington, Virginia, school&#13;
board is being sued by the ACLU there on behalf of&#13;
the National Socialist White Peoples Party for&#13;
denying the Nazis use of a school auditorium to&#13;
celebrate Hitler's birthday. At a recent federal&#13;
court hearing, the lawyers of the NSWPP conceded&#13;
the school board has a duty to protect school&#13;
property but contended, "The NSWPP is not a&#13;
violent party and doesn't enage in violence." The&#13;
school board has customarily permitted private&#13;
organizations to use school facilities, and the&#13;
ACLU contends the refusal in this instance is a&#13;
discriminatory denial of First Amendment rights.&#13;
Consumer League to hold Assembly&#13;
The Wisconsin Consumers&#13;
League announced that Mr. Leo&#13;
Perlis, National Director of&#13;
AFL-CIO Community Service&#13;
Activities, will keynote the&#13;
Wisconsin Consumer Assembly&#13;
72 to be held Saturday, May 6,&#13;
on the University of WisconsinMilwaukee&#13;
campus. The public&#13;
is invited to attend.&#13;
The day-long meeting will be&#13;
held in the Fireside Lounge of&#13;
the Student Union on the&#13;
Milwaukee campus. Displays&#13;
and educational materials from&#13;
government agencies, business&#13;
organizations and consumer&#13;
interest groups will be situated&#13;
throughout the area for the&#13;
benefit of participants.&#13;
Registration is $5.00 which&#13;
includes the luncheon, and $1.00&#13;
for the program only. For&#13;
registration or additional information,&#13;
contact John Udick,&#13;
Program Chairman, Wisconsin&#13;
Consumer Assembly '71, at&#13;
10025 West Greenfield Avenue,&#13;
Milwaukee, 53214, or call 1-414-&#13;
778-2227.&#13;
WISPIRG Praised by State Rep.&#13;
state Representative Harout&#13;
O. Sanasarian (D-Milwaukee-4)&#13;
applauded the birth of the&#13;
Wisconsin Public Interest&#13;
Research Group (WISPIRG). A&#13;
student-run and student-funded&#13;
organization which would&#13;
provide needed research on&#13;
problems that are posed before&#13;
the general public in such areas&#13;
as the consumer prices, and&#13;
environment, or anything else&#13;
CORNBREAD&#13;
one-third cup shortening&#13;
three-fourths cup sugar&#13;
2 eggs&#13;
1 cup milk&#13;
2 cups flour&#13;
3 teaspoons baking powder&#13;
one-half teaspoon salt&#13;
three-fourths cup yellow cornmeal&#13;
1. Place shortening, sugar and eggs in a bowl and&#13;
beat thoroughly until smooth.&#13;
2. Add the milk, then the flour sifted with the&#13;
baking powder and salt.&#13;
3. Add the cornmeal and beat until smooth.&#13;
4. Place in a greased shallow pan and bake in a&#13;
moderately hot oven (400 to 425 degrees) for 25&#13;
minutes or until done.&#13;
5. Serve hot with butter.&#13;
Cleta Skovronski&#13;
that is deemed in need of&#13;
studying. The research would&#13;
be conducted in a scholarly&#13;
fashion, with policy being taken&#13;
by the WISPIRG board only&#13;
after all the data has been&#13;
subjected to careful scrutiny.&#13;
Sanasarian noted that in&#13;
addition to providing sorely&#13;
needed research for public&#13;
interest causes, the group&#13;
provides a very much needed&#13;
educational experience for&#13;
those involved, not only in&#13;
specific reserach projects, but&#13;
in administering and coordinating&#13;
the program, both on&#13;
the state and local levels.&#13;
The Milwaukee lawmaker&#13;
urged the Board of Regents to&#13;
give life to WISPIRG by approving&#13;
a funding mechanism&#13;
at its May 7 meeting, thus encouraging&#13;
students to get a real&#13;
education and also help the&#13;
state.&#13;
Marriage Preparation&#13;
Catholic Student Center&#13;
beginning Sunday,&#13;
April 23 at 7:30 PM&#13;
pre-registration phone 552-8626&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE —1946 Fo'rd,6cyl.-2door&#13;
in good cond. Call after 6 at 654-6485.&#13;
for this $450 value.&#13;
FOR SALE — '62 Comet, 6 cyl. $125.&#13;
Call 652-5904 or 654-3429.&#13;
RIFLE - Winchester model 88 - .243&#13;
Win. with 4x Weaver Scope. Excellent&#13;
condition. $110 firm. ph. 654-&#13;
7964.&#13;
FOR SALE — '68 VW, sunroof, good&#13;
cond. $1,145. Call 632-9669 after 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Spiffy 1963 MG Midget SPORTSCAR,&#13;
needs body work, truly THE&#13;
car of the future and yours for the&#13;
ridiculously low price of $150 c ash,&#13;
contact Jim at 553-2496 or at the&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
SK11"!!&#13;
0 ' Writers&#13;
' journalists,&#13;
production staff and ad men to take&#13;
over a college newspaper. Must be&#13;
housebroken, learn while you earn&#13;
