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              <text>"Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" - Matthew Arnold University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Volume 4 Number 7&#13;
tr&#13;
UJ&#13;
o&#13;
or&#13;
0&#13;
01&#13;
_l&#13;
J&#13;
UJ&#13;
a.&#13;
a:&#13;
&lt;&#13;
D&#13;
A u g u s t&#13;
1 2 3 4 5 6 7&#13;
8 9 10 11 12 13 14&#13;
15 16 17 18 19 20 21&#13;
22 23 24 25 26 27 28&#13;
29 30 31&#13;
O c t o b e r&#13;
1 2&#13;
3 4 5 6 7 8 9&#13;
10 11 12 13 14 15 16&#13;
17 18 19 20 21 22 23&#13;
24 25 26 27 28 29 30&#13;
31&#13;
2 3 4&#13;
5 6&#13;
Labor Day&#13;
7 8 9 10 11&#13;
12 13 14 15 16 17 18&#13;
19 20&#13;
Rosh Hashoriah&#13;
21 22 23 24 25&#13;
26 27 28 29&#13;
Yom Kippur&#13;
30&#13;
1971 SEPTEMBER 1971 &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE August 9,1971&#13;
Letters To The E ditor&#13;
PRINCETON NJ. — Educational Testing Service&#13;
announced recently that undergraduates and others&#13;
nreDaring to go to graduate school may take the&#13;
GraduateRecord Examinations on any of six different&#13;
test dates during the current academic year.&#13;
The first&#13;
Exam&#13;
Dates&#13;
Announced&#13;
testing date for&#13;
the GRE is&#13;
October 23,&#13;
1971. Scores&#13;
from this administration&#13;
&#13;
will be reported&#13;
to the graduate&#13;
schools around&#13;
December 1.&#13;
Students planning to register for the October test date&#13;
are advised that applications received by ETS after&#13;
October 5 will incur a $3.50 late registration fee. After&#13;
October 8, there is no guarantee that applications for&#13;
the October test date can be processed.&#13;
The other five test dates are December 11, 1971,&#13;
January 15, February 26, April 22, and June 17, 1971.&#13;
Equivalent late fee and registration deadlines apply to&#13;
these dates. Choise of test dates should be determined&#13;
by the requirements of graduate schools or&#13;
fellowships to which one is applying. Scores are&#13;
usually reported to graduate schools five weeks after&#13;
a test date. .&#13;
The Graduate Record Examinations include an&#13;
Aptitude Test of general scholastic ability and Advanced&#13;
Tests measuring achievement in 19 major&#13;
fields of study. Full details and registration forms for&#13;
the GRE are contained in the 1971-72 GRE Information&#13;
Bulletin. The Bulletin also contains forms and instructions&#13;
for requesting transcript service on GRE&#13;
scores already on file with ETS. This booklet is&#13;
available on most campuses or may be ordered from:&#13;
Educational Testing Service, Box 955, Princeton, N.J.&#13;
08540; Educational Testing Service, 1947 Center&#13;
Street, Berkeley, Calif. 94704; Educational Testing&#13;
Service, 960 Grove Street, Evanston, 111. 60201.&#13;
Present 'A Switch&#13;
An open letter to John C.&#13;
Weaver, President of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin,&#13;
Madison, Wis.&#13;
Dear President Weaver:&#13;
The Brokaw Defense&#13;
League is in receipt of your&#13;
letter of July 26, 1971.&#13;
In my letter of July 14,&#13;
1971, we requested a&#13;
meeting with you to discuss&#13;
(1) the continuing&#13;
repression by the Parkside&#13;
Administration of student&#13;
and faculty rights and&#13;
freedoms; (2) the recent&#13;
non-retention decisions&#13;
affecting five members of&#13;
the Parkside faculty, made&#13;
in the absence of "clear,&#13;
specific and fully-public"&#13;
guidelines for faculty&#13;
review promised in Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie's policy&#13;
statement; and (3) the&#13;
specifics of the nonretention&#13;
decision regarding&#13;
Dr. James Russell Brokaw.&#13;
In your reply you chose to&#13;
comment only on the last of&#13;
these issues.&#13;
Your letter states, "I am&#13;
satisfied that hearing&#13;
procedures in complete&#13;
c o n f o r m a n c e w i t h&#13;
University regulations were&#13;
followed and the appropriate&#13;
peer judgments&#13;
were brought to bear." If&#13;
this is the case, University&#13;
regulations are in desperate&#13;
need of change. The conditions&#13;
of Dr. Brokaw's open&#13;
hearing were a mockery of&#13;
due process. Not only did the&#13;
body which made the&#13;
original non-renewal&#13;
decision, the Science&#13;
Division Executive Committee,&#13;
act as the appelate&#13;
body, but the Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and&#13;
Society functioned as a&#13;
member of the Executive&#13;
£Pmile&#13;
Get Acqu ainted Uffer&#13;
F REE LUBE&#13;
Wit h Oil &amp; Fi l t e r Ch a n g e&#13;
PARKSIDE SHELL&#13;
WASHINGTON ROA D&#13;
&amp; 3 0TH A V E.&#13;
6 5 4 - 9 9 68&#13;
C o m m i tt e e b e f o r e&#13;
reviewing the non-retention&#13;
decision.&#13;
Furthermore, testimony&#13;
was introduced at the open&#13;
hearing implicating the&#13;
Chancellor in the recommendation&#13;
of the Executive&#13;
Committee. The Administration&#13;
involvement in&#13;
the Executive Committee&#13;
recommendation should&#13;
have been sufficient to&#13;
reverse the decision of the&#13;
Executive Committee.&#13;
Beyond this, Dr. Brokaw&#13;
answered all of the&#13;
"charges" that were submitted&#13;
to his personnel file,&#13;
most of which were submitted&#13;
after the Executive&#13;
Committee had made its&#13;
non-renewal decision.&#13;
"Peer judgements" were&#13;
not involved in Dr. Brokaw's&#13;
non-renewal. Unlike&#13;
departmental review — th e&#13;
review process at Madison&#13;
— the Science Executive&#13;
Committee review was&#13;
made by members of many&#13;
disciplines. Only two&#13;
members of this body were&#13;
members of Dr. Brokaw's&#13;
discipline, psychology.&#13;
These two psychologists&#13;
acted to recommend Dr.&#13;
Brokaw's termination in&#13;
October of 1970, basing their&#13;
review of Dr. Brokaw's&#13;
work at Parkside the&#13;
previous year on their experiences&#13;
at Parkside since&#13;
their arrival in September.&#13;
Unmentioned in your&#13;
letter are the other four&#13;
faculty members recommended&#13;
for non-renewal in&#13;
the absence of guidelines for&#13;
faculty review. These nonrenewal&#13;
decisions are arbitrary,&#13;
and in at least one&#13;
instance, may constitute&#13;
political firing. Indeed,&#13;
Editor Warren Nedry&#13;
Copy Editor JohnKoloen&#13;
News Editor Marc Eisen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Business Manager John Gray&#13;
NEWS STAFF&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Darrell Borger,&#13;
James Casper, Jim Koloen, Bill&#13;
Sorensen.&#13;
CONTRIBUTING&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Mike Stevesand, Janet Sabol,&#13;
Mike Starr.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella, Dave Kraus,&#13;
Don Marjara, Barb Scott.&#13;
| MIDTOWN B AR&#13;
. &amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
P I Z Z A - S E A F O O DS&#13;
I ITALJAN —AMERIC AKl c o c O&#13;
C O C K T A ILS&#13;
E N T ER T A I N M E N T&#13;
L 211 2 - 14 - 52 ST.&#13;
R KEN OSH A _ _&#13;
there is strong evidence that&#13;
Dr. Brokaw's termination&#13;
may have been made for&#13;
political reasons.&#13;
There is no comment in&#13;
your letter concerning the&#13;
climate of political&#13;
repression at Parkside. We&#13;
cannot imagine why this&#13;
goes unmentioned in your&#13;
reply. The current situation&#13;
at Parkside is well&#13;
documented. Not only&#13;
academic freedoms, but&#13;
constitutionally protected&#13;
rights have been infringed&#13;
upon by the actions of the&#13;
Parkside Administration, in&#13;
their dealings with both&#13;
faculty and students.&#13;
We do not accept your&#13;
decision regarding the nonrenewal&#13;
of Dr. Brokaw. The&#13;
civil courts are the next&#13;
area of appeal, and we are&#13;
urging him to pursue a&#13;
resolution of the issues&#13;
involved in his case in the&#13;
civil courts. At the same&#13;
time, other events at&#13;
Parkside threaten the&#13;
usefullness of that campus&#13;
as an academic institution.&#13;
We feel an investigation of&#13;
the actions of the Wyllie&#13;
Administration, particularly&#13;
the Office of&#13;
Student Affairs, is&#13;
necessary to preserve&#13;
Parkside as a part of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin's&#13;
educational system.&#13;
Very truly yours,&#13;
Nancy K. MacKay&#13;
Corresponding Secretary&#13;
cc: Chancellor&#13;
IrvinG. Wyllie&#13;
Executive Vice President,&#13;
Donald E. Percy&#13;
Senator Henry Dorman&#13;
Editor-The Daily Cardinal&#13;
Editor-Newscope&#13;
PHONES&#13;
Editorial 553-24%&#13;
Business 553-2498&#13;
Summer Newscope is an&#13;
independent student newspaper&#13;
composed and published weekly&#13;
through the summer session by&#13;
students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Student&#13;
obtained advertising funds are&#13;
the sole source of revenue for&#13;
the operation of Newscope. 6,000&#13;
copies are printed aod&#13;
distributed through the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the&#13;
University. Free copies are&#13;
available upon request.&#13;
by Terry Kollman&#13;
Publicity Chairman&#13;
This year's Kenosha&#13;
Recreation Chorus program&#13;
entitled "A SWITCH IN&#13;
TIME", is centered around&#13;
the music of t he well known&#13;
Burt Bachrach and Hal&#13;
David. The show includes&#13;
such numbers as "Walk on&#13;
By", "The Look of Love",&#13;
and "Promises Promises".&#13;
Other numbers are&#13;
"Scarborough Fair",&#13;
"Traces", "Elinor Rigby",&#13;
and many others. The&#13;
program also includes band&#13;
and dance numbers.&#13;
The Kenosha Recreation&#13;
Chorus is sponsored by the&#13;
Kenosha Recreation&#13;
Dep artm ent. Unli ke&#13;
previous years, the director&#13;
of this year's show is a&#13;
student from Whitewater&#13;
State University, Dan&#13;
Zarletti. Other members of&#13;
the production staff are:&#13;
Dan Apyan, Choreographer;&#13;
Terry Lawler,&#13;
Staging; Bruce Tallon,&#13;
Production Manager; Barb&#13;
Hunt, Costumes; and Terry&#13;
Kollman, Publicity. "A&#13;
SWITCH .IN TIME" is a&#13;
combined effort by students&#13;
who hope to prove that they&#13;
recycle t h is p a p e r&#13;
1AIU J V/i v ^ 1&#13;
Kenneth Huck acts as head&#13;
of a city that employs 1,000&#13;
people to carry out its&#13;
responsibilities and provide&#13;
services for the community.&#13;
Huck is opposed to party&#13;
politics in so much as he&#13;
eels he could not work in&#13;
that particular political&#13;
arrangement because he&#13;
would not act according to&#13;
party policy. He believes&#13;
that his conscience is more a&#13;
barometer of his decisions&#13;
than political obligations&#13;
and was elected mayor&#13;
without the endorsement of&#13;
the traditionally influential&#13;
labor or political organizations.&#13;
&#13;
Newscope spoke with&#13;
Mayor Huck last week and&#13;
discussed his opinions on&#13;
topics ranging from&#13;
taxation to welfare.&#13;
Newscope: Do you have any&#13;
political reasons for running&#13;
for mayor?&#13;
Huck: I said when I first ran&#13;
that my intentions were not&#13;
to be a career mayor, that I&#13;
was hopeful what I wanted&#13;
to accomplish could be done&#13;
in two to four years and so I&#13;
think this is probably my&#13;
last time around.&#13;
NS: What did you want to&#13;
accomplish?&#13;
Huck: Well, what I was&#13;
looking for when I first&#13;
came into office was an&#13;
attempt at a stabilization of&#13;
taxes. The tax rate in the&#13;
city of Racine had increased&#13;
by 33 per cent in the&#13;
previous two years.&#13;
I also looked for a&#13;
reorganization of local&#13;
government. I felt that we&#13;
were attempting to do&#13;
business and attempting to&#13;
meet modern and conRacine's&#13;
&#13;
temporary problems with&#13;
Outmoded governmental&#13;
tools.&#13;
Since I have taken office&#13;
we have gone to a strong&#13;
mayoral office. In the&#13;
beginning there were only&#13;
two employees out of a&#13;
thousand that reported to&#13;
me; my secretary and the&#13;
sealer of weights and&#13;
measures.&#13;
I did not submit an&#13;
executive budget, there&#13;
were no staff meetings, no&#13;
one talked to each other. So&#13;
we attempted to reorganize &#13;
August 9,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
accompanying access roads, is $196,624.&#13;
The completion of the lots comes nearly&#13;
IOV2 months later than originally&#13;
planned.&#13;
James Gailbraith, the Director of&#13;
Planning and Construction, explained&#13;
the delay was due to bad weather in the&#13;
fall of 1970 and the great difficulty of&#13;
building on a clay base.&#13;
Rains last fall prevented work from&#13;
beginning until late April of this year, he&#13;
said. Work proceeded for about six&#13;
weeks until all the material was brought&#13;
in. Then it was discovered that the land&#13;
had not yet drained from the spring&#13;
rains.&#13;
Drain tiles that farmers installed in&#13;
order to work the land, Galbraith&#13;
related, were actually bringing water&#13;
into the parking lot because the area was&#13;
a low point.&#13;
They decided then to form a "moat"&#13;
by cutting off the tiles in the lot from the&#13;
rest of the system. But in July two&#13;
damaging rains resulted in water being&#13;
trapped on the surface.&#13;
He said of working with the clay,&#13;
"Clay is one of the trickiest materials to&#13;
work with. No two clays are alike. It's&#13;
consistent only if it's always wet, or only&#13;
if it's always dry, but if it's both, that's&#13;
jwhere the problem is."&#13;
Galbraith noted in his talk with&#13;
Newscope that while state funds paid for&#13;
these lots, a new policy is being&#13;
developed that requires new parking lots&#13;
to be self amortizing — i.e. to be&#13;
financed through funds generated from&#13;
their use.&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Parking at the Parkside campus will&#13;
be doubled by the fall semester with the&#13;
belated completion of two permanent&#13;
1&#13;
lots east of Tallent Hall.&#13;
It ends the problem that at times saw&#13;
an excess of 200 to 300 cars without space&#13;
to park in the Tallent Hall lot.&#13;
The two lots, with a combined capacity&#13;
of 1,000 cars, will supplement the present&#13;
temporary Tallent Hall parking area.&#13;
The'new lots are part of the campus&#13;
master plan.&#13;
The cost of the lots, including the&#13;
Parking&#13;
Readied&#13;
For F all&#13;
"With the asphalt layed now,"&#13;
Galbraith said, "there's not much we&#13;
can do but try to stop the further&#13;
penetration of water."&#13;
He said that he has been advised by"&#13;
the engineers that because of recent&#13;
rains the soil is not as stable as it should&#13;
be, and that minor failures in the lot&#13;
should be expected in the future until the&#13;
soil can be sealed.&#13;
Galbraith described what happened as&#13;
'a real come uppance for everybody.&#13;
It's been a challenging engineering&#13;
problem. It's very difficult soil to work&#13;
on. We've had our disappointments."&#13;
In Time'&#13;
are responsible and creative&#13;
enough to put on a good&#13;
show. The directors as well&#13;
as cast are primarily&#13;
students of either high&#13;
school or college level.&#13;
"A SWITCH IN TIME"&#13;
will be presented August 20&#13;
and 21 at 8:15 p.m. in the&#13;
Tremper High School&#13;
auditorium. Tickets will be&#13;
available from cast&#13;
members, or call 652-8680.&#13;
General admission is $1. So,&#13;
join the Kenosha Recreation&#13;
Chorus for "A SWITCH IN&#13;
TIME".&#13;
Inside&#13;
Reaction&#13;
Wendy&#13;
Ball Hour&#13;
More&#13;
administratively and set up&#13;
12 division managers that&#13;
more or less serve as my&#13;
cabinet.&#13;
Since we have done some&#13;
reorganizing in the&#13;
executive branch, I feel now&#13;
that we have to turn our&#13;
attention to the legislative&#13;
branch; the council.&#13;
We have 18 part-time&#13;
aldermen. I think we have&#13;
too many first of all, and&#13;
secondly, I think we could&#13;
use full-time aldermen.&#13;
structure four of our seven&#13;
municipalities do not levy a&#13;
municipal tax. Now this is&#13;
-nonsense. Take the town of&#13;
Mount Pleasant, one of the&#13;
largest townships in the&#13;
state, that provides services&#13;
to its people but yet does not&#13;
tax them for it. Obviously&#13;
somebody's paying for it.&#13;
With a municipality of our&#13;
geographic location, with&#13;
our skilled and semi-skilled&#13;
people, pulling in the same&#13;
direction in planning conA/layor&#13;
Kenneth Huck&#13;
3're the third largest&#13;
in the state and the&#13;
ind largest industrial&#13;
with corporate assets of&#13;
$500 million and yet we&#13;
to 18 part-time guys,&#13;
make the policy for us.'&#13;
an impossible situation,&#13;
hat I'd like to see in the&#13;
r future is a&#13;
ropolitan government,&#13;
e people are saying it's&#13;
government, it's taking&#13;
power away from the&#13;
)le. I don't believe that's&#13;
nder our present tax&#13;
cepts and municipal services&#13;
we would probably&#13;
have one of the most&#13;
progressive communities in&#13;
the state, if not in the&#13;
Midwest. But instead we&#13;
have seven municipalities&#13;
all going the opposite way.&#13;
You just cannot plan for the&#13;
future when across the road&#13;
you're in another&#13;
jurisdiction. We say we'd&#13;
like to see multi-family&#13;
dwellings developed here&#13;
while they're building&#13;
factories across the street.&#13;
It's a ridiculous situation.&#13;
NS: Would you say that&#13;
centralized government is&#13;
the answer?&#13;
Huck: Yes, I'm sure some&#13;
people would disagree and&#13;
let the municipalities&#13;
structrue the way they&#13;
want, but I can't see that as&#13;
being effective because I&#13;
know the problems we have&#13;
attempting to administer&#13;
business now and I think this&#13;
would just complicate&#13;
issues. I think we have to&#13;
consolidate.&#13;
It's just like anything&#13;
else; the theory is sound but&#13;
the administration is going&#13;
to make it or break it.&#13;
Jacksonville is a good case&#13;
in point because in the last&#13;
three years, with their&#13;
consolidation, their taxes&#13;
have gone down and their&#13;
services have improved. I&#13;
think it's only as good as the&#13;
administration.&#13;
NS: Do you think by consolidating&#13;
the city government&#13;
it would help to&#13;
stabilize taxes?&#13;
Huck: I think if you took the&#13;
total area east of 1-94 we&#13;
could administer a good,&#13;
sound program. If you go&#13;
west of 1-94 it's like entering&#13;
another state; it's rural in&#13;
(Continued on Page 5)&#13;
Nixon Rose In Poll&#13;
Princeton, N.J.: Young people's approval of President&#13;
Nixon rose sharply after his announcement that he would&#13;
travel to the People's Republic of China before May of 1972.&#13;
Fifty-seven per cent of the 18-29-year-old group now&#13;
approve of the way Nixon is handling his job as President;&#13;
33 p er cent disapprove and ten per cent have no opinion.&#13;
This 57 per cent approval is an increase of 11 per cent from&#13;
the June 5-6 approval rate of 46 per cent.&#13;
Clearly the 18-29-year-old group are the strongest&#13;
supporters of the President's decision to visit Peking.&#13;
Seventy-three per cent of those in this age group believe it is&#13;
a good thing that the President will travel to China.&#13;
Both surveys were conducted by telephone among a&#13;
representative cross-section of telephone households. The,&#13;
sample sizes for the June 5-6 survey and the July 20-21&#13;
survey were approximately 1,000 persons. Following are&#13;
the questions asked and the survey results:&#13;
"Do you approve or disapprove of the way Richard&#13;
Nixon is handling his job as President?"&#13;
Percentage Base&#13;
June 5-6 Survey&#13;
(293)&#13;
July 20-21 Survey&#13;
(287)&#13;
Approve 46 57&#13;
Disapprove 42 33&#13;
No Opinion 12 10&#13;
(Persons Age 18 to 29 Years)&#13;
"Do you personally believe that it is a good thing that&#13;
President Nixon has decided to visit the People's Republic&#13;
of China, or isn't it?"&#13;
Not a&#13;
Pet. Good Good No&#13;
- Base Thing Thing Opinion&#13;
Total Public (1,002) 67 20 13&#13;
18-29 Years (287) 73 17 10&#13;
30-49 Y ears (416) 66 22 12&#13;
50 Yrs. &amp; Ove r (294) 64 19 17&#13;
Equestrians Hold First Show&#13;
On Saturday, July 17, the UW-Parkside Equestrian&#13;
Club held its first horse show at Oak Hi Stables.&#13;
The twenty-four class show started at 9:00 A.M. There&#13;
were seven halter classes and then a lunch break. The&#13;
seventeen afternoon classes included among them speedand-action&#13;
and English and Western pleasure and horsemanship&#13;
classes.&#13;
The Parkside Equestrian Club was formed last winter&#13;
by a handful of horse admirers and owners. The club is open&#13;
to everyone in the Parkside community on a regular or&#13;
associate member basis. Anyone interested in a good nonpolluting,&#13;
organic hobby is invited to stop at the PEC table&#13;
during registration or come to one of the fall meetings. All&#13;
announcements of meetings will be posted on the bulletin&#13;
boards. &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE August 9,1971&#13;
The J. Geils Band&#13;
Atlantic SD 8275&#13;
Peter Wolf — Vocals&#13;
Seth Justman — Piano and&#13;
Organ&#13;
Magic Dick — Ha rp&#13;
J. Geils — Gu itar&#13;
Danny Klien — Bass&#13;
Stephen Bladd — Drum and&#13;
Vocal&#13;
A look at the album cover&#13;
will give you a good idea&#13;
what awaits you inside. It&#13;
£ &amp;&#13;
8 i&#13;
n *&#13;
•Ss? 03 t&#13;
*3&#13;
appears to be a composite&#13;
photo of the six top&#13;
qualifiers of the 1955&#13;
mugging and knifing&#13;
championship of greater&#13;
Pittsburg. Their collective&#13;
hairdoos could support&#13;
several good sized oil wells,&#13;
while their sneers make you&#13;
think twice about walking&#13;
home alone. One quickly&#13;
comes to the conclusion that&#13;
the reason they are pictured&#13;
from the waist up is to&#13;
reveal the group in their&#13;
skin-tight chinos would&#13;
render the album undisplayable&#13;
in record shops.&#13;
Needless to say, the music&#13;
is hardly Swan Lake. Song&#13;
titles like "Crusin' for a&#13;
Love" and "Serves You&#13;
Right to Suffer" should&#13;
prove that. In place of&#13;
Tschaikovsky, we find Juke&#13;
Joint Jimmy and John Lee&#13;
Hooker as the authors of the&#13;
musical fare. Their styles&#13;
have never been the type to&#13;
be immortalized by the&#13;
Vienna Boys Choir. It's too&#13;
honest.&#13;
The point of this review is&#13;
not to give a critique of the&#13;
authors or the style, but to&#13;
discuss what the band does&#13;
with them. It often seems&#13;
that the entire album was&#13;
recorded in about an hour of&#13;
studio time. There is no&#13;
semblence of polish or&#13;
refinement, no dynamics&#13;
and a distinct lack of orchestral&#13;
coloring.&#13;
The arrangements are&#13;
uninvolved, and the solos&#13;
simple.&#13;
But that, people, is the&#13;
blues. When done this way.&#13;
it's good, accurate,&#13;
meaningful blues.&#13;
The harp player (with the&#13;
dubious name of Magic&#13;
Dick), puts meaning into his&#13;
simple riffs. On guitar, J.&#13;
Geils makes it by playing&#13;
things that at times sound&#13;
corny, but in really are&#13;
breaks with all the phony,&#13;
egotistical embellishments&#13;
left out.&#13;
Most of all, Peter Wolf's&#13;
vocals show that this is&#13;
music for the common man.&#13;
His voice is rough and untrained.&#13;
It doesn't take a&#13;
Caruso to sing about a&#13;
cheatin' woman or a bottle&#13;
of c heap whiskey.&#13;
It's music that can live&#13;
only on honesty. If played&#13;
sincerely as it is here, it's&#13;
worth listening to.&#13;
When I referred to the&#13;
album as having been&#13;
recorded in an hour or so, I&#13;
meant that what they&#13;
recorded is something that&#13;
can't be over-dubbed and&#13;
polished, without losing its&#13;
appeal of sp ontineity.&#13;
All the tunes are basically&#13;
the same and every one has&#13;
been heard before, but in no&#13;
way detracts from the&#13;
album. If you're not hung up&#13;
on disciplined music and&#13;
can see beauty in raw but&#13;
honest efforts, you'll like&#13;
this album.&#13;
I3e&lt; 0j&#13;
JluAA/. 7j^.W.&#13;
Not too long ago, I discovered a fine, late&#13;
night bit of entertainment. On weekends, when&#13;
social events are at a low ebb, I ventured into&#13;
George Webb's on Roosevelt Road.&#13;
Sipping the same cup of coffee for hours, I&#13;
watch people come and eat in the middle of the&#13;
night. I watched the waitresses serve people&#13;
who were too spaced out, or too drunk, to care&#13;
what they ate, and also I'd watch my reflection&#13;
in the mirrors that make up the walls of this&#13;
hamburger parlor.&#13;
Minutes after the bars closed the doors to&#13;
patrons, cars arrived at George Webb's as&#13;
though it were a rendezvous spot for a local&#13;
mid-evening parade of some sort. Backslapping,&#13;
laughing and sometimes stumbling,&#13;
the adult crowd would invade&#13;
the "Webb" for eggs,&#13;
pancakes, hash brown&#13;
potatoes, hamburgers, chili,&#13;
or whatever else fits the&#13;
appetite. Most of the individuals&#13;
tried to simulate&#13;
breakfast while sometimes&#13;
almost shouting to one&#13;
another, sitting blurry eyed,&#13;
or simply remaining on a&#13;
stool at the counter in a&#13;
trance-like condition.&#13;
There is no better show in&#13;
town at this time. Although&#13;
they are funny, the events&#13;
were also very interesting. I would sometimes&#13;
see a drunk valiantly trying to keep his head&#13;
from plunging into his order of fried eggs. It&#13;
was nothing to see someone doze off for a&#13;
minute or two while putting jelly on a piece of&#13;
toast.&#13;
George Webb enjoys a wide range of&#13;
popularity. Factory workers who work late&#13;
shifts, truck drivers, teenagers driving around&#13;
in the night, laborers or mailmen on their way&#13;
to a day's work, all eat here.&#13;
Literary critics would be amazed by the&#13;
menu, printed on two boards against the west&#13;
wall of the tiny restaurant; "Real" chicken rice&#13;
soup; "delicious" coffee, "farm fresh" eggs,&#13;
"tender" wheatcakes, "golden" hash brown&#13;
potatoes, "rich, creamy" butter. Such a modes!&#13;
list of of ferings can hardly go unnoticed.&#13;
Steak and eggs cost a dollar and a quarter.&#13;
Hamburgers are twenty-four cents, two farm&#13;
fresh eggs and toast are sixty-five cents, chili is&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
forty, and coffee, fifteen. No one can&#13;
reasonably call George Webb's expensive,&#13;
unless you have no money whatsoever.&#13;
Questions concerning the quality of the food&#13;
at this hamburger parlor don't seem to be very&#13;
important to me. When one eats here late at&#13;
night, he is either exhausted, spaced out or&#13;
drunk. People in any of these conditions can&#13;
hardly care about the degree of quality&#13;
surrounding the food they are unconsciously&#13;
shoving into their bodies. Anyone eating here in&#13;
the middle of the day must like the atmosphere&#13;
and food, since there are other restaurants&#13;
open.&#13;
The only real black eye that the restaurant&#13;
has given itself is spelled out in a small sign&#13;
above the entrance. "Minimum to Minors, 36&#13;
cents". The sign then states&#13;
that there is a ten minute&#13;
limit placed on minors'&#13;
visits, and that they cannot&#13;
smoke while in the&#13;
restaurant. This sign seems&#13;
to me to be out of place in&#13;
any restaurant in America.&#13;
Those individuals who&#13;
work at this restaurant&#13;
during the late hours have a&#13;
fine sense of humor. Once a&#13;
mosquito fell off a neon light&#13;
onto my friend's piece of&#13;
toast, just before she was to&#13;
take a bite of it. The&#13;
waitress and I both noticed the event at the&#13;
same time. The George Webb employee quickly&#13;
quipped, "We won't even charge you extra for&#13;
his little visit." We all laughed as the waitress&#13;
dropped another piece of toast in the toaster.&#13;
Once in awhile, a long hair will wander in at a&#13;
strange hour, and devour enormous amounts of&#13;
food. I learned that this phenomenon is known&#13;
to those of the counter-culture as the "midnight&#13;
munchies".&#13;
But these individuals aren't as frequent&#13;
visitors as the drunks. It wouldn't be fair to&#13;
write or infer that everyone who eats in this&#13;
place late at night is of questionable character&#13;
or behavior. Many of the customers eating here&#13;
at all hours follow very normal behavior patterns.&#13;
&#13;
In any case, I enjoyed the hours I spent at&#13;
George Webb's. It's very interesting to watch&#13;
stoned, drunk and exhausted people stumble&#13;
into the hamburger parlor and "name their&#13;
poison."&#13;
BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING&#13;
THE ANDERSON TAPES&#13;
Sean Connery&#13;
Dyan Cannon&#13;
Martin Balsam&#13;
Alan King&#13;
James Bond, the most invincible man in the world,&#13;
moved stealthily down the cement-wet early morning&#13;
street, the sound of his footsteps the only interruption of&#13;
silence other than the occasional nervous taxi horn.&#13;
I pretended to read my newspaper, mimmicking that&#13;
New York aire of d isinterest while listening to those footsteps,&#13;
whose separation in time relayed that same stalking&#13;
stride .... animal.&#13;
The man finally approached and I realized that the&#13;
distance at which I was watching him had betrayed by&#13;
description. As he went by I looked up and was surprised to&#13;
see the most invincible man in the world to be balding;&#13;
l o o k i n g m o r e l i k e a b u s i n e s s m a n j u s t a t m i d d l e a g e . . . .&#13;
more preoccupied with the damp air and chill breeze than&#13;
with the cold steel revolver that probably lay hybernating&#13;
under his arm until the spring of death.&#13;
Suddenly, aware of m y vigil, he stopped and turned. I&#13;
looked into quieter eyes, tired of peril eyes; they were eyes&#13;
Working Class&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
I was sitting in the back of&#13;
the small grocery store&#13;
when two young boys came&#13;
in to hustle the butcher for&#13;
some dog bones. With the&#13;
aire and confidence of a 20&#13;
year customer, they&#13;
presented their requests to&#13;
the butcher who was sifting&#13;
unquestionably through his&#13;
scrap of the day, almost&#13;
before they finished asking.&#13;
Minutes later, three small&#13;
children came and began&#13;
haggling among themselves&#13;
in little kid "jibber jabber".&#13;
They wanted to spend their&#13;
small change to their best&#13;
advantage on penny candy.&#13;
Little did they realize that&#13;
the ritual of buying penny&#13;
candy is amost extinct.&#13;
A woman came in and&#13;
talked to the butcher for a&#13;
while. She seemed more a&#13;
friend than a customer. She&#13;
asked for a little of this, a&#13;
half pound of that, and if&#13;
he could cut a piece of meat&#13;
a certain way. She took her&#13;
fresh meat, picked a few&#13;
other daily essentials before&#13;
checking out. The middle&#13;
aged lady was on her way&#13;
home to begin supper. It was&#13;
the end of a typical work day&#13;
for Marco and Ann Stella.&#13;
Stella's Market is located&#13;
on the southside of Kenosha,&#13;
where 14th Avenue and 70th&#13;
street form a T. By all&#13;
rights, 70th street should&#13;
have been allowed to continue&#13;
eastward, when the&#13;
streets were created. For&#13;
some strange reason,&#13;
Stella's Market and a few&#13;
other stores were granted&#13;
immunity from progress.&#13;
Walking east on 70th street&#13;
from Lincoln Park will lead&#13;
you right into the front door&#13;
of the small grocery.&#13;
Since 1927, Marco Stella&#13;
has been running his store.&#13;
A year or so later Ann&#13;
became his wife and a&#13;
valuable half of the&#13;
business. For 44 years,&#13;
Stella's Market has been&#13;
visited by little kids for&#13;
can dy, h o u s e wi v es for &#13;
that were looking for rest rather than advisary As quicklv&#13;
he moved on, disappearing down another street where&#13;
someone else would have to look twice.&#13;
So it was with Duke Anderson, a man who looked a lot&#13;
like the most invincible man in the world, but the resemblance&#13;
ends there.&#13;
Connery plays a newly released prisoner, who after ten&#13;
years in a penitentiary is imprisoned again into a world of&#13;
watchers that plays as the archives of men's fate . . . tapes&#13;
and cameras controlled" by men to control men.&#13;
For about 25 minutes the audience is conditioned by a&#13;
gray television type static which plays over the forms and&#13;
faces on the screen; while this technique is a little overplayed,&#13;
it is still successful with the help of percussionmoog&#13;
music .... admittedly one does become a little&#13;
desensitized by the electric smog.&#13;
After his release from prison, Connery decides to go in&#13;
again for Grand theft. The heist's goal is a luxury apartment&#13;
building on New York's upper East side. The plan&#13;
brings about the inevitable clash; lenses, and microphones&#13;
vs. Homo Sapien Sapien and his wits. With this as the focal&#13;
point of the story we have all the needed thrill material to&#13;
make a chiller, but, happily, more was done with the film&#13;
than this.&#13;
Connery portrays a man who will probably never quite&#13;
be played in the same way again. A man of honor with a&#13;
distinct hatred for violence huddles beneath the exterior of&#13;
a hardened man who's image of the criminal world is more&#13;
befitting a revolutionary. He is given the task of killing one&#13;
of the men assigned to him by the syndicate; he is repulsed&#13;
by th e idea, and this repulsion becomes his undoing. The&#13;
Anderson tapes are erased. Our burglars are surrounded by&#13;
the police who methodically corner them, killing just about&#13;
everyone involved.&#13;
Connery has always been quite an actor, but because of&#13;
this James Bond stigma he has carried with him it has been&#13;
rather difficult for him to be considered anything more than&#13;
a comic book hero. In this film, as in The Hill and A Fine&#13;
Madness he has shown his ability through the mask of&#13;
James Bond, making this otherwise saleable movie a&#13;
"bit more.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
August 9,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
•we'&#13;
REACTION&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
Last Thursday had all the makings of a fine&#13;
day for me. I didn't have to struggle to keep my&#13;
eyes open an hour after I woke up, the AM discjockies&#13;
weren't punishing listeners with the&#13;
usual trash, and the morning mail brought no&#13;
bills, bad news or junk.&#13;
Breakfast tasted unusually good. I read the&#13;
Chicago Sun-Times and realized that the Cubs&#13;
had won a double header. It all sounded fine.&#13;
After a few morning odds and ends, I headed&#13;
out the front door ready to enjoy the day.&#13;
Even though the absence of August&#13;
humidity and heat would mean a reduction in&#13;
the wealth of g arden tomatoes, I "still enjoyed&#13;
walking through Indian summer breezes a bit&#13;
early in the year.&#13;
About half a block from home, I saw a&#13;
neighborhood kid bending over a flamin' red&#13;
tricycle that was having obvious mechanical&#13;
trouble. It was upside down in the middle of the&#13;
sidewalk, as he was trying to decide why a back&#13;
wheel wobbled. He transferred dirt from his&#13;
hands to his face every time he wiped a few&#13;
locks of hair out of h is eyes. When he saw me&#13;
coming, he ran up and greeted me with a&#13;
request for help.&#13;
After a few minutes of minor repair, he was&#13;
able to jump on his bike and merrily peddle his&#13;
way down the sidewalk, chasing a stray dog.&#13;
Warren Nedry, Newscope editor, met me&#13;
an hour or so later. He began to fill me in on the&#13;
news of the day, as he usually does. The interview&#13;
I had set up between John Koloen of the&#13;
staff and the Mayor of Racine had come off&#13;
without a hitch. Marc Eisen made it to the&#13;
Ravinia Miles Davis concert all right, and no&#13;
one was complaining very loudly about the&#13;
layout of the last issue of the paper, in which&#13;
pages 2 and 8 got confused.&#13;
I told Warren that I had decided upon the&#13;
week's "Working Class Hero" and an "Eating&#13;
Out" had to only be transferred from my mind&#13;
onto paper. This week's deadline wasn't going&#13;
to be hanging over my head like a guillotine&#13;
blade for once. Rarely did even the journalism&#13;
business look this good late in the week. I began&#13;
to tell Warren how fine things were going, when&#13;
he told me about "the phone call"&#13;
Warren had been answering the Newscope&#13;
telephone all morning.&#13;
"Good morning, Newscope."&#13;
"Is Lomartire there?"&#13;
"No he isn't here right now."&#13;
"Who's this?"&#13;
"Warren Nedry"&#13;
"Don't cha think you were a little racist&#13;
and bigotted on Page 5?"&#13;
"Pardon."&#13;
"I think you were racist and bigotted on&#13;
Page five."&#13;
"Which article are you ..."&#13;
CLICK&#13;
My reaction was, "C'mon, Warren, did you&#13;
really get a call like that?" Then I realized that&#13;
editors don't make jokes about complaints&#13;
concerning articles that appear in papers under&#13;
their leadership.&#13;
I wasn't shook up. I've become used to&#13;
criticism. After I was interviewed by the&#13;
Kenosha News about my trip to Washington,&#13;
D.C., on May Day, I got telephone calls from&#13;
individuals telling me I was a rotten Communist,&#13;
and why didn't I drop dead. In the past,&#13;
I have even gotten a few bad responses to my&#13;
"Eating Out" columns, but the people identified&#13;
themselves, and their criticism wasn't of&#13;
a political or personal nature.&#13;
But an anonymous call over the statement,&#13;
"Any Jew worth his weight in blintzs has to&#13;
admit that Ruby's offers a fine corned beef&#13;
sandwich." I couldn't believe this qualified me&#13;
as a "racist bigot". Mister devout and proven&#13;
member of the left a "racist bigot" over a&#13;
statement concerning a corned beef sandwich.&#13;
Why couldn't the caller at least have identified&#13;
himself?&#13;
The rest of the day went downhill. All of a&#13;
sudden it was too cold, the AM disc-jockies&#13;
were punishing listeners with the usual trash,&#13;
and lunch tasted terrible. I knew I shouldn't let&#13;
the call bother me, but there are some things&#13;
that can bother even "thick skinned" individuals.&#13;
&#13;
All the way home I didn't talk to anyone. I&#13;
just felt Thursday dissolve in my mind. Once&#13;
back in my neighborhood late in the afternoon,&#13;
I noticed the same little kid bent over his red&#13;
tricycle in the middle of t he sidewalk. A wheel&#13;
had fallen off, and he was kicking the hell out of&#13;
the toy that had failed him.&#13;
I couldn't see why I should help the kid, he&#13;
just might be Jewish.&#13;
Heroes-. Mr. and Mrs. Marco Stella&#13;
fresh meat and boys for&#13;
dog bones.&#13;
While sitting in the back of&#13;
the place by the meat&#13;
counter, I talked to Marco&#13;
Stella, who has always been&#13;
the butcher and owner.&#13;
Between greeting and&#13;
serving customers, and&#13;
slicing big hunks of meat&#13;
into dinner table proportions,&#13;
he talked with me&#13;
about the future of small&#13;
groceries, inflation and&#13;
himself.&#13;
I asked if the day was&#13;
coming when a neighborhood&#13;
grocery store would&#13;
be a thing of the past.&#13;
"Yes", he said, "because&#13;
none of the small groceries&#13;
are training anyone. There&#13;
used to be one or two boys in&#13;
the neighborhood who would&#13;
come to work here and I&#13;
could teach them meat&#13;
cutting. Now there is no&#13;
one."&#13;
"I know if I were 20 years&#13;
younger, I'd go to the big&#13;
stores and get all the&#13;
benefits," he continued. I&#13;
then asked where he learned&#13;
the trade.&#13;
Marco picked up the&#13;
knowledge behind his work&#13;
with experience. A couple&#13;
years here and there, as he&#13;
puts it, California, Chicago&#13;
and Kenosha. In Kenosha,&#13;
he worked for Philbin and&#13;
Degen, who, in the twenties,&#13;
were the biggest butchers in&#13;
town. He also worked with&#13;
his father before opening his&#13;
own store in 1927.&#13;
The main attraction to&#13;
Stella's Market lies in the&#13;
personal service. Certain&#13;
cuts of meat, special family&#13;
favorites, and other small&#13;
but important services keep&#13;
a steady clientele.&#13;
I wondered if recent inflation&#13;
. had hurt his&#13;
business. Inflation had&#13;
indeed hurt his surplus&#13;
buying Marco said. But in&#13;
the number of customers he&#13;
said "We've been holding&#13;
out own. In fact," Marco&#13;
said, "we've gained on meat&#13;
sales."&#13;
Huck&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
nature while the area east of&#13;
the highway is urban. With&#13;
the industrial complexes&#13;
that we have, ana the&#13;
natural assets and&#13;
resources we have, I think&#13;
we could really do a&#13;
A typical work day for&#13;
Marco and Ann Stella is nine&#13;
to ten hours. Ann must&#13;
assemble orders to be&#13;
delivered, and check out&#13;
customers. Marco handles&#13;
the meat counter, and occasionally&#13;
helps out at the&#13;
resgister. Together, they&#13;
have seen three generations&#13;
of neighborhood families&#13;
come to do business in their&#13;
store.&#13;
Marco and Ann Stella are&#13;
working class heros of a&#13;
special sort. The services&#13;
they render beyond the&#13;
grocery business can only&#13;
be counted in personal&#13;
favors and solid friendships,&#13;
in and around the neighborhood.&#13;
&#13;
Their value bypasses&#13;
trading stamps, giant air&#13;
conditioned monsters, and&#13;
chain store public relations.&#13;
Stella's Market can best be&#13;
judged in free dog bones,&#13;
penny candy, and friendliness&#13;
that can't be sold.&#13;
tremendous job.&#13;
NS: Presently, what would&#13;
you consider to be the main&#13;
problems of the city?&#13;
Huck: It's really difficult&#13;
with the many problems we&#13;
do have to say this one is&#13;
more important than that&#13;
one. Obviously unemployment&#13;
today in the city of&#13;
Racine is a very bad&#13;
situation.&#13;
The many social problems&#13;
that we have in our city and&#13;
the many needs ... I think&#13;
that as we live within the&#13;
inequities that we presently&#13;
have within the state of&#13;
W i s c o n si n , as far as&#13;
taxation goes, we are&#13;
burdened.&#13;
The property tax is outmoded,&#13;
it's antiquated, it&#13;
should be done away with. It&#13;
was never intended to&#13;
support welfare, it was not&#13;
intended to support the&#13;
education programs, it was&#13;
not intended to support&#13;
pollution a b a t e me n t&#13;
programs and so forth.&#13;
We're overburdening our&#13;
low income, senior citizens&#13;
ana driving them out of their&#13;
homes.&#13;
1 think one of the problems&#13;
we have to face head on is to&#13;
completely revamp our tax&#13;
structure. The property tax&#13;
can no longer be the main&#13;
source of revenue. Even&#13;
though the city of Racine is&#13;
a comparatively rich&#13;
community, because of our&#13;
present tax structure, as our&#13;
monies go to Madison and&#13;
Washington D.C., we find&#13;
that we don't have enough&#13;
left to meet our needs.&#13;
NS: As a final question,&#13;
what is the city's stand on&#13;
the topless controversy?&#13;
Huck: I can't speak for the&#13;
whole city, of course,&#13;
because I know there are&#13;
aldermen on the floor that&#13;
have different viewpoint^&#13;
than I do. We have some&#13;
aldermen that are rather&#13;
Puritan in their approach&#13;
and we have others that are&#13;
a whole lot less than that. I&#13;
think somewhere in the&#13;
middle there's a reasonable&#13;
ground. The thing that I was&#13;
upset about concerning this&#13;
kind of entertainment was&#13;
something we saw the other&#13;
day at the outdoor.&#13;
If a person is 21 years old&#13;
and they want to see a&#13;
certain type of entertainment,&#13;
I find it very&#13;
difficult for me to say no,&#13;
you can't do that.&#13;
But by the same token, I.&#13;
don't think that this sould be&#13;
pushed on the general public&#13;
through the advertising&#13;
media and so forth, if they&#13;
don't want it.&#13;
I don't think you should&#13;
have to give an eight year&#13;
old an explanation when&#13;
you're driving by a bar with&#13;
a big toples-bottomless sign&#13;
and a few other things that&#13;
might be on the sign, or&#13;
when the drum and bugle&#13;
corp is practicing at Starbuck&#13;
and watching 101 Acts&#13;
of Love or whatever.&#13;
That wasn't the film that&#13;
(Continued on Page 8) &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE August 9,1971&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
"Spend the night with Wendy",&#13;
you're invited by an earnest male&#13;
voice, so you do, and when it's over&#13;
you wonder what's she really like.&#13;
'Cause you've just spent six hours&#13;
with her and you like her, but&#13;
there's something missing.&#13;
"What's she really like?" you keep&#13;
wondering to yourself.&#13;
So you go up to talk to her and&#13;
you find a pretty girl with long&#13;
blonde hair, a wide smile, and a&#13;
fashion model's leanness, you like&#13;
all that, and you find she's easy to&#13;
interview and it's going to be a&#13;
breeze story.&#13;
It's over after 50 minutes, you get&#13;
up to leave, and it hits you then:&#13;
she's said next to nothing about&#13;
herself. You walk away puzzled,&#13;
still wondering where her head's&#13;
at, but respecting, yet, her desire&#13;
to keep her personal life personal.&#13;
She's Wendy, and between&#13;
midnight and six in the morning on&#13;
WRKR fm radio she plays a mixed&#13;
brew of underground and occasional&#13;
top 40 music that is unique&#13;
in Racine-Kenosha radio.&#13;
She's been at WRKR since last&#13;
December when the station&#13;
changed its format to a combination&#13;
of top 40 and underground&#13;
sounds. Before then she worked at&#13;
the cream of Wisconsin underground&#13;
stations, WTOS and&#13;
WZMF, both out of the Milwaukee&#13;
area.&#13;
She says she prefers WRKR to&#13;
the Milwaukee stations. Freedom&#13;
to program her own show is a&#13;
prime reason. In Milwaukee, at&#13;
times, she had to follow a format&#13;
closely.&#13;
"My program is strictly my&#13;
thing; what I feel like getting into&#13;
that night," she says of her show at&#13;
WRKR. "I program according to&#13;
what I feel the audience wants to&#13;
hear, the mood I'm in, and the&#13;
requests I get.&#13;
"They give me a wide rein as to&#13;
what type of music I play," she&#13;
continued. "In one night I can go&#13;
from top 40 to jazz, and never stop&#13;
to think about it."&#13;
She feels, furthermore, the&#13;
people at the Milwaukee stations&#13;
were more interested in becoming&#13;
God images than DJ's putting on a&#13;
they can call up and talk to if they&#13;
have a problem."&#13;
Wendy feels WRKR is one of the&#13;
most unique stations in the nation.&#13;
The loose format has top 40 cuts&#13;
mixed with album cuts in the day&#13;
— "It has worked out so it sounds&#13;
good" — followed in the evening&#13;
with a higher proportion of album&#13;
cuts, then with almost all album&#13;
material in her show.&#13;
'Spend the night with Wendy'&#13;
good show.&#13;
"What I hope to accomplish with&#13;
my program is to play the music&#13;
the people want to hear, to entertain&#13;
people with the music they&#13;
know and the music they may not&#13;
know. And to be — this may sound&#13;
stupid — t he type of person they&#13;
would consider a friend; not to be&#13;
Superstar Wendy behind the&#13;
microphone, cold and impersonal,"&#13;
she says.&#13;
"I want to be the type of person&#13;
The format is failry well on its&#13;
feet in regard to finances. Except&#13;
she would like to get a sponsor to&#13;
support the entire six hours of her&#13;
show, in order that the sponsor&#13;
become identified with her&#13;
program.&#13;
No audience survey has been&#13;
taken yet, so the size of it is&#13;
unknown. She believes, though,&#13;
WRKR has attracted a good&#13;
listening audience.&#13;
On her best night during the past&#13;
week she received about 600 c alls&#13;
from listeners.&#13;
''The people who listen to my&#13;
show are really nice. I get a lot of&#13;
people calling up just to talk, and a&#13;
lot for requests. I get the typical&#13;
crank calls — people calling up and&#13;
asking me what I look like and&#13;
would I like to go out on a date,"&#13;
she shrugs.&#13;
Wendy entered radio in 1968&#13;
when she heard of an opening at&#13;
WTOS after being in radio school&#13;
for about a week. She took it and&#13;
later received her diploma from&#13;
the school.&#13;
"There was no earthly reason in&#13;
the world why I wanted to. become&#13;
a radio announcer. It was sort of a&#13;
last resort thing," she says now.&#13;
When asked about herself,&#13;
Wendy smiled engagingly and&#13;
sidestepped the question. She said&#13;
while in Milwaukee she used her&#13;
own name and got too many&#13;
hassles because of it.&#13;
Asked if she was part of the&#13;
underground, she allowed, "I feel&#13;
that I'm just Wendy, and if I&#13;
happen to fit into the underground&#13;
— fine. But if I fit into something&#13;
else — that's cool, too. My friends&#13;
go from Mr. Businessman to&#13;
someone panhandling on Main&#13;
street."&#13;
What bothers her the most? "One&#13;
thing that is really hard to take is to&#13;
have someone call you at 3 o'clock&#13;
in the morning when you think&#13;
you're doing a good show and have&#13;
them say, 'You playing that same&#13;
shit again?' It totally wipes you&#13;
out."&#13;
Outside of people like that, she&#13;
believes "Racine and Kenosha are&#13;
coming into their own as far as&#13;
having 'hip people'."&#13;
Wendy may be one of the reasons&#13;
why this is happening.&#13;
you didnt frmite &lt;yn fiayo two,&#13;
bmile&#13;
ANYONE WANTING&#13;
KINDLING WOOD FOR A&#13;
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3105 60th Street 657-3142 &#13;
August 9,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
A Dell Book&#13;
Edited by Leonard Shecter&#13;
The fact that Jim Bouton's book&#13;
about baseball, entitled Ball Four&#13;
is not especially relished by many&#13;
major league ballplayers comes as&#13;
no surprise upon reading it.&#13;
Unlike many baseball&#13;
biographies that paint the game up&#13;
as perhaps the most ideal career a&#13;
young man can aspire to, Bouton&#13;
points out shortcomings in the&#13;
attitudes and general behavior of&#13;
people who play the game.&#13;
Included in the discussion are&#13;
such items as relationships among&#13;
teammates, travel, what&#13;
ballplayers do in their spare time,&#13;
along with the heartaches and&#13;
thrills that are part of the major&#13;
league scene.&#13;
Perhaps the reason that Bouton's&#13;
book appears to be a more realistic&#13;
portrayal of life in the major&#13;
leagues than other baseball books&#13;
is that it was written primarily&#13;
about a season in which Bouton&#13;
was trying to make a comeback in&#13;
the game. He did not have the&#13;
security that the superstars enjoy.&#13;
Most baseball biographies are&#13;
about superstars who possess so&#13;
much talent that they have very&#13;
few worries about playing ball&#13;
effectively.&#13;
Bouton's book is probably more&#13;
identifiable to the great majority of&#13;
players who have to struggle to&#13;
make a living in the intensely&#13;
competitive baseball world.&#13;
Not that Bouton never ex-n&#13;
player when he is cut: "You walk&#13;
into the clubhouse and you see a&#13;
guy packing his bag and you both&#13;
try not to look at each other. Most&#13;
guys won't pack until they know&#13;
everybody is busy on the field, but&#13;
sometimes you surprise Somebody&#13;
in there and it's always awkward."&#13;
Bouton later was to experience&#13;
A LOOK AT BALL&#13;
perienced being in the spotlight. In&#13;
1963 he wpn 21 games for the New&#13;
York Yankess. The following year&#13;
he chalked up 18 victories for them,&#13;
plus two more in the World Series.&#13;
But Bouton was not destined to stay&#13;
on top for long. Shortly afterward,&#13;
he lost his fastball — a fate that&#13;
befalls many promising young&#13;
pitchers. He was sent to the&#13;
minors, but, through considerable&#13;
effort, worked his way back to the&#13;
majors. Worried over his&#13;
weakened arm, he spent many&#13;
frustrating hours working on his&#13;
knuckleball, and because of his&#13;
arm problem, he concluded that it&#13;
would have to be his primary pitch.&#13;
Jim lived under the fear of&#13;
getting cut from the Seattle squad.&#13;
He explains a typical reaction of a&#13;
being sent to the minors during his&#13;
stay with Seattle, but he was soon&#13;
[recalled to the parent club and&#13;
Patronize Newscope&#13;
Advertizers&#13;
remained with it until near the end&#13;
of the season when he was traded to&#13;
the Houston Astros.&#13;
Some evidence of habits that&#13;
ballplayers possess is revealed in a&#13;
statement by Jim Pagliaroni, a&#13;
catcher. Before the players left the&#13;
park after a game they were told to&#13;
show up at 10:30 a.m. the next day&#13;
as the game would start early&#13;
because of national television.&#13;
Upon hearing this, Pagliaroni&#13;
replied, "Ten-thirty, I'm not even&#13;
done throwing up at that hour."&#13;
The above remarks are just a&#13;
small example of the interesting&#13;
anecdotes found in the book that&#13;
help make it appear closer to&#13;
reality than statements found in&#13;
some straight laced baseball books&#13;
such as this series of ideas dealing&#13;
with the goals and behavior of a&#13;
certain player:&#13;
"He had no time for movies, golf,&#13;
tennis, taverns, night clubs or&#13;
social affairs. He decided early in&#13;
life that he was going to be a big&#13;
leaguer and a good one. He saw&#13;
drinking men at close hand. No&#13;
need to go into details. But young&#13;
as he was then he saw that the men&#13;
who drank were not as keen on the&#13;
baseball field as those who abstained&#13;
.... He never smoked,&#13;
and never drank intoxicating&#13;
liquor of any kind. He shunned&#13;
movies because he reasoned that&#13;
viewing films made the eyes tired.&#13;
He wanted his eyes and his muscles&#13;
to be sharp and keen for his one lofe&#13;
in life, which was always&#13;
baseball."&#13;
True, the above statements&#13;
contain worthwhile goals, but if&#13;
you want to get closer to the reality&#13;
of major league life for most&#13;
players, Bouton's book, despite the&#13;
sensationalism found in it, would&#13;
probably be a better bet.&#13;
NEED MONEY?&#13;
SEL L Y OUR SUMMER&#13;
SCHO OL B O O KS&#13;
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buys 6,000 ads&#13;
this size |&#13;
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OF HEALTH FOODS&#13;
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And many other&#13;
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633-4662 — 634-7168&#13;
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for&#13;
the&#13;
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SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
Craig Govekar and Tom&#13;
Williamson, who were&#13;
teammates at St. Joseph&#13;
high school, will be running&#13;
together again this fall as&#13;
members of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside track&#13;
and cross country squads.&#13;
Both have signed letters of&#13;
intent to attend UW-P, track&#13;
coach Bob Lawson announced&#13;
today.&#13;
Govekar, the son of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Frank Govekar,&#13;
10719 35th Ave., Kenosha,&#13;
was the third man on his&#13;
prep cross country squad&#13;
and ran the quarter-mile&#13;
and jumped in track.&#13;
Williamson, the son of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Thomas&#13;
Williamson, 7728 14t h Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha, was his squad's&#13;
No. 2 man in cross country,&#13;
set a school record over two&#13;
miles in track and placed&#13;
third in his state meet in the&#13;
half mile.&#13;
Both were coached in high&#13;
school by John Refieuna.&#13;
Golf, at least in a class at UW-Parkside, has a new&#13;
twist to it this year. Students in Coach Steve Stephens'&#13;
nightly golf class may watch themselves in action&#13;
later and analyze their swings. Here Susan Christian&#13;
shows Stephens how she keeps her eyes on the ball as&#13;
the camera records her every move.&#13;
UWP&#13;
Sports &#13;
Page 8 NF'VSCOPE Augusts, 1971&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
Title: Black Elk Speaks&#13;
Author: John G. Neihardt&#13;
Publisher: Bison Books (1.50)&#13;
The white man's whirlpool of&#13;
guilt is on the recent rise, white&#13;
man qua American, conqueror of&#13;
nature now destroying it, has the&#13;
time to look back in remorse at his&#13;
ancestors, more and more falling&#13;
into the mucky loopholes of white&#13;
history. We&#13;
* O&#13;
o&#13;
have admitted&#13;
to our ancestors'&#13;
atrocities,&#13;
we are accepting&#13;
the&#13;
responsibility&#13;
for them, the&#13;
monkey on our&#13;
backs is heavy&#13;
guilt. We are&#13;
able to condemn&#13;
ourselves because&#13;
we have&#13;
enough leisure&#13;
time to do so.&#13;
Our Colonial&#13;
kins' first fictims,&#13;
of course,&#13;
were the red&#13;
savages who&#13;
lived on the land&#13;
without ever&#13;
conceiving of it&#13;
as property&#13;
(their biggest sin). Black Elk&#13;
Speaks (280 pages) is the life story&#13;
of a holy man of the Oglala Sioux&#13;
and it represents one of white&#13;
history's loopholes, a quagmire.&#13;
This book is timely even though it&#13;
was first published in 1932. It will&#13;
be timely forever; it was timely&#13;
long before it was written; it is the&#13;
record of a culture and of th e spirit&#13;
Huck&#13;
(Continued from Page 5)&#13;
was out there, but it was a&#13;
film that was a little risque&#13;
for an outdoor theatre;&#13;
when you can stand on Ohio&#13;
street you don't have to hear&#13;
it because the kids can see&#13;
the nuidy. This I think is a&#13;
little bit too much. I think we&#13;
have to regulate this type of&#13;
entertainment so that they&#13;
are not infringing on the&#13;
rights of others but at the&#13;
same time not denying their&#13;
rights either. That's a pretty&#13;
tough position to define and&#13;
of a people.&#13;
Black Elk Speaks represents&#13;
another point of view, it presents a&#13;
nature culture which has only&#13;
recently found its white surrogate&#13;
among the back to the land faddists.&#13;
I use the term fad because it&#13;
is a false move, you just can't go&#13;
back, there are no buffalo and we&#13;
have already conquered the Gods,&#13;
like it or not modern man is not a&#13;
farmer, he is a cog. No, there is a&#13;
difference between a nature&#13;
culture and a nature fad, and Black&#13;
Elk Speaks is exhibit A for my&#13;
contention.&#13;
Black Elk was an old medicine&#13;
man when he told his life story to&#13;
poet Neihardt. He traces his life&#13;
from his first visions at age nine to&#13;
the last time he was to say&#13;
something "to the Six Grandfathers".&#13;
Through him we learn&#13;
about the murder of a nation,&#13;
through him we can feel the&#13;
warriors' pride being shoved into&#13;
the mud.&#13;
Close to and in harmony with&#13;
God and nature, the Plains Indians&#13;
respected them, their souls were&#13;
tuned to a cosmic tuning fork. With&#13;
the industrial "revolution" White&#13;
man mass-produced his own tuning&#13;
forks, his soul attuned to a&#13;
machine. The visions the holy man&#13;
presents us are impressive, what&#13;
we dopers have vaguely (on occasion)&#13;
envisioned through external&#13;
stimulation, Black Elk felt&#13;
and saw involuntarily, he could no&#13;
more turn them on or off than he&#13;
could run away from them.&#13;
The life story gives us insights&#13;
into the two Pahuskas (longhairs&#13;
Custer and Buffalo Bill), the last&#13;
stand and the Wild West Shows,&#13;
into the mysterious superhero that&#13;
Crazy Horse was to the Indians,&#13;
how soldiers murdered him, how&#13;
soldiers murdered the old man&#13;
Sitting Bull, how white men&#13;
destroyed the buffalo for a reason&#13;
no Indian could understand, for.&#13;
sport. We follow the long list of&#13;
broken promises, of how the Indians&#13;
were forced out of their lands&#13;
by force and lies, promised food&#13;
and shelter in return they froze and&#13;
starved in the winter ("all we got&#13;
were lies and you can't eat lies.")&#13;
"It was our land." It was and the&#13;
Grandfather in Washington took it&#13;
with lies.&#13;
The Battle of Wounded Knee&#13;
broke the nation's hoop, it was a&#13;
massacre of Indians, their last&#13;
stand in which the majority of&#13;
victims were women and children.&#13;
We herded the survivors into&#13;
square houses, in "islands of land"&#13;
(reservations) which had no&#13;
power. The circle was a basic&#13;
element in the Plains Indians&#13;
metaphysic, everything in the&#13;
