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                <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Volume 6, issue 16</text>
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            <text>Graffin recieves Kiekhofer Award</text>
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            <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <text>Graff in receives&#13;
Kiekhofer award&#13;
Walter R. Graffin, 35, an&#13;
assistant professor of English at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside, is among young&#13;
faculty members chosen from&#13;
throughout the UW System to&#13;
receive the 1972 Kiekhofer&#13;
awards of $1,000 each for&#13;
superior classroom performance.&#13;
Graffin received the award&#13;
Friday evening at a dinner&#13;
attended by members of the&#13;
Parkside humanities division,&#13;
which recommended Graffin&#13;
for the honor, the campus&#13;
teaching award committee,&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie and&#13;
other colleagues. Final selection&#13;
of recipients is made by an&#13;
all-UW System committee.&#13;
Graffin is the second&#13;
Parkside faculty members to&#13;
receive one of the outstanding&#13;
young teacher awards since the&#13;
program, which began at the&#13;
Madison campus in 1953, was&#13;
extended in 1970 to all campuses&#13;
of the university. Morris W.&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside free&#13;
Volume 6 Number 16 May 1, 1972&#13;
last sga meeting of semester&#13;
Loumos steps down from Meeting&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The April 25th meeting of the&#13;
Parkside Student Senate saw a&#13;
diversity of items on the&#13;
agenda.&#13;
Motions made by Nancy&#13;
Robinson, corresponding&#13;
secretary, after a presentation&#13;
by Jim Twist on the WPS&#13;
Medical Insurance which would&#13;
be made available to students&#13;
during the next academic year.&#13;
Though this insurance, at a cost&#13;
of $87 per 12 month year, is&#13;
more than previously paid for&#13;
medical insurance, the increased&#13;
benefits far outweigh&#13;
the cost.&#13;
Included in the health&#13;
package are surgical,&#13;
diagnostic, and maternity&#13;
benefits. The policy is available&#13;
to students with carrying six&#13;
credits or more.&#13;
The motion: "That the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association participate in the&#13;
Wisconsin Physicians Service&#13;
student health insurance&#13;
program sponsored by the&#13;
United Council of University of&#13;
Wisconsin Student Governments."&#13;
passed unanimously&#13;
when quorum was established.&#13;
A second motion, "That a&#13;
coordinator be elected to&#13;
represent the Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association in all&#13;
matters regarding the student&#13;
health insurance problem,",&#13;
also passed unanimously and&#13;
Jim Twist was elected to fill the&#13;
post.&#13;
A final motion: "That a&#13;
representative(s) be elected to&#13;
officially represent the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association at the United&#13;
Council Winter and Spring&#13;
General assemblies at Stout&#13;
State University in Menominee&#13;
on May 5, 6, and 7.&#13;
1). That these representatives&#13;
be given full authority in terms&#13;
of voting powers to represent&#13;
the Student Government&#13;
Association on any matters that&#13;
call for a decision at the general&#13;
assemblies.&#13;
2). That travel, lodging, and&#13;
meals be paid for by the&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association by means that are&#13;
availablel"&#13;
The motion passed 13-0-1 and&#13;
Jim Twist and Elaine Birch&#13;
were voted to attend the conference.&#13;
In commenting on the PSGA&#13;
sponsored Symposium, Dean&#13;
Loumos expressed his disappointment&#13;
in the way the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
was handling approval of funds,&#13;
and objected to the president&#13;
referring the matter to committee.&#13;
President Loumos further&#13;
expressed his feeling on the&#13;
matter when he turned the&#13;
meeting over to Jim Twist&#13;
saying he had had it. He also&#13;
stated that Bruce Volpintesta,&#13;
who was not present, had also&#13;
"had it." Danny Trotter,&#13;
treasurer, who ran for office on&#13;
the same ticket as Loumos and&#13;
Volpintesta, must also have had&#13;
it since he also was not present.&#13;
Upon taking over the&#13;
meeting, Jim Twist, with&#13;
Elaine Birch, clarified the&#13;
symposium plans. It was&#13;
generally agreed that the&#13;
Symposium committee try to&#13;
save as much of the planned&#13;
program as pos sible instead of&#13;
forgetting the whole thing which&#13;
had been suggested by&#13;
President Loumos.&#13;
The preceeding action took&#13;
place without a quorum,&#13;
quorum being established at&#13;
5:15 with the arrival of Mike&#13;
Lofton who had not been informed&#13;
of the meeting until&#13;
called when it was evident a&#13;
quorum was not present.&#13;
Upon establishing a quorum,&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
•»..&#13;
PARKSIDE CHILD CARE CENTER&#13;
The Parkside Child Care Center will offer a special summer&#13;
session to begin June 19th. Registration will be held at the center&#13;
ST n,a n?: T }.P\m each day the week of May 8th through the&#13;
12th and will be limited to children up to age 5. The Center will be&#13;
open Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., during the summer&#13;
session. For further information you may call Kenosha 658-3888 or&#13;
Racine 633-2931.&#13;
CAMPUS UNION BUILDING&#13;
f Thf £fmpus Union Building Committee has recently been&#13;
formed. The following members of the faculty, staff, and student&#13;
body form the committee: Student representatives include James&#13;
Lroxtord, John J. Grimes, and Patrick Moran; Staff, William&#13;
, ?r'AEJWin ?UeWke' and Philip Burnett! Faculty members&#13;
include Andrew McLean, John Murphy, and Barbara Jo Morris.&#13;
}he Co"1"1I"ee members welcome all suggestions by students,&#13;
taculty, and staff members in the planning of this vital building on&#13;
campus. &amp;&#13;
THIRTEEN DOLLARS A COUPLE&#13;
The annual Varsity Club Awards Banquet and Dinner-Dance&#13;
will be held Saturday, May 6, at the Kenosha Holiday Inn. All&#13;
students, faculty and staff are invited.&#13;
Cost for the complete program, which includes a social hour,&#13;
dinner and dance, is six-fifty per person or thirteen dollars a&#13;
couple.&#13;
Tickets may be purchased at the athletics office on Wood Road.&#13;
Call 553-2246 for information.&#13;
CAREER INTEREST GROUPS&#13;
Beginning the week of May 1 a group will be started for&#13;
students who would like to learn more about their career related&#13;
interests. If you would like to join such a group, please call 553-2121,&#13;
extension K42, as soon as possible . Tell the secretary your name,&#13;
phone number and what hours would be most convenient for you to&#13;
meet. If you have any questions, please cal lus at the same number.&#13;
CHICAGO BORN ITALIAN RESIDENT TO TEACH&#13;
A painter and printmaker of international stature, Moishe&#13;
Smith, has been named a visiting associate professor of art- at&#13;
Parkside effective next September. Chicago-born Smith presently&#13;
lives in Rapallo, Italy.&#13;
He previously taught at Southern Illinois University and Stout&#13;
State University (presently UW-Stout) and has been a visiting&#13;
faculty member at UW-Madison, Ohio State University, Utah State&#13;
University and the University of Iowa.&#13;
A PLANNED WEEK&#13;
This week will be Academic Planning Week at Parkside.&#13;
The program, organized by the Parkside student counseling&#13;
staff and faculty, is designed to assist students in p lanning summer&#13;
and fall academic schedules, selecting majors and determining&#13;
career choices.&#13;
Group academic advising sessions a re scheduled in various&#13;
academic fields throughout the week for students who have not yet&#13;
selected a major. Students who already have selected a major are&#13;
being encouraged to confer with the academic adviser assigned to&#13;
them during the week.&#13;
LITERATURE AND FILM&#13;
Literature and Film: "Narration, Montage and You" is the&#13;
topic for the next Parkside Humanities Seminar. Dr. Robert Self of&#13;
Northern Illinois University will lecture and show several short&#13;
films in Greenquist room 101, Friday, May 5th, at two-thirty.&#13;
Mr. Self has been teaching film for years and has been&#13;
especially interested in the possibilities for teaching in a comparative&#13;
approach to literature and film.&#13;
His presentation will vocus on the narrative and verbal aspects&#13;
of literature, the visual demands and implications of&#13;
cinematography, and the socio-cultural significance of the two&#13;
media. There is no charge; all students are welcome.&#13;
itt subsidiary opposed Strike becomes a Boycott of Canteen&#13;
Discussion takes plac e at&#13;
Monday s t r i k e meeting .&#13;
by Jim Kq lo^n, editor&#13;
What began as an attempt to&#13;
initiate a student strike,&#13;
developed into a free lunch&#13;
program in the Activities&#13;
Building. Originally, the&#13;
Concerned Students Coalition&#13;
had planned to strike in protest&#13;
of the War. However, as it&#13;
turned out, their efforts were&#13;
channeled into a protest of the&#13;
Canteen Company which&#13;
provides food services to the&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
During a Monday morning&#13;
Strike meeting in the Activities&#13;
Building, the plan for a free&#13;
lunch table was crystallized. It&#13;
was pointed out that the Canteen&#13;
Co. is owned by ITT, and as&#13;
such is implicated in the war&#13;
effort. Dean Loumos, SGA&#13;
President, said, "It's not&#13;
whether you boycott the&#13;
machine, it's that you know&#13;
they are owned by ITT."&#13;
The Monday morning planning&#13;
session was attended by&#13;
twenty students who agreed&#13;
with Loumos that "a true act of&#13;
anti-war sentiment would be to&#13;
boycott Canteen." Loumos&#13;
explained the boycott of Canteen&#13;
would represent a "constructive&#13;
action" as opposed to&#13;
a more dramatic strike.&#13;
Donations were gathered from&#13;
those attending the planning&#13;
session and by 12:15 a table had&#13;
been set up offering assorted&#13;
sandwiches and fruit.&#13;
Continuing through Wednesday,&#13;
the lunch table attracted&#13;
few faculty or students,&#13;
and though a few boycott&#13;
supporters stood up on tables to&#13;
explain the purpose of the free,&#13;
alternative lunch, few people&#13;
looked up.&#13;
Danny Trotter, an SGA officer&#13;
participating in the&#13;
boycott, said "though the&#13;
boycott may seem futile, it's a&#13;
start. You have to take some&#13;
kind of action, you just can't sit&#13;
around doing nothing." Few&#13;
people heeded his plea.&#13;
The al t e r n a t i ve lunch prograi&#13;
protestin g Canteen a nd |TT&#13;
May l, 1972 NEWS COPE Pag* 2&#13;
EpjtoRIAL&#13;
ran 'L'V revaa,ln9' and monotonously predictable conclusions&#13;
can be drawn from the first full week of Symposium activities&#13;
&amp;J^aCt'^,eS r" t0 dr3W Very sP®c!alizeTaudiences;&#13;
the people interested in Wednesday's Women's Caucus programs&#13;
nterested in Thursday's VICC VCISD. Radical Politics Seminar, and&#13;
intpr^ln"mb€a^0: ^ pe0p,e (faculty' staff' students) are&#13;
interested in anything. The average attendance figure for each&#13;
event presented during the week approached ten. Though some&#13;
succassfu,,y Presented than others, quality had&#13;
materialize' quanitltV of attendance. The audience just didn't&#13;
notth^n^Tw"6.!1?01 ubiquitous 9ray daV apathy; maybe it's&#13;