2T f&#13;
9"' Ph" 553 2496 or 553-&#13;
2498. Ask for anybody or come in&#13;
person to the Newscope office,&#13;
corner of Wood Rd. and Hwy. A.&#13;
HOUSEWORK HELPER - early&#13;
June for about a week, pay open. Ph.&#13;
034-8517.&#13;
FOR SALE - Reel to reel tape deck,&#13;
Allied TD-1095 with sound on sound&#13;
+ sound with sound, price $90.00.&#13;
Phone 552-8733 after 6:30 p.m.&#13;
fcOR SALE - Panasonic stereo&#13;
model 1519 Am-Fm, BSR turntable,&#13;
2 2-way speakers, best offer. Call Joe&#13;
after 6:00, 654-2945.&#13;
Athletic Event Results - Call Information&#13;
Center, ext. 2345 the&#13;
morning after. We will have the&#13;
word.&#13;
WANTED — a student volunteer to&#13;
be big brother to 11 year old cerebral&#13;
palsied boy. Call Wendy at 553-2121,&#13;
ext. 42.&#13;
Pterodactyl ancient flying reptile,&#13;
full size replica Rhamphorhynchus&#13;
$150 - ph. 658-3833 in the evening.&#13;
Daucshunds AKC registered, born&#13;
Feb. 6, lightweights, 2 females $65&#13;
each. ph. 652-4513 after 4:30.&#13;
MUSICIANS (bass, electric piano,&#13;
percussion) wanted to start from&#13;
scratch to create new soft rock&#13;
sound. Must be able to read and-or&#13;
inproviseon chords; must have own&#13;
equipment, contact Gary 633-0875 or&#13;
Fred at P-side Village apt.&#13;
Clean sleeping room for man, 6100 -&#13;
24th Ave., Kenosha.&#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;
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;
WATCHES |&#13;
Rolex - Accutron&#13;
Ultrachron . Longine&#13;
Bulova - Movado&#13;
Caravel le - Time*&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
PERFUMES&#13;
France's&#13;
Finest -&#13;
Perfumes and&#13;
Colognes&#13;
REPAIR DEPT~"]&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
'-Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
Y/' s&#13;
*&#13;
17&#13;
- -&#13;
rimufooag&amp;ru&#13;
1*0/ rsi Ji ?oe*&#13;
make 3 difference where you shop!&#13;
Q/o Discount to (tudpntc an d smoents and Faculty wit h |. D&#13;
Diana Intermezzo&#13;
Wallace - Lunt&#13;
Reed 6 Barton&#13;
Sheffield - etc.&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tiffon - Orrefort&#13;
Seneca - Lalique&#13;
Boyal Worcester &#13;
Merritt works toward Decothalon&#13;
April 17, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
Keith Merritt might be&#13;
something akin to those major&#13;
league baseball players who&#13;
have played all nine positions in&#13;
a single game.&#13;
But Merritt, a sophomore at&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
finds his action on'the&#13;
track — in at least three or four&#13;
events in each meet.&#13;
It's an iron man stunt which&#13;
few athletes can match in this&#13;
era of specialization, but more&#13;
than that, it shows Merritt's&#13;
tremendous versatility, a trait&#13;
that Coach Bob Lawson&#13;
welcomes on a squad that is&#13;
long on talent but short on&#13;
depth.&#13;
The Tremper grad may have&#13;
found his niche this outdoor&#13;
season, though that niche includes&#13;
just about every event on&#13;
the track slate.&#13;
"He competes in everything&#13;
from the marathon through&#13;
cross country and the hurdles to&#13;
the triple jump and the pole&#13;
vault," Lawson pointed out.&#13;
"He just amazes me."&#13;
For Merritt, it's all in the&#13;
course of a day's work at a&#13;
track meet. He showed the&#13;
crowd at the Arkansas Tech&#13;
Relays just what one man can&#13;
do when he scored 15 of UWParkside's&#13;
30 p oints.&#13;
On the track, he cracked the&#13;
UW-P record over the 440-yard&#13;
intermediate hurdle route,&#13;
clocking 56.2 for a big win over a&#13;
rugged field which had seen&#13;
much more outdoor action than&#13;
any of the Rangers, who were&#13;
getting their first taste of&#13;
outdoor competition on the trek&#13;
south.&#13;
Merritt also triple jumped 44-&#13;
5% to take top honors in that&#13;
event and then followed up with&#13;
a third in the pole vault.&#13;
More amazingly, all three&#13;
events were run at about the&#13;
same time and the lean&#13;
sophomore had to rush from one&#13;
to the other to compete.&#13;
"He's really an up and&#13;
coming athlete," Lawson said.&#13;
"I think he's one of the best allaround&#13;
men in the state. He's a&#13;
local athlete who's built his&#13;
reputation up throughout the&#13;
state by working hard and being&#13;
dedicated.&#13;
"Keith doesn't have the great&#13;
strength or speed but he has a&#13;
good attitude and he wants to&#13;
compete."&#13;
More correctly, however,&#13;
Merritt might be well suited for&#13;
a single event rather than the&#13;
many he competes in weekly.&#13;