universe is cyclical, eternal, it is&#13;
like nature, it has power. The&#13;
suqare house is no more than a&#13;
square house, the tepee was a&#13;
metaphor for the power of G od, the&#13;
universe, nature.&#13;
The incidents portrayed in this&#13;
book are interesting, the visions&#13;
are real (that phrase, incidentally,&#13;
is not a contradiction of te rms), the&#13;
ear and pen of Neihardt capture&#13;
the nuances and syntax of the&#13;
Indian, the final product is&#13;
poignant and poetic.&#13;
Perhaps the most impressive&#13;
aspect of Neihardt's book is the&#13;
feeling that overcomes the reader&#13;
of the fantastically complex yet&#13;
simple blend of metaphysics and&#13;
man and nature that formed the&#13;
Indian Nation. Behind every cloud&#13;
there is a metaphor and behind&#13;
that is a symbol and behind that is&#13;
a messenger of a God and behind&#13;
every God there is the cloud. If the&#13;
buffalo was a source of food and&#13;
shelter it was also sacred, if a tepee&#13;
was functional it also reflected the&#13;
power of the nation's hoop and the&#13;
cycle of life. If yo u killed an enemy&#13;
or won a battle you celebrated, you&#13;
danced, you shouted to the Gods,&#13;
you were happy that you had killed&#13;
an enemy, and proud, you went to&#13;
battle and "it was a good day to&#13;
die". You put everything on the&#13;
line for your nation, your people, a&#13;
good day to die.&#13;
The Plains Indians were so&#13;
primitive that they even had the&#13;
welfare problem licked. The young&#13;
braves hunted buffalo for the&#13;
feeble and the sick, and were&#13;
honored that their was the&#13;
privilege. "The yellow metal that&#13;
makes white men crazy" led to&#13;
General Crook's invasion of the&#13;
Black Hills, Wounded Knee was the&#13;
culmination, and the Indians&#13;
couldn't even understand why the&#13;
yellow metal was so important.&#13;
The white man was as alien to the&#13;
Indian as the Indian was to the&#13;
white man, after reading this book&#13;
it will dawn on you that the difference&#13;
was a thing called nobility,&#13;
a thing that died at Wounded Knee.&#13;
The real is yonder and the&#13;
darkened dream of it was Black&#13;
Elk's visions. If you don't read this&#13;
book you're only cheating yourself.&#13;
Black Elk Speaks courtesy of t he&#13;
Book Mart, 622 - 59th Street,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
enforce.&#13;
Now I know some people&#13;
will say, 'close em' down,&#13;
they're no good, they're&#13;
sinful', I don't think we can&#13;
talk strictly morality here, I&#13;
think we have to talk the&#13;
mores of the community. I&#13;
definitely feel that if there is&#13;
a legal case in point it should&#13;
be tried initially by local&#13;
courts.&#13;
I don't think that a federal&#13;
judge or the US Supreme&#13;
Court should decide what&#13;
the mores of Racine,&#13;
Wisconsin are because it's&#13;
okay in Chicago or Los&#13;
Angeles. We're talking&#13;
about completely different&#13;
types of communities, and&#13;
the way people think, and&#13;
the way they believe and&#13;
what have you. I don't care&#13;
what Los Angeles wants to&#13;
do, but I know that the&#13;
majority of the people in the&#13;
city of Racine have certain&#13;
mores that they live by. Now&#13;
if this is what they want,&#13;
fine. If you lose the case&#13;
there then you go to the state&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1969 Olds 442. Automatic, power&#13;
steering and brakes, 14,000 mi.&#13;
$2,500. Call 657-5681 after 5.&#13;
19*2 Buick 2 dr hardtop, $250. Call&#13;
634-4445 or 633-2791.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
3 suitcases, very good cond. $25. Call&#13;
654-2704.&#13;
For a Good night's sleep —&#13;
Waterbeds. 3701 - 60th street. Call&#13;
654-9447.&#13;
"Sears" Portably typewriter. Good&#13;
condition. Comes with carrying&#13;
case. Will sell for $30.00. Call 637-&#13;
6445.&#13;
Homegrown tomatoes. Call 633-3836.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
F OR RENT — Modern office space.&#13;
Carpeted and air conditioned. $50.00&#13;
per mo. Utilities included. Call Tony&#13;
at 652-3945 or 654-7410.&#13;
APARTMENT FOR RENT —&#13;
Madison, 3 girls need 1 for fall to fill&#13;
modern, furnished apt. onUniversity&#13;
and Bridge. $62.00 per mo. per&#13;
person. Call 633-2753. Joyce.&#13;
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Earn Extra Money — Bartend 8&gt; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633-3805.&#13;
WAN TED — Rambler American or&#13;
Volkswagen — Good condition and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694-3419.&#13;
Rider to Mankato, Minn.,or vicinity.&#13;
Either one or both ways. Leaving&#13;
Aug. 21. Call 652-9053, Vanessa.&#13;
court and then you go to the&#13;
federal court.&#13;
We're in a situation now&#13;
though that everytime you&#13;
turn around, bam, you're in&#13;
a federal court. You don't&#13;
bother to go through the&#13;
process anymore, you're&#13;
right in front of a federal&#13;
judge who has a political&#13;
appointment for fife — a nd&#13;
he could care less. This is&#13;
the way I feel about Judge&#13;
Reynolds. I think that he&#13;
hasn't had the guts to make&#13;
decision. I'm not&#13;
what his decision should be,&#13;
but I think he ought to have&#13;
enough guts to say 'here it&#13;
is, gentlemen', because now&#13;
we're set on one case and&#13;
it's going to take us a year to&#13;
get a decision from the man&#13;
and then it's not going to be&#13;
his own; he's going to appoint&#13;
two other judges and&#13;
the panel of three will get&#13;
together and work this thing&#13;
out. This political appointment&#13;
for life leaves a&#13;
little bit to be desired as far&#13;
as our judicial system goes. </text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 4, Issue 7, August 9, 1971</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Racine's Water Wonderland</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Volume 4 Number 6&#13;
Wonderland,&#13;
See Page 8 &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE August 2,1971&#13;
CHAT N CHEW&#13;
4 0 th Av e n u e &amp; 52 n d Street&#13;
91 Students Earned 4 Point&#13;
» KENOSHA&#13;
SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY&#13;
11 A .M. TILL MlDNITE&#13;
FR IDAY &amp; SATURDAY TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS 40&lt; &amp; 24&lt;&#13;
S UP ER CH EW (Triple dec k e r) 1 I I 55(&#13;
REL AX&#13;
^t^TTTTTTtfffflV&#13;
RAINBOW GARDENS&#13;
AMUSEMENT CENTER&#13;
MINI* GOLF&#13;
ARCHERY&#13;
87th &amp; SHERIDAN RD,&#13;
Large Edition&#13;
Framed Original&#13;
•Geometries&#13;
$20 - $25&#13;
NEW&#13;
GALLERY ONE&#13;
503 Main, Racine&#13;
633-4662 — 634-7168&#13;
BOOKS - NOVELS&#13;
GREENING OF AMERICA&#13;
by Charles Reich&#13;
THE COUPLE&#13;
by Mt &amp;Mrs. K&#13;
CALIFORNIA GENERATION&#13;
by Jacqueline Briskin&#13;
Hit&#13;
R-K NEWS AGENCY&#13;
Newspapers - Paperbacks - Magazines n&#13;
5816 Sixth Ave. &amp; Pershing P laza&#13;
SAVE $ ON ELECTRONICS!&#13;
W AT CH F OR BARGAINS&#13;
WE UNDERSELL EVERYONE ON&#13;
• Color &amp; B+W TV&#13;
• Stereo Components &amp; Consoles&#13;
• Radios (AAA - FM - CB - SW - PB AAW -&#13;
LW- BFO)&#13;
• Tape Equipment (Cass. - Cart. - R to R)&#13;
• Air Conditioners&#13;
Newscope Special:&#13;
Famous Brand Oil#&#13;
Color Portable 'r/b&#13;
Full 12" Screen &lt;r»ir&gt; A&#13;
Slimline J&gt;lv4&#13;
1 Yr. Warranty&#13;
JUnoW&#13;
3105 60th Street 657-3142&#13;
Ninety-one students with&#13;
perfect 4.0 academic grade&#13;
point averages head the second&#13;
semester Dean's List at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
Students named to&#13;
the Dean's List must achieve a&#13;
grade point average of at least&#13;
3.25 (B-plus) out of a possible&#13;
4.0. Students with averages of&#13;
3.5 and above are designated as&#13;
achieving high honors.&#13;
A total of 591 U W-P students&#13;
made the Dean's List. In addition&#13;
to the 91 perfect grade&#13;
point averages, 288 were between&#13;
3.5 and 4.0 and 212 between&#13;
3.25 and 3.5.&#13;
Racine area students with 4.0&#13;
grade point averages are:&#13;
Linda Abrahamson, 917&#13;
Saxony Dr.; Gary Bendix, 2221&#13;
Summit Ave.; Jeanette Dremel,&#13;
Rt. 1, Box 254A, Union Grove;&#13;
Sara Ekizian, 2210 N. Newman&#13;
Rd.; Kenneth Fonstad, 830&#13;
Lombard Ave.; Ella Gardina,&#13;
3821 Spring St.; Joseph&#13;
Gauchel, 814 Kentucky St.;&#13;
Nancy Getman, 3510 Haven&#13;
Ave.; Kathleen Glines, 2627&#13;
Jacato Dr.; John Gray, 3213&#13;
Republic Ave.; Thomas&#13;
Gueldenzopf, 1937 Jupiter Ave.;&#13;
Alice Hamele, 2200 W ashington&#13;
Ave.; Mark Harris, 1400 Cedar&#13;
Creek St.; Kathleen Hinke, 6525&#13;
Lincolnshire; Thomas James,&#13;
1700 Boyd; David Jenn, 820&#13;
Coronado Dr.; Paul Ketarkus,&#13;
413 Chicago St.; Michol Klabo,&#13;
1132 Reschke Ave.; Theresa&#13;
Klaus, 2434 Thor Ave.; Michael&#13;
Kmetz, 2120 Russet St.; John&#13;
Krummel, 1323 Quincy Ave.;&#13;
Judith Lanning, 2514 Rosalind&#13;
Ave.; Thomas Luedtke, 505&#13;
Hayes Ave.; Janis Mazelis, 300&#13;
High St.; Donald Michel, 1516&#13;
Park Ave.; William Muzenski,&#13;
1713 Lathrop; Richard Nutt,&#13;
2919 Geneva St.; Michael&#13;
Olander, 1102 Romayne Ave.;&#13;
Susan Olson, 314 Tenth St.;&#13;
Mary Anne Pietkivitch, 2115&#13;
LaSalle; Janet Rouse, 306 Sixth&#13;
St.; Jay Ruud, 2824 Durand&#13;
Ave.; Curtis Sahakian, 1925 N.&#13;
Main St.; Beth Schuppe, 3206&#13;
Barbara Dr.; Kathryn Skow, 39&#13;
S. Summerset Dr.; James&#13;
Stanis, St. Francis Friary,&#13;
Burlington; Jacquelyn Wasiak,&#13;
2806 Brentwood Dr.; Danelle&#13;
Zenner, 2811 Geneva St.; and&#13;
Judy Zimmerman, YMCA,&#13;
Lake Ave.&#13;
Kenosha area students with&#13;
4.0 grade point averages are:&#13;
Timothy Alfredson, 8425 1 9th&#13;
• Ave.; Herbert Anderson, 1887&#13;
20th Ave.; Robert Anderson,&#13;
7820 33rd Ave.; Michael Benetii,&#13;
4901 36th Ave.; Linda Blanchard,&#13;
516 Pershing Blvd.;&#13;
Ralph Brittelli, 1836 90th St.;&#13;
Alberta Bruch, 1909 33rd St.;&#13;
Barbara Chulew, 7920 20th&#13;
Ave.; Stanley Craig, 1715 19th&#13;
Ave.; Roxanne Eckmann, 7640&#13;
48th Ave.; Larry Ellis, 4704 35th&#13;
Ave.; Linda Fonk, 304 7 th PI.;&#13;
William Frederich, 6816 26th&#13;
Ave.; Joan Fredericksen, 3916&#13;
6th Ave.; Dennis Funk, 3801 19th&#13;
Ave.; Patricia Gastaldi, 2012&#13;
57th St.; Thomas Gaudio, 4700&#13;
18th Ave.; Howard Gilles, 3222&#13;
23rd Ave.; Joseph Gogola, 1103&#13;
54th St.; Kirth Harff, 8917 22 nd&#13;
Ave.; David Hawes, 4101 21st&#13;
Ave.; Marcia James, 4022 8th&#13;
Ave.; Alice Keating, 6417 37th&#13;
St.; Peter Levonowich, 9330&#13;
Wilmot Rd.; Sally Mengo, 612C&#13;
15th PL; Martin Metten, 913&#13;
Washington Rd.; Pamela&#13;
Miller, 2003 28th St.; Rick&#13;
Moffett, 4919 34th Ave.; James&#13;
Nolan, 7941 39th Ave.; Alan&#13;
Ramias, 5702 19th Ave.;&#13;
Michael Rizzo, 1914 55th St.; Jo&#13;
Anne Roders, 3704 19th Ave.;&#13;
Michael Rossi, 4340 88 th Ave.;&#13;
Suellyn Scoon, 4412 Taft Rd.;&#13;
Janis Scoville, 1204 69th St.;&#13;
Judith Smith, 8601 19th Ave.;&#13;
Bernard Springer, 6338 Pershing&#13;
Blvd.; John Tomlinson,&#13;
7521 32nd Ave.; Kathleen&#13;
Turner, 7011 5th Ave.; Kenneth&#13;
Van Kammen, 3540 10th Ave.;&#13;
Robert Vens, 6622 30th Ave.;&#13;
Myra Walkovik, 7311 34th Ave.;&#13;
Marilyn Ward, 711 Sheridan&#13;
Rd.; Kristine Willems, 3555&#13;
22nd Ave.; and Joseph Yantorni,&#13;
7736 10th Ave.&#13;
Other students with 4.0 grade&#13;
point averages:&#13;
Nancy Huron, 8959 S. Howell,&#13;
Oak Creek; Kenneth Koehler,&#13;
215 Beulah Ave., East Troy;&#13;
Sharon Marsch, 222 E. Sunset&#13;
Dr., Oak Creek; Linda McDermott,&#13;
1213 Michigan Ave.,&#13;
South Milwaukee; and Robert&#13;
Toto, 433 Gillette Ave.,&#13;
Waukegan, 111.&#13;
Racine area students with&#13;
grade point averages of 3.5 13.99&#13;
(high honors) are:&#13;
Denise Anastasio, 4339&#13;
Ridgeway Dr.; Jerome Andersen,&#13;
1607 Perry Ave.;&#13;
Richard Anderson, 2623 Olive&#13;
St.; Jacqueline Bacher, 45&#13;
Emmertsen Rd.; Barbara&#13;
Baer, 1504 Pratt Ave.; Matthew&#13;
Belan, 728 Lathrop Ave.;&#13;
Patricia Beyer, 1524 N. Green&#13;
Bay Rd.; Thomas Beyer,&#13;
Wadewitz Hall; Steve Blaha[&#13;
1225 Chatham St.; Michael&#13;
Bohlman, 1245 Lathrop Ave.;&#13;
Lois Bowar, 413 Tenth St.;&#13;
James Braun, 4620 Taylor Ave.;&#13;
Anton Breitchaft, 1023 High St.,&#13;
Union Grove; Ellen Bronec,&#13;
5356 Hunt Club Rd.; Barbara&#13;
Brown, 2214 Washington Ave.;&#13;
Donald Brownell, 3435 N.&#13;
Wisconsin St.; Hilary Brzezinski,&#13;
St. Francis Friary,&#13;
Burlington; Ronald Bucheger,&#13;
2009 Superior St.; Lorraine&#13;
Carlson, 118 Steeplechase Dr.;&#13;
James Casper, 3417 Lindermann&#13;
Ave.; William Cetin,&#13;
8220 Racine Ave., Sturtevant;&#13;
Edward Cook, 4918 Beacon&#13;
Lane; Christine Crosby, 2521&#13;
James Blvd.; Christopher&#13;
Crowe, 1000 Harmony Dr.;&#13;
Charles Daceno, 2309 Ashland&#13;
Ave.; Dennis Davies, 1100&#13;
Fairway Dr.; Robert Davis, 617&#13;
Oregon St.; Blaine DeGraff,&#13;
3334 Ascot St.; John Denzine,&#13;
1428Vfe Hayes Ave.; Thomas&#13;
Devine, 1330 Quincy Ave. ; Mary&#13;
Domeier, 3248 Debra Lane,&#13;
Thomas Drier, 1011 Mayfair&#13;
Dr.; John Engel, 1802 Grange&#13;
Ave.; Ronald Erickson, 2044&#13;
Case Ave.; Vicki Erickson, 2411&#13;
River Shore Dr.; Michael&#13;
Flood, 2108 W. High St.;&#13;
Gregory Fowlkes, 5000&#13;
Graceland Blvd.; Jay Francis,&#13;
2334 Thor Ave.; John Fries, 1222&#13;
High St., Union Grove; Gene&#13;
Fromm, 1531 Thurston; Mary&#13;
Gauchel, 814 Kentucky St.;&#13;
Paula Gentz, 919 S. Newman&#13;
Rd.; Terrence Gorski, St.&#13;
Francis Friary, Burlington;&#13;
John Gray, 5000 Graceland&#13;
Blvd.; Thomas Gross, 3623 N.&#13;
Main St.; Patricia Hanson, 3107&#13;
Erie St.; Terrace Harter, 1009&#13;
Grove Ave.; Charles Henkel,&#13;
706 Grove Ave.; David Herchen,&#13;
5407 Athens Ave.; Janet Holler,&#13;
3054 97th St., Sturtevant; Kay&#13;
Huebner, 3773 North Bay Dr.;&#13;
Donald Ivanoski, 1931 West&#13;
Blvd.; Bill Jaworski, 4507 N.&#13;
Main St.; David Jewell, 2100&#13;
Romayne Ave.; Walter Jordan,&#13;
1624 Holmes Ave.; Lenee&#13;
Karow, Rt. 4, Box 209,&#13;
Burlington; Eugene Kastenson,&#13;
(Continued on Page 4)&#13;
New Salary Protection Plan&#13;
During the first week of&#13;
August, classified employees&#13;
should receive information&#13;
and application&#13;
forms for a new Salary&#13;
Protection plan offered by&#13;
the University. Academic&#13;
personnel will be receiving&#13;
information in early October.&#13;
&#13;
This voluntary coverage&#13;
will guarantee at least 60&#13;
per cent of gross salary to&#13;
age 65 should an employee&#13;
become disabled either on&#13;
or off the job. An individual&#13;
will know in advance the&#13;
amount of benefits that will&#13;
be received, regardless of&#13;
how much may or may not&#13;
be paid by Workmen's&#13;
Compensation, social&#13;
security, or retirement&#13;
plans. Individuals may&#13;
select a 30, 60, 90, or 365 day&#13;
waiting period to fit their&#13;
p e rso n a l nee ds.&#13;
Premimimus (based on the&#13;
waiting period, gross&#13;
salary, and age) will be&#13;
payroll deducted monthly.&#13;
Details on the plan and&#13;
rates will be included in the&#13;
inf o r m a tio n pac ket.&#13;
Questions on the plan should&#13;
be referred to the Personnel&#13;
and Payroll Office, Tallent&#13;
Hall, telephone number&#13;
2204.&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Coke&#13;
Editor Warren Nedry&#13;
Copy Editor JohnKoloen&#13;
News Editor MarcEisen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Business Manager John Gray&#13;
NEWS STAFF&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Darrell Borger,&#13;
James Casper, Jim Koloen, Bill&#13;
Sorensen. ,&#13;
CONTRIBUTING&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Mike Stevesand, Janet Sabol&#13;
Mike Starr.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella, Dave Kraus&#13;
Don Marjara, Barb Scott.&#13;
PHONES&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
Summer Newscope is an&#13;
independent student newspaper&#13;
composed and published weekly&#13;
through the summer session by&#13;
students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Student&#13;
obtained advertising funds are&#13;
the sole source of revenue for&#13;
the operation of Newscope. 6,000&#13;
copies are printed and&#13;
distributed through the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the&#13;
University. Free copies are&#13;
available upon request. &#13;
August 2,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
It's not a bad place for rock concerts.&#13;
Realistically, it's probably one of the&#13;
best possible halls in either Racine or&#13;
Kenosha to hold weekly concerts.&#13;
There's a certain class to it — and a&#13;
certain raunchiness.&#13;
Picture an old ornate movie theatre: a&#13;
high domed ceiling, a fresco of cavorting&#13;
seraphs and dancing eherubs floating on&#13;
white clouds high above the stage.&#13;
Picture 15 different coats of arms&#13;
Help Save America&#13;
beneath the fresco that line the top of the&#13;
stage, a balcony that overhangs half the&#13;
sloping main floor, ballustrades that&#13;
climb the side walls.&#13;
This contrasted with the barrenness of&#13;
the theatre.&#13;
It's gutted. The seats, except for a&#13;
small section in the balcony, have long&#13;
been stripped away. It's dark, and&#13;
there's a grimyness that no' amount of&#13;
scrubbing will ever get out.&#13;
It's an old building. Old and forgotten.&#13;
Except now, some life is being pumped&#13;
into it, but that too may be at an end.&#13;
It's America, and less than a month&#13;
after its opening, it's closing down.&#13;
Hopefully, for only a month in order to&#13;
get better organized. But if the reaction&#13;
then is what it has been, it will go the&#13;
way of the old Vogue Theatre Concerts&#13;
held two years ago in Kenosha. It will&#13;
die.&#13;
It will die, the promoters say, because&#13;
the people they want to serve will not&#13;
patronize it.&#13;
It closed last Wednesday night after&#13;
holding an emergency benefit concert&#13;
for itself. About 150 people showed up for&#13;
the hastily organized show (the&#13;
promoters had decided on Monday to&#13;
hold it). Bulldog Harry, now out of&#13;
Milwaukee, Rye Dad, and two folk acts,&#13;
Jumbo, and Lance Davenport, who's&#13;
working as a single now, played for free.&#13;
There was a casual atmosphere to it&#13;
all. The bands played competently and&#13;
the audience was relaxed and enjoyed&#13;
itself. At times when the folksingers&#13;
needed reassurance, the audience was&#13;
there with encouragement. An easy&#13;
rapport between audience and performer&#13;
coalesced.&#13;
During the benefit, Newscope talked&#13;
with the young promoters of the concerts.&#13;
The five partners are Hans Geyer,&#13;
Tom Gedemer, Randy Johnson, Bob&#13;
Heinrich and John Barrett. All are from&#13;
Racine and are between 18 and 20 years&#13;
old. Gedemer and Geyer are Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
It cost the five big money to open&#13;
America. Nearly $1,500 was sunk in&#13;
before the first concert was even held at&#13;
Racine's old Uptown theatre on&#13;
Washington Avenue. First an adequate&#13;
facility had to be found, and then a lease&#13;
negotiated with a cautious landlord,&#13;
which stipulates that only one rock&#13;
concert can be held a week.&#13;
The theatre had to be made operable&#13;
before it could pass a city inspection.&#13;
Plumbing had to be reinstalled.&#13;
Rewiring of the electrical system had to&#13;
be done. A new stage was built. The&#13;
group estimates they have put a&#13;
minimum of 1,000 man hours of work&#13;
into restoring the theatre.&#13;
What had to "be done then was to get&#13;
adequate liability insurance, which&#13;
proved to be both hard and expensive.&#13;
Bands had to be contacted and booked.&#13;
All of which was done in a very short&#13;
time.&#13;
They admit now that the speed that&#13;
they did this contributed to their lack of&#13;
success. Barrett says, "It's something&#13;
we jumped into without really thinking&#13;
about. We've lost a lot of money, but&#13;
we've learned a lot. It's been a good&#13;
education."&#13;
They see their prime mistakes as&#13;
moving too quickly and not publicizing&#13;
the concerts enough. They intend during&#13;
(Continued on Page 5)&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The mayor of Kenosha,&#13;
Wallace Burkee, became&#13;
involved in politics in 1958&#13;
when the old city manager&#13;
form of government was&#13;
changed in favor of the&#13;
mayor-alderman organization.&#13;
At the time he was an&#13;
insurance representative&#13;
for Metropolitan Life and&#13;
ran for alderman against a&#13;
man who he said, "had a&#13;
record of forty arrests".&#13;
As a political novitiate, he&#13;
lost his job with the insurance&#13;
agency because&#13;
company policy forbid its&#13;
employees from entering&#13;
politics. He believes that&#13;
citizens should take an&#13;
active part in government in&#13;
order to make the city a&#13;
better place to live. From&#13;
1958 to 1962 he served as an&#13;
alderman and participated&#13;
on every committee and&#13;
commission. With considerable&#13;
pride he mentions&#13;
the accomplishments of&#13;
those years which saw the&#13;
world's largest aluminum&#13;
swimming pool open in&#13;
Washington Park, the&#13;
opening of the county airport,&#13;
expansion of the&#13;
harbor facilities and water&#13;
treatment plant and various&#13;
other public services&#13;
initiated.&#13;
In 1962 he moved to the&#13;
south side and decided&#13;
against running for&#13;
alderman and instead&#13;
opened an insurance&#13;
agency. In 1966 h e ran for&#13;
mayor and was defeated by&#13;
1,800 votes. He had been&#13;
disappointed with the way&#13;
the mayor's office had dealt&#13;
with industrial development&#13;
and future planning. But&#13;
only four months after his&#13;
defeat the incumbent,&#13;
Mayor Eugene Hammand,&#13;
announced he would leave&#13;
the job of mayor to become&#13;
vice-president of the&#13;
Kenosha National Bank.&#13;
Burkee won in a special&#13;
election and has served as&#13;
Kenosha's mayor for the&#13;
past five years.&#13;
Newscope spoke with the&#13;
mayor about the problems&#13;
of the city, the accomplishments&#13;
of his administration&#13;
and the task of&#13;
running the city.&#13;
Newscope: What has taken&#13;
most of your time as&#13;
mayor?&#13;
Mayor Burkee: Well, in the&#13;
beginning it was taking care&#13;
of petty calls, and I got&#13;
plenty of those. I got calls at&#13;
two o'clock in the morning&#13;
from drunks who would sit&#13;
in the bar and announce&#13;
that, 'I'm gonna call the&#13;
mayor and tell him what's&#13;
going on.'&#13;
I could just see these&#13;
people look at this clown&#13;
give his big speech. Then&#13;
there would be a dead&#13;
silence on the other end&#13;
while I told them what the&#13;
score was.&#13;
This came to a screeching&#13;
halt and most of my time&#13;
now is devoted to making up&#13;
budgets and operations and&#13;
helping in surveys of our&#13;
particular departments.&#13;
On a statewide basis I&#13;
work as president of the&#13;
Alliance of Cities which is&#13;
the fifteen largest cities in&#13;
the state, banded together.&#13;
I'm the first and only&#13;
president of the Alliance and&#13;
I really can't get rid of the&#13;
legislation they should be&#13;
backing. They never had&#13;
anybody that really talked&#13;
to them, I mean collectively.&#13;
Sure, they could go to Green&#13;
Bay, Racine, Kenosha,&#13;
spend about two months&#13;
interviewing all the mayor&#13;
on different problems but&#13;
now they can go to our&#13;
organization or our lobbyist&#13;
and get the answers right&#13;
there.&#13;
have said that you can't run&#13;
a car that was built in 1911&#13;
on the highways today, nor&#13;
can you run old formulas for&#13;
the communities that exist&#13;
today.&#13;
Another important bill&#13;
before the legislature is Bill&#13;
64. It says, in essence, that&#13;
the governor will appoint&#13;
three people, approved by&#13;
the senate, who will form a&#13;
Boundary Review Board.&#13;
Newscope Interview1&#13;
Kenosha's Mayor W allace Burkee&#13;
job. Nobody really wants the&#13;
task of going to the&#13;
legislature and having&#13;
every senator who wants to&#13;
take a pot shot at you, and&#13;
every representative who&#13;
wants to get in a personal&#13;
kick at you, do it. I'm willing&#13;
to go this route and, along&#13;
with the other mayors who&#13;
have worked so hard in this&#13;
organization, I think we've&#13;
put together one of the&#13;
greatest organizations for&#13;
lobbying for the central&#13;
cities and the urban areas of&#13;
Wisconsin that has ever&#13;
been formed.&#13;
We're finally starting to&#13;
get more backing from&#13;
governmental departments.&#13;
Now they come to us to find&#13;
out what's wrong with our&#13;
areas and what type of&#13;
We've put in dozens of&#13;
bills for the Alliance of&#13;
Cities. We're backing&#13;
several dozen other bills&#13;
that we have had other&#13;
groups initiate on our behalf&#13;
because sometimes it's&#13;
better to have another group&#13;
front for you. But those bills&#13;
that we have pushed for&#13;
ourselves are bills that are&#13;
either trying to solve some&#13;
of the problems that we&#13;
have, or trying to correct&#13;
some of the so-called&#13;
solutions that they've come&#13;
up with.&#13;
Shared taxes is one of o ur&#13;
big things. We have this&#13;
problem with formulas that&#13;
were made up in 1911. They&#13;
are so antiquated it's&#13;
pathetic. They want to&#13;
continue with those and we&#13;
This is very important&#13;
because then cities can&#13;
initiate annexations and go&#13;
to the state and tell them&#13;
that this is the area that&#13;
we'd like to annex because&#13;
it's urban in nature. We&#13;
would submit the time-table&#13;
servicing it and the reasons&#13;
why it should become part of&#13;
the city. This would solve a&#13;
lot of our problems.&#13;
Right now we have the&#13;
Parkside area which I am&#13;
annexing: 1,400 acres; 700&#13;
acres of Parkside land and&#13;
700 on Somers. It is vital that&#13;
Bill 64 be passed not only for&#13;
Kenosha but for every other&#13;
urban area in the state.&#13;
NS: What is the major&#13;
problem in Kenosha? In&#13;
Milwaukee the major&#13;
problem is the inner city;&#13;
what is it in Kenosha?&#13;
Burkee: Well, the major&#13;
problem in all cities is a lack&#13;
of funds to operate the&#13;
amount of things that have&#13;
to be done. People demand&#13;
more services today than&#13;
they ever have. They would&#13;
like to have one policeman&#13;
for every person, but that's&#13;
impossible.&#13;
The problem is that you&#13;
have an overburdened&#13;
property tax. It was never&#13;
designed for the high cost of&#13;
education we have today,&#13;
nor was it designed for the&#13;
present welfare system.&#13;
I think welfare should be&#13;
picked up by the federal&#13;
government. Then we'd stop&#13;
the migration from&#13;
Mississippi and Texas to&#13;
Wisconsin where welfare is&#13;
great. As a matter of fact&#13;
there is a sign in Mississippi&#13;
that says. 'Go to Racine,&#13;
Welfare is Wonderful.' The&#13;
people down there will give,&#13;
you a one way ticket free to&#13;
go to Racine, which is&#13;
asinine and ridiculous. We&#13;
don't want any more of this •&#13;
ridiculous migration of the&#13;
poor and the indigent.&#13;
This could be solved by&#13;
having national standards&#13;
on welfare applied across&#13;
the nation so people&#13;
wouldn't have to move to a&#13;
certain area in order to get&#13;
more money.&#13;
Of course, we'd like to see&#13;
everyone have a decent&#13;
education and a decent&#13;
living, but it's just one of&#13;
those things. Some people&#13;
will squander everything&#13;
they've got and some people&#13;
save. You can't tell the guy&#13;
that squandered everything,&#13;
'that's it, Buddy, you're all&#13;
done.' You have to take care&#13;
of him, but you don't have to&#13;
take care of him in the style&#13;
he might have been accustomed&#13;
to when he had a&#13;
lot of money.&#13;
These are the problems&#13;
we have. Education should&#13;
be picked up by the states.&#13;
The state has an obligation&#13;
to give every child an equal&#13;
education and the state&#13;
should finance it. Then we&#13;
would have the property tax&#13;
(Continued on Page 6) &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE August 2, 1971&#13;
by B ob Borchardt of&#13;
The Allman Brothers At&#13;
Filmore East&#13;
Capricorn SD2 802&#13;
Duane Allman — lead and&#13;
slide guitars&#13;
Gregg Allman — Organ,&#13;
piano and vocals&#13;
Dicky Betts — lead guitar&#13;
Larry Oakley — b ass guitar&#13;
Jai Johanny Johanson —&#13;
drums, congas and timbales&#13;
&#13;
Butch Trucks — drums and&#13;
timpani&#13;
When a group of good&#13;
musicians get together to&#13;
play music rather than&#13;
revolutionize it, the result&#13;
should be predictably&#13;
the N e w s c o p e Staff&#13;
freshness and enthusiasm&#13;
on guitar, using one or two&#13;
well placed notes in lieu of a&#13;
double that many use in a&#13;
flashy but less effective run,&#13;
while brother Gregg fills in&#13;
all the cracks on organ. As&#13;
on every song, the drummer&#13;
is perfect. While outclassed&#13;
by many others in his&#13;
profession as far as a&#13;
technical command of the&#13;
drums, he's not trying to&#13;
compete with them. He&#13;
plays simple, driving, rythmically&#13;
perfect beats which&#13;
is all that is called for, in&#13;
fact, all that is appropriate&#13;
on this album.&#13;
satisfying. The Allman&#13;
Brothers latest fulfills that&#13;
prediction.&#13;
In two live performances&#13;
at the Fillmore East on&#13;
March 12 and 13 the group,&#13;
forsaking any attempt to&#13;
predict the musical future,&#13;
resurrected such tunes as&#13;
"Stormy Monday", "Done&#13;
Somebody Wrong" and&#13;
"You Don't Love Me", had a&#13;
few beers and proceeded to&#13;
raise hell.&#13;
The result is a recorded&#13;
collection of straight&#13;
ahead, good - time, no&#13;
bullshit rock, and de good ol'&#13;
empty Ripple bottle blues.&#13;
Both are done with such&#13;
ease and accuracy that the&#13;
business end of the album&#13;
should have no trouble&#13;
getting back many times the&#13;
original investment.&#13;
Try on "Statesboro&#13;
Blues". It shuffles so hard&#13;
that it threatens to by-pass&#13;
Buffalo and head straight&#13;
for the Delta. Duane Allman&#13;
s h o w s r e m a r k a b le&#13;
4 Point&#13;
(Continued from Page 2)&#13;
12311 Washington, Sturtevant;&#13;
Rita Kelley, Rt. 1, 4840 Park&#13;
Ridge Dr.; Connie Kinsella,&#13;
2801 Illinois St.; Lynne Kirk,&#13;
904' •&gt; Bl aine; Babette Kis, 5815&#13;
Spring St.; Charles Kis, 5815&#13;
Spring St.; Margaret Kis, 5815&#13;
Spring St.; Kenneth Konkol,&#13;
YMCA, Lake Ave.; Mary&#13;
Kraujalis, 706 Lake Ave.;&#13;
James Krupp, 5305 16th St.;&#13;
Laraine Kunka, 2914 Green;&#13;
Thomas LaFleur, 2205 St. Clair&#13;
St.; James Larsen, Rt. 2, Box&#13;
555, Franksville; William Lee,&#13;
Rt. 1, Box 96A, Kansasville;&#13;
Mary Libal, 1020 College Ave.;&#13;
Peter Lindhard, 1032 Perry&#13;
Ave.; Susan Lofton, 105512&#13;
LaSalle; Larry Maresh, 1608&#13;
Charles St.; Marilynne&#13;
Maresch, 1608 Charles St.;&#13;
William Matelski, 112 David;&#13;
Robert Mikkelsen, 1513&#13;
Maryland Ave.; David Miller,&#13;
1432 Breeze Terrace; Nancy&#13;
Miller, 2401 Ole Davidson Rd.;&#13;
Kenneth Moran, 4652 Charles&#13;
St.; Ronald Morgenson, 3200&#13;
Kearney; James Murray, 3505&#13;
N. Chatham; Paulette Nelson,&#13;
2114 Indiana; Russell Nelson,&#13;
1309 Ohio; Allen Noll, 5918 Hsy.&#13;
V, Caledonia; Stephen&#13;
Norovich, 1428 Ostergaard&#13;
Ave.; Salley Oertel, 3431 Taylor&#13;
Stormy Monday could&#13;
invoke the spirit of W. C.&#13;
Handy. One would find it&#13;
difficult to suppress the&#13;
desire to let out a few "Oh&#13;
Yas'.' or an occasional&#13;
"halleluja" when listening&#13;
to such low down, gutter&#13;
blues. All the solos are basic&#13;
enough to have substance&#13;
but innovative enough to&#13;
have a fresh improv&#13;
isat iona l flair .&#13;
Probably the best cut on the&#13;
album.&#13;
As in the case with most&#13;
double albums, however,&#13;
there are the inevitable bare&#13;
spots. Whipping Post seems&#13;
a bit drawn out at times, and&#13;
on You Dont' Love Me,&#13;
Thorn Doucette picks up a&#13;
harmonica that would have&#13;
been better off left alone.&#13;
But the good music far&#13;
outweighs the bad. The&#13;
music has been played&#13;
worse but not often better&#13;
and is worth adding to your&#13;
collection.&#13;
Ave.; Howard Olson, 5010&#13;
Biscayne Ave. ; Otto Olson, 1254&#13;
Illinois; Florence Onnink, 4527&#13;
Bluffside Dr.; George Pearson,&#13;
1200 Geneva St.; Barbara&#13;
Pedersen, 1031 S. Green Bay&#13;
Rd.; Connie Richards, 712&#13;
Virginia; Joyce Richards, 2527&#13;
Maryland Ave.; Gerald Ruk,&#13;
1108 Park Ave. ; James Russell,&#13;
Rt. 5, Box 368, Burlington;&#13;
George Ryback, 2042 Golf Ave.;&#13;
Cynthia Sahakian, 1925 N. Main&#13;
St.; Dale Schaber, Rt. 3, Box&#13;
485A, Burlington; Rose&#13;
Schoenfeld, 2419 19th St.;&#13;
William Seidel, 4545 Leslie Ann&#13;
Lane, Sharon Silk, 2301 Golf&#13;
Ave.; Ronald Slagter, 1907&#13;
Carlisle; Stephen Smith, 1422&#13;
Blaine Ave.; William Smith,&#13;
1209 Grand Ave.; Eric Smithback,&#13;
2425 Haze Ave.; Terri&#13;
Sorenson, 3451 Fourth Ave.;&#13;
James Sowinski, 2016 Phillips&#13;
Ave.; Linda Spanske, 2814&#13;
Illinois; Reginald Stanczyk, St.&#13;
Francis Friary, Burlington;&#13;
Paul Stuhr, 3821 Spring St.;&#13;
Sylvia Thoele, 9305 Caddy Lane,&#13;
Caledonia; John Vaughan, 3744&#13;
North Bay Dr.; Sandra Wiedmann,225&#13;
Madison, Burlington;&#13;
Nancy Wilbert, 816 St. Patrick&#13;
St.; and James Wishau, 6237&#13;
Hwy. H, Caledonia.&#13;
and quiet&#13;
on many&#13;
sun sets&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of t he Newscope staff&#13;
There is a certain solitude&#13;
evident in downtown Kenosha&#13;
weekday evenings. When the&#13;
somewhere in the western end of the county,&#13;
it seems as though the sidewalks should be&#13;
taken in.&#13;
On fifty-sixth street, between sixth and&#13;
seventh avenues, there are rows of parking&#13;
meters on cement islands. The cement&#13;
islands attract no bathers or fishermen, just&#13;
cabbies. There are usually two or three&#13;
cabbies sitting in their beat-up cars, reading&#13;
a racing form, the Enquirer or the Kenosha&#13;
News. Only on the deadest of nights is there&#13;
not even one sleepy-eyed cabbie parked near&#13;
the islands.&#13;
I walked out of Becker's Cigar Store on&#13;
one of these "deadest of nights", with the L.&#13;
A. Free Press under my arm. Beside there&#13;
being no cabbies, there weren't even any&#13;
elderly window shoppers browsing around.&#13;
An occasional car, freshly turtle-waxed,&#13;
would rumble through downtown toward the&#13;
bridge, carrying scoopers to Simons Island.&#13;
The beat cop could be seen now and then,&#13;
ambling from door to door, store to store.&#13;
It was so quiet, that I could hear the&#13;
traffic lights changing. Someone sneezed on&#13;
the Police Department steps, and it echoed&#13;
all the way down to Lepp's. The entire scene&#13;
on this segment of 56th Street would have&#13;
attracted the eye of Norman Rockwell for a&#13;
mural of "a typical Midwestern downtown&#13;
after sunset".&#13;
I stood in front of Becker's and watched&#13;
the sign on the First National Bank change&#13;
from time to temperature and back again. It&#13;
was a methodical, mechanical cynic&#13;
reminding me that I was a minute closer to&#13;
death every time it changed. My eyes&#13;
wandered across Sixth Avenue to a neon sign&#13;
that looked so average, it seem unique.&#13;
The neon letters weren't cooperating&#13;
with each other. Instead of spelling&#13;
restaurant in red letters against the evening&#13;
shadows, the sign read "aurant". I walked&#13;
under the "aurant" sign and pressed my&#13;
face against a large picture window, as&#13;
though looking for a specific fish in a&#13;
crowded aquarium.&#13;
Once my eyes were adjusted to the light&#13;
inside, I saw three people surrounding a&#13;
table. I walked inside Ruby's Restaurant&#13;
and asked if the place was still open for&#13;
business.&#13;
A man with a beard getting up from the&#13;
table said he could fix me something to eat.&#13;
Sitting at the table were an old friend of mine&#13;
Working Class Heroine&#13;
\ 1&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers I&#13;
I I&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
To the bored husband, suffering&#13;
through a shopping tour in the woman's&#13;
department at Welles Department Store,&#13;
Kathy Williamson is a working class&#13;
heroine of sorts. The husband can leave&#13;
the world of hot pants, panty hose and&#13;
slacks to enjoy a cup of coffee at the&#13;
snack bar where she works.&#13;
To the second grade student&#13;
struggling through reading of the tales of&#13;
Dick, Jane and Spot, she is definitely a&#13;
heroine, as she helps in the capacity of&#13;
teacher's aide. To the teacher of the&#13;
second grade class, who wants to treat&#13;
every student in her over crowded&#13;
classroom as an individual, Kathy is a&#13;
valuable help.&#13;
Kathy Williamson is all of these. As&#13;
a 20 year old Parkside junior, she has&#13;
entered the world of the working class,&#13;
while working her way through college.&#13;
Almost two years ago, when Welles&#13;
Department Store opened, she applied&#13;
for a job. She didn't get hired to work in&#13;
any of the various departments, but got&#13;
a job in the snack bar, where she has&#13;
worked ever since.&#13;
"The only bad part of my job," she&#13;
said, "is that the customers don't read&#13;
the signs. What I mean is, there are 24&#13;
different flavors of ice cream. The&#13;
flavors are all listed, but customers will&#13;
still ask what kind of i ce cream we have.&#13;
This is an example."&#13;
Working twenty hours a week has&#13;
helped her pay tuition at Parkside,&#13;
where she is an English major. During&#13;
the second semester last year, she&#13;
signed up to be a teacher's aide at Grant&#13;
School. She helped teach the second&#13;
grade. For her efforts she received three&#13;
credits, but no pay.&#13;
Deciding that she liked teaching,&#13;
Kathy applied for a twenty hour a week&#13;
position as a teacher' aide with the&#13;
Unified School System. Because of her&#13;
qualifications, she was hired to continue&#13;
at Grant with the second grade through&#13;
the summer. "I really like helping the&#13;
kids, but at times teaching is real work,"&#13;
she said.&#13;
Her skill in handling children could&#13;
stem from her home life, where she&#13;
helps her parents raise two brothers and&#13;
a sister about the age of the children she&#13;
was hired to teach. Kathy is one of&#13;
eleven in the Williamson family.&#13;
In the fall Kathy plans to take fifteen&#13;
credits at Parkside. She hopes to&#13;
graduate in June, 1973. Then she will go&#13;
on to receive her teachers certificate.&#13;
Then she can become an elementary&#13;
school teacher.&#13;
While working at Welles and at&#13;
Grant Elementary School, Kathy took a&#13;
three credit English course at summer&#13;
school on Shakespeare. This filled up her&#13;
schedule for the summer to the hilt.&#13;
"The only bad part about working so&#13;
hard or being so busy in the summer, is&#13;
getting up early every morning," Kathy&#13;
said. "I'd like to sleep late on weekends,&#13;
but those are my only two days that I&#13;
have to myself. So I sometimes get very&#13;
tired during the week, and wonder why I&#13;
work two jobs. In the long run, I'll be&#13;
able to stay in school, and still have&#13;
extra money."&#13;
Kathy also said that the teaching&#13;
experience she got at Grant School was&#13;
very valuable. As she compiles credits&#13;
for her degree in English, she must take&#13;
various classes teaching how to teach&#13;
others. She plans to minor in sociology.&#13;
Another reason that she is trying to&#13;
get as much experience as possible can&#13;
be explained in the future of teachers&#13;
today. Because there is a surplus of&#13;
teachers graduating from colleges, only&#13;
those with the most valuable assets can&#13;
count on jobs. The field is becoming&#13;
more and more competitive.&#13;
Between her taw jobs, summer&#13;
school and family obligations^ Kathy&#13;
spends much of .her time with Her boy&#13;
friend Zappoi He is also a student at&#13;
Parkside and a full-time shde salesman&#13;
aL/Maling's Show Store in Pershing&#13;
Plafca.&#13;
With summer coming to an end,&#13;
Kathy is looking forward to the last two&#13;
weeks in August, when she gets a two&#13;
week paid vacation from Wells. She&#13;
plans to take a trip to Northern&#13;
Wisconsin, where she can relax, and get&#13;
ready for the fall.&#13;
At a time of year when moods and&#13;
feelings of laziness hit many college&#13;
students, Kathy Williamson has vaulted&#13;
into the world of the working class,&#13;
spending days in school teaching and&#13;
nights at Welles, along with summer&#13;
school. The surprising thing about this&#13;
combination is her outlook. She does it&#13;
all with a smile. &#13;
— - J U&#13;
August'2, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
from high school, and a girl wearing a candy&#13;
striped jumper. It didn't appear that I was&#13;
interrupting anything very important.&#13;
I sat down and thought about what to eat&#13;
Any Jew worth his weight in blintzs has to&#13;
admit that Ruby's offers a fine corned beef&#13;
sandwich. When I want to substitute a&#13;
New York mood for a Kenosha one, I use a&#13;
Ruby's corned beef in lieu of a United Air&#13;
Lines ticket.&#13;
The price of the sandwich (90 cents) the&#13;
quality and quantity, walk hand in hand. For&#13;
a restaurant that serves this sort of specialty&#13;
item, I think Ruby's has the best in town. It&#13;
wouldn't surprise me to learn that they&#13;
either have or are about to conquer&#13;
"authentic New York bagels with cream&#13;
cheese and lox".&#13;
I ordered a corned beef sandwich and&#13;
coffee. While it was being made, I talked to&#13;
my friend about high school, a subject I had&#13;
only infrequently thought about since being&#13;
released from Tremper, after "doing three&#13;
years". The conversation would have fit well&#13;
at a ten year reunion. I traded a 'how's Linda&#13;
Schneider doing' for a 'whatever happened&#13;
to John Martinez'. The nostalgic dialogue&#13;
seemed to fit the restaurant's atmosphere.&#13;
A n ewsman on the color television over&#13;
the bar was silently reviewing the day's&#13;
events. A jukebox was resting quietly in the&#13;
front of the place, while the eyes of a man&#13;
captured for posterity in a painting above&#13;
the bar watched over the entire dining area.&#13;
Each table had a colony of accessories on it;&#13;
sugar, salt, pepper, napkins and mustard,&#13;
this dining area, with all the empty tables,&#13;
was a maze of loneliness.&#13;
During a normal day, lawyers,&#13;
businessmen, bikers, shoppers, clerks,&#13;
heads, and doctors all share the same eating&#13;
facilities. The prices of meals fit the variety&#13;
of clientele every nicely. This restaurant is&#13;
very often full at noon hour during the&#13;
week, which testifies to questions concerning&#13;
quality, service and popularity, in the&#13;
opinion of many.&#13;
As I sat and enjoyed the corned beef, it&#13;
was far from a noon hour scene. The chairs&#13;
even looked tired, after holding dead weight&#13;
all day. The man who had made the sandwich&#13;
is one of the two brothers who run&#13;
Ruby's. Between sentences of conversation&#13;
and sips of coffee, he acknowledged&#13;
greetings from passers-by on the street. This&#13;
is the home of t he wide variety of characters&#13;
who star in the long running hit, Kenosha.&#13;
After I left Ruby's, I wondered if Normal}&#13;
Rockwell would paint the resturant sign&#13;
above the restaurant as it was, "aurant", or&#13;
as it should read. I also wondered if someone&#13;
could commission Andy Warhol to paint a&#13;
"pop art" corned beef sandwich. After&#13;
Norman Rockwell did the mural of 'a quiet&#13;
downtown' and Andy did the sandwich, both&#13;
could relax in Ruby's over a cup of coffee,&#13;
some warm summer evening. They would&#13;
experience Ruby's art of making a collage of&#13;
people feel welcomed, even on the deadest of&#13;
dead nights.&#13;
America&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
August to organize themselves&#13;
better and open again&#13;
in September.&#13;
"August is going to be&#13;
spent working on advertising&#13;
and- booking&#13;
bands," Barrett explained.&#13;
"We're going to try to get&#13;
things firmed up."&#13;
They hope by booking&#13;
bigger bands they can draw&#13;
more people. But the danger&#13;
of this is recognized. "The&#13;
bigger the band the more&#13;
the down payment is. We&#13;
blow one big band and we're&#13;
in the hole again," one&#13;
partner acknowledged.&#13;
Outside of the Soup&#13;
concert, America never&#13;
drew enough to break even.&#13;
The combined attendance of&#13;
the five concerts was about&#13;
1,500 people. The capacity of&#13;
the theatre is 2,000.&#13;
Is the group disappointed&#13;
at the lack of support by&#13;
their peers? "In some ways&#13;
I do feel the kids have let us&#13;
down," Gedemer says.&#13;
"We're not even asking for a&#13;
profit. We just want enough&#13;
support to keep going. We&#13;
feel like we're doing&#13;
something for kids our age.&#13;
Because there's nothing&#13;
really to do in Racine, and&#13;
no one is starting anything.&#13;
Everybody complains. So&#13;
we give .them something to&#13;
do and then they shut us&#13;
down."&#13;
Gedemer concedes that&#13;
they will have a smaller&#13;
chance of s uccess in the fall&#13;
than they had in the summer.&#13;
He says, "I hope the&#13;
kids come. I hope like hell&#13;
they come in September."&#13;
He continued: "In golf you&#13;
don't need a one year&#13;
contract — you need at least&#13;
a three year contract. In one&#13;
year, you cannot tell enough&#13;
about your potential.&#13;
Everybody just doesn't&#13;
make it in one or two years.&#13;
In three years you will&#13;
probably know whether you&#13;
are going forward or backward."&#13;
&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
This was to be an essay, but it's not now&#13;
because I'm tired and it's getting late, and I've&#13;
blown it for tonight. I had intended to continue&#13;
writing about totalitarianism and how John&#13;
Kennedy represented what was wrong with&#13;
liberalism, and on the debasement of the&#13;
language, which, together, seem totally&#13;
unrelated topics.&#13;
I thought in writing about the general drift,&#13;
toward totalitarianism in American society, I&#13;
could draw the two together. Except I&#13;
misplaced an article I wanted to use. I've found&#13;
it now, and it's 3 a.m.&#13;
So it's not an essay. It&#13;
l&#13;
s rather what I'm&#13;
thinking at this moment, and while I'll be&#13;
considering the same topic the essay would, it's&#13;
different. It's different because what I say now&#13;
is a closer reflection of myself than an essay&#13;
would be. In an essay I can abstract myself&#13;
from what I'm writing and say something I&#13;
don't fully believe (If this was an essay the first&#13;
sentence would read, "You can abstract&#13;
yourself from what you're writing and say&#13;
something you don't fully believe.")&#13;
I have to be honest in what I write this way.&#13;
There is little to hide behind — if I had written&#13;
"You have to be honest in what you write"&#13;
there would be something to hide behind. The&#13;
reality and impact of what I say is much more&#13;
concrete to me if I use "I" rather than the&#13;
generalized "you".&#13;
What I'm saying here is itself an intimation&#13;
of the argument I wish to make about the&#13;
debasement of the language. Orwell in his&#13;
essay, "Politics and the English Language",&#13;
argues that English is in a "bad way". He sees&#13;
the causes as being ultimately political and&#13;
economic in nature.&#13;
He writes, "In our time, political speech&#13;
and writing are largely the defense of the indefensible&#13;
. . . Thus political language has to&#13;
consist largely of euphemism, question begging&#13;
and sheer cloudy vagueness. Defenseless&#13;
villages are bombarded from the air, the&#13;
inhabitants driven out into the countryside .&#13;
the huts set on fire with incendiary bullets: this&#13;
is called pacification ...&#13;
"The inflated style is itself a kind of&#13;
euphemism. A mass of Latin words falls upon&#13;
the facts like soft snow, blurring the outlines&#13;
and covering up all the details. The great&#13;
enemy of clear language is insincerity . .&#13;
He concludes in part, "Political language&#13;
— and with variations this is true of all political&#13;
parties, from Conservatives to Anarchists — is&#13;
designed to make lies sound truthful and&#13;
murder respectable, and to give an appearance&#13;
of solidity to pure wind."&#13;
Orwell wrote this in 1946.&#13;
The end result of this is what Time&#13;
describes as "semantic aphasia". It's defined&#13;
as "that numbness of ear, mind and heart —&#13;
that tone deafness to the very meaning of&#13;
language — which results from the habitual&#13;
and prolonged abuse of words."&#13;
It's what Mailer described as the&#13;
totalitarian culture. A culture that blinds&#13;
visions and deadens instinct.&#13;
Where does the fault lie? It lies in the&#13;
mentality that says "Off the pig," and the&#13;
mentality that says "terminate with extreme&#13;
prejudice," instead of saying "Go kill a human&#13;
being."&#13;
"It sits," as Mailer wrote,"in the image of&#13;
the commercials on television which use phallic&#13;
and vaginal symbols to sell products which are&#13;
otherwise useless for sex ..."&#13;
It resides with the academician and the&#13;
technocrat who has beclouded his area of&#13;
competance with a fog of jargon and subordinative&#13;
clauses. It's a lifeless prose befeft of&#13;
humanity ; as sterile as the environment it is&#13;
produced in. It's written as if simple&#13;
declarative sentences no longer exist.&#13;
It resides with the technocrat . . . I'm&#13;
going to pull some of my punches at the myth of&#13;
JFK — it's late (near 6 a.m.; I write very&#13;
siowy) and I don't have space to sufficiently&#13;
develop some ideas.&#13;
George Ball, who was Under Secretary of&#13;
State for both John Kennedy and Lyndon&#13;
Johnson, and who is given credit for being the&#13;
leading dove within the two administrations,&#13;
wrote a recent column for Newsweek entitled&#13;
"The Trap of Rationality."&#13;
He claims that one of the most disheartening&#13;
disclosures of t he Pentagon papers is the&#13;
feeling of sterility that emerges. He says the&#13;
"bloodless terminology" and the "antiseptic&#13;
style" evoke a sense of heartlessness and a&#13;
belief that the authors of the memoranda&#13;
thought only in numbers and concepts and were&#13;
indifferent to what their proposals would mean&#13;
to the people in Vietnam.&#13;
Ball believes this impression is totally&#13;
misleading, but he questions, nevertheless, how&#13;
such an intellectual climate occurred.&#13;
He finds two parallel developments as the&#13;
cause. One was a scholarly preoccupation with&#13;
underdeveloped societies. How could&#13;
America by use of its resources establish a&#13;
stable democratic nation in an artifically&#13;
defined area called Vietnam?&#13;
The other was the evolving of analytical&#13;
methods of r esarch activities. Such institutions&#13;
as MIT. the RAND corporation, and the Hudson&#13;
Institute became home for this work. It was&#13;
here, Ball says, much of the jargon was created&#13;
—- game theory, input-output ratos, kill ratios,&#13;
limited war, flexible response, and&#13;
controlled escalation!&#13;
The overall effect, Ball contends, was that&#13;
these men misled themselves by depersonalizing&#13;
the war and treating it too much as&#13;
an exercise in the deployment of resources and&#13;
in the process ignored one aspect, the strength&#13;
of will and the Viet Cong.&#13;
I think John Kennedy and the thinking that&#13;
produced him must bear the brunt of the&#13;
responsibility for creating this intellectual&#13;
climate.&#13;
Two points are key to this. One, it was the&#13;
era of " tough" liberals. "In the long history of&#13;
the world, only a few generations have been&#13;
granted the role of defending freedom in its&#13;
hour of maximum danger. I do not shrink from&#13;
this responsibility — I welcome it," so said&#13;
John Kennedy. And along came the Green&#13;
Berets, counter-insurgency, the "missile gap,"&#13;
the space race, and 17,500 "advisers" in&#13;
Vietnam.&#13;
Then there was the New Frontier, and a&#13;
chance to have Power, and a chance to be part&#13;
of Camelot. It worked both ways, John Kennedy&#13;
attracted a plethora of brilliant people, but&#13;
these same people wanted power to pursue&#13;
their ideas.&#13;
Bill Buckley, despite his Toryism, has said&#13;
he'd rather be ruled by the first 100 names in&#13;
the New Haven phone book than the faculty of&#13;
Yale. Beware of liberals doing good.&#13;
There is finally the perfect example of the&#13;
Kennedy intellectual — technocrat — Robert&#13;
McNamara. He was the businessman,&#13;
technician, and cost-benefit expert. Let Time&#13;
describe him, "McNamara delivered an unstoppable&#13;
stream of convincing detail. He had a&#13;
swift answer for every question, a sharp&#13;
rebuttal for every doubt."&#13;
He considered every technical aspect of the&#13;
War in Vietnam — except one — the will power&#13;
of the Viet Cong. Time described his dilemma&#13;
as "... he was so infatuated with statistics&#13;
that he was long blinded to the human factors in&#13;
the Vietnam conflict. It was a puzzling outcome&#13;
for a man who had entered Government&#13;
renowned to his humane instincts at well as his&#13;
technological brillance. McNamara became a&#13;
divided personality." (my emphasis)&#13;
If you're interested in a further and more&#13;
complete de-mystification of John Kennedy&#13;
read "JFK — Bitter Memories of a Cold Day"&#13;
by Gerald Clarke in the January 16, 1971, N ew&#13;
Republic. — I t's 7:30 a.m. &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE August2,1971&#13;
Burkee&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
picking up'the load it was&#13;
designed for; police, fire,&#13;
garbage and the operation&#13;
of the city.&#13;
NS: Do you anticipate a&#13;
raise in the tax rate as a&#13;
result of the annexation of&#13;
Parkside:&#13;
Burkee: No. As a matter of&#13;
fact we will get $364,000 a&#13;
year out of that area in&#13;
taxes. We would have the&#13;
obligation of servicing&#13;
Parkside with a fire&#13;
dep artm ent . P o lic e&#13;
Save .&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
FEDERAL&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT&#13;
MILWAUKEE&#13;
protection will also have to&#13;
be afforded to the university.&#13;
They have their own&#13;
police department, very&#13;
inadequate of course, but&#13;
sufficient for a university&#13;
that size. Eventually we'd&#13;
have to supplement that&#13;
with city police protection.&#13;
I think you have to keep in&#13;
mind that there are only&#13;
eight houses in the entire&#13;
annexation and so the&#13;
garbage pick-up will be&#13;
minimal, the fire protection,&#13;
besides Parkside, nothing to&#13;
speak of and the police&#13;
protection very small except&#13;
for Parkside. The&#13;
$364,000 should adequately&#13;
take care of the additional&#13;
personnel that would be&#13;
required to handle this&#13;
annexation.&#13;
The interceptor sewer&#13;
that will be built will cost&#13;
about $lVfe million, but we&#13;
will be able to fund this&#13;
through HUD. We can&#13;
provide the services of our&#13;
water department without&#13;
any additional taxes being&#13;
paid.&#13;
NS: Speaking of public&#13;
services, is there any future&#13;
to public transportation in&#13;
Kenosha?&#13;
Burkee: We've done&#13;
something unique in the&#13;
state. We've combined the&#13;
Parking Commission with&#13;
the Transit Authority and&#13;
are using Parking Commission&#13;
money to support&#13;
I $&#13;
I&#13;
Kenosha Racine&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR |&#13;
&amp; R ESTAURANT&#13;
P I Z Z A - S EA F O O DS&#13;
I TAL IA N - A M E R I C A N F O OD&#13;
C O C KT A I LS&#13;
E N T E R T A I N M E N T&#13;
B&#13;
2112 - 14 - 52 ST.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
LAST CHANCE&#13;
THIS WEEK WE MUST BEGIN TO RETURN&#13;
ALL REMAINING TEXTBOOKS TO THE&#13;
PUBLISHERS. IF YOU STILL NEED BOOKS,&#13;
GET THEM NOW, W HILE THEY ARE STILL&#13;
AVAILABLE.&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
the transit system. I think&#13;
this will work.&#13;
NS: As mayor, do you view&#13;
maintenance as your&#13;
primary responsibility, or&#13;
planning and development?&#13;
Burkee: Well, you have to&#13;
maintain what, you have.&#13;
You have to have a good&#13;
operating department to do&#13;
this. Maintenance of what&#13;
you have is very important&#13;
so it doesn't deteriorate to&#13;
the point where you have to&#13;
go back and renew all the&#13;
time.&#13;
Planning for the future is&#13;
vital. We have been doing&#13;
this very extensively,&#13;
moreso now than ever&#13;
before.&#13;
We have on the drawing&#13;
boards additional areas&#13;
where the harbor can&#13;
develop, we're talking about&#13;
a 7,000 fo ot runway for the&#13;
airport, and there is a large&#13;
aircraft manufacturing&#13;
company that will move into&#13;
the area if we put this extension&#13;
onto our runway so&#13;
jets can land. As a matter of&#13;
fact, they're ready to sign a&#13;
contract today if we would&#13;
guarantee them the runway&#13;
would be put in. I have been&#13;
in touch with the state and&#13;
federal authorities and the&#13;
word from them is go. As&#13;
soon as we can wire all the&#13;
things together, we will&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI . CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI * RAVIOLI • LA SAGN&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU Blur Wf BU NG"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
have this project underway.&#13;
NS: Are there any programs&#13;
considered to raise the level&#13;
of living in Kenosha?&#13;
Burkee: First of all you&#13;
have to have good employment,&#13;
and this in itself&#13;
will raise the level of living.&#13;
We've gotten in the first&#13;
large industry in 20 years in&#13;
Kenosha, and that's Ocean&#13;
Spray.&#13;
Then you must also have&#13;
adequate facilities like&#13;
parks, and schools. You&#13;
have to give people an opportunity&#13;
to get a decent&#13;
education and a place to&#13;
work after they graduate.&#13;
We have several other&#13;
industries that we've been&#13;
talking to. It's not easy, with&#13;
a tight money market, to get&#13;
an industry to move and put&#13;
a capital outlay of 8 to 10&#13;
million dollars into an area.&#13;
They look very closely at&#13;
your area.&#13;
^e have Parkside coming&#13;
along very well and KTI is&#13;
probably at the peak of its&#13;
development right now with&#13;
all the programs they have,&#13;
and Carthage College has a&#13;
1,500 enrollment which is&#13;
tops for them.&#13;
We have a health&#13;
department that operates&#13;
efficiently. Our inspection&#13;
department inspects houses&#13;
and apartments being built&#13;
to insure that they are not&#13;
built with shoddy construction.&#13;
I think that all of&#13;
our departments are&#13;
operating at top capacity&#13;
and I believe we have a good&#13;
city because of it.&#13;
NS: Would you care to&#13;
comment on the controversy&#13;
over the topless bars?&#13;
Burkee: Yes, I think it's a&#13;
very detrimental thing for&#13;
our community and I cite&#13;
the fact that we have been&#13;
on nationwide television.&#13;
Channel Six ran a particular&#13;
segment of&#13;
American Motors people&#13;
running across 52nd street&#13;
at lunchtime with their bags&#13;
of lunch to go and have a&#13;
beer and watch the naked&#13;
women. I've received letters&#13;
from almost every state in&#13;
the country saying what a&#13;
horrible city I have.&#13;
A column written by&#13;
Margo out of New York went&#13;
out to every newspaper of&#13;
any size in the whole United&#13;
States. In that particular&#13;
item it said, 'When Old&#13;
Calcutta started in New&#13;
York we wondered how far&#13;
the sexual revolution would&#13;
go. Now we know; they're&#13;
all dancing naked in&#13;
Kenosha.' Then she goes on&#13;
to intimately describe what&#13;
the girls do. It's just a very&#13;
bad cast on the city of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Yes, if you wanted to be&#13;
called the Hurley of&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin,&#13;
fine, continue. If you wanted&#13;
to be called the Calumet&#13;
City of Wisconsin, instead of&#13;
Illinois, continue. You'll get&#13;
the name and then you'll&#13;