thl h °nuf kn0W where they're at' more "ke it's simply&#13;
factor'" att«ndan^?ere *" 9°' ^ •&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee recently rejected SGA's&#13;
proposal that the Revolutionary Youth Movement, and the&#13;
Wisconsin Alliance people who participated in the Radical Politics&#13;
Seminar, be paid a small gratuity for their efforts&#13;
The reason given: RYM and the Alliance represent "political"&#13;
groups and therefore cannot be paid for speaking on campus.&#13;
wh« lm 1 nter*sf 1 n9» and not entirely irrelevant, that Julian Bond,&#13;
nn m Q^f a-ne Student Union's Symposium program&#13;
n 5uW eCelve$2'000forhiseffortsfrom Lecture and Fine&#13;
^,'i ®°ndh.f'°f cou"e' a 9reater nationwide fame based on his&#13;
sn!!thf&gt;rn i u3 e 68 D®mocratic Convention, and in&#13;
southern politics. He is a public political figure; possibly the fact&#13;
«iomathiaP^eaHanCf*!S funded throu9h Lecture and Fine Arts has&#13;
something to do with this seeming incongruity.&#13;
Perhaps the rub is not just the word "politics" or "political"&#13;
bu the word "radical". Perhaps the difference befween radical&#13;
asfrfh,3 ,C°nVen,l0nal P°",iCS is ,he ,ac,or dictating the&#13;
distribution of money. Of course, there's nothing new here.&#13;
frl£0'S&#13;
Letters to the Editor Jff&#13;
PIZZA £&#13;
Custom made for you&#13;
FREE DELIVERY TO PA RKSIDE VI LLAGE&#13;
ALSO CHICKEN DINNERS&#13;
AND ITALIAN SAUSAGE BCMBERS&#13;
5021 — 30th Avenue Kenosha 657-5191&#13;
Open 6 day^a wee/c from 4 p.m., closed Mondays&#13;
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PERMANENT TYPE ANTI-FREEZE&#13;
12OZ. HEAVY DUTY BRAKE FLUID&#13;
50c per quart&#13;
34c per quart&#13;
$1.39 per gal Ion&#13;
47c per can&#13;
Cash and Carry Prlctson Oil Filters,&#13;
Air Filters, Tune Up Kite, Spark Plugs&#13;
All Items Subject to 4 Par Ont Sales Tax&#13;
SAVE — SAVE — SAVE&#13;
Turk stops flood&#13;
April 25,1972&#13;
To th e Editor:&#13;
When Robert Flood, in his&#13;
missive to the Voice, showed us&#13;
that he had missed the message&#13;
in the movie, "The Godfather,"&#13;
I was sorry. But when your&#13;
reviewer seemed to have&#13;
missed it also, I felt obligated to&#13;
clear it up.&#13;
If you are going to discuss a&#13;
movie with any degree of intelligence,&#13;
it is suggested that&#13;
you see all of it first. The&#13;
message was in the very&#13;
beginning, with the little old&#13;
man who had determined to live&#13;
by the rules, by law and order,&#13;
and to stay clear of the dirty&#13;
hands of the Mafia. But the poor&#13;
fellow learned that justice does&#13;
not always prevail, and to right&#13;
a grievous wrong had been&#13;
forced to get help from the&#13;
Godfather.&#13;
The message is just as&#13;
relevant today — i.e . McCarthy&#13;
who couldn't get a peace&#13;
platform in '68, or his followers&#13;
who could not even speak&#13;
because their microphones&#13;
were turned off. We have all&#13;
learned that, though violence&#13;
isn't much of an answer,&#13;
seeking justice through&#13;
peaceful means doesn't do&#13;
much either.&#13;
And so we have the usual&#13;
problems that stay usual every&#13;
year . , . an administration&#13;
overstocked with expensive&#13;
administrators who run the&#13;
university for themselves and&#13;
not the students or faculty... a&#13;
school that will not support a&#13;
newspaper unless it is a rubber&#13;
stamp for their propaganda,&#13;
and on and on.&#13;
Sex was such a minor part of&#13;
the movie that I am a bit&#13;
amazed at # Mr. Flood's&#13;
anguished cries ... I don't&#13;
think he's ready for anything as&#13;
dull as "Love Story" either.&#13;
He'd better just stay home and&#13;
lock the doors. But I'm indebted&#13;
to Mr. Flood. "Sex is a sacred&#13;
act," he said. Surely does&#13;
relieve my mind, so that's what&#13;
those bells are that I keep&#13;
hearing!&#13;
I would suggest that perhaps&#13;
the "Godfather" . is popular&#13;
because the distraught citizens&#13;
who attempted to gain peace&#13;
through the regular channels&#13;
are at the movie looking for&#13;
other answers. We've tried to&#13;
get out of Vietnam and dispose&#13;
of local dictators with every&#13;
method short of that.&#13;
I realize that you are short of&#13;
copy, but do we have to put up&#13;
with such long letters, such as&#13;
last week's offering from some&#13;
fellow who never has had&#13;
anything to say, but keeps on&#13;
saying it. We'd all be ahead if&#13;
you would just leave the space&#13;
blank.&#13;
Mrs. Genevieve Turk&#13;
senator&#13;
answers&#13;
gruhl&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Last week saw another of&#13;
those infrequent and unmissed&#13;
missives by Art Gruhl generally&#13;
condemning our hard working&#13;
student senate as a bunch of&#13;
bureaucratic misfits.&#13;
I have a few things to say to&#13;
Mr. Gruel regarding , his instance&#13;
that the student senate is&#13;
unrepresentative since it was&#13;
elected by only 17 per cent of the&#13;
student body.&#13;
I say this to Mr. Gruhl: Your&#13;
Student Senate is the duly&#13;
elected body of the students of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside and the fact that only&#13;
17 per cent of those students&#13;
voted only means that 83 per&#13;
cent of the students aren't worth&#13;
shit when it comes to expressing&#13;
a political preference. Did YOU&#13;
vote, Mr. Gruhn?&#13;
As to his comments about&#13;
paying taxes, that can only be&#13;
taken as a bunch of crud since&#13;
just about everyone does the&#13;
same be they hard working&#13;
businessmen like Mr. Gruhl or&#13;
outspoken short-haired radicals&#13;
like myself who are trying their&#13;
best to get an education.&#13;
I, unlike Mr. Gruhl, do not pay&#13;
my 'own' tuition. For this I&#13;
depend strictly upon scholarships&#13;
and $175 a month from a&#13;
grateful government paid me&#13;
through the Veteran's Administration.&#13;
I did have a job&#13;
once, but it interfered with my&#13;
academic planning. My only&#13;
'job' now is with the Naval&#13;
Reserve.&#13;
As to the entertainment Mr.&#13;
Gruhl derides so nicely:&#13;
Someone should inform Mr.&#13;
Gruhl that the money for such&#13;
entertainment is budgeted&#13;
through the State of Wisconsin&#13;
and given to the Activities&#13;
Board which must use it all up&#13;
or give it back.&#13;
The Activities Board is&#13;
strictly controlled by the Administration&#13;
of this University&#13;
even to the extent of having its&#13;
members appointed and then&#13;
denied even a vote on the&#13;
committee.&#13;
It's too bad Mr. Gruhl that&#13;
you are denied the opportunity&#13;
to express yourself to the PAB,&#13;
which should have been&#13;
disbanded long ago in favor of&#13;
the more representative and&#13;
duly elected Student Union&#13;
Committee of the Parkside&#13;
Student Senate. Your Student&#13;
Senate, Mr. Gruhl. If you have&#13;
any complaints on the way the&#13;
show is run bring them yourself&#13;
to the off office of YOUR Senate&#13;
and we will try to help you with&#13;
them.&#13;
Instead of crying to his&#13;
friendly recognised student&#13;
newspaper which is subsidized&#13;
by his friendly Student&#13;
Government Association of&#13;
which he is a member, Mr.&#13;
Gruhl could be useful to us on&#13;
some Student Senate committee&#13;
or other, thus putting that&#13;
vehemence of his into a constructive&#13;
channel.&#13;
So, Mr. Gruhl, come on down&#13;
and have a tale with your&#13;
representatives. Instead of&#13;
rapping Dean and the rest of t he&#13;
Senate in the paper, rap with&#13;
them in person. Though if you&#13;
want to dh so with me you will&#13;
have to do so before I depart on&#13;
the little journey I have coming&#13;
up on the orders of the U.S.&#13;
Navy. (Even student radicals&#13;
can have that little regarded&#13;
emotion of patriotism.)&#13;
Yours,&#13;
Kenneth R. Konkol, Senator&#13;
Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association&#13;
senior reflects&#13;
on uwp&#13;
To the Students,&#13;
I have been a student at&#13;
Parkside for four years now and&#13;
graduate next month and I feel&#13;
at least a little qualified to state&#13;
some experiences during my&#13;
time here and some opinions on&#13;
them I have been fortunate, or&#13;
equally unfortunate, to watch&#13;
Parkside grow in some areas&#13;
and conversely die in others, as&#13;
u has gone from a University&#13;
Extension to a University of&#13;
Wisconsin. Aside from just&#13;
being "around here" for four&#13;
years 1 have been on a number&#13;
of student committees, a&#13;
member of the Athletic Board&#13;
oMwo P?SitW°years' President&#13;
of two clubs, and have worked&#13;
AAtthhlewti c ^Dlethp armtmemebnetr. s of the&#13;
I have: gotten chased by two&#13;
Parkside cops all the way to&#13;
Racine because a friend and I&#13;
took a wrong road on campus&#13;
during a blizzard (even though&#13;
they tried to run us off the road&#13;
they failed to get us) . . . sden&#13;
three different sets of roads on&#13;
this campus and their accompanying&#13;
sets of pot holes&#13;
. . . Been thrown out of a dance&#13;
by Tony T. for still unknown&#13;
reasons . . . easily come to the&#13;
conclusion that Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
is full of sh-t . . . seen Wyllie&#13;
spend $5,000 on sod around&#13;
Tallent and Greenquist Halls&#13;
only to have it torn up less than&#13;
a year later (he refused to have&#13;
it used for a soccer field which&#13;
was needed at the time) .&#13;
seen some blonde woman&#13;
walking around the Student&#13;
Union for 3 years and never do a&#13;
goddamn thing except make&#13;
money off the students ....&#13;
been with a friend as the&#13;
Parkside cops towed away his&#13;
car during class because it&#13;
stalled on the side of the "road"&#13;
and then wanted him to pay&#13;
$41.00 to get it back . . . never&#13;
found Donald Gunderson in his&#13;
office (try the Library&#13;
newsstand) . . . had the "files"&#13;
pulled out on me and consequently&#13;
2 days later had a&#13;
parking ticket appeal, which I&#13;
submitted over four months&#13;
earlier, denieii . . . and the&#13;
terrible misfortune of having to&#13;
take a class with Harry Copipock&#13;
. . . wondered why the building&#13;
where the administration has&#13;
its offices is called Tallent when&#13;
they show so much lack of it&#13;
. . . and finally, I have been&#13;
falsely accused of fighting and&#13;
brawling in the Student Union&#13;
by some of the Administration.&#13;
I could go on but I think you&#13;
get the point I am trying to&#13;
make. That is, as a student at&#13;
Parkside you are going to be&#13;
faced with all kinds of shit from&#13;
the administration, faculty, and&#13;
cops. Don't get me wrong, I'm&#13;
not tearing down the school.&#13;
Parkside has great potential&#13;
and I want to see it developed,&#13;
but it's the things and the people&#13;
I mentioned and experienced&#13;
that are choking Parkside to&#13;
death. I have had good times at&#13;
Parkside, too, especially with&#13;
the Athletic Department and&#13;
S.G.A. and it is through these&#13;
and similar organizations I&#13;
suggest you work in to better,&#13;
Parkside. It's your school, not&#13;
the faculty's or the, administration's,&#13;
so make it the&#13;
way you want it to be. And then&#13;
in the future it will be a school&#13;
where you, as well as myself,&#13;
will be more proud to have&#13;
graduated from.&#13;
Peter J. Habetler, Jr.&#13;
"Don't believe everything you read."&#13;
Jim Koloen, "Red" Widely, Paul&#13;
Lomartire, Brian Ross, Cleta&#13;
Skovronski, Bob Mainland, Mike&#13;
Kite, Gary Jensen, Wolfgang&#13;
Salewski, Mike Stevesand, Andrew&#13;
Schmelling, Ken Konkol, Kathy&#13;
Rasch, Tom Paradise&#13;
PHONES:&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
student* of thte University of&#13;