It's the decathlon, which officially&#13;
is a single event, but in&#13;
reality is a two-day ten-event&#13;
grind that can wilt the best of&#13;
men.&#13;
=&#13;
£=y=t&#13;
,&#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;
But it's never wilted Merritt&#13;
f&#13;
S.&#13;
e&#13;
,&#13;
V e&#13;
"5&#13;
ed ^ his 5,658 point&#13;
total m the event, a Parkside&#13;
varsity record. He'll compete in&#13;
the decathlon at least twice this&#13;
season, with the April 22&#13;
ofu,uSf&#13;
e Invitati&#13;
°nal and May&#13;
20 Whitewater Open Meet offering&#13;
it.&#13;
And for that, he's got one of&#13;
the best teachers in the business&#13;
m Lawson, who rated fourth in&#13;
w&#13;
i&#13;
orld the late '50s and&#13;
may have found in Merritt, the&#13;
decathlete he's been looking for.&#13;
The events are geared for&#13;
Dewitt m akes&#13;
Merritt, with the first-day&#13;
decathlon slate including the 100&#13;
meters, long jump, shot put,&#13;
high jump and 400 meeters and&#13;
the second-day counting the 110&#13;
meter hurdles, the discus, pole&#13;
vault, javelin and 1500 meters.&#13;
For a cross country runner&#13;
who's run marathons and high&#13;
jumped and triple jumped and&#13;
vaulted and sprinted and run&#13;
400 meter hurdles, that combination&#13;
shouldn't be all that&#13;
bad.&#13;
As Lawson said, "What else&#13;
can a kid do?"&#13;
For The Record&#13;
1 11 I I I \ I K | || | \ v; £ | \ M i &lt; |&#13;
~• Dou ntou n Kenosha&#13;
Mike DeWitt, UW-Parkside&#13;
senior and long distance walker&#13;
who's rapidly becoming one of&#13;
the best around, has a trip to&#13;
Eugene, Ore., on his agenda for&#13;
mid-summer.&#13;
DeWitt clocked 1 hr., 39 min.,&#13;
for a 20 kilometer walk Sunday&#13;
at a Riis Park (Chicago) meet&#13;
and made the Olympic trial&#13;
standard of 1 hr., 45 m in.&#13;
DeWitt, who became&#13;
Parkside's first track allOlympic&#13;
T ria Is&#13;
American in January when he&#13;
placed third in the National&#13;
Assn. of Intercollegiate&#13;
Athletics (NAIA) indoor&#13;
championships in the two mile&#13;
walk, has been walking steadily&#13;
both indoors and out in recent&#13;
weeks and has collected his&#13;
share of first place honors.&#13;
He recently won the 29th&#13;
annual AAU walk in Milwaukee&#13;
on a meet record 7:07 for the&#13;
one mile distance.&#13;
ZJhe VJlL eyS—uJu„pPpeer r CLl&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
552-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Make Bowling&#13;
Your Thing!&#13;
Swing at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes&#13;
O N S O U TH S H E R I D A N RO A D I N K E N O S H A 6 5 4 - 0411&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Setuuuj. the, Qineit&#13;
Pify+ &amp; Otalian tyoodl&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 654-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
BREAKFAST 6:A.M. TO II: A.M.&#13;
If.ijj- Our /]/eu, TnsiJe C arpeted&#13;
ICCtl&#13;
A&amp;W RESTAURANT&#13;
30th ave. and Roosevelt Road&#13;
i * KihosU&#13;
Open:&#13;
Mon. thru Thurs. — 6 A.M. -11 P.M.^&#13;
Friday — 6 A.M. to Midnight&#13;
Saturday — 9 A.M. to Midnight&#13;
*^"^1 Sunday — 9 A.M. to 11 P .M.&#13;
310 Green Bay Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
V2 Block South of Kenosha-Racine County Line&#13;
ump&#13;
Save&#13;
SERVE YOURSELF WITH THE FINEST GASOLINE&#13;
AND SAVE!&#13;
DISCOUNT SPECIALS&#13;
Cash &amp; Carry&#13;
ROYAL TRITON&#13;
QUAKER STATE&#13;
PENNZOIL&#13;
10W-20W-30W&#13;
AFSCON.O. 10W-20W-30W&#13;
PERMANENT TYPE ANTI FREEZE&#13;
120Z. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
SI .39 per gallon&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry FYlceson Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kits, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 F»er Cent Sale s Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE &#13;
page8 NEWSCOPE April 17, 1972&#13;
TVifi Ufcft o rf SomcHiin^ HEW -BU&#13;
ALRIKAS&#13;
Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Guidance Association to meet at UWP&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
About 200 guidance counselors&#13;
and student personnel&#13;
staff members from&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin schools&#13;
are expected for a day-long&#13;
workshop on group counseling&#13;
on Thursday, April 20, at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
The workshop is&#13;
jointly sponsored by Parkside&#13;
and the Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
Personnel and Guidance&#13;
Association (SEWPGA).&#13;
Workshop sessions will be&#13;