have no one wanting to come&#13;
here to teach, no one&#13;
wanting to locate an industry&#13;
here and no one&#13;
wanting anything to do with&#13;
Kenosha. Maybe they'll&#13;
come down to see how the&#13;
topless and bottomless is&#13;
going, but you're tearing a&#13;
good city apart for the&#13;
amusement and profit of&#13;
very few people.&#13;
NS: Are recent supreme&#13;
court decisions obstructing&#13;
the city's fight against the&#13;
topless bars?&#13;
Burkee: Not the recent&#13;
ones; the old decisions are&#13;
in there. But now we're&#13;
getting into an area where a&#13;
federal judge" is trying to&#13;
interpose his will on a&#13;
legislative matter, which is&#13;
the issuance of tavern&#13;
licenses. He has no&#13;
authority to issue tavern&#13;
licenses. He has done this&#13;
and we have challenged him&#13;
with an order to suspend the&#13;
temporary restraining&#13;
order. He's going to rule on&#13;
that this week.&#13;
We feel that he's in an&#13;
area that's way over his&#13;
head; something he&#13;
shouldn't have done and I&#13;
think he's beginning to&#13;
believe it himself.&#13;
NS: Is there any legal way&#13;
that you can get rid of the&#13;
topless bar. You can take&#13;
away their licenses for&#13;
liquor but can you take&#13;
away the dancers?&#13;
Burkee: No. Legally if you&#13;
took the topless-bottomless&#13;
issue, this isn't a pun, on the&#13;
nakedness of itself, you&#13;
would find that you cannot&#13;
win. The Supreme Court has&#13;
ruled that being naked is a&#13;
form of expression. I don't&#13;
understand the language,&#13;
but it is a form of expression,&#13;
at least that's&#13;
what they say. If you did try&#13;
to win on the basis that&#13;
Nakedness is something&#13;
that you can legislate&#13;
against, you'd lose.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
Dune Buggy. Brand new. Must sell&#13;
3814 - 16 Avenue, Kenosha.&#13;
1962 Buick 2 dr hardtop, $250. Call&#13;
634-4445 or 633-2791.&#13;
1961 Jeep CJ5. Call 694-5744.&#13;
F OR RENT — Modern office space.&#13;
Larpeted and air conditioned. $50.00&#13;
Vtilities included. Call Tony&#13;
at 652-3945 or 654-7410.&#13;
Tape Recorder. 3 speed, mono, auto&#13;
Cai?°657 5992^&#13;
C0Unter 900d ^nd- 1969 Open GT Silver $2,400 or best&#13;
offer. 652-3312 after 4.&#13;
1969 Olds 442. Automatic, power&#13;
steering and brakes, 14,000 mi.&#13;
$2,500. Call 657-5681 after 5.&#13;
1970 Camaro. Snow Tires &amp;nd Rims.&#13;
639-8863 after 4:30.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
APARTMENT FOR RENT -&#13;
Madi&#13;
son 3&#13;
gir,s need , for fal| t0 fi(&#13;
^?n&#13;
rn&#13;
i,&#13;
fUrniShed apt&#13;
- on Universit&gt;&#13;
WANTED&#13;
1966 Ram. Amer. Con. 7843 - 20th.&#13;
1949 Harley-Davidson. Will trade.&#13;
Call -652-6335 between 4 &amp; 6.&#13;
1963 VW (40,000 mi.) $600, 1966&#13;
Dodge Coronet (12,000 mi.) $700.&#13;
12911 Washington Ave. Raci.&#13;
^C&#13;
sy!ic®ses&#13;
' vei-y good cond. $25. Call OD4-2704.&#13;
Earn Extra Money — Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633-3805.&#13;
For a Good night's sleep —&#13;
Waterbeds. 3701 - 60th Street Call&#13;
654-9447.&#13;
vmi!t&#13;
TED ~~ Rambler American or&#13;
not ~ 0006 cor,dition and&#13;
not too expensive. Jan 694-3419.&#13;
Rider to Mankato, Minn.,or vicinity.&#13;
» n&#13;
her„&#13;
on&#13;
r&#13;
e&#13;
,&#13;
or both ways. Leaving&#13;
Aug. 21. Call 652-9053, Vanessa. &#13;
Coaches Head Track Clinic&#13;
August 2,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
High school and college&#13;
coaches from throughout&#13;
the nation will be converging&#13;
on northern&#13;
Wisconsin and Michigan in&#13;
two weeks for the Fifth&#13;
Annual Track and Cross&#13;
Country Coaches Clinic,&#13;
sponsored by Olimpia Sport&#13;
Village in cooperation with&#13;
the U.S. Track and Field&#13;
Federation.&#13;
And University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside personnel&#13;
are prominent&#13;
throughout. Tom Rosandich,&#13;
athletic director at&#13;
UW-Parkside, is the owner&#13;
of the sport camp and&#13;
originator of the clinic,&#13;
while UW-P track coach Bob&#13;
Lawson and his assistant,&#13;
Vic Godfrey, head vital&#13;
phases of the clinic&#13;
program.&#13;
Coaches attending the&#13;
clinic may also arrange for&#13;
graduate credit for the&#13;
session, which will run from&#13;
Aug. 8-14 and cover every&#13;
event in depth. The site of&#13;
the clinic is Indianhead Ski&#13;
Resort, in Wakefield, Mich.&#13;
The week will conclude with&#13;
most coaches officiating at&#13;
the Third Annual Paavo&#13;
Nurmi Marathon, which&#13;
finishes on Silver Street in&#13;
Hurley and lures long&#13;
distance buffs from&#13;
throughout the nation.&#13;
An athletic trainers' clinic&#13;
will also be held under the&#13;
direction of Dick Hoover,&#13;
head trainer at Northwestern&#13;
University and&#13;
trainer for the College AllStars.&#13;
&#13;
Other members of the&#13;
coaches clinic staff include&#13;
Sam Bell, coach of the 1970&#13;
and 1971 Big Ten track&#13;
champions, the Indiana&#13;
Hoosiers; Roy Griak of&#13;
Minnesota, renowned for his&#13;
great distance runners; Dr.&#13;
Richard Ganslen, author of&#13;
"Mechanics of the Pole&#13;
Vault"; Don Meyers of&#13;
Colorado, who produced one&#13;
of the nation's top spring&#13;
relay units in 1971; Gary&#13;
Wieneke of Illinois, who&#13;
coached Lee LaBadie, the&#13;
first miler in Big Ten history&#13;
to break four minutes; A1&#13;
Cantello of the U.S. Naval&#13;
Academy, a former world&#13;
record holder in the javelin;&#13;
and Bob Ehrhart, director of&#13;
the famed Drake Relays,&#13;
track coach at Drake&#13;
University and program&#13;
director for the clinic.&#13;
Caddies on the Golf Tour&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Touring caddies do far more than&#13;
just carry the pros' clubs around.&#13;
Newscope talked with an experienced&#13;
touring caddy who&#13;
moves from week to week with a&#13;
specific pro.&#13;
Caddies apparently do not like&#13;
much publicity, at least on an individual&#13;
level, so we refrained&#13;
from using has last name in this&#13;
article. This particular caddy's&#13;
name is Ervin, and he hails from&#13;
North Carolina, about 80 miles&#13;
from where his pro, Jack Lewis,&#13;
Jr., came from.&#13;
We asked him what&#13;
qualifications were needed to be&#13;
able to caddy on the tour: "To&#13;
qualify to be a caddy on the tour&#13;
you must have good common&#13;
sense, some knowledge about&#13;
caddying, dependability, and a&#13;
willingness to do what your player&#13;
wants you to do."&#13;
"The best thing to do is to work&#13;
for a player that you know you can&#13;
really get along with. A young&#13;
caddy coming to the golf tour&#13;
should try to latch on to a young&#13;
player and stick with him while he&#13;
is getting started, and one day,&#13;
hopefully, he will do well."&#13;
"For those interested in becoming&#13;
a caddy the best thing to&#13;
do is to go to a country club and&#13;
start caddying in order to get the&#13;
basic ideas about the job, and once&#13;
the members start telling you that&#13;
you do your job well, you should&#13;
come out on the tour and catch on&#13;
to a young player and tell him that&#13;
you have never caddied for a&#13;
touring pro before and he will tell&#13;
you what he wants you to do. It is a&#13;
good learning experience for a&#13;
college golfer to caddy for a pro&#13;
during a tournament," Ervin&#13;
added.&#13;
"Any player that is on a high&#13;
school or a college golf team is&#13;
qualified to caddy on the golf tour. I&#13;
don't think he would make an error&#13;
to hurt a pro," he said.&#13;
Although caddying is basically&#13;
the same for all players, there are&#13;
some differences in what the&#13;
players want their caddies to do.&#13;
Ervin commented on this: "Jack&#13;
Nicklaus needs help to a certain&#13;
point. Not so much the clubs, but he&#13;
wants the pin placements and he&#13;
can't get out of bed at 6:00 A.M.&#13;
and walk the course to get the&#13;
placements, so that job is up to his&#13;
caddy. Trevino and Casper, for&#13;
example, want the clubs, yardage,&#13;
and pin placement — they pay their&#13;
caddies well for that additional&#13;
information — you can believe&#13;
that."&#13;
"Not every pro out here has his&#13;
own caddy. They can't all afford to&#13;
give their caddies $125 a week and&#13;
five per cent of t he winnings. Some&#13;
players give $200 a week and seven&#13;
per cent. If you get a young player&#13;
you have to take what he will give&#13;
you. I feel fortunate to get $125 a&#13;
week and five per cent. Some&#13;
weeks when he does well and we&#13;
have a week off, he will give me an&#13;
extra $75 p lus the percentage."&#13;
We asked Ervin about the differences&#13;
found in Southern and&#13;
Northern golf courses: "Courses in&#13;
the North are a little easier&#13;
because they are probably in better&#13;
condition and a little shorter than&#13;
Southern courses. There is not&#13;
quite as much wind here in the&#13;
North as in Texas for example.&#13;
Courses in North Carolina are very&#13;
FOR LoveOfJF/Y&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
W\D .. ftws IDE Do RUGUST&#13;
Geza Martiny, a soccer coach and women's gymnastics&#13;
coach at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, instructs the&#13;
Racine Women's Gymnastics Club in one of the delicate&#13;
maneuvers of the graceful sport. The girls, ranging in age&#13;
from 13 to 18 years, meet twice weekly throughout the year&#13;
for guidance and practice.&#13;
•Alvarez to Attend ParksideRudy&#13;
Alvarez, star distanceman from Racine Horlick&#13;
high school, will attend the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
track coach Bob Lawson announced recently.&#13;
Alvarez, who won state Class A titles in cross country&#13;
and track, placed fourth in last month's All American&#13;
Championships in Illinois.&#13;
"We think Rudy will fit in very well on our cross&#13;
country team," Lawson said. "He's the type of runner we&#13;
want and is not afraid to take command of a race."&#13;
Alvarez, who posted a best of 9 :13 for the two mile and&#13;
won the event in his state meet, will be running the longer&#13;
five and six mile cross country distances for Parkside this&#13;
fall, but said he thinks he will like the extra mileage.&#13;
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin E. Alvarez, 1100&#13;
Frederick Street, Racine, and was coached in high school&#13;
by Tom Keefe.&#13;
8ph.&#13;
SHARP&#13;
tight, have many trees, and are&#13;
very long. Tripoli, where the GMO&#13;
was held, by comparison, is very&#13;
short, but it isn't the easiest around&#13;
because you can't afford to hit it&#13;
over the green."&#13;
What about the future of the pro&#13;
tour? We posed this question to&#13;
Ervin and he replied: "In ten years&#13;
a man would only have to win one&#13;
major tournament and he would&#13;
become a millionaire on the spot&#13;
even if he never won another one.&#13;
He would not, of course, receive a&#13;
million in prize money; but a&#13;
prestigious victory is worth very&#13;
much in endorsements. In ten&#13;
years the first prize in every&#13;
tournament will be at least $40,000.&#13;
You can play in 30 tournaments&#13;
and still be with the family 22&#13;
weeks out of the year."&#13;
The level of competition is also&#13;
getting tougher so the winning will&#13;
not be easy. Ervin discussed this:&#13;
"The competition is as tough right&#13;
now as it will ever be. No one will&#13;
ever get better than Lee Trevino or&#13;
Jack Nicklaus. You have six&#13;
players: 1. Nicklaus, 2. Lee&#13;
Trevino, 3. Gary Player, 4. Billy&#13;
Casper, and a tossup between&#13;
Arnold Palmer, Frank Beard and&#13;
Gene Littler for fifth place. Those&#13;
are seven great players and it's&#13;
hard to beat them."&#13;
"Trevino is really improving, "but&#13;
if N icklaus played in the amount of&#13;
tournaments that Trevino played&#13;
in there would be no comparison.&#13;
Nicklaus is in a field by himself. If&#13;
he plays in 30 tournaments in the&#13;
United States he will win $400,000.&#13;
He is really that good. We (the&#13;
caddies) know it because we are&#13;
out here and we see it. People who&#13;
just read in the papers don't really&#13;
see it — w e see it. He has an advantage&#13;
on the world playing golf.&#13;
Trevino right now is the hottest&#13;
thing on the golf tour, yet he has to&#13;
hit nine-irons to the green where&#13;
Nicklaus might be on the green in&#13;
one. He is really that long."&#13;
There are several factors that&#13;
make Nicklaus so tough, and Ervin&#13;
explained some of them: "It's his&#13;
physical strength for one thing, but&#13;
he is a great putter and a great left&#13;
to right player. If you get him on a&#13;
golf course where he must play&#13;
right to left then he can be handled&#13;
a little."&#13;
"Nicklaus knows he is the best&#13;
golfer and one thing that bothers&#13;
him now is that when he makes a&#13;
mistake he sometimes lets it get&#13;
the best of him, feeling that he is&#13;
letting people down because they&#13;
know he can make that shot and he&#13;
knows it himself. When he really&#13;
gets it going, gets his confidence&#13;
built up, there is no one in the world&#13;
who can touch him, and you can&#13;
ask Ben Hogan and Sam Sneed&#13;
about that. No doubt about it, he&#13;
hasn't reached his peak yet. He is&#13;
not even close to reaching it — he is&#13;
three years away from that."&#13;
After those seven players&#13;
previously mentioned, it's quite&#13;
well balanced according to Ervin.&#13;
"The young players can beat those&#13;
other players on any given day,"&#13;
he added.&#13;
Because of t he abundance of fine&#13;
players, some young players find&#13;
out that they just don't have it for&#13;
the golf tour or perhaps they get&#13;
sponsor problems. "Sometimes the&#13;
sponsor does not want to bear with&#13;
you when you are playing badly&#13;
and when the sponsor cuts you&#13;
loose then there is trouble," Ervin&#13;
said. &#13;
Page H NEWSCOPE August 2, 1971&#13;
by Sandy Principe&#13;
As Assistant Secretary of&#13;
Labor Arthur A. Flescher&#13;
recently remarked, women&#13;
workers today, "are not&#13;
auxiliary workers but an&#13;
integral part of the work&#13;
force."&#13;
There were 31.5 million&#13;
women in the work force on&#13;
the average in 1970. Roughly&#13;
one-fourth that number (8.2&#13;
million, or 23 per cent of the&#13;
working-age women) were&#13;
in the labor force in&#13;
January, 1920, the same&#13;
year that women gained the&#13;
right to vote. That was also&#13;
the year the Women's&#13;
Bureau was established in&#13;
the U.S. Department of&#13;
Labor "to formulate&#13;
standards and policies&#13;
which shall promote the&#13;
welfare of wage-earning&#13;
women, improve their&#13;
working conditions, increase&#13;
their efficiency, and&#13;
advance their opportunities&#13;
for profitable employment."&#13;
Each decade since 1920&#13;
has seen the proportion of&#13;
working women increase in&#13;
a variety of economic settings,&#13;
and amid many social&#13;
and technological changes.&#13;
Nine out of ten women will&#13;
work outside of the home&#13;
sometime in their lives,&#13;
most of these due to&#13;
economic need. Of the 37&#13;
million women who worked&#13;
in 1968, 17 per cent were&#13;
widowed, divorced or&#13;
separated from their&#13;
husbands; many of these&#13;
women were raising&#13;
children in a fatherless&#13;
home. Another 23 per cent of&#13;
the women workers were&#13;
single. In addition, married&#13;
women whose husbands'&#13;
incomes are inadequate or&#13;
barely adequate to support&#13;
their families often are&#13;
compelled to such gainful&#13;
employment.&#13;
For other women, a&#13;
career is a necessary and&#13;
fulfilling part of their lives.&#13;
Newell Brown, in his book&#13;
"After College . . . What",'&#13;
warns that while many&#13;
high school education or&#13;
better, however, the increase&#13;
was 7.4 percentage&#13;
points more. On the other&#13;
hand, the labor force participation&#13;
rates of women&#13;
with eight years or less of&#13;
nursing, library sciences,&#13;
social and welfare work,&#13;
and other professions&#13;
staffed largely by women.&#13;
The arithmetic of supply&#13;
and demand clearly shows&#13;
that this will have to change.&#13;
women lead careerless but&#13;
happy and constructive&#13;
lives, many others who&#13;
o r i g i n a l l y t h o u g h t&#13;
homemaking would be&#13;
enough and gave no thought&#13;
to a possible career, later on&#13;
find themselves wanting to&#13;
undertake rewarding paid&#13;
work outside the home.&#13;
Today these women&#13;
usually land jobs unworthy&#13;
of their talents or remain&#13;
uncomfortably at home.&#13;
"The point here, it seems&#13;
to me, is that the early&#13;
twenties may be too soon to&#13;
make a commitment to&#13;
careerlessness," Brown&#13;
says. As Stella Gray,&#13;
Chairman of t he Humanities&#13;
Department and Professor&#13;
of E nglish at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside, said,&#13;
"No education is wasted,&#13;
even if a woman never&#13;
works. It opens many new&#13;
interests she may never&#13;
have discovered. She should&#13;
also be able to use it in&#13;
rearing her children and&#13;
guiding them through&#13;
school."&#13;
Educational attainment&#13;
appears to exert a stronger&#13;
influence today on whether&#13;
a woman works than it did in&#13;
October, 1952. The labor&#13;
force participation rate of&#13;
all women 18 years of age&#13;
and over increased 6.4(&#13;
percentage points to 42 per&#13;
cent from October, 1952, to&#13;
March, 1968. For those with&#13;
schooling were practically&#13;
unchanged over the same&#13;
period.&#13;
Still, the educational&#13;
backgrounds of a great&#13;
many women are not being&#13;
fully utilized in their jobs. A&#13;
startling seven per cent of&#13;
employed women who had&#13;
completed five or more&#13;
years of college were&#13;
working as service workers,&#13;
operatives, sales workers,&#13;
or clerical workers in March&#13;
of 1969. Nearly one-fifth of&#13;
employed women with four&#13;
years of college were&#13;
working in these occupations,&#13;
as were some&#13;
two-thirds of those who had&#13;
completed one to three&#13;
years of college. Women&#13;
have only recently been&#13;
recognized as the greatest&#13;
untapped labor resource in&#13;
our country. Employers&#13;
should consider cutting&#13;
work hours, making work&#13;
hours more practical for&#13;
women with families, to&#13;
make use of this resource.&#13;
Women must also expand&#13;
to other fields. The increasing&#13;
participation of&#13;
women in the labor force&#13;
and the narrow range of&#13;
professions in which the&#13;
majority of them seek&#13;
employment are at the heart&#13;
of the women workers'&#13;
problem. The growth of&#13;
p r o f e ss i o n al w om e n&#13;
workers reflects the exp&#13;
a n d i n g e mp l o y m e n t&#13;
requirements in teaching,&#13;
Although efforts to improve&#13;
women's representations in&#13;
professions staffed largely&#13;
by men have had only&#13;
limited results, it is evident&#13;
that women will have to&#13;
expand to other professional&#13;
areas. Of all fields,&#13;
medicine, dentistry, law,&#13;
engineering, the natural&#13;
sciences, architecture and&#13;
college teaching have the&#13;
smallest percentage of&#13;
women. For example,&#13;
women constitute seven per&#13;
cent of all physicians in the&#13;
country and only three per&#13;
cent of the total number of&#13;
persons in law — the same&#13;
percentage as 15 years ago.&#13;
The number of women&#13;
college graduates is expected&#13;
to increase by about&#13;
two-thirds over the 1968-80&#13;
period, nearly double the&#13;
rate of increase for men.&#13;
Thus, the only sensible&#13;
trend will be for women to&#13;
enlarge the range of occupations&#13;
for which they&#13;
prepare.&#13;
While there is still male&#13;
prejudice in many fields,&#13;
there is much more attention&#13;
being paid to&#13;
establishing a standard of&#13;
sex equality in the&#13;
Universities and employment&#13;
markets. Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, coordinator&#13;
ofCounciling Services for&#13;
the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
last Monday&#13;
attended a meeting in&#13;
Madison of a committee&#13;
organized by the President&#13;
for the protection of&#13;
minority groups on campus.&#13;
While women are not&#13;
statistically a minority&#13;
group, representing 51 per&#13;
cent of the population, they&#13;
have been denied equal&#13;
rights as a group. Only&#13;
recently have they stepped&#13;
out of the stereotyped&#13;
traditional women's role&#13;
and organized to obtain&#13;
equal recognition for their&#13;
acco mpl ishm ents. T h e&#13;
committee was organized so&#13;
that should any group have&#13;
a grievance it can be heard&#13;
before this committee.&#13;
Just this past year, the&#13;
University system abolished&#13;
its laws restricting hiring of&#13;
married couples — both in&#13;
the capacity of professors.&#13;
Previously, if one was a&#13;
professor, the other could&#13;
not accept any position&#13;
above the status of instructor.&#13;
&#13;
I interviewed Stella Gray,&#13;
the highest ranking woman&#13;
at Parkside. Dr. Gray, it&#13;
seems, has had a perfect&#13;
combination of luck, skill&#13;
and timing. She remarked&#13;
that the University has been&#13;
very generous to her and&#13;
has encountered no real&#13;
difficulties in teaching or&#13;
administration which could&#13;
be attributed to her sex. She&#13;
said that it takes a special&#13;
kind of husband, family and&#13;
woman to make this careerwife-mother&#13;
combination&#13;
successful. "He has to be&#13;
willing to share you in this&#13;
way, for a comfortable life&#13;
anyhow, and willing to&#13;
develop your potential."&#13;
Whichever career, if any, a&#13;
woman chooses, she should&#13;
be free to practice or remain&#13;
home without prejudice or&#13;
ridicule. This is rapidly&#13;
becoming an accepted fact.&#13;
At a time when sandy beaches and&#13;
sparkling clear water are becoming as rare&#13;
as a 1943 copper penny, Racine residents&#13;
have a man-made lake at their fingertips.&#13;
The Racine Quarry is a haven for&#13;
weekend bathers, scuba divers,&#13;
photographers and anyone else with leisure&#13;
time on his hands.&#13;
Located on the city's northwest side,&#13;
the Quarry was almost used by a foundry&#13;
as a dumping site. In the 40's a farmer sold&#13;
the land to a club that sold memberships to&#13;
people who wanted to use the lake. The&#13;
area was called Aqualand but due to high&#13;
taxes the club was forced to sell the lake to&#13;
a foundry in 1967. That year Racine&#13;
residents sponsored a referendum for the&#13;
county to buy the land and make it into a&#13;
park rather than see it destroyed by industrial&#13;
wastes.&#13;
Since that time thousands of people&#13;
have ventured into the unique and&#13;
awesome area, and it is fast becoming one&#13;
of the area's favorite recreational spots.&#13;
Bathers can swim under the watchful eye&#13;
of trained lifeguards equipped with&#13;
rowboats for those who find themselves&#13;
exhausted far from shore.&#13;
A popular legend claims that the lake is&#13;
bottomless even though scuba divers have&#13;
set the lake's floor at 80 feet, but even a&#13;
skeptic might agree with the legend upon&#13;
first sight of the vast towering cliffs and&#13;
vegetation that surround the lake.&#13;
At night, before the park closes at 10,&#13;
the immense lake takes on a preternatural&#13;
appearance,- far from the hassles of the&#13;
nearby city. It is meditatively calm and fit&#13;
for a quiet stroll along the meandering&#13;
paths near the water's edge. And with a full&#13;
moon glancing off the still night water, one&#13;
can speculate how deep it is though it is&#13;
unlikely many would dare find out.&#13;
GIRLS: $400 a week minimum guarantee. Less than 1&#13;
per cent of the working girls in the world earn more than&#13;
$12,000 per year. Our girls earn a minimum of $17,680 per&#13;
year. Unbelievable? It's true! Meet Top young executive&#13;
in pleasant social surroundings while earning incomes 99&#13;
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18 or o lder and attractive, we have immediate openings&#13;
— full or part time, local or international. Our career&#13;
guidance program is designed to transform you into one&#13;
of the most respected and artistic entertainers of the day.&#13;
Top choreographers, designers and public relations men&#13;
dedicate their talents to develop your talents. For interview&#13;
with the nation's fastest growing agency, call&#13;
LES GIRLS OF CALIFORNIA&#13;
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654-9968 </text>
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              <text>Last Night A Go-Go?</text>
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              <text>Starving&#13;
Artist's&#13;
Fair&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Last year nearly 10,000 people&#13;
visited it and 125 artists entered. This&#13;
year 175 artists are entered and the&#13;
attendance is expected to surpass last&#13;
summer's.&#13;
Things are looking good for the&#13;
Racine Starving Artist's Fair, according&#13;
to Mrs. Carol Madsen,&#13;
director of the fair.&#13;
This year's event will be held for the&#13;
first time on the front lawn of the UWParkside's&#13;
Racine campus on Sunday?&#13;
August 1, from 10 a .m. until 6&#13;
p.m.&#13;
The fair is unTque in that all works&#13;
are priced at less than $20,00 —&#13;
making it truly a starving artists'&#13;
(and patrons') fair.&#13;
"Many of the artists just want to&#13;
recoup the costs of materials," Mrs.&#13;
Madsen explains.&#13;
It's an unjuried fair, which means&#13;
that in order to enter an artist need&#13;
not pass a screening committee that&#13;
grants entrance based upon the acceptability&#13;
of his work. A $2 entry fee&#13;
is required.&#13;
In comparison, the Kenosha and&#13;
Racine art fairs are juried events.&#13;
Last year the fair sales netted&#13;
$7,000.&#13;
"A whopping $7,000," says Mrs.&#13;
Madsen, as she points out that the&#13;
highest price paid was the $20.00 tag.&#13;
Also, there was no institutional&#13;
purchasing, characteristic of other&#13;
fairs.&#13;
The entrants are mostly from&#13;
Racine and the surrounding area. As&#13;
painters, they vary from "Sunday&#13;
painters" to professional. The fair is&#13;
often the first place where a beginning&#13;
artist exhibits.&#13;
The types of art exhibited include&#13;
oils, watercolors, graphics, ceramics,&#13;
hand wrought jewelry, sculpture, and&#13;
original craft work such as macrame.&#13;
The only stipulation is that the work&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
'Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" — Matthew Arnold University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Volume 4 _ NUMBER 5 July 26,1971&#13;
Orientation&#13;
Issue&#13;
Inside&#13;
Last Night A Go-Go?&#13;
m&#13;
o:&#13;
This Could Be&#13;
The Last Time&#13;
Tonight could be the last night&#13;
to combine drinking and&#13;
dancing.&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
In 1968 Mi ke Royko won the&#13;
Heyward Broun award for&#13;
outstanding journalism lor his&#13;
coverage of the Democratic&#13;
National Convention in Chicago&#13;
in which he criticized the city's&#13;
handling of the demonstrations.&#13;
In 1971 h e published a book&#13;
entitled The Boss in which he&#13;
describes the rise of Richard J.&#13;
Daley from a neighborhood&#13;
political hack to leader of one of&#13;
the most powerful political&#13;
machines in the nation's&#13;
history.&#13;
Royko has been on top of the&#13;
Chicago political scene for a&#13;
number of years and perhaps,&#13;
with Daley himself as the only&#13;
exception, its most&#13;
knowledgeable authority.&#13;
Newscope spoke with Royko&#13;
about his recent book, journalism&#13;
in general, and Chicago&#13;
politics.&#13;
Newscope: Because your&#13;
columns frequently focus on&#13;
Daley and machine politics, do&#13;
you find any resentment on the&#13;
part of the city administration?&#13;
Royko: As a matter of fact I&#13;
get on quite well with public&#13;
officials. I knew these people&#13;
before I became a columnist&#13;
and they know that when I'm&#13;
Newscope Interview&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The hour soon approaches when we may&#13;
be able to say that topless-bottomless taverns&#13;
are a thing of the past.&#13;
Monday a federal district judge will hear&#13;
the case of the city versus the half-dozen or so&#13;
tavern owners who have taken the brunt of&#13;
city council and mayoral criticism for&#13;
months.&#13;
One of the owners, who declined to be&#13;
named, said that his lawyers were optimistic&#13;
about the outcome of t he case. Meanwhile, at&#13;
Bruce and Murph's a not so promising&#13;
number of hardy customers weathered a light&#13;
rain to see what may be the next to the last&#13;
night of drinking and dancing.&#13;
If the decision goes against the owners,&#13;
they will most likely offer nude dancing but&#13;
will not be allowed to serve beer.&#13;
"I'll stay open to prove a point", one&#13;
owner said. "I don't want to cater to eighteen&#13;
year olds and I don't really want to stay open,&#13;
but the city did some unfair things to us and&#13;
I'll stay open if for nothing more than the&#13;
principle involved."&#13;
Apparently the principle referred to&#13;
concerns the issue whether or not nudity per&#13;
se is offensive or obscene. The owners contend&#13;
that it isn't; the mayor and half of the common&#13;
council disagree.&#13;
Accordingly, the council and the mayor&#13;
claim that the topless-bottomless taverns&#13;
nave deteriorated the city's reputation, while&#13;
on the other hand, the owners insist that they&#13;
have contributed significantly to the economy&#13;
as a result of th e added income brought in by&#13;
the entertainment. They claim that the go-go&#13;
girls attract customers from Illinois and&#13;
elsewhere and that gas stations and&#13;
restaurants have all benefited from the influx&#13;
of c usumers.&#13;
The owners maintain that the city had&#13;
dealt with them in a prejudicial manner and&#13;
that the local government had a "vendetta"&#13;
against them.&#13;
But between the arguments the show must&#13;
go on and it did in most places. Freddie's was&#13;
reported closed Sunday night but Josie was&#13;
dancing at the Velvet Swing.&#13;
She stepped on stage dressed in black lace&#13;
panties and top with a robe draped over her&#13;
shoulders. The first song, a selection of&#13;
Creedence Clearwater Revival ended with her&#13;
robe on the stage. A secon d song, and then a&#13;
third by Hugh Masakella saw her top float off&#13;
and Blood Sweat and Tears played as she&#13;
slowly lowered her lace panties.&#13;
Each song was followed by a faint sound&#13;
of a pplause until the final number by Janis&#13;
Joplin. Half way through the song Josie had&#13;
surrendered her panty and for the next minute&#13;
or so danced in the nude. As Janis trailed on&#13;
the record Josie turned her back to the&#13;
audience like a child standing in a corner and&#13;
then to the flapping of a slightly louder applause&#13;
slipped into her robe and left the stage&#13;
to sit at the end of the bar until the next&#13;
number when again the audience would give&#13;
her their undivided attention.&#13;
taking a shot at somebody I'm&#13;
not doing it to entertain myself,&#13;
or amuse myself. If I say&#13;
someone's a bad guy it's&#13;
because I think he is.&#13;
As for the reaction among&#13;
political people toward the&#13;
book, many of them told me&#13;
they liked it. A number of t hem&#13;
are a part of Daley'&#13;
Moyer's, 'Bill, have you read&#13;
it?' Bill said no and Foran said,&#13;
'Gee, you ought to read it, it's&#13;
terrific.'&#13;
Newscope: Has Mayor Daley&#13;
shown any reaction to the book?&#13;
Royko: Mrs. Daley was interviewed&#13;
by some fawning&#13;
free-lance magazine writer.&#13;
The writer asked if she had read&#13;
read it. If she would have said&#13;
anything other than that, I&#13;
would have been surprised.&#13;
One thing she said bothered&#13;
me, and she's said this before,&#13;
people like myself print second&#13;
hand information rather than&#13;
getting it directly from the&#13;
source, meaning the mayor. I&#13;
would have been happy to in-&#13;
Mike Royko:&#13;
Chicago's Daley News&#13;
Mike Royko&#13;
organization^oo^vva^oin^T&#13;
television show with Tom&#13;
Foran, (Kup's Show), and he&#13;
was there, more or less as&#13;
Daley's man. Bill Moyers was&#13;
on the show, too. While we were&#13;
on the air, Foran was taking all&#13;
kinds of shots at the books,&#13;
which is his job, but during the&#13;
commercial break he said to&#13;
the book. She said she had and&#13;
that I was an underdevelopedunderachiever.&#13;
I was struck by the expression&#13;
and ever since I have been&#13;
trying to figure out what it&#13;
means. She said the book was&#13;
trash. One night she reviewed it&#13;
for Mr. Daley before bdti and&#13;
tOld him he shouldn't bother&#13;
terview the mayor. I wrote him&#13;
a letter telling him that I was&#13;
going to do the book and wanted&#13;
to interview him, but he never&#13;
answered my letter.&#13;
I couldn't have done the&#13;
book if I didn't have some damn&#13;
good sources right in the&#13;
organization.&#13;
Newscope: Do you think there&#13;
is much weight behind the&#13;
recent criticism directed at the&#13;
press concerning objectivity,&#13;
etc.?&#13;
Royko: I think newspapers&#13;
are probably more accurate,&#13;
more responsible than they&#13;
were when I started in the&#13;
business. You don't have the old&#13;
cops-and-robbers mentality on&#13;
newspapers anymore. You have&#13;
fewer police reporters on&#13;
newspapers than in the past.&#13;
They hung around police&#13;
stations to cover police news,&#13;
most of which reflected the&#13;
point of view of the police&#13;
department.&#13;
But every story is slanted&#13;
one way or another. I don't&#13;
know how you could ever put out&#13;
a scrupulously fair newspaper.&#13;
What newspapers should try to&#13;
do basically, is print the facts as&#13;
they find them. I don't think we&#13;
should try to print the truth&#13;
because how the hell do we&#13;
know what the truth is?&#13;
I think in general,&#13;
newspapers should make very&#13;
clear what is an attempt to print&#13;
facts and what is a writers'&#13;
opinion. When people read a&#13;
news account they're entitled to&#13;
know they're getting an attempt&#13;
at objectivity and as many facts&#13;
(Continued,on Page 6)&#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE July 26,1971&#13;
TO&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Maybe it's something in&#13;
the air, or just a feeling one&#13;
gets once in a while, but it&#13;
would almost seem to me,&#13;
possibly others as well, that&#13;
a type of conspiracy has&#13;
developed here at the&#13;
University of Dust and Dirt.&#13;
It seems that no matter&#13;
which way you look, there is&#13;
someone standing behind&#13;
you waiting to take any&#13;
monies you may have, will&#13;
have, or might have.&#13;
Although there are lesser&#13;
rip-offs (in terms of&#13;
amounts) which are a part&#13;
of this campus's day to day&#13;
life, one only has to look to&#13;
the south of Tallent Hall and&#13;
view the enormous erection&#13;
known as Parkside Village.&#13;
I can remember back&#13;
when several of o ur leaders&#13;
participated in the various&#13;
hoi palloi involved in&#13;
making the announcement&#13;
that student on (or close to)&#13;
campus housing was to be&#13;
built by private developers&#13;
with the students in mind.&#13;
Sounded really nice until the&#13;
developers oiled up their&#13;
cash registers and laid down&#13;
their brochures. What was&#13;
that now? Somewhere&#13;
around 35 dollars for a one&#13;
bedroom el cheapo pad.&#13;
Sounded pretty cheap until&#13;
your "friend" pointed out&#13;
that the occupancy of such a&#13;
room can only be had that&#13;
cheap with the addition of&#13;
three other roommates. Use&#13;
your imagination, you'll fit&#13;
'em all in.&#13;
As a transfer student at&#13;
UWP from WSU-O, I was&#13;
really surprised to find that&#13;
while providing a listing of&#13;
apartments in the area, the&#13;
University seemingly did&#13;
nothing to insure the&#13;
prospective occupants a&#13;
suitable place to live. I'm&#13;
not saying that the "village"&#13;
roofs will leak or things of&#13;
such nature, but rather&#13;
lacks basic student needs&#13;
like a measure of privacy,&#13;
ample study area and&#13;
facilities including a desk&#13;
for each resident, plenty of&#13;
shelving, closet room, etc.&#13;
From the view portrayed in&#13;
the sketches shown it sure&#13;
looks as if the village will&#13;
fall far short of this and if&#13;
these items are planned for&#13;
inclusion, why were they not&#13;
shown in the sketches instead&#13;
of that spacious twobed&#13;
comfortable living&#13;
bullshit when your rates are&#13;
for four occupants.&#13;
In closing all I wish to say&#13;
is that for any poor student&#13;
who has no choice when&#13;
renting a PV apartment&#13;
The runaway bestseller is on the screen.&#13;
COLUMBIA PICTURES Prasenls Sean Connery&#13;
in A ROBERT M. WEITMAN PRODUCTION The Anderson Jf Tapes&#13;
ORPHEUM A UNITED ARTISTS THEATRE&#13;
STARTS&#13;
AUGUST 4th&#13;
—I— a-1^ 9TWDC&#13;
UUkV Ol&#13;
(\ £&gt;e n i? n&#13;
LAST CHANCE THIS WEEK WE MUST BEGIN TO RETURN&#13;
ALL REMAINING TEXTBOOK S TO THE&#13;
PUBLISHERS. IF YOU ST I L L NEE D BOOKS,&#13;
GET THEM NOW, WHILE THEY ARE S T IL L&#13;
AVA I LABLE. UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
ought to get his head&#13;
together with the others in&#13;
the form of a tenants' union&#13;
or something because&#13;
village people are here to rip&#13;
students off a s deep as they&#13;
can.&#13;
MarcH. Colby&#13;
P.S.: Almost forgot to tell&#13;
ya, if you want furniture, it&#13;
will cost extra per month. If&#13;
you want a sun deck it's&#13;
gonna cost some more&#13;
money as will a phone and&#13;
air conditioning. If you're&#13;
single, even though you're&#13;
paying rent, you won't be&#13;
allowed to park at the&#13;
village; it seems that some&#13;
sort of arrangement will be&#13;
worked out with the&#13;
University for the Tallent&#13;
lot, and who knows, maybe&#13;
that will cost extra too.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Last week the Science&#13;
Division Executive Committee&#13;
of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin - Parkside,&#13;
chaired by Dr. Norbert&#13;
Isenberg, made public its&#13;
decision not to alter its&#13;
previous recommendation&#13;
regarding renewal of the&#13;
contract of Dr. James&#13;
Russell Brokaw. It affirmed&#13;
its decision of April 2, when&#13;
it recommended nonrenewal&#13;
of Dr. Brokaw's&#13;
contract.&#13;
The Brokaw Defense&#13;
League protests this recent&#13;
act of the Executive&#13;
Committee. In the open&#13;
hearing of June 24, Dr.&#13;
Brokaw showed all of the&#13;
stated reasons for nonrenewal&#13;
given by the&#13;
Committee to be invalid.&#13;
Further, the dual role&#13;
played by Dr. William&#13;
Morrow, who acted both as a&#13;
member of the Executive&#13;
Committee and as Dean of&#13;
the College of Science and&#13;
Society, casts doubts on the&#13;
legality of the original&#13;
recommendation of April 2.&#13;
The BDL has written a&#13;
letter to Dean Morrow,&#13;
e x p r e s s i n g o u r&#13;
dissatisfaction with several&#13;
matters relating to the&#13;
organization of the open&#13;
hearing. Our primary&#13;
concern was the lack of&#13;
notification of Dr. Brokaw's&#13;
access to his file, and written&#13;
notification of the&#13;
hearing itself, until two days&#13;
before the hearing.&#13;
We feel it is significant&#13;
that a large volume of data&#13;
was submitted to Dr.&#13;
Brokaw's file after the&#13;
Executive Committee had&#13;
already made its decision&#13;
for non-renewal, apparently&#13;
as justification for its&#13;
THE&#13;
decision. There are ar large&#13;
number of documents in the&#13;
file dated June 3, just three&#13;
weeks before the hearing.&#13;
Another matter of concern&#13;
is the testimony introduced&#13;
at the open hearing which&#13;
suggests that the Chancellor&#13;
was involved in the&#13;
Executive Committee&#13;
decision. This testimony&#13;
also could invalidate the&#13;
April 2 recommendation of&#13;
the committee.&#13;
While the final decision&#13;
must rest with Dr. Brokaw,&#13;
the Brokaw Defense League&#13;
believes that preparations&#13;
for the open hearing have&#13;
produced a strong legal case&#13;
and we are urging him to&#13;
take legal action against the&#13;
University toward a&#13;
resolution of these issues.&#13;
Nancy MacKay&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I would like to make a few&#13;
remarks on Mayor Huck's&#13;
statements, on the&#13;
restraining order the&#13;
federal courts gave the city&#13;
concerning the denial of&#13;
liquor licenses to the three&#13;
go go bars.&#13;
I would like to remind you&#13;
that Racine didn't waste any&#13;
time going to federal court,&#13;
when they were going to&#13;
close the coast guard&#13;
1&#13;
it's the 1&#13;
real thing [&#13;
Cc ijoy )V&#13;
New Salary Protection&#13;
During the first week of&#13;
August, classified employees&#13;
should receive information&#13;
and application&#13;
forms for a new Salary&#13;
Protection plan offered by&#13;
the University. Academic&#13;
personnel will be receiving&#13;
information in early October.&#13;
This voluntary coverage&#13;
will guarantee at least 60&#13;
per cent of gross salary at&#13;
age 65 should an employee&#13;
become disabled either on&#13;
or off the job. An individual&#13;
will know in advance the&#13;
amount of benefits that will&#13;
be received, regardless of&#13;
how much may or may not&#13;
be paid by Workmen's&#13;
Compensation, social&#13;
security, or retirement&#13;
plans. Individuals may&#13;
select a 30, 60, 90 o r 365 day&#13;
waiting period to fit their&#13;
personal needs. Premiums&#13;
(based on the waiting&#13;
period, gross salary, and&#13;
age) will be payroll&#13;
deducted month.y.&#13;
Details on the plan and&#13;
rates will be included in the&#13;
information packet.&#13;
Questions on the plan should&#13;
be referred to the Personnel&#13;
and Payroll Office, Tallent&#13;
Hall, telephone number&#13;
2204.&#13;
Security School&#13;
Three members of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside protection and&#13;
security staff are attending&#13;
an eight-week course at the&#13;
Wisconsin State Patrol&#13;
Academy at Camp McCoy.&#13;
They are William Cartner,&#13;
Burnell Anderson and&#13;
Richard Atkins, all of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The course, which runs&#13;
through Sept. 2, will give the&#13;
men the same training as&#13;
state patrol officers get in&#13;
their first eight weeks at the&#13;
academy.&#13;
Newscope&#13;
CARL'S P IZZA 9" - 12" - 14" - 16" 4&#13;
ALSO 1&#13;
In Four Sizes&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARHY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU KING . . . WP BUNG"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
Editor Warren Nedry&#13;
Copy Editor JohnKoloen&#13;
News Editor Marc Eisen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Business Manager John Gray&#13;
NEWS STAFF&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Darrell Borger,&#13;
James Casper, Jim Koloen, Bill&#13;
Sorensen.&#13;
CONTRIBUTING&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Mike Stevesand, Janet Sabol,&#13;
Mike Starr.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella, Dave Kraus,&#13;
Don Marjara, Barb Scott.&#13;
PHONES&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
Summer Newscope is&#13;
independent student newspi&#13;
composed and published we&#13;
through the summer sessioi&#13;
students of the University&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Stu'&#13;
obtained advertising funds&#13;
the sole source of revenue&#13;
the operation of Newscope. (&#13;
copies are printed&#13;
distributed through&#13;
Kenosha and Racine c&#13;
munities as well as&#13;
University. Free copies&#13;
available upon request.&#13;
July 26,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
station, and again against&#13;
Mt. Pleasant. To go so far as&#13;
to say "federal courts&#13;
should stay out of local&#13;
government", is a disgrace&#13;
to the whole American&#13;
system. When a mayor lets&#13;
his Aldermen disregard the&#13;
United States Constitution&#13;
like Aid. Frank Barry does,&#13;
then by all means the&#13;
federal courts are needed.&#13;
After all Racine is still part&#13;
of the United States. I do&#13;
think it's a shame that&#13;
citizens of Racine have to go&#13;
to federal court to protect&#13;
their rights as Americans.&#13;
I do agree with the Mayor&#13;
on full time aldermen. By&#13;
having full time aldermen,&#13;
we'd be able to get some&#13;
qualified aldermen, because&#13;
I think that most of our&#13;
present aldermen do not&#13;
qualify to hold the office in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
In conclusion I think we&#13;
pay enough tax money, not&#13;
to have Aid. Frank Barry&#13;
and Mr. Edward Krenzke&#13;
waste it in court battles, now&#13;
I see Racine even hired&#13;
another attorney, for the gogo&#13;
issue. All they're doing is&#13;
trying to take away people's&#13;
rights as Americans, with&#13;
their stand. If they insist,&#13;
then let them pay the cost of&#13;
this outside attorney, and&#13;
the whole court cost out of&#13;
their own pockets. I personally&#13;
don't want to pay for&#13;
any of their future campaigns,&#13;
with my taxes! And&#13;
why does Mr. Krenzke even&#13;
need this attorney in the&#13;
first place? Doesn't he have&#13;
enough confidence in&#13;
himself, or isn't he&#13;
qualified? I do realize that&#13;
taking away American&#13;
people's rights in a federal&#13;
court is a hard if not impossible&#13;
job.&#13;
The question I would like&#13;
to ask is: If the city is&#13;
successful in taking away&#13;
the go-go bars liquor&#13;
licenses, what have they&#13;
proved? They'll continue&#13;
with the same type of entertainment,&#13;
only without&#13;
liquor. Then you realize&#13;
people under 21 years old&#13;
will be allowed in, and they&#13;
wouldn't have any set&#13;
closing time, (all night). So&#13;
as long as the owners are&#13;
still willing to talk to the city&#13;
and reach an agreement,&#13;
why doesn't the city do so?&#13;
If the go-go bars do win in&#13;
court, which it looks like&#13;
they will, then what? At&#13;
least now they're willing to&#13;
bend a little so why&#13;
shouldn't Aid. Barry???&#13;
Charlene Kuipuo&#13;
Look What Happened&#13;
To Student Government&#13;
by Mark Timpany&#13;
Special Correspondent&#13;
The Parkside Student&#13;
Government Association&#13;
met last Tuesday night at 7&#13;
p.m. and passed two&#13;
resolutions relating to the&#13;
latest non-renewals of&#13;
Parkside faculty members.&#13;
The first resolution&#13;
directed the PSGA&#13;
Corresponding Secretary to&#13;
communicate in written&#13;
form dissatisfaction with&#13;
the latest non-renewals to&#13;
President Weaver, Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie, the Chairman&#13;
of th e Board of Regents, the&#13;
Secretary of the Faculty&#13;
Senate, and the Secretary of&#13;
the Faculty.&#13;
The resolution stated,&#13;
"The manner in which they&#13;
were conducted leads to the&#13;
question of whether the nonrenewals&#13;
were political&#13;
rather than academic.&#13;
Communications shall ask&#13;
for immediate action on the&#13;
December 10 policy&#13;
statement of the Chancellor&#13;
and a moratorium on&#13;
faculty non-renewals until&#13;
such time as the policies&#13;
stated by the Chancellor&#13;
have been implemented."&#13;
The second resolution&#13;
directed Gary Davis,&#13;
Chairman of the PSGA's&#13;
Academic Policies Committee,&#13;
and other interested&#13;
members of the Student&#13;
Government Association, to&#13;
travel to Madison on the&#13;
Brokaw Defense League's&#13;
bus trip to Madison to meet&#13;
with President Weaver in&#13;
order to report back to the&#13;
Student Government on the&#13;
outcome of that meeting.&#13;
The second resolution also&#13;
charged Gary Davis, "time&#13;
and conditions permitting,&#13;
to solicit the opinions of&#13;
President Weaver concerning&#13;
the recent nonrenewals."&#13;
The members discussed&#13;
means of making student&#13;
government more visible to&#13;
the student body and of&#13;
allowing for greater participation&#13;
by the student&#13;
body in the decision making&#13;
processes of student&#13;
government.&#13;
the next meeting of the&#13;
PSGA was scheduled for&#13;
Friday, July 30, at 3:30 p.m.&#13;
CHAT N CHEW 1&#13;
X'&#13;
y,&#13;
«&#13;
William Ross (second from left) of the Water Resources Division of the United States&#13;
Geological Survey in Madison explains to UW-Parkside geography students how to take&#13;
various kinds of measurements on the Pike River.&#13;
UWP Decl a r es Wa r On Pi k e&#13;
The opening volley in an&#13;
all-out war on the polluted&#13;
Pike River has been fired by&#13;
a summer geography class&#13;
at the University of&#13;
W isconsin-Parkside.&#13;
The class, "Special&#13;
Problems of the Pike&#13;
River", is taking to the field&#13;
and laboratories to gather&#13;
basic data about the river,&#13;
which originates in Mt.&#13;
Pleasant, just west of the&#13;
city of Racine, and empties&#13;
into Lake Michigan on the&#13;
north side of Kenosha.&#13;
Ultimate victory will&#13;
depend on adequate support&#13;
of a comprehensive and&#13;
systematic battle plan&#13;
drawn up by UW-P&#13;
specialists, and an alliance&#13;
among the university and&#13;
the five townships and cities&#13;
through which the offending&#13;
river flows. Restoring a&#13;
polluted river, even a small&#13;
one which meanders only 15&#13;
miles through two counties,&#13;
is a major ecological&#13;
project.&#13;
But the recreational and&#13;
esthetic dividends which&#13;
would accrue from a clean&#13;
Pike River flowing through&#13;
the heavily populated&#13;
southeastern corner of the&#13;
state, including the 700-acre&#13;
Parkside campus, has&#13;
stireed enthusiasm on the&#13;
part of city and county officials&#13;
of Racine and&#13;
Kenosha and the townships&#13;
of Mt. Pleasant, Sturtevant&#13;
and Somers.&#13;
UW-P staff share their&#13;
enthusiasm and see the&#13;
project as a way to help&#13;
fulfill the new university's&#13;
formal educational mission&#13;
| 40th Avenue &amp; 5 2nd Street&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
| SUNDAY THR U THURSDAY |&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS 40&lt; &amp; 24( §&#13;
| SUPERCHEW (Triple de cker) %&#13;
| 55&lt; I&#13;
RELAX&#13;
^fllTrfrTTTTTT^&#13;
JNBOW GARDENS!&#13;
AMUSEMENT CENTER&#13;
MINI-GOLF&#13;
ARCHERY&#13;
87th &amp; SHERIDAN RD.&#13;
of relating and responding&#13;
to the needs of its industrial,&#13;
rapidly growing urban&#13;
setting.&#13;
The class will update&#13;
mapping of the entire river&#13;
and its tributaries, determine&#13;
its discharge through&#13;
depth, width and flow&#13;
measurements at critical&#13;
points, pinpoint pollution&#13;
points, particularly uncharted&#13;
field tiles which&#13;
enter the river below water&#13;
level, and analyze water&#13;
samples for various kinds of&#13;
chemical and thermal&#13;
pollution.&#13;
That kind of raw data,&#13;
essential to a serious effort&#13;
to restore the river, is either&#13;
incomplete or non-existent.&#13;
But everyone knows the&#13;
river is polluted.&#13;
Bathers know it every&#13;
time a quarter-inch of rain&#13;
raises the Pike's pollution to&#13;
unsafe levels and forces city&#13;
officials to close Kenosha's&#13;
expansive Lake Michigan&#13;
beaches for two or three&#13;
days.&#13;
Picnickers at parks along&#13;
its banks know it when the&#13;
aroma of c harcoal is lost in&#13;
the Pike's own pungency.&#13;
Warning signs seem only&#13;
to belabor the obvious.&#13;
Cooperation and support&#13;
from city and township&#13;
officials has been excellent,&#13;
according to the class instructor,&#13;
Chelvadurai&#13;
Manogaran, assistant&#13;
professor of geography at&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Information about the&#13;
river gathered to date by the&#13;
various municipalities has&#13;
been made available to the&#13;
class, and officials have&#13;
encouraged land owners to&#13;
allow access to the private&#13;
property they have to cross&#13;
to reach the river.&#13;
Both Kenosha and Racine&#13;
health departments have&#13;
made their laboratories and&#13;
equipment available to the&#13;
students who are doing&#13;
chemical analysis, and the&#13;
Kenosha public works&#13;
department has provided&#13;
instruction in surveying and&#13;
provided instruments.&#13;
A Somers official experienced&#13;
in chemical&#13;
analysis of the river has&#13;
trained students in water&#13;
sampling and location of&#13;
field tiles.&#13;
Mt. Pleasant officials&#13;
invited Manogaran and the&#13;
students to the town board&#13;
meeting and pledged support.&#13;
State and federal agencies&#13;
also have expressed interest&#13;
in the project. An engineer&#13;
from the United States&#13;
Geological Survey (USGS)&#13;
in Madison visited the&#13;
campus to instruct students&#13;
in measuring techniques.&#13;
Later this fall the USGS and&#13;
UW-P will establish a&#13;
permanent measuring&#13;
station on campus to record&#13;
water level, rate of flow and&#13;
pollution levels.&#13;
In addition to field work,&#13;
members of the class meet&#13;
three hours per week for&#13;
lecture and discussion. The&#13;
data gathering process,&#13;
which cannot be completed&#13;
in an eight-week summer&#13;
course, will be continued in&#13;
the fall.&#13;
PEPSI-COLA&#13;
Kenosha Racine&#13;
:iS±*&#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPK July 26,1971&#13;
Freddie Hubbard&#13;
"Straight Live"&#13;
CTI Records&#13;
CTI 6007&#13;
Freddie Hubbard —&#13;
Trumpet-Flueglglehorn&#13;
Ron Carter — B ass&#13;
Jack DeJohnette — Drums&#13;
Herbie Hancock — Piano&#13;
Joe Henderson —&#13;
Tenor Sax&#13;
Richard "Pablo" Landrum&#13;
Percussion&#13;
George Benson — Guitar&#13;
Finding a really good jazz&#13;
album is getting to be a&#13;
problem. Not that there&#13;
aren't plenty of t hem on the&#13;
market, but in searching&#13;
through the overabundant&#13;
dead weight one might&#13;
become considerably&#13;
frustrated. Jazz unfortunately&#13;
has found it&#13;
profitable to commercialize.&#13;
The hierarchy of the inby&#13;
Bob Borchardt&#13;
of The Newscope Staff&#13;
dustry has presented the&#13;
public with a line of slicklyproduced&#13;
cutely-covered&#13;
albums that when played&#13;
reveal nothing more than&#13;
the sound track of the "Bill&#13;
Cosby Show".&#13;
While Quincy Jones has&#13;
done a lot to further the&#13;
course of jazz in the mass&#13;
media since taking over as&#13;
musical director for the&#13;
show, the music is nevertheless&#13;
watered down,&#13;
lacking purpose and conviction.&#13;
It certainly isn't a&#13;
style that deserves to&#13;
dominate the market in a&#13;
time when so much really&#13;
innovative talent is around.&#13;
Furthermore, to present a&#13;
"complete" line of jazz, the&#13;
moneymen have felt it&#13;
necessary to record&#13;
everything from sloppy&#13;
Dixieland to fertility rites. If&#13;
your tastes lie somewhere in&#13;
between, you are left with&#13;
two choices: trusting a&#13;
record reviewer or finding a&#13;
shop where the proprietor is&#13;
so benevolent as to let you&#13;
play his entire stock before&#13;
making a selection. While&#13;
the former is dubious, the&#13;
latter is impossible and so&#13;
you are left with the lesser&#13;
of two evils.&#13;
"Strait Life" is the prize&#13;
of the hunt. Deep amid the&#13;
jungles of Don Sebelsky and&#13;
Ramsey Lewis the album&#13;
was discovered cooly&#13;
awaiting its chance to&#13;
strike. It's a record that's&#13;
gone well beyond Quincy but&#13;
would be hard pressed to&#13;
find much of a camaraderie&#13;
with Sun Ra and his Solar&#13;
Arkestra. It very definitely&#13;
swings, which above all else&#13;
is the trademark and beauty&#13;
of jazz itself.&#13;
Listening to "Mr. Clean"&#13;
should prove the point. De&#13;
Johnette on drums, Carter&#13;
on bass and Benson on&#13;
guitar join to form the&#13;
perfect rhythm section,&#13;
something a jazz soloist&#13;
UDIO I&#13;
would like to find under the&#13;
Christmas tree. They serve&#13;
more than just a&#13;
background, uniting to&#13;
spark ideas for the soloist —&#13;
a sort of musical thesarus. It&#13;
serves to enhance the&#13;
amazing things that Hubbard&#13;
does on trumpet. His&#13;
range gives him the use of&#13;
an almost unexplored&#13;
frontier as he weaves ideas&#13;
into complete pictures.&#13;
On piano, Hancock once&#13;
again proves his supremacy&#13;
at the jazz keyboard. Never&#13;
content to stay with the&#13;
standard phrases or ideas,&#13;
he constantly explores,&#13;
often coming with amazing&#13;
results.&#13;
The high point, however,&#13;
is "Here's That Rainy&#13;
Day". Miles has done it, Diz&#13;
has done it, but Hubbard&#13;
proves it to be his tune. The&#13;
combination of this song and&#13;
Hubbard's lyric fluglehorn&#13;
shows him to be the horn&#13;
player critics hoped he&#13;
would be with the release of&#13;
his first recordings. Hubbard&#13;
proves to be one man&#13;
who has listened and&#13;
learned.&#13;
Eating In&#13;
By Prof. Koch&#13;
Mueller elbow macaroni&#13;
offers these two "tested&#13;
recipes" which are good for&#13;
quick summer meals.&#13;
Elbow Macaroni&#13;
and Cheese&#13;
What you need:&#13;
1 Pkg. elbow macaroni&#13;
1 tablespoon butter&#13;
1 tablespoon flour&#13;
1 teaspoon salt&#13;
2V4 cups milk&#13;
cups grated Cheddar&#13;
cheese&#13;
2 te aspoon paprika&#13;
What to do:&#13;
Melt butter, blend in flour&#13;
and salt, add milk and cook.&#13;
Stir until cheese melts. Cook&#13;
elbow macaroni as directed&#13;
on side panel. Combine&#13;
cooked elbow macaroni with&#13;
sauce in a greased&#13;
casserole. Sprinkle top with&#13;
paprika. Bake in moderate&#13;
(375 degree) oven 25&#13;
minutes. Makes 6 s ervings.&#13;
Elbow Macaroni Salad&#13;
What you need:&#13;
1 pkg. elbow macaroni&#13;
4 c up mayonnaise&#13;
1 tablespoon lemon juice&#13;
1 teaspoon salt&#13;
1 teaspoon sugar&#13;
'/4 teaspoon celery seed&#13;
1 tomato diced&#13;
1 cup diced celery&#13;
2 pime&#13;
2 pimientos, chopped&#13;
tablespoons green&#13;
pepper&#13;
chopped — if desired&#13;
What to do:&#13;
Cook elbow macaroni as&#13;
directed on side panel, rinse&#13;
with cold water, drain. Mix&#13;
mayonnaise with lemon&#13;
juice, salt and sugar&#13;
Combine cooled elbow&#13;
macaroni, vegetables&#13;
celery seed and mayonnaise&#13;
m i x t u r e , b l e n d i n g&#13;
thoroughly. Serve on crisp&#13;
lettuce leaves and garnish&#13;
with radish roses. Makes 6-8&#13;
servings. i-n'i sot&#13;
mm&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Teenager, the star of recent 7-Up Uncola&#13;
ads on TV, came through town last week on&#13;
some sort of tour. I was chosen as his official&#13;
guide during his stay, and although the task&#13;
was somewhat hard, many felt that I would do a&#13;
fine job, especially with my imagination.&#13;
I was to pick him up at the Chicago and&#13;
Northwestern train station at noon. Because of&#13;
other details surrounding his visit, I was&#13;
delayed for almost half an hour.&#13;
When I did arrive, I expected to find him&#13;
either waiting restlessly on the platform, or&#13;
sitting aimlessly in the station. He was in&#13;
neither place. I decided to call the Uncola&#13;
people to see if he had come, when I spotted&#13;
him. He was pitching pennies in the alley next&#13;
to Becker's Cigar Store with a various assortment&#13;
of high school drop-outs.&#13;
He was a vision out of th e past. About 5 feet&#13;
9 inches tall, with the beginnings of a beer belly&#13;
and a mustache. He was fresh from the barber&#13;
with a Hollywood hair style, a worn, leather&#13;
jacket with zipper pockets thrown over his&#13;
shoulder, sleeveless tee-shirt and a pair of&#13;
greasy levis choking his hips.&#13;
Realizing that I would have to make him&#13;
feel at home, I had come prepared to pick him&#13;
up. I wore a tight pair of black pants with cuffs,&#13;
white socks, a black tee-shirt with a pack of&#13;
Camels rolled up in the sleeve, and a fine pair of&#13;
pointed black shoes with lightning bolts up the&#13;
sides. My hair weighed in at about three&#13;
pounds, parted down the middle, slick as a&#13;
sewer cap in the rain.&#13;
I had borrowed a '56 Chevy with crome&#13;
reverse, a tape player, and various other articles&#13;
that would make any teenager proud. 11&#13;
also bought Flamin Groovies and Sha-na-na!&#13;
tapes, and a six pack of beer. I greeted him with1&#13;