Wisconsm-Parkside published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole source of&#13;
revenue for the operation of&#13;
Newscope. 5,000 copies are printed&#13;
and distributed throughout Ihe&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University. Free&#13;
copies are available upon request.&#13;
Deadline for all manuscripts and&#13;
photographs submitted to Newscope&#13;
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;
I*-***4*.***MUttVlMPMW******** "*»«r**•««*•*' AT A .*&lt;.*•»-» * * *&#13;
OUTER LIMITS&#13;
Parkside Activities Board&#13;
Presents a REAL Road Rallye&#13;
"Head Your Car to the "&#13;
May 7&#13;
Registration at Noon — 1st Car Out l :00 PM&#13;
$5.00 Registration Fee — includes Driver and Navigator&#13;
Tallent Hall Parking Lot&#13;
After the competition and Dust Subsides&#13;
Relax at our party — Beer &amp; Food&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin ID required&#13;
Page 3 NEWSCOPE May 1,1972&#13;
Radical Political Organizing&#13;
SGA Meeting by Jim Koioen, Editor&#13;
Thursday night's segment of&#13;
the Parkside Student Government&#13;
Symposium, "Radical&#13;
Political Organizing" began&#13;
late, and was attended by few.&#13;
Paul Soglin, the Madison City&#13;
Councilman, did not speak. His&#13;
absence was explained by&#13;
PSGA President Dean Loumos&#13;
as due to a searies of events in&#13;
Madison that demanded his&#13;
presence.&#13;
Members of the Wisconsin&#13;
Alliance, a political party from&#13;
Madison, and representatives of&#13;
the Revolutionary Youth&#13;
Movement from Racine&#13;
outlined their philosophies and&#13;
programs.&#13;
Spokesmen for Wisconsin&#13;
Alliance explained their activities&#13;
in organizing workers&#13;
and farmers in the Madison&#13;
area. Representing various&#13;
committees in the Alliance, the&#13;
four Madisonites explained the&#13;
goals of the Alliance as a&#13;
"working people's party" which&#13;
assists in organizing people&#13;
from the "bottom up". One&#13;
speaker pointed out that the&#13;
union leadership "can be as&#13;
bureaucratic as management",&#13;
and thus not represent the true&#13;
feelings of the rank and file.&#13;
After briefly outlining the&#13;
history of the Alliance, which&#13;
was formed in 1968, two spokesnen&#13;
from RYM presented an&#13;
PENAL&#13;
Kicking off Symposium 1972,&#13;
the Cellblock Circus Players&#13;
performed a series of short skits&#13;
which one of the players&#13;
characterized as "examples of&#13;
the kind of humor that goes&#13;
over really well in the institutions."&#13;
The troupe performed&#13;
before an audience&#13;
whose size was to be seen as&#13;
characteristic of the week-long&#13;
Symposium activities; small&#13;
and specialized.&#13;
The four women and one man&#13;
who make up the Cellblock&#13;
Players presented six skits,&#13;
including "Pedro", a "pet&#13;
rock," with which the player&#13;
quickly knocked herself out;&#13;
"Hopscotch", about a cop who&#13;
attempts to bust some kids for&#13;
holding an illegal assembly on&#13;
the sidewalk; "Hey, Bill,"&#13;
about a man who discovers his&#13;
girl isn't "safe"; and "Factory&#13;
Song" sung to the tune of "I've&#13;
Urban League and SSSSSSSS&#13;
Project Acceptance&#13;
Women's&#13;
Day of Symposium&#13;
poetry and play readings&#13;
by Gary Jensen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Three people dedicated to&#13;
helping the needy in Racine met&#13;
Tuesday, April 25, at the&#13;
Whiteskellar. They presented&#13;
the facts of their presently&#13;
existing programs to an&#13;
audience of six or seven.&#13;
Ray Matthews, Associate&#13;
Director of the Racine Urban&#13;
League, was the first to speak..&#13;
He informed the meager&#13;
audience that the Racine Urban&#13;
League was part of a national&#13;
urban league. There are 106&#13;
local affiliates of their league in&#13;
46 cities. It is presently funded&#13;
by private citizens and the&#13;
Department of Labor. One of his&#13;
hopes, he said, is to get minority&#13;
groups into jobs as skilled&#13;
apprentices.&#13;
The Southside Revitalization&#13;
Organization was represented&#13;
by Terry Ludimon. The S.R.O.&#13;
recently began being funded by&#13;
the federal government. They&#13;
are presently occupied with the&#13;
rebuilding of Racine's south&#13;
side. Ludiomon also said they&#13;
hope to buy small industries for&#13;
the south side community. This&#13;
would provide jobs for the&#13;
people.&#13;
Jean Manley from Urban&#13;
Concern told about her experiences&#13;
working with ACenter,&#13;
the detention home, and&#13;
the city jail. This is all part of&#13;
"Project Acceptance," which&#13;
was formed to help prisoners fit&#13;
back into society. Urban&#13;
Concern is funded solely by&#13;
private donations and churches.&#13;
During his presentation,&#13;
Ludimon suggested that&#13;
students become directly involved;&#13;
paint a poor person's&#13;
house; clean a blind person's&#13;
house, he suggested.&#13;
Matthews said the Racine&#13;
Urban League can always use&#13;
new people since it is a membership&#13;
organization, supported&#13;
only by volunteers. Jean&#13;
mentioned that Father Williams&#13;
needs students in the research&#13;
area.&#13;
At the end there was a&#13;
question-answer period in&#13;
which students asked the group&#13;
various questions about the&#13;
progress of the aforementioned&#13;
organizations.&#13;
The poetry reading, held in&#13;
the Whiteshellar at 7:30 was&#13;
presented by Carol Vopat, an&#13;
English instructor. Included in&#13;
her selections were poems from&#13;
Sandra Hoffman, Denise&#13;
Levertov, Nikki Johavic, Ann&#13;
Sexton and Sylvia Plath.&#13;
Ms. Vopat provided a good&#13;
interpretation of the "Women's&#13;
poems," whose themse included&#13;
abortion, seduction, menstruaticn,&#13;
childbirth. The&#13;
general ambiance of the poems&#13;
was either celebration or&#13;
poignant sadness, a dejection&#13;
culminating in Plath's poetry of&#13;
tragedy and venom.&#13;
The audience at the poetry&#13;
reading outnumbered the&#13;
participant ten to one,&#13;
representing a 66 per cent&#13;
upswing in attendance over the&#13;
play readings.&#13;
analysis of the "system" in&#13;
historical terms. The RYM&#13;
member posited as an apriori&#13;
premise the statement that.&#13;
"America is the most racist&#13;
country in the history of the&#13;
world." He concluded that the&#13;
failure tp deal with racism has&#13;
historically prevented&#13;
meaningful change in the U.S.&#13;
Speaking briefly on what&#13;
radical politics means, the&#13;
RYM representative equated it&#13;
with change. The RYM speaker&#13;
later outlined the various&#13;
programs his organization has&#13;
initiated in Racine. Concentrating&#13;
on the Near North&#13;
Side, he explained, "We have&#13;
put together survival programs&#13;
for the oppressed and poor&#13;
people living in this area."&#13;
"Only by getting the community&#13;
together," he continued,&#13;
"can we survive."&#13;
The meeting ended with a&#13;
question and answer period.&#13;
INSTITUTIONS&#13;
been working on the Railroad"&#13;
with lyrics like "some one in the&#13;
factory is dying, hoping a fresh&#13;
wind blows."&#13;
The Cellblock Circus Players&#13;
has performed at the&#13;
Manhattan House of Detention&#13;
for Men, disaffectionately&#13;
nicknamed the "Tombs" by its&#13;
inmates, and at many state&#13;
penal institutions including&#13;
Green Bay, Waupun and the&#13;
Milwaukee House of Correction.&#13;
Following the presentation of&#13;
the skits, a discussion ensued&#13;
which included short presentations&#13;
by Jack Jude, a&#13;
representative of Project Acceptance,&#13;
and Jerry Gonzales, a&#13;
former convict and addict.&#13;
Jude explained the function of&#13;
Project Acceptance, characterizing&#13;
it as a vehicle for&#13;
community involvement with a&#13;
philosophy similar to the Big&#13;
Brother and Sister&#13;
organizations. The attitude of&#13;
the group, Jude said, leads to&#13;
the belief that "jail as a form of&#13;
rehabilitation is defunct,"&#13;
adding that the "institution&#13;
squelches the individual."&#13;
Gonzales drew the analogy of&#13;
prison as "a bug which goes in&#13;
one ear and eats his way&#13;
through to the other ear. On the&#13;
way it lays millions of eggs all&#13;
over the brain."&#13;
He told the audience that&#13;
when a person is released from&#13;
prison, he needs "a place to stay&#13;
for at least two months, clothes&#13;
and a minimum of $30 a week"&#13;
in order to readjust himself to&#13;
the world and find employment.&#13;
Currently, he explained, a&#13;
released prisoner is left&#13;
basically to his own resources,&#13;
and without the necessities as&#13;
he outlined, he is easily forced&#13;
back into crime.&#13;
As part of the "Women's&#13;
Day" activities of the SYMPOSIUM,&#13;
the Parkside&#13;
Women's Caucus produced both&#13;
a play reading and a poetry&#13;
reading. The play readings,&#13;
held in the Whiteskellar at 3:30,&#13;
featured Claire Booth Luce's&#13;
"Doll's House 1970" and Sylvia&#13;
Plath's "Three Women".&#13;
Ms. Luce's play, which unfortunately&#13;
is yawningly&#13;
didactic and evidences little&#13;
dramatic merit, was capably&#13;
read by Pam Nekich and'Ted&#13;
Paone. The tract involves a&#13;
dialogue between a couple&#13;
married for ten years, and&#13;
analyzes the reason behind the&#13;
wife deserting her husband in&#13;
order to become a human being.&#13;
Tough both participants&#13;
presented a good reading, little&#13;
could be done to compensate for&#13;
the play's lack of merit; the&#13;
dialogue, as written, has little&#13;
relationship to the way people&#13;
really speak: Propagandizing is&#13;
not necessarily an art form.&#13;
The final reading was from&#13;
Sylvia Plath's "Three Women,"&#13;
a poem for three voices. The&#13;
three women were presented by&#13;
Debby Friedell, Becky Ecklund&#13;
and Rebecca Cook, One voice&#13;
represented a mother about to&#13;
give a natural childbirth;&#13;
another echoed a woman about&#13;
to have a miscarriage following&#13;
a series of miscarraiges; and&#13;
the third voice was that of a&#13;
college girl about to have a child&#13;
which she plans to put up for&#13;
adoption.&#13;
Sylvia Plath, a poet who&#13;
committed suicide at the age of&#13;
30, afforded the readers with&#13;
decidedly poetic material, as&#13;
opposed to the staid didacticism&#13;
of the tractition Luce. The three&#13;
readers presented a good interpretation&#13;
of the material;&#13;
Rebecca Cooks' rendering&#13;
especially good.&#13;
The audience tied the participants&#13;
with six members&#13;
each.&#13;
May l, 1972 NEWSCOPE Page 4&#13;
SGA meeting&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
Ken Konkol made a motion that&#13;
the roll be taken for the purpose&#13;
of having it as part of the&#13;
minutes, something which had&#13;
not been previously made. The&#13;
motion passed.&#13;
Members present: Dean&#13;
Loumos, President, Becky&#13;
Ecklund, Recording Secretary,&#13;
Nancy Robinson, Corresponding&#13;
Secretary, Senators&#13;
Michael Baxter, Jerry Murphy,&#13;
Mike R. Harris, Elaine M.&#13;
Birch, Kenneth R. Konkol, Mike&#13;
Lofton, Mark Barnhill, Ken&#13;
Martin, James Twist, Dale&#13;
Martin, Jim Bielefeldt, and&#13;
Tom Taskonis, another late&#13;
arrival.&#13;
A motion on a request by&#13;
Z.P.G. for $100 for establishing&#13;
an information center on birth&#13;
control methods and contraceptive&#13;
devices with a future&#13;
outlook toward a V.D. clinic&#13;
passed 12-2.&#13;
A motion to reimburse&#13;
Carmen Nute of the Latino&#13;
Student Coalition for expenses&#13;
of $36.20 incurred while attending&#13;
two Latino oriented&#13;
conferences passed 10-3.&#13;
A motion to provide $200 for&#13;