conducted by Merle M. Ohlsen,&#13;
Holmstedt Distinguished&#13;
Professor of Guidance and&#13;
Psychological Services at Indiana&#13;
State University and&#13;
immediate past president of the&#13;
American Personnel and&#13;
9(amnfo.&#13;
B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
In Concert&#13;
Carthage Field house&#13;
Friday April 21&#13;
8:00 PM&#13;
$2.00 at door&#13;
sponsored by&#13;
Carthage Freshman&#13;
Class&#13;
Guidance Association.&#13;
Dr. Ohlsen will conduct a&#13;
morning session for elementary&#13;
school counselors and educators&#13;
and an afternoon session for&#13;
counselors in junior and senior&#13;
high schools and in education.&#13;
The workshops will deal with&#13;
when to use group counseling,&#13;
differences between group&#13;
counseling and group guidance&#13;
and techniques of successful&#13;
group counseling.&#13;
Dr. Ohlsen is the author of&#13;
eight books on education including&#13;
a 1970 v olume, "Group&#13;
Counseling." Before beginning&#13;
his teaching career at the&#13;
university level, he taught in&#13;
elementary and high schools&#13;
and was a guidance chairman&#13;
and high school principal.&#13;
He received his B.E. degree&#13;
at Winona (Minn.) State&#13;
College, his A.M. from the&#13;
University of Illinois and his&#13;
Ph.D from the University of&#13;
Iowa. Before accepting his&#13;
present post, he taught at&#13;
Washington State University.&#13;
The afternoon workshop will&#13;
be followed by a business&#13;
meeting of the SEWPGA and a&#13;
dinner at Maplecrest Country&#13;
Club.&#13;
Prisoners and the&#13;
Press&#13;
(CPS) — A group of journalists&#13;
and a* group of federal&#13;
prison inmates, represented by&#13;
the ACLU Foundation, have&#13;
filed a federal lawsuit&#13;
challenging the U.S. Justice&#13;
D e p a rtm e n t's policy&#13;
prohibiting press interviews of&#13;
federal prison inmates.&#13;
The journalists cite the&#13;
freedom of p ress guarantee and&#13;
the public's right to know; the&#13;
prisoners cite their right of free&#13;
expression.&#13;
IN MEMORY OF&#13;
RICHARD P 5ART0&#13;
PASSIM6 HIS 35TH BIRTH PAY&#13;
The Business Office,&#13;
U-W Parkside&#13;
U . 'll he c l o s e d Fri d a y , A p ril «?Ls +&#13;
FROM to w.in dm&#13;
Hamm's 6 pack&#13;
Vodka full quart&#13;
Gin full quart&#13;
Aristocrat B randy full quart&#13;
Southern C omfort fifth&#13;
Would your club or organization&#13;
like a&#13;
Wine Tasting&#13;
Contact Fred Cook, 637-4101,&#13;
MWMMIMMWINMWyiWW'l&#13;
'Where the fun starts before the party begins."&#13;
P r i c e s g o od t h r o u g h S u n d a y , A p ril 2 3 rd&#13;
IN RACINE AT WESTGATE ON HIGHWAY 20, WASHINGTON AVENUE AND OHIO STREET&#13;
DAILY 9 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. MONDAY THRU SATURDAY • SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M.&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
</text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 14, April 17, 1972</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="63745">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
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          <name>Date</name>
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            <elementText elementTextId="63746">
              <text>1972-04-17</text>
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              <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63750">
              <text>English</text>
            </elementText>
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          <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>
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            <elementText elementTextId="63751">
              <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="63752">
              <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="63753">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
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        </element>
        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63754">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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      <name>campus concerns committee</name>
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    <tag tagId="261">
      <name>socialist workers party</name>
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    <tag tagId="210">
      <name>student government association</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="263">
      <name>symposium</name>
    </tag>
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</item>