my best "New Yawk" accent. When he saw me,&#13;
he slid a comb through his hair, glanced from&#13;
side to side, and hopped into the car, bidding his&#13;
penny pitchers a "catch ya around."&#13;
One of the reasons I was picked as his guide&#13;
was because I could take Teenager "to lunch&#13;
based on all my experience with this column. I&#13;
had to think of a place where Teenager would&#13;
be welcome, and fit in. Someone had told me&#13;
that beneath all the grease, Teenager was a&#13;
warm, tender person. I tried to think of a place&#13;
where the hamburgers would fit the same&#13;
criteria.&#13;
On the corner of 22nd Avenue and 75th&#13;
Street I took Teenager for a late dinner. The&#13;
Spot proved to be an excellent place where we&#13;
both could relax, dig the atmosphere, and feel&#13;
at home. There were other reasons I picked this&#13;
place.&#13;
There is constant police protection at The&#13;
Spot. I can't really remember the last time I&#13;
failed to see at least one police car protecting&#13;
the citizens while they ate hamburgers. At least&#13;
here, Teenager wouldn't get into a rumble.&#13;
Another reason we went to this drive-in was&#13;
because the prices are pretty good. Although&#13;
hamburgers are forty cents, they are famous. A&#13;
"Spot Hamburger" is one step above a regular&#13;
one, it seems. This is the most popular eating&#13;
place after ten p.m. in the entire county.&#13;
The service is fast, as the car-hops rely on&#13;
tips from the customers to supplement their&#13;
wages. The food is very good in my book, all the&#13;
way from the chicken to hot dogs. The item that&#13;
draws the most people though is ice cold root&#13;
beer.&#13;
Teenager and I each downed a couple of&#13;
hamburgers and French fries. He watched the&#13;
car-hops smile and scurry from car to car. Car&#13;
radios and tape players composed a sort of&#13;
original moog synthesized ballad, as Teenager&#13;
and I washed down root beer after root beer&#13;
while watching bugs bounce off of the neon&#13;
signs.&#13;
Teenager was thumbing his nose at the&#13;
Uncola generation as he sat back and relived&#13;
the fifties at the only place in Kenosha he really&#13;
could in style, The Spot.&#13;
THAT CIGAR SHAPED&#13;
THING IN THE SKY&#13;
Elke Sommer&#13;
Erika Sltschul&#13;
Michael York&#13;
Jeffrey Richter Douglas&#13;
Ettienne Perier&#13;
Director&#13;
This was one week that I&#13;
had a little difficulty finding&#13;
a film worth watching, let&#13;
alone reviewing. I chose a&#13;
picture that lies somewhere&#13;
between the "Blue Max"&#13;
and "2001, A Space&#13;
Odyssey". It was about&#13;
World War I and the famous&#13;
zeppelins . . . or at least for&#13;
the first ten minutes of the&#13;
film, that's what I thought it&#13;
was about.&#13;
Instead, it turned out to be&#13;
one of the most far-fetched&#13;
films I have ever seen. We&#13;
find the World War I German&#13;
zeppelin turning into a&#13;
Flash Gordon-like vehicle,&#13;
complete with Elke Sommer&#13;
as Dale, dressed in this&#13;
year's leather, which will,&#13;
no doubt, catch on. As an&#13;
added spectacle, espionage&#13;
is included in the form of a&#13;
none too willing Scottish spy&#13;
(Michael York). This was&#13;
T only the beginning? • - ;&#13;
A technically impressive&#13;
job of miniaturization&#13;
turned immensity our&#13;
Goodyear blimp is so&#13;
grandiose that I could&#13;
almost see Sigmond Freud&#13;
turn over in his grave . . .&#13;
What more fitting creature&#13;
to have running around,&#13;
inside of, on top of and&#13;
underneath this monstrosity&#13;
than Elke Sommer? Cliff&#13;
Richardson must be commended&#13;
for special effects&#13;
for they were impressive.&#13;
The story concerns a&#13;
Scottish lieutenant whc&#13;
conveniently has relatives&#13;
in Germany and France. He&#13;
is sent to Germany by the&#13;
British to discover the&#13;
secret of bl imp No. LZ36; he&#13;
is more than successful, of&#13;
course. Elke comes into the&#13;
picture as the wife of our&#13;
spy's former professor,&#13;
extremely educated and&#13;
beautiful, the cliche which&#13;
she will always be.&#13;
We find the Germans have&#13;
a plan too . . . The Scot is to&#13;
get them to a Scottish castle&#13;
where, it just so happens,&#13;
the Magna Carta and other&#13;
pieces of historical value&#13;
are being stored for the&#13;
duration. These are to be&#13;
destroyed or captured. It is&#13;
all a success until our hero,&#13;
who by the way has a fear of&#13;
heights, throws a wrench in&#13;
the works. In the end, Elke&#13;
and Michael plus a few&#13;
nondescript crewmen&#13;
escape to France, where the&#13;
great blimp burns. This&#13;
fantasy is sprinkled with&#13;
blood and bodies alike, and&#13;
this in particular makes it a&#13;
lousy film.&#13;
On the same bill with this&#13;
flick was an even more&#13;
disgusting example of much&#13;
of the same. It was a John&#13;
Wayne blockbuster that&#13;
plays on all the heart strings&#13;
that make this country at&#13;
least partially sick. It is&#13;
probably the worst film I've&#13;
ever seen in my life. It is&#13;
called "Chisum" and makes&#13;
"Zeppelin" look good in&#13;
comparison. They are both&#13;
Warner Brothers products,&#13;
which seems also to be&#13;
saying something.&#13;
When these films come to&#13;
town, get yourself an old Tshirt,&#13;
a can of beer and stay&#13;
at home and watch NET.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
Dean Dearborn Tim Eaker&#13;
Dear New Student:&#13;
It is extremely important for a campus to have new&#13;
faces each year, for with them come fresh ideas and different&#13;
approaches. I hope that you will provide us with this&#13;
by being imaginative and enthusiastic in your involvement&#13;
in the academic and social aspects of campus life. It is far&#13;
too easy today to be negative and pessimistic. I submit that&#13;
this is the easy way out and attitudes such as these if&#13;
carried far enough could seriously harm not only this&#13;
campus but the greater society of which it is a part.&#13;
Share with us the excitement and satisfaction of&#13;
building and perfecting a new institution of higher learning.&#13;
By doing this, I am sure that one day we all will look back&#13;
with great pride at that which we collectively took part in&#13;
building.&#13;
I am pleased to extend to you the welcome of Chancellor&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie and the entire Parkside community. We are&#13;
happy that you have chosen this campus for attaining your&#13;
educational goals and in those pursuits we wish you the very&#13;
best.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn&#13;
Dean of Students&#13;
The Parkside Student Government&#13;
Association welcomes those who have never&#13;
attended this campus, especially those new to&#13;
the college environment. You will find that&#13;
college becomes a different "society" from&#13;
that which you may be accustomed. It is the&#13;
transitory stage from home life to independent&#13;
life styles in society at large. In&#13;
keeping with this view, Parkside sustains that&#13;
kind of community life in which the student's&#13;
total educational experience is deepened and&#13;
enriched. The college encourages selfgovernment&#13;
and grants as much personal&#13;
freedom as is consistent with the best interests&#13;
of the individual and the group.&#13;
The social life of the campus — a most&#13;
important part of college society — c enters&#13;
around events planned for the entire student&#13;
body and includes many informal dances,&#13;
movies, lectures, concerts and most any other&#13;
activity you could be interested in. There is a&#13;
good selection of student organizations but&#13;
their success is dependent on your interest&#13;
and support.&#13;
I hope that some of you will seriously&#13;
consider taking an active part in Student&#13;
Government while attending Parkside. This&#13;
will be our first full year of operation which&#13;
can provide you with unique experience of&#13;
organizing a governing body. Participation in&#13;
Student Government fosters the development&#13;
of responsibility, leadership ^pd dependability&#13;
which are demanded of the collegetrained&#13;
individual. The Student Senate is&#13;
composed of five Officers and seventeen&#13;
Senators, elected in the eighth week of t he fall&#13;
semester from the student body at large. It&#13;
sponsors certain all-campus social functions,&#13;
considers matters of student interest and&#13;
welfare, and serves as an agency whereby&#13;
sentiment and initiative may help determine&#13;
college policy and practice.&#13;
I would like to again welcome you to&#13;
Parkside and hope that -I get the chance to&#13;
meet most of you sometime during the next&#13;
year. Student Government is to serve your&#13;
needs and it can be successful only with your&#13;
cooperation and help. Take an active interest&#13;
in the University for it holds the key to your&#13;
future.&#13;
Tim Eaker, President&#13;
P.S.G.A.&#13;
University of&#13;
W isconsin-Parkside&#13;
\&lt;) I'AHKIV*- IX tl'XTiai&#13;
vim; UW&#13;
The office of Auxiliary Enterprises&#13;
encompasses the Student&#13;
Activities Building, student&#13;
lounges, food and vending service,&#13;
the bookstore, Student Housing&#13;
Services, and any special luncheons&#13;
or dinners held on the&#13;
campus.&#13;
The Student Activities Building&#13;
is located on Wood Road just south&#13;
of Tallent Hall. During the&#13;
academic year, it is open from 8:00&#13;
A.M. to 10:00 P.M. and until 1:00&#13;
A.M. on weekends during&#13;
programmed events. The majority&#13;
of programmed events are held in&#13;
this building. In this building, as&#13;
well as in the student lounges at&#13;
Racine and Kenosha, hot meals are&#13;
served during the noon hour and&#13;
full-line vending is also available.&#13;
Beer is also available in Student&#13;
Activities Building.&#13;
There are three locations of the&#13;
University Bookstore. The main&#13;
store is located just south of the&#13;
Student Activities Building, and&#13;
there are branch stores located on&#13;
the Racine and Kenosha campuses.&#13;
In addition to textbooks, an&#13;
assortment of paperback novels,&#13;
sweatshirts, jackets, records, and&#13;
other sundries are available at&#13;
each location.&#13;
Student Housing Services is&#13;
located in Room 278, Tallent Hall.&#13;
This office maintains an up-to-date&#13;
file of rooms, apartments, flats and,&#13;
homes that are available for&#13;
students, as well as faculty, to rent&#13;
in Kenosha and Racine, as well as&#13;
in the county.&#13;
Auxiliary Enterprises&#13;
If you want to learn, and not just what is&#13;
required, and if you want to do serious work,&#13;
the Honors Program is what you're looking for.&#13;
"It's something for those who want to get a&#13;
little more out of classes than is normally&#13;
required," Charles Kugel, the director of the&#13;
Gifted Student Program, explained.&#13;
Entrance is solely on a volunteer basis- To&#13;
enter, freshmen must have graduated in the&#13;
top 10 per cent of their class. Continuing&#13;
students must have at least a 3.25 grade point&#13;
average to be eligible.&#13;
But that rule is flexible. Anyone can take an&#13;
Honors course with the consent of the instructor,&#13;
regardles of g .p.a. or whether he has&#13;
officially applied.&#13;
To graduate with an Honors degree one&#13;
needs to have completed at least 30 c redits in&#13;
the Honors program, and to have at least a 3.25&#13;
cumulative g.p.a. To earn Honors credit one&#13;
must earn either an A or a B in a class.&#13;
Honors work might entail extra papers,&#13;
additional readings, or a one-day-a-week&#13;
luncheon-seminar. In the performing arts it&#13;
might require special recitals.&#13;
Kugel said about three fourths of all classes&#13;
offered are available for Honors credit. In most&#13;
Honors&#13;
Program&#13;
cases work is done in conjunction with regular&#13;
classes, though there will be some special&#13;
classes or special sections restricted to Honors&#13;
students.&#13;
There will be fewer of these this year,&#13;
however, because of the UW budget situation.&#13;
Central Admission has said every faculty&#13;
Newscope is in a one-time&#13;
general store at the intersection&#13;
of Wood R oad and&#13;
Hwy. A. The biggest hype&#13;
you could attach to&#13;
Newscope is that it's here.&#13;
No joke. It's so new that the&#13;
editors are looking back on&#13;
the past six months as a&#13;
rehearsal for the real thing&#13;
this fall.&#13;
That's not to say that the&#13;
editors didn't give a damn&#13;
last semester, because they&#13;
did. What it means is that it&#13;
took six months for&#13;
Newscope to get on its feet.&#13;
It started with a group of&#13;
people who wanted to write&#13;
and put out a student paper,&#13;
but for the most part none of&#13;
them had any real experience&#13;
in college journalism.&#13;
Oh yeh, there were some&#13;
who came from an underground&#13;
paper that folded&#13;
two years ago. Others have&#13;
come from area high&#13;
schools where they&#13;
m imeo g r a p h e d u n derground&#13;
rags as an&#13;
alternative to graduation.&#13;
The only thing they had in&#13;
common was the desire to&#13;
do something constructive&#13;
about what they saw around&#13;
them, and perhaps learn&#13;
from it.&#13;
At times Newscope tends&#13;
to look cooly at traditional&#13;
j o u r n a l i s m . T h o u g h&#13;
Newscope has a long way to&#13;
go before it can brag about&#13;
its content, the staff enjoys&#13;
the opportunity to experiment&#13;
with their work.&#13;
There is no standard way of&#13;
writing in Newscope, just as&#13;
there is almost no standard&#13;
anything. Each person sets&#13;
his own standards, does his&#13;
own work and learns from&#13;
his own mistakes. It's&#13;
honest work, but it ain't&#13;
steak.&#13;
Presently, there are&#13;
openings on the staff for&#13;
almost anybody, regardless&#13;
of his particular interests. If&#13;
you're into business why not&#13;
see if you can help run ours.&#13;
We have a yearly budget&#13;
projected into the tens of&#13;
thousands of dollars with&#13;
incorporation slated for&#13;
later this summer.&#13;
It is as free an&#13;
organization as there is, fFee&#13;
from administrative ties,&#13;
free from obligations to any&#13;
interest group and subject to&#13;
its own rules, the most&#13;
important of which are&#13;
economic.&#13;
If you want to work in the&#13;
office you can contribute as&#13;
much as you wish. No one&#13;
will force you to do layout if&#13;
you don't like it. But if&#13;
you've never tried it how do&#13;
you know you don't like it?&#13;
The present layout manager&#13;
never heard of layout eight&#13;
months ago. Without an&#13;
instructor to tell him what to&#13;
do he did things as he saw&#13;
them and if you want you&#13;
can do the same.&#13;
If you want to write, you&#13;
don't have to be pretentious&#13;
about it and think you can't&#13;
learn from experience. It is&#13;
not a classroom situation;&#13;
on Newscope you have to&#13;
meet deadlines, you have to&#13;
do interviews, you have to&#13;
check your own sources, you&#13;
have to do everything&#13;
yourself. There's no one to&#13;
look over your shoulder to&#13;
guide or limit you.&#13;
Newscope isn't looking for&#13;
perfection, though you&#13;
should be; Newscope just&#13;
wants to give you the chance&#13;
to make mistakes without&#13;
dropping a grade.&#13;
All you need to work for&#13;
Newscope is dedication,&#13;
p e r s e r v e r a n c e a n d&#13;
toleration; everything after&#13;
that will work itself out.&#13;
We're sure that if you take&#13;
the time to talk with a&#13;
Newscope staffer he'll be&#13;
able to tell you more.&#13;
If you need more&#13;
motivation, you can receive&#13;
credits for most work done&#13;
at Newscope. In many ways&#13;
it's one of the most innovative&#13;
programs in the&#13;
academic discipline, though&#13;
it isn't really a program.&#13;
We're as close as student&#13;
organizations will ever get&#13;
to being taken seriously,&#13;
simply because it's difficult&#13;
to ignore* a weekly paper&#13;
that prints 6,000 copies. We&#13;
have an effective medium&#13;
for communication which&#13;
you can help to develop.&#13;
member should generate 100 credit hours as a&#13;
work load, which translates to three classes of&#13;
an average of 33 students each. So if a n Honors&#13;
class has 15 students, another class will have to&#13;
make up the difference.&#13;
The practical advantages of the Honors&#13;
Program are many. The emphasis on independent&#13;
work is good training for graduate&#13;
school. An Honors graduate receives special&#13;
consideration when enrolling in graduate&#13;
school and usually in job opportunities.&#13;
Honors students register the first day of&#13;
registration in order to enroll in the classes&#13;
they want. They also receive special library&#13;
privileges and have closer contact with&#13;
professors.&#13;
While the advantages of the program are&#13;
many, student reaction to it has been disappointing&#13;
to Kugel. Only about 150 students&#13;
retistered for the program last year, and only&#13;
85 followed through. In June, only three&#13;
students graduated with Honors.&#13;
"I'm definitely not satisfied with the turnout,"&#13;
Kugel said. "The cause is a combination&#13;
of things, Student apathy is the easy answer.&#13;
Realistically, I don't feel that Kenosha and&#13;
Racine are communities that are higher&#13;
education oriented. A large percentage of the&#13;
students are going to school 'to get a better&#13;
job'."&#13;
"Even though the program concentrates on&#13;
quality in education and trys to discourage just&#13;
additional work, there is no doubt that it does&#13;
take more time."&#13;
"The people who participate in the&#13;
program think it's worthwhile and not that&#13;
much extra work," Kugel explained. "Students&#13;
don't necessarily suffer grade-wise, which&#13;
seems to be one of the bigger concerns of&#13;
students. Actually 90 per cent of t he grades are&#13;
A's and B's."&#13;
Kugel spoke of an Honors coffee hour held&#13;
last spring at which he answered questions&#13;
about the program. A student there charged&#13;
that the program was elitist.&#13;
"He felt an Honors program contributes to&#13;
an intellectual elitism. But this isn't&#13;
necessarily so. My concern is that a lot of good&#13;
kids have come out of hi gh school and into big&#13;
classes where many of the student attitudes are&#13;
indifferent. They become turned off.&#13;
'They say, 'I've sat beside these clowns for&#13;
four years in high school and they didn't do&#13;
anything there, and now I'm sitting with them&#13;
again and it's not very stimulating.'&#13;
My feeling is that we should give these&#13;
students an opportunity to get in with kids who&#13;
have the same attitudes. If this is elitism,&#13;
? conceded. "But elitism isn't the idea&#13;
behind it.&#13;
* •C*ea *s no* *° se8regate them, but to&#13;
get them into a group that has their same interests,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
The biggest handicap to the program,&#13;
Kugel thinks, is simply the lack of knowledge&#13;
about it.&#13;
fK most rewarcling thing to me has been&#13;
the enthusiasm of some of the kids involved -&#13;
many of whom started the program apprehensively,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
The Student Affairs Office offers&#13;
a vareity of counseling services.&#13;
They include academic advising,&#13;
career planning, help in reading&#13;
and learning skills, personal&#13;
counseling and draft counseling.&#13;
Academic planning includes&#13;
advice on courses, University&#13;
requirements and the choice of a&#13;
major.&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, the Coordinator&#13;
of Counseling services,&#13;
described the course of academic&#13;
advising as beginning with freshman&#13;
orientation and then continuing&#13;
until a student choses a&#13;
major and is referred to a faculty&#13;
adviser.&#13;
She feels that at times it is&#13;
preferrable to seek the advice of a&#13;
counselor rather than a faculty&#13;
member.&#13;
"We can be of extra help,&#13;
because it's not our discipline, and&#13;
we're not going to be hung up on&#13;
how many students are in each&#13;
class, Miss Echelbarger said.&#13;
"We're not trying to sell a&#13;
program.&#13;
"Last year we were at such a&#13;
developmental stage that we were&#13;
afraid that what we told students&#13;
one day might be changed by the&#13;
faculty the next. So we usually just&#13;
referred them to the faculty. Now&#13;
we have a solid base curriculum we&#13;
can work with."&#13;
"Looking at the resources we&#13;
have, and comparing them to other&#13;
Universities, I think we offer a&#13;
very good program," Miss&#13;
Echelbarger pointed out. "It's&#13;
unfortunate more students aren't&#13;
using it. But I think it's because it's&#13;
new."&#13;
Interest tests are also given as&#13;
part of career planning. It's proved&#13;
the most popular aspect of the&#13;
service.&#13;
"It's not a test," Miss&#13;
Echelbarger said, "That's the nice&#13;
thing about it. It's an interest&#13;
profile. You answer questions&#13;
regarding if you like a certain&#13;
activity. As you look at the profile,&#13;
you see there is nothing negative&#13;
about it. The only thing it does is&#13;
point out your strong interest&#13;
areas, and the areas you're not&#13;
interested in."&#13;
There are many materials&#13;
available for career planning. For&#13;
instance, if a student wants to know&#13;
what employment possibilities a&#13;
certain major will give him, there&#13;
are statistics that indicate how&#13;
many people have jobs with this&#13;
type of background. There is also a&#13;
file that shows what jobs are open&#13;
to a student when he chooses a&#13;
major.&#13;
"We're here to paint a realistic&#13;
picture of job opportunities for&#13;
students," Miss Echelbarger said.&#13;
In addition, Career Planning has&#13;
a file of graduate school&#13;
catalogues.&#13;
Reading and study skills counseling&#13;
hasn't been fully developed&#13;
yet. The faculty does offer a course&#13;
in reading improvement.&#13;
"We're not here to teach the&#13;
courses, we're here to help individuals&#13;
who need help. We have&#13;
the equipment to help them," Miss&#13;
Echelbarger explained.&#13;
She calls the study systems&#13;
fantastic. They were devised by the&#13;
University of Minnesota and help a&#13;
student develop his own study&#13;
techniques.&#13;
Tutoring is available also: Except,&#13;
as Miss Echelbarger noted,&#13;
few students, no matter how much&#13;
academic trouble they're in, are&#13;
willing to pay a tutor $2 an hour for&#13;
help.&#13;
Career planning is a rapidly&#13;
growing area of counseling. At&#13;
Parkside, Barbara Larson does&#13;
most of this type of advising.&#13;
Personal counseling is done&#13;
primarily by Wendy Musich, Miss&#13;
Echelbarger and Steve Bangert.&#13;
All have been trained in this type of&#13;
work.&#13;
The most frequent problems they&#13;
encounter involve troubled family&#13;
relationships and male-female&#13;
problems.&#13;
The counselors try to work with&#13;
existing community agencies.&#13;
Agreements have been worked out&#13;
with the Racine Mental Health&#13;
Service and the Kenosha Family&#13;
Counseling Center so that students&#13;
can be referred to them. This is&#13;
done without charge. With other&#13;
referrals the University will pay&#13;
part of the cost.&#13;
The counselors also receive help&#13;
from the Bacon Clinic, except it is&#13;
used more to. counsel the counselors&#13;
when they find themselves&#13;
with problems they don't know the&#13;
answers to.&#13;
If they do find themselves getting&#13;
in too deep, they are quick to pull&#13;
back.&#13;
"We work to the level of our&#13;
knowledge," Miss Echelbarger&#13;
noted. "We're quick to refer a&#13;
student if we feel .we're getting in&#13;
over our heads."&#13;
She sees granting of confidentiality&#13;
to personal files as a&#13;
major development in personal&#13;
counseling. They can no longer be&#13;
supeonaed by the courts. This&#13;
insures privacy.&#13;
The types of counseling available&#13;
include group therapy and group&#13;
discussion at all levels and at the&#13;
level of counseling the student&#13;
needs.&#13;
Draft counseling at Parkside is&#13;
handled by Steve Bangert. He's&#13;
been working on the development&#13;
of it since he came here last fall. He&#13;
sees himself in an educational role,&#13;
trying to help each individual&#13;
decide what he wants to do.&#13;
He has general information&#13;
about military service and is&#13;
currently concentrating on learning&#13;
about procedural rights in&#13;
dealing with the Selective Service.&#13;
"It seems that every time the&#13;
board meets, about three days&#13;
later people come in and ask&#13;
questions about the draft which&#13;
indicates to me students aren't&#13;
really giving this much&#13;
forethought," Bangert said.&#13;
this trip will include air fare&#13;
and the use of a rented car&#13;
with one full tank of g as and&#13;
unlimited mileage.&#13;
Spring trips under&#13;
discussion and consideration&#13;
include such&#13;
places as Acapulco, Mexico,&#13;
Spain and the Caribbean.&#13;
Details and bids from&#13;
various travel agencies will&#13;
help determine what the&#13;
warm weather offering will&#13;
be in the spring of 1972.&#13;
Also planned are short&#13;
trips to events like&#13;
Milwaukee Bucks basketball&#13;
games. Last fall Coach&#13;
A1 McGuire of Marquette&#13;
spoke at Parkside, and a&#13;
trip to the Bucks game&#13;
followed. Something along&#13;
this line will again be offered,&#13;
according to Niebuhr.&#13;
While no major rock attraction&#13;
has been announced&#13;
yet, there will be concerts&#13;
again this year. Dances will&#13;
feature bands from the&#13;
Kenosha-Racine area and&#13;
the state.&#13;
With this potential of&#13;
social events on campus, it&#13;
appears that those easily&#13;
disenchanted students will&#13;
indeed be in the minority.&#13;
Co l l e g e s t u d e n t s&#13;
sometimes feel that an&#13;
academic semester is unbearably&#13;
long because of&#13;
exams, long reading&#13;
assignments and research.&#13;
These students can take&#13;
heart, since there is a well&#13;
balanced calendar of events&#13;
at Parkside to break up&#13;
periods of disenchantment&#13;
that sometimes impede&#13;
school work.&#13;
Out of the offices of&#13;
Student Activities, headed&#13;
by William Neibuhr, comes&#13;
a full year of campus events&#13;
and activities that run the&#13;
gamut between dances and&#13;
trips to Europe.&#13;
During the 1970-71 school&#13;
year, Parkside students&#13;
enjoyed such internationally&#13;
acclaimed acts as The Fifth&#13;
Dimension, Buddy Rich and&#13;
his Orchestra, and the rock&#13;
group, Chicago. There were&#13;
also concerts by Charley&#13;
Musselwhite (free), Sam&#13;
Lay and Lucille Span, The&#13;
Neighborhood, Johnny&#13;
Young Blues Band, Your&#13;
Father's Mustache and The&#13;
Gregory James Group.&#13;
Along with these musical&#13;
events were films that were&#13;
shown for 75 cents per&#13;
person in the Student Activities&#13;
Building. Some of&#13;
the films shown included&#13;
"True Grit", "Butch&#13;
Cassidy and the Sundance&#13;
Kid", "Good-Bye Columbus",&#13;
and "Four for Texas".&#13;
In the form of European&#13;
ventures, the Student Act&#13;
i v i t i e s C o o r d i n a t o r s&#13;
arranged a mid-winter ski&#13;
trip to France and a spring&#13;
trip to Spain. Both tours&#13;
proved to be so successful&#13;
that three additional&#13;
in appeasing the moviegoers&#13;
on campus. The first&#13;
film for the fall semester&#13;
will be shown on Friday&#13;
evening, Sept. 10. The movie&#13;
will be "The Reivers",&#13;
starring Steve McQueen.&#13;
Other films to follow include&#13;
"Brewster McCloud",&#13;
"Dirty Dingus McGee",&#13;
"Blow-Up", "Rosemary's&#13;
Baby", "Cool Hand Luke",&#13;
"Where Eagles Dare",&#13;
"Charley", "Sandpebbles",&#13;
"Butch Cassidy and the&#13;
Sundance Kid" (probably&#13;
hours in the form of live&#13;
entertainment or films.&#13;
These events depend on the&#13;
budget according to&#13;
Niebuhr.&#13;
Between January 4 and&#13;
the 14, Parkside students&#13;
will be able to ski on the&#13;
fastest Olympic track in the&#13;
Alps near the southern&#13;
border of France. An Air&#13;
France 747 jet will take&#13;
students from Chicago to&#13;
Paris, with connections to&#13;
Geneva, on a skiing holiday&#13;
summer trips to Europe&#13;
were offered to Parkside&#13;
students.&#13;
The job of bridging the&#13;
gaps among the variety of&#13;
cultural tastes is as difficult&#13;
a job as it sounds. But with a&#13;
successful and eventful year&#13;
behind them, the Student&#13;
Activities Coordinators&#13;
have planned well into the&#13;
1971-72 sc hool year.&#13;
The line-up of featured&#13;
films shows the variety used&#13;
the last time this film will be&#13;
shown in the state, since the&#13;
studio is taking it off the&#13;
market), and at Christmas&#13;
time, "Oliver". There are&#13;
still two or three yet to be&#13;
announced films.&#13;
AS for other forms of&#13;
entertainment, Student&#13;
Activities would like to offer&#13;
a few nightclub or coffee&#13;
house features. Also being&#13;
considered is some&#13;
• programming during school&#13;
offered through Parkside.&#13;
The cost for air and ground&#13;
transportation, plus lodging&#13;
and other incidentals, will&#13;
be about $259 plus tax.&#13;
In addition, non-skiers&#13;
will be offered a motoring&#13;
option. This will include the&#13;
same flight to Paris or&#13;
Geneva, but instead of&#13;
spending the ten days on the&#13;
slopes, students will have an&#13;
opportunity to motor&#13;
through Europe. The cost of&#13;
Counnseling&#13;
A thletics•&#13;
Welcome to Parkside!&#13;
We in the Office of Athletics hope you share our enthusiasm&#13;
for this university and what it can offer you, both&#13;
academically and athletically in a total lifetime sports&#13;
program.&#13;
Our program is open to both men and women, with 26&#13;
intramural sports, 16 cl ub sports and eight varsity sports,&#13;
enough to satisfy the most varied tastes. We offer a&#13;
coaching certificate as a major part of our physical&#13;
education program.&#13;
Our club sports teams have been most successful, with&#13;
the skiing club planning a trip to the Italian Alps this winter&#13;
after a successful tour of the French Alps last year. Our&#13;
sailing club is second to none, with interest high and many&#13;
of our winter-time skiers turning to sailing in the summer.&#13;
We offer a sailing class for the inexperienced would-be&#13;
sailor.&#13;
We believe in sports which will benefit you during your&#13;
lifetime. To name only a few, we can offer instruction and&#13;
guidance in sports such as archery, badminton, fencing,&#13;
golf, handball, ice skating, paddleball, squash, tennis and&#13;
volleyball. There are more, and the opportunities are endless.&#13;
We have varsity sports, too, and if you're not participating,&#13;
.you can watch the Rangers in action in&#13;
basketball, soccer, cross country, wrestling, fencing,&#13;
gymnastics, track, tennis or golf.&#13;
In short, the message of Parkside is opportunity. The&#13;
key to that opportunity is participation. We can offer you&#13;
the chance, but you must go from there.&#13;
We can offer you help, advice, instruction and guidance&#13;
in just about any sport or athletic endeavor you can&#13;
imagine.&#13;
We are here and we are welcoming you to Parkside.&#13;
Enjoy the university and take part in its athletic programs&#13;
in some way. We think you'll be a better person for it.&#13;
Thomas P. Rosandich&#13;
Athletic Director&#13;
The Office of Athletics&#13;
offers Parkside students a&#13;
balanced sports program&#13;
that includes physical&#13;
education, club sports,&#13;
intramurals and intercollegiate&#13;
athletics.&#13;
All students, men and&#13;
women alike, are provided&#13;
the opportunity to take&#13;
elective courses in physical&#13;
education should they desire&#13;
to learn a particular sport&#13;
skill. After a survey of the&#13;
State of Wisconsin indicated&#13;
that over 56 p er cent of the&#13;
high school coaches in the&#13;
State had no formal&#13;
training, the Office of&#13;
Athletics established a&#13;
professional courses which&#13;
seek to develop the "total&#13;
coach".&#13;
Included in these are&#13;
courses detailing the officiating&#13;
of individual, dual&#13;
and team sports, preventing&#13;
and caring for athletic&#13;
injuries, sports psychology,&#13;
body mechanics, scientific&#13;
basis of conditioning,&#13;
organization arid administration&#13;
of athletics and&#13;
coaching theory courses in&#13;
football, basketball,&#13;
wrestling and track and&#13;
field.&#13;
Reflecting the Olympic&#13;
concept of both the sports&#13;
program and the staff,&#13;
Rosandich, himself a wellknown&#13;
international coach&#13;
with wide experience in&#13;
various parts of Asia.&#13;
The athletic program at&#13;
Parkside is open to both&#13;
men and women. Most&#13;
physical education classes&#13;
are co-educational and&#13;
equal opportunity is offered&#13;
in all sports.&#13;
A n ew physical education&#13;
building, which will serve as&#13;
a base for intramurals, club&#13;
sports, intercollegiate&#13;
athletics and physical&#13;
education is now under&#13;
construction on County&#13;
Road JR, west of the present&#13;
site of th e Office of Athletics&#13;
s?&amp;&#13;
r&#13;
IJ&#13;
Mi&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKS IDE PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND ATHLETICS BUILDING&#13;
program leading&#13;
coaching certificate.&#13;
to&#13;
Believing&#13;
terscholastic&#13;
periences are&#13;
contribute&#13;
physiological,&#13;
psychological,&#13;
ethical and&#13;
development of&#13;
that inathletic&#13;
exdesigned&#13;
to&#13;
to the&#13;
anatomical,&#13;
educational,&#13;
moral&#13;
the participants,&#13;
the required&#13;
courses for the awarding of&#13;
the coaching certificate&#13;
include a broad base of&#13;
Parkside coaches are now in&#13;
the Philippines forming an&#13;
athletic program on all&#13;
civilian and military levels.&#13;
The Office of Athletics has&#13;
close ties to the Peace Corps&#13;
and a training program for&#13;
American coaches who will&#13;
go to Asia will be held at&#13;
Parkside in the early fall.&#13;
This program will be&#13;
under the direction of&#13;
athletic director Tom&#13;
on Wood Road.&#13;
Parkside athletes have&#13;
traveled to various parts of&#13;
the globe in the short two&#13;
years since Parkside opened&#13;
its doors. Apart from the ski&#13;
club, two Parkside athletes&#13;
have been picked for trips&#13;
abroad, fencer John Hanzalik&#13;
and basketball center&#13;
Mike Madsen, currently a&#13;
member of the all-star team&#13;
touring four European&#13;
countries.&#13;
Honors have come to&#13;
Parkside as well. Wrestling&#13;
coach Jim Koch was picked&#13;
as "Rookie Coach of the&#13;
Year" by a national&#13;
wrestling magazine and&#13;
grappler Ken Martin earned&#13;
all-American status with his&#13;
second place finish in the&#13;
national championships.&#13;
And gymnast Doug Anderson&#13;
also earned all-&#13;
American acclaim in the&#13;
first year his sport existed&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
The club sports concept is&#13;
an important one and&#13;
reflects the increased&#13;
emphasis on lifetime sports&#13;
and on others that are not&#13;
traditionally intercollegiate&#13;
in nature.&#13;
The clubs are generally&#13;
extramural in nature, with&#13;
top flight schedules including&#13;
other colleges and&#13;
universities and wide travel&#13;
throughout mid-America.&#13;
Tom Rosandich&#13;
The ski club is the largest on&#13;
campus and is coached by a&#13;
former Olympian. The judo&#13;
club, which is the second&#13;
largest on campus, is also&#13;
active, in extramurals&#13;
along with the hockey,&#13;
baseball, volleyball, rugby,&#13;
sailing, karate and bowling&#13;
clubs.&#13;
Other sport clubs approached&#13;
from a&#13;
recreational standpoint&#13;
include the gun club,&#13;
gymnastics club, equestrian&#13;
club and the booster-pep&#13;
club.&#13;
Students interested in&#13;
being cheerleaders are&#13;
urged to contact the Office&#13;
of Athletics at 553-2245.&#13;
There are also opportunities&#13;
for girls to become involved&#13;
in the sports program as&#13;
Rangerettes (pom pom&#13;
girls) and for men as&#13;
athletic team managers.&#13;
*** — "rrrrwMvinoivui&#13;
Octoberfest&#13;
Highlighting the fall sports season at&#13;
Parkside will be the Octoberfest, featuring&#13;
Parkside's varsity sports teams and clubs in&#13;
action throughout the week of October 2-9.&#13;
The Parkside cross country team will host&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and Beloit College Oct. 2 and&#13;
the Ranger soccer squad will tangle with UWMadison&#13;
on the Parkside soccer field to begin&#13;
the festivities, which the Office of Athletics&#13;
plans to make a traditional celebration.&#13;
Golf and tennis tournaments, sailing&#13;
regattas involving both club and varsity teams,&#13;
a rugby match, a fencing meet and a gymnastics&#13;
turnfest will also be featured during the&#13;
eight day period, which concludes with the&#13;
Parkside Invitational Soccer Tournament Oct.&#13;
8-9.&#13;
Also to be featured at the Octoberfest will&#13;
be a "Bratwurst and Sauerkraut" setting, with&#13;
refreshments available in keeping with the&#13;
spirit of the occastion which will include&#13;
dancing with polka bands and the atmosphere&#13;
of old Europe, complete with Tyrolean hats.&#13;
..-.nr. •• • • -&#13;
Clubs&#13;
They vary from the Film Society&#13;
to the Flying Club, from Students&#13;
for a Clean Environment to the&#13;
Students International Meditation&#13;
Society. These are just four of the&#13;
more than 35 student clubs that&#13;
exist on campus.&#13;
Various types of clubs function at&#13;
Parkside. They include political&#13;
action groups (the Young&#13;
Democrats, the Luddites, the&#13;
Committee for United Student&#13;
Action), recreation clubs (such as&#13;
the hockey, chess, equestrian and&#13;
flying clubs), literary groups&#13;
(Newscope, Indications and Poetry&#13;
Forum), occupational clubs (the&#13;
Management Science, Modern&#13;
Language, and the pre-law clubs),&#13;
and the more traditional fraternities&#13;
and sororities (Alpha Kappa&#13;
Ldmbda, Sigma Delta Psi, Zeta&#13;
Beta Tau).&#13;
In order to form a club you need&#13;
only pick up a registration form&#13;
from Tony Totero at the Student&#13;
Affairs Office, and return it with&#13;
either a faculty or staff member's&#13;
signature as adviser, together with&#13;
either a club constitution or a&#13;
statement of purpose.&#13;
The form is then sent to Student&#13;
"-"V, ^&#13;
preliminary recommendation&#13;
whether it should be recognized as&#13;
a campus organization. It then&#13;
goes to the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee which makes the final&#13;
decision.&#13;
Once a club is recognized, it is&#13;
able to use University facilities.&#13;
Facilities can also be used by clubs&#13;
for the purpose of organizing&#13;
before official recognition has been&#13;
given.&#13;
Any questions about campus&#13;
organizations should be directed to&#13;
Totero of the Student Affairs office.&#13;
July 26, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
Now that $150 million has been appropriated&#13;
for drug abuse programs .&#13;
The other night I was sitting in my living&#13;
room with a couple of friends playing a rather&#13;
simple game of throwing kitchen matches into&#13;
a beer bottle.&#13;
That's alright, it's simple. Children play it&#13;
with clothespins and milk bottles, all that&#13;
changed is the sophistication of the pieces.&#13;
Matches were forbidden when I was youngnow&#13;
I 'm making up for all those fantasies that&#13;
went with forbidden things.&#13;
Sex was the same way. The secret&#13;
meetings in someone's basement where&#13;
everyone took turns at playing doctor and&#13;
patient. It made the whole sex scene legitimate,&#13;
doctors did it, we were allowed to pretend, so&#13;
we pretended we were doctors. If you were&#13;
caught pretending behind the garage or in the&#13;
alley, grownups thought you were evil because&#13;
evil things always happened in the alleys at&#13;
night.&#13;
What happened to the evil pretenders&#13;
followed in the lines of whatever particular&#13;
prejudices your parents had. The more&#13;
traditional second generation parents would&#13;
infuse a bit of leather philosophy in the privacy&#13;
of the basement while little brothers and sisters&#13;
peeked down the stairway boiling up with rage&#13;
and shivering with fear at their father's justice.&#13;
Then there were the more liberal parents,&#13;
who would refrain from corporal punishment&#13;
but instead implant the seeds of a sinister&#13;
paranoia. They would lecture and point out that&#13;
if you wanted to know about sex, ask them, and&#13;
they would in turn tell you about the stork. You&#13;
had to be very young to believe it but in time,&#13;
after a friend whispered to meet him behind the&#13;
garage or in the corn field with his sister, you&#13;
would look twice before you went out for some&#13;
evil pretending. As long as no one saw then you&#13;
were all right, as if nothing happened.&#13;
So you met your friend's sister and she&#13;
would strip and you would stare and maybe&#13;
touch, but not really touch because you didn't&#13;
know what would happen.&#13;
But as you got older the evil pretending&#13;
became passe; you didn't have to pretend, you&#13;
could do everything. But you still sought the&#13;
forbidden things and now that what had been&#13;
denied was approachable, you looked for different&#13;
things. In high school you watched films&#13;
on venereal disease and dope. Dope and&#13;
syphillis, somehow they belonged together.&#13;
The films they showed blew your mind.&#13;
Young kids hooked on grass madly opening&#13;
bottles of beer against a brick. They drank it&#13;
glass and all and it was the grass that made&#13;
them do it. You never cared much about&#13;
syphilis because it was a disease, like leprosy,&#13;
but grass, that was different. The films were so&#13;
unreal that you had to find what it was all&#13;
about.&#13;
So one day, in someone's tightly closed&#13;
apartment, or in an alley, you smoked your&#13;
first joint. It wasn't much at first because you&#13;
didn't know how to smoke it but after several&#13;
attempts you finally got high. The distortion&#13;
was new, exciting, unique and best of a ll there&#13;
wasn't any hangover. You got stoned and&#13;
listened to music, drew, talked, anything that&#13;
you could do, almost anything you could do,&#13;
straight. It seemed to take the rat out of the&#13;
race and you could relax. You could share&#13;
things better, mutual jokes, laughter, and&#13;
politics. If was fun, almost a ritual to smoke&#13;
and be together with friends.&#13;
And you knew it was safe because you&#13;
didn't know anyone who was addicted. At that&#13;
time you didn't know of a ny speed freaks, only&#13;
the friend who dealt the grass and he said he&#13;
only did it because he wanted to turn you on. At&#13;
that time the bags of white powder were as far&#13;
away as the sex films in health class.&#13;
But things that are far away have a&#13;
peculiar manner of drawing your attention.&#13;
They come from odd places, like having your&#13;
palm read as a joke; only months later the&#13;
broken life line she told* you about preoccupies&#13;
your mind and you start worrying. The more&#13;
familiar you become with grass the more you&#13;
discover the other drugs because everyone is&#13;
doing new things, looking for the forbidden&#13;
things and then pills became the big mystery.&#13;
So you went to the hallucinogens, did a few&#13;
and waited for the great moments that&#13;
everyone said you would see. It happens, it&#13;
leaves you confused or you block it out of your&#13;
mind. In either case you took the pills and you&#13;
begin to identify with the drug culture. It grows&#13;
out of its isolation from the other cultures.&#13;
Everyone into it feels some sort of bond with&#13;
others and you choose your friends from among&#13;
the numbers prowling the streets at night and&#13;
come up with your very own corner of the&#13;
culture.&#13;
The only hangup is that everyone has a lot&#13;
of friends and they infiltrate into your corner of&#13;
the culture and bring with them new ideas. One&#13;
of them is a heavy dealer, but you don't mind&#13;
because then grass is much more accessible.&#13;
He deals in amphetamines and coke, and&#13;
maybe smack, but he's got ki's of Mexican&#13;
weed and for that you're willing to forgive&#13;
for his business. After all, anyway, he's got to&#13;
make a living too. And anyway, it's none of&#13;
your business what he does.&#13;
You decide that he is one of the evil&#13;
pretenders because he's always doing his&#13;
business at night, in noisy, run-down apartments.&#13;
You visit him looking for grass and he&#13;
and two friends, whom you know, are sitting&#13;
amid a squalor of empty bottles and cans that&#13;
the wind kicks around as it whistles through the&#13;
window. One of them is holding a spoon of clear&#13;
liquid and the other is drawing it into a syringe.&#13;
You can't express shock because who are you to&#13;
judge.&#13;
Instead, you excuse yourself because they&#13;
are busy and walk the long way home past a&#13;
friend's^ house where you stop in and tell him&#13;
what you saw and he shrugs his shoulders and&#13;
says, "What are you gonna do. It's his life."&#13;
And you wonder if it is.&#13;
by Mike Stevesand&#13;
It's 1:30 a.m. and me and&#13;
Starr are. stuck in the&#13;
Chicago Union Station with&#13;
... no way home . . . 'til&#13;
6:30, but I don't care,&#13;
because we just made&#13;
friends with Rod Stewart.&#13;
As a matter of fact an&#13;
ocean of people . . . 10,000?&#13;
. . . 100,000? . . . filling up&#13;
every square foot of the&#13;
Auditorium Theater,&#13;
swaying like those waves of&#13;
grain with the occasional&#13;
favorite cousins, buddies&#13;
and drinking companions to&#13;
all, get up and entertain and&#13;
everybody has a happy,&#13;
boozy old time. Except that&#13;
the music happens to be&#13;
some of the best, cleanest&#13;
and most exciting rock and&#13;
roll currently being played.&#13;
When the Faces were still&#13;
Small, they had a bright,&#13;
fantasy-edged sound that&#13;
contrasted nicely to the&#13;
Cream-based power trios&#13;
that were the fashion of the&#13;
took Ron Wood, one of the&#13;
most under-rated of rock&#13;
guitarists, and went looking&#13;
for some mates. They found&#13;
one another, and, in what&#13;
one imagines to be one of t he&#13;
most musically prolific&#13;
drunken debaucheries of all&#13;
time, the new Faces were&#13;
created.&#13;
And it was a godsend to&#13;
rock fans. The new band is&#13;
probably the happiest bunch&#13;
of p eople ever to hit a stage.&#13;
They love each other,&#13;
scarecrow on somebody's&#13;
shoulders for a better look&#13;
just made friends with Rod&#13;
Stewart. He's an eminently&#13;
likeable chap.&#13;
Making good music is a&#13;
rare talent. Rarer still is the&#13;
maker of good music who&#13;
can project his personality&#13;
to the far balconies of a hall&#13;
as big as the Auditorium and&#13;
unleash an exchange of love&#13;
that charges the atmosphere&#13;
with consideration&#13;
and good&#13;
fellowship and turns a&#13;
sellout rock and roll crowd,&#13;
a notoriously hard-nosed&#13;
kind of group identity, into a&#13;
fabulous party where only&#13;
line things can happen.&#13;
When Rod Stewart and the&#13;
Faces play, it's not really a&#13;
concert at all. It's more like&#13;
a family reunion where the&#13;
time, and that sold almost&#13;
no records, except possibly&#13;
to the introverted Tolkeinreading&#13;
set. Their one big&#13;
single, "Itchykoo Park",&#13;
had the misfortune of&#13;
competing with "Purple&#13;
Haze" for the radio&#13;
audience, and got lost in the&#13;
philosophical shuffle. Steve&#13;
Marriot, leader, singer,&#13;
writer and focal point,&#13;
decided that the route to&#13;
superstardom didn't lie in&#13;
this direction, and split to&#13;
form Humble Pie, leaving&#13;
Ian McLagen, keyboards,&#13;
Ronnie Lane, bass, and&#13;
Kenny Jones, drums, in the&#13;
lurch. That, by all rights,&#13;
should have been it for the&#13;
FSCGS&#13;
But at the same time. Rod&#13;
Stewart became disenchanged&#13;
with Jeff Beck, and&#13;
continually horsing around,&#13;
mugging, dancing, grinning&#13;
like idiots, playing steel and&#13;
silk rock. They love the&#13;
music, beaming like proud&#13;
first graders for a good lick,&#13;
or squinting in concentration&#13;
to pull the big&#13;
fast riffs off their axes.&#13;
But above all, they love&#13;
the audience. Rod himself,&#13;
high stepping like a drum&#13;
major, shadow boxing,&#13;
running laps around the&#13;
stage, twirling the mike&#13;
stand, striking operatic&#13;
poses, is the ultimate&#13;
vaudevillian, always on,&#13;
anything for the show of it.&#13;
It's obvious he needs people,&#13;
and he knows how to get&#13;
them on his side. When&#13;
several fans climbed onto&#13;
the stage, he not only&#13;
restrained the muscular&#13;
ushers from throwing them&#13;
off, he helped them up&#13;
himself, in fact slapping&#13;
eager palms and affectionately&#13;
rubbing the odd&#13;
head. Wine is the sustaining&#13;
force of a Faces performance,&#13;
and Rod passed&#13;
almost a case of various&#13;
wines out to the audience,&#13;
and regretted that there&#13;
wasn't enough for&#13;
everybody.&#13;
The thing about Rod&#13;
Stewart is, he's basically a&#13;
goddam good guy, with a bit&#13;
of the rowdy-juicer&#13;
mystique, a guy you'd like to&#13;
go drinking with, and he&#13;
genuinly would like to go&#13;
drinking with you, too. No&#13;
superstar aloofness; he&#13;
cares about the little people.&#13;
And he's a musician, too.&#13;
His famous voice, which&#13;
sounds like gin shot from a&#13;
Windex bottle, can impart a&#13;
wide range of emotion to a&#13;
song, from the rum-soaked&#13;
rave-up of "Had Me a Real&#13;
Good Time", to the&#13;
nostalgic longing for his&#13;
good old "Country Comforts".&#13;
He can handle a&#13;
rocker with the best, and&#13;
that means Mick Jagger,&#13;
tossing off falsetto whoops&#13;
like exclamation points and&#13;
phrasing machine -gun&#13;
bursts that are seemingly&#13;
beyond human capability.&#13;
But he really shines on&#13;
ballads, where he can snake&#13;
his voice around a line,&#13;
wringing the last drop of&#13;
pain from it, baring his soul.&#13;
Stewart is responsible for&#13;
some of the loveliest&#13;
laments in the history of&#13;
unrequited love, and you&#13;
know suddenly that he's&#13;
been hurt probably as much&#13;
as he's been drunk.&#13;
But it never bogs him&#13;
down, and that's the real&#13;
heart of his success. Rod&#13;
Stewart can maintain joy in&#13;
the face of anything, and it&#13;
just naturally spills over to&#13;
his audience. Someone&#13;
threw a bunch of party hats&#13;
up to the stage, and Rod&#13;
passed them around,&#13;
saying, "Who brought the&#13;
hats? What a marvelous&#13;
idea." Joints, too? Fine,&#13;
he'll pass those around. One&#13;
long-haired guard in particular&#13;
failed to endear&#13;
himself to the crowd by&#13;
attacking bodily some of the&#13;
stage jumpers. Rod put an&#13;
arm around him, sang him a&#13;
chorus of "Feel So Good",&#13;
and mussed his hair, asking&#13;
for a hand for the ushers&#13;
"Who've been such good&#13;
sports."&#13;
And that's it. Such love&#13;
can't go unreturned, and&#13;
I've never seen any performer&#13;
inspire such love&#13;
from his audience. A&#13;
standing ovation, total&#13;
cacophony, squeezed out&#13;
three encores, and the&#13;
tumult merely doubled&#13;
when Stewart announced&#13;
that they'd be back in "dear&#13;
old Chicago" at Christmastime.&#13;
I would suggest that you&#13;
be there, too.&#13;
NEWSCOPE July 26,1971&#13;
By Sandy Principe&#13;
The teacher shortage is over. A&#13;
study on teacher supply and&#13;
demand, released by the State&#13;
Coordinating Council for Higher&#13;
Education this February, revealed&#13;
that of the more than 51,000&#13;
teaching and administrative staff&#13;
positions in Wisconsin public&#13;
elementary and secondary schools,&#13;
only 141 vacancies existed as of&#13;
Sept. 15, 1970. This places the&#13;
recruiters, if no one else, in an&#13;
excellent position.&#13;
"We can be extremely selective&#13;
for the first time," said Walter&#13;
Stenavich, assistant superintendent,&#13;
staff personnel services,&#13;
for the Racine Unified School&#13;
District, in discussing recruitment&#13;
for the 1971-72 s chool year.&#13;
The statistics are changing&#13;
drastically in the field of education.&#13;
Where Education and Labor&#13;
Departments across the U.S. were&#13;
begging for teachers years ago,&#13;
their recent studies reflect a&#13;
complete trend reversal.&#13;
In February, 1971, the State&#13;
Coordinating Council for Higher&#13;
Education released its report&#13;
stating that there is no longer a&#13;
teacher shortage nor is there likely&#13;
to be for many years. The Labor&#13;
Department recommends that all&#13;
young people, especially women,&#13;
planning on entering the&#13;
educational field should think&#13;
about other fields. The release&#13;
stressed directing women away&#13;
from education because of the&#13;
tremendous increase of graduates&#13;
in recent years. Women graduates&#13;
have increased their numbers by&#13;
two-thirds between 1968 and 1970.&#13;
At the same time, two out of five&#13;
professional women are elementary&#13;
and secondary teachers.&#13;
This surplus of teachers is&#13;
complicated by several other&#13;
factors: thfe slumping national.&#13;
openings. For example, a school&#13;
may have an open slot for an Industrial&#13;
Arts and Physcial&#13;
Education teacher. If th ey can find&#13;
one satisfactory applicant to fill&#13;
this dual opening, she (he)&#13;
probably has the job.&#13;
In discussing the present&#13;
economy, a decline in federal&#13;
funding, a lower turnover rate, and&#13;
a general decrease in the school&#13;
age population.&#13;
However, for those seriously&#13;
dedicated to teaching, there is still&#13;
hope. The secret lies in background&#13;
preparation and a willingness to&#13;
teach in rural and inner-core&#13;
areas.&#13;
"In some fields of education,&#13;
securing employment has become&#13;
a frustrating experience for many&#13;
applicants," Gerald Euting,&#13;
Coordinator of Personnel Services&#13;
for the Kenosha Unified School&#13;
District, said. "However, there are&#13;
other areas where we are&#13;
frustrated. Supply and demand are&#13;
just not equal from area to area."&#13;
He suggested that while English,&#13;
social studies and language&#13;
departments find their job&#13;
openings well overmatched by&#13;
applicants, there is still a need for&#13;
men in guidance, and in special&#13;
education such as for the&#13;
emotionally disturbed, and&#13;
remedial reading.&#13;
The rest of the openings seem to&#13;
be limited to subject-combination&#13;
situation in the Kenosha Unified&#13;
School District Euting indicated&#13;
that for primary grade teachers,&#13;
English teachers and history&#13;
teachers, the competition is extremely&#13;
keen. It is unlikely a&#13;
person without prior teaching&#13;
experience or exceptional&#13;
qualifications would be hired at&#13;
this time.&#13;
"My own feelings are that if you&#13;
are willing to define your graphical&#13;
location in broad terms there is a&#13;
job some place in this country&#13;
where you can teach," UWP&#13;
Director of Admissions John&#13;
Elmor said.&#13;
You can no longer choose your&#13;
job as you may have been able to&#13;
do in 1967. However, if you're&#13;
dedicated enough to move to a&#13;
rural or inner-core area, you will&#13;
probably be able to secure a&#13;
teaching position.&#13;
For those of you skeptical of&#13;
leaving the city, Elmor spoke very&#13;
favorably of teaching in a rural&#13;
area. He said the rural area&#13;
provides greater freedom for the&#13;
teacher along with closer and more&#13;
personal relationships with both&#13;
students and parents. In comparing&#13;
his own experiences, Elmor&#13;
stated that he found teaching in a&#13;
rural area much more rewarding&#13;
personally and professionally than&#13;
his teaching stay in a New York&#13;
suburb.&#13;
Elmor noted that there has been&#13;
an increase in the number of&#13;
students entering the teaching&#13;
certification program of&#13;
Parkside's education curriculum.&#13;
There were 90 or 95 student&#13;
teachers last semester and are&#13;
expected to increase to 105 this fall.&#13;
However, he noted that Parkside's&#13;
student population is getting older&#13;
relative to the number of credits.&#13;
That is, there are more juniors and&#13;
seniors this year than before. Since&#13;
the population is not yet stabilized,&#13;
it cannot be said if the percentage&#13;
of teachers is going up or down.&#13;
In reference to elementary and&#13;
secondary teacher preparation,&#13;
Elmor thought the dual major&#13;
system a teacher's greatest&#13;
security. This provides two&#13;
avenues for the graduate to follow.&#13;
Selection of areas is also important&#13;
if the graduate wishes to teach. The&#13;
situation is not much different on&#13;
the University scene.&#13;
Elmor reported some 300 applicants&#13;
in the department of&#13;
education (95 per cent of whom&#13;
held Ph.D.'s) and thousands moe&#13;
more in the sciences.&#13;
These are only the statistics.&#13;
Naturally, desire, qualifications&#13;
and ambition all have to be taken&#13;
into consideration.&#13;
Royko&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
as are available.&#13;
Newscope: Speaking of&#13;
slanted journalism, do you think&#13;
the underground press is&#13;
legitimate-journalistically?&#13;
Royko: The good ones are,&#13;
the ones that know alittle bit&#13;
about what newspapers should&#13;
be. The one on the west coast,&#13;
Rolling Stone, fron what I've&#13;
seen of it that's not a bad paper.&#13;
There's some pretty good&#13;
writing in it.&#13;
Look at the Village Voice.&#13;
All these years it has shown&#13;
many excellent qualities.&#13;
The underground press isn't&#13;
underground anymore, the&#13;
whole thing is laughable.&#13;
They're selling them in stores&#13;
and newstands. This isn't being&#13;
cranked out in the basement&#13;
with the police coming in the&#13;
back door or handed out in the&#13;
dead of night. They're out there&#13;
competing. A young press is&#13;
what it is, and they have to get&#13;
out and compete like anyone&#13;
else to sell their product and if&#13;
it's any good, they'll sell it.&#13;
Newscope: In view of the New&#13;
York Times and the Pentagon&#13;
Papers, how much would you&#13;
say is the press entitled to&#13;
know?&#13;
Royko: As much as we can&#13;
find out. Obvsiously, in the&#13;
matter of secret documents . . .&#13;
if I had a document that I&#13;
genuinely believed was harmful&#13;
to the national interest I just&#13;
wouldn't print it.&#13;
But the Pentagon Papers&#13;
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are so patently phony, it's just a&#13;
bunch of politicians trying to&#13;
hide their mistakes. It's not that&#13;
harmful to the national interest.&#13;
Newscope: What about the&#13;
people who criticize the press?&#13;
Royko: The people who&#13;
complained about what the New&#13;
York Times did, are primarily&#13;
the people who would have&#13;
complained about anything the&#13;
Times did. You'll find the same&#13;
political mentality among the&#13;
opinions given on the Pentagon&#13;
Papers as you will on civil&#13;
rights, and just about any other&#13;
issue that divides the very&#13;
conservative from the rest of&#13;
the country.&#13;
I think that people can&#13;
believe what they read as long&#13;
as their thinking isn't colored by&#13;
political considerations. I think&#13;
the believability of newspapers&#13;
is greater now than in the past.&#13;
"It's funny, guys like Agnew&#13;
always yell about the new York&#13;
Times and Washington Post,&#13;
but never tells about the ones&#13;
who are really guilty of t he most&#13;
slanted journalism and that's&#13;
the very conservative papers&#13;
like the Tribune. They slant&#13;
news more than the Times ever&#13;
did . . .so Agnew takes shots at&#13;
the Times which tries much&#13;
harder to be fair than the&#13;
Tribune ever tried.&#13;
The guy who's probably&#13;
spewed the most misinformation&#13;
over the airwaves,&#13;
misinformation and outright&#13;
flat distortions, is Howard&#13;
Miller. Miller can go on the air&#13;
and say anything; ghastly&#13;
rumors that Kennedy is alive&#13;
somewhere . . .&#13;
These buffoons talk about the&#13;
slanted media and then Howard&#13;
Miller comes on and doesn't&#13;
check his story out, doesn't try&#13;
to confirm whether it's true or&#13;