fencing for the Day Care Center&#13;
passed by 9-4-2.&#13;
At this time a question arose&#13;
as to whether the Student&#13;
Organizations Account, which&#13;
had had $1,700 in it before the&#13;
Symposium planning which&#13;
would cost an estimated $1,200,&#13;
and other disbursements had&#13;
been made, now had any money&#13;
left in it at all. Since the&#13;
treasurer was unavailable, the&#13;
question remained unresolved.&#13;
Mike Lofton, Chairman of the&#13;
Academic Policies Committee,&#13;
spoke on the standardized&#13;
TEACHER EVALUATION&#13;
FORM prepared by that&#13;
committee consinsting of Lofton&#13;
and Senators Birch, Bielefeldt&#13;
and Konkol.&#13;
Though the meeting started&#13;
breaking up for 6:00 classes, the&#13;
committee got the go ahead to&#13;
disburse the form to faculty&#13;
members for consideration at&#13;
the May 2 Faculty Senate&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Graffin receives award&#13;
(Continued from Page 1&#13;
Firebaugh, an associate&#13;
professor of physics at UW-P,&#13;
received one of the first four allcampus&#13;
awards in 1970.&#13;
The awards are named for&#13;
William Kiekhofer, late UW&#13;
professor of economics, and are&#13;
funded from a grant established&#13;
to perpetuate his teaching&#13;
ideals, candidates must be&#13;
under 36.&#13;
Graffin was graduated from&#13;
Milwaukee North Division High&#13;
School, received his B.S. and&#13;
M.A. degrees at UW-Madison,&#13;
did additional graduate work at&#13;
Indiana University and was&#13;
awarded his Ph.D. degree at&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Before joining the Parkside&#13;
faculty in 1968, he taught for&#13;
three years at Northwestern&#13;
University.&#13;
His current teaching includes&#13;
a section devoted to&#13;
contemporary problems in&#13;
P a r k s i d e ' s i n n o v a t i v e&#13;
American language program,&#13;
an English course in contemporary&#13;
literature and a&#13;
humanities course titled&#13;
"Background of the Arts: 20th&#13;
Century," which he developed&#13;
with Peter Martin of the&#13;
English faculty.&#13;
Graffin also is chairman of&#13;
the American language&#13;
program committee and is&#13;
active as a lecturer for PREP&#13;
(Parkside Resource Enrichment&#13;
Professors), a project in&#13;
which faculty members act as&#13;
visiting lecturers in area high&#13;
schools.&#13;
He was among lecturers for&#13;
the recent Capsule College for&#13;
Women at UW-P and has spoken&#13;
on a variety of literary topics&#13;
before community groups.&#13;
He is co-editor of a volume of&#13;
contemporary readings for&#13;
college level English classes,&#13;
"Perspectives for the 70's,"&#13;
publiched by Dodd, Mead in&#13;
1971.&#13;
He was elected to Phi Beta&#13;
Kappa as an undergraduate and&#13;
is a member of the Modern&#13;
Language Association.&#13;
Last spring he was among&#13;
four UW-P professors cited for&#13;
honorable mention as&#13;
distinguished teachers at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
*S«rving Daily From 5:00 P.M.&#13;
COZY CO MFORTABLE DININ C&#13;
658-2177&#13;
• CAPTAIN'S'CABIN RO OM&#13;
FOR PRIVATE PA RTIES&#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 PROXM|R£_&#13;
18 hour film&#13;
marathon at&#13;
vogue&#13;
On Saturday and Sunday,&#13;
May 6th and 7th, SGA will&#13;
present the penultimate activity&#13;
of Symposium 1972. An 18 hour&#13;
long film festival is planned to&#13;
begin at 6 PM Saturday at the&#13;
grave site of the Vogue Theater,&#13;
1820 - 52nd Street, Kenosha.&#13;
Admission is $1.00 and inexpensive&#13;
food and refreshments&#13;
will be served. Many surprises&#13;
are currently being planned to&#13;
keep people awake and alert as&#13;
the marathon film session runs&#13;
its 18 hour cinematic gamut of&#13;
underground, foreign, and old&#13;
classic flicks.&#13;
Included in the list of films to&#13;
be shown are such old standbys&#13;
as "Horse Feathers" starring&#13;
the inimitable Marx Brothers;&#13;
the Great Nose's "Hurry!&#13;
Hurry!" and "The Great&#13;
Chase"; Laurel and Hardy's&#13;
"Perfect Day", as well as&#13;
Chaplin's "Essanay" films. For&#13;
swashbuckling fans, Errol&#13;
Flynn's "Captain Blood" will be&#13;
shown.&#13;
Other, more contemporary&#13;
fare includes such peppery&#13;
classics as "Salt of the Earth";&#13;
the controversial "Pledge of&#13;
Allegiance"; "Brand X"&#13;
starring Taylor Mead, Ultra&#13;
Violet and Abbie Hoffman; and&#13;
"Right On".&#13;
Rounding out the list will be a&#13;
3-D flick entitled "Eyes of Hell'&#13;
the proletarian "Day of the&#13;
Painter", the revealing "Apple&#13;
Thieves", "Parque-Year of the&#13;
Tanks", the prosaic "La Vita -&#13;
Life in a Tin Can", "Spider&#13;
Elephant", "1001 Arabian&#13;
Nights" and "Dead of the&#13;
Night".&#13;
The film festival is open to the&#13;
public.&#13;
SYMPOSIUM 1972&#13;
A BON VOYAGE TO RACINE CAMPUS&#13;
On Friday, May 5, beginning about 5 PM, a "Going Away",&#13;
party will be held for and at the Racine campus. Featured at this&#13;
event will be three rock bands; "Canyon", "Speedy Cookin' " and&#13;
"Blood Money".&#13;
Weather permitting, the party planners hope to hold the party&#13;
outside, on the Racine Campus' patio, overlooking Lake Michigan.&#13;
Next year, the campus will become part of the Racine Technical&#13;
Institute.&#13;
THEATRE X&#13;
An • Exc iting theatrical revue of satire, improvisation and&#13;
experiment will be featured when UWP presents Milwaukee's&#13;
Theatre X. The ensemble company will present X Communication.&#13;
Curtain time is 8 PMat the Activities building on Tuesday, May 2.&#13;
Admission is free.&#13;
A collective touring ensemble, which has recently performed&#13;
before Kenosha audiences at Carthage College and the Vogue&#13;
Theater, Theatre X has won both popular and critical acclaim for&#13;
more than 175 performances in 60 locations since its founding two&#13;
years ago.&#13;
X COMMUNICATION is a collage of changing and growing,&#13;
short original pieces created by the Theatre X company members.&#13;
The program runs the theatrical gamut of co ntent and style, and&#13;
features spontaneous company improvisations utilizing situations&#13;
drawn from audience suggestions.&#13;
There will be only one performance.&#13;
Pre-Law Club: Sex Panel&#13;
As part of the Symposium&#13;
activities, the UWP Pre-Law&#13;
Club will sponsor a panel&#13;
discussion Wednesday, May 3,&#13;
at Greenquist 103. The topic will.&#13;
be "Should Private Sex Between&#13;
Concenting Adults be&#13;
Legalized?"&#13;
The discussion panel includes&#13;
Waukesha County District&#13;
Attorney Richard McConnell;&#13;
Racine Attorney Jay Schwartz;&#13;
Kenosha State&#13;
Assemblyman Eugene Dorff;&#13;
and the Rev. Gergory Spitz, a&#13;
Kenosha St. Joseph high school&#13;
teacher. Also sitting on the&#13;
panel will be a prostitute and a&#13;
homosexual.&#13;
District Attorney McConnell&#13;
recently gained notoriety for his&#13;
opposition to the controversial&#13;
sex education program sponsored&#13;
by the Unitarian Church.&#13;
Jay Schwartz is a well-known&#13;
Racine attorney who ran for&#13;
state attorney general a few&#13;
years ago.&#13;
The panel discussion in&#13;
Greenquist 103\vill begin at 7:30&#13;
PM. After the discussion an&#13;
informal social gathering&#13;
replete with refreshments will&#13;
be held in the Whiteskellar. All&#13;
UWP faculty, staff and students&#13;
are invited to attend and continue&#13;
discussion with panel&#13;
members on a one to one basis.&#13;
CLARIFICATION:&#13;
Last week's NEWSCOPE&#13;
included a story on the new bar&#13;
in the Activities Building. It was&#13;
mistakenly reported that two&#13;
upright coolers cost $2,900 each.&#13;
This should be amended to&#13;
approximately $2,200 for&#13;
everything, not as stated in&#13;
NEWSCOPE. Don't believe&#13;
everything you read.&#13;
. ^OMEGRAD SCHOOLS&#13;
ARE MORE CHALLENGING&#13;
THAN OTHERS. It's graduation day and&#13;
there you stand... diploma&#13;
in hand and future in doubt.&#13;
You could go on to graduate&#13;
school.Or you could look for&#13;
a job in today's ever-tightening&#13;
job market. Or,you could&#13;
put your education to work&#13;
immediately by applying for&#13;
the Air Force's OfficerTraining&#13;
School program.&#13;
Upon qualification,&#13;
you'll find yourself beginning&#13;
12 weeks of specialized&#13;
study designed to prepare&#13;
you for the challenge and&#13;
responsibilities of an officer's&#13;
commission. And, give you&#13;
the chance to go on to flight&#13;
school to earn those famous&#13;
silver wings as an Air Force&#13;
pilot or navigator.&#13;
OTS is your chance to&#13;
break away from the crowd&#13;
and be recognized. For all the&#13;
facts, mail in the coupon. Or,&#13;
call 800-631-1972 toll free:&#13;
Remember,with an Air&#13;
rorce future, the sky's no&#13;
imit. * In New Jersey call 800-962-2803.&#13;
TDfRHIAmRATEcR^?»U1TINGSERV1CE «•«!&#13;
Please send me more information on Air Force OTS. I&#13;
i Name.&#13;
. Address&#13;
j Date of Birth. I City&#13;
| State&#13;
-Sex.&#13;
-County.&#13;
| Date of Graduation —School.&#13;
j I understand there is no obligation. |&#13;
ij^dyo^jf in theAirFbrce.j&#13;
Awards To VanWilliganfO'Rourke Page 5 NEWSCOPE May 1,1972&#13;
An anthropologist and an&#13;
engineer are the 1972 winners of&#13;
outstanding teaching awards of&#13;
$500 each at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. The&#13;
awards are'funded by a grant'&#13;
from the Standard Oil (Ind.)&#13;
Foundation and will be formally&#13;
presented at commencement&#13;
exercises on May 28.&#13;
The winners are John Van&#13;
Willigen, assistant professor of&#13;
anthropology, and Michael J.&#13;
O'Rourke, engineering science&#13;
instructor. Cited for honorable&#13;
mention as distinguished&#13;
teachers were LeRoy Cougle,&#13;
assistant professor of business&#13;
management, and Chong-maw&#13;
Chen, assistant professor of lif e&#13;
science.&#13;
They were selected by the&#13;
c ampu s f a c u l t y - s t u d e n t&#13;
teaching awards committee&#13;
chaired by Prof. Herbert Kubly&#13;
on the basis of nominations&#13;
submitted by students.&#13;
Van Willigen, 33, joined the&#13;
Parkside faculty in September,&#13;
1970, after teaching at the&#13;
University of Arizona, where he&#13;
also completed work for his&#13;
Ph.D.&#13;
John Van Willigen&#13;
As an anthropologist and as a&#13;
teacher, Van Willigen has interested&#13;
himself in the impact&#13;
of industrialization on the&#13;
problems of urban industrial&#13;
society, the area of stu dy which&#13;
constitutes Parkside's special&#13;
educational mission.&#13;
He presently is teaching two&#13;
courses in introductory anthropology&#13;
and a course in&#13;
culture and technological&#13;
change. He also was one of tw o&#13;
UW-P anthropologists who led a&#13;
study-field trip to Mexico&#13;
during the spring semester&#13;
break to study Mexican culture&#13;
News Briefs&#13;
DRUG TESTS AT CENTRAL STATE U.&#13;
(CPS) —Ohio's Central State University has begun mandatory&#13;
urinalysis with registration to weed out hard drug users, after two&#13;
drug-related shootings shook the campus several weeks ago.&#13;
Students at the predominantly black school requested the tests&#13;
and the regents approved, "to change CSU's reputation as a drug&#13;
haven in Ohio."&#13;
READER-OWNED PAPER IN IDAHO?&#13;
(CPS) — The Intermountain Observer in Boise, Idaho, is&#13;
selling shares to its readers in that state to raise $30,000 by th e end&#13;
of April.&#13;
The paper, written and printed on the University of Idaho&#13;
campus, hopes to buy its way out of a local broadcasting firm and&#13;
become a self-supporting journal of a dvocacy by 1973. It would be&#13;
the first totally reader-owned paper in the country.&#13;
MITCHELL SPEAKS OUT&#13;
(CPS) — "My dear, don't you realize that you can take a real&#13;
trip in marijuana. . . These stupid jerks who smoke the stuff don't&#13;
realize what they're getting themselves into. Now that we've&#13;
stopped the flow of the milder stuff in the United States, they're&#13;
going outside the country, and now the pushers are importing the&#13;
cannabis plant from other countries. The same kind of stuff the&#13;
opium smokers use. It's hashish, and you can really become addicted&#13;
to it." — for mer Attorney General John Mitchell to Kandy&#13;
Stroud, a reporter for Women's Wear Daily, at a cocktail party.&#13;
EAGLE FOUND SHOT&#13;
(CPS) — A mature golden eagle has been found shot to death in&#13;
Wyoming with a note tied to its legs with barbed wire. The note&#13;
read: "To the continued safety of the flocks of Wyoming, for he died&#13;
that the lambs may grow."&#13;
and history.&#13;
He has just been elected a&#13;
fellow of the American Anthropological&#13;
Association and is&#13;
also a member of Sigma Xi, the&#13;
Tibet Society and the&#13;
Association for Asian studies.&#13;
O'Rourke, 25, also came to&#13;
Parkside in fall, 1970, and&#13;
presently is teaching a course in&#13;
electromechanics, mechanical&#13;
vibrations and introducting to&#13;
computing mechanics in the&#13;
School of Modern Industry,&#13;
which implements Parkside's&#13;
industrial society mission.&#13;
O'Rourke also has been&#13;
selected as a participant in a&#13;
National Science Foundation&#13;
Summer Institute, on structural&#13;
design, an interaction program&#13;
between educators and practitioners,&#13;
to be held July 10&#13;
through August 4 at Illinois&#13;
Institute of Technology.&#13;
He received his M.S.C.E. and&#13;
Ph.D. degrees at Northwestern&#13;
University and brings to the&#13;
classroom experience from&#13;
both industrial and academic&#13;
posts.&#13;
He is a member of T au Beta&#13;
Phi, Chi Epsilon and the&#13;
Michael O'Rourke&#13;
American Society of Civil&#13;
Engineers.&#13;
Cougle teaches courses in&#13;
emp l o y e e e v a l u a t i o n ,&#13;
behavioral science and decision&#13;
making in the management&#13;
science division of th e School fo&#13;
Modern Industry, and is a&#13;
Loyola University Ph.D.&#13;
Chen, who is teaching&#13;
bioscience and plant&#13;
physiology, received his Ph.D.&#13;
at Kansas University and did&#13;
postdoctoral work at the&#13;
National Cancer Institute of&#13;
Canada and the Roche Institute&#13;
af M olecular Biology.&#13;
the tyinedt&#13;
Pigya &amp; O tatum Qoodd.&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
LIQUOR STORE, BAR, DINING ROOM&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA 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 ... WE BRINC"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
•olt&gt; • AccMtron&#13;
Ultrachron - Longine&#13;
Bulova - Movado&#13;
Caravel la . Timer&#13;
LeCoultre&#13;
PERFUMES&#13;
France's&#13;
WSnont -&#13;
Nrfumei And&#13;
Colognes&#13;
JtEYAIR DEPT/ J&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Set t ing&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept .&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
SBI7 OTA Ava. VwUihco &amp; g&amp;nA,&#13;
ft does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
0% Di scount to s tudents and Faculty with | .q&#13;
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BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
CRYSTAL&#13;
Tlffon • Orrefori&#13;
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FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE —1948 Ford, 6cyl. 2 door&#13;
in good cond. Call after 6 at 654-6485.&#13;
for this S450 value.&#13;
FOR SALE — '62 Comet, 6 cyl. $125.&#13;
Call 652-5904 or 654-3429.&#13;
FOR SALE —Guitar MARTIN D-18,&#13;
with deluxe hard shell case, $335"&#13;
firm, ph. 652.0295.&#13;
FOR SALE: White panne velvet&#13;
shawl with long white fringe. Never&#13;
worn. Shimmers like White gold. $25&#13;
new, will sell for $10. Ph. Cleta 654-&#13;
1927 o r 553 2496.&#13;
FOR SALE — '68 VW, sunroof, good&#13;
cond. $1,145. Call 632 9669 after 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
P E Turntable. SHURE high track&#13;
cartridge. Call Ron. 657-6630.&#13;
FOR SALE — '68 Triumph 500,&#13;
custom, best offer call 552-9068.&#13;
1970 Nova, 350 V-8, two barrel,&#13;
factory 3 speed on floor, power&#13;
steering and brakes, 32,000 miles,&#13;
new tires. Call 657-7105, 8 to 5:30 or&#13;
554-6470 after 6:30.&#13;
Splffy 1963 M6 Midget SPORTSCAR,&#13;
needs body work, truly THE&#13;
car of the future and yours for the&#13;
ridiculously low price of $150 cash,&#13;
contact Jim at 553-2496 or at the&#13;
Newscope office.&#13;
PERSONALS&#13;
WANTED - Writers, iournalists,&#13;
production staff and ad men to take&#13;
over a college newspaper. Must be&#13;
housebroken, learn while you earn&#13;
when you can. 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;
Gay Youth Coalition: Anyone interested,&#13;
or having any questions or&#13;
problems they would like to discuss,&#13;
please call 634-4470.&#13;
HOUSEWORK HELPER — early&#13;
June for about a week, pay open. Ph.&#13;
554-8517.&#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;
JUST IN TIME FOR MOTHER'S&#13;
DAY — Ready for the Home,&#13;
weaned and litter trained, 8 weeks&#13;
old people orientated kittens. 1&#13;
Black 8, White Female - loo ks like a&#13;
panda bear; 1 Black 8. White male -&#13;
looks like Sylvester the Cat; 1 Gray&#13;
Tiger Stripe Male - big eyes and a&#13;
loud pur; 1 Brown Tiger Stripe Male&#13;
• the friendliest kitten. All come with&#13;
white boots, stomachs and faces.&#13;
Cost: only a little love. Call 633-8162&#13;
any time, but hurry.&#13;
Go Go Girls wanted', top wages.&#13;
Pussy Cat Lounge, 633-3805, Racine.&#13;
Babysitter and light house work,&#13;
afternoons and evenings, full or part&#13;
time. Please call 632-3785.&#13;
WANT TO TRADE Men's 21"&#13;
bicycle frame - Reynolds 531. With to&#13;
trade for larger, comparable frame -&#13;
would consider selling. Ph. 657-3046.&#13;
TYPING done. Experienced. Ph.&#13;
552 877.&#13;
ROMEMATE WANTED — Girl to&#13;
share apt. in June, a mile from the&#13;
Kenosha campus. 3 rooms. Ph. 652-&#13;
1486, between 12 - 2, 652-5904.&#13;
May l, 1972 NEWSCOPE Paget&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
HOLIDAY IN N AND&#13;
RUBY II&#13;
It took me a day and a half to&#13;
find Eating Out, and when I did,&#13;
I found him on some kinda' trip.&#13;
It seems that the dentist he&#13;
hadn't seen in six months told&#13;
him his teeth were fine, but he&#13;
was too fat.&#13;
Eating Out was depreseed, it&#13;
took a real sales pitch to get him&#13;
out to review double the normal&#13;
amount of restaurants. "C'mon,&#13;
man, we've got three places to&#13;
do before NEWSCOPE is a&#13;
thing of the past." '&#13;
Maggie was gathered up, and&#13;
the three of us slid into&#13;
Kenosha's melting pot of&#13;
prepared food.&#13;
The first stop on a Thursday&#13;
night, a little after nine, was the&#13;
local Holiday Inn. I had to&#13;
convince Eating Out that this&#13;
coast to coast, global Chain&#13;
didn't contribute directly to&#13;
"the Big Viet Squirmish", the&#13;
"Commie Caper". I told him it&#13;
didn't to my limited knowledge,&#13;
just don't drink a Coke.&#13;
The only reason I took the&#13;
entourage there was because a&#13;
former Parkside student and&#13;
Kenosha track superstar, Tom&#13;
Young, worked there.&#13;
The ex-student mans the night&#13;
kitchens, preparing items like&#13;
hamburger delights, Reuben&#13;
sandwiches, Norsman halibut&#13;
steak, T-Bones, Kansas City&#13;
Sirloins, lobster, frog legs . . .&#13;
and so on.&#13;
Word had gotten to the food&#13;
desk to the effect that ole Tom&#13;
was whippin' up some fine food.&#13;
So, by a three to nothing vote, it&#13;
was off to the Southport Room.&#13;
Eating Out and I each had a&#13;
steak sandwich (2.65) while&#13;
Maggie was drawn to a Rueben&#13;
sandwich (1.95) by the well&#13;
worded menu. The real test was&#13;
on the shoulders of the former&#13;
fleetfoot. As Eating Out put it,&#13;
"Can one successfully make the&#13;
transition from cinder to tile?"&#13;
He did, at least last Thursday&#13;
night. The steak sandwich&#13;
wasn't the usual scrawny,&#13;
grizzly, stringy piece of poorly&#13;
cooked meat. We each ate big,&#13;
juicy, cooked to perfection&#13;
steaks, plump, placed atop a&#13;
throne of toast.&#13;
Maggie decided the Rueben&#13;
was good enough to serve Al&#13;
Kooper, Norman Mailer,&#13;
Barbara Striesand, el Rico&#13;
Dorfman, Sandy Koufax, Bob&#13;
Dylan, Sammy Davis, or even&#13;
good enough to bury with Lenny&#13;
Bruce. A Rueben can't be given&#13;
a higher recommendation to my&#13;
way of thinking-writing.&#13;
PAB Presents&#13;
PARAMOUNT P ICTURES PRESENTS&#13;
Ali MacGraw-Ryan O'Neal&#13;
A HOWARD G.MINSKY- ARTHUR HILLER Production&#13;
John Marley &amp; Ray Milland ERO SEGAL ARTHUR HILLER&#13;
fcoduefetd bby* {f iflecruultivn#t PPrrrovd4u,c.re«ri MUu.s.i.c. Scored bk.*&#13;
HOWARD G.MINSKY D AVID GOLDEN FRANCIS LAI A PARAMOUNT M&#13;
I SOUNO TRACK At BUM AVAILABLE ON PARAMOUNT RECOUPS I [PPl&#13;
May 5, 8 PM 100 min.&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Parkside 8. Wisconsin ID required&#13;
While eating and talking to&#13;
Tom, I found out Josie worked&#13;
there, one of the waitresses on&#13;
the Eating Out All Star Team,&#13;
and in the Eating Out Hall of&#13;
Fame. Josie Speed Queen, one&#13;
of the friendliest workers in the&#13;
frenzied, freaked-out food&#13;
world.&#13;
Tom Young and the other&#13;
night shift workers had won our&#13;
stomachs at the Holiday Inn,&#13;
and the three of us recommend&#13;
the food prepared by Tom, and I&#13;
suggest stopping by in the&#13;
morning to see Josie.&#13;
That was' it, we couldn't&#13;
return for a second visit to&#13;
really give the Inn a twice-over,&#13;
no time. With a staff of two&#13;
writers covering all the beats,&#13;
regular columns, and all else, I&#13;
had to hustle my associates&#13;
home for rest so we could take&#13;
on another deserving eatery.&#13;
On to Ruby II, at the site of&#13;
the defunct George Webb&#13;
franchise. The Ruby Brothers&#13;
have expanded to the west, they&#13;
run the all-night restaurant&#13;
painted purple on Roosevelt&#13;
Road. Kenosha night life never&#13;
had it so interesting.&#13;
Along with a sharp waitress&#13;
named Marie, we enjoyed&#13;
cheeseburgers, Damon Runyon&#13;
characters, and the jukebox.&#13;
The Ruby Boys, along with&#13;
their army of workers-nonworkers,&#13;
are always ready to&#13;
listen to any ideas concerning&#13;
the betterment of their&#13;
restaurants. They are unique&#13;
this way. Besides talking about&#13;
food. Jack Ruby will offer his&#13;
basketball analysis to anyone,&#13;
and I have not found him to be&#13;
wrong recently. He'll tell you&#13;
how. the Knicks will upset the&#13;
Lakers, just ask him.&#13;
They could serve dog food at&#13;
Ruby 11 and still rake it in when&#13;
the bars close. Those individuals&#13;
dining-out after&#13;
drinking-out will consume&#13;
anything under the guise of&#13;
food, ask Jim Koloen.&#13;
Ruby II is better than that. It&#13;
is an interesting place,&#13;
frequented by everything from&#13;
intellectuals to nomads to&#13;
moms and dads to detectives&#13;
(and they wouldn't put just&#13;
anything in their stomachs).&#13;
There is one thing the&#13;
management at Ruby II did that&#13;
deserves mention. They&#13;
removed the sign above the&#13;
door that read "Minimum to&#13;
Minors", which spelled out a&#13;
minimum time the second class&#13;
citizens could sit. The sign is&#13;
gone and minors are more than&#13;
welcomed. That's progress in&#13;
the restaurant business.&#13;