not, ancUgets on the air.&#13;
Newscope: What effect has&#13;
television had on journalism?&#13;
. Royko: Television has helped&#13;
to make us a little more honest I&#13;
think, a little more accurate and&#13;
careful because what television&#13;
does is just a grotesquely imcompetent&#13;
job of covering news.&#13;
By showing the picture, they act&#13;
as sort of a check on the writers.&#13;
The newscasters on television&#13;
can't cover news, they just want&#13;
to sit down and read something&#13;
for three or four mintues on one&#13;
story. So they just skim the&#13;
surface . . . but they make us&#13;
work harder.&#13;
Newscope: Do you think&#13;
Daley will run for re-election&#13;
again.&#13;
Royko: He's not going to run&#13;
again. He'll be seventy at his&#13;
next birthday. I think what will&#13;
happen is there will be a battle&#13;
among the various factions.&#13;
Daley can't hand pick his&#13;
successor. There are just too&#13;
many ambitious people in that&#13;
organization. I mean, you can&#13;
be boss for twenty years, but&#13;
don't tell us who the next boss&#13;
will be, let us decide who's&#13;
going to boss us.&#13;
Newscope: Because of your&#13;
column do you find yourself&#13;
labeled as the people's defender,&#13;
or that sort of thing?&#13;
Royko: I'd say a fourth of my&#13;
columns result from people&#13;
calling in. They're my best&#13;
sources of information and&#13;
they're what I'm writing about.&#13;
I guess I'm reverse populist. I&#13;
figure that in the long run it isn't&#13;
Daley that I'm mad at, it's the&#13;
average guy.&#13;
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KENOSHA&#13;
UWP&#13;
Sports&#13;
Mike Madsen, starting&#13;
center on the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside basketball&#13;
team, is among 12&#13;
midwestern players heading&#13;
aborad in mid-August for a&#13;
three-week, 17-game swing&#13;
through four European&#13;
nations.&#13;
Madsen, a 6-8, 240-&#13;
pounder from KenoSha,&#13;
averaged 11 points per game&#13;
with a .561 shooting perJuly&#13;
26,1971&#13;
centage and pulled down 12&#13;
rebounds a contest in&#13;
Parkside's 26 g ames.&#13;
The team, which will be&#13;
coached by Lakeland&#13;
College basketball coach&#13;
Duane Woltzen, was chosen&#13;
by officials of the Swe.dish&#13;
national. team in&#13;
cooperation with American&#13;
coaches when the Swedes&#13;
toured and played&#13;
throughout the United&#13;
NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
States last season.&#13;
Madsen, who will be&#13;
starting his junior year at&#13;
Parkside, said he was&#13;
surprised he was picked and&#13;
expected to gain a lot of&#13;
experience.&#13;
Parkside basketball coach&#13;
Steve Stephens echoed his&#13;
sentiments and said Madsen&#13;
should return from Europe&#13;
with more mobility and&#13;
aggressiveness and confidence&#13;
in his game.&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside's Geza Martiny (center,&#13;
with board) instructs his class in one of the finer points of&#13;
sailing in a recent Thursday night session at the Kenosha&#13;
Yacht Club. UW-P is offering the class in its summer&#13;
session for one credit and the yacht club is supplying the&#13;
sailboats and all facilities.&#13;
They may not be quite ready&#13;
for an intercollegiate&#13;
regatta, but thanks to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside and the Kenosha&#13;
Yacht Club, would-be&#13;
sailors in this area are&#13;
learning the fine art of&#13;
sailing this summer.&#13;
Parkside is offering the&#13;
class in its summer session,&#13;
with one credit given for the&#13;
twice weekly, two hours-anight&#13;
stint at the yacht club&#13;
docks. And the club is&#13;
furnishing its facilities, the&#13;
docks, hoists and penguin&#13;
sailboats free of charge to&#13;
the new class.&#13;
Three men have been&#13;
instrumental in forming the&#13;
class and keeping it going.&#13;
Tom Rosandich, athletic&#13;
director at UW-Parkside,&#13;
first suggested the&#13;
possibility of a class last&#13;
winter to Ed Pobar of the&#13;
yacht club, who enthusiastically&#13;
approved and&#13;
laid the groundwork with&#13;
the club for the use of its&#13;
facilities.&#13;
Leading the class in&#13;
learning about the hows,&#13;
whats and whys of s ailing is&#13;
Geza Martiny, who also&#13;
doubles as soccer coach at&#13;
UW-Parkside and has had&#13;
extensive experience in&#13;
varied sports in Canada and&#13;
his native Hungary.&#13;
"When Tom approached&#13;
me during the winter,"&#13;
Pobar remembered, "I&#13;
carried his desires to the&#13;
board of directors, which&#13;
felt the yacht club should be&#13;
operating in the public interest.&#13;
So we have been&#13;
involved with the class from&#13;
the beginning."&#13;
Pobar also has a personal&#13;
interest in sailing, apart&#13;
from his duties as a member&#13;
of the yacht club's board of&#13;
directors. His son Mike is&#13;
one of Parkside's top&#13;
sailors.&#13;
The sailing idea appealed&#13;
to Rosandich as a natural&#13;
extension of both the UWParkside&#13;
Sailing Club and&#13;
the Parkside philosophy.&#13;
"Sailing is a lifetime sport&#13;
and that's what we're trying&#13;
to get people interested in at&#13;
Parkside," Rosandich said.&#13;
"It's a logical part of our&#13;
whole philosophy about&#13;
sport and the role it plays in&#13;
life."&#13;
Martiny, an enthusiastic&#13;
bundle of energy who also&#13;
works with women's&#13;
gymnastics twice weekly in&#13;
Racine, has grappled with&#13;
the challenge of teaching&#13;
sailing to a group of inexperienced&#13;
students and after&#13;
three weeks of classes&#13;
thinks he has come out&#13;
ahead.&#13;
Students have had their&#13;
share of spills and a few&#13;
have tasted water when they&#13;
didn't want to, but Martiny&#13;
said the mistakes are getting&#13;
fewer as the students&#13;
gain experience.&#13;
"This is the first time&#13;
sailing has ever been offered&#13;
here as a class,"&#13;
Martiny pointed out. "Interest&#13;
is great and I think&#13;
it's something that will&#13;
grow.&#13;
"From now on, though,&#13;
they're going on their own&#13;
more often. Now it's just a&#13;
question of selfimprovement&#13;
after learning&#13;
the basics," he said. "Of&#13;
course, I'm-there for advice&#13;
and guidance."&#13;
Seventeen students are&#13;
enrolled in the course, and&#13;
they're not all of college&#13;
age, showing that sailing&#13;
bridges the "generation&#13;
gap".&#13;
On hand to demonstrate&#13;
from time to time are&#13;
Parkside's prolific sailors,&#13;
Mike Pobar and Jerry&#13;
Ruffolo, both juniors-to-be&#13;
at Parkside.&#13;
The two were undefeated&#13;
this past season in intercollegiate&#13;
competition&#13;
and have been among the&#13;
top finishers in all open&#13;
meets they've entered.&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the&#13;
impression of one of the&#13;
students that participated in&#13;
UWP's first Study Tour to&#13;
Germany.&#13;
by Eugene Kopp&#13;
The American influence&#13;
on the German Youth is&#13;
quite apparent. We've influenced&#13;
them in schools,&#13;
styles and music. So we can&#13;
picture many of your&#13;
youths' problems with the&#13;
German youths' problems.&#13;
In schools they worry&#13;
about grades just the way&#13;
we do. We're graded by&#13;
letters, A, B, C, D, F., and&#13;
they're graded by numbers,&#13;
1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Many times I've&#13;
heard from American instructors&#13;
they would like to&#13;
have the European teaching&#13;
system, while the European&#13;
instructors are saying they&#13;
would like to have the&#13;
Impressions Of Germany&#13;
American teaching system.&#13;
German youth worries if&#13;
they can get into the&#13;
university or should they go&#13;
into the trades. American&#13;
youth also worries about&#13;
university entrance exams&#13;
and what they will do with&#13;
their lives in the future. In&#13;
Germany right now there&#13;
are so many job openings&#13;
they have to import workers&#13;
from Italy, Turkey,&#13;
Yugoslavia and Spain.&#13;
While in the U.S. it's just the&#13;
opposite, we don't have&#13;
enough jobs for our students&#13;
and college grads.&#13;
It's sort of funny, but&#13;
German youth even worries&#13;
about the service. Their&#13;
army is now modelled after&#13;
the U.S. Army and even&#13;
though they get to go home&#13;
on weekends (unless they're&#13;
on guard duty) no one that I&#13;
talked to wanted anything to&#13;
do with the army, but if they&#13;
would be called only one&#13;
said he would resist. They&#13;
expressed their sympathy&#13;
for us having to go to&#13;
Vietnam.&#13;
In politics they are geared&#13;
much as our American&#13;
youth. They all wanted us&#13;
out of Vietnam! They are&#13;
also in some cases very&#13;
radical towards their&#13;
g o v e r nme n t . T h e i r&#13;
nationalistic feeling is way&#13;
down; they would rather&#13;
everybody be called&#13;
Europeans than Germans or&#13;
other nationalities.&#13;
Our music has also had a&#13;
great effect on them. Where&#13;
I was at I always heard rock&#13;
music being played from&#13;
groups like Chicago, Guess&#13;
Who, Doors, Crosby, Stills&#13;
and Nash, etc. They all&#13;
admitted Germany had no&#13;
groups like these, or what&#13;
we were putting out in&#13;
musical groups.&#13;
Then, of course, there's&#13;
also the problem of drugs.&#13;
Drugs are really starting to&#13;
take hold in European&#13;
youth. In some cases they&#13;
are already in the junior&#13;
high level, just as they are&#13;
here. But one thing I found&#13;
was that it was smoked and&#13;
grown a lot more in the&#13;
open. Law enforcement&#13;
officials have not yet taken a&#13;
firm grip on the problem as&#13;
they have here. It seems&#13;
that through all the&#13;
discipline before the war,&#13;
now they are afraid to enforce&#13;
strict discipline on this&#13;
issue yet. Their parents are&#13;
starting to realize the&#13;
problems of drugs and are&#13;
really starting to worry&#13;
about how great an effect&#13;
drugs are having on their&#13;
youth. I think they are&#13;
definitely behind us in their&#13;
enforcement and cure of the&#13;
drug problem.&#13;
I have now shown a few&#13;
problems that I noticed&#13;
When I was there that were&#13;
very much comparable to&#13;
the problems of our&#13;
American youth.&#13;
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Framed Original&#13;
Geometries&#13;
$20 - $25&#13;
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503 Main, Racine&#13;
633-4662 — 634-7168&#13;
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3814 - 1 6 Avenue, Kenosha.&#13;
Tape Recorder. 3 speed, mono, auto&#13;
shutoff. 3 didget counter good cond.&#13;
Call 657-5992.&#13;
1969 Olds 442. Automatic, power&#13;
steering and brakes, 14,000 mi.&#13;
$2,500. Call 657-5681 after 5.&#13;
1970 Camaro. Snow Tires and Rims.&#13;
639-8863 after 4:30.&#13;
1966 Ram. Amer. Con. 7843 - 20th.&#13;
1949 Harley-Davidson. Will trade.&#13;
Call -652-6335 between 4 &amp; 6.&#13;
1963 VW (40,000 mi.) $600, 1966&#13;
Dodge Coronet (12,000 mi.) $700.&#13;
12911 Washington Ave. Raci.&#13;
1962 Buick 2 dr hardtop, $250. Call&#13;
634-4445 or 633-2791.&#13;
1961 Jeep CJ5. Call 694-5744.&#13;
1969 Open GT Silver $2,400 or best&#13;
offer. 652-3312 after 4.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
3 suitcases, very good cond. $25. Call&#13;
654-2704.&#13;
For a Good night's sleep —&#13;
Waterbeds. 3701 - 60th Street. Call&#13;
654-9447.&#13;
Mimeograph Paper — Rainbow&#13;
Colors — Best Quality. 14 reams $1&#13;
apiece. Call 654-2726 between 4 &amp; 6&#13;
p.m.&#13;
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Earn Extra Money — Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632-3785 or 633-3805.&#13;
APARTMENT FOR RENT —&#13;
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modern, furnished apt. on University&#13;
and Bridge. $62.00 per mo. per person.&#13;
Call 633-2753. Joyce.&#13;
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654 -996 8&#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE July 26,1971&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Joe Tyjerina tries to&#13;
keep people from becoming&#13;
impersonal code numbers in&#13;
a file cabinet. In his role at&#13;
the Wisconsin State Employment&#13;
Service in&#13;
Kenosha, Joe helps those&#13;
individuals who have&#13;
barriers between themselves&#13;
and employment&#13;
opportunities.&#13;
Working in human&#13;
relations, mostly involving&#13;
Mexican-Americans and&#13;
other members of minority&#13;
groups, he specializes in&#13;
selection, referral and job&#13;
development at the State&#13;
run Employment Service.&#13;
"One of the main&#13;
requirements in my job,"&#13;
Joe told me, "is that I speak&#13;
fluent Spanish. I interview&#13;
all the Mexican-Americans&#13;
who come into the office&#13;
looking for a job."&#13;
The three main objectives&#13;
of the employment service,&#13;
he explained, are to help&#13;
people become successfully&#13;
employed, to help employers&#13;
meet their manpower&#13;
needs, and to help&#13;
communities develop their&#13;
manpower resources.&#13;
Joe Tyjerina is twentyone&#13;
years old. He is a&#13;
valuable link in the employment&#13;
office, between&#13;
the programs and help of-&#13;
TerecF^exicaiwS&#13;
and the people themselves.&#13;
"At times maybe half of&#13;
those I interview can't&#13;
speak English very well,&#13;
This limits them to menial&#13;
jobs, or migrant work,&#13;
neither of which supports a&#13;
battle."&#13;
Joe is a limited term&#13;
employee at the employment&#13;
service. He has a&#13;
high school education, and&#13;
experience in the work he&#13;
does. Recently the&#13;
qualifications for the job&#13;
TtmnUelTiiHS^&#13;
Wisconsin, Kenosha, Racine&#13;
and Walworth. This Tri-&#13;
County Program will serve&#13;
to educate migrants for&#13;
better jobs if they relocate&#13;
in one of the counties.&#13;
Besides education and&#13;
Working&#13;
Class&#13;
Hero:&#13;
Strives For&#13;
Equal&#13;
Employment&#13;
Joe Tyjerina&#13;
family very well," Joe&#13;
.continued.&#13;
"There is job discrimination&#13;
today, but&#13;
Mexican-Americans are&#13;
trying to combat this by&#13;
(getting a better education&#13;
and becoming better informed.&#13;
"The lack of an adequate&#13;
education will stand between&#13;
anyone and their&#13;
potential," he said, "but&#13;
realizing this is a part of the&#13;
were raised. This means&#13;
that Joe will soon have to&#13;
step down from the position&#13;
he holds. A full time employee&#13;
will be hired oil the&#13;
basis of q ualifications. But,&#13;
for the time being, Joe will&#13;
help locate individuals into&#13;
jobs, or educational&#13;
programs that will soon&#13;
qualify the otherwise "hardcore&#13;
Unemployed".&#13;
One such program has&#13;
recently begun in three&#13;
housing, other benefits will&#13;
be offered.&#13;
The advantages of this&#13;
program include bi-lingual&#13;
instructors at places like the&#13;
Kenosha Technical Institute&#13;
to teach the migrants such&#13;
trades as welding. This Tri-&#13;
County Program is an extension&#13;
of the Manpower&#13;
Development Training Act.&#13;
It is one of the first such&#13;
programs in the state, according&#13;
to Joe.&#13;
Even after Joe explained&#13;
programs available to&#13;
minorities like Mexican-&#13;
Americans, it still seemed&#13;
evident that the federal and&#13;
state governments have a&#13;
way to go before the welfare&#13;
rolls are sufficiently&#13;
lightened. Job discrimination&#13;
is a fact of&#13;
life we all live around, but&#13;
few of us live in. Even&#13;
though minorities are&#13;
striving for better schooling,&#13;
one only has to look as far&#13;
south as Chicago and the&#13;
American Indian to see&#13;
backward progress on the&#13;
part of government.&#13;
There are many things&#13;
that Joe sees while&#13;
operating within the Employment&#13;
Service, but for&#13;
many reasons he avoided&#13;
mentioning them. He&#13;
mentioned the favorable&#13;
factors surrounding his job.&#13;
The advantages Joe&#13;
brings to his job include his&#13;
bi-lingual talents, his&#13;
familiarity with the&#13;
Mexican culture, customs&#13;
and life-styles. Most important&#13;
though, is the&#13;
knowledge he has of the&#13;
p r o b l e m s M e x i c a n -&#13;
Americans face.&#13;
Although he now is a short&#13;
term employee, Joe said he&#13;
still would like to get into&#13;
work involving human&#13;
relations, a field that could&#13;
use many more working&#13;
class heroes like himself&#13;
Fair (Continued from Page 1)&#13;
must be original.&#13;
The fair itself is sponsored by the&#13;
Racine Art Guild. The guild has about&#13;
100 members and is comprised mostly&#13;
of women. It meets once a month and&#13;
offers workshops in different fields of&#13;
art.&#13;
Along with food and drinks,&#13;
balloons will be sold, and if it is one's&#13;
"Too many other fairs have&#13;
become highly juried. It's more&#13;
relaxed here, and there's a&#13;
camaraderie among the artists.&#13;
There's not the sense of competition&#13;
that exists at other&#13;
fairs."&#13;
desire, he can have his body painted.&#13;
Portraits and caricatures will be&#13;
offered also.&#13;
Artist reaction to the fair is&#13;
characterized by what one painter&#13;
told Mrs. Madsen.&#13;
"The Starving Artist's Fair is my&#13;
idea of a fair," he said. "Too many&#13;
other fairs have become highly&#13;
juried. It's more relaxed here, and&#13;
there's a camaraderie among the&#13;
artists. There's not the sense of&#13;
competition that exists at other&#13;
fairs."&#13;
"I really think we're going to have a&#13;
nicer fair this year. We h ave better&#13;
grounds and more artists entered,"&#13;
Mrs. Madsen added.&#13;
r'O A -fy_r\&#13;
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&gt;/e a A c/ y.Y; x. Q,&#13;
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—w tK W zcafg c*&#13;
j i la *1^ A I c\cj&#13;
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Ad/*; s s - Y c\ pJ l(&#13;
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W'M. n o+i •&#13;
+o do ^4-&#13;
o.s</text>
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              <text>f I Irl l 4 . u » M A M University of Wisconsin - Parkside "Journalism is Literature in a Hurry" — Matthew Arnold J J&#13;
St 8 WtO OM&#13;
Volume4 Number 4 July 19,1971&#13;
Bell Strikers 'Disenchanted'&#13;
By JohnKoloen&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Since last Wednesday&#13;
members of the Communications&#13;
Workers of&#13;
America have been striking&#13;
the Bell System. According&#13;
to earlier reports the&#13;
company had made a last&#13;
minute contract offer to the&#13;
union but Nick Bovden, vicepresident&#13;
of local 5511 in&#13;
Racine said that the union&#13;
executive board had&#13;
received "no formal contract&#13;
offers since May 21st."&#13;
Bovden maintained that if&#13;
the company wanted to&#13;
negotiate a contract to avoid&#13;
the strike it could have done&#13;
so during the time between&#13;
the initial offer and the&#13;
strike deadline.&#13;
National issues focus on&#13;
union demands for an immediate&#13;
25 per cent across&#13;
the board wage increase and&#13;
\sr the consent of the Bell&#13;
System to become a union&#13;
shop. The company had&#13;
offered a 30 per cent wage&#13;
increase over a three year&#13;
contract period but union&#13;
officials termed the&#13;
proposal "inadequate".&#13;
Locally the strike affects&#13;
140 Wisconsin Telephone&#13;
employees in Kenosha and&#13;
300 in Racine. Bovden&#13;
pointed out that in Racine&#13;
late-shift operators had&#13;
staged a walkout nine hours&#13;
prior to the strike deadline&#13;
but explained that it had&#13;
been precipitated by "undue&#13;
pressure from supervisors".&#13;
He added that the walkout&#13;
affected only the late-shift&#13;
operators and that the bulk&#13;
of the employees remained&#13;
on the job until the deadline.&#13;
A union spokesman from&#13;
Kenosha claimed that many&#13;
employees had become&#13;
"disenchanted" with the&#13;
Bell System management.&#13;
He explained that&#13;
"grievances have reached&#13;
an all time high during the&#13;
past five years", citing that&#13;
this strike is the second to&#13;
hit the company in three&#13;
years. The previous strike&#13;
lasted 18 days. He attributed&#13;
the rising dissatisfaction&#13;
among employees to the&#13;
company's attitude toward&#13;
its employees and that it had&#13;
lost the "espirit de corp"&#13;
that had been established&#13;
during its first thirty years.&#13;
He contended that since&#13;
Theodore Vail, a founder&#13;
and past president of AT&amp;T&#13;
the employee "has been lost&#13;
in the shuffle" between&#13;
customer, stockholder and&#13;
employee. The spokesman&#13;
suggested that union strikes&#13;
would not be necessary if&#13;
the company maintained as&#13;
good a relationship with its&#13;
employees as it does with&#13;
its customers. "They spend&#13;
millions on public relations&#13;
but they don't pay adequate&#13;
wages nor improve working&#13;
conditions so how can they&#13;
expect the best service?"&#13;
C o n c e r n i ng w a g e&#13;
demands Joe Andrea, a&#13;
chief steward in Kenosha,&#13;
said that the CWA, had paid&#13;
$100,000 for a study to&#13;
determine wage distribution&#13;
throughout the country. The&#13;
study entitled the Nathan&#13;
Report, divided the country&#13;
into four wage "bands" to&#13;
be used as a guideline in&#13;
setting wages. The study&#13;
places telephone workers&#13;
from the Kenosha area in a&#13;
lower wage band than those&#13;
in Milwaukee. Andrea&#13;
claimed that "there would&#13;
be no handicap placed on the&#13;
company if it followed this&#13;
report." He added that the&#13;
Bell System has utilized&#13;
parts of the report in the&#13;
past but maintains no&#13;
consistency to it.&#13;
The union substantiates&#13;
its demand for wage increases&#13;
by pointing out the&#13;
profits AT&amp;T reaps each&#13;
year. A union member put it&#13;
this way: "It's too bad they&#13;
hire employees who can&#13;
read that they made $2&#13;
b i l l i o n l a st y e ar . . . we&#13;
know this and we want a&#13;
part of it."&#13;
Apart from the demand&#13;
for across the board increases&#13;
the union is also&#13;
seeking equal pay for&#13;
women. Currently female&#13;
employees of the Bell&#13;
System receive less pay for&#13;
the same jobs performed by&#13;
men. Peggy Johnson, a&#13;
qnion steward in Kenosha,&#13;
said, "There is as much as a&#13;
62 per cent difference in&#13;
wages." She blamed the&#13;
national office for this&#13;
situation and added, "The&#13;
argument is that most&#13;
women are holding down&#13;
Mrs. Helen Gibson, Chief Operator in Kenosha assisting Sam&#13;
Lupo and other supervisory personnel filling in for striking CWA&#13;
operators.&#13;
second jobs in the family,&#13;
with husbands supporting&#13;
them. But some of the&#13;
women are supporting&#13;
themselves and they have to&#13;
pay for everything just like&#13;
anyone else only they don't&#13;
have anyone to help them."&#13;
A union spokesman explained&#13;
additionally that the&#13;
company does not consider&#13;
the operator to be as&#13;
technically skilled as other&#13;
employees. "The company&#13;
says it's a lesser job," he&#13;
said, "but the management&#13;
was glad when the operators&#13;
came back the last time."&#13;
The spokesman admitted&#13;
that the union had not been&#13;
p u r s u i ng e q u a l p a y f o r&#13;
women in the past but&#13;
stated, "It's high time&#13;
women are recognized by&#13;
the company and the&#13;
union." Of the 550,000&#13;
members of the CWA 220,000&#13;
are women, most of whom&#13;
serve as operators.&#13;
Mrs. Johnson explained&#13;
that under current company&#13;
policy a top operator with&#13;
five years of training and&#13;
experience on the job can&#13;
earn a maximum of $106.50&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
by Marc Eisen of the Newscope staff&#13;
You could ask whatever happened to student government,&#13;
and probably the only people that could tell you what&#13;
transpired would be those who were active in it.&#13;
Which is to say that student government has given the&#13;
appearance that someone tied a brick around its neck and&#13;
threw it off a bridge. Because it hasn't been heard from&#13;
since Jerry Rubin said education and excretion had a lot in&#13;
common. Which occurred in late April.&#13;
Newscope spoke to four members of the Student&#13;
Government, President Tim Eaker, and student senators,&#13;
Dean Loumos, Ken Konkol, and Gary Davis. The four&#13;
represent a cross section of the views that are found in the&#13;
government. They were asked to evaluate student government,&#13;
to talk of its successes and failures.&#13;
What was discovered was that there still is a student&#13;
government at that. Except it hasn't had a formal meeting&#13;
since May. There has been the subsequent failure to get a&#13;
quorum (two-thirds of the members) at every planned&#13;
meeting since then.&#13;
The reason for this has been a combination of factors:&#13;
Final examinations, incompatible schedules, vacation,&#13;
work, members graduating, and the lackadaisical attitude&#13;
of some members.&#13;
Tim Eaker has had a change in his thinking since he&#13;
took office. While he campaigned for the presidency on the&#13;
basis that change could be affected through cooperation&#13;
with the University, this faith seems to have been shaken.&#13;
He told Newscope, "I've learned to be skeptical. My&#13;
biggest disappointment has been the lack of cooperation&#13;
from the other departments of the University. It almost&#13;
appeared they didn't want a student government. They&#13;
were fearful student government may attempt to rock the&#13;
boat — which it may certainly do. There appears to be a&#13;
complete air of paranoia around the University."&#13;
He continued, "If I run again I don't think my overall&#13;
views would change. I would still say the University has to&#13;
be unified. There has to be meaningful student participation&#13;
in the University. There also has to be a lot of faith and&#13;
Whatever&#13;
Happened&#13;
to&#13;
Student&#13;
Government?&#13;
assistance on everyone's part.&#13;
"It's going to be up to the people how we get this," he&#13;
asserted. We can either get it through faith, or we can get it&#13;
through negotiations, or we may have to use other means.&#13;
"Students are not bound by many of t he regulations the&#13;
administration and the faculty are," he explained. We can&#13;
bring pressure to bear through different activities in support&#13;
of things we need.&#13;
"I've become more skeptical that cooperation with the&#13;
University is possible," he said, "but I still maintain it is&#13;
possible."&#13;
Student Senator Dean Loumos' attitudes have hardened&#13;
more than Eaker's. He said, "If Eaker can't get any help&#13;
from the administration, no one can. His mistake was&#13;
thinking we could get help. If student government is going&#13;
to be anything next year it has to realize you can't get any&#13;
help from the University."&#13;
He emphasized, "If you want to make change, you do it&#13;
through threats. Threats of violence and violence. Mostly&#13;
through the threat of it."&#13;
He was asked if he was serious. He answered, "Yes.&#13;
What I mean by violence is a strike, and everything that&#13;
goes with it. That's the only thing that works."&#13;
In evaluating student government, he said, "I don't&#13;
know because we really didn't do very much. But for this&#13;
campus it was excellent. I'm hesitant about embracing&#13;
militancy. As far as that goes, we were excellent in not&#13;
tearing down the school. Because if we were a bunch of&#13;
militants we did poorly."&#13;
He added, "I'm caught between the two, but I'm&#13;
starting to lean to militancy."&#13;
Ken Konkol's appraisal of student government was, "1&#13;
don't think it's really gotten underway yet. About the only&#13;
thing they have accomplished is to give $125 to Jerry Rubin.&#13;
The one big success it had was being formulated in the first&#13;
place."&#13;
The biggest danger to it, he feels, is student apathy.&#13;
"Unless we dissolve the student apathy I don't see much &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE July 19,1971&#13;
TO THE&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
Ho-hum; Barry is off&#13;
again, on his tangent over&#13;
the topless clubs, and trying&#13;
to run people's lives.&#13;
It must be Spring: (the&#13;
elections are over)!&#13;
I know how discouraging&#13;
to the operators of the&#13;
topless clubs it is to appear&#13;
at the city council hearings&#13;
and discover only themselves&#13;
there to defend their&#13;
entertainment, knowing&#13;
only too well that back in&#13;
their establishments there&#13;
are hundreds of patrons&#13;
enjoying the shows, who&#13;
rightfully should be allowed&#13;
as adults to enjoy any such&#13;
entertainment they so&#13;
desire.&#13;
1 would like to call the&#13;
attention of the city council,&#13;
once again, to the swimwear&#13;
that they'll find at the public&#13;
beaches, where every kid of&#13;
any age can view! (Talk&#13;
about double standards)&#13;
If topless dancing is a&#13;
crime how come the&#13;
thousands of patrons, and&#13;
the people who distribute&#13;
their merchandise, aren't&#13;
prosecuted for aiding and&#13;
abetting?&#13;
On May 25th Barry held&#13;
another one of his public&#13;
"hearings". I suppose that&#13;
on the last hearing May 11th&#13;
only a dozen of his supposedly&#13;
14,000 backers&#13;
showed up. Now he's trying&#13;
again, what a waste of time&#13;
and money. Well this time&#13;
we'll let all the "rightous"&#13;
people know, why we've&#13;
gone to the State Supreme&#13;
Court and are willing and&#13;
prepared to go to the United&#13;
States Supreme Court. I'm&#13;
sure the patrons of the&#13;
topless clubs are letting&#13;
themselves be "heard" by&#13;
their continuous patronizing&#13;
of these clubs. By denying&#13;
these places Liquor&#13;
Licenses will in no way stop&#13;
the topless entertainment,&#13;
the clubs would continue to&#13;
operate without liquor, and&#13;
it would iust mean another&#13;
Kenosha - Racine&#13;
BOOKS - NOVELS&#13;
GREENING OF AMERICA&#13;
by Ch arle s Rei ch&#13;
THE COUPLE&#13;
by M r. &amp;Mrs. K&#13;
CALIFORNIA GENERATION&#13;
by J acqueline Briskin&#13;
R-K NEWS AGENCY&#13;
Newspapers - Paperbacks - Magazines&#13;
5816 Sixth Av e. &amp; P ershing Plaza&#13;
NEED BOOKS?&#13;
The K e n osh a &amp; R a cine C a m p u s&#13;
B o ok Stores are n ow clo s e d for&#13;
t h e summ er, but all b o o k s a re&#13;
s ti l l a v a i l a b le from the store o n&#13;
t he Wo o d R o ad Cam pus.&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
law suit against Barry and&#13;
his committee, and another&#13;
court battle. There was&#13;
already a ruling in Los&#13;
Angeles, Calif., by the&#13;
supreme court, which read&#13;
as follows, "Ban on Liquor&#13;
for Nude Clubs Ruled&#13;
Illegal", Mr. Barry is aware&#13;
of this ruling, so if there is&#13;
another law suit served&#13;
upon the city there will be&#13;
one man and one man only&#13;
to blame, Mr. Frank Barry&#13;
the 105h w ard Alderman of&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Thank You&#13;
Charlene Kuipuo&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
Have you been following&#13;
the various hassles between&#13;
Aid. Frank Barry of Racine&#13;
and the nude bars, topless&#13;
entertainment and bottomless&#13;
entertainment? And&#13;
the liquor license complications?&#13;
Seems a federal&#13;
court in Los Angeles&#13;
recently ruled that "denial'&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR&#13;
&amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
PIZ ZA - SEA FOO DS&#13;
ITAL IAN-A MERI CAN FOO D&#13;
COC KTA ILS&#13;
ENT ERT AIN MEN T&#13;
• ?U2 - 14 - 52 ST.&#13;
| KENOSHA&#13;
in the United States. If a&#13;
mayor of any city, lets some&#13;
aldermen disregard the&#13;
American Constitution the&#13;
way Aid. Barry does consistently,&#13;
then I say by all&#13;
means the federal court&#13;
should and must step in,&#13;
after all the city of Racine&#13;
must honor the constitution,&#13;
too. The only think I think is&#13;
shameful is when a citizen of&#13;
Racine even has to go to&#13;
federal court to protect his&#13;
rights as a American&#13;
citizen.&#13;
I think Aid. Frank Barry&#13;
of the 10th Ward in Racine,&#13;
should admit he acted&#13;
wrong and against the&#13;
constitution. If he keeps on&#13;
insisting to battle the people&#13;
in federal courts trying to&#13;
take away their rights, then&#13;
I say let him pay for the&#13;
court cost out of his own&#13;
pocket, and leave the tax&#13;
money alone, we pay enough&#13;
taxes already.&#13;
Bud Missuerli&#13;
of a liquor license to an&#13;
establishment providing&#13;
nude e n ter tai n m e n t&#13;
because the nature of the&#13;
entertainment, is unconstitutional.&#13;
The entertainment&#13;
itself is constitutionally&#13;
protected, held&#13;
the court, and therefore not&#13;
obscene. .&#13;
Aid. Frank Barry is well&#13;
aware of this ruling, but he&#13;
continually disregards it&#13;
Now the question I would&#13;
like to ask is: If Mr. Barry, a&#13;
lawmaker himself, refuses&#13;
to honor this decision made&#13;
by a three judge federal&#13;
court. Then he goes so far as&#13;
to punish those who&#13;
disagrees with the laws he&#13;
makes, and challenges them&#13;
through the courts. Now how&#13;
are we suppose to respect&#13;
this man?&#13;
Mayor Huck of Racine,&#13;
made a remark that the&#13;
federal court should stay out&#13;
of local government. This&#13;
remark disgraces the whole&#13;
system of d emocracy, used&#13;
Studen t Governmen t (Con tin u ed f r om p a g e d&#13;
future at all for student government."'&#13;
Gary Davis, like Dean Loumos, was a member ol the&#13;
Halloween party. His assessment was, "Not nearly the stuff&#13;
I thought would get done has gotten done. Not remotely has&#13;
it approached it. I'm really disappointed in that respect."&#13;
He explained, "I'm not nearly disappointed in student&#13;
government as I am in the people who composed it. They've&#13;
displayed an unwillingness to respond to the needs and&#13;
interests of the students."&#13;
He said of the success of student government, "I think&#13;
the People's Peace Treaty was a success in that it bore out a&#13;
campaign promise of most people in the Senate. I think h&#13;
sets the precedent for involvement in the community."&#13;
Davis expanded, "I think if student government wants&#13;
power it's going to have to go out and make students aware&#13;
of it; that their own interests lie with a strong student&#13;
government. We don't have that now.&#13;
"I do believe that if student government is to be a&#13;
leading organization, it must be in the vanguard. I don't&#13;
believe student government can have a purely reflective&#13;
role," he continued. It should also be creating and exploring&#13;
new ideas. I think that was the main intention of the May&#13;
Day action."&#13;
Eaker disagrees with this view. Which in itself is a&#13;
microcosm of t he split between him and the Luddites (the&#13;
Halloween party). Eaker said, "Once a Senator is elected&#13;
he seems to lose sight that he is there to serve the students.&#13;
Whether their viewpoint is the same as his makes no difference.&#13;
He's their voice."&#13;
He is against the formation of student parties. "I'd&#13;
rather see 17 s enators who have their own heads, rather&#13;
than 17 senators who judge an issue by who proposed it."&#13;
If a n evaluation of student government is to be made&#13;
from speaking with four of its members, its successes might&#13;
be that it does exist, and it did sponsor a successful May&#13;
Day demonstration.&#13;
It's failures would be foremost that it failed to stay in&#13;
touch with the student body, and that its successes only&#13;
numbered two.&#13;
As for the attitudes of it, it would be primarily skepticism&#13;
towards the administration. An attitude that was&#13;
held firmly by all four, despite their political differences.&#13;
Newscope&#13;
CARL'S P IZZA&#13;
In Four Siies 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
. RIBS • SPAG HETT I • CHIC KEN&#13;
GNO CCH I . RAVIOLI • LA SAG NA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SAN DWI CHE S&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
-YOU KIN G . . . WF flR/NC"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
Editor Warren Nedry&#13;
Copy Editor JohnKoloen&#13;
News Editor Marc Eisen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Business Manager John Gray&#13;
NEWS STAFF&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Darrell Borger&#13;
James Casper. Jim Koloen. Bill&#13;
Sorensen.&#13;
CONTRIBUTING&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
S&#13;
e&#13;
^,&#13;
tevesand&#13;
- Janet Sabol, Mike Starr.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella. Dave Kraus,&#13;
Don Marj ara, Barb Scott.&#13;
PHONES&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
553-2496&#13;
553-2498&#13;
Summer Newscope is a"&#13;
independent student newspaper&#13;
composed and published weekly&#13;
through the summer session by&#13;
students of the University ol&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Student&#13;
obtained advertising funds are&#13;
the sole source of revenue for&#13;
the operation of Newscope. 6,00&#13;
copies are printed and&#13;
distributed through the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the&#13;
University. Free copies aie&#13;
available upon request. &#13;
July 19,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I have been following&#13;
events at Parkside since last&#13;
December when the administration&#13;
unsuccessfully&#13;
attempted to fire 27 f aculty&#13;
members. It seems to me&#13;
that the administration&#13;
would by now have&#13;
recognized the bounds&#13;
within which it can operate;&#13;
apparently it has not. This&#13;
spring they attempted to do&#13;
the same thing again, only&#13;
on a much smaller scale and&#13;
in a much quieter manner.&#13;
However, Dr. Russell&#13;
Brokaw (one of the faculty&#13;
members whose nonretention&#13;
was announced&#13;
this May) decided to present&#13;
his side of his case in an&#13;
open hearing. He did so&#13;
most competently.&#13;
I was therefore shocked to&#13;
read in the last issue of&#13;
Newscope that the nonretention&#13;
decision concerning&#13;
Dr. Brokaw had not&#13;
been reversed. It's amazing&#13;
that the Science Division&#13;
Executive Committee could&#13;
listen to three hours of&#13;
factual testimony from Dr.&#13;
Brokaw and still come up&#13;
void. The fact that substantial&#13;
proof was introduced&#13;
to the committee&#13;
showing that Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie was more than&#13;
confident in May of 1970 that&#13;
Brokaw's contract would&#13;
not be renewed, does not&#13;
apparently represent&#13;
prejudice to the committee.&#13;
That Chancellor Wyllie is&#13;
the Spiro Agnew of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin, is&#13;
quite evident, however.&#13;
I have heard rumors that&#13;
Dr. Brokaw is being urged&#13;
to take his case to court. As&#13;
a concerned member of this&#13;
community, I support Dr.&#13;
Brokaw and hope that other&#13;
will, too.&#13;
A concerned citizen&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
On the Mayor's remark&#13;
that federal courts should&#13;
stay out of local governments.&#13;
I would like to bring&#13;
to the attention of the mayor&#13;
Section 66.054 par. No. 14, in&#13;
the Wisconsin State Statues&#13;
(Municipal Law). There&#13;
you'll find as follows: „&#13;
Court Reviews A. The&#13;
action of any city council,&#13;
village or town board, in&#13;
granting or refusing liquor&#13;
licenses, can be reviewed by&#13;
the courts, and it also&#13;
mentions the supreme&#13;
courts, too.&#13;
Maybe you and your&#13;
aldermen on the license&#13;
committee, Barry, Anzalone,&#13;
Heck and Stanton,&#13;
should study some law,&#13;
before running off with your&#13;
mouths.&#13;
Terry McCue&#13;
Darrell Borger&#13;
Studying got you down? Take a break for the Newscope dance&#13;
July 31.&#13;
L I&#13;
by Marc Eisen of the Newscope staff&#13;
With a snicker, waterbeds have come to&#13;
Racine and Kenosha. Three stores in the two&#13;
cities sell them, Rip Van Winkles, 3701 60th&#13;
street in Kenosha, the Earth Works, 625 Main&#13;
street in Racine, and Melody's High Fashion,&#13;
2304 63 rd street in Kenosha.&#13;
The waterbed, having a triad of virtues that&#13;
spell success in the mass culture (it's new and&#13;
part of the underground, it's a tactile experience,&#13;
and it gives sex an extra bounce), has&#13;
become a pop superstar in the tradition of the&#13;
knapsacks, and Elton John. Keep in mind that&#13;
the most famous waterbed advertisements in&#13;
the National Media goes something like, "Two&#13;
things are better in a waterbed. One is&#13;
sleeping." Heh-heh.&#13;
Which is not to emphasize that in all&#13;
probability it is healthier to sleep on a waterbed&#13;
than a conventional bed.&#13;
business generated.&#13;
He teaches sixth grade at Holy Rosary&#13;
school in Kenosha during the rest of the year.&#13;
His parther (who is his brother-in-law) just&#13;
graduated from UW-Madison, and will enter&#13;
medical school in the fall. Which all means, he&#13;
said, they have too much at stake to be fast&#13;
buck artists.&#13;
Davis said he had a couple of reasons for&#13;
going into business. One was that he had just&#13;
gotten out of the draft a couple months ago, and&#13;
he concluded, "I figure I'd lose two years in the&#13;
army, so I decided to gamble on this."&#13;
A second reason, he said, was, "You hate to&#13;
go around with a college degree begging for a&#13;
lousy summer job. Besides, I want to get some&#13;
business experience. This is better than&#13;
business school, or taking a class at Parkside.&#13;
If I break even I'll be ahead."&#13;
Melody Borom, who is the owner of&#13;
What a waterbed consists of is a water-filled&#13;
membrane of elastic high strength vinyl — in&#13;
other words, a water mattress. A person lying&#13;
on one displaces his own weight in the water,&#13;
and has his weight evenly distributed over&#13;
every part of his body in contact with the&#13;
mattress.&#13;
It contours to each individual's body shape,&#13;
giving more support to the body's surface than&#13;
a conventional bed. This being so because&#13;
water is displaced from heavier parts of the&#13;
body to lighter parts, giving support to areas&#13;
like the small of the back, the neck, and the&#13;
arms.&#13;
What it's like is floating on your back in&#13;
water.&#13;
The three stores began to sell the waterbeds&#13;
within the past few months.&#13;
Ken Davis, who with Ed Scruggs owns Rip&#13;
Van Winkles, opened for business July 2, and&#13;
has sold between ten and 20 beds since then.&#13;
Davis described the store as a summertime&#13;
venture. Its future depends on the volume of&#13;
Meldoy's High Fashion, says the waterbeds are&#13;
a sideline to her beauty shop. She claims to&#13;
have sold close to 100 beds in two months' time.&#13;
The Earth Works is the only head shop in&#13;
the area thus far to sell waterbeds. Russ&#13;
Growthus, a co-owner of the shop, told&#13;
Newscope they have been selling the beds for&#13;
three months, and have been averaging about&#13;
three or four sales a week, with the rate increasing&#13;
as time goes on.&#13;
While they. said it's mostly college age&#13;
people who buy the beds, there have been adult&#13;
buyers. Davis spoke of a man who came in and&#13;
said he wanted to buy a bed for his teen age&#13;
girls, and that was that. "He bought it like it&#13;
was a carton of milk." Growthus said that&#13;
almost half of his customers were adults,&#13;
particularly those with back trouble and arthritis.&#13;
&#13;
What are people's reactions when they first&#13;
see a water mattress? Growthus said, "The&#13;
older people are skeptical. The young kids just&#13;
giggle. Most people are hesitant to lie on one.&#13;
They're afraid they're going to bust, but we&#13;
encourage them to try it out."&#13;
Marlene Volpendesta, who works at&#13;
Meldoy's, said, "What they usually say is,&#13;
'Wow, it's really far out. What if it pops?' "&#13;
Ken Davis told Newscope, "Reaction to it&#13;
has been good, except for my mother-in-law —&#13;
she says I'm going to lose my shirt selling&#13;
them. What adults ask about them is, 'how are&#13;
they for sex?', or else they say, 'I'm going to get&#13;
up or I'll fall asleep.' One lady said it was&#13;
spooky. I really couldn't logically convince her&#13;
it wasn't."&#13;
He added, "The only way for a person to&#13;
find out what it is is to lay on it."&#13;
The price of the cheapest waterbed is&#13;
around $30.00 in all three stores — e xcept for&#13;
Rip Van Winkles which will have a special sale&#13;
price of $25.00 soon for the single size (3'3"x7').&#13;
The stores offer a vareity of sizes.&#13;
Prices vary with the size and type of&#13;
guarantee. The guarantee varies from five,&#13;
seven, ten, 20 and 50 years in the different&#13;
stores.&#13;
The Earth Works is the only store to offer&#13;
all sizes for $30.00. The King size (6'x7') costs as&#13;
much as the single size. Russ Growthus explained&#13;
it costs the manufacturers very little&#13;
more to make a larger size as opposed to a&#13;
smaller size. The price increases in the other&#13;
stores is fairly substantial.&#13;
But it takes more to have a waterbed than&#13;
just a waterbed. You need a frame to hold it in,&#13;
or else there's too much pressure.on the seams.&#13;
And if y ou do spring a leak you need a liner in&#13;
the bottom of the frame. Liners cost about $15,&#13;
while the frames cost about $40. All the shops&#13;
said many people build their own frames.&#13;
There's more needed yet. If you don't have&#13;
a foam pad, you're going to get pretty cold at&#13;
night. The water in the bed eventually settles to&#13;
room temperature — a bout 30 degrees cooler&#13;
than your body. To absorb this you need a foam&#13;
pad, which is about an inch thick. The pad costs&#13;
about $10.00.&#13;
None of the stores offer waterbed heaters.&#13;
The cost of them is the prime reason for this.&#13;
Growthus adds, "I don't like the idea of&#13;
electricity and water together."&#13;
The biggest drawback to waterbeds is their&#13;
weight. When filled they weigh about 1,600&#13;
pounds. They hold about 250 gallons. When&#13;
they're filled, it's obvious, they can't be moved.&#13;
They're not advised for people who have houses&#13;
with weak floors.&#13;
Growthus told of a guy who had sprung a&#13;
leak in his bed. He managed to drag it out to his&#13;
porch so he could patch it there. The porch then&#13;
collasped because of the weight.&#13;
on July 22 SUMMERFEST $1-00&#13;
"Bloomsbury People" &amp; "Raw Meat"&#13;
Hwy. 38 Johnson Park &#13;
Paf*p4 NEWSCOPE July 19,1971&#13;
I was always the kid in the neighborhood&#13;
who opened a Kool-Aid stand on days when it&#13;
seemed like bubonic plague hit the city. I didn't&#13;
even have the kind of parents who would send&#13;
someone out to buy drinks when my ego fell as&#13;
low as my business. Even though Ma gave me&#13;
the Kool-Aid, and the water was free, it still&#13;
seemed like I was losing money.&#13;
This harsh introduction into the world of&#13;
capitalism left a definite impression upon me.&#13;
Whenever I pass a business that is obviously&#13;
failing or has already failed the test of&#13;
popularity miserably, I feel genuine sympathy.&#13;
In fact, I can feel bad any night I want, simply&#13;
by driving around Kenosha and recalling&#13;
recent "ghosts of the restaurant world".&#13;
I magine I should establish a route through&#13;
town as a public service to take future&#13;
restaurant owners on so they can learn by&#13;
others' mistakes. A few stops at former eating&#13;
locations would include The College Inn,&#13;
Franksville, The Cheyenne House, and Taco&#13;
King. Another place that bit the dust was a hot&#13;
dog haven called Lum's that once called 3315 -&#13;
52nd Street home.&#13;
This place would have made almost anyone&#13;
feel bad if waste in quantity bothers them,&#13;
especially waste in the form of a brand new&#13;
building designed for that chain. Lum's in&#13;
Florida are nearly always big financial successes,&#13;
I'm told. But I'm also quickly reminded&#13;
"this ain't Florida".&#13;
I was very glad to see another restaurant&#13;
on that site months after Lum's folded. It was&#13;
healthy to see that kind of courage in big&#13;
business. The Bonanza Sirloin Pit was&#13;
welcomed, even if only by myself, when it came&#13;
to 3315 - 52nd Street.&#13;
To check on their progress, Maggie and I&#13;
ate at the Sirloin Pit during the middle of the&#13;
by Paul Lomartire of the Newscope staff&#13;
week. This is usually a good chance to see if a&#13;
place is doing all right, business-wise, unless&#13;
there are money saving gimmicks going on.&#13;
There were enough people eating there&#13;
that night so it didn't seem like eating at a&#13;
Brewers' post-pennant victory party. It struck&#13;
me that a second bargain steak place was&#13;
making it. That started other ideas going&#13;
through my head.&#13;
Kenosha was apparently supporting two&#13;
steak houses, even though they both borrowed a&#13;
name from the same television show. The close&#13;
name association, I concluded, was for a&#13;
healthier rivalry. Pondorosa vs. Bonanza does&#13;
have sort of a ring to it.&#13;
After waiting in line a few minutes, we&#13;
were asked by a western clad female what we&#13;
wanted to order. The menu is on a big board&#13;
that offers eleven meals from which to choose.&#13;
Besides steak, they offer chicken, shrimp and&#13;
fish, not to forget hamburgers. The prices&#13;
range from $2.99 for a T-Bone steak to 69 cents&#13;
for a Bonanza Burger. In between these two&#13;
items, the prices hover around $1.59.&#13;
After we told the girl what we wanted, she&#13;
gave us plastic 'V' shaped cards with numbers&#13;
on both sides. I thought that this was part of&#13;
some sort of western gambling game to pass&#13;
time while the food was cooked. I wanted to W1&#13;
"&#13;
a trip to Abilene or something but I found out&#13;
that the numbers are just to keep the orders&#13;
I^was waiting for a number eight, a fish&#13;
clatter ($1.59). Maggie had ordered a steak&#13;
sandwich ($1.39), number five. With our meals&#13;
the menu lists French fries, a salad or coleslaw&#13;
and Texas toast. The last item mentioned could&#13;
be called Iowa toast or New Jersey toast, as it&#13;
isn't overly big, or even from Texas.&#13;
Before I got the meal, I saw definite advantages&#13;
that Bonanza had over their comnetitor&#13;
Their selection offers a choice, including&#13;
various steaks. And, a big advantage&#13;
that might mean a lot, especially in Kenosha, is&#13;
the fact that Bonanza allows an individual to&#13;
wash his meal down with a beer.&#13;
With this in mind, and satisfied stomachs,&#13;
Maggie and I left. The prices seemed a little&#13;
stiff to me, until the versatile excuse, inflation,&#13;
popped into my head.&#13;
If there is a hunger for a good steak,&#13;
Maggie's recommendations on those used in&#13;
sandwiches are favorable, and I would&#13;
recommend the fish. Even if they didn t offer&#13;
free trips or prizes with those numbers, I was&#13;
satisfied that this business will appease most&#13;
anyone. I would even have considered going&#13;
back if I hadn't decided to open my own place.&#13;
Soon I will open Cartwright's Cut-Rate&#13;
Canteen, featuring Hoss' Heavy Hamburgers,&#13;
(4 lbs. each), served by authentic cowgirls&#13;
(shipped from Dallas) wearing only 46 g allon&#13;
hats. My entry should prove to be very competitive&#13;
and interesting in the bargain steak&#13;
world. Especially some hot day, at high noon,&#13;
on a dusty side street when Bonanza, Pondorosa&#13;
and I realize this town ain't big enough&#13;
for the three of us.&#13;
CARNAL KNOWLEDGE&#13;
Directed by Mike Nichols&#13;
Jack Nicholson&#13;
Candice Bergen&#13;
Arthur Garfunkel&#13;
Ann Margaret&#13;
Jules Feiffer&#13;
Film's growing interest in&#13;
frank sex as a motivating&#13;
force has appeared&#13;
frequently in open markets&#13;
now for about five years,&#13;
and in foreign and underground&#13;
films for about&#13;
fifteen. The sexual arena&#13;
still remained a primary&#13;
stage in an upcoming genre&#13;
of films dealing more with&#13;
excitement found within the&#13;
act, rather than with the&#13;
psychological strain that&#13;
this "momentary" excitement&#13;
brings about.&#13;
The 'New Morality' has&#13;
found its latest foothold in&#13;
the form of semihistorical&#13;
critique, showing us first the&#13;
wrong way, and no doubt,&#13;
telling us later the right way.&#13;
Now we are confronted with&#13;
a reasonable facsimile of&#13;
the past and even given time&#13;
to ponder on what we have&#13;
seen and bow our heads in&#13;
shame. The punishment of&#13;
disgust is dealt heavily to all&#13;
of us when only some of us&#13;
are at fault. It might be wise&#13;
for the college aged viewer&#13;
to quietly observe as though&#13;
an outer space alien taking&#13;
notes and nodding while&#13;
those who must heed the&#13;
lesson accept shame.&#13;
While the title remains&#13;
misleading, "Carnal&#13;
Knowledge" is the container&#13;
of s everal lessons. The most&#13;
important of these is the one&#13;
taught to the near middle&#13;
aged people who can recall&#13;
the chain of events that&#13;
brought them to their&#13;
present level of inadequacy.&#13;
From their youth they are&#13;
shown the fumbling first&#13;
attempts at sexual contact,&#13;
those same attempts that&#13;
have been glorified to be&#13;
touching, reminiscent of the&#13;
Student Prince (Summer of&#13;
'42, and, to an extent "Love&#13;
Story). The older audience&#13;
is then transported a little&#13;
closer to the present, where&#13;
the two caricatures of the&#13;
extreme, Nicholson and&#13;
Garfunkel, separate from&#13;
college and each other, one&#13;
marrying and the other&#13;
"hot-lining" as a bachelor.&#13;
The film continues with&#13;
infrequent visits between&#13;
the two old friends,&#13;
Nicholson the visited, and&#13;
Garfunkel the visitor. We&#13;
are bombarded with the&#13;
bachelor's references to&#13;
"big tits" at ages 20, 30 and&#13;
40. Nicholson demonstrates&#13;
a cultural role that insisted&#13;
men find women that will&#13;
smother them in flesh&#13;
rather than personality. We&#13;
are shown in a graphic&#13;
fashion how the word LOVE&#13;
is raped, twisted and&#13;
manhandled, creating&#13;
veritable hell on earth for&#13;
those who participated.&#13;
The parallel is completed&#13;
as the married Garfunkel&#13;
pops in on his old friend,&#13;
relating the difficulties he&#13;
has encountered with his&#13;
wife. We see the same&#13;
giggling, funbling males&#13;
attempt to describe and&#13;
understand a condition that&#13;
they have created.&#13;
In the end we see&#13;
Nicholson as a burned out&#13;
man and Garfunkel as a&#13;
hollow individual seeking a&#13;
cure that has come 20 years&#13;
too late. He has grown a&#13;
mustache and long hair and&#13;
become involved in uncarbonated&#13;
communal love.&#13;
There is really very little&#13;
to this film, because there is&#13;
very little of the film that we&#13;
haven't already experienced;&#13;
at least now it&#13;
has all been put together in a&#13;
nicely analytic package. In&#13;
the analysis the women are&#13;
superficial and neurotic, the&#13;
men are material and&#13;
schizoid ... a pretty accurate&#13;
picture of today, I&#13;
suppose. If indeed I were a&#13;
slightly older reviewer (say,&#13;
20 y ears) I would probably&#13;
say a great many good&#13;
things about this film, but,&#13;
from my point of view the&#13;
film can only be called&#13;
correct. A c orrect film then&#13;
is "Karnal Knowledge" . . .&#13;
a lesson, too . . . and, a bad&#13;
example. We have isolated&#13;
the disease. What I will&#13;
await is a cure.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
CAROL KING TAPESTRY&#13;
The other day I was&#13;
reading an article in one of&#13;
the trade papers concerning&#13;
the state of affairs in the&#13;
record industry today. One&#13;
general complaint was that&#13;
the big powers (Capital,&#13;
RCA) were sacrificing&#13;
quality for quantity and that&#13;
a really good record critic&#13;
can find at least one flaw;&#13;
something slightly lacking&#13;
in any current release.&#13;
If that statement is true,&#13;
then there would be some&#13;
obvious advantage being a&#13;
not so good critic, but rather&#13;
an average one. For&#13;
example, I can say that on&#13;
The songs are symphonies&#13;
surrounding the poetic&#13;
lyrics. It is the kind of music&#13;
that you'll put on just before&#13;
you go to sleep and end up&#13;
listening to 'till four in the&#13;
morning. Pure, delicate,&#13;
fresh, sincere and beautiful.&#13;
One might think that in&#13;
recording Carol King's&#13;
talent, it would be very hard&#13;
to get musicians equal to the&#13;
task of backing her up.&#13;
While that may be true, it&#13;
certainly wasn't a problem&#13;
on this album. If you can&#13;
escape concentrating on&#13;
Miss King herself, you'll be&#13;
amazed at the quality of the&#13;
people in the background,&#13;
by Bob Borchardt of the Newscope staff&#13;
"Tapestry", I find it impossible&#13;
to notice any flaws;&#13;
that in my opinion it is&#13;
perfect, without having to&#13;
worry about my reputation&#13;
as the boys from "Rolling&#13;
Stone" might.&#13;
While professional critics&#13;
shy away from using&#13;
superlatives and are very&#13;
careful not to use anything&#13;
that sounds like a&#13;
generalization for fear of&#13;
losing credibility, I myself,&#13;
enjoying the freedom of&#13;
ignorance, can say that&#13;
"Tapestry" is the ultimate&#13;
in refined and subtle beauty&#13;
and that the entire album is&#13;
brilliant without one gram&#13;
of dead wax. If Leonard&#13;
Feather said this, he might&#13;
have to go back to playing.&#13;
Carol King is a writer&#13;
perfectly attuned to how and&#13;
why music affects people.&#13;
especially on bass.&#13;
The highest point on the&#13;
album, which is probably an&#13;
inaccurate phrase to use&#13;
since there is nothing that&#13;
could be considered a low&#13;
point, is the combination of&#13;
geniuses; Miss King and&#13;
James Taylor. Together,&#13;
their music is something&#13;
more than perfect, a&#13;
marriage of sympathetic&#13;
talents that achieve the&#13;
unachievable. I can't help&#13;
feeling that a person who is&#13;
unable to see beauty in this&#13;
music must be numb.&#13;
Newscope would&#13;
appreciate suggestions&#13;
for&#13;
Audio Realm &#13;
July 19,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
white, the stalls are white, the urinal is white.&#13;
Flurorescent light glare at you. It's unreal.&#13;
It's unhuman.&#13;
A classroom. Close the door behind you&#13;
and then sit down. Listen. Look about. It&#13;
comes to you. Your'e an animal, you're in a&#13;
cage, you're locked up. A windowless&#13;
claustrophobia surrounds you. The whiteness&#13;
is there again. Except for the back wall.&#13;
Purple. Your mind reels as though someone&#13;
has exploded a flashbulb within inches of y our&#13;
face.&#13;
Listen. The humming of a distant&#13;
generator. The almost silent passage of air&#13;
through the ducts. Cool air. Antisceptic air. 68&#13;
degrees F. It's there. A something that speaks&#13;
of technology. There's a sameness to it. You&#13;
could be anywhere where science is supreme.&#13;
The common denominator is sterility.&#13;
Walk out of it and into the halls. Wander&#13;
around. There's a timelessness in being in&#13;
Greenquist late at night. Nothing changes.&#13;
Nothing to indicate the passage of time.&#13;
Something Mailer wrote: " ... one&#13;
cannot conceive of a modern building growing&#13;
old (does it turn dingy or will the colors&#13;
stain?); there is no way to age, it can only&#13;
cease to function. No doubt these buildings&#13;
will live for twenty years and then crack in&#13;
two. They will live like robots, or television set&#13;
which go of order with one whistle of the&#13;
wind."&#13;
Greenquist Hall is the totalitarianism that&#13;
Mailer writes about. It is not to say that architect&#13;
of it is a fascist. It is to say that it is an&#13;
example of the latent totalitariannism that is&#13;
in the American psyche, particularly in the&#13;
liberal and the technocrat psyches.&#13;
What I'm saying is that America is&#13;
becoming a totalitarian society. — and it&#13;
won't necessarily only happen if the military&#13;
engineers a coup, no, there are more forces&#13;
that are propelling us almost inevitably to&#13;
this. It's liberals who want to make the world&#13;
safe for liberals, technocrats who want to&#13;
wrap the world in Saran wrap, it's left wing&#13;
fascists, it's narcs, it's food that has no taste,&#13;