There was a creamer soured&#13;
on our table, and there may be&#13;
other odds and ends one could&#13;
fault, but the place is new, and it&#13;
is like a factory, three shifts,&#13;
busy usually, and just getting&#13;
routines set.&#13;
As Ken Kesey and the Merry&#13;
Pranksters would say, "flow&#13;
with it, just flow with it" and I&#13;
agree.&#13;
Next Week: The Last Supper&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's Newest Rock Bar&#13;
now open&#13;
the Establish&#13;
424 Lake Avenue, Racine&#13;
(formerly Counselor's II)&#13;
Live Entertainment Five Nights a Week&#13;
now featuring&#13;
Second Coming&#13;
formerly&#13;
Buddy and the Citations&#13;
by Bob Sieger&#13;
ONE YEAR:&#13;
COLIN BLUNSTONE&#13;
During the middle 60's, The&#13;
Zombies was one of many&#13;
groups to share the crowded&#13;
spotlight of rock stardom. They&#13;
were good, putting out such&#13;
early hits as "She's Not There"&#13;
and "Tell Ner No." They were a&#13;
strong group, both musically&#13;
and vocally and they really&#13;
knew how to rock. Shortly after&#13;
their last hit, "Time Of The&#13;
Season," the Zombies broke up.&#13;
Out of this breakup came&#13;
ARGENT, a new group led by&#13;
Rod Argent, a former Zombie.&#13;
Now, Colin Blunstone, a singer&#13;
for the Zombies, has decided to&#13;
re-enter the music business.&#13;
With the musical backing of&#13;
ARGENT, Blunstone has just&#13;
released his first solo album.&#13;
But something is missing.&#13;
Although he has his roots in&#13;
rock, Blunstone does nothing on&#13;
this album that comes close.&#13;
There is none of the power, none&#13;
of the drive that was inherent in&#13;
the Zombies. Instead what&#13;
Blunstone offers is ten love&#13;
songs, four of which he wrote.&#13;
Songs of love lost, love gained,&#13;
love far away.&#13;
- -^nse o&gt;&#13;
a un,fy of ba&#13;
monotony, 7^ r&#13;
^ts. are also&#13;
chelated and&#13;
arranged.&#13;
B'unstone's Vo&#13;
rename&#13;
h abl sound!&#13;
t\eJchln .iqhuaeb,i t wa struci&#13;
&lt;*rtain song,&#13;
beneficial. Howe-&#13;
9asps way&#13;
s,*» of the albu&#13;
suffer from too&#13;
^king them dry&#13;
0,1 the first cut or&#13;
only cut pn the&#13;
l&#13;
from the music desk&#13;
Buddy Rich is the Grand&#13;
Canyon among the&#13;
topographical features of the&#13;
drumming fraternity. Or he&#13;
could be Steve Canyon; larger&#13;
than life in spite of .weighing in&#13;
at 115 on a heavy day. The plain&#13;
fact is that he was born with&#13;
wings while the rest of us need&#13;
sticks to walk with.&#13;
Buddy Rich doesn't need&#13;
sticks to drum with. He can play&#13;
cleaner licks with his fingers&#13;
than most drummers can&#13;
manage with any number of&#13;
sticks, as he demonstrated&#13;
Saturday, April 22, at Bradford&#13;
Auditorium. His return&#13;
engagement drew probably all&#13;
the local hardcore swing fans, a&#13;
number of masochist fellow&#13;
drummers come for the sheer&#13;
sweet frustration of it, and,&#13;
befitting the glittering UWPARKSIDE&#13;
floating above the&#13;
stage, even a few students who&#13;
didn't belong to either category.&#13;
Noticing the I.F.O., Buddy&#13;
quipped, "That's a funny way to&#13;
spell 'Rich'."&#13;
Several such remarks plus&#13;
bored-casual attitude toward&#13;
the funny Wisconsin towns he&#13;
and his band were hitting led to&#13;
the conclusion that Buddy Rich&#13;
thinks highly of himself. The&#13;
buzz from the business bears&#13;
WO$HA this out, as Buddy has collected&#13;
a reputation as one of the Bad&#13;
Boys, hell to work with, hell to&#13;
Interview. Rumor has Frank&#13;
Sinatra throwing a full pjtChe,&#13;
of water at him for disrupt^&#13;
love songs with rimshots durinq&#13;
their mutual stint with Tommy&#13;
Dorsey. But the stature of the&#13;
man and his prodigous musical&#13;
genius make all other considerations&#13;
irrelevant, at least&#13;
to the audience.&#13;
Buddy fronts a streamlined&#13;
band these days, himself and a&#13;
bassist the sum total of the&#13;
rhythm section, the sole support&#13;
for four trumpets, three&#13;
trombines and four saxes. It&#13;
could easily get top heavy but&#13;
Buddy Rich is Buddy Rich and&#13;
the bassist, who looks like a&#13;
lizard with a ponytale and plays&#13;
with spider fingers, is his&#13;
match, eyes glued to Buddy's&#13;
ride cymbal, staying neck and&#13;
neck. The rest of the side men&#13;
are all first rate, many doubled&#13;
on several instruments, and two&#13;
of the sax men are genuinely&#13;
exciting in solo spots.&#13;
This really isn't a big band,&#13;
though. The arrangements,&#13;
while workmanlike and spiffy,&#13;
are rather elementary in terms&#13;
of tone color and shading,&#13;
tending toward flashy accents&#13;
and lots of fills, playing off the&#13;
«* • .&#13;
•T&gt;* V.&#13;
-v*:&#13;
zr ...&#13;
kX&#13;
.4 i'v.&#13;
jC&#13;
-aby&#13;
"Red" Widely of the&#13;
Newscope Sports staff&#13;
Yes, sports fans, finally&#13;
NEWSCOPE's ace in the hole,&#13;
par free, bar none, sportswriter&#13;
gets a chance to pitch the ole&#13;
ball. Yessir, this On the Nod&#13;
fella's average has been falling&#13;
lately, vat-aging he can't go the&#13;
distance anymore. After each&#13;
contest he's had to wrap his&#13;
head in ice packs; he's even&#13;
been whirl-pooling his tongue.&#13;
But the quarts are inevitably&#13;
creeping up on him.&#13;
Nothin' worked, so coach&#13;
benched him and gave me,&#13;
NEWSCOPE's first round draft&#13;
choice, a chance to bat and&#13;
pitch the ole ball.&#13;
Yessiree, I'm pitchin' the old&#13;
ball npw, yesirqe.&#13;
Dick's Olympic Super Bar (on&#13;
the corner of 24th Ave. and 52nd&#13;
St.) was my first batter of this&#13;
early season and, well, looks&#13;
like I gotta do some more warm&#13;
ups. Got a tripple off me on the&#13;
first pitch. Yessiree, I peppered&#13;
it in there and zowie, I was&#13;
knocked off the mound. But&#13;
coach says I deserve another&#13;
chance, so I'll probably be&#13;
starting when we play the&#13;
Activities Building next week.&#13;
Dick Stankus presents an&#13;
ever-smiling, chunky figure,&#13;
and manages a fine team with&#13;
such All-star material as ten&#13;
ounce tap Bud, Pabst, Hamm's&#13;
and Old Style for 15c; basic&#13;
mixed drinks for 35c; schooners&#13;
for 30c and Harvey Wallbangers&#13;
for a shockingly low 75c. I didn't&#13;
stay in the game long enough to&#13;
face a Wall banger, but Jack&#13;
Daniels and Gin Tonic did&#13;
plenty of damage; I was beaned&#13;
twice in a row. A NEWSCOPE&#13;
record.&#13;
The tavern features a formica&#13;
topped bar which is at least 50&#13;
feet long (you can't hit one out&#13;
ef the bar), tables and padded&#13;
chairs, a piano, and a small pool&#13;
table. Bob Stankus, who will&#13;
become manager of the bar in&#13;
May, took over for his father at&#13;
9 PM, and with him, the older&#13;
fans in the stands started filing&#13;
out, figgering the game was&#13;
already decided.&#13;
With mostly longhair types&#13;
sparsely occupying the box&#13;
seats at the bar, Bob piped- in&#13;
music from a stereo, featuring&#13;
albums by the Doors, Dylan and&#13;
Eric Burdon to name a few.&#13;
Fumblefingers Socha was&#13;
catching, and trying to call the&#13;
pitchers. Unfortunately/ he&#13;
wasn't speaking loudly enough,&#13;
which left the ordering of drinks&#13;
on my shoulders.&#13;
The softly lit/ "ewly&#13;
remodelled bar featured a&#13;
Martini and Manhattan mixing&#13;
device which resempled a four&#13;
^ cuts he is ac- drums and bass) Blunstone&#13;
igjy by Violins and comes close to a rock style. Yet&#13;
arranging of the he catches himself before he&#13;
st identical on all has a chance to&#13;
0 gives the returns to his&#13;
Page 7&#13;
sing out and&#13;
This '"c reiurna 10 nis nnoorrmmaall,, ' ssaaffee&#13;
&gt; of unity' but it is style. His vocal ethic seems to 1&#13;
' bKa^ddiylv arrantg ed bt e: ,D on't take chances and try&#13;
„ remaining four to please everyone.&#13;
Ho heavily or- —&#13;
ld equally overvocals&#13;
ar e high,&#13;
mediocre. He has&#13;
inding br eathy. If&#13;
was a refined&#13;
-uctured to fit a&#13;
It would be&#13;
lWever, Blunstone&#13;
jy through both&#13;
jbum. His vocals&#13;
oo much control,&#13;
dry and ordinary&#13;
With&#13;
groups&#13;
worse yet, going crazy on the&#13;
bar circuit, why does Colin&#13;
so many deserving&#13;
going unheard of or.&#13;
Blunstone rate an album? But&#13;
I'm letting my ideals show. I'm&#13;
forgetting that the music industry,&#13;
with all its politics and&#13;
petty bureauracracy, is a&#13;
business first and an artistic&#13;
medium second.&#13;
ONE YEAR: COLIN&#13;
BLUNSTONE is just a lot of&#13;
wasted acetate. It has no beat,&#13;
,t on side two (the the lyrics are trite, and the&#13;
the album with vocals ordinary. I give it a 25.&#13;
NEWSCOPE May 1,1972&#13;
fA&#13;
big brass sound like a drum&#13;
corps scaled for the stage.&#13;
Which figures because it is&#13;
Buddy's show.&#13;
But in context it's a great&#13;
show. Buddy pulls sounds from&#13;
his drums that qualify them as a&#13;
melodic instrument, filling the&#13;
holes with the perfect riffs,&#13;
nudging the beat in all the right&#13;
places. Every now and then an&#13;
arm will shoot out of the tangle&#13;
to flick a cymbal, always catching&#13;
the accents, and all&#13;
without benefit of a score.&#13;
Buddy shouts the numbers of&#13;
the songs like some cocky&#13;
quarterback setting off a flurry&#13;
of pages, but he doesn't have a&#13;
music stand.&#13;
And, of course. There were&#13;
only two extended drum solos&#13;
but Buddy did them right, arms&#13;
crossing, sticks blurred to a&#13;
solid sheet, rattling off the most&#13;
amazingly complex combinations&#13;
of obscure rudiments.&#13;
The finale had him moving from&#13;
the fastest cleanest most&#13;
purring single stroke roll in the&#13;
world on the rim of his snare to&#13;
several arm, shoulder and head&#13;
riffs.&#13;
It may be grandstanding, but&#13;
the man is a natural wonder&#13;
and should be seen at least once&#13;
in a l ifetime. r&#13;
^% pronged candelabra: Lot of&#13;
drinking geniuses running&#13;
around inventing all kinds of&#13;
labor saving machines for the&#13;
contemporary bartender.&#13;
One especially impressive&#13;
aspect of the Super Bar is its&#13;
orderliness; nothing was out of&#13;
place; the good stock of hard&#13;
spirits was lined up in single&#13;
file, chest out and bottletop&#13;
fight. On review night, the bar&#13;
was quiet, restful, almost&#13;
tranquil, though the seasonal&#13;
attendance figures are probably&#13;
quite high since Dick's , is&#13;
located near AMC. It's a shot&#13;
and a beer bar during the afternoon&#13;
when some elderly&#13;
sportsmen sit around the tables&#13;
playing cards, or while the&#13;
American Motors workers lift a&#13;
few during recess, hoping to&#13;
Place the boredom of fhe&#13;
Assembly line in the proper&#13;
amber perspective.&#13;
Prices are very reasonable,&#13;
indeed I wonder how they got&#13;
Harvey Walbanger and Gin&#13;
Tonic to play for only 75c and&#13;
40c respectively: The strike had&#13;
no effect on them. On&#13;
weeknights, Dick's provides the&#13;
patron with a quiet atmosphere,&#13;
color TV and albums to listen to.&#13;
Even the umpires are nice guys,&#13;
which just goes to show why&#13;
drinking is America's number&#13;
one a ll-season indoor sport.&#13;
By Andy Schmelling&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
After making a few last&#13;
minute arrangements Friday&#13;
afternoon, like calling for&#13;
tickets, picking up my young&#13;
lady, replenishing my stash,&#13;
buying a bottle, grabbing a bite&#13;
and filling my beast with petrol,&#13;
it was off into the sunset, 1-94&#13;
non-stop to Madison.&#13;
We reached our destination,&#13;
the Madison field house, about 8&#13;
p.m. or one hour after the start&#13;
of the show. Inside there were&#13;
gathered a sizeable number of&#13;
people but not the crowd scene&#13;
one might have expected at the&#13;
first major festival of the year.&#13;
As i t was, it was ideal. Anyone&#13;
who wanted to could work&#13;
himself to the front of the stage&#13;
without much difficulty, or if he&#13;
preferred there was ample&#13;
room in the bleachers to stretch&#13;
out and take a nap or just observe&#13;
the show from a reclining&#13;
position, which many people did&#13;
as the clock moved on past two.&#13;
Looking to the stage we saw&#13;
what appeared to be about a 40&#13;
year old, long haired man in an&#13;
orange jumpsuit telling dirty&#13;
jokes. As it turned out, it was&#13;
just Uncle Dirty, the M.C.,&#13;
doing his thing. He wasn't&#13;
having much success in the&#13;
audience reaction department,&#13;
and it soon became apparent&#13;
that the crowd had come for&#13;
music and would settle for&#13;
nothing less.&#13;
Then the spotlight swung to a&#13;
large bearded man with a&#13;
guitar whom Uncle Dirty introduced&#13;
as Dave Von Ronk.&#13;
Dave has been around for quite&#13;
a while but his talents have for&#13;
the most part been overlooked&#13;
except for people who have been&#13;
into folk. After a rolicking&#13;
rendition of "Candy Man", the&#13;
frustrated dopers lament, he&#13;
broke into a laugh and exclaimed&#13;
"Kenosha Blues". He&#13;
moved through the slow rhythmic&#13;
"Who Do I Love" and&#13;
blasted out another called "If&#13;
You Want to be A Hero Follow&#13;
Me". I remembered what Dylan&#13;
once said of him. "I'd always&#13;
known Risin' Sun but never&#13;
really knew it until I heard&#13;
Dave sing it." Called back after&#13;
"One Meatball" he delighted&#13;
the crowd with "Would You&#13;
Like to Swing on A Star".&#13;
Next up was McKendree&#13;
Spring, a relatively new group&#13;
whom I'd never had the&#13;
pleasure of hearing before.&#13;
They began with Neil Young's&#13;
"Down By The River". Their&#13;
three guitars and violin&#13;
produced such a full sound that&#13;
it was hard to believe they&#13;
didn't have a drummer. They&#13;
had a real ear-pleasing sound. A&#13;
violin solo of "God Bless&#13;
America" reminded me of&#13;
THE END&#13;
MAY 20,21&#13;
Hendrix's "National Anthem"&#13;
with fantastic feedback work&#13;
producing everything from the&#13;
sounds of a string quartet to&#13;
that of a diving jet bomber full&#13;
with blazing machine gun. I&#13;
hope to hear some more good&#13;
things from this group.&#13;
McKendree was as-hard as the&#13;
rock got Friday night with the&#13;
appearance of Ramblin' Jack&#13;
Elliot the sounds returned to the&#13;
acoustic traditional vein which&#13;
dominated the weekend.&#13;
Opening with "San Francisco&#13;
Bay Blues" he quickly moved&#13;
into a string of fine Dylan tunes&#13;
including "I Threw It All&#13;
Away", "Lay Lady Lay", and&#13;
"God On Our Side". He looks&#13;
remarkably like Dylan and&#13;
hearing him sing his songs was&#13;
almost disconcerting. He more&#13;
lhan did them justice though.&#13;
After Jack was the world&#13;
famous Earl Scruggs Review&#13;
show, in the spirit of the thing,&#13;
opened up with Dylan's "You&#13;
Ain't Going No Where". Their&#13;
reception was fantastic,&#13;
especially when they started&#13;
getting it on with some down&#13;
home square dance, the whole&#13;
place was jumping. At one&#13;
o'clock in the morning they&#13;
were just What the crowd&#13;
needed for a second wind.&#13;
Hearing Earl play "Orange&#13;
Blossom Special" on the banjo&#13;
was a real treat.&#13;
The first night was climaxed&#13;
with the fabulous Richie&#13;
Havens. Watching his play&#13;
guitar just blows my mind. His&#13;
hand just moved in a blur&#13;
across the front of his box.&#13;
Every song he sang brought on&#13;
an ovation. "Handsome&#13;
Johnny", "Freedom", "Here&#13;
Comes the Sun", and a couple&#13;
new songs I'd never heard&#13;
before. It was a fine end to a&#13;
great night. When the lights&#13;
came on it was alter 2:30 a.m.&#13;
and looking at Diane I knew it&#13;
was time to head for home. It&#13;
seemed like we'd been there a&#13;
week.&#13;
We missed Sorry Mutha's and&#13;
just caught the last part of&#13;
David Mississippi Queen Rea's&#13;
act. I decided to move up to the&#13;
stage and try to get a couple of&#13;
shots. My luck was with me,&#13;
just as I reached the stage&#13;
Beautiful Day came on, just as&#13;
they came on I came on, and the&#13;
next hour was almost to much&#13;
for me to believe. Anyone who&#13;
has ever seen them could understand&#13;
why. They sang a&#13;
couple of cuts off their first&#13;
album like "Hot Summer Day",&#13;
and "White Bird". I could have&#13;
sat and listened to them until&#13;
the cows came home. As far as I&#13;
was concerned they were the&#13;
high point of the weekend.&#13;
Country Joe followed&#13;
Beautiful Day with a sing-aiong&#13;
version of "We'll All Be Free&#13;
Some Day". If you know&#13;
anything about Country Joe,&#13;
and you know anything about&#13;
Madison, you can imagine what&#13;
his performance was like. It&#13;
was something like a family&#13;
reunion, brothers and sisters&#13;
together again for a while. He&#13;
told a story about his being&#13;
harrassed in Boston over the&#13;
"Fish Cheer" and then led the&#13;
crowd in a chorus of it that&#13;
shook the walls. "Give me an f .&#13;
. . Give me a U ... He played&#13;
four or five songs and ended up&#13;
with the house singing "Fixin to&#13;
Die Rag". No one wanted to let&#13;
him leave the stage.&#13;
Linda Ronstadt was up next.&#13;
She's one of the best looking&#13;
female performers I've ever&#13;
seen (The lady in Beautiful Day&#13;
was right up there too!) besides&#13;
being a fine singer and violin&#13;
player. She started out with "A&#13;
Whole Lot More of Jesus and a&#13;
Whole Less Rock and Roll" then&#13;
(I think I'm Going to Love You&#13;
For) "A Long Long Time" I'd&#13;
say her group's music was&#13;
country based although it had a&#13;
wide variety. Her lead player&#13;
who said he was from "Suthurn&#13;
Texus" picked and his way&#13;
through "a littl' song ah rote"&#13;
called "Mail Order Dog", and&#13;
then they jammed on some&#13;
country for a while.&#13;
By the time Kris Kristofferson&#13;
got on the stage we were&#13;
having trouble seeing it. Just&#13;
the same our audios were in fine&#13;
shape. He sang his current&#13;
release "Josie" and then made&#13;
a big hit with "Okie from&#13;
Muskogee". Then he asked&#13;
Linda Ronstadt to come up and&#13;
sing "Help Me Make It Through&#13;
The Night" with him. They&#13;
really sounded good together.&#13;
Muffy, a friend of mine from&#13;
Racine, agreed when I said they&#13;
sounded good and added, "And I&#13;
don't even like that song." After&#13;
that they brought Ramblin Jack&#13;
Elliot up and they all sang a&#13;
song of Jack's called "The&#13;
Tramp on the Street". For the&#13;
final number of the weekend&#13;
they called Leslie on stage and&#13;
the whole group sang "Me and&#13;
Bobby McGee". Ramblin Jack&#13;
had a yodel that would put the&#13;
Swiss to shame. It was really a&#13;
happy scene, everyone was&#13;
singing and laughing and just&#13;
carrying on. When the lights&#13;
finally came on it was apparent&#13;
that our friend with the sports&#13;
coat had done a miserable job. I&#13;
saw him as we left, sitting on a&#13;
bleacher with his head in his&#13;
hand.&#13;
Walking out into the warm&#13;
night air I had the feeling of&#13;
having taken part in something&#13;
beautiful, something to&#13;
remember for a long time to&#13;
come.&#13;
For The Record&#13;
T II I: l: I N l: K T II I N v*. S IN Ml'f IC&#13;
Downtown Kenosha -&#13;
LIVE&#13;
ENTERTAIN&#13;
MENT&#13;
Two Shows&#13;
featuring&#13;
Tom Rosplack&#13;
and the duo of&#13;
Terry Elliot&#13;
Don Mohr&#13;
May 3 + 4&#13;
Noon to 3 PM&#13;
The news&#13;
is Stretch!&#13;
VERY DEFINITELY&#13;
GEAR BOX®&#13;
Newest fashion on the&#13;
scene — Stretch Woven&#13;
Slacks! Great new fabric&#13;
look with a great, built-in&#13;
comfort factor. Stay-neat,&#13;
Dura-Press® blend in&#13;
flannels, twills and neat&#13;
geometries. Pick your favorite&#13;
color: grey, green,&#13;
navy. It. blue, tan, black.&#13;
Sizes 28-38.&#13;
Richman BROTHERS&#13;
Elmwood Plaza&#13;
May 1, i?72 NEWSCOPE Page 8&#13;
Iil'lil'l'l'l'lil'l'lililililililililililililil.lililil.&#13;
Parkside Student Activities Board&#13;
Last Dance of the Year&#13;
(until the End)&#13;
9 PM — 1 AM&#13;
SURPRISE BAND!&#13;
$1.00 for students $1.25 for guests&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin ID required&#13;
I'I'I'I'IiI'IiIiIiIiIiTiT iTiTiTiTiTiTiTiT iTiTiT iTiTiTiTi&#13;
| Golfers vs. Roosevelt I&#13;
The UW-Parkside golf squad&#13;
went into action against&#13;
Roosevelt University Friday&#13;
with a 9-5 mark and Coach Steve&#13;
Stephens hopes that's a good&#13;
sign for the future.&#13;
And the future, in this case,&#13;
means Thursday through&#13;
Saturday because the Rangers&#13;
will be vying in the NAIA&#13;
District 14 tournament at Green&#13;
Lake, hoping to improve on&#13;
their ninth place finish of 1971.&#13;
Parkside dumped Carthage,&#13;
Loyola and Whitewater last&#13;
Tuesday to run their mark to 9-5&#13;
as freshmen Dave Fox and Pete&#13;
Nevins led the way over the par&#13;
Trackmen&#13;
E&gt;q&amp;s' Ko r r s e To Compete&#13;
^ 5r P®T"&#13;
The UW-Parkside trackmen&#13;
will compete Saturday at the&#13;
Northern Illinois Relays in&#13;
DeKalb.&#13;
The meet is becoming one of&#13;
the Midwest's toughest relay&#13;
battles as evidenced by the&#13;
entry of Drake University,&#13;
perennial Missouri Valley&#13;
Conference champion.&#13;
The Rangers will enter a full&#13;
squad in the meet and also in&#13;
next Tuesday's dual encounter&#13;
with UW-Whitewater on the&#13;
Warhawks' track.&#13;
Lucian Rosa and Gary Lance&#13;
competed in the marathon in&#13;
last weekend's Drake Relays at&#13;
Des Moines. For Rosa, the&#13;
Ceylonese Olympian, it was his&#13;
first big test over the 26 mile&#13;
route.&#13;
The Rangers also entered a&#13;
four mile relay team of Rosa,&#13;
sophomore Jim McFadden and&#13;
freshmen Dennis Biel and Rudy&#13;
Alvarez. That quartet, which&#13;
ran in the big race with all the&#13;
major colleges, schools, should&#13;
have ben pulled to a fast time,&#13;
hopefully under 17 minutes.&#13;
// yon arc unable to a/tend summer school, yon are invited to participate in . . .&#13;
A T E L E V I S E D C R E D I T S E M I N A R&#13;
The College ot Continuing Education, University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh&#13;
PSYCHOLOGY OF DRUG USE...AND ABUSE&#13;
a six week course - Summer, 1972&#13;
presented on the following stations:&#13;
WLUK-TV (ch 11) Green Bay, Wis. WREX-TV&#13;
WXOW-TV (ch 19) La Crosse, Wis. KDUB-TV&#13;
WKOW-TV (ch 27) Madison, Wis. WDSE-TV&#13;
WMVS-TV (ch 10) Milwaukee, Wis. KTCA-TV&#13;
WAOW-TV (ch 9) Wausau, Wis. WNMR-TV&#13;
(ch 13) Rockford, III.&#13;
(ch 40) Dubuque, Iowa&#13;
(ch 8) Duluth, Minn,&#13;
(ch 2) Minneapolis, Minn.&#13;
Northern Michigan Univ.&#13;
TOPICS WILL INCLUDE: Is th e \1is( hiet in Drills or in People . . . Hist ory ol Drug Abuse . . . Drugs Commonly&#13;
Abused . Inerts ot Drug Abuse loneliness lose llum.in Development and Growth . . . Psycho-&#13;
Sor i.il ( onsider.itions . the Allein.itive So&lt; jety Drugs. Religion, and Mysticism . . . Crime Drugs.&#13;
\outh and law leathers, kids and Drugs ( ommunily Role in Drug Abuse . . . New Directions&#13;
YOU CAN ENROLL AS:&#13;
a "Special" undergraduate student&#13;
a "Special" graduate student&#13;
an undergraduate auditor&#13;
Earn i graduate or undergraduate credits&#13;
for a course outline, enrollment information, and viewing schedule, dip and mail&#13;
All c ourse&#13;