it's buildings that have no color.&#13;
It's urban problems that demand&#13;
solutions that are inamical with democracy,&#13;
it's preventivive detention, it's Spiro Agnew,&#13;
it's prior restraint of the press, it your phone&#13;
being tapped, your mail being opened by the&#13;
government, it's the brain police. It's&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
It's an existence that is sterile and&#13;
inhuman. It's the way things are going.&#13;
In two weeks some thoughts on John&#13;
Kennedy and totalitarianism.&#13;
• ••Voices...&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
Totalitarianism has come to America with no&#13;
concentration camps and no need for them, no&#13;
political parties and no desire for new parties,&#13;
no, totalitarianism has slipped into the body&#13;
cells and psyche of each of us it sits in the&#13;
image of the commercials on television which&#13;
use phallic and viginal symbols to sell&#13;
products which are otherwise useless for sex&#13;
it resides in the taste of frozen food, the&#13;
pharmaceutical ordor of tranquilizers the&#13;
lack of workmanship in the mass it&#13;
vibrates in the sound of t he air conditioner or&#13;
the flicker of fluorescent lighting. And it&#13;
proliferates in that new architecture which&#13;
rests like an incubus upon the American&#13;
landscape It was the first art to be&#13;
engulfed by the totalitarians, who distorted&#13;
the search of modern architecture for simplicity&#13;
and converted it to monotony. It&#13;
beheads individuality, variety, dissent, extreme&#13;
possibility, romantic faith, it blinds&#13;
visions, deadens instinct, it obiliterates the&#13;
past It makes factories look lik e college&#13;
campuses. It makes new buildings on college&#13;
campuses look like f actories. It depresses the&#13;
average American with the unconscious&#13;
recognition that he is installed in a gelatin of&#13;
totalitarian environment which is bound to&#13;
deaden his most individual efforts.&#13;
— Norman Mailer&#13;
The Idol and the Octopus&#13;
Sit in the concourse of Greenquist Hall&#13;
some night when it's deserted and the building&#13;
is silent. Sit there quietly and listen.&#13;
Sense what the building is. Feel what the&#13;
vibrations are that it given off. Then look&#13;
about quickly. Flash to the ceiling, the brick&#13;
wall, to the glass wall, to the floor.&#13;
Close your eyes then, and you'll get a&#13;
premonition of what it means. Sensations of&#13;
coldness, isolation, drabness, muteness,&#13;
sterility, death. A sense of giganticsism, a&#13;
huge brick wall dwarfs you on one side as a&#13;
ceiling towers over you. This, juxtaposed to a&#13;
sudden low ceiling that smothers you with&#13;
separated inverted cells and indirect lighting.&#13;
It's a tomb, a mausoleum, a Paean to&#13;
death. (&#13;
Walk around. Go in the men's john. It s&#13;
white. The tile floor is white, the walls are&#13;
white, the ceiling is white, the wash basin is &#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
by Sandy Principe&#13;
Twenty years ago economist&#13;
Seymour Harris warned that by the&#13;
middle 'sixties there would be a&#13;
surplus of college graduates on the&#13;
ob market. The first sign, he said,&#13;
would be an overabundance of&#13;
teachers. The Department of Labor&#13;
reported such an overabundance in&#13;
September, 1969. Later reports indicated&#13;
an excess of professional&#13;
personnel in many other areas. Men&#13;
and women with recent doctorates,&#13;
particularly in the sciences, are&#13;
hoped for, the salary may be lower&#13;
than they like. They will certainly not,&#13;
as in the past, have jobs conferred&#13;
upon them. A possibly incomplete but&#13;
telling poll of the 944 men who&#13;
graduated from the letters and&#13;
science division of the University of.&#13;
Wisconsin last year showed that only&#13;
174 were working full time; and of&#13;
that number, only about half had the&#13;
kind of job they wanted.&#13;
"Normally a placement director is&#13;
wined and dined by firms wanting to&#13;
ingratiate themselves with the institution,"&#13;
says Cornell Placement&#13;
among those hard hit by unemployment.&#13;
The Cooperative College&#13;
Registry in Washington, a placement&#13;
service for college teachers, reports&#13;
the number of Ph.D. candidates is up&#13;
25 per cent over last year while the&#13;
number of job vacancies is down 25&#13;
per cent. These statistics are relative&#13;
and opportunities vary in the different&#13;
fields.&#13;
The fact is our colleges and&#13;
universities are graduating more&#13;
people than our present job market&#13;
requires. The largest graduating&#13;
class in history — an educated army&#13;
of 186,000 — is entering America's&#13;
certified credential society and&#13;
learning to its sorrow that a degree is&#13;
no longer a guarantee of a suitable&#13;
job. Actually, the high ranking&#13;
seniors of -71 — at least those of the&#13;
best schools — will have no serious&#13;
trouble finding employment. But,&#13;
they may have to work harder at&#13;
selling themselves to an employer,&#13;
the job may not be the one they had&#13;
Chief John Munschauer. "This year&#13;
no one even bought me lunch."&#13;
Although Corporate recruiters still&#13;
visit campuses, their numbers have&#13;
decreased tremendously over the past&#13;
few years. At Princeton, there were 85&#13;
recruiters this spring compared to 169&#13;
in 1968. The engineering school at the&#13;
University of Kansas greeted 55&#13;
recruiters this semester, down from&#13;
255 three years ago.&#13;
The job offerings reflect this crisis&#13;
situation even more effectively. A&#13;
survey of 140 U.S. colleges and&#13;
universities indicated that between&#13;
March, 1970, and March, 1971, job bids&#13;
for male B.A.s dropped 61 per cent&#13;
and a staggering 78 per cent of Ph.-&#13;
D.s. Actual hiring will be down less&#13;
than these statistics suggest —&#13;
probably 25 per cent at the B.A. level.&#13;
Every year, more and more people&#13;
enter colleges or universities. Yet, 80&#13;
per cent of all jobs available in the&#13;
U.S. are within the capabilities of&#13;
those with high school diplomas.&#13;
"Even in periods of continued&#13;
economic growth," says a recent&#13;
report of the Commission on Human&#13;
Resources and Advanced Education,&#13;
"more than a fourth of the college&#13;
graduates would be available to&#13;
upgrade the educational level of&#13;
occupations." What this means is that&#13;
even without a recession, 25 per cent&#13;
of all graduates will be working at&#13;
jobs for which a college education is&#13;
not needed at all.&#13;
What does all this mean? There are&#13;
two interpretations as to the source of&#13;
the dilemma. Some are confident that&#13;
jobless Ph.D.s are a temporary&#13;
Sumptom of the recession, and will&#13;
disappear with a small upswing in the&#13;
economy, or with the expansion of the&#13;
universities in this decade. I personally&#13;
feel any expansion would&#13;
simply reinforce a top heavy spiral.&#13;
The less optimistic see them as&#13;
harbingers of a worse crisis to come,&#13;
as the nation's schools continue to&#13;
produce more specialists than industry&#13;
and academe can absorb.&#13;
Reactions to this job scarcity vary&#13;
from nonchalance to panic and anger.&#13;
Many graduates have adopted a waitand-see&#13;
attitude toward the future.&#13;
Feeling that we can only accept the&#13;
present as is, and unwilling or unable&#13;
as of yet to join the nine to five conventional&#13;
career club, they are&#13;
directing their energies in what has&#13;
been labeled alternative careers.&#13;
These include jobs (mostly low&#13;
paying) with a basic commitment to&#13;
service or to social change.&#13;
Since three-fourths of the&#13;
graduating class have B.A.s in the&#13;
humanities, liberal arts seniors are&#13;
the most bewildered. According to&#13;
John Berry, a senior at Wisconsin's&#13;
Beloit College, "The standard joke is&#13;
that after you graduate you can either&#13;
work for Yellow Cab in town or for the&#13;
security force on campus." Time.&#13;
What then is the value of a college&#13;
education? While the lack of a college&#13;
degree does not necessarily negate&#13;
the intellectual qualifications of an&#13;
applicant, its possession is a&#13;
recommendation to the prospective&#13;
employer as to the graduate's&#13;
determination and stamina. On the&#13;
other hand, an education is not&#13;
limited to a four-year-degreegranting&#13;
program. Herein lies the&#13;
true value of higher education. Once&#13;
this is realized and accepted, the&#13;
anger diminishes — an anger often&#13;
directed at the colleges that trained&#13;
the students to no seeming purpose.&#13;
However, the U.S. is still highly&#13;
productive and has an enormous&#13;
potential for employment — 21,741&#13;
different jobs are described in the&#13;
latest U.S. Dictionary of Occupational&#13;
Titles, and 82 million are working at&#13;
them. There are Federal and State&#13;
government programs which provide&#13;
jobs in every professional field with&#13;
salaries that compete with private&#13;
corporations. Only a small percentage&#13;
of these thousands of jobs are&#13;
even known to the average college&#13;
student. Thus, this is a time for the&#13;
revival of guidance counseling. With&#13;
updated statistics and trend&#13;
projections, counselors are capable of&#13;
guiding students; pointing out areas&#13;
in their field that may be more open&#13;
than others. New efforts are being&#13;
made in this direction and should be&#13;
taken advantage of. Parkside&#13;
provides such services through the&#13;
Student Affairs Office. The counselors&#13;
here have much material at their&#13;
disposal and are readily available&#13;
upon appointment.&#13;
Strike&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
per week. Currently there&#13;
are no opportunities for&#13;
operators to advance further&#13;
without leaving the&#13;
switchboard operations.&#13;
Because of this many union&#13;
representatives are calling&#13;
1971 "the year of the&#13;
operator'. The union in turn&#13;
expresses little hope that&#13;
women employees will be&#13;
paid equally with men, but&#13;
they expect to reduce the&#13;
difference significantly&#13;
throu gh con tra ct&#13;
negotiations.&#13;
In Kenosha and Racine all&#13;
employees of Bell Telephone&#13;
are members of CWA and&#13;
strongly support the&#13;
demand for union securitv.&#13;
According to a spokesman&#13;
the company would have to&#13;
make no concessions by&#13;
consenting to a union shop.&#13;
benefits a spokesman said,&#13;
"The health program is so&#13;
bad that Blue Cross&#13;
wouldn't underwrite it."&#13;
The plan had been&#13;
negotiated by contract but&#13;
had never been the target of&#13;
a strike. The program was&#13;
opposed both by the rank&#13;
Speaking of fringe and file and some&#13;
management personnel but&#13;
it remained in the contract&#13;
despite. A recent suggestion&#13;
for improved dental care&#13;
programs was not taken&#13;
.seriously by the union. The&#13;
spokesman said, "What&#13;
would be the use when we&#13;
have the worst&#13;
h o s p i t a l i z a t i o n p l an&#13;
available."&#13;
$6.80 BUYS 6,000 ADS THIS SIZE call&#13;
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3701 • 60th STREET&#13;
TELEPHONE 654-9447&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
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RAINBOW GARDENS&#13;
AMUSEMENT CENTER&#13;
MINI-GOLF&#13;
ARCHERY&#13;
87th &amp; SHERIDAN RD.j&#13;
ANNOUNCING THE OPENING ON JUL Y 1, 1971&#13;
OF K 5 S ASSOCIATES&#13;
A PRO FESSIONAL VOCATIONAL&#13;
GUIDANCE SERVICE&#13;
Offering Services in the following areas&#13;
Career § Educational Planning&#13;
Diagnostic Testing by Licensed&#13;
Psychologists&#13;
Occupational Information and&#13;
Employment Outlook&#13;
1303 Douglas Ave, Racine 633-2132&#13;
^urthei^nformation^AvaHable^jj)onRequest&#13;
Save&#13;
for&#13;
the&#13;
Future&#13;
WEST&#13;
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SAVINGS&#13;
Phone 658-2573&#13;
58th St. at 6th Ave.&#13;
MAIN OFFICE:&#13;
CAPITOL COURT,&#13;
MILWAUKEE •J &#13;
July 19,1971 NEWSCOPE&#13;
B y Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Wide open, long,&#13;
relatively level, and&#13;
challenging - these are&#13;
some o f the characteristics&#13;
making up the recently&#13;
opened Ives Grove Golf&#13;
Links located just west if I94&#13;
on Highway 20 in Racine&#13;
County.&#13;
The 18 hole layout,&#13;
situated on an open tract of&#13;
land, may at first glance&#13;
look easy to a long hitter,&#13;
but what the course lacks in&#13;
natural barriers, has been&#13;
compensated for by a series&#13;
of traps and water hazards&#13;
that necessitate accurate&#13;
shooting for good scoring.&#13;
The new course has four&#13;
different sets of tees for&#13;
each hole, giving the course&#13;
a great deal of flexibility&#13;
and a wide range of difficulty&#13;
levels. The different&#13;
sets of tees include the&#13;
regular, the women's, the&#13;
Sunday and the championship&#13;
tees. When the&#13;
championship tees are used&#13;
the course stretches out to&#13;
6,915 yards, making it one of&#13;
the longest in the state.&#13;
From the regular tees the&#13;
course runs 6,390 yards,&#13;
which is similar to the&#13;
yardage at Johnson's Park.&#13;
From the ladies tee the&#13;
course is only 5,410 yards —&#13;
about 1,500 yards less than&#13;
the longest tees.&#13;
Adding to the difficulty of&#13;
the course are the 65&#13;
strategically located sand&#13;
traps. A long ball straying&#13;
from the fairway will likely&#13;
hit a trap.&#13;
Trees are not yet a major&#13;
factor on this course&#13;
because they are short and&#13;
very small, but there will be&#13;
a big problem of tree&#13;
planting going on in the next&#13;
two years. In eight to ten&#13;
years the trees will provide&#13;
hazards for inaccurate shots&#13;
Ives Grove Links Open to Public&#13;
Page&#13;
as well as offering more&#13;
shelter and shade - two&#13;
things that the course has&#13;
very little of at present.&#13;
Seven lagoons are placed&#13;
in areas that will catch&#13;
errant shots. The lagoons&#13;
have an additional purpose.&#13;
All the tees and greens are&#13;
water fed from the lagoons.&#13;
Water is pumped into the&#13;
lagoons, then comes to the&#13;
surface and is exposed to the&#13;
open air for several hours.&#13;
Then it comes into the&#13;
watering system warm —&#13;
making it ideal for watering&#13;
fairways.&#13;
The complete fairway&#13;
from tee to green can be&#13;
watered at intervals.&#13;
Longer holes may have five&#13;
or six water sprinklers&#13;
placed right into the fairways.&#13;
Shorter holes have&#13;
from two to four. Not all the&#13;
sprinklers are on at one&#13;
time. One comes on and&#13;
another shuts off. All of&#13;
them are run on an&#13;
automatic time clock&#13;
controlled setup.&#13;
Fairway conditions are&#13;
not good yet, but that is to be&#13;
expected on a new course.&#13;
They have had about one&#13;
and a half years of growth.&#13;
Some of the spots that took&#13;
hold right away are in good&#13;
shape, while other areas&#13;
still need time.&#13;
The course will have a&#13;
rough area bordering the&#13;
fairways and it will be cut&#13;
about two or three inches,&#13;
which is not very long.&#13;
There will be a defined&#13;
rough, although roughs tend&#13;
to slow down play. This is a&#13;
country golf course and the&#13;
public doesn't want to spend&#13;
five or six hours on a golf&#13;
course. There will be a&#13;
definite line for the fairways&#13;
and when the trees start to&#13;
grow they will further serve&#13;
to outline the fairways. At&#13;
present things are very wide&#13;
Half M iler t o Attend Parkside&#13;
Three sport star Bill Carlson of Rhinelander has agreed to&#13;
attend the University of Wi'sconsin-Parkside, Track Coach Bob&#13;
Lawson announced recently.&#13;
Carlson, who placed fourth in the 880 yard run in the Class&#13;
A state meet, has posted a best of 1:56.3 for the two-lapper. He&#13;
also performed mile relay duty while running at Rhinelander&#13;
high school.&#13;
A nine letter winner, Carlson earned three each in track,&#13;
in football as a halfback and in basketball as a forward.&#13;
Currently playing summer baseball, he intends to major in&#13;
business at Parkside.&#13;
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John Carlson, 710 South&#13;
Oneida, Rhinelander, and was coached in track by Brian&#13;
Kuhlman.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1969 Dodge Super - Vee 383, 4sp„&#13;
console, vinyl top, new Goodyear&#13;
tires, $2,000. Call 652-1443 a fter 5.&#13;
1970 Camaro. Snow Tires and Rims.&#13;
639-8863 after 4:30.&#13;
1966 Ram. Amer. Con. 7843 - 20th.&#13;
1963 VW (40,000 mi.) $600, 1966&#13;
Dodge Coronet (12,000 mi.) $700.&#13;
12911 Washington Ave. Raci.&#13;
1962 Buick 2 dr hardtop, $250. Call&#13;
634-4445 or 633-2791.&#13;
1961 J eep CJ5. Call 694-5744.&#13;
'949 Harley-Davidson. Will trade.&#13;
Ca&#13;
" '652-6335 between 4 &amp; 6.&#13;
'969 Open GT Silver $2,400 or best&#13;
of&#13;
ter. 652-3312 a fter 4.&#13;
1955 B uick Deluxe (black). No rust,&#13;
exc. cond. New exhaust system and&#13;
brake line. Good trans. Call&#13;
654-6726 between 4 a nd 6 p.m.&#13;
1969 Olds 442. Automatic, power&#13;
steering and brakes, 14,000 mi.&#13;
$2,500. Call 657-5681 after 5.&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
3 suitcases, very good cond. $25. Call&#13;
654-2704.&#13;
open and it not always easy&#13;
to tell where the fairway&#13;
ends on many of the holes.&#13;
To make it possible for the&#13;
player to see where he is&#13;
supposed to go, every tee is&#13;
marked with an outline of&#13;
the hole showing the&#13;
location of water hazards&#13;
and sand traps. The yardage&#13;
is given for the respective&#13;
tees on the colorful&#13;
markers.&#13;
Greens are much larger&#13;
than most around this area,&#13;
but they are in good condition&#13;
and the putts seem to&#13;
hold true. They are not&#13;
unfair, as they offer a true&#13;
test of putting ability.&#13;
Tees, which are constructed&#13;
somewhat similar&#13;
to the greens, are well built&#13;
out here. They have a good&#13;
base which consists of such&#13;
elements as sand, gravel,&#13;
and black dirt. Tees have to&#13;
repair themselves because&#13;
of the divots that are taken&#13;
off of them. If constructed&#13;
properly, they will do a&#13;
better job of this.&#13;
Because of the automated&#13;
sprinkling system the&#13;
maintenance staff can&#13;
concentrate on other areas&#13;
of course repair. The course&#13;
now has one greenskeeper&#13;
who takes care of the entire&#13;
maintenance staff. Recently&#13;
there have been 16 people&#13;
working on maintenance,&#13;
while the normal crew is&#13;
expected to be reduced to&#13;
about 12.&#13;
Presently a trailer services&#13;
as the clubhouse, but&#13;
the permanent clubhouse&#13;
should be started later this&#13;
year and will probably be&#13;
housed completely which&#13;
will allow for work to continue&#13;
through the winter,&#13;
and it could be likely be open&#13;
by next spring for the dolf&#13;
season.&#13;
Aside from course&#13;
maintenance, plans are for&#13;
for a club manager rather&#13;
than a professional. A pro&#13;
usually has such duties as&#13;
care of the pro shop and&#13;
working on his own concessions,&#13;
whereas a&#13;
manager generally spends&#13;
more time in the building&#13;
dealing with all phases of&#13;
the operation, and is more of&#13;
a clubhouse manager than a&#13;
professional and a manager&#13;
combination.&#13;
Green fees at Ives Grove&#13;
are: Weekdays, 9 holes&#13;
$2.25; 18 holes $4.25.&#13;
Weekends and Holidays: 9&#13;
holes $2.50; 18 h oles $4*75&#13;
Yearly passes are&#13;
available to Racine County&#13;
residents only. There are&#13;
t h r e e d i f f e r e n t&#13;
classifications for these&#13;
passes: Junior (to age 16&#13;
$25; Regular $50; Senior (over&#13;
age 62) $25.&#13;
Vic God frey Handling Marathon&#13;
The third Annual Paavo&#13;
Nurmi Marathon, attracting&#13;
long distance runners from&#13;
throughout the nation, will&#13;
be held Saturday, August 14,&#13;
with the 26 mile, 385 yard&#13;
jaunt beginning at 8 a.m. at&#13;
Olympia Sport Village in&#13;
Upson and finishing some&#13;
two and one-half hours later&#13;
on Hurley's famed Silver&#13;
Street.&#13;
The race, which takes the&#13;
runners through the rugged&#13;
iron range country of northern&#13;
Wisconsin, is sponsored&#13;
by the Hurley&#13;
Chamber of Commerce in&#13;
cooperation with Olympia&#13;
Sport Village. Vic Godfrey,&#13;
distance coach at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
and camp director&#13;
at Olympia, is handling&#13;
preparations for the -run,&#13;
which has also been&#13;
designated the Wisconsin&#13;
AAU Marathon ChamRosandich&#13;
Named Secretary of N AIA&#13;
Tom Rosandich, athletic director at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, has been named secretary of the NAIA&#13;
athletic directors' committee.&#13;
Rosandich, whose duties will include coordination of the&#13;
National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics directors'&#13;
meetings in March, 1972, also was named to a three year term&#13;
as Area Four and District 14 representative.&#13;
Rosandich pointed out that the greatest interests among&#13;
athletic directors lie in the problems of finances for athletic&#13;
programs and drug abuse among athletes, coaches and&#13;
trainers.&#13;
"Everyone is experiencing a budget squeeze right now&#13;
and solutions will have to be found for that," Rosandich noted,&#13;
"but drug use among athletes is also a matter of great concern."&#13;
&#13;
Rosandich will work in cooperation with Dr. Charles M.&#13;
Morris of the NAIA national office in finalizing the agenda and&#13;
securing consultants for the athletic directors' workshop&#13;
March 13-14.&#13;
Joining him on the committee are Carnie Smith, Kansas&#13;
State College, chairman; Bill Baker, Arkansas Tech., vice&#13;
chairman; and Steve Senko, Rutgers University at Newark,&#13;
coordinator.&#13;
pionship.&#13;
Only runners from the&#13;
Badger State are eligible for&#13;
an official placing in that&#13;
division, but runners from&#13;
other states need not worry.&#13;
There are awards aplenty,&#13;
with custom-made plaques&#13;
going to the top 15 finishers,&#13;
special awards to age group&#13;
leaders, certificates to all&#13;
who start and T-shirts to all&#13;
who finish.&#13;
Team awards are given to&#13;
the best three man team.&#13;
And girls will get similar&#13;
awards for a 124 mile&#13;
"marathon".&#13;
All 1970 w inners return to&#13;
defend their titles. They are&#13;
Bruce Mortensen of&#13;
Rochester, Minn., who&#13;
clocked 2:25:02.8 in winning&#13;
the 1970 race, and age group&#13;
winners Dr. William Andberg&#13;
of Anoka, Minn., over&#13;
50; in 2:52:59; Dr. Alex&#13;
Ratelle of Minneapolis, over&#13;
40, in 2:52:59; and Jay&#13;
Monfore of Miller, S.D., and&#13;
Rich Brooks of Oak Park,&#13;
111.&#13;
«&#13;
%&#13;
Dune Buggy. Brand new. Must sell.&#13;
3814 - 16 Avenue, Kenosha.&#13;
Tape Recorder. 3 speed, mono, auto&#13;
shutoff- 3 didget counter good cond.&#13;
Call 657-5992.&#13;
For a Good night's sleep —&#13;
Waterbeds. 3701 - 60th Street. Call&#13;
654-9447.&#13;
Mimeograph Paper — Rainbow&#13;
Colors — Best Quality. 14 re ams $1&#13;
apiece. Call 654-2726 be tween 4 &amp; 6&#13;
p.m.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
Attractive Young lady to pose nude&#13;
for an aspiring photographer who&#13;
can't afford to compensate for such&#13;
services. Write M. Starr, 6517 28&#13;
Ave., Kenosha.&#13;
Earn Extra Money — Bartend &amp; Go&#13;
Go Dance. 632 3785 or 633-3805.&#13;
A P A R T M E N T FOR R E NT —&#13;
Madison, 3 girls need 1 f or fall to fill&#13;
modern, furnished apt. on University&#13;
and Bridge. $62.00 per mo. per person.&#13;
Call 633 2753. Joyce.&#13;
Large Edition&#13;
Framed Original&#13;
Geometries&#13;
$20 - $25&#13;
NEW&#13;
GALLERY ONE&#13;
503 Main, Racine&#13;
633-4662 — 634-7168&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
§: SUN. TH RU THURS. g&#13;
g 11 A.M. T ILL Ml UNITE f&#13;
|FRI. &amp; SAT." TILL 2 A.M.f&#13;
IHAMBURGERSI&#13;
I 40&lt; &amp; 24{ I&#13;
j SUPERCHEW |&#13;
| (triple decker) |&#13;
I 55&lt; &#13;
Pages NEVVSCOPE July 19,1971&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
He has a job hardly&#13;
anyone would want. When&#13;
he checks out a call to a&#13;
store late at night, he never&#13;
knows what may be waiting&#13;
for him. The chances of his&#13;
getting ^hot or maybe killed&#13;
during working hours,&#13;
would not even attract a bad&#13;
odds maker.&#13;
When he tells a group of&#13;
kids not to block a sidewalk,&#13;
he never knows if one of&#13;
them will turn and call him&#13;
a 'pig'. He must bridge the&#13;
gap between the old and the&#13;
young, set standards with&#13;
his own actions, and see to it&#13;
that his job is carried out&#13;
with life and death efficiency.&#13;
&#13;
Officer Ray Hamm is&#13;
employed by the Kenosha&#13;
Police Department. He is&#13;
what is popularly called a&#13;
"public servant". Between&#13;
the hours of 2 and 10 p.m.,&#13;
Officer Hamm is the&#13;
downtown area beat cop.&#13;
His function from day to day&#13;
as he puts it "is to control&#13;
traffic flow, and generally&#13;
be present, showing the&#13;
badge, as it is sometimes&#13;
called in police circles."&#13;
"The very fact that a&#13;
policeman is there walking&#13;
around sometimes tends to&#13;
dissuade those with quasi&#13;
criminal feelings or tendancies,"&#13;
he went on to say.&#13;
Though this isn't foolproof,&#13;
it is a deterrent, he said.&#13;
Ray Hamm joined the&#13;
police force when he was 33.&#13;
He has been on the force for&#13;
more than three years.&#13;
When he came to the job, he&#13;
had a high school education,&#13;
assorted technical school&#13;
experience in the field of&#13;
electronics. Since joining&#13;
the force, he has received an&#13;
associate degree from the&#13;
Kenosha Technical Institute&#13;
in police science. He attended&#13;
Parkside and took&#13;
courses in deviant sociology&#13;
and managerial data&#13;
processing. His studies then&#13;
led him to Michigan State&#13;
University, where he&#13;
received credits in a class,&#13;
Comparative Criminal&#13;
Justice, in an effort to get a&#13;
will come along as we prove&#13;
ourselves as a service&#13;
organization," he said.&#13;
While attending college,&#13;
Ray Hamm has been a&#13;
family man. While not&#13;
getting paid on any sdrt of&#13;
scale in relation to his&#13;
educational gains, he has&#13;
supported a family which&#13;
includes five children. Last&#13;
Working Class Hero&#13;
Officer Ray Hamm&#13;
To serve&#13;
and protect'&#13;
day activities. Bobies&#13;
conduct themselves as more&#13;
or less referees," he went on&#13;
to explain.&#13;
He said the British police&#13;
officer as an individual acts&#13;
"more as a friend, a neighbor,&#13;
a chap that lives in your&#13;
area, works in your area&#13;
and you see him every day,&#13;
so he's not a stranger."&#13;
Darrell Borger&#13;
Officer Ray Hamm&#13;
four year degree. This fall,&#13;
he hopes to enroll at Carthage&#13;
College to finish the&#13;
requirements for his&#13;
Bachelor of Science degree&#13;
in Sociology.&#13;
In discussing his&#13;
education, Officer Hamm&#13;
said, "Professionalism in&#13;
the police ranks is not&#13;
pleasant to have or nice to&#13;
have; it's a necessity in an&#13;
age when the people are&#13;
more intelligent and advanced.&#13;
They deserve what&#13;
they are paying for."&#13;
"Although I don't quite&#13;
think we're paid for&#13;
professionalism yet, this&#13;
summer his finances&#13;
allowed him to study police&#13;
science in England, in&#13;
connection with Michigan&#13;
State University.&#13;
While in England at the&#13;
University of London, he&#13;
studied "the association of&#13;
society to its police&#13;
department and how that&#13;
police department functions,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
"Their (law enforcement&#13;
officers) primary aim or&#13;
goal is minimal force at all&#13;
times, which seems to be the&#13;
cradle of the English police&#13;
department. Minimal interference&#13;
in public day-toAnyone&#13;
who is familiar&#13;
with Officer Hamm during&#13;
his hours on duty can detect&#13;
this philosophy in the way he&#13;
does his job. With the exception&#13;
of restless Kenosha&#13;
teens who haggle with Officer&#13;
Hamm on weekends&#13;
over loitering laws downtown,&#13;
many Kenoshans look&#13;
upon this police officer as a&#13;
friend.&#13;
Interested in the youth,&#13;
Officer Hamm offered, "I&#13;
don't think the kids are any&#13;
different than when we were&#13;
younger, except I possibly&#13;
had a little more respect for&#13;
the law."&#13;
"I think the kids are&#13;
waiting a little too much for&#13;
somebody else to do&#13;
something for them and&#13;
there's nothing free in this&#13;
world," he continued. "I&#13;
mean it's up to you to do&#13;
some thinking, and they've&#13;
got the intelligence if they&#13;
would just put it to work&#13;
instead of saying woe is me,&#13;
poor me."&#13;
After having discussed&#13;
police work in general, the&#13;
interview took a turn to&#13;
more personal views. I&#13;
asked Officer Hamm if he&#13;
thought the press treated&#13;
the law enforcement officers&#13;
fairly, and he said&#13;
that in his own opinion he&#13;
felt that newspapers did not&#13;
intentionally try to make&#13;
policemen look bad, but the&#13;
phrasiology connotated one&#13;
thing while saying another.&#13;
He also felt that public&#13;
relations have become very,&#13;
very important in his day-today&#13;
work. He credited&#13;
college with helping him&#13;
keep in touch with the youth&#13;
today, for example, and said&#13;
that other officers are attending&#13;
colleges in the area.&#13;
Officer Ray Hamm then&#13;
went on to sum up the way&#13;
he looks at his job. "I'm a&#13;
human being," he said, "the&#13;
same as a college student. I&#13;
don't want to be&#13;
stereotyped. I'm an individual,&#13;
but by the same&#13;
token I have to wear a&#13;
uniform. I'm not ashamed of&#13;
it, I'm proud of it; it&#13;
represents my society, not&#13;
my police department, but a&#13;
society that employs this&#13;
police department as a&#13;
means of controlling its&#13;
discipline factor. This is&#13;
what we are here for, our&#13;
services and to protect."&#13;
This is the philosophy of a&#13;
man who has a job that&#13;
hardly anyone wants.&#13;
Enro llme nt U p 3%&#13;
Final enrollment figures&#13;
at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside summer&#13;
session total 1,811 — an&#13;
increase of three per cent&#13;
over last year and an alltime&#13;
summer high at UW-P.&#13;
Last summer 1,767&#13;
students were enrolled and&#13;
the previous high of 1,789&#13;
was set in 1969, according to&#13;
John Valaske, Summer&#13;
Session Director.&#13;
Parkside's eight-week&#13;
summer session began June&#13;
28 and runs through Aug. 20.&#13;
VIVA MAX!&#13;
IS COMING!&#13;
the world s funniest general&#13;
recaptures the Alamo, and&#13;
the world s mightiest army&#13;
cant get him out I&#13;
PAMELA JONATHAN JOHN'&#13;
WINTERS AST1N&#13;
PETER&#13;
UST1NCM T IFFIN&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
8:00 P.E. ADMISSION - 78#&#13;
JULY aa PARKSIDE and WISCONSIN &#13;
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              <text>The Wandering Troubadour</text>
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              <text>"Journalism is Literature in a Hurrv" - Matthew Ar~old&#13;
•IIWIJCOPll FREE&#13;
\ 01.L )IE ~ - \ l')IRE:R 2 July 6. 19;1&#13;
THE llBS?AFlY&#13;
UW,., KEt/ :sr1;. CAMPL!f&#13;
3, 00 WASHINGTON RD. 1 n 5 id e&#13;
Summerfest&#13;
Threatened&#13;
Parkside Annexation&#13;
Proposal&#13;
Ike t Tina Turner&#13;
Review&#13;
More&#13;
The Wandering Troubadour&#13;
See Page 5 &#13;
PageZ NEWSCOPE July 5, IJll&#13;
lndicnl ions11ll onted&#13;
INDICATIONS. the student llttrary&#13;
magulne, ts interested in obtaining student&#13;
t'onlribuUon1 ln the fltld o( tnallve $lUdtnl&#13;
tndu,·or1 1ncluding short storlts. pHlr)',&#13;
photography and olhtt' media of art suitable for&#13;
lht maguint formal.&#13;
.or iJ it nect-ssary (or a stcde:nt to attend&#13;
Parllskie in lhe fall, as long 'as he attended&#13;
('lassd during the summer. Co,1trlbutors .whost&#13;
"'°'k is accepted for publicalion wUI rec.en·e the&#13;
graUtude of the t.taft and h,·o tree copies of the&#13;
n111gadne sc-nt to their bomt address. Vn•&#13;
1ortuna1.ely, due to economic restrictions. no&#13;
material can be rewrned unle.55 •«omp.ani~ by&#13;
a seU-addrt-SJed sUi iuptd envelope.&#13;
No deadline has yet bffn stt. but due to the&#13;
Job ot tdiUng and la)out. de.., the sooner&#13;
material is submitt.td lhe belier to allow the&#13;
f'dilorS ample U.me l.O do • good job oo the&#13;
--Letter Policy--&#13;
N scope will print as maay letter!. to the&#13;
f:Jllitolte:s possible. The letters will be printed in&#13;
. 0&#13;
. ety as li t...dtcr5 s~ould be double- thmr en r , · d typed if possible, and iw longer than 400&#13;
spacde '•tl lt-lters ltlUSl be: signed. Names will be wor $.o . withheld upon requesL&#13;
Congratulations . are ex&amp;end~ t.o • those fol"t:iiighted,&#13;
II men in PJannmg and Construction who paved an&#13;
gen e ' b 'Id. d sphall waU&lt;way to Ille athelellcs •• mg an tore II up lbe&#13;
~ollowin,g day to lay a pipeline beneath.&#13;
Tht&gt; naturt ol I.ht magailne exprHSH&#13;
tutrtnt tnnds In studtnl &lt;:r'e'aUvlty. anylhlng&#13;
from tht nptrlmHLII \.o the mort tradhlonal&#13;
forms of f'XprtH\on. Ont ntf'd not be a masc.tr to&#13;
tontrlbult ma~rial: onl) lnterulNI enoug.h to&#13;
1ubmh. In lht put thttt hu bun a tibort.agt of&#13;
matf'r,al from studt::115. many ~ntlal con•&#13;
t.ributon httltaling atdisplaylng their work. But&#13;
tht magatint Is a rorum for scudent Ytork, a&#13;
plact " 'htrt ont can pu.bllsh htl material ud&#13;
pt'thap.s lta"n from II.&#13;
m•gatint'.&#13;
Those int.trested. st.ould •·tile In•&#13;
'1catlon5 care of Newscopt, UW·P Kt~osha,&#13;
Wis. S31'0, or phone ISS48'1, exL 443, (or further&#13;
information.&#13;
Centrex Comes To Parkside&#13;
It ls Ml nettnary &amp;o ~ a fall-lime 11.u.dent.&#13;
sorensen on sorensen&#13;
tn the June 28. 1971. ,ssue d&#13;
lht' Nt'-.5N)p(' m)· friend John&#13;
Koloen m,de ,t somewhat&#13;
painfully obvious thal he was&#13;
suHermg from a not-lo-~·e11•&#13;
knawn malad) called misin•&#13;
tcrpr1t1hs It i-1 brought about&#13;
b) an o-vtt'l"d,ng o( the lapP&#13;
tte:0rdt•r and mflamtd earlobe&#13;
In other words • • I talk&#13;
loo much&#13;
\\1lh all the rapping contained&#13;
on his poor httlt tape recorder.&#13;
a few mistakes in ipelhng and&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR&#13;
&amp; RESTAURANT&#13;
PIZZA - S6AFOQ0$&#13;
ITALIAN-AMERICAN FOOO&#13;
COCK.TAILS&#13;
e:;N T£RT AINME.NT&#13;
2112 - 14 - 12 ST.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
-&#13;
fact were accidentally put into&#13;
print., so wlthout any iU feehngs&#13;
to",&lt;·ard my good lriend John or&#13;
tov,,ard Mother Newscope, I&#13;
would hke to researc.h lhal&#13;
which has been reseatched.&#13;
L The publication name is&#13;
ETC .. not ETCETERA. 2 H L. Mencl.en has indeed&#13;
written for thts $8me&#13;
pubhcation but my area of&#13;
lnterest is not nocessarily in the&#13;
territory of his publications i.e.&#13;
conc:epl,;&#13;
3. Allred Kon.ybsky's name is&#13;
spelled as ilis here ... Alfred's&#13;
mother might object~ 4. In paragraph 9 while&#13;
discus.sing cdd media the word&#13;
'hot' was used rather lhall the&#13;
formerl)' mentioned&#13;
I would like Vtf'Y much to&#13;
thank Jol111 again for his&#13;
original interest in my&#13;
publication and to mention to&#13;
our readers that many mem•&#13;
bers of the Ncwscope staff are&#13;
overworked.&#13;
Record Summer Enrollment&#13;
Summer Session enrollment at the Unn·ersity of Wisconsin--&#13;
Parkside ha!&gt; reached an all•time high. John Vul.:t:..ke, Summer Session director, announced tMt ~um•&#13;
mer enroUml'nt ~tood al 1,790 last Tuesday afternoon and shouJd&#13;
l'xceed 1.800 by the close of rtgistration. That compares to a total&#13;
last summer of l ,ffl and the all-lime high or 1,189 in 1969.&#13;
Voices wlll be just that. Voices.&#13;
ll will be a column that witl appear weekly in these pages. It&#13;
will be written altcr-n..itely by John Koloer, and Marc Eisen.&#13;
What will be written wm not necessarily reflect the v1~ws of&#13;
this paper. or even necessarily the views of the columnist who is noL&#13;
writing th.ll w00:k. What 1t will reOect are the opinions of an individual at a particular&#13;
pomt in lime.. Nothing more. No guarantees of consistency&#13;
are made. We will say what we feel, andhope£ul1y be able to convey&#13;
wh,,t this is- no small task in itself,&#13;
OUr topics w1II beanylhingthat interests us, be it in life, morals.&#13;
art or polllics, U we do a1\)'Utlng it will be to approximate .&#13;
something Yea.ts said. To "cast a cold eye on life, on death ... "&#13;
Hopefully. ..&#13;
The open111g piece will be on LOtalitarianism, and will appear&#13;
next week.&#13;
SA YE $ ON ElECTRONICSI&#13;
WATCH FOR BARGAINS&#13;
WE UNDERSELL EVERYONE ON&#13;
• Color &amp; B+W TV&#13;
• Stereo Components &amp; Consoles&#13;
• Radios{AM-FM-CB-SW-PB MWLW-BFO)&#13;
&#13;
• Tape Equipment (Cass .. Cart.. R to R)&#13;
• Air Conditioners&#13;
Newscope Special:&#13;
Famcus Brand&#13;
Color Portable&#13;
Full 12" Screen&#13;
Slimline&#13;
O,t,ly&#13;
$194 lomous lo,&#13;
A new inward dialing&#13;
telephone system known as&#13;
Centrex will be put into effect on&#13;
Monday .. July 12. This new&#13;
system permits a faster and&#13;
more efficJent use of telephone&#13;
equlpmenl II should be noted&#13;
that au main campus telephone.&#13;
oumberS wlll b~ changing as&#13;
well as t.be special acc:ess codes&#13;
und between the: main Kenosha&#13;
and Racine campme:s. The&#13;
extension numbers on the two&#13;
outlying campust:::1 will remo.in&#13;
as they arc now. Dire&lt;:¢ inward dialing means&#13;
that callers rrorn olf campus&#13;
will be able to dial directly to&#13;
the individual or office they are.&#13;
b'ying 'lo , .. ch wiUlout going ·&#13;
throog)l a (elcphone operator.&#13;
Persons not knowing the&#13;
telephane number of tile ln•&#13;
dividw&gt;I they are calling m~y&#13;
still di&amp;! the Parkside telephone&#13;
op,&gt;rator and be connected to&#13;
the desired party.&#13;
In ccrect most tclcphone in•&#13;
struments will be. · similar to&#13;
home telephones. Even the&#13;
billing !or telepl)one charges&#13;
will be automatically charged&#13;
to the extension from which the&#13;
telephone call originates.&#13;
The new equipment in general&#13;
affects the main campus only,&#13;
although some minor changes&#13;
affect the Kenosha arx! llacin,&#13;
campuses. The rea$on lhat lbe&#13;
~~ system for the m0$t part ls&#13;
hm1ted to the main CMlJ&gt;Us is&#13;
that the two outlying campus&#13;
are not in the Cenu-.x ix.!&#13;
daries as established by 11.;&#13;
telephone company.&#13;
The new system will aUow&#13;
indivi~ual ~rs to perform&#13;
func.tions . not previou&amp;ly&#13;
possible with the old equ~&#13;
menl; for th1s reason Ceoll'e:\&#13;
t,tY.rintroductlon rlasses will be&#13;
conduete&lt;i by telephone "u,,.&#13;
pany representatives. AU&#13;
faculty and staff are urged to&#13;
plan to altend one II the&#13;
training sessions. Alt \I.ill be&#13;
held in Greenquisl Hall, room&#13;
• 03:&#13;
July7 • 9:00a.m.&#13;
July?• 2:00p.m.&#13;
July8· 10:00a.m. July 8 · 2:00 p.m.&#13;
T~ey will last approximalel)' 30&#13;
nurunes.&#13;
Interim telephone direc:toriet&#13;
!or lac11lty and stair w.U te&#13;
made available before July 12&#13;
1he new city telephone di.rec·&#13;
tory cwhicll comes out iB latt&#13;
July) will contain a dl\'Jsiandepartment&#13;
listing for C41lltrs u,&#13;
easily Identify area desired and&#13;
dial directly to that ollice.&#13;
Activities Building Open&#13;
The Student Activities buiJding has announced its summer&#13;
hours. They are: Monday - Thursday, 11 a.m. • 11 p.m.&#13;
Friday, 11 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. and8:00 p.m. - I :OOa.m. Sa,urday, 8:00 p.m. - 1 :00 a.rn. for programmed events ooh&#13;
The laclllties in lhe &amp;uildi~ includ• pool table, amusemeot&#13;
machines a juke box and a piano, ln addition to vending semc.ts&#13;
available for rood and soft drinks, Schlitz, Budweiser ond SchliU&#13;
Mall Liquor are served. The beer prices are 25c, 25C. and 30c&#13;
respectively. Durlng Uie summer dances will be s,:heduled oo Wednesdif&#13;
and Saturday nights. A dance schedule wlll be available this wtd.&#13;
Wednesday night hours will be ext«1ded to 1 :00 a.m. when daJ'IC'('$&#13;
are beld.&#13;
Dam.-e admissiotl policy includes second semester paJti.iOt&#13;
students with 1.0. cards, summer students with ft:e cards, a!KI&#13;
gueots. Guesl$ can only be admitled by Parkside siudents and,,.&#13;
limited to one guest per student. Also, once a student ~s beel&#13;
admitted to the dance, he forfeils his guest admission pr1vikd&amp;t&#13;
Hours and dances can be altered to betler accomm~tt&#13;
student needs. Questions concerning the student actJvities buiJdilC&#13;
can lbe an..c;:wered by contacting Mr. Martioe2 at the ~tudcot Jttivities&#13;
building or by calllng his office.&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Editor Warren Nedry&#13;
•&#13;
Copy Editor John Koloen&#13;
News Editor Marc Eisen&#13;
Ff:aturt Editor Paul Locmu·tire&#13;
Business Manager. John Gray&#13;
PHONES&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
iS •&#13;
11&#13;
1 Yr. Warranty&#13;
CARL'S/ PIZZA NEWS STAFF&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Darrell Borger.&#13;
James Casper, Jim Kolcie:n, Bill&#13;
Sorensen.&#13;
summer Newscope papd&#13;
independent s!Udent """;,.tll&#13;
compooed and p11blish,::., i!&#13;
through the summer. •ty d&#13;
s!Udents or the. Ulll'1iud&lt;'&#13;
Wis&lt;.-onsin-Partts1de. ur,dS ,rt&#13;
obtained advertisin~ f/ll&#13;
the sole source or 1..,&#13;
theoperollon ol N""'ff ,od&#13;
copies are prin b cbt'&#13;
distributed thro~e cot''&#13;
Kenoshri o nd Rat• •~ .,&#13;
rnunities as ~el~id II'&#13;
University . . free t&#13;
&amp;vaiJable upon requei.&#13;
3105 60th Street 657-31-42&#13;
•• fo4u Sun,... 12"' • 1, ... w·&#13;
•uo • lllS • s,AGHm1 • (HICK[N&#13;
C.MOCCHI • U.VIOll • LA SM.NA&#13;
• UA FOOD • S4"DWICHIS&#13;
CAUY -OUTS • OlllvtlY&#13;
"'rOU .,He • wr UIIU;"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
CONTRIBt.rrlNG&#13;
WRITl:;RS&#13;
Mike Slevcsand, Janet Sabol&#13;
Mike Starr&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella. Dave Kraus,&#13;
Don Marjara, Barb Scott &#13;
-------s ummerf est Threatened ---..&#13;
-=-&#13;
J:::lal)~•·.:.::'"~· ---~"t;e.!!:l\.=:M.~O•..::.·i: ____ .,--"•1•_•&#13;
Summer Institutes Still Open by Marc Eisen of the Newscope start&#13;
It's the only place in the area where college&#13;
age people can come lClgether weekly during&#13;
urnmer to lalk and dance oc l'I)' in the grass and&#13;
~ten to a band. And now the continuation ot it is&#13;
., je,)Plrdy.&#13;
It's the Racine Summeriest. It's held every&#13;
Tbw-sd•Y night i n the pavilion at John.,on•s Park&#13;
in catedOr'lia - therein Ues the problem.&#13;
Area residents are complaining that people&#13;
whO s.neak in tut acro.ss their lawns. There is talk&#13;
that Caldeoola may pass a noise ordinance that&#13;
~oold end the outdoor dances.&#13;
Summeriest is sponsored by the Racine&#13;
Parks and Recreation Departmen~ and while&#13;
Johnson's Park is part ol Racine, it is&#13;
surrounded by the Lown of Caledonia.&#13;
Jim Wardrip of the Park and Recreation&#13;
DeJ)arlment told Newscope that there have been&#13;
totnplaint.s and thrPJihl in pa.st ye.ars. but that he&#13;
tx-pects lhls to be the make or break year for&#13;
summeriest.&#13;
The rapid growth in popularity is the reason.&#13;
n,e nrstdance this summer drew a crowd of 850.&#13;
'Ibis is an increase of more than 300 compared to&#13;
the first dance last !iummer. Wardrip estimated&#13;
that another 150 sneaked in withoul paying.&#13;
He said there were 12 telephoned complaints&#13;
by J ohn Koloen&#13;
of the News:c0peStarf&#13;
AS a rcs.11Jt ()( Ull;: vrt.&gt;:Sence ot&#13;
ParksJCle in Kenosha county,&#13;
t nacres or land now lying in&#13;
SOmers township is likely to be&#13;
aMeXed to the city or Kenosha.&#13;
n,e move. inlllated by Parkside&#13;
Village Inc., developers or the&#13;
88 unit dormitory complex sooth&#13;
of the Student Activities&#13;
building, ls being done in order&#13;
ro secure an adequate sewer&#13;
ar&gt;d water system and olber&#13;
murucipal services for the area.&#13;
•boot P&lt;Ople &lt;Ulting across 1a,.,.. alter th• flnt&#13;
dance:. A number or cars were aho illegally&#13;
parked. He said license plate nunbers ,..ere&#13;
taken. a?d that notices will be sent to thp owners&#13;
expla,mng that by illeg,,Uy parki~ they are&#13;
helf)lngto put an end to Summeriest Tic:tets ~ill&#13;
be issued in the Future, be noted.&#13;
, He emphasiz.ed. "The situation is 1tttous. We re not crying wotr. We see the handwriting on&#13;
lhe "''all." He explained that last year a petition&#13;
was circulated in Caledonia urainl an md to&#13;
Sum.a,.enest.. and that on stveral occasions the&#13;
sound lev,,I ol the hands had to be lo"-ered.&#13;
A resurfacing o{ the petition wouldn't sur•&#13;
prise him. he said.&#13;
What the end result will be remains to be&#13;
seen. He describes Swnmerfest, wh:ch lS 1n its&#13;
fifth ,Year. u ~•one ot the smoothest rwming&#13;
fun,ctions the aty has". He u1d Ute- ltids arc&#13;
always weU-behaved - ex('f:pt ~hen they sneak ill.&#13;
Hesa.id,&#13;
11lt's up to the people at Summeriest&#13;
themselves. They have the pc,wer to keep 1t&#13;
going. I have no control ove.r it."&#13;
Wardrip acknowledged, thouah, that it iJ&#13;
Caledonia that wlll make the final decuion.&#13;
••n,ei' can do about anything they want. We'tt&#13;
CConbnued on Page 6)&#13;
Open1np sbll rnna1n for thf&gt;&#13;
summt-r ln.st,tutH 1n&#13;
Hum1ntiea ror h11.h school&#13;
studtllls 10 be l&gt;Pld at tl&gt;P&#13;
Uni1-·,rsny of YJ11com1n&#13;
Pa~1de. th&lt; achoo! announc,d&#13;
today&#13;
Three workshops or hw•&#13;
-ffl.S eac-h -.&amp;11 be M'Jd in an.&#13;
July 5-16, mUSJc. Juh 19--30: and&#13;
bter-ature, Aug 2·13 T'hey mttt&#13;
Monday thNlUgh ~·rKlay !Nm t&#13;
to 12 and att open to h&amp;gh SC'hool&#13;
students•ho..,.111 bt-SfflJOl"S Uw&#13;
tan The non-&lt;t"fldJt lll$l!tUtes&#13;
includo field lnPI lo Chk:ago&#13;
and M1h.-aukee for • regist~tion fee 9( SI$&#13;
n,e mu:ste: v. orb.hop v. di&#13;
feature l«tutts on music •~ precaation &amp;nd careers In&#13;
music, hims, opporturuty for&#13;
per/onn.allCfS by sludfflts. and&#13;
trips to Ra,·1ru.a ror- a coocert by&#13;
the Clucago Symphony and to&#13;
the Mdwauktt Pfflormu~ Art,;,&#13;
Center for a pN)Gjct.1on ol "Tht&#13;
\1erry V. 1dow." Parkside&#13;
Parkside Village, Inc.&#13;
Requests City To&#13;
Annex University Newscope spoke with Robert&#13;
Kolstadt, city planner for&#13;
Kenooha, about the propo,ed&#13;
annexation. According tei&#13;
Kolstadt. "We've reached a&#13;
situation where the ruture&#13;
develDpment of the univerfity&#13;
itself, and its growth in&#13;
tlUdtnts, was going to be stifled&#13;
wir.hoot the provision of an&#13;
adequate sewer system.,.&#13;
f, -PROPOSED ANNEXATION&#13;
"When you take a look at the&#13;
uul i;ituatlon to where th~c&#13;
typt services would come rrom&#13;
there is no other solution but&#13;
Mnexation to the city. The&#13;
municipal seri.1 ices of water,&#13;
wnitary sewers, police&#13;
Jf'OU!Ction, lire p:otectfon and&#13;
other municipal amenities&#13;
&lt;aMot be provided by the&#13;
""'nship o! Somers."&#13;
According to Kolstadt the&#13;
(l'Obltm is one of economics.&#13;
Somers township is incapable of&#13;
~yu-.g ror Uie services and&#13;
1lnlf depend$ on a smaJJ&#13;
l'Olunteer lire department a.d&#13;
Che county sheriff for lire and&#13;
ll0li&lt;t protection. Ho noted that&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie became&#13;
«ncemed aboot fire protection&#13;
after fire str,,ck the Carthage&#13;
C.Utge lieldhousc last wint&lt;r.&#13;
8'cause Parkside is isolated&#13;
t_.. rnunicipal fire stations&#13;
Ind the Somers station is in·&#13;
capable of handling laree fires.&#13;
bt ren u..1 if a lire broke out on&#13;
campus it could do a great deal&#13;
of damage before lructs am_.ed_&#13;
kolsiadt expressed belie! that&#13;
'ftltbln the next several years it :i" be neces.sary to construct a ft &amp;talion on or near the&#13;
ctrnpUs in order to provide&#13;
•dtquate protection. He&#13;
-liooied Iha! after the an•&#13;
,.._tion lhe area will come&#13;
~ ttw- Jurisdiction of the city&#13;
JIOuce deportment rather than&#13;
rtlyinc on the sheriff's&#13;
:,S-nment as it does presently.&#13;
•dded_ however. that the&#13;
~ WOUid not "invade" the&#13;
tarnpus and would come only on&#13;
~ request of the unlversity.&#13;
..;,..._...., asked Mr. Kolstadt&#13;
.._ the Ptopooed annexalim&#13;
~~•n. lie said, " Parkside&#13;
~t Inc. petllioned U!e&#13;
•Pof Somers for building&#13;
~•ti to buUd apartments&#13;
· The town said the zoning&#13;
::.'"'P'Of)er so the developers lo th• tounty board, to gtt&#13;
i&#13;
L&#13;
-PARKS I DE UNIVERSITY -&#13;
. ',---- ., ~.&#13;
I I&#13;
--..J I n) /&#13;
\'\===::1!1======;:=-=~ :=--.... ' "fflll!,1'11fG / / ', • I :,&#13;
" :,&#13;
I&#13;
1&#13;
,...L .. - ..... , ·~· l&#13;
C I T)'.&#13;
.-&#13;
o,:&#13;
. - . . · ...&#13;
•&#13;
4 I -· r.tn•&#13;
·:&#13;
.•&#13;
..&#13;
• I, .. ~ ,t:;·· .&#13;
-I -· _,;,;_&#13;
'.'"· ~.: ~'-.'~:.J._.:.;:~--:A:·..::n!·:!= ..=·L!:·~·~&#13;
PropoSed Annt Xatlon.. Robert Kollta• city planner hase-o.&#13;
-'"ei.1601 pr, 'r Vlr , musk&#13;
0.JTtll 1-lu 10 """"-tor&#13;
11w l1tttat\n' ,.,-wkJ.h( p 111,ffl&#13;
l't\·ol\'earou.nd tht tMrru•, • Tbt&#13;
Ball~ ol tht, C:.f', ... \"a.rba&#13;
lorms o1 ,ittatw, ltaluring&#13;
that ll&gt;Pmt •Ill bo d&lt;KUSINS .-,th filf'ld lrlpa 1dwdulfd lO a&#13;
JUfflfflfT IIO&lt;'k lht•ltr&#13;
pn:Gl('tK111 and a pnwnc.tian&#13;
of ~tr} nad1n1,1 J1mt1&#13;
Dtan a'ISl&gt;,.nl pn,,....., d&#13;
i,;,ctJSh, b .-..i nalor&#13;
°Mw' art , orb.hop ._ I II lnfkklt&#13;
t«turff Ind d~. • 1th&#13;
opportunit) (o.- studio "'°"- 1n&#13;
cenm1cs 1.nd sculph.1~ f'"lf'Jd&#13;
lMJ» will ~ lakf'fl 10 1hr&#13;
M1l-.1UkN Art Cf'ftlt'1" and Ur&#13;
Chicago ,\rt ln1111u1ir F.r1t·&#13;
F'on-csl. l!St'l('fllf PfO{HS« ol&#13;
ar1 b coord1n11or&#13;
Su.mmf'I" 1n&amp;titutt, for hipi&#13;
Khool &amp;tudmu 1Jso ire- tldn~&#13;
hPkt tn ~ and &lt;"Offl?Jlitn&#13;
For m&lt;re lftfonnatloo rontaC't&#13;
Charlrs Kuge-1 lnshtutn&#13;
C'OOrdl.Nllnr, at l'\\ P.trksidr&#13;
11 re~ 'nw-n I.Jw-y wnal to&#13;
tht '""" boord for approval d&#13;
tht pro)&lt;d TM board cannot&#13;
appn)\'e 1t unJn.1, tbt~ att&#13;
adequate means for .-.er and&#13;
Yi:'ater ur ... •1ces," he em • phas11ed •·So unbd.nov.n to lhP&#13;
oty. the .,..._tloptta n,gohattd&#13;
'Allh ~ Ul'lil\:tt'51l) and lhf,y&#13;
ha\e an l&amp;J'tt~t v.ith thr&#13;
U111\"ft'Slt)' v,Mff tht: Unl\~nlly&#13;
grantfd lhem an eaumf"tlt&#13;
across un \"ef'Sll)' proptrty to&#13;
UlC ~"' ma,n U11 the- prvpirr1y&#13;
to permit limn !O h"oll up to lhP&#13;
uni,tt1.1ty M-wtr J) tle-m •&#13;
But Uwno, WH a htllf" hllch&#13;
~ u1d • 11w, un1,-crsit) bu no&#13;
authority to ~rant thas ptt&#13;
m.J.SS.lon btca,..m,,e lhas iJ a ~ t•r&#13;
brr that ts CM'ntd by lhr f"ih&#13;
and ll as coc,lrar)· lo UK" ell)&#13;
ordmanc't' and t'a against lhr&#13;
1tatlf" la" Ind f\•ttyUdnc lf'lMkittat.att&#13;
d l!htS a11ua1ion lhtcuy&#13;
finally gol draY.n ,nto lhis&#13;
thUllg ••&#13;
It - I.ht ffiBJOf pn,)&lt;'(1 (:Cl')C'('rninc munJC1pal l&lt;'T\ rn&#13;
roaa.u on thP """" ft' Juw Thr&#13;
36-,mch. tnl\k b.ne ii et1matt'd&#13;
to eot,t $1,500.0QO Tbffr b •&#13;
p&lt;&gt;S$1bihly U,.t IO por Cffll ol tl&gt;P&#13;
&lt;'al ffll) be sub&amp;1dn«t b)&#13;
fir-den I ~rant.I, bul thtrem11nuiat0&#13;
pe-r cent s...».cm•&#13;
-.oukl ha\t to bt madt ~,p b) _,.. Kobtadl txpla,nod, -n..&#13;
1Jru\:ttS1l) btln1 O'W' pnnc,paJ&#13;
...r, .tllluld pay ,,. P"'IJlll'&#13;
honalt lhatt Ind lbt) "f'N'&#13;
mort than .. nhnc to do u,..&#13;
Thllt "oulll amount ot S II . l&gt;,O&#13;
per yrar c,,,n- 1 17 )~ar ~r1od&#13;
TM ~ma nd..- o1 the C&lt;lal.&#13;
$21,000 per )'Nr, ~ould bl,-e to&#13;
be p,&lt;,kNI up by U.. t"'"nsl&gt;P ol&#13;
SomPn 11nd lhttr budget&#13;
v.oukln'l permit IL••&#13;
Hr admits 1.1\at toml! ,ncquit)&#13;
may Ul$t' d and •ben U.. an&#13;
nt,r;allon II f1nabttd. but et.&#13;
~ upt1m1-sm that in tht&#13;
long run 110 propert~ o,. nr,r&#13;
-.ould 11.ctually take I h1111ncl1l&#13;
loH He mentioned that&#13;
prope:rty \IIIUH haH•&#13;
sltyrock, .... u a rsill of the&#13;
locauon ol th&lt; Un1v&lt;r11ty and&#13;
that bes1del r11"u• the values&#13;
o/ lJ,e land lhf In tffal ol&#13;
pnva~ dtvtloptn an the 1ree LI&#13;
expec~ .. bnna }Ol,o and •&#13;
broader tax base to lht aty&#13;
Ho doesn't txpect • ceneral&#13;
IDC:reHe ln property ~XN IS I&#13;
result of the annexabon bttaUR:&#13;
the pnvat, developera "°"Id&#13;
make up most ol the d1rtttenCtfo,&#13;
paymelll ol ll&gt;P SOl'Vlt .. 11\at&#13;
the oty would prov1dt The&#13;
basic ca use of I nequ 11 y seems to&#13;
anso lrom the dol[onnc&lt; bot•&#13;
ween the Somers t1x&#13;
asso.smentol property and 11\at&#13;
ol Kenooha, but 1n mum !or a&#13;
higher rate of asseument the&#13;
property owner would also&#13;
receive additional H:rv1ces&#13;
,.-tuch the- township does not&#13;
proYlde. &#13;
NE\l'SCOPE&#13;
··Racing and hunting cause c:ine's mmd tobe&#13;
mad ·· - Lao-Tzu&#13;
One of the comments the American pmg•&#13;
po~ pla)el'S 'NhO VlSlted Red China kepl&#13;
repealmg was that the food was excellt:nl Even&#13;
though American dishes were offered, many&#13;
enjoyed the native cuisine&#13;
JUI) &amp;, 1911&#13;
slig)ttly higher. My dinoer was excellent. Rarely can I leave&#13;
8 restaurant as satisfied as 1 do when I ate at th.is&#13;
Chinese restaurant. Much or !his has to do with&#13;
the fact that Chinese food, m general, seems&#13;
more compatible with my stomach. Arter an&#13;
Italian meal t sometimes feel like sleeping for a&#13;
few days, and other ~tiona• dishes ha~e ~lated&#13;
effects. Although Chinese lood doesn I stick to&#13;
the ribS. so to speak, it saUsfys my fetlings of&#13;
hunger.&#13;
For those ol us not skllJed in table ttnnis, we&#13;
are left toenjoyChmesc rood a Lour favonte local&#13;
Chinese restaurant In Kenosha. the choice or&#13;
(I\TOnte Chinese restaurants involves eatin8, in&#13;
lhe Oriental Chop Suey R&lt;Stauranl at 5000 • 6th&#13;
Avenue. or not eating u Chinese meel in&#13;
Kenosha. t.ince it 1s the only such rest.aurant&#13;
w1thln the oty limit£&#13;
With ttus obv100s monopoly. It would seem&#13;
I.Ml the thing for me to do would be 10 take&#13;
htttary sw~ at lhis un•Amencan advantage. I&#13;
rMd somewhere monpolo.es are not tolerated in&#13;
this country&#13;
Tearing aparl this cabng place would be&#13;
hard for me because I tota.Uy enjoyed eatmg&#13;
thf."re There are a rew naws lbat immediately&#13;
stnke the We5tern "gourmet", but after an&#13;
exptanahon or two everything equals oul&#13;
by P•ul t..omar1lreof the NewscopesU1ff&#13;
Maggie and tale here on a night that wasn't&#13;
too busy We ate our meal slowly and found I.hat&#13;
it look a little over an hour. l ordered a complete&#13;
dinner of shrimp roo yong. A complete dinner&#13;
costs 75 cents more than a regular dinner. but&#13;
you get soup ( our chCQ.Sc wns c:hicktn noodle or&#13;
rice&gt;. an egg roU or egg roo yong, and de$SCrt (a&#13;
choice or vanilla .ce c:-eam or sherbet, a fortune&#13;
or almond cookie, AU tltis and a small pol or tea.&#13;
My meal came to$3.06 ctheshrirnp foo yong was&#13;
S2 00)&#13;
Magg1e ordtrcd a complete dinner of brown&#13;
chop suey, which Is chop ,uey with pork, that&#13;
c05t Sl.85. She ordered Pepsi no ounce ser·&#13;
vlng&gt; which cost 30 cents. So the two of us ale&#13;
(.'Omplele dinners for a little over six doJlars.&#13;
Maggie didn't like her brown chop suey too&#13;
mUCh. because there was too much celery in il&#13;
All the other aspects or the meal agreoo with her&#13;
but the celeey wasn' t appealing. (In the pasts~&#13;
bas ordered beef chop suey and enjoyed it very&#13;
much.) Realizing that this restaurant is a little oll&#13;
my ~ten path, I still felt that I should&#13;
recommend this restaura.nl for students on&#13;
dates. I hear people still go on thooe sort of&#13;
ve11t.ures. Many indJvitluals. don't agree with me&#13;
because they don't Jike any meal that isn't&#13;
·•meat ·and potatoes". Their eating haven l$ a&#13;
restaurant adjacent to the Kansas City&#13;
stockyards, and I $ce nothing wrong wilh that.&#13;
Bui for a fine Chinese dinner prepared by&#13;
individuals who seem to know what they are&#13;
doing, this is the place. lf this isn't an authentic&#13;
enough Chinese meal Cc&gt;r the money, I can only&#13;
suggest be-Coming an expert on throwing darts&#13;
playing croquet, or becoming good in any&#13;
p-ospective $port that might qualily for&#13;
dipl&lt;&gt;matiC" t'irc.lcs between Lhis country and Red&#13;
China. Myself. I've been practicing like eraty at&#13;
Chinese checkers. just in case my state depart•&#13;
ment needs me.&#13;
The complaint I had most often heard about&#13;
lh1s pla~"e 1s that tM)' are slow You ha\·e to wait&#13;
too long for your meaJ. For these people I have&#13;
.. tarCNI Uus column with an apt proverb. To be&#13;
h«&gt;rK'sl. t\·en I have compl:::uned a rew times,&#13;
Wllll I rcahied that every meal here ,s begun&#13;
from ,.cratch, "v"n lhe r1cc. There is no steam&#13;
table to ,~en lhc qu;)lit) or the food, and speed&#13;
up the service ll takes lime because time 1s&#13;
oc(.'(lt.-d to prepare the food. Ju:i.l like m someone's&#13;
kitchen at horr~.&#13;
At first this strikes one as a Jot of money to&#13;
spend on a meal. but it really isn't. When you&#13;
consider the volume o.f each serviog, the ,•aricty&#13;
of items that comprise the meal, and the quality,&#13;
you begln to thmk 1t's quite a bargain. Prices at&#13;
other Chi1lese restaurants in lhe area tend to be&#13;
r-or in any LIVING thing&#13;
TllF. ANOROM•:DASTRAIN&#13;
Or Jeremy Stone Arthur Hill&#13;
Or Charles Dutton David&#13;
Wayne&#13;
James01son&#13;
Kate Reid&#13;
Poul• Kelly&#13;
George Mitchell&#13;
Dr Mark Hall&#13;
Or Ruth Leavitt&#13;
Konen Anson&#13;
Jack:son&#13;
One or the more pleasant&#13;
mcmones lhal many or us can&#13;
recall from the earlier days of&#13;
TV were those of the Science&#13;
P1cuon thriller, 1-llr a rew&#13;
moments ll.'t .. ere t,,eld m 1hc&#13;
han~ of fate a.s the cntirie world&#13;
nearly succumbed to some ahen&#13;
beast from Alpha Ccntauri,&#13;
Gr,:-al mouth~opening scenes that bctr1,1.yed Korn Kurls&#13;
belll.een our leelh were not&#13;
uncommon as our r112ing&#13;
glasses or Coke ended up rn our&#13;
laps and the fiend sunk his&#13;
teeth devour~ bi$ guest.&#13;
1rampled the city or just burned&#13;
his way out ot town. With ,ome&#13;
sadness then we all bid thcxse&#13;
days or the great Science&#13;
Fiction thriller a tender&#13;
goodb)•e . but . . alas. my&#13;
p.1rano1d patriots .•. Not all is&#13;
10:SI 1&#13;
As though fN)m the murky&#13;
depths of the black lagoon&#13;
anothrr slimy monster makes&#13;
lus way toward yoo, not unlike&#13;
former O,:-shy friend$. The same&#13;
technique or abstracting from&#13;
existing dangers again Is dusted&#13;
otr and Jl'Jl back to us•. In the old days il used to be&#13;
the atomic bomb that spurn&gt;d&#13;
the monster back inlo hfe or the&#13;
eleclroi.tahc shock brouthl&#13;
forth from the heavens that put&#13;
the hle blood into tbe creature.&#13;
but now the eXJsting condition is&#13;
•brought from space m the rorm&#13;
cl micre&gt;-organlsms much like&#13;
those feared to contaminate tM&#13;
homecoming astronauts.&#13;
ln the film "The Andr&lt;amcda&#13;
Strain", we are confronted with&#13;
a ,overnmcot pl"Oj@cl called&#13;
'Wildfire' Lhat has the&#13;
monumental task of identifying&#13;
and destroy1ng an organism&#13;
that defies identification and&#13;
destNClion. Encompassing the&#13;
new danger brought from space&#13;
via satellite is a musive&#13;
bcehh•e Q{ sterility with all the&#13;
neces."wlry apparatus to do the&#13;
job The apparatus and the&#13;
photography are really quite&#13;
good, hint.ing that som~e had&#13;
qutte a set consuvctJon bill.&#13;
The satellite and ,ts&#13;
passengers ran directly on the&#13;
!.mall town of Piedmont where&#13;
everyone except an old man&#13;
v.ho has a taste ror sterno and a&#13;
smalJ baby who pre.rcrs milk,&#13;
dies from the unknown disease.&#13;
Or. Jeremy Slone &lt;Arthur Htlll&#13;
and Or. Mark Hall (James&#13;
Olsen&gt; go searching through the remams or the sm,a;II satellite&#13;
and for evitl~ne-e as t6 hOw the&#13;
townspeople died. Throoghout&#13;
this search split screen and&#13;
multiple image techniques are&#13;
used to the audience's ad.&#13;
vantage l or disadvantage&gt;,&#13;
showing the various p05itians&#13;
and situations that the unex•&#13;
peeling have assumed in death.&#13;
The mm goes underground as we follow the operation into the&#13;
'Wildfire' }Qboratories, an&#13;
earthbound operation&#13;
surrowided by Mllid rock. Stone,&#13;
Hall and No·o other scie:ntists&#13;
begin work and the i.ec!lnical&#13;
jargon begins. Terms like&#13;
spectometry. vector analysis,&#13;
and Zen&lt;an impressed this&#13;
reviewer. but don't ask him&#13;
what the de·ril they mean. The&#13;
enllre seUi~ is quite realistic&#13;
and vef'y reminiscent of the&#13;
previously mentioned moon&#13;
rock precautions. The&#13;
educational value is readily&#13;
seen if not glorified some\1,1hat.&#13;
Some character conflict iS&#13;
encountered between the three&#13;
straight scientists and the&#13;
single surgeon, who is the&#13;
ctosesl thing we have to a hero&#13;
1n this sterne environment. He&#13;
is gi\!en the only key that can&#13;
st.op the aut(lmatic self destruct&#13;
mechaol:-;m that goes oU in ca&amp;e&#13;
or contamh1alion because he is&#13;
the •odd man'; a term&#13;
describing a single, maJe&#13;
subject who, through stalh;lical&#13;
analysis, \\oOuJd make the best&#13;
decision under those cir•&#13;
cumstances. Eventualty this&#13;
thing doe• go orr but total&#13;
contaminaHon of the entire&#13;
·Project Wildfire' is impossible&#13;
so he is given the task of&#13;
reachlng the abort keyhole in&#13;
five mlnut~s ... a successfully&#13;
h&amp;ir-raising battle with lasers&#13;
and gas follows. Somehow' OU.r&#13;
hero makes It and aborts the&#13;
destruc.tioo of the place and&#13;
comrades in.side.&#13;
To avoid spoiling the story,&#13;
the end wLll have to wait until&#13;
the rtade-r get:5 a chance to see&#13;
the mm. While it certainly Is not&#13;
the best picture this revlev.·er&#13;
has seen so far this ye:ar, it still&#13;
carries 3 rath~r high recom-&#13;
~endatio.n. because it's always ruce to vLstt an old (riend.&#13;
Wllllam Sorensen&#13;
"Tile old labels, Jazz-rock&#13;
and Lhe like, are gone, repJaced&#13;
hy the simple, straight-forward&#13;
ideas o( making music . . , how&#13;
can any other description be&#13;
adequa~e?", Don Heckman in&#13;
Liner note. on BS&amp;T IV&#13;
Finally, arter a three )'ear&#13;
stretch in a musical limbo&#13;
brought on as a result or a&#13;
coUeetive case of "capo&#13;
grandus", BS&amp;T have dcdded&#13;
to admit their humanity and&#13;
give us more or the music they&#13;
promised when they rcJcased&#13;
"Child Is Father To Tbe Man".&#13;
They apparenUy had 1001&#13;
sight of the ract that II&gt;• rock&#13;
influence was just as appealing,&#13;
and in its own way, sv.,mg just&#13;
as hard. They've also abandoned&#13;
their attempts to In•&#13;
tellectua1fae their mus:ic to tht&#13;
po:lnt where they become&#13;
sterile. You won't hear any ume&#13;
rows or overly structured&#13;
arrangements..&#13;
fhe music is honest and&#13;
sitteere.&#13;
Possibly, the slight pe.......el&#13;
change had S&lt;&gt;meting lo do wilh&#13;
their metamorphosis. Jerry&#13;
Hyman was Ji.fled ror Da,'t&#13;
Blood, Sweat and TearS IV&#13;
Colu,ubia KC :,esoo&#13;
By Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope.Stafr&#13;
If successive LP's follow any&#13;
kind o( pattern and considering&#13;
-the fact that in my opinion their&#13;
first was great, their second&#13;
disappointing, and their third&#13;
di.sgwting. you can understand&#13;
why l was Jess than anxious lo&#13;
pay good money for their&#13;
fourth. It might suffice to say&#13;
~t I was very happily surpn.sed.&#13;
&#13;
First of all, they've given up&#13;
the two things that hurl their&#13;
elforl$ most on I.he last two&#13;
albums. They no longer try to&#13;
swing by molding themselves&#13;
into a small Count Basie. While&#13;
it's true that their jut. was&#13;
alwa)'sa very attrac.llve aspect&#13;
the abundanoo of it left the,,;&#13;
with few published examples ol&#13;
the great rock-based things that&#13;
Kooper showed them how to&#13;
play.&#13;
Bargaron, who proves to be 111&#13;
ama1Jng bitch on trombolle. oml&#13;
the addition of 000 H~&#13;
cclarine~ bass clarinet&gt;&#13;
Mlcltael Smith (co~061 '"'&#13;
lributed some m,.IY sol06•&#13;
Finally, I try not lo niakt:.&#13;
habit of reviewing tti.e 1&#13;
11 d,vldual songs, but• ,..,.,-::.,&#13;
this album wooldo'l_ be ,,&#13;
plele wiU,Out m,ntionillll..,&#13;
least one. Cl ... your "'°wll1"&#13;
listen to "Mama Of. . ilJld (slow, raunchy, ,x,_ roc.kl. When you open ,.;,,p,'11&#13;
you'll !ind yourself all cJu1&gt;&#13;
table at the smo_ke•r&#13;
•&#13;
1&#13;
t doil•&#13;
Chi-Chi, watch&gt;DS ~' ~ Maud's Jaybird ,ewe, 10,.;,.,&#13;
grasp for a dtflll' re ..... br.us:ie-t'P. while saiome&#13;
tbe ..-,enlh veil. .....&#13;
The album ii .,.,..,&#13;
worth the price. &#13;
Jul.&gt;•· a,n&#13;
by Marc Eben&#13;
of the News.cope:ataff&#13;
1be wandering troubadour Jives.&#13;
Except now he travels &lt;and lives) in a&#13;
1,attered Checker Mara then, singing his&#13;
songs to those who wlll Usten, carrying&#13;
yovet:nent l'l&lt;M'S Crom one outpost to&#13;
,not.her like an cvangellst riding his&#13;
circuit, and hoping all ~e: time tc, get&#13;
enc,.igh g;,gs to keep goang.&#13;
rerence in Milwauk&#13;
week and had ee ear)icr in the&#13;
playing and eas:::f'ped here •• hope of&#13;
such luck. He tried ~i'::,:'':;";;,- No&#13;
:!Jominican College he me.° s~~e&#13;
han~ple, but still came up °"'pt)··&#13;
flrtlew Yont .. ntten all over him Sli_JJJI m &amp;'I He bt-l.1eve11trongly n IIOIIMitanig 1&#13;
budd. "-llh long black ba1t and a kq fraend once t.okl him. •·nw.-t-•a oo rfl.l&#13;
run board. be looks unprewmpt,w. alternate rul~ n~pt bard -.on&#13;
SomNl!M to be linottd. )'OU lh1nlc Ht- 11 cornm1ttN1 10 Uw- !l.tm'f'fflffll&#13;
He's • folk&lt;mger He's bo&lt;n on the and ._ his 11\UIIO 111111 to lllo od&#13;
roed Hite this ror nff.rl) two ,ea.n VJ,ncflrlt-nt ol ~• Ht rir:,«ts the Idea&#13;
Tra\'eling ...,,Oun a tr~g,lt: marked by that ht- 1s et.her a.at to furt.brr hlS&#13;
solivesTedWarmbrand. The present&#13;
day troubadour refu5"5 to die.&#13;
He was at Piu·kside last wee:k.. He had&#13;
attended the May Day Tribe ConT~cn&#13;
be talked to the people 01 the&#13;
~; f.e 0&#13;
f:~-~er1ca c'1ub in Rndne.&#13;
he •= g,g. He played and then&#13;
_was on his way. To Katl.58s City he&#13;
su,a1d. There would be othtt stops aJ~no&#13;
e way. ·•&#13;
Upstate Ntw vcn, Wtih.l.n.g1on. D.C.. mu&amp;1t-. or- t:M to furthtt 1-flf fflOl.~mmt.&#13;
•nd Iowa. and &amp;toppmg at as many ··1th1nktt·1afa1R&lt;S1C'Otcmy ,oucan1&#13;
coll'lff u pou1ble. t ffe calla it davtdt- the ,.._o ol them • "cam""" hopping•• I P,op~ are twc:omlng apau,.tJc and&#13;
Berore this. he chd tmdff'CJ'aduatt- Arf' tuma..ng lmurd.. ht fH-ls tltr think.I&#13;
wort in drama and ~ommunicahou at the)· IN' ~h-n u lnap&amp;ble ot Who is he? He's • !Nak and he has Syrao.i~ Uru,·ers.1ty He '4fflt on rnm ~attng to lM -.orLd arrund lhm1 llt&#13;
Dlnld Ellsberg, supposedly&#13;
•bclAtted by hi$ con5ctenc;e,&#13;
iltaded lo become a link bel•&#13;
Wftll the people and govern•&#13;
mtnt He alJcgcdly leaked&#13;
ll'tl'et documents on the Viet&#13;
Ham_ war policy from previous&#13;
ldoun1Strations to The New&#13;
Yori! 'llmes. Tlm Cullen also&#13;
.,.ided I&lt;! become a link bel·&#13;
ween&#13;
_,&#13;
the people and govern•&#13;
'l"im C\JtJen comes to Kenosha&#13;
uually two Wednesdays a&#13;
Ted Warmbrand.&#13;
serving in other than go·,emrnenUII&#13;
ugenci~. The c.:,.mJ)\l&amp;&#13;
at Berkeley has a professor&#13;
serving as one. and a prison in&#13;
Oregon has a prisoner who is a&#13;
go-between between the&#13;
prisoners and the warden.&#13;
Congressman Aspin's ombudsman&#13;
comes from&#13;
Janesville., where he held a&#13;
similar p0sitlon bet"'een the&#13;
City Council and the prople.&#13;
Tim Cullen worked for Les&#13;
Aspln throughout his campaign&#13;
for Congress, and after hts&#13;
Working Class H ero:&#13;
Tim Culkn,&#13;
Ombudsman&#13;
By P aul Loma tire of&#13;
The NeWJcope Staff&#13;
:-:".th• as Congressrnan Les&#13;
~ 1 ombudsman . Tim&#13;
"'1.. Is the valuable link&#13;
lit """ the C&lt;&gt;ngressman and r.-.i P&lt;ople who comprise tile&#13;
Oln D1$tricl.&#13;
let&#13;
~&#13;
budisman is a Swedish&#13;
Which means a&#13;
1'ie fi tative or a liaison man.&#13;
~lttl ombudsman was in&#13;
~ in 1809, and now au&#13;
llnieo vian . countries havt&#13;
"ill&gt;&#13;
~ "' "'"""8 this function&#13;
&amp;Overmient. Even New&#13;
!Jlt,., and Australia use tre&#13;
.... · In the United Stato,&#13;
are a few ombudsm~&#13;
victory Aspin asked Cullen to&#13;
hold the lull time position ••&#13;
ombudsman.&#13;
Striking a vein or honesty as 1&#13;
began the interview with him,&#13;
he said, "It's just kind or a fact&#13;
cl life that a Congressman has&#13;
more puU when he cont.sets a&#13;
federal agency Ulan you and I&#13;
have as individual&amp;."&#13;
With this realistic approach.&#13;
Tim CUiien comes to the lobby&#13;
of the main Pest Olfice down•&#13;
town in Kenrw..ha about twice a month, set$ up a card table, a&#13;
name plate, and earnestl_y&#13;
listens to Kenoshans and the.r ..&#13;
the.-. lo the PILO procnm at lhe v,,hemNtll) .-.,..ta this "Thtt&lt;-'• a lol&#13;
Unl\en1ly of fll,nou Follo,.;,. tJus he of v. orlt to he cl-. and mmt ltido - t&#13;
taught communications ror Uvtt ye.n knov. ~ to ~~ 10 11&#13;
at lht University ol J&lt;14·a To thf, pt'rWM \&amp;.1,o U)I Iha&amp; Ow, onl)'&#13;
But he nt'\'er boa.shed ht.s master's thuc that c-ounb Is mus&lt; M ans,rn&#13;
lheslS, and art..- bolJ1l told he v.owd II. - INt t:,·,nthnc ~OU do .. havt to l"tVIH ll one mort' htnf'. ht conn«1f:d to ~ v.~d arc:a.,nd \OU&#13;
~ldl'd he would bum around lo, a lndn""1al ll1111i5 don I rn,an &amp;n) Un,C&#13;
yeu and then teadt the following) ear unliea lhe) ·re related to a 1.,-J:('r ordc-r&#13;
He had concluded that v.o&lt;I&lt; on theis of lh,np&#13;
was "a sterile exttt"ise•• He nhtt has He rt)l'.'Cta the idf9 thll 1,r111p tnfort&#13;
m.adt it back to teachmg He txplauled nttuunl) 1ubordin11es thf' 1n&#13;
it•~ ''A piece of ,tut J.S a patte ol slut dai" 1du.l I The W andering Troubadour I&#13;
Wort.1ngon1llom.ake1tapttftttp1ttt \\htn •--k~ '. ht' v.ould ('l.)',t nuto&#13;
of slut ,a abeurd H doarc 'Wml tw- hu donie 1n the, paa1 . hr&#13;
Ht Utd that he reahzed that thtrf' MW-.-ettd You pt t.o t don·t thira&#13;
was £rict1on bthl.:N!'l hunself and an\:bod\1nthtmo,tfflffl1,u111.~togJ\~&#13;
un,wrshy htc He knt'A he"'" dotng up. ua:f tti.- sa~ln.&amp;. ·KN'p on !kt"f'Pu~&#13;
v.«t that he t:nJOY~. s.o the 5CIW'tt or on' • He bf'lif'\.ta tt•t \\ r mUtt \ttp&#13;
lbt prob~m c.-ould not be ham..'tlf our nuncb to at Wt&gt; nttd o,e c.-oufai.l" co&#13;
Obv,ousl:) tbt problem •N in the &amp;n- confront "hat b bad&#13;
sbtubon.&#13;
He went on the road and began&#13;
sinl&gt;ng professionally He found he&#13;
could support himself&#13;
The currt&gt;nl under&amp;round cllC'h&#13;
phrue • Su:1'1,•I through M'l"'K'I 10&#13;
the people," , u.,.. up lu phlloouph)I&#13;
HIS music he descnbed simpl) as&#13;
··good oongs. Singable - · I '-•· He refuses to ha ... e them cop)-..Titcd. ore\'en&#13;
wnllcn do....,·n. He sa)'S the form of&#13;
them ts ton.Stantly evol\'ing.&#13;
W&amp;.rmbrand has bft..- on lhc road no-c&#13;
for nrarl) two )t'l.n and M'• 1tm&#13;
scratching for f'I\ON') a..t his c-ar ts 1n&#13;
the C"Ond1hOn 1t b . )'it-\ ht-'• op• m.tstk&#13;
and M still bd C,,t'S tn I~ mou·mmt&#13;
Lnstn.unents he play$ m~tudt- 12&#13;
strmg guitar. auto harp, banjo and&#13;
recorder. Wann.brand says he pe-rlorms rai.rl)&#13;
comtantly Though he adm11A be ma)&#13;
go th.rough a couple ol -."ttk~ without a&#13;
Ht 1r1 ... ,b. •loaw. and U)'1, about his&#13;
ltfe-calberoad. "'1 maloneallrtght bul&#13;
I don'L ~r m)idf .apart rrom&#13;
Olh•rs Propk- ask mo I I ~•I lon,ly&#13;
o-a,ehng by myself task thrm ln turn&#13;
d' l.M) 're- not IOOf'ly "'ht''" they re et •&#13;
problems He .sees that each&#13;
per-son has an equal cont.act&#13;
with the Froeral agericies that&#13;
serve lhem.&#13;
His job is to wri le a report on&#13;
each individual problem and gel&#13;
in touch with the Corcressman&#13;
or his staff. "When he 11..6&#13;
Aspin) comes back to the&#13;
distnct, I generally try I&lt;! •pend&#13;
a day or so with tam e\'ff)'&#13;
c-ouple: of weeks," CUilen said.&#13;
"He and I can talk about some&#13;
or the C"&amp;st$ I've been dealin&amp;&#13;
wilh eod be ean g.ive me some&#13;
Conc~man ti.till finck tune ~o&#13;
work on 1nd.1"td.&amp;al probl,ems&#13;
from the Fu-st Dis-tnct&#13;
Commenting on th•• 1n&#13;
,-olvement. run Cullen s1ud.&#13;
'Tm surpnR&lt;! at the amount of&#13;
bme he has sptff on theM' 1n--&#13;
di,·1dual ca.!4!':I '&#13;
When Henr) Schadeberg&#13;
ter'Ved the Fine OaJ.lnct 1n&#13;
Coo3r,ss. he UP&lt;! the ··c•I&gt;&#13;
secretar)" 5)1Slftn to kffp up&#13;
wilh problems of his con~&#13;
sliluenh, 1-hnv other&#13;
Mr. Tim CuJl~n. LH Asptn's Ombudsman.&#13;
suggestions as to how to better&#13;
handlt thf&gt;m from my enc1.·· be&#13;
ooricluded.&#13;
For quite awhile. Con.grel,$"&#13;
man Aspin has been wrestlin,g&#13;
wjth the defense budge~ as a&#13;
member of the Armlld ServieeS&#13;
Committee. He is working on&#13;
percentaae cuts &gt;n lbe budget,&#13;
and '"'orking toward a&#13;
&amp;ystematic control of that&#13;
budget He is also s,tting up •&#13;
Lake Pollution Conference at&#13;
the KTJ campus in Elkhorn on&#13;
August 13th. With tirne at an&#13;
obvious minimum. the&#13;
Cong,-e$$men utihu ~ same&#13;
system.&#13;
·•The problem ,uth th1J&#13;
system i$ the pt'OPle from the&#13;
smaller eommun.lUes have no&#13;
one to go to w,thout tra,·ehng a distance;· Ttm CUlltti potnled&#13;
ouL A$ ombudsman. he tra,-els&#13;
to each commu111ty and meel.5&#13;
..-,th the pe&lt;lple He relys on&#13;
nobeff ,n local pa~ he said,&#13;
and so far Kenosha has been tho&#13;
best city 1n the dtstnct as rar as.&#13;
public respons,, llas been.&#13;
Speak,ng or ,.,. ~ the u,-&#13;
d,vidual proh- he &lt;On1ft&#13;
into f;'Oftla&lt;"l • th_ Tim C'ulk-n&#13;
mrnUont'd 10C1al lf'C'ur11y&#13;
\\-bPn thf ttpOrt JtOH to lhft&#13;
AJ.pin o{htt 1n \\Mbln(1on,&#13;
DC . lM CorcNSSman l'fll ID&#13;
1-'1 "'th tlr Fedoul Soci,,I&#13;
Sttunt) offitt and th,n ho&#13;
mu.all)' 1.N..,ert by mid lhr&#13;
1ndt\ ldual •-hi&gt; loot hts probltm&#13;
to \1 r &lt;"llllffl&#13;
·Dunng a tame v.hNI mtf\)'&#13;
ad\'ocale- rtlurn1na Uie&#13;
l')\'t"fflfflf'f\l to thir- pt'Qpl&lt;- and&#13;
d t1Ybh5l11nc mott r,ncnal&#13;
aint.l&lt;·h v.1th JO\ttnmrnl ot&#13;
fic,ab I thou,chl that ll..- •hokKlet&#13;
al an omhud1m11n •• a&#13;
S(f'S) II\°"' nghC d,n,rti«I .-hal,t,&#13;
•ociurc ,.,1bln UaC' ayslr.m ·•&#13;
1 Nk&lt;d \Ir 0.11"' II he&#13;
lhoucht thf' eenf'ral pubhc&#13;
would lc»e rn,;Pf(:t for tht1r&#13;
ito,~rnm,nt artitr r~ad1n1 lht!&#13;
paper• l::ll~ra: supposrdl)&#13;
lnkNI.&#13;
·•Pe,_..lly I think tho poopte&#13;
have I n&amp;ht to kl'M1'4 I think&#13;
tho,e p•pers trt bu.1cally&#13;
hi'\tory and "'' ha"e a rt&amp;ht to&#13;
t:nc,....,. I th,,. that that 1n&#13;
format.ion lS h11lor) .. he N•d&#13;
.. 1 th, nk the people a re a I,~&#13;
smarttT tha.n the pohlla•n.&#13;
IP'" them crecbt lot I think the&#13;
people can htndlt: the ,n,&#13;
formtbon and that the) ,houtd&#13;
get all !NI the)- can." he concluded&#13;
&#13;
Tim Cullen conhooaUy used&#13;
the v,.'Qrd ''v.'f'' •hen he spoke of&#13;
The people in aeneral • ....,h1ch&#13;
slNCk me as a Ytry \'aluahle&#13;
ch.a.r1ctfflsbe ol ht$ approach&#13;
to ht£ ,ob. With thts. altitude&#13;
toward hi, v.-ork and the people.&#13;
I thank lh1.s makes him an ex&#13;
ce-llen\ '""orcing clas.s h(&gt;r0' &#13;
!lo E\\SC'OPE Jutyti, 191'1&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
All Stores Open Nights&#13;
4:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.&#13;
For Finl T wo Wu.ks of Class&#13;
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GREENING OF AMER)('.&lt;\&#13;
by Charles Reich&#13;
THE COUPLE&#13;
by Mr. &amp; Mrs. K&#13;
CALIFORNIA GENERATION&#13;
by Jacqueline Briskin&#13;
"W'&#13;
R-K NEWS AGENCY ~~ Newspope~&#13;
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SIXTH&#13;
ot&#13;
WISCONSIN&#13;
S·- 1 k&#13;
Ike and Tina Turn er Review&#13;
By Mike Sle\.'esand nasties · J mes Brown gym ' S14•eet sad music, 3 f I Otis phrasings,&#13;
rhythm_ and blues, m~s~~rh~ve it, man - Ike&#13;
screaming fun, - you . . Jay hard-on music.&#13;
and T1!1'3 Turner P th hot and eager crowd at&#13;
Fnday, Juoe 25 ' 8 t vicariausly&#13;
the Milwaukee A~~ ~:.e;{;~e~ into sutr&#13;
debased ard oxa ed b strobe-light&#13;
mission, c:osmicalJr tefrustr~~s aid ultimately and smok~bomb m rrup ' l le t . fed beyond fantasy by the fastest, see es J&#13;
sat1.s '1 hol damn- m05t accommodating cat• sex1es - . woman in al of rock music. . . h&#13;
The Ike and Tina Turner Review JS one oft~ = i . 1 acts to be perceived as rock music, a ::SOI\$ for this ore an intrinsic pai:t o~ thcl~&#13;
success John Mayall once char~ctcrIZe ~&#13;
music a~ "aD showmanship .. , and, although ~s&#13;
was typically purist of him, he made a ·,alid&#13;
point .. I ~ul music has always been C?mmerc1a •&#13;
from the earliest James Brown Revtew,. all the&#13;
boys in beret-shaped conks, to Sly al1d. lhe&#13;
.Family Stone; all polish~, stylized&#13;
choreography; lhe nasb is the thing: T?e result&#13;
is total accel:Sibility; all you gotta do is hsten and&#13;
you can' t miss the mes.sage.&#13;
Black acdiem..'es have never had an_y trouble&#13;
with this, especialJy since the message is usJaJ.!Y&#13;
black pride, all the things _blacks are besl at, 1~&#13;
funky splendor. White audiences, however, cant&#13;
Identify with the philosophy as completely, and&#13;
insist on examining the medium for the com·&#13;
pJexities and ironies that white music has t.s.~ht&#13;
them to expect, and which simply don'_t ~XJ~l&#13;
here. Which is not to say that soul music 1sn t&#13;
&lt;..-omplex; some of the tightest, most comP_etent&#13;
playing is foi1ncl here. It's just that the ambience&#13;
is the most vital element.&#13;
Ike and fir1a, while retaining complelely the&#13;
mu1o-ic~l ',l.-uct.ures' of soul mu~k. (WP.rlay the&#13;
sound with a healthy layer of sex, which im•&#13;
mediately brings it all back home for everybody,&#13;
black or white, who sees them .. They've _been&#13;
kicking around the soul circuit for a Jong d me,&#13;
getting outrageous, and only came into real rock&#13;
promi1lence after backing up the RoJling Stones&#13;
on their 1969tour. SUH, they're 100 per centsouJ,&#13;
which means a planned end paced show.&#13;
The M.C. stro1led out and introduced the&#13;
band, which cooked alone for two numbers, establishing the musical ground rules. Here it's&#13;
all riff-dependent, chopped chords, big braS1 and&#13;
chunky drums wiLh a truly incredible alto sax&#13;
man who he.'d one fantastic note for all or three&#13;
minutes. to cries of delight from the other&#13;
members.&#13;
T'hen tht lkettes, three beautiful backing&#13;
singers, porty out for a teaser, tossing oif e[·&#13;
rorUess harmony and good~nnturcd cracks. This&#13;
Was maybe fifteen minutes Into the shMY, and&#13;
already they were doing "Piece of My Heart".&#13;
Confidence.&#13;
But the moment was at hand lk&#13;
from the wings, stone face, au I~ ~,&#13;
shades, the man himself, br ... ,.,th11,, i-.&#13;
hot damn - nna boiled out, The .,.., Ille.&#13;
seemed to _stand a liUle straighttr 111'"°Pioo.&#13;
Tin~ is every lush dream You•~&#13;
the promise or all the wondrous •.._bi,&#13;
read about, but could n~ver fiod bicts Yaw',&#13;
knew, She knows, and she's Pl'olld •oy.., lb&#13;
strate: muscular lei($, mlni up to to &lt;i.,,,;&#13;
and undulating like ripples in a P&lt;&gt;od, lliere, "'-&#13;
spring, bursting with pu.-., sex..:"" lit,&#13;
cares~ing the micropbo~e in a $.500., . ~&#13;
prowling the stage, barmg jungle 1"11,"'Chl"&#13;
·growl, shr-iek in .:i liquid sandpaper, .. lo Pllr&#13;
Superwoman, Name your proclivity Olot, i.._&#13;
satisfy it, maybe e.ven teach you a'~ ..,_&#13;
One big black woman right in froot 0/ U-.&#13;
tuated every song with cries or "Right"''-&#13;
honey, do whatcha know." '"- Tito,&#13;
''Come Together," on. thedQJbl!e nna shaking it, " ... come l&lt;lg,ti.:'r....,,_&#13;
stamping feet. raisi~ her arms in 111 " .. , right now ... ", re« planted~ "'111t&#13;
back, arms out,'' .. . o"er ine!"Toa~&#13;
sighs. "Proud Mary", '\ . . we ne,·er do If&#13;
nice and easy. We do 'em nice ... aDd ._&#13;
Ob, hit me again. A long, slow ,1 .. ,.::.,&#13;
rap, black stage, one spotlight on Tioa ~"'&#13;
most bizarre things to the miel'OJl.lx,ne II&#13;
cJ,uckling from tho _ darkoes,;, odd ,..__ sounds, not one man m the auditnce .;-,..&#13;
stage with her. Sigmund himseU WOlld t:&#13;
gotten hot.&#13;
And where is Ike during all lltis! &amp;ct lllt&#13;
audience, punching the band with bu ._&#13;
they caJJ him the 0 musicaJ direckr' ~ illtllt&#13;
really sort of, well, a pimp'? But na,.'Ht'11'11&#13;
old man, after all, lhat ought to say""'"-'&#13;
and he's smug enough to bl·ing it &lt;if. At Uie ead.&#13;
lhe seduction number he jived, "I got -&#13;
hope you got yours." You people .. n loot 111:,,,&#13;
want, but oh, boy. On the back ol °"" ol •&#13;
early albums there's a gassy pielffl "i.&#13;
playing the piano while Tina washes aou...,&#13;
big old tub.&#13;
Having brought the audiencealmo1l '-•&#13;
quite to the pot of gold at lheend, Tina hid•&#13;
fun. While smoke engulfed the stage,,,,.,_&#13;
be Sffn in strobe-light slow motion. ,_&#13;
steppio' away, and the house light, cam,• Tumult ensued, and the barxl, 'Aitb ._.&#13;
casualness, sbulned bacl: on and plUlfld&#13;
Then Tina sweet stepped right back 11111•&#13;
"Wanna Take You Higher", which. of COllll&#13;
was what we all wanted, too. Withthel,ghb11,&#13;
was somehow more apparent that she""'•&#13;
and right there, and . : . hot damn.&#13;
I would go far fl"Orn where I ,m 1.0 • •&#13;
and Tina Turner igain. I would suggest tmi •&#13;
do tbe sam~ . .&#13;
Summerfest Threatened&#13;
(Continued from Page 3) and Recrea'tion Departments. In Une•1&#13;
lil9:&#13;
Racine is sponsoring a pilot program U.I&#13;
out there on the good ur-aces of Caledonia." He have activities that resemble Haym.arbl ... JIU\"11 likened the situation at Summerfest wlth tt'.at of Square. It begins Sunday aftemoon. •&#13;
West Berlin in relation to East Germany. Pershing Park. . • lie stressed the success and uniqueness or A "soapboxn will be provided for ,.&#13;
lhe pr011ram. Racine is the only city south or people who wish lo speak, a band will:;·_. Wisconsin Dells to have such a program. an area will be provided for artiSts 10&#13;
Kenosha has nothing that matches it. wares. Siardi&#13;
The program is unique In that you must be at He said he got the idea .rrom ~-,_.&#13;
least 18 to be admitted. A similar program is run Arti~t.!'I Fair held once a year in RaCUl&#13;
m the city for high school youths, but bas met annually wasn' t often enough. Dt-"'..., 1&#13;
with much Jess success. ..The Park and Recreatioo . ~ 1 •&#13;
The reason for this., Wardrip feels, is that it's going to lose money on ~t, •: he sa:~· sutf dull&#13;
held inside. This makes the location of Sum~ waywecancbargeacbmss1onfor 1&#13;
fflerfestot prime importance. If Johnson's Park· can really work out"&#13;
00&#13;
!btr'!&#13;
is lost he knows of no other outdoor area to Admission to Sumrnerfest !' $1.~ ea"&#13;
~epljce it: He noted, "If we had held Summerfest hos remained C&lt;)nstant for_ live ) ,,,_&#13;
ma hall, •t would have died two years ago." scheduled to play later this sullllll&lt;' ~&#13;
The Put?O$e of Summerfest, he said, was to Siegel-SChwall R.E.O. Speedwagoo,&#13;
serve the people usually Ignored by most Park and the Boweey Boys.&#13;
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------ MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
FOR SALE &#13;
byJamesKol~n&#13;
of the Newscopesla..ff&#13;
"The M b err) Menu, o1 May" is narrated&#13;
J'~~~~~~ lruUey, an American in Paris&#13;
&lt;whicb. es • small hterary ""''"' _ 'd • ol course, Just simply every~&#13;
...,ns, ers to be better than the Paris&#13;
Review). Old crotchet)· Jack b looi.:&#13;
back on lhe May Revolution and at :&#13;
!'aJlagher family wluch has JIJ.'I been&#13;
informally dissolved&#13;
Jor, •• ltil 'E"~'OPt,; PaJc-7&#13;
OC cord 1 n c to _::...:_:_:_ Hartley, IS j\llt. ____ p1,a .. the ___; --------- ('GfflH •ff'OM u an ~t:ably good&#13;
canatureol 1hr •••~ he'1 the old moth&#13;
bolled rMn reminisdnJ on his past ,.htl,&#13;
IUllult.lntOlaly JudgtJll II• l OWi&amp; from his&#13;
fa\onte table- in ttalur) old bin&#13;
r;Ue: The Mtrry Month ol May (J7.95l&#13;
AIILh«: Jarne11 Jonts&#13;
Publlsber: Oelacourte&#13;
students are umpl)· IO'li\ me their $ttCII t to&#13;
u,,,.e one of the aut.hor·s c:hldla,.&#13;
James Jones once wrote a noveJ called&#13;
•rrom !!ere to Eternity". Its subject was&#13;
ftllrl Harbor and the pre--war barracks&#13;
life of Hawaii. .. The Merry Month or May"&#13;
&amp;150 written by Jones, concerns the May&#13;
Pens Revolt or 1968. The cast of characttrs.&#13;
au of them types, incbde a famous&#13;
Aroerican direct.or, his student son, Danny&#13;
u,e Red. lesbians, liberals, nymphos, and&#13;
u,e Great N06e.&#13;
. Thcn,'s Harry Gallagher a fan,ous&#13;
director al'Kl notorious: bbcral.'hi.s son. }Ml&#13;
In_ a eonK1ou~ attempt lo ~&#13;
Hem1~ay, the author points out Uwntuats&#13;
m hre For H4rtJty-Jones tht ntm.l&#13;
lS sha\·1rw:, that'• "-'ht-tt f'\'tt)L""Unc- i.n a&#13;
man·_, hie comes to I Cclll!) pOHlt&#13;
1ha""1.flC Tht ntu111 oC &amp;ha\1na as w nt.xus&#13;
ti ma1CUlm1ty ms probably the f1nt blat,;nt&#13;
1nd,cator ol Jones· hterary bufToontt&gt; u,,&#13;
Th,~ ,n I.hit book r&lt;all) std Qlt Tho&#13;
pn.raw • my dnr da.rlinC a, •• «, l..GuLN'" l.CJuLM h Ow •il• of Harr) the&#13;
dlr«:tor and mothtr "' Hill Ibo 1tudmt&#13;
She &lt;n&lt;I&gt; up •r,,111 to commit IUlcidt-ar,.,.&#13;
•naa1ing iD lub&amp;an ICh\ 1Uts led&#13;
somehow ,..,,. her husl»nd to "'"&#13;
l&lt;sbtan AO DC Mt p,..- l.ou1'.1 ' 1t·1 •&#13;
t«hniqu, ,tr11ght wt ol lhe 19th c,,n,ury&#13;
On• cwtdN) that Jo,,.,. Jon,, II 1lta;g]&gt;t&#13;
out ol the 19th C&lt;ntury&#13;
J onre thought that it would be an easy&#13;
~asure to review a bad, bad novel WeU&#13;
ft ain't. it's dirricull because it seems lik~&#13;
~h• waste of time. What can I say? I can&#13;
say that this book should nev,er have been&#13;
piblisJ1ed for a num_ber of reasons.&#13;
Jamn Jone1 Is VWTihQI badly. hit'1 an&#13;
· One, it wastes a lot of paper that could be&#13;
p.1t to betler use; two, it makes the author&#13;
~ llke an clfctc bastard; three its&#13;
contribution to literature ga..s no fu;ther&#13;
tbaJl p,..enting the reader with :JOO pages&#13;
d cbches, stereotypes, stock characters.&#13;
[c,,u', old men should not write young men•;&#13;
stCJ"ies. What Norman Mailer did (or the&#13;
)lardl on the Pentagon In .. Armies o1. th~&#13;
Sight" Ja.mes Jones undoes tor the Paris&#13;
su,lent Revolt.&#13;
a srudent. who rejects daddy's ideas, and&#13;
Louisa, wife ~ Harry and~ mother of Hill&#13;
The Gallagher:, are the most typed tiber I&#13;
f~mily I've ever encountered in literatu.r:_&#13;
nght down to lhe subU,- double-.tandaNb&#13;
and the originals by as yet unkno\vn arhsls&#13;
nailed to the walls.&#13;
old. old man "'"bftl a youna man·• 1t.ory.&#13;
novel l! rmed with indicators 11 the book tu view ol tbe !\lay kevolut.on. or ol &gt; ounc&#13;
v-ereauoreJonesv.outdbtuplh&lt;tt,.,th ptopl• for !hit mau ... , ts• produ&lt;"' ol&#13;
&amp;rib or Vonnogu~ unfortunately Janos 11 tcaM1ng thNtUgh the ,.,...,, tnd ol lhe&#13;
Siel'IOUS, f'alstaft lS not \li.'Nring lhe ~,,. bm~ulara. He llJUll toolar a-·&amp;) from hb&#13;
J:ftll04Vpber'$ maa, 00 f'alstalf bas hit M~ and ~ pocM" q\l,al1ty ot wnh"I&#13;
pants dc:r,,.-u, mtrtl) tmphHltH ht.s d11t1n«&#13;
Jack HarUev is \ellina us the swr, ol his&#13;
txpenences during the May Pans Re\·olt.&#13;
and of the dissolution ol the Gallagher&#13;
family. _Jack's treatment and analys1.s of&#13;
the Pans Revolt accurately indicates just&#13;
how far out of Louch \,l,ith the students the&#13;
old fart really_ b. l/ltima~y the Revol~&#13;
Hartley is uuensallve Whim Hlll goes Ullimat.Ny, Jones 1.1 a dy1ng fo,h. Mtl)up&#13;
tltroullh the trauinatic oxp,nence ot loouw and gasptng for au-, blind tAl u,.. (act !hit&#13;
Ju [11'$t love and ftnally in despair tAl drop air .. all aNtUnd htm ti he·d )'Ill di\ .. boct&#13;
out to meditate With the tupp,ec. Jad, can ul.&#13;
merely say that 1&gt;e·11 get o,-.,r •~ tho lov• - ------------- th..l~ and the meditation lhlng. •h&gt;' J TIit Mf'M") '10lllh of ,1.,. NVldh of&#13;
remember back v,1l,en J ,u.s. f'tc .• ad n~ Book \lar1,, m-.st1h Stred, Mtnc,,:;.h, nauseum. Personally, I th.mil Hinley&#13;
...&#13;
-. -&#13;
.. tt&#13;
...iiil7&#13;
l -&#13;
Speaking for nearly thre:e hours before tht Stien« Oh•ision Execudu: Commitlff in •n tlfM""&#13;
hearing, Dr. James Ru~seu Brokaw. assist.an, professor of pshcholo«), rtbullitd lht charges madit&#13;
against hlm in lhe Committee's l'ff0mmendation fnr lhe non•rtne~al of hls contract bt)Nd thP Jt1l•&#13;
7Z academic year.&#13;
Eating In&#13;
8ar~td Spareribs always&#13;
makf' An e;ia.y and tasty meal.&#13;
Hm is a basic recipe which&#13;
1'rve&amp; six&#13;
What you need:&#13;
1 Ibo P0rk spareribo • tup water&#13;
'&gt; &lt;up catsup&#13;
I tablsp. sugar&#13;
1 tablsp. vinegar&#13;
I tabbp. lemon juiel)&#13;
II cup chopped onions&#13;
: 1'bbp. chopped gr. pepper • ci,p chopped celery ~ tta,p. l1ry mustard&#13;
~ t.a,p. Worcestershire sauce&#13;
How to Prepare the spareribs:&#13;
r Pr.heat oven to 350 degrees&#13;
P~ spareribs in a shallow&#13;
RELAX&#13;
baking pan ( a small rack might&#13;
be useful here). Roost t\1, hours&#13;
(or until tender). Remove&#13;
excess rat from pan, but save&#13;
•one tablespoonful aside.&#13;
To prepare sauce: Cook green pepper, ,celery&#13;
and onion in the tablespoonful o1&#13;
(at in a frying pan for about S&#13;
minutes (until lightly brOMled).&#13;
Add the other ingredients&#13;
(except meat) and simmer for&#13;
10 minutes. Pour sauCE- over&#13;
sparer-ibsi return to ove:n and&#13;
bake uncovered for another :tO&#13;
minutes.&#13;
Serve on platter with green&#13;
beans and coleslaw. Ma)'be an&#13;
orange sherbet for desser~&#13;
MO LB EC K'S&#13;
COMPLETE LINE&#13;
OF tiEAi, TH FOO OS&#13;
ffFRR T EAS&#13;
STONF GROUND&#13;
FLOURS&#13;
NA f tJRAL VITAMINS&#13;
And many other&#13;
Organic Food•&#13;
1304 ORANGE AV'&amp;.&#13;
RACINE 633- n69&#13;
Sports Shorts&#13;
Tom and Mike Joyce. the two&#13;
highest scorers in Greendale&#13;
high school basketball history.&#13;
will be rtun1ted al the&#13;
University ur W i5consin•&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Tom, a 5-11 guard, led&#13;
Greendale w its thu-d straight&#13;
1-'au1an&lt;1 conference c-.hamplonship&#13;
last season aHer&#13;
teaming with his bro&lt;her Mike,&#13;
a 6-1 guard. the 1..-0 previous&#13;
seasons. Miko attended Stevens&#13;
Point State University last&#13;
year, but both announced they&#13;
will enroll at IJW-Parkside this&#13;
£all. Ounng the last three years&#13;
Coach Ron Barb1an·s Greenc1ale&#13;
team has won 42 conference&#13;
games tn a row.&#13;
Both started for Greendale&#13;
£or three seasons, earned all·&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
get Red Corpet treotment&#13;
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BANK OF&#13;
ElMWOOD&#13;
(e ve,yon• else does!)&#13;
2704 Loth,op Ave.&#13;
Roci"e, Wis.&#13;
s.tate mention &amp;!I. ~mon and&#13;
....-ere all-conren-nce both tht1r&#13;
jwlior and 5e1Uor seG!!Oni. Tom&#13;
seottd 1.176 p,;;llnb 1n lhrtt&#13;
yea~andM,k~ 1.1:..z. forcarttr&#13;
a\·e-rages ol nearly 2Q pou~ts per&#13;
g;,me Tom I«! Gr«n&lt;Lile in&#13;
assjsts for thfft )·tars. and als.o&#13;
holds the school '1ngle cam•&#13;
rttOrd ltl 48 poull.&gt;. Jilln&gt;I&#13;
Oidahy as a 111ruor Mtl&lt;t hid&#13;
his carttr high d • tht s.am,&#13;
year. Both ~~re ciiptJi1nt and&#13;
MVPs for Greendale a, seroon&#13;
l:W-Parutde -.tll optn ,ts&#13;
lhtrd varsity basketbell 'ifftan&#13;
against Western '-hchigan 1n&#13;
Kalamaioo&#13;
Richard Voss. Jr 5-2 guard&#13;
and most valuable player on&#13;
Wauwatosa West's Suburban&#13;
conference team, has</text>
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              <text>"Journalism is Literature tn a Hurry" — Matthew Arnold University of Wisconsin - Parkside&#13;
Volume 4—Number 1 June 28,1971&#13;
Brokaw Charges&#13;
Wyllie Pressured&#13;
for Non-Renewal&#13;
By Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Speaking for nearly three hours before the Science Division&#13;
Executive Committee in an open hearing. Dr. James&#13;
Russell Brokaw, assistant professor of psychology,&#13;
rebutted the charges made against him in the Committee's&#13;
recommendation for the non-renewal of his contract beyond&#13;
the 1971-72 academic year.&#13;
Brokaw charged that Chancellor Wyllie himself&#13;
pressured for the non-renewal. He said the charges that he&#13;
was a poor teacher were unsubstantiated and the reason he&#13;
did no research was that there were no facilities available.&#13;
The Committee had decided unanimously on April 2 to&#13;
recommend the non-renewal of Brokaw's appointment. The&#13;
initial reasons for the decision were repeated student&#13;
complaints about his teaching, limited and unsatisfactory&#13;
participation in the professional work of the psychology&#13;
faculty and of t he Science Division, and lack of e vidence of&#13;
scholarly activity.&#13;
Later, Dean Morrow, upon Brokaw's request, gave the&#13;
specifics of the charges. He said there were persistent&#13;
complaints about the "chronic lack of careful preparation&#13;
for classes, poor lectures, incomplete classroom presentations&#13;
. . . unsatisfactory testing practices, unfair and&#13;
inappropriate grading practices . . ."&#13;
For the second point Morrow elaborated, "... Limited&#13;
and unsatisfactory participation in the professional work of&#13;
the psychology faculty and of the science division . . .&#13;
limited amount of participation in business of psychology&#13;
and division faculty and in faculty committees;&#13;
procrastination and failure to submit needed information&#13;
. . . causing extreme inconvenience to colleagues ... by&#13;
prolonged delays in moving office, by leaving personal&#13;
effects in gross disorder in a shared office, and by&#13;
unauthorized use of s ecretarial facilities . . . lack of constructive&#13;
reactions to criticism and suggestions."&#13;
Brokaw contended that "I have been frustrated by this&#13;
administration in my efforts and by the Science Division&#13;
Executive Committee. I have been frustrated by the&#13;
Chancellor because the Chancellor does not want to see an&#13;
animal psychology program here."&#13;
Brokaw related later that the Chancellor once told him,&#13;
"When I hired you I thought I was getting a psychologist,&#13;
not an animal trainer."&#13;
He asked the Committee point blank if in August&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie had not told the Committee to fire&#13;
Brokaw. Burt Wagner, a UW legal counselor, wondered if&#13;
the question fit into the scope of the hearing. The question&#13;
was never answered.&#13;
Brokaw questioned what leaving personal effects in&#13;
gross disorder in a shared office had to do with "Limited&#13;
and unsatisfactory participation in the professional work of&#13;
the psychology faculty and of the science division."&#13;
Overall, the documents this reporter saw supporting&#13;
the Committee's assertions were collected after the&#13;
decision not to renew Brokaw's appointment was made.&#13;
A memo dated April 15, 1971 — two weeks after the&#13;
decision, from Dean Morrow to Norbert Isenberg, Chairman&#13;
of S cience Division, said, "Please prepare for me, as&#13;
soon as possible, a memo providing detailed, factual&#13;
documentation of the unsatisfactory aspects of Russell&#13;
Brokaw's performance, as supporting evidence for the&#13;
Science Division Executive Committee's recommendation&#13;
of non-renewal ..."&#13;
Dr. Surrinder Datta, life science, in a memo to Isenberg&#13;
dated June 8,1971, stated that in the fall of 1969 he told Dr.&#13;
"Brokaw that he could use space in that Animal House for his&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
Inside&#13;
Baltimore Oriole Interview&#13;
Johnny Young&#13;
Siegel Schwa II&#13;
Review&#13;
Humanities Reverses Douglas Non Renewal&#13;
The Humanities Divisional Executive&#13;
committee has reversed its decision not to&#13;
renew the contract of Darrell Douglas,&#13;
assistant professor of music (Newscope, May&#13;
24).&#13;
The Reversal came as the result of a closed&#13;
hearing held Wednesday on June 16 at which&#13;
time Douglas appeared before the committee.&#13;
The hearing is part of the review process,&#13;
when additional information can be submitted&#13;
to the committee. The hearing may be open or&#13;
closed.&#13;
In addition to Douglas, the committee heard&#13;
testimony from students and members of the&#13;
Music Educators National Conference —&#13;
Parkside chapter.&#13;
Since Douglas is in his sixth year of&#13;
teaching, the case now goes to the tenure and&#13;
curriculum committee for the final decision.&#13;
Under university regulations, a professor who&#13;
has been with the university for six years&#13;
must either be granted tenure or have his&#13;
contract terminated.&#13;
After the committee's decision, Douglas&#13;
was elected coordinator of the music&#13;
discipline replacing Harry Lantz, interim&#13;
coordinator.&#13;
Bill Sorenson is a difficult person to interview, being a&#13;
friend makes it that much more trying. But he wrote a&#13;
paper entitled, THE WHEN, WHERE, WHY AND HOW, a&#13;
semantic reaction diary. Written as an assignment for a&#13;
general semantics course taught by Dr. Scott Baudhuin,&#13;
the paper was submitted for publication to ETCETERA:&#13;
A General Review of Semantics. The quarterly was&#13;
founded by Dr. S. I. Hayakawa and is considered to be a&#13;
prestigious publication in the field of general semantics&#13;
and for a junior to publish in the territory of H. L. Mencken&#13;
is rare, and I think, significant.&#13;
I talked with Bill for an hour during which we&#13;
discussed the paper and some of his ideas toward communication.&#13;
Speaking about his paper he said, "The article&#13;
was an assignment, which was to be given orally for&#13;
a general semantics course. General Semantics is kind of&#13;
a philosophy of l inguistics, but it's not linguistics, there's&#13;
a philosophy involved with it too.&#13;
"The paper was basically a diary of experience; it&#13;
covered four days of bumping about and I tried my best to&#13;
attack the top of what is called the structural differential&#13;
and that is called 'what is going on'."&#13;
"A fellow called Alfred Korizipsky came up with the&#13;
theory in 1948 when he published his Science and Society".&#13;
"The theory itself is based on the idea that we have a&#13;
tendency to label things and think of them as the things&#13;
we're talking about. In other words, the thing is, like this&#13;
chair is a chair and right away the word chair becomes&#13;
the chair, and that's wrong because it's only called a chair&#13;
and this has a great influence on the way we think.&#13;
"I was trying to get at more of the action, the flow of&#13;
things, the kind of continuum of the experience, the&#13;
dynamism the changeability. It was more of a creative&#13;
thing and not a research paper. It was more my true&#13;
feelings about things, trying my best to approach a truthfulness."&#13;
&#13;
His interest in communication focuses on cinematics,&#13;
in one way as a movie reviewer for NEWSCOPE, but&#13;
more importantly as a potential film maker.&#13;
Bill Sorensen:&#13;
'The When,&#13;
Where, Why&#13;
and How'&#13;
By John Koloen of The Newscope Staff&#13;
Categorically refuting ideas toward communication&#13;
popularized by Marshall McLuhan, he characterized his&#13;
opposing viewpoint as "dynamic participation."&#13;
"Filming is very much a part of communications and&#13;
I think it's an upcoming part. The film is what you want to&#13;
make it, it can be just as usable as the written word.&#13;
McLihan talks about hot and cold media; for him hot&#13;
media would be more like active media that brings about&#13;
involvement. Like reading words, we become a participant&#13;
as soon as we start reading because we have to be&#13;
the channel. The movie, he asys, is not of the same genre&#13;
because a viewer is getting sound and sight and a lot of the&#13;
interpretation isn't necessary.&#13;
"A good example is Finnegan's Wake in book form&#13;
and in film form were just as challenging in both forms.&#13;
Many Bergman films are this way and you have to&#13;
become involved, you have to interpret or else you drown&#13;
in it."&#13;
Bill is not the typical scholar and came to Parkside&#13;
after suffering through a high school education which he&#13;
called "boring". With many others he shares a contempt&#13;
for public education with its emphasis on mechanical&#13;
thinking to the detriment of utilizing ones' creative&#13;
potential. Referring to problems in communication and in&#13;
relating to our environment he said, "If we look at the&#13;
world as a gigantic movement and if we could interpret&#13;
ourselves in the same way without making static entities&#13;
of ourselves, we would probably go a long way in improving&#13;
our society and probably stop delineating between&#13;
peoples. There's nothing to make it impossible for us&#13;
to interpret things as they are or at least as they seem to&#13;
all of us, or seem to a part of us or seem to one of us. We&#13;
could probably interpret our environment correctly, but&#13;
we don't do that and that's where it goes back to general&#13;
semantics.&#13;
"We do not interpret correctly through language;&#13;
language should be improved. I don't think you're going to&#13;
do it by taking English lit., the only way to do it is to say,&#13;
(Continued on Page 6) &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE June 28,1971&#13;
LETTERS TO THE&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
I am continually amazed at&#13;
the manner in which this&#13;
University functions. The way&#13;
in which the Parkside administration&#13;
organized the open&#13;
hearing for Dr. Brokaw leaves&#13;
doubt in my mind as to whether&#13;
there was an attempt to review&#13;
his case in a manner which was&#13;
fair.&#13;
I have written a letter to Dean&#13;
Morrow on behalf of the Brokaw&#13;
Defense League which I&#13;
delivered to him personally at&#13;
the time of the hearing. In that&#13;
letter, I expressed the position&#13;
of t he League that we were not&#13;
satisfied with the lack of written&#13;
notification of the hearing until&#13;
two days before the hearing.&#13;
Similarly, the League felt that&#13;
notification of Dr. Brokaw's&#13;
access to his personal file, upon&#13;
which the Executive Committee's&#13;
recommendation was&#13;
based, also came too late. That&#13;
notification came on Tuesday,&#13;
June 22. This gave Dr. Brokaw&#13;
only one day to prepare an&#13;
answer to any allegations that&#13;
had been inserted in his file.&#13;
The letter to Dean Morrow&#13;
expressed the League's position&#13;
that room 1J8 of Greenquist&#13;
Hall was too small a room to&#13;
conduct the open hearing. This&#13;
proved to be the case, since&#13;
there was not sufficient seating&#13;
capacity, with a number of&#13;
people forced to stand in the&#13;
hallways, where they were&#13;
unable to hear a great deal of&#13;
the testimony. These sort of&#13;
arrangements for the open&#13;
hearing, made by the Office of&#13;
the Dean of the College of&#13;
Science and Society, limited the&#13;
ability of those connected with&#13;
the defense of Dr. Brokaw to&#13;
properly organize all of the&#13;
materials toward that defense.&#13;
A matter which may&#13;
ultimately have more&#13;
significance with respect to the&#13;
outcome of the hearing is the&#13;
attitude of the Chancellor,&#13;
whose duty is to act on the&#13;
recommendation of the&#13;
Divisional Executive Committee.&#13;
I called the Chancellor&#13;
with regard to the open hearing&#13;
on June 23, the day before the&#13;
hearing. I had hoped that he&#13;
would attend the hearing, so&#13;
that he might base his actions&#13;
on testimony received first&#13;
hand. When I asked him if he&#13;
planned to attend, his reply&#13;
was, "It's none of your goddamned&#13;
business." He finally&#13;
stated that he definitely would&#13;
not attend the hearing and.that&#13;
it was. his impression from a&#13;
conversation held the day&#13;
before with the Dean, that the&#13;
hearing would be postponed&#13;
because of the recommendation&#13;
of Dr. Brokaw's physician that&#13;
he should rest his throat. (Dr.&#13;
Brokaw had for several weeks&#13;
been suffering from severe&#13;
larynghitis.) In the fifteen&#13;
minute conversation with the&#13;
Chancellor that ensued, he went&#13;
on to defend his ten point policy&#13;
statement made after the attempted&#13;
dismissals of 27 fac ulty&#13;
members last winter. He was of&#13;
the opinion that current administration&#13;
policies were not&#13;
at odds with the policies expressed&#13;
in that policy&#13;
statement. It would seem that in&#13;
a legal proceeding, the type of&#13;
prejudice expressed by the&#13;
Chancellor would rule him&#13;
ineligible for the role he must&#13;
play as executor of the new&#13;
recommendation of the Science&#13;
Division Committee.&#13;
Finally, the type of material&#13;
in Dr. Brokaw's file is of the&#13;
type that would be inadmissable&#13;
in any legal proceedings. Much&#13;
of the material in the file had&#13;
been entered there after the&#13;
Executive Committee made&#13;
their unanimous recommendation&#13;
for non-renewal. It&#13;
seemed that the material was&#13;
put there to justify their position&#13;
and that their decision was&#13;
based on either insubstantial or&#13;
hearsay evidence. There were&#13;
several items that were missing&#13;
from Dr. Brokaw's file. One was&#13;
a statement of commendation&#13;
submitted to the Dean by some&#13;
of Dr. Brokaw's students of last&#13;
summer. Another notable&#13;
commission was Dr. Brokaw's&#13;
memorandum to Dean Morrow&#13;
on the possibility of shifting&#13;
Psychology into the Social&#13;
Science Division. There was a&#13;
large body of d ata submitted to&#13;
the file dated June 3, just three&#13;
weeks before the hearing. Some&#13;
of th e material submitted to the&#13;
file was submitted by William&#13;
Morrow, who both functioned as&#13;
a representative of the&#13;
Psychology discipline on the&#13;
Executive Committee, and then&#13;
reviewed that decision as acting&#13;
Dean.&#13;
Regardless of the outcome of&#13;
the hearing, the open hearing of&#13;
Dr. Brokaw has shown that the&#13;
structure for review of&#13;
E x e c u t i v e C o m m itt ee&#13;
r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s is&#13;
inadequate. There is no semblance&#13;
of due process. The same&#13;
people that make the original&#13;
decision are those that review&#13;
that decision. The "defendant"&#13;
has no rights. Burt Wagner, the&#13;
University attorney who was&#13;
present, seemed to indicate that&#13;
the only duty of the Executive&#13;
Committee was to be present at&#13;
the Hearing. The members of&#13;
the Committee were not allowed&#13;
to testify at the hearing. Apparently,&#13;
any type of material&#13;
may be entered or removed&#13;
from the file of the person&#13;
whose case is being reviewed,&#13;
and at any time. It seems that&#13;
the only legality of the open&#13;
hearing proceedings is their&#13;
appearance in the rules and&#13;
regulations of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin. My only hope is that&#13;
those two instructors who were&#13;
granted closed hearings were&#13;
allowed a better forum for the&#13;
presentation of materials&#13;
relating to their non-renewal&#13;
recommendations from the&#13;
Humanities Division.&#13;
Very truly yours,&#13;
Edmund Gilday&#13;
Chairman,&#13;
Brokaw Defense League&#13;
cc. President John C. Weaver&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The political repression that&#13;
has been going on all year at&#13;
Parkside reached some sort of a&#13;
climax on the day of Parkside's&#13;
commencement exercises,&#13;
Saturday, June 12. It is now&#13;
clear to us that we were wrong&#13;
in assuming that what has gone&#13;
on came about through lack of&#13;
coordination within the Office of&#13;
Student Affairs. It now appears&#13;
to us that what has gone on in&#13;
that Office came about as a&#13;
direct result of coordination&#13;
within that Office, much of it&#13;
under the direction of Allen&#13;
Dearborn.&#13;
Allen Dearborn's first appearance&#13;
on that Saturday&#13;
came when he told us that we&#13;
could not distribute leaflets&#13;
inside Greenquist Hall. This&#13;
came as a surprise to most of&#13;
us, since we had been allowed to&#13;
do this during the rest of the&#13;
school year. Dearborn told us&#13;
shortly after we entered the&#13;
building that if we gave out any&#13;
of our leaflets, we would be&#13;
arrested. He told us that we&#13;
could leaflet outside the&#13;
building.&#13;
After the commencement&#13;
exercises, a member of the&#13;
Parkside Protection and&#13;
Security force told us that we&#13;
could not leaflet anywhere on&#13;
campus. After moving on to&#13;
Wood Road, we were told we&#13;
would be arrested if we continued&#13;
to leaflet there. Finally,&#13;
we were stopped from&#13;
leafletting by the Student&#13;
Government Building when a&#13;
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KELLERMEN'S CLASS&#13;
(PSYCHO LOGY)&#13;
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For First Two Weeks of Class&#13;
Niebuhr to Head Regional Conference&#13;
William Niebuhr, Coordinator of Student Activities&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, has&#13;
been elected to a two-year term as Unit Coordinator&#13;
of t he Northern Michigan and Wisconsin chapter of&#13;
the National Entertainment Conference (NEC).&#13;
The National Entertainment Conference&#13;
consists of staff from nearly 600 colleges and&#13;
universities who work in the areas of campus&#13;
concerts, films, lectures and travel.&#13;
Niebuhr was a panelist at a special NEC&#13;
workshop on group travel held June 7 at Wisconsin&#13;
State University at Stevens Point.&#13;
Under Niebuhr's direction, Parkside has&#13;
sponsored sell-out concerts by such groups as The&#13;
Fifth Dimension, Blood, Sweat and Tears, The First&#13;
Edition, Chicago, Buddy Rich, and Your Father's&#13;
Mustache, sponsored charter flights to Spain, the&#13;
French Alps and northern Europe, and brought in a&#13;
steady series of on-campus dance and coffee house&#13;
acts.&#13;
'The When, Where, Why and How'&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
'now here's some tools, here's&#13;
some directives, see what you&#13;
can do with it,' individually and&#13;
creatively. The article I wrote&#13;
was probably just that, I was&#13;
trying to do something creative&#13;
without having a bibliography."&#13;
Concerning education he said,&#13;
"When I was in high school, I&#13;
was one of the lousiest students&#13;
that ever existed. I passed, but&#13;
even then I was a lousy student,&#13;
they were trying to get rid of&#13;
me. But it scares me to think&#13;
that any system can remove&#13;
and alienate anyone as much as&#13;
the educational structure does&#13;
in this country. If it wasn't, let's&#13;
£Pmile&#13;
RELAX&#13;
RAINBOW GARDENS&#13;
AMUSEMENT CENTER&#13;
MINI-GOLF&#13;
ARCHERY&#13;
87th &amp; SHERIDAN RD&#13;
say, for Doctor Baudhuin, and&#13;
other people, especially other&#13;
students, I probably wouldn't be&#13;
here either because true&#13;
communications takes place&#13;
amidst those who feel alienated.&#13;
"The way classes are set up, I&#13;
despise the definite formulated&#13;
static structure. You go to a&#13;
room, you sit in a chair, the&#13;
chair has to have four square&#13;
feet so you can move your legs;&#13;
this is wrong. There was a&#13;
professor Williams, I guess his&#13;
name was. He taught social&#13;
psycfi and behavioral psych,&#13;
and he was totally unstructured.&#13;
The class&#13;
developed, there were some&#13;
criteria to follow but otherwise&#13;
the students were on their own.&#13;
"I believe most people&#13;
walking out of that class felt&#13;
more fulfilled because to feel&#13;
fulfilled you have to release&#13;
things too, you have to feel as if&#13;
you contributed something.&#13;
Here you don't feel that, really.&#13;
The first time I felt I contributed&#13;
anything was when I&#13;
started turning an article out&#13;
that was of my own making,&#13;
that was picked up out of context,&#13;
out of the school, and sent&#13;
somewhere else. It was a&#13;
personal private thing, these&#13;
things can be done, but they are&#13;
seldom recognized.&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Editor Warren Nedry&#13;
Copy Editor John Koloen&#13;
News Editor Marc Eisen&#13;
Feature Editor Paul Lomartire&#13;
Business Manager John Gray&#13;
NEWS STAFF&#13;
Bob Borchardt, Darrell Borger,&#13;
James Casper, Jim Koloen, Bill&#13;
Sorensen.&#13;
CONTRIBUTING&#13;
WRITERS&#13;
Mike Stevesand, Janet Sabol,&#13;
Mike Starr.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Connie Kinsella, Dave Kraus,&#13;
Don Marjara, Barb Scott.&#13;
PHONES&#13;
Editorial&#13;
Business&#13;
658-4861, Ext. 443&#13;
658-4861, Ext. 444&#13;
Summer Newscope is an&#13;
independent student newspaper&#13;
composed and published weekly&#13;
through the summer session by&#13;
students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. Student&#13;
obtained advertising funds are&#13;
the sole source of revenue for&#13;
the operation of Newscope. 4,000&#13;
copies are printed and&#13;
distributed' through the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the&#13;
University. Free copies are&#13;
available upon request. &#13;
MOLBECK'S&#13;
COMPLETE LINE&#13;
OF HEALTH FOODS&#13;
HERB TEAS&#13;
STONE GROUND&#13;
FLOURS&#13;
NATURAL VITAMINS&#13;
And many other&#13;
Organic Foods.&#13;
1304 GRANGE AVE.&#13;
RACINE 633-7759&#13;
EDITOR&#13;
Parkside car and a Protection&#13;
and Security squad car pulled&#13;
up and we were confronted by&#13;
several plainclothes police&#13;
officers. We were told that we&#13;
could leaflet on campus only&#13;
what the Dean (Allen Dearborn)&#13;
told them could be&#13;
distributed. Apparently our&#13;
leaflets, which were critical of&#13;
the recent terminations of five&#13;
Parkside faculty members,&#13;
were unacceptable.&#13;
Later that night, Allen&#13;
Dearborn reappeared to break&#13;
up a gathering of students at the&#13;
Student Government Building.&#13;
He told them that they could not&#13;
use the building without prior&#13;
approval, since the building was&#13;
operated through his office. He&#13;
told several student senators&#13;
that were present that they did&#13;
not represent the Parkside&#13;
student body. He gave everyone&#13;
present five minutes to clear the&#13;
area, threatening them with&#13;
arrest if they wanted to stay. He&#13;
then called in three members of&#13;
the Protection and Security&#13;
force who came with guns to&#13;
enforce that order.&#13;
The most surprising event&#13;
that occurred on that Saturday&#13;
took place about a half an hour&#13;
after Dearborn had cleared the&#13;
students from the Student&#13;
Government Building. About&#13;
forty students massed on the&#13;
Tallent Hall parking lot,&#13;
shouting an anti-Dearborn&#13;
phrase, and burned Dearborn in&#13;
effigy. Dearborn's response this&#13;
time was incredible. He said he&#13;
did not understand why the&#13;
students had done this. His&#13;
comment was, "We've taken&#13;
your building away, what more&#13;
do you want?". He then&#13;
threatened the one Parkside&#13;
faculty member who happened&#13;
to be present, Hal Stern, telling&#13;
him to get off campus and&#13;
telling him to watch out who he&#13;
associates with. Dearborn then&#13;
proceeded to collect ID cards&#13;
from anyone who looked&#13;
suspicious to him. One student,&#13;
Ian MacTaggart, was stopped&#13;
in the parking lot by Sargent&#13;
Crow, who pulled out a blackjack&#13;
and told MacTaggart to&#13;
give him his student ID or&#13;
leave. Ian left.&#13;
The type of measures that&#13;
Allen Dearborn is using against&#13;
the students are far out of line&#13;
with the actions of students on&#13;
this essentially conservative&#13;
campus. More than anyone else&#13;
at this University, Allen&#13;
Dearborn has served to&#13;
radicalize the student body. We&#13;
do not believe his actions are&#13;
justified. We only hope that this&#13;
sort of repression will not be&#13;
condoned by other segments of&#13;
the Parkside administration,&#13;
particularly the Office of the&#13;
Chancellor. We hope that the&#13;
opinions concerning students at&#13;
Parkside held by Allen Dearborn&#13;
are not shared by those&#13;
•others in the administration&#13;
who are responsible for dealing&#13;
with student needs.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Mark Timpany&#13;
Carole L. Shuman&#13;
Madeleine Thielen&#13;
Dean Loumos&#13;
Ed Gilday&#13;
Ian MacTaggart&#13;
it's t he I&#13;
real t hing |&#13;
use newscope free classifieds&#13;
June 28,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
Where's&#13;
Wood&#13;
Road ?&#13;
If you've been wondering why Wood Road has been torn up,&#13;
it's because of the construction of the utilities distribution&#13;
tunnel. The tunnel will carry heat and chilled water and connect&#13;
the Heating and Chilling Plant, which is presently under construction,&#13;
with Greenquist Hall and the Library Learning&#13;
Center.&#13;
Work being done near Wood Road should be completed by&#13;
the middle of July, and the road opened again at that time. The&#13;
tunnel itself should be finished by fall.&#13;
The plant will be finished by the fall of 1972. It will be large&#13;
enough to handle all heating and chilling needs till 1980. It&#13;
replaces a temporary Heating and Chilling Plant that served&#13;
Greenquist. According to Francis O'Murray of Planning and&#13;
Facilities, it is more efficient to have one central heating and&#13;
chilling plant than many smaller sub-stations.&#13;
Other work being done in the same area is the construction&#13;
of the first leg of the campus innerloop road, and of sewer and&#13;
water facilities beneath the road. Putting the sewer beneath the&#13;
road means the land only has to be dug up once.&#13;
Kenosha Mayor Wallace Burkee (left) and Emil Abendroth,&#13;
president of Global Business and Residential Centers, Inc., of&#13;
iMilwaukee, turn the first shovels full of earth at the site of Parkside&#13;
'village, a private development of apartments for students adjacent&#13;
to the University of Wisconsin-Parkside on Wood Road. Looking on&#13;
(from left) are John Abendroth of the Global firm and UWParkside&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie. The first phase of the Global&#13;
development project will open this September with apartments&#13;
capable of accommodating as many as 256 persons. Abendroth has&#13;
published a notice of intent to seek annexation to Kenosha of 1,380&#13;
acres, including the housing site and all 700 acres of the Parkside&#13;
campus which is now in Somers Township. Mayor Burkee said the&#13;
annexation petition, the largest ever sought for Kenosha, would&#13;
open the way to city installation of a major interceptor sanitary&#13;
sewer and development of the entire Parkside area. He said 75 per&#13;
icent of the cost of the $1.5 million sewer project could come from&#13;
state and federal funds.&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Village&#13;
Begun &#13;
page 4 NEWSCOPE June 28,1971&#13;
FRE DNO ER A Summer Sunset at UW-P&#13;
Working Class Hero&#13;
By Paul Lomatire&#13;
of th e Newscope staff&#13;
"The dream is over. I'm not just talking about the&#13;
Beatles. I'm talking about the whole generation, the&#13;
revolutionary image and the long hair. It's time to own&#13;
up. It's over and we have to get down to so-called&#13;
reality."&#13;
John Lennon made this statement early this year and&#13;
attracted many new followers. On his solo album,&#13;
which came out about Christmas-time, he added a&#13;
romantic twist to his new philosophy, as he sang of the&#13;
"working class hero".&#13;
The working class individual is all too often the most&#13;
commonly forgotten, least acknowledged cog in&#13;
American society, even though without him, the basics&#13;
in life we enjoy wouldn't exist.&#13;
With this in mind, it is my intention to bring to the&#13;
pages of Newscope, a working class hero every week.&#13;
By interviewing this person, I hope to bring out insights&#13;
on many issues and problems concerning American&#13;
society.&#13;
In the song, "Working Class Hero", John Lennon&#13;
sang, "A working class hero is something to be, a&#13;
working class hero is something to be . . .'&#13;
In the weeks to come, it will be interesting to see why&#13;
a working class hero is indeed, "something to be."&#13;
By Prof. Koch&#13;
Now that summer has&#13;
arrived, you don't want to waste&#13;
time preparing big meals. Here&#13;
are a few suggestions for quick&#13;
meals for two.&#13;
Alpine Onion Soup&#13;
What you need:&#13;
1 can Onion Soup (condensed)&#13;
1 tablespoon margarine&#13;
1 well beaten egg&#13;
&gt;/4 teaspoon salt&#13;
1 tablespoon Parmesan cheese,&#13;
grated&#13;
3 tablespoons flour&#13;
How to put it all together:&#13;
Follow directions on soup can&#13;
and prepare soup. In separate&#13;
bowl, beat butter till creamy,&#13;
then add egg, flour, salt and&#13;
cheese, blending ingredients&#13;
together.&#13;
You will have a batter-like&#13;
substance in the bowl. As soup&#13;
simmers (i.e., small bubbles&#13;
form by low heat), drop batter&#13;
by small teaspoonsfulls into&#13;
simmering soup. Simmer for&#13;
about five minutes.&#13;
To serve:&#13;
Place in bowls, serve with&#13;
saltines or Ritz crackers. Add&#13;
cooked chicken or chicken salad&#13;
sandwiches go nice with this.&#13;
Chicken Salad is good for&#13;
sandwiches or as the center of a&#13;
summer salad plate meal. It's&#13;
easy to prepare once you've&#13;
cooked (or bought) the chicken.&#13;
Chicken Salad&#13;
What you need:&#13;
Vi2 of 1 cup cooked minced&#13;
chicken&#13;
V2 cup diced celery&#13;
l&#13;
/4 c up diced onion&#13;
1 medium tomato, cut up small&#13;
pieces&#13;
one-third cup mayonaise&#13;
V-i teaspoon each of salt and&#13;
pepper&#13;
In a mixing bowl, combine all&#13;
ingredients and mix well (don't&#13;
beat it). Leaye covered bowl sit&#13;
in frigerator until chillded.&#13;
Then you're ready to serve — on&#13;
rye bread for sandwiches, or on&#13;
lettuce leaves for salad plate.&#13;
Americans View Peace Corps&#13;
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Young Americans led&#13;
the nation in viewing the Peace Corps and Peace&#13;
Corps Volunteers as a positive force for "helping&#13;
other people to help themselves". This conclusion&#13;
comes from a recent Peace Corps national research&#13;
survey conducted by Daniel Starch and Staff of&#13;
Mamaroneck, New York.&#13;
The survey showed that a majority of young&#13;
persons (18 to 24) consider people-to-people&#13;
programs to be the Peace Corps' major contribution&#13;
abroad (65 per cent of 18-to-24-year-olds vs. 57 per&#13;
cent for the total sample). Also, young Americans&#13;
lead the way in holding a positive attitude about the&#13;
Peace Corps (84 p er cent of Americans 18-24 vs. 78&#13;
per cent of the total sample) and in approving of&#13;
Peace Corps Volunteers (96 per cent approval&#13;
among those 18-24 vs. 86 per cent of the total sample).&#13;
&#13;
Young Americans also indicated a high level of&#13;
personal interest in the Peace Corps. Asked&#13;
whether they thought the Peace Corps would be&#13;
interested in them, 72 per cent of the respondents 18-&#13;
24 said "yes," compared to 48 per cent of the total&#13;
sample. And 51 per cent between the ages of 18 and&#13;
24 s aid they had an interest in joining the Peace&#13;
Corps, compared to 28 per cent in the total sample.&#13;
The research also disclosed that over one-third&#13;
of the young Americans sampled claimed to know&#13;
personally a current or former Peace Corps&#13;
Volunteer. Since the Peace Corps' inception in 1961,&#13;
more than 50,000 Americans have served as&#13;
Volunteers overseas.&#13;
When asked about the Peace Corps' role within&#13;
the U.S. government, young Americans were above&#13;
the national average in believing the Peace Corps&#13;
operated independently in the 60 developing nations&#13;
in which Volunteers serve (64 per cent of persons 18-&#13;
24 vs. 54 per cent of the total sample).&#13;
The research survey was conducted earlier this&#13;
year among widely varied demographic groups&#13;
across the United States. Of the total sample of 995,&#13;
there were 164, or 17 per cent between the ages of 18&#13;
and 24.&#13;
CIRUN A Takes&#13;
Positive Stand&#13;
In W orld Affairs&#13;
by Janet Sabol&#13;
— N. Y. —&#13;
The National Student Leadership Institute on&#13;
World Affairs (CIRUNA) held its annual conference&#13;
in New York recently. With the enactment of&#13;
several constitutional changes the organization is&#13;
turning from a timid stance in world affairs to an&#13;
organization concerned with attaining goals concerning&#13;
the environment, Cdmmunist China,&#13;
development and South Africa.&#13;
In the past CIRUNA h$s shown reluctance at&#13;
taking positive action on its platforms for fear of&#13;
losing its tax exempt status.&#13;
Parkside's CIRUNA will be working on South&#13;
Africa with particular attention placed on its&#13;
apartheid policy of white supremacy and the exploitation&#13;
of foreign investors which make it ex&#13;
tremely difficult for blacks to raise their standard&#13;
of living or obtain political freedom. In the RacineKenosha&#13;
area three corporations involved in South&#13;
Africa are J. I. Case Co., S. C. Johnson Inc., and&#13;
American Motors Corporation.&#13;
This year the National Southern Africa Coalition&#13;
hopes to raise $5,000 for South African organization.&#13;
are to be 1156(1 in mobilizing support for&#13;
Gulf Oil and Polaroid boycotts and to end the South&#13;
Africa sugar quota.&#13;
Summer School Begins! Approximately 1,600 students&#13;
signed up for summer classes at UWP last week. Enrollment is&#13;
expected to increase with registration continuing through this&#13;
week.&#13;
Eating In&#13;
D A R R EL B O R G E R &#13;
June 28,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 5&#13;
Charles Shaughnessy&#13;
Robert Mitchum&#13;
Rosy Ryan Sarah Miles&#13;
Father Collins Trevor Howard&#13;
Major Doryan Christopher&#13;
Jones&#13;
Michael John Mills&#13;
Thomas Ryan Leo McKern&#13;
It could be said that writings&#13;
that contain the themes of war,&#13;
revolution and betrayed love&#13;
attract David Lean's fine talent.&#13;
It could also be said that when&#13;
Mr. Lean has finished with his&#13;
mainly historical productions&#13;
they are the finest; so it is with&#13;
Ryan's Daughter.&#13;
Ample use was made of all&#13;
three of the themes through&#13;
masterful cinematography that&#13;
granted the film a more than&#13;
deserved Academy Award.&#13;
Exquisite photography of&#13;
Ireland's jagged coastline and&#13;
beautiful flora played as backdrop&#13;
for a WW I-era village of&#13;
outwardly simple folk where all&#13;
was not quite as it seemed.&#13;
The viewer is given the all too&#13;
rare opportunity to look closely&#13;
at circumstances, where people&#13;
are caught up in promises that&#13;
cannot be kept. This same&#13;
fluency of experience was&#13;
demonstrated in Lean's earlier&#13;
"Doctor Zhivago". In both&#13;
cases, the omniscient viewer&#13;
comes so close to the characters&#13;
that a near-total empathy is&#13;
unavoidable.&#13;
One of this reviewer's&#13;
greatest problems is that of&#13;
finding universals in films that&#13;
are not meant to be rflade for&#13;
universal interpretation. While&#13;
Ryan's Daughter is primarily&#13;
an historical film, I will interpret&#13;
further; seeing, of&#13;
course, that "problems" are an&#13;
important source of identity.&#13;
Revolution played an important&#13;
part as an aspect of the&#13;
film, as was the case in "Doctor&#13;
Zhivago". Here we find the cold&#13;
and sometimes angry alienation&#13;
that results from one people&#13;
striving for freedom from&#13;
another. The goal that they set&#13;
before them becomes so important&#13;
that all privacy is unveiled&#13;
and anyone in the path to&#13;
that goal is crushed. So is the&#13;
case in our simple romance&#13;
between a teacher and his&#13;
student.&#13;
The story begins with the&#13;
rather beautiful romance&#13;
between that young girl (Sarah&#13;
Miles) and her older teacher&#13;
(Robert Mitchum). They wed&#13;
but soon their romance cools&#13;
and the lust for life inherent in&#13;
most young girls and men leads&#13;
the girl into an even more poetic&#13;
affair with an English Major&#13;
(Christopher Jones) who bears&#13;
the stigma of a n Englishman in&#13;
revolutionary Ireland. Their&#13;
love, at first desperate, then&#13;
sensible, is as beautifully&#13;
photographed as I have yet seen&#13;
on film.&#13;
Our school teacher soon finds&#13;
out about the involvement, but&#13;
is too aware of his wife's youth&#13;
and passion to prohibit the&#13;
entanglement. So, he lets it&#13;
continue, with hopes of her&#13;
eventual disinterest. The only&#13;
member of t he town who knows&#13;
of the affair other than the girls'&#13;
husband, is the town fool... A&#13;
strange little crippled man&#13;
who's mimmicing soon betrays&#13;
the previously quiet affair. The&#13;
little man is portrayed by John&#13;
Mills; his beautiful mixture of&#13;
disdain, joy and childlike&#13;
sadness enriched the character&#13;
to academy award standards.&#13;
Betrayal stands as another of&#13;
the major themes. First, the&#13;
aforementioned betrayed love,&#13;
and second the betrayal of a&#13;
daughter by her father. Thomas&#13;
Ryan (Leo McKern) eventually&#13;
turns his back on his beautiful&#13;
child and lets her bear the&#13;
burden of his treachery.&#13;
As the movie comes to a close&#13;
she is chastised by an angry&#13;
mob of villagers who nearly&#13;
rape her and finally shear off&#13;
her hair . . the enigmatic&#13;
becomes the known as her faithful,&#13;
saintlike husband is held&#13;
back from saving her.&#13;
The love that was found is lost&#13;
as the Major commits suicide.&#13;
While the film is a history, it&#13;
remains as more in that it&#13;
shows quite graphically how&#13;
little we have changed, if for&#13;
nothing more than its breathtaking&#13;
photography it is well&#13;
worth seeing.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
of The Newscope Staff&#13;
Title: Tarkus&#13;
Artists: Emerson, Lake &amp;&#13;
Palmer&#13;
Cotillion Records SD9900&#13;
As I boldly face another&#13;
semester j)f attempting to&#13;
present "Audio Realm" supplied&#13;
with all the confidence one&#13;
would feel being the target in a&#13;
Mexican knife-throwing act, I&#13;
feel it necessary to make a few&#13;
preliminary statements before I&#13;
stumble on.&#13;
First, if I am qualified to&#13;
write this column at all, it is as a&#13;
last 11 or so reviews were&#13;
anything but complimentary,&#13;
we arrive happily at this week's&#13;
subject.&#13;
Even with the knowledge that&#13;
generalizations are not very&#13;
convincing, I'd still have to&#13;
start out by saying that&#13;
"Tarkus" is head and shoulders&#13;
above any album I've heard&#13;
released in the last few months.&#13;
In these dark days of commercializing&#13;
and sell-outs, it&#13;
will serve to bolster your faith&#13;
in rock.&#13;
Specifically, their attraction&#13;
lies in their ability to use the&#13;
5&#13;
musician, not a writer. Often&#13;
my literary attempts have&#13;
contained the poise and subtlety&#13;
of Harpo Marx swinging from a&#13;
chandelier, and I will readily&#13;
admit it. Second, a few of you&#13;
have been asking me why it is&#13;
that I never seem to say&#13;
anything nice in my reviews.&#13;
As far as my writing is concerned,&#13;
I can do little but offer&#13;
you the hope that it may improve&#13;
as I keep attempting it;&#13;
but concerning my somewhat&#13;
fatalistic outlook that may&#13;
possibly be too apparent in my&#13;
reviews, it's a characteristic&#13;
anyone can develop by simply&#13;
looking into the state of affairs&#13;
the recording industry is in&#13;
today. For every good album&#13;
released, the industry drops a&#13;
dozen bombs totally undeserving&#13;
of serious attention.&#13;
But anyway, seeing as I've&#13;
already used about ten column&#13;
inches and also seeing that my&#13;
idea of the three-man group&#13;
successfully, making full use of&#13;
its advantages. The music is&#13;
uncluttered, precisely clear,&#13;
never a pointless run or a sloppy&#13;
riff. Not since Tull have I heard&#13;
a group so obviously tight and&#13;
sure of itself, and not since&#13;
Brubeck have I heard a group&#13;
so at ease in just about any&#13;
meter you can think of.&#13;
Another strong attraction is&#13;
their originality. The music&#13;
isn't "Cream" or "Glass Harp"&#13;
or any other trio you've heard&#13;
before. It's distinctly them,&#13;
whatever they want to call it.&#13;
But the one thing that I really&#13;
found hard to believe was&#13;
Emerson's keyboard work. The&#13;
way he can string ideas&#13;
together, never digressing, is&#13;
amazing. Apologies to Niki&#13;
Hopkins, but he's the best I've&#13;
ever heard. All in all, I doubt if&#13;
you'll ever hear a group playing&#13;
much better than this.&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
It was the first day of 1971 that could have been&#13;
aptly labeled "a scorcher." The ladies who spend a&#13;
life-time downtown shopping for incidentals were&#13;
even doggin' it a bit under the sweltering sun.&#13;
I was standing on the corner of 56th Street and 7th&#13;
Avenue wondering where I could go to find a Utopia,&#13;
which at that point would have simply been an air&#13;
conditioned building. I was to meet Maggie for&#13;
lunch, and the Dutch Maid looked like the place.&#13;
It only took a few seconds to realize that the Dutch&#13;
Maid was either not air conditioned or the air&#13;
conditioning wasn't turned on. In either case, I was&#13;
out of the sun and I figured a lot of people will find&#13;
themselves under the same sun in the same heat&#13;
downtown, walking into the Dutch Maid for the&#13;
same reason I did.&#13;
The Dutch Maid is the type of restaurant-soda&#13;
shop that you can find in almost any town. No&#13;
matter how small a town is there is always a place&#13;
to buy an ice cream cone or get a sundae or meet&#13;
your friends. Kenosha's ice cream parlor downtown&#13;
would fair very well almost anywhere.&#13;
There is a jukebox stocked with old favorites,&#13;
songs hot off the surveys, a few standards, and good&#13;
speakers so everyone in the place can enjoy&#13;
someone's selections.&#13;
When it comes to enjoying an ice cream dish,&#13;
there is a very good selection here. I had heard&#13;
much talk from a friends about something called a&#13;
"Fabulous Nightmare", which supposedly takes at&#13;
least forty minutes to eat. It costs a dollar seventyfive&#13;
and is guaranteed to make the eater feel like a&#13;
true glutton before the spoon clinks against the&#13;
empty dish. I just couldn't get into making a display&#13;
of eating lunch for all the passersby on the street,&#13;
and I was also afraid they might serve it in a pail.&#13;
So on this hot day Maggie decided to try a&#13;
mm&#13;
"Peanut Vender", which includes Spanish peanuts,&#13;
chocolate syrup and whipped cream or marshmallow.&#13;
It costs fifty-five cents, and is worth it&#13;
Maggie said after examining the structure. She is a&#13;
former employee of a very successful ice cream&#13;
stand, and I consider her testimony expert.&#13;
I decided to eat a more traditional lunch, so my&#13;
order fell into the lines of a fish dinner. For eightynine&#13;
cents I got a haddock square, French fries, cole&#13;
slaw and a piece of bread and butter. I passed up the&#13;
list of drinks available, phosphates, soda combinations&#13;
and coolers, in favor of a cup of coffee.&#13;
I thought the food was good. The prices are high&#13;
in some spots on the menu, but an experienced eater&#13;
can piece together a good economic, filling meal.&#13;
There is only one thing that annoys me about eating&#13;
a meal at the Dutch Maid, and that is the system by&#13;
which they ration ketchup to their patrons.&#13;
It is quite evident that teanagers make up a major&#13;
portion of the customers at the Dutch Maid. The&#13;
ghosts of D ave and Ricky Nelson seem to be in the&#13;
air. Everytime I eat there I expect Frankie Avalon&#13;
to run in and grab a chick's hand and run to "where&#13;
the action is." Kenosha provides their youth with&#13;
absolutely no community sponorored events, so like&#13;
the Dutch Maid and various street corners serve as&#13;
mee ting places.&#13;
I imagine the most frequently ordered combination&#13;
at the Dutch Maid is French fries and a&#13;
Coke. So a bunch of k ids come in, order this and sit&#13;
for awhile and order nothing else. There is nothing&#13;
wrong until the French fries are served.&#13;
When I got my meal, I saw a tiny cup of ketchup&#13;
that lasted through about a half dozen French fries.&#13;
When I asked for more, I found out that a second&#13;
ration is a nickel extra. This is what annoyed me.&#13;
Using the management's logic I c an only assume&#13;
that they are afraid much of the ketchup goes to&#13;
waste. I imagine they have seen many puddles of&#13;
ketchup on a plate long after the fries are gone. But&#13;
I can't see that this is any reason to charge&#13;
everyone a nickel extra for only enough ketchup to&#13;
satisfy the average person.&#13;
This may all seem too trivial to discuss in print,&#13;
but it is another instance where everyone is made to&#13;
suffer for the actions of a few. If the Left runs out of&#13;
issues to protest, and the youth of America look for&#13;
new directions for a revolution, the Kenosha Dutch&#13;
Maid and its ketchup policy seems a likely target.&#13;
The visit to the Dutch Maid was good though, in&#13;
that the food was good. I suppose that is all that is&#13;
really important. So, if you're ever downtown&#13;
sweltering in the heat about noon, a visit to the&#13;
Dutch Maid might be just the ticket.&#13;
Some day I hope the good ole Bowery Boys&#13;
make a national tour of American soda shops and&#13;
stop in Kenosha's downtown Dutch Maid. I would&#13;
like to see someone explain to them why a second&#13;
cup of ketchup is extra. It would be far out to see&#13;
Mugsy, Satch and the boys make an issue out of the&#13;
ketchup policy. That would be worth a nickel.&#13;
DANCE THIS FRIDAY &#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE June 28.1971&#13;
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Brokaw Charges Wyllie&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
and individual student j&#13;
research. He summarized by&#13;
saying Dr. Brokaw has never&#13;
been refused animal space for&#13;
his scholarly activity.&#13;
At the hearing Brokaw saia&#13;
this space was not adequate&#13;
because he needed access to a&#13;
computer, and because he&#13;
wanted his classes to be able to&#13;
use the space.&#13;
He told the Committee of his&#13;
work on the Facilities and&#13;
Planning Committee of the&#13;
Science Division in»purchasing&#13;
the Lehigh Valley Interact&#13;
Computer System.&#13;
He spoke of his work on the&#13;
justification of the facility and&#13;
of submitting three sets of&#13;
laboratory plans for it. None of&#13;
which were accepted.&#13;
"What happened then all of a&#13;
sudden?" he asked. "The&#13;
laboratory is assigned; I never&#13;
heard about it. Another&#13;
psychologist was hired; I never&#13;
hear about that — until they&#13;
took a course away from me&#13;
(Experimental Psychology)&#13;
and gave it to him. Then I found&#13;
all my equipment was gone. I&#13;
find this very strange."&#13;
He continued, "Now it seems&#13;
everyone is upset because I&#13;
didn't do any research. But of&#13;
course you haven't given me&#13;
any facilities to do research in.&#13;
But that doesn't bother you a&#13;
bit. I have no equipment to do&#13;
reasearch in, so h ow in God's&#13;
name can I do research?" he&#13;
asked.&#13;
Brokaw said that student&#13;
charges that he was a poor&#13;
teacher were never substantiated&#13;
and that he was&#13;
never informed of them. In&#13;
regard to the Experimental&#13;
Psychology Course he said five&#13;
student complaints were used&#13;
as an excuse to take the course&#13;
away from him.&#13;
He argued the complaints&#13;
were "torn out of context" and&#13;
extenuating circumstances&#13;
were not considered. He told the&#13;
Committee he had no&#13;
laboratory facilities to teach the&#13;
experimental class in. The ideal&#13;
size of the class he said would&#13;
have been 15, but the cut-off«&#13;
mark was set at 24. Over 70&#13;
students enrolled. The eventual&#13;
enrollment was 50 after he&#13;
encouraged people to drop.&#13;
Another mitigating circumstance,&#13;
Brokaw said, was&#13;
that the class met only once a&#13;
week, and it was the first time it&#13;
had been taught.&#13;
Brokaw complained the&#13;
negative comments were not&#13;
adequately investigated. "I&#13;
wonder if it is inappropriate to&#13;
go inside them, why do you cite&#13;
them? I think you should either&#13;
bury them, or else take them up&#13;
with me."&#13;
He questioned why a&#13;
statement of commendation&#13;
submitted to Dean Morrow by&#13;
some of his students of last&#13;
summer was not in his file.&#13;
Members of the Executive&#13;
Committee present at he&#13;
hearing were: Norbert Isenberg,&#13;
chemistry; Robert Esser,&#13;
life science; Albert May,&#13;
mathematics; John Vozza,&#13;
chemistry; Kenneth Cashion,&#13;
chemistry; Harold Coppock,&#13;
p s y c h o l o g y ; E u gen e&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, life science;&#13;
M i c h a el R o tte n b e r g,&#13;
mathematics; Allan Schneider,&#13;
earth science; Surrinder Datta,&#13;
life science; and James Shea,&#13;
earth science.&#13;
The outcome of the Executive&#13;
Committee's reconsideration of&#13;
the issue is not known yet. They&#13;
will report their recommendation&#13;
to the Dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society,&#13;
William Morrow.&#13;
Pike River Clean-up Saturday&#13;
On June 19 Concerned students and friends turned out to do a&#13;
great job on opening up the Pike River on campus. However, we&#13;
have more to accomplish!&#13;
If you are concerned about the quality of your environment —&#13;
be a n activist.&#13;
Sign up to clean-up the Pike River on campus — Saturday, July&#13;
10. Contact: Tom Devine - 632-2908.&#13;
Tom Krout - 652- 9762&#13;
Jerry Koske - 762- 9311&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1970 Camaro. Snow Tires and Rims.&#13;
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1966 Ram. Amer. Con. 7843 - 20th.&#13;
1963 VW (40,000 mi.) $600; 1966&#13;
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June 28,1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of The Newscope Staff&#13;
At a recent game between the Milwaukee Brewers and Baltimore Orioles&#13;
Newscope talked to one of the Oriole players and Baltimore manager Earl&#13;
Weaver.&#13;
Questions on varied subjects including all-star balloting procedures and&#13;
controversial books on sports were asked&#13;
^ s&#13;
pok&#13;
e with Paul Blair, Oriole outfielder, and asked him about the&#13;
method used for choosing the all-star team. Fans are given cards with a list&#13;
of previously chosen players and they are to vote for their choices A&#13;
provision for write-ins is included. Blair discusses it-&#13;
"Either way you go somebody is going to get hurt. Right now I think the&#13;
name ballplayers are the guys that will make the all-star teams. These are&#13;
"If you rely on college players, you are not developing&#13;
your own players."&#13;
Paul Blair, outfielder&#13;
the guys that the people know about. The rookies that are having good years&#13;
and so-so ballplayers that are doing well get less coverage than 'name'&#13;
players. Some of them are not going to be chosen on the all-star ballot, but if&#13;
the players pick the team some of them would be hurt also. Either way you&#13;
go, somebody is going to lose out by it, but I imagine this is about the best&#13;
way because you get more participation from the fans. Perhaps some fans&#13;
will come out to the park just so they get the opportunity to vote for the allstar&#13;
team."&#13;
Blair was asked about the incident in Chicago where a fan jumped onto the&#13;
field and attacked Baltimore s Don Bufford. Bufford had earlier run to the&#13;
mound with bat in hand after a White Sox pitcher had hammed him on a&#13;
pitch. Blair said:&#13;
"This is the first time I have seen it happen and it was an unfortunate&#13;
incident, but the fan had no business on the field swinging at one of our&#13;
ballplayers. We're only 25 and there are quite a few fans in the stands so we&#13;
have to try to protect ourselves. You've got to help your teammate. He (the&#13;
fan) could have started a big incident there, a big riot, but nothing&#13;
significant developed because no one else came out of th e stands. I think the&#13;
Brooks commented on the fact that all playoff series up till now have been&#13;
sweeps: "Well, it is quite unusual. For example, we played Minnesota 12&#13;
times last year, losing seven, yet beat them three in a row in the playoff&#13;
series so it is hard to figure out."&#13;
Big first baseman "Boog" Powell talked very briefly on Jim Bouton's&#13;
books: "I don'tknow anything about either one of them because I didn't read&#13;
either one of them. I don't have any opinion on them because I didn't read&#13;
them. I do know that not too many guys liked the books."&#13;
Frank Robinson, one of baseball's most feared hitters, answered a few&#13;
questions for us. He talked about the playoffs and why they have been so onesided:&#13;
"I just think it is coincidence, actually. In a short series like that&#13;
anything can happen, and I think that is the case here. No team has expected&#13;
"Anytime a fan comes onto the field, he is asking for&#13;
trouble."&#13;
Frank Robinson, outfielder&#13;
to sweep a three game series from their divisional opponent."&#13;
On the all-star balloting, Frank had these remarks: "It is fine with the&#13;
fans voting, but I just don't like the way it is set up before spring training&#13;
begins because players whose names appear on the ballot are most likely the&#13;
one's who will receive votes. People don't really have a tendency to think&#13;
about write-ins. They get their card and punch it. I think they should&#13;
distribute the ballots and say, 'Here fans, vote for who you want to vote for,'&#13;
and that way people are going to look at a newspaper and.be more aware of&#13;
who is going good at that time."&#13;
Slowpitch softball is popular in Racine and Kenosha and many Parkside&#13;
students are playing it. With this in mind, we asked Frank if h e ever tried it:&#13;
"Well, I've played a few games of slowpitch softball. I did pretty well and I&#13;
know that a lot of people think it is really easy, but it is not as simple as some&#13;
Newscope Interviewi&#13;
The World Champion Baltimore Orioles&#13;
fan deserved what he got because he had no business coming out swinging at&#13;
Bufford."&#13;
Blair was asked to comment on college baseball and its relation to the&#13;
minor leagues. In recent years there has been a notable decline in the&#13;
number of minor league clubs, but it is still a question as to whether college&#13;
baseball will effectively take up the slack. Blair had this to say:&#13;
"If you rely on college players you are not developing your own&#13;
ballplayers because somebody else might get them before you, perhaps by&#13;
offering more money. When you have your own ballplayers and your own&#13;
minor league system you don't have to worry about another team taking&#13;
them from you and you can develop them. I think this is the main reason why&#13;
you have the minor leagues in baseball. You don't have much of it in&#13;
basketball and football because they don't rely on their minor league&#13;
systems."&#13;
In a related subject, Blair discussed how the baseball draft works: "You&#13;
can't sign out of high school but a player can sign out of college. The purpose&#13;
of the player draft is to keep one club from buying up all the available&#13;
talent."&#13;
Brooks Robinson, perennial all-star third baseman on the world champions,&#13;
commented on Jim Bouton's critical analyses of baseball found in his&#13;
two books*&#13;
"I don't think they did baseball any good, but I think there was a lot of&#13;
-truth in them. There were, however, numerous things that came second&#13;
hand; statements by players that have been categorically denied since then.&#13;
Yet it is a free country so you can do what you want to."&#13;
He continued, "Baseball is just like any other thing in life, any other&#13;
business. If anybody wanted to write something about the local bank they&#13;
could sit down and do it, too. The only difference in professional sports is that&#13;
you have a type of celebrity status and some people are gding to be unhappy&#13;
there have been fewer and fewer ballplayers&#13;
signed mainly because they haven't got a place to go."&#13;
Brooks Robinson, third baseman&#13;
about comments. People are disgruntled about other businesses, too, but if&#13;
they wrote books on them it wouldn't make any difference one way or&#13;
another."&#13;
Brooks also discussed college baseball's relation to the minor leagues:&#13;
"There-have been fewer and fewer minor leagues in the past few years and&#13;
there have been fewer and fewer ballplayers signed mainly because they&#13;
haven't got a place to go. If a prospective player asked me what to do I d tell&#13;
him to go to school and play college baseball, but then again I think that the&#13;
years 18 to 21 are about the most important years of a player's development&#13;
Playing minor league baseball is better than playing college ball, but I d tell&#13;
a boy to try to get an education, and if he wants to try to make it big in&#13;
baseball, he should try that also."&#13;
Is the appeal in baseball going up or down? Robinson remarked on this&#13;
question: "Well, it varies from town to town. It really depends on whether or&#13;
not you are winning. Overall, there have been more teams so the attendance&#13;
has increased over the last several years."&#13;
He was asked about the value of the divisional arrangements: They have&#13;
good and bad things about them. You don't have 12 teams in one league,&#13;
which is good. If you had 12 teams and we had the kind of years that we have&#13;
had in the last two seasons the race would be decided quickly. This way you&#13;
have the playoffs which lead to more overall interest.&#13;
think it is. I wouldn't want to play slowpitch softball for a living."&#13;
Frank discussed one of Jim Bouton's books (Ball Four): "I don't think this&#13;
and some other controversial books are hurting professional sports. The first&#13;
book Bouton wrote, which was entitled Ball Four, could have been written by&#13;
anyone connected with baseball. Many things that happen with the ballclub&#13;
— in the clubhouse, on the road, the things players say in confidence, should&#13;
not be written and made public. Because Bouton did this he ran into&#13;
trouble."&#13;
Frank had some remarks on the fan incident in Chicago: "It has happened&#13;
a couple of t imes — once when I was in Cincinnati. Any time a fan comes on&#13;
to the field he is asking for trouble. It is also true that ballplayers cannot go&#13;
into the stands after a fan because they pay their way to come into the&#13;
ballpark and basically they can say what they want to as long as they remain&#13;
in the stands. Once they come on to the field they're fair game and anything&#13;
can happen because you don't know what they have on their minds when&#13;
they come on the field and approach you."&#13;
He talked about fan behavior around the league: "Some cities are worse&#13;
than others. It is bad in New York because the fans bring a lot of junk to the&#13;
ballpark. Detroit is another bad one, but most of the parks are cleaning up&#13;
with that stuff, and it's not too bad — m ostly paper — bu t some people still&#13;
bring stuff at the park to throw at players."&#13;
Frank was asked whether he preferred a hit in older parks, or the new&#13;
more symmetrical parks: "Old parks like Detroit and Boston are good to hit&#13;
in, but the new parks are all quite fair as far as the measurements and&#13;
dimensions go, because they are basically alike. If yo u are hitting well they&#13;
will go out of any ballpark. I don't worry about any park in particular — I&#13;
just try to hit the same in all of them."&#13;
After the game we talked with Baltimore manager Earl Weaver. He answered&#13;
a few of our questions, but stayed clear of some of them.&#13;
In the two years that the divisional playoffs have occurred there have been&#13;
three game sweeps in both leagues. Weaver had a comment on this matter:&#13;
"It is hard to explain. Usually there is one pitcher on every ballclub that can&#13;
give the opposing club a problem. We had Dave Boswell in 1969 who went 11&#13;
innings in a scoreless game against us before we could win it. Everybody is&#13;
at the top of their game at that time of the year. Teams have a couple of off&#13;
days before the playoffs to get their pitching in shape and set it up the way&#13;
they want it. Nine out of ten times the club with the best percentage is going&#13;
to make it to the world series. This is true because of the talent. Despite the&#13;
"I believe that we are already a dynasty."&#13;
Earl Weaver, Manager&#13;
fact that the club with the highest percentage will probably end up in the&#13;
series, three straight both times in both leagues has just been something&#13;
unbelievable."&#13;
Baltimore has been the dominating force in the American League in&#13;
recent years so Weaver was asked to compare the Baltimore team with the&#13;
great New York Yankee teams in the past: "I believe that we are already a&#13;
dynasty. The Yankees never won as many ballgames in two consecutive&#13;
years as the Orioles have in the last two years, so that would put us a little&#13;
ahead of them. We have won three pennants in the last five years, which&#13;
certainly qualifies us for a dynasty, and it's what we do every day on the&#13;
field from now on that will determine if we remain a dynasty."&#13;
The Baltimore clubhouse, after the 12-4 victory, had an aura of confidence&#13;
in it, and on checking the standings one finds that the Orioles have now&#13;
regained the top spot by a substantial margin. They were in second place at&#13;
the time of this series of interviews. Baltimore's combination of talent,&#13;
confidence and good rapport among the players help make it a difficult team&#13;
to overtake. &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE June 28,1971&#13;
But it's a fact that while Johnny can get&#13;
a cheer for one teeny roll of his hips, Corky&#13;
Siegel is splotched by the end of the first&#13;
song and gets progressively wetter. Jim&#13;
Schwall gets exercise occasionally and the&#13;
bass and drummer stay calm, until the&#13;
bassman, A1 Radford, takes his inevitable&#13;
and fine solo. But Siegel is constantly&#13;
moving, jerking upright, bouncing his&#13;
rubber legs, flapping his arms, dashing&#13;
from mike to piano, mugging, drops&#13;
whipping off, playing, squealing, grunting,&#13;
flying, crawling good harp. Schwall uses&#13;
body English, too, but mostly playing&#13;
statues, striking poses to coax notes from&#13;
his old electrified Martin acoustic. He's a&#13;
fine guitarist from sparse slow chords to&#13;
buzzing bottleneck, and you can bet your&#13;
calluses that he didn't learn to play that&#13;
by Mike Stevesand&#13;
Boogie!&#13;
It's a magic word these days. Skinny,&#13;
shaggy cats chant it reverently into a&#13;
microphone and the resultant spell is&#13;
stato-electrically intense. Hands clap, feet&#13;
stamp, and eyes glaze into uniform rapture&#13;
'gonna make you feel all right. Even if&#13;
you've argued the blues—dues question to&#13;
an exhausted standstill, you've got to&#13;
accept that most bands can't make it&#13;
work.&#13;
Kenosha was recently attacked by two&#13;
bands that can. Sunday, June 13, the&#13;
Parkside tent housed, just barely, the&#13;
Johnny Young Blues Band and the most&#13;
laid back invocation of the Boogie Madness&#13;
you'd ever want to see. Wednesday,&#13;
June 16, the Midwest's resident good time&#13;
band, the Siegel-Schwall Blues Band,&#13;
sweated its way to a screaming ovation at&#13;
the Eagles Club hall of mirrors.&#13;
Young, 300 plus pounds of crowdpleasing&#13;
Chicago South Side funk, and his band are&#13;
the real item. He says that his bassman&#13;
used to play with, and in fact is a cousin of&#13;
the late, great Chicago guitarist, Magic&#13;
Sam, and that he often plays with Sam&#13;
Lay, blues drummer supreme. The right&#13;
credentials. They are black and they are&#13;
grown men, with the exception of a white&#13;
boy on harmonica, and they are certainly&#13;
not in this business for the glamor of it.&#13;
They radiate such happiness with their&#13;
music, and such lack of self-importance&#13;
that they look as though, if they were&#13;
white, they'd be a polka band booked solid&#13;
with garlic weddings six months in advance.&#13;
But they work steadily and tour&#13;
often, one of the few Chicago bands that&#13;
doesn't find it necessary to hold down fulltime&#13;
jobs to keep food on the table. Maybe&#13;
that's a good sign.&#13;
The thing about Young and company is,&#13;
they make it look easy. They have no part&#13;
of the rock and roll consciousness, and&#13;
therefore don't need and probably never&#13;
learned the tricks that your neighborhood&#13;
band studies so earnestly. No flash. No&#13;
birdman arm exercises. No meatless&#13;
solos. Just blues of a quality that leaves&#13;
the crowd no choice but to dance, sing,&#13;
pass out, whatever, like a gas-filled room&#13;
exploding at the suggestion of a single&#13;
match. Oh yeah, Johnny does play his&#13;
mandolin behind his head.&#13;
The rhythm section, immobile bassist&#13;
and droll drummer, lay the foundation for&#13;
the guitarist who fills every crack with&#13;
tasty riffs and plays mean rhythm himself&#13;
when the harp or Johnny's mandolin is in&#13;
the foreground. The total sound is so integrated&#13;
that its architecture, and&#13;
Johnny's bumps and grinds, infrequent&#13;
and spontaneous, top it like a gargoyle&#13;
grinning down with a head full of how to&#13;
make you move. Altogether, a frantic&#13;
Sunday afternoon.&#13;
The Siegel-Schwall band, on the other&#13;
hand, bring their sweat with them. They&#13;
are as tight as Young's band, in some&#13;
studied ways tighter, but there is a difference,&#13;
which those really into musical&#13;
roots would call lack of dues, which has to&#13;
do with not having been taught the blues by&#13;
your % year old Delta grandpappy;&#13;
anyway, they have to work harder to be as&#13;
loose, as cool, as black bands. Corky Siegel&#13;
and Jim Schwall have in fact been taught&#13;
by such non-debatable blues masters as&#13;
Otis Spann, deceased pianist, and their&#13;
dedication to the idiom cannot really be&#13;
questioned. And they play well, too.&#13;
Symphony, so what, B. B. King's played&#13;
with orchestras, too. It's not exactly&#13;
grandstanding.&#13;
Typically, the audience started the&#13;
evening on the floor and dragged it full of&#13;
chairs between sets, thinking that the best&#13;
way to listen to Siegel-Schwall is sitting&#13;
down. The best way to listen to SiegelSchwall&#13;
is moving, and by the last songs&#13;
that discovery had been made. The final&#13;
frenzied number, yes it was a boogie, got&#13;
everyone up and shaking until the plugs&#13;
were pulled. Corky didn't use this for a putthe-dam-plugs-back-in-ego&#13;
trip, but saw&#13;
that it was more hassle than it was worth,&#13;
and said that's cool.&#13;
Bulldog Harry, arguably Kenosha's best&#13;
band, backed up Siegel-Schwall, and even&#13;
The Johnny Young Blues band at UWP.&#13;
way in somebody's garage, or for a pile of&#13;
money. See, these guys aren't rock stars&#13;
either, they're musicians who'd rather&#13;
play small acoustically sound rooms like&#13;
the UWM Union than the Fillmores. They&#13;
even haul their own stuff around. And even&#13;
if t hey are doing gigs with the Milwaukee&#13;
if the acoustics at the Eagles didn't do&#13;
anyone any favors, they played a fine set.&#13;
With all the new production companies,&#13;
Mark IV, Bag, Roach, and now Magus, it is&#13;
to be hoped that more music like this will&#13;
be coming.&#13;
UJ i&#13;
anc.fi&#13;
r-;n&lt;3&#13;
B &lt; * l Id o Q H a t&#13;
q : 0 O + o / : 0 0&#13;
od j-fadeni acti vities&#13;
and AltY c.ol[eye X.O-S&#13;
r e qui red </text>
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              <text>Clnir trsit1 QI i1(Q'11i11-P,11/.•itl,&#13;
" Journalll"' b l!lf,u!ur• I• a ln,rr)'" -lllaU..w,4.rnold&#13;
• ,~.&#13;
1~ ,~~~,m&#13;
1~ ~ v~ · ••&#13;
,.,..-&#13;
~&#13;
\II\ 31, lfll \Ol.l'\11 ,J ,1 \lllf.111• . .&#13;
THE LIBRARY&#13;
UWP, KENOSHA CAMPUS&#13;
~700 WASHINGTON RD.&#13;
.,&#13;
..,&#13;
.. &#13;
Photographs by Darrell Borger and Bill Jacoby &#13;
... .. 2 M1yJ1_ 1_,1&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
peopl•• Tholo pictw• &lt;ould"&#13;
been laken on Memorial O 'ff&#13;
any •=er S&gt;lnday •~· •t.b or July, l.abor 0.)&#13;
Wt •~ that the parking&#13;
AbJ•tklrl lel\"ts much to be&#13;
~1red. But please be-fair to the&#13;
WllVff$it)' poh&lt;.-e. In isswng&#13;
t1clttt1 thf')' dl1c.rirn1nate&#13;
a,a1Ml no one - not e,ft the&#13;
1t&lt;&gt;l&lt;k'n aged&#13;
To 111, p,cpw who 1tole 11w&#13;
[nru("allCftS adirtln..in&amp; po!ih:rt&#13;
A thou&amp;h • t- upttttd&#13;
IOffl«.IW' •auld att-al Cb. p011trn&#13;
v.t put up in , amlUI placn&#13;
lhrf&gt;u&amp;),out ~ campus. "e&#13;
6dn"I ,,q,oc: lh&lt;fl&gt; to b, stola,&#13;
tM ume day """ pul ttw&gt;m up&#13;
~" appnd.a~ )QUI'" ,...,.hnsiu m&#13;
but. ltntci •e are brci.r &amp;nd&#13;
ttnct thr m•1itH1ne and ptall"r&#13;
"&gt;tt prk NI .... ro, UK- bnd1I&#13;
o/. $tUdtlu al P •• ude and&#13;
a.inct lh&lt;' ...-Kt' "°ould ha\:t m bf!&#13;
cor,sk!ttably "'ah« lo non&#13;
c«M r at! to prmtifll N&amp;t!. ,..&#13;
c-an't rNll)' 1ffurd to It'"" tbrm •••1 SQ.. ll I.bf' burden ti rt.lilt&#13;
brcamn too .....,,_ ror ;ou&#13;
nwrt-1)' put hfl) centl ror M&lt;"h&#13;
pool« you i1&lt;N ond "'• Idly&#13;
kw teC"h mow:.ttd poatrt 1n an&#13;
Niul9{Jtt and mad it to lht&#13;
lddrfa _, U. potlN'&#13;
I ,;oic 4110,;&#13;
To the Edll«&#13;
Ha 1. mK hnaU) tracked down&#13;
ffl)' bn&gt;lhff Geora• I ,.oufd now&#13;
tiu lo 1rmU1ably lffllk• ond&#13;
condtmn his aclloru and&#13;
anarcbutk IC'ndt'flC1H&#13;
II• lla5 caus«I mu&lt;h p;.t to our family b&gt; rurunng around&#13;
U.. ..,..,.,,, ••ll•llJ up 1,.uddllO&#13;
., a''Gm • tfi UWir aws&#13;
for tomt' form ol ~..,oluUon.&#13;
PIH"' try to undentand thal&#13;
.._ - ...... llul unlll&#13;
afltt his tol.lr of wn,ct 1n , ... ttt&#13;
sam Ht c1mt hom~&#13;
dislD-.. ,111 the wv and&#13;
Id ,ountry. Thll disilluolooffiffil&#13;
and rrustnllon hH madf&#13;
lllln act 1hr way bt ..._ a.&#13;
AlUM&amp; lO atttpt tM ract that&#13;
th-a countl')· ha$ IO protttt Usell&#13;
from 111\U. by IUwdit fCll'Cea&#13;
U'v,rth \ wt l\ill"D)&#13;
llav1na reachtd tht&gt; con-&#13;
- lb.I G&lt;uJe and lua&#13;
reltow ccmp,n"'" must be&#13;
•l"f'p,d, I uk Y"" not lo&#13;
conpfralf with his mad&#13;
sd)Nnes tor peace and 110Cial&#13;
lJ'lnqUilll~&#13;
'!'hanky,...&#13;
Bill McteP&lt;)". Jr.&#13;
To lhf Editor&#13;
Wt •'"f'ff aurpntiNS to hear&#13;
from Peter J J-IMM&gt;jter Jr • thal&#13;
nil(hl d8"(. .. art K'hec!\iltd for&#13;
tht COO\ NUUCf of Goldt':O·&#13;
agen ""• apoiotptt 10 JIii'&#13;
Habtlter and his triendl loT&#13;
kttplllg thorn up pasl lhoir&#13;
hf&lt;lun•&#13;
And h.,.,, for good mea1ure,&#13;
isa httlt- motherly advit-t~ they tbDlllcl mMHler thal 1M tt.aoo&#13;
£or Jerry Rubin•• refettntt to&#13;
edutation at txcranent Is lhat&#13;
hr, l&gt;k• 111, ...., or the tum&lt;d...,&#13;
tt'O'Wd, gttt hia mtormatkln&#13;
lrom I.be ,m,ng end of the horse.&#13;
IF YOU WANT&#13;
SOMETHING&#13;
A UTTLI EXTRA •••&#13;
TR'II'&#13;
Budweiser.&#13;
MALT UQUOR&#13;
• • • but yo• u&#13;
know that! !!&#13;
It's the real thing. CQ.~e.&#13;
z: ADULT BOOK STORE&#13;
0 KENOSHA V,&#13;
,, 1-- BONDAGE DENMARK rn u z MAGS BOOKS ('""I u.J&#13;
_,.J - -i - 3: A ,I Pu~k\ d~ St,.,Jent\ )&gt; )&gt;&#13;
u.J r--&#13;
V, 0 Ch., 21 10-; Off a, 1-- SEX EDi.JCAT'ON r-- a, 1-- rT1 )&gt; V, z: BOOKS&#13;
. GAY7 ::::0 u.J - l!) SECTION I G') 1202-56 ST 652-9051 )&gt; l!) - C0 TALK OF THE TOWN&#13;
:z&#13;
IASl!y here is our .,..--•I&#13;
ni&gt;&lt;&gt;rl. b) 7 p m the btltred&#13;
and f1llhy student lounge5 look&#13;
lh-ecl 111 - bul not by anything&#13;
human. If v.e att capablf' ol&#13;
risina (lo our elderl)' le~ and&#13;
tottering th......,, the debris 10&#13;
the hall-6lled ~ IJ it&#13;
too much to e,pect neet-looted&#13;
)-Outh 10 do the same• Ecology,&#13;
bn - tlwliS, starts •t&#13;
home&#13;
Very lt\llyyours,&#13;
Evaod ...... 11111&#13;
( ParkAldo'• Golden-ager,).&#13;
Dear Editor&#13;
'lb~&amp; 1 Police state at&#13;
Petrifying Sprln111! The&#13;
Sber1tt's Department 11&#13;
cracking down on college.&#13;
students. The Kenooh• Nows&#13;
ran • phcn), ..,...,tied ooe&#13;
page artide on the Pets Park&#13;
situaUcm. Ont pictw-e showed&#13;
t,r..-O Sttte btffcans on the crass.&#13;
I c:he&lt;ked out the beer oans and&#13;
couldn't rmd (IDe Stite con&#13;
any,ti,'tw-re. J don ·t know an)'Ooe&#13;
that drinks the stull I eouldn"t&#13;
find more lhan a dozen S&lt;hlllt&#13;
and Pabst w,s, and a few pop&#13;
cans. More picures showed&#13;
tralllc jam&amp;, full parking lots,&#13;
m . What 1tt the) tryu,g lo&#13;
prove? Anyone in the park LI •n&#13;
"Wlde&amp;irable"" Undesired by&#13;
vmo• The &lt;0&lt;allcd "okttnl"&#13;
The Sherilr and the K""""h&#13;
~C\\·• says there's dope •&#13;
bcff dtmk1rc, oul \htro. si,;;;&#13;
Polana.ky is trying to make a bi fI&#13;
nam• for himself by Pt 1&#13;
secullng the lore hair&amp; }l '·&#13;
anti•ettablishment tYP-eti~·&#13;
using Certain cod,e 'll"Ol'd$. ~J&#13;
phn ... •« He wanis lo dn&#13;
out all lhe young people ,. ,;::&#13;
the m1ddl&amp;-elas. typeg do.,~&#13;
have to tote their picn10 bosl.&lt;1&amp;&#13;
so ror. Certain thing, are blo-..&#13;
completely out of proponio,&#13;
have driven lhroogh the par\~ ""·•a.I hmN and w,ilk_frd ~ trolls, and found that .,...,._ is cool. having tun lhrowi&#13;
lruby platters, ~ ~ dogs, playfflll ball u u,,,, 11&#13;
any dope lh,.-., why cloesn'o 11,.&#13;
Sberill just IO !her, aad • .._&#13;
the junkies on ~ rllhor&#13;
than raising lhe hu,e and tty&#13;
and making scattt:r-,~&#13;
statements.&#13;
Thia type ol ta&lt;llct is ..... to&#13;
mull In massn·e lliowdo,,,,&#13;
trashing, war, I think it wowd&#13;
makt- more sense to kcal tt&#13;
befflnthep,vk.A!Jo.lUret·,_&#13;
coonty make more JObl tor lt.o&#13;
youtha to take care of the put&#13;
The part ractblles '4Ctt la.."&#13;
apart bcforo Parkside ,..11&#13;
plan,..d.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
TUESDAY, J\. l'E I&#13;
Lee1Urt5 and Fine Arts Com•&#13;
111lUtt )ltttiag: 10 a.m in&#13;
Scae-nce o,,... Con.ference&#13;
Room, 344A, Grecnquisl.&#13;
\\EDM.SDA\',Jl:NE z&#13;
TIIVR~OAY. JV:-.E 3&#13;
s1udy Period, No cla•1H.&#13;
Studfflts prepare for exams.&#13;
FRIO\\', J\/Nt: 4&#13;
Exams R,-11n: Exams run&#13;
through June 12.&#13;
SAnllOI\Y, JV1''E$&#13;
Ma11,owu'1 •·Vouthpower";&#13;
Prt-regj1tt.r tor summer&#13;
employment. Ra&lt;tne Dodger&#13;
Room, 9 a.m. • 12 noon&#13;
SUND4Y, JUNES&#13;
Op,n Ho.., for the public on the&#13;
Parkside ca.inpua fr(lffl 1 to 5&#13;
p.m.&#13;
SATl11DAY, Jl '&lt;E 12&#13;
Commencement: 2 p.m io&#13;
c_.t Hall c.onoo..-.e.&#13;
Spoakero will be c;.,,..,rnor&#13;
Patrick L.ucey and UW&#13;
PrtSldml Jabn Weaver.&#13;
~101,0AY, JU!,'E U&#13;
Concerned Studtnt.t CoaUtlon&#13;
,.,n present a &lt;oncert and&#13;
Altemalt 'CommenCffl'lcnt&#13;
fnvn 12 to 3 p m tr:anrirc&#13;
music by • The Gatherin~•.&#13;
student tllms and se\'ff al&#13;
swpnse nmts. T,nlatiwq&#13;
scheduled ror lhe KfflOllla&#13;
Fine Arts room.&#13;
Spec\11 E't-"'f'r&amp;U!&#13;
Four t:urop,an Ftlglit.s th»&#13;
swnmer. f"liCht C doplr1I&#13;
August 15 from ChKago to&#13;
London a nd rt:lurn.s Sep&#13;
temb..- 12 (n,m ~ to&#13;
Chicago. The coat " $197 • F1ight D doparts July JS (roll&#13;
Landon aod: ttluras S.-ptembcr&#13;
11 rrom Amsterd&amp;.""&#13;
to Chicago. The &lt;OIi is $19! 0l&#13;
Fltgltt I departs JWIO JS ,r.,,&#13;
Chicago to London and&#13;
«turns Augull Ill from&#13;
London to C111c,,go 11,tcmt ~&#13;
n1a.oo. Fllaht F ocporu Jrl1&#13;
30 from 1'tilwa~ee to Am&#13;
slffllam aad - A.C&gt;"'&#13;
11 from PariJ to Mlln.\lP'f&#13;
The COOi ii fllll 00 For o,I&#13;
dltlonal 1ntorm1t1• • 4&#13;
reservations, contact . .,&#13;
Stucleot Mtivid,. Olllct ~&#13;
Tallent Holl. tiiwwr1J=7/iJpi ';;::)I,'ti i:&#13;
Editor Warren Nedry PHOl'ES&#13;
~y ~tor Jabn Koloe,, Editorial 6$8-41181, E•1 ~ · ews ~llor Marc £.LSffl Business 6Sf-tl&#13;
FealureEdllor p ul Lom ,__.. BuslnessMa o arllre N('WSC'Opt 15 an an~&#13;
llllgor ,rudtnt =•pap&lt;r &lt;0111P~&#13;
Ad&gt;ertisin&amp; Mana•!~ts Solan by_ 11ude;nto of !bet 11~ • Wasc(lns,n•Parksidt, ~-=&#13;
Accountant John Lt'l&amp;hton weekl)' exctpt dur1na "acat:&#13;
NEWS STAFF John Gray penO&lt;ls. s,..i.111 ~~ .. verth,1ng funds art .,.. _,&#13;
Bob Borchardt. Darrell Borger sourtt (If revenue for ,r&#13;
Jam• Caper, BiU Jac:ob) Ju~ operabOll ol :,"""""' .,. Koloen, Ken Konkol. 'Mtke copits ,rt: pr1n1td lbt&#13;
Kur th, Du n Loumos Bob dislrlbuted Chrou1M1.11&#13;
toCI&#13;
llainlalld, Ktvtn McKa) Bill Kenosha ond Rad ot Iii'&#13;
Sor~nsen. M•rk T,rnpany' munlhes H -.t11 a.s II"&#13;
BIJSl:O.'ESS STAFF Unlvenity. f',.. &lt;&lt;&gt;t""&#13;
Barbar• Scou, Don Marja la avair.ble •!IO"~&#13;
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS &#13;
Mayn.1111&#13;
Newscooe is .now . one semester old&#13;
(we're not "Parkside's Newscope"&#13;
anymore). The present staff is a combiJUltiOn&#13;
of some of the old "Committee"&#13;
SA){lle of the old "Parkside's Newscope"'&#13;
SA){lle journalism buffs, a few interested&#13;
students, and some straights from the&#13;
l)USiness sphere. The paper you're reading&#13;
is their endea".or at creating something&#13;
unique in the field of college journalism.&#13;
Beginning in January (with a staff&#13;
revision in February) with a legacy of nonjournalism,&#13;
non-reporting, nonbc)Okkeeping&#13;
and non-readership, it's been&#13;
a steady uphill battle. Since there is no&#13;
pnnting facility on the campus and no&#13;
subsidy from the University, we are&#13;
required to print the paper off campus and&#13;
secure our own advertising revenue at 11&#13;
tiJlle when many college newspapers are&#13;
dipping into their reserve funds.&#13;
~hck, layed out, returned to Walworth&#13;
oddsere the headlines and pictures and other&#13;
• . anct. ends are finalized taken to&#13;
Dela van to be run off and finally brought&#13;
back to be distributed throughout the&#13;
campuses and the communities.&#13;
Througho.ut all this, the stare has&#13;
responded with much more than could&#13;
have been expected; long hairs got along&#13;
With short hairs, women got 8 long with&#13;
men, an~ writers got along with editors.&#13;
Cecchini: to the staff ol the Public In·&#13;
formation and Publications ofhce, Walt&#13;
Shirer. Bruce Weston, Mn. Rita Petttttl;&#13;
to Erv;in Zuehlke of the Business othce, to&#13;
the staff ol the Bursar office, TI)omas&#13;
Peltier, Mrs. Ruth Borchardt, Mrs Bia nee&#13;
Nitzke, and to all those not menlloned by&#13;
name.&#13;
Third, to the advertisers of the&#13;
Newscope, whose support enabled us to&#13;
bring what we hope JS an accurate student&#13;
voice and effecbve adverus,ng medium.&#13;
ThiS required a superior effort by a&#13;
rookie team. I.E. Enough ads have to be&#13;
secured to cover printing costs ($1,500 per&#13;
roooth), stories have to be covered,&#13;
written and edited, pictures taken and&#13;
developed, layouts ideas created, sent so&#13;
miles to Walworth, Wis., to be justified&#13;
(lined uo in printed columns) brought&#13;
Special thanks are extended to those&#13;
that made this controlled chaos possible.&#13;
First, to Mr. Fred Noer of The Walworth&#13;
Tun~ a!"d members of The Times&#13;
orgaruzation, Mr. Herb Miller, Mrs. Deone&#13;
Langston, Miss Viola Sherman and Miss&#13;
Shirley Schnitcke who worked Saturdays&#13;
late .n~t hours a'od went out of their way&#13;
to. aid m the production of Newscope and&#13;
\\1thout whose help- and understanding&#13;
Newscope would have been impossible.&#13;
Second, to the Administration of&#13;
Parkside, who made a difficult task easier&#13;
namely the Student Affairs omce ~&#13;
Dear_bom, Bill Niehbur, Tony Totero, Mrs. Sophie Graf; the Kenosha Campus Office&#13;
s1:9££, MJ:s· Ellen Toigo, Mrs. Fran&#13;
P1erangeh, Miss Celeste Toigo, Miss Val&#13;
And fourth, to the studenls and&#13;
members of the communities who have&#13;
supported us by bemg open enough to&#13;
recognize the need for an independmt,&#13;
student newspaper and who have and&#13;
hopefully will continue to support I.hose&#13;
who have supported us. Because without&#13;
sb.ldent support cl our advertisers a&#13;
sb.ldent newspaper will become a thmg or&#13;
the past.&#13;
And an extra special thanks to the&#13;
staff and contributors of Newscope.&#13;
Newscope looks forward to serving&#13;
you through lhe summer beg1nru11g June&#13;
28.&#13;
THE EDITOR&#13;
By Mark Timpany&#13;
ol the Newsc.ope Starr&#13;
lt is the right of any faculty member&#13;
wbo$ecOlllract bas been recommended for&#13;
ooo-renewal by his division to request a&#13;
bearing, either open or closed. to review&#13;
!tie iSSUeS relating tO that decisio11. At this&#13;
tune, one of the five Parkside raculty&#13;
whose contracts were recommended £or&#13;
tlDD-rtnewal has requested such a hearing.&#13;
Or James Russell Brokaw has requested an open hearing to resolve se,·eral issues&#13;
m\-otved in the termination of his contract.&#13;
lo a leller lo William Morrow. acting&#13;
Dea• cf the College of Science and Society,&#13;
dated May 24, Dr. Brokaw slated:&#13;
"In our conference ol May 4, I indicated&#13;
that the reason, staled for the termination&#13;
,i my contract are neither accurate nor&#13;
,alt. and that coosiderations other than&#13;
'!bole elaborated by the Scier.ce Division&#13;
Exttutive Committee motivated the&#13;
rttemmendation tor non-renewal. (The&#13;
ral reasons behind my firing w;ould not be&#13;
Cl'IISUrtble in the Open Society - I tried to&#13;
lfOVlde the-foundations for a respectable&#13;
JS}dlology deparlment; I have had a&#13;
dt("tnt regard for freedom of :speech. and&#13;
r.r the rights cf students.) I am, therefore,&#13;
nquesting that you arrange £or an open&#13;
bt.artng concerning lhe termination ot my&#13;
•ll'act with the University,&#13;
'ln )'OW' letter, you indicate that such a&#13;
.. annc would . . . of course. deal only&#13;
With the a.hove stated reasons for nonrtllN'l.l.&#13;
• These reasons, as staled In ywr&#13;
ltUer1•~ofsucha genent.l 11dl,urc as to~&#13;
almolt unanswerable. I am requesting.&#13;
illorefore, that you direct \he Science&#13;
Division Executive Committee to provide&#13;
'P«.ific information regarding the&#13;
lollowing staled reasons (or non-renewal:&#13;
"•&gt;•U student complllints regarding my&#13;
leiadllng perl&lt;rma.nce, the informa.Hon to&#13;
ON THE NON-RENEWALS&#13;
)f'ar's C('(', u1d that Brot,-. had fou;.bl&#13;
hard for $1.udf'l"lt &amp;0\-•ffnfflt'nl and that h~&#13;
• appr«11t&gt;d i.. .iron and contnbu_, •&#13;
on tbe comm1tttt&#13;
Include course, date. student name, and&#13;
tlle nature of the complainL&#13;
"bl the specifics ol. my alleged ·limited&#13;
and unsatisfactory participation in the&#13;
professional work or the psychology&#13;
(acuity and of the Sciet1ee Division.'&#13;
"c) how the coiclusion regarding 'lack or evidence ot 1eholarly tscth'lty' was&#13;
reached, and how my alleged lack or&#13;
·scholarly' performance differs from the&#13;
performance of the majority of teachers at&#13;
Parkside. (I " 1ill not, al this point. recount&#13;
OOw my efforts to do serious research were&#13;
of the unit. Thr Interact w1lh its. au.xi.liar)·&#13;
equipment would ha-.e ff.clhtated&#13;
poychologlcal mearch al both tht slUdent&#13;
and faculty le,;ol Al the pr6ent ~-· 0,,&#13;
tntu-act system, •long with su. operant&#13;
conditioning boxes, lS unavadable for ~&#13;
m psycholog1cal researclt The reasons for&#13;
Ulb wi11 be part of \he tatimOn)' &lt;..11 Or&#13;
Bt"Oka-.··s open hearing Or Brok.av, came to the umpus 1n&#13;
Septt!mber ot 1969 For his fir-St year. M'&#13;
was the only full bme faculty member m&#13;
Psycholotl)I He tau~t about 350 ,rudent&gt;&#13;
ln Junt: (t JV70, Of e~,.., ._u 1n&#13;
rormf'd by tht Cha.nce:U,r d a 1t.1t:.tant1.1l&#13;
ment pa) 1ncrate His Jr,(! M.lmff'lff&#13;
course 1n Elemtn\.a.l') Pl)&lt;.'holo&amp;) drf'Vi&#13;
coasid«ablo poolh\O f,-dbatk from h1&gt;&#13;
~rudtDI-$ ._. hich "'a, n-port,ed to U.. Dtan&#13;
by ,_ studftlta&#13;
Dr. James Russell Brokaw&#13;
:-. "", 1n op,n h&lt;anJll ii bnnC ac~kd&#13;
to C'00$1&lt;kr- ~ tSSUe. ,n.,,.h-..d ,a ~&#13;
C'ffle'V,alotDr BroUv. 1c:ontr1C't "•lham&#13;
Morro-., act&gt;ng Dnn ol 1M roll,g• ol&#13;
Science and Society. adrruttf'd Oat uwro&#13;
appeaD to ~ ~t amtq,uate to the&#13;
nghti ti ddendant.a ,n wch ~n11ts Hf&#13;
S\18ietted that whit -.oukl happtn i. that&#13;
the Soenc;-t 01vtJICM.'I (,;,cttUlJ\'f COffl•&#13;
mill.ff, v.tuth made lht rt'("Offlmtndatlon&#13;
recWln&amp; term1n.tlon.""ouldtnfft 1n oprn&#13;
rrustraled by the PerksJde administr,tion&#13;
and by the Sd,nce Division Executive&#13;
Committee,)"&#13;
According to l3rokaw. the actions taken&#13;
by the Science Division an the stated reasons (or termination prior to their&#13;
notification of their decision indicate that&#13;
their decision wa., based on reasons other&#13;
than the reasons stated in the notification.&#13;
Dr. Brokaw was never notified of an)·&#13;
student complaicts until Divlsional action&#13;
had already be&lt;n taken on those alleged&#13;
complaints. One o( the issues involved in the charges&#13;
of ••Jack of schc&gt;:.arly activity'' is involved&#13;
ln tho ...., nt the fifty-thousand dollar&#13;
Lehigh Valley Interact System. The ~•·&#13;
tcract system, which '5 an mterface with&#13;
the. University's POP..S computer, was&#13;
purchued by the University ln the spring&#13;
or 1970. Dr. Brak.aw, at that lune the onl}'&#13;
full lime faculty mttnber in Psychology,&#13;
was direcUy responsible for the purchase&#13;
bisflT$tM.'mesterandover2'0thtsecond session to a.pread on r«'OC"d tt\r fact•&#13;
ln adchhoo. he was a member of M"'ttal regarchng lhe tenran111on. \ft.Pr 1ht fact,&#13;
facult)' comm1ttees ,n rttorded. tht ('0Pm1tttt wU1 l"ff'OnMuch&#13;
of his \\Ofk on~ racili~ and ~r tht"lr ongmal rttommf'ndlllOf'I and&#13;
Planning Committee of the Sc1tnce nollf)' ~ Dttn ol thP Col)~"~ S('1t'PC't'&#13;
DhtSion was related to tht Un1\:er'S1l)' " and SOClel)' and lht Chlincdlor of lhetr&#13;
purchase of the Interact system B) dcasion and the O..n and U&gt;e O,:Onttllo&lt;&#13;
February of 1910, the committH mel to will act on lhal drds.121&#13;
consider p1•ns for pi.ycholog,cal \\hr:11 Wed about Ult Par11.11de F•Mt)&#13;
laboratory fac:1hties des1gn"1 b),' Or ~LlbOl't'I req\lftt f« .a m.orlhJMUm on&#13;
Brokaw around lhe capabi.hbe~ of the- terminations u.n.td 11,JCh 11m, as l\,ltdt&gt;hnC'$&#13;
S)'Stem. Dr STOka-.··s Ju1y. 1970. memo to for f6C:Ulty m,t..,,. art est.blW'lrd. Otan&#13;
Dean MacKinney outlines 8roka1J. '$ Morrow rTphed. ... un apptt&lt;11t~ U'Hpropo5ed&#13;
u,tegrauon of t.hoff labotatOf"} C'Ol'ICffn ttfleeltd 1n lbat rtsolutaon " Ut&#13;
racllitie$ unto a unifitd undergraduatf' °fll,rflt on to 11, I.hit ~ lhftr .c~oos.. lh4&#13;
progr•m £or Parks1de. At that time ht 'On1.Sl{'lnal Eiecul.J\'e&gt; CommUttt and thft&#13;
slated that Pa.rMidc. '" couJd have~ Ch,anttU« have condudt'ld I hat .. hatntt&#13;
d lll&lt; best undergraduate p&lt;Ol!l'8lTI$ ,n the thehmilJlli-cf thepromlurofor ,...,,.,.&#13;
counU)' .. il ...,..td necoaary to carry ""' the&#13;
Or. Brokaw"s v;ork: on last )Nr·, normal faculty ptn,oa11tl tt\1f"A' 1ncludl.n&amp;&#13;
Campus Concerns Comm1ttH v.as poaa:1blerecommf'l'datNW1Salnon ret\C'Wal&#13;
charactertud by an a.nterest lft $tudffil 1bt da~ of lM opt'fl hdn,C hu ~ )-.t&#13;
aU,irS PhiJltp Simpson. chatffl\lD ol LHI been Hl&#13;
By I u MtTagert&#13;
lacluded among tbo.e """'°" wbo have receh-«I&#13;
DQQ..renewal contract&amp; i•&#13;
Cl,1,1., Holzbog, 111l1tanl&#13;
ll'Ofeaor ol ,\rl,&#13;
Tht Humanities Executive&#13;
Olllmitt,e has stated lhat the&#13;
ruson ror Hobbog's t,er•&#13;
ll'Uftlhon is that his&#13;
'llllificalion, and skills do not&#13;
llllld, Parl&lt;side's program of&#13;
Arltducation because o( budget&#13;
tlltl. 1109,•ever, there remains&#13;
IQrQe Question u to how the ~°!! of Park&amp;ide's art&#13;
..._u.. is doflrial. Holibog&#13;
~ U..l dtrlng his association&#13;
to the university, written&#13;
Kendall College, and Laytocl&#13;
SchOol d Art.&#13;
Prior lo coming to Parkside.&#13;
Holzbo!t worked for &amp;everal&#13;
Architectural firms. eg. Nelson&#13;
and Associaln of Milw11Jkee,&#13;
and at one Ume