requirements&#13;
can be&#13;
completed&#13;
at home&#13;
without&#13;
campus&#13;
attendance&#13;
host professor&#13;
Robert lane, Ph.D.&#13;
N.ime- Te&#13;
Address.&#13;
City-&#13;
State. -Zip.&#13;
Televised Instruction&#13;
College of Continuing Education&#13;
Return to: University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh&#13;
Oshkosh, Wisconsin 54901&#13;
71 course at Pets as with a 77&#13;
and 79 repsectively.&#13;
Mark Hjortness added a 79&#13;
and Tom Bothe an 80 while Jim&#13;
Vakos and Tom Feiner came up&#13;
with an 80 and 85 respectively to&#13;
round out the Parkside scoring.&#13;
The Rangers totaled 480 for&#13;
six men while Carthage had 487.&#13;
Whitewater 487 and Loyola of&#13;
Chicago 509. Medalist was Ed&#13;
Habacker of Loyola with a par&#13;
71.&#13;
Parkside will meet Lake&#13;
Forest and Dominican — teams&#13;
which it's already defeated —&#13;
and UW-Green Bay at 1 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday at Pets.&#13;
Road Rallye Results&#13;
On Sunday, April 23, Steve&#13;
Swan and his navigator Tom&#13;
Werbie won the second annual&#13;
Jimmy Clarke Road Railey.&#13;
Runner up trophy was given to&#13;
Kevin McKay and Jerry Socha.&#13;
John Zaring and Ron Gatterdam&#13;
received the Most&#13;
Distinguished Faculty Award.&#13;
Forty-six cars turned out for&#13;
thS event on a partly Sunny&#13;
afternoon, and it was a great&#13;
success for the Ragtime&#13;
Rangers.&#13;
The actual course, 67 miles&#13;
long, was created by Mary&#13;
Fettas and Chris Heckel, and&#13;
was basically designed for&#13;
Racine and Kenosha counties;&#13;
but a few people included side&#13;
tours to as far south as Antioch,&#13;
Illinois, as far west as&#13;
Burlington, and as far north as&#13;
the Seven Mile Fair. Many&#13;
people were thankful for Lake&#13;
Michigan's constant presence to&#13;
the east!&#13;
After the Rallye, a crowd of&#13;
more than ninety people enjoyed&#13;
food and beer at the&#13;
Brat's basement.&#13;
Netmen vie for volley&#13;
Interested in (check one) Graduate Credit- Undergraduate Credit- -. Undergraduate Audit-&#13;
The Ranger tennis squad will&#13;
face UW-Milwaukee Friday at&#13;
the Pershing Courts in Racine&#13;
in a rematch of one the&#13;
Parkside men dropped earlier&#13;
and Saturday the Rangers will&#13;
meet UW-Green Bay up north.&#13;
The Rangers, improving&#13;
weekly, notched their second&#13;
victory last week against an&#13;
experienced Milton unit in what&#13;
Parkside Coach Dick Frecka&#13;
called "our best meet of the&#13;
year."&#13;
Mike Safago, playing at No. 1&#13;
singles for the Rangers, beat&#13;
Brian Gibson of Milton 6-3, 6-2&#13;
while No. 2 man Dan Mieczkowski&#13;
won over Brad Barry 6-&#13;
3, 6-2.&#13;
Skip Jones, No. 3 man, won 6-&#13;
4, 4-6, 6-0 over Bruce Lindsley&#13;
while Dennis Halverson fought&#13;
an uphill battle at No. 4 against&#13;
Kurt Aufterhaar but won 1-6, 8-&#13;
6, 6-4.&#13;
Dave Herchen won over Sam&#13;
Skaggas at No. 5 by 6-1, 6-3&#13;
whild John Kangas topped&#13;
Corey Shea at No. 6 6-1, 6-3.&#13;
In doubles action, Safago and&#13;
Jones beat Gibson and Aufterhaar&#13;
6-2, 6-2 while Mieczkowski&#13;
and Halverson won 6-0,&#13;
6-0 over Barry and Lindsey.&#13;
Herchen teamed with Todd&#13;
Nelson at No. 3 doubles to win 6-&#13;
1, 6-2 over Skaggs and Shea.&#13;
THE RANCH CREATIONS&#13;
KAMI&#13;
GRINGO SPECIAL&#13;
1 , lb G.ROUND BEEF&#13;
ON FRF.NCH CRUST&#13;
BR FAD DRF.SSFD&#13;
WITH CRISP&#13;
LFTTHCE AND OUR&#13;
SPECIAL SAUCE&#13;
80c&#13;
PORKY SPECIAL&#13;
GRILLED COUNTRY&#13;
HAM 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 BURGER. CHEESE&#13;
BACON LETTUCE TOMATO AND MAY&#13;
ONNAISF. ON TOAST gfc&#13;
THE RANCH&#13;
NORTH 3311 SHERIDAN ROAD SOUTH 7500 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
uvuT-n.nrLqft.-inf»i^i^^^^^, . . , nnritijuJ&#13;
ASNDH0UGH S0ME0NE FROM PARKSIDE WILL ATFrom&#13;
May 5th through June 11th, the Milwai.kpo R&#13;
Theater Company will present forty-four performanrP^T^P&#13;
Journey of the Fifth Horse", Ronald Ribman's thrfn !&#13;
compassionate portrait of human lonliness and unrrJ,?- "Ifi&#13;
The rhapsodical play MRT's final .ubscription^„72 oft'&#13;
season, will open Friday, May 5th, at eight p m in the T«HH ur u&#13;
Theater at the Performing Arts Center.&#13;
EROTIC FL ICS&#13;
The prize winning works of the recent New York Fvnt;,. R-.&#13;
Festival, an exhibition designed to encourage more creaUvP T&#13;
in sex cinema, will be presented at UWM's Bolton Hall l in&#13;
The films, part of a new UWM Union sponsored filmT •&#13;
be shown Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 4th 5th and 6th&#13;
Showtimes Thursday are at seven and nine-thirty p m and FHH*&#13;
and Saturday at seven, nine-thirty and eleven thirty o m&#13;
Admission for the public is two bucks, persons uder 18 can't get&#13;
in, and identification is required, so know who you are.&#13;
WHOSE GOVERNMENT IS THIS 9&#13;
Students on a number of US campuses have began a campaign&#13;
to turn the Nixon Administration around on its refusal to hold&#13;
public hearings on the issue of environmental impact of the&#13;
proposed trans-Alaska pipeline.&#13;
Working with the Alaska Action Committee, an organization of&#13;
econservatiomsts living in the vicinity of Washington D C these&#13;
students are distributing a pamphlet entitled "The Alaska PinelTne&#13;
Reading Lesson." The pamphlet deals with unanswereS quSns&#13;
and inconsistencies found in the government's pipeline imnacl&#13;
statements. r r&#13;
In spite of the imposing concern on the part of conservationists&#13;
ecologists, Congress members and students, the Nixon Ad'&#13;
ministration appears determined to bow to oil industry demands to&#13;
issue the pipeline permit (a permit for construction as early as Mav&#13;
4th for construction of the 789 mile, hot-oil pipeline)&#13;
Copies of "The Alaska Pipeline Reading Lesson" can be obtained&#13;
m quantity from the Alaska Action Committee 729 - lith&#13;
Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20005. '&#13;
Page 9 NEWSCOPE May 1,1972&#13;
OA/ +ht LAKE&#13;
•sPorts bar&#13;
: HWY 32.&#13;
/ &gt; / / \ Y pool ' FOO s BA L L.&#13;
^ BAR- SAA/D UL/CRBS .jP,&#13;
" package c,oot&gt;s .&#13;
(we l come A/ E w AbULTSJ)&#13;
\ . . s A / s t &gt; s 3 A A / t &gt; S — 3 * A / t &gt; S .&#13;
It's the&#13;
Creoakl eth. ing.&#13;
FLO'S&#13;
Home Cooking&#13;
HWY 31&amp;County Trunk E&#13;
L_&#13;
6AM-6PM Specials Daily&#13;
T h e SG A l i t e r a t u r e t a b l e w as r e ce n t l y s e t up i n&#13;
t h e A ct i v i t i e s B u i l d i n g . B e s i d e l i t e r a t ur e , i t&#13;
o f f e r s s t e l e p h o n e f o r s t u de n t us e .&#13;
Quiet City,&#13;
USA&#13;
(CPS) — If the city of Des&#13;
Plaines, Illinois, has its way,&#13;
that town will probably be the&#13;
quietest town in the country.&#13;
They've just passed an ordinance&#13;
that bans the following:&#13;
m "... crying, calling or&#13;
• o shouting, using a whistle, rattle,&#13;
* bell, gong, clapper, hammer,&#13;
ro drum, horn, hand organ,&#13;
jjj mechanically operated piano,&#13;
or other musical instrument,&#13;
wind instrument, mechanical&#13;
device, radio, phonograph,&#13;
sound amplifier or other similar&#13;
electronic devices so as to&#13;
destroy the peace of the neighborhood."&#13;
The nine page document,&#13;
passed unanimously by the&#13;
Council, also requires motors on&#13;
vehicles, except for buses, to be&#13;
shut off while idle.&#13;
The ordinance carries lines of&#13;
$15 - 300 for a first offense and a&#13;
jail term of up to six months for&#13;
additional offenses.&#13;
T h e n ew | £ f o o t l o n g ba r , r e c en t l y b u i l t i n&#13;
t h e Ac t i v i t i e s B u i l d i n g ; i t f e at u r e s a new&#13;
P a b s t t a p.&#13;
A t h i r d o f t h e au d i e n c e a t t he R ad i c a l&#13;
P o l i t i c a l O rg a n i z i n g s em i n a r l i s t e n s&#13;
i n t e n t l y t o t h e s e ve n s p e a k e r s .&#13;
ALRIKAS Body and&#13;
Paint Shop&#13;
6310 - 20 th Ave.&#13;
Phone - 657-3911&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
3,L VJLluey SSu' p p e r CU&#13;
Catering to all types and size groups&#13;
552-8481&#13;
1700 Sheridan k«J.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
9Gunmb. B E E R&#13;
Join&#13;
The Brotherhood&#13;
of Hamm's&#13;
Sports Cars Specialists&#13;
THE&#13;
UPSTAIRS&#13;
"Highest bar&#13;
in Kenosha&#13;
| | |&#13;
WC&lt;4S. SUN./-6&#13;
12 O Z. &amp; QTTLE B EER&#13;
V- HIGH-BALLS 35 &lt;&#13;
L/ v e Bjusic —&#13;
Fri. +&#13;
ACROSS FROA T HE&#13;
LAKE THEATER&#13;
May 1,1972 NEWSCOPE Page 10&#13;
Page 11 NEWSCOPE May 1,1*72&#13;
*************rtWrt«)i»u&#13;
episuj sojoij j BJoy\ j&#13;
tqsueuaoqs (gjupfs (q otoqf&#13;
www;&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
oa&amp;e 3322 SHERIDAN ROAD KENOSHA&#13;
RHINELANDER&#13;
Pott R um — fifth S309&#13;
Dimitri Vodka—full quart $345&#13;
Five-Star Brandy f'M $335&#13;
Henri C Brandy—full quart—$3*'&#13;
Seagram's Gin Miwart — $439&#13;
Would your club or organization&#13;
like a&#13;
Wine Tasting&#13;
Contact Fred Cook, 637-4101 1&#13;
12PAK&#13;
CANS&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
at Blueberry Cold Duck&#13;
Strawberry Cold Duck&#13;
Cold Turkey&#13;
Your complete home&#13;
wine making center.&#13;
Gold Seal Catawba&#13;
Wines&#13;
Phono 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at. 6th Ave.&#13;
AAAIN OFF ICE:&#13;
•CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
QUARTS-&#13;
|</text>
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              <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 6, issue 16, May 1, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
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          <name>Description</name>
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            <elementText elementTextId="63769">
              <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
            </elementText>
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          <name>Date</name>
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              <text>1972-05-01</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="63773">
              <text>Newspaper</text>
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        <element elementId="44">
          <name>Language</name>
          <description>A language of the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63774">
              <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="63775">
              <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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          <name>Type</name>
          <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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          <name>Publisher</name>
          <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63777">
              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
            </elementText>
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        <element elementId="47">
          <name>Rights</name>
          <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="63778">
              <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
            </elementText>
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    <tag tagId="648">
      <name>chancellor irvin g. wyllie</name>
    </tag>
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      <name>ken konkol</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="222">
      <name>parkside student government association (PSGA)</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="514">
      <name>women's day</name>
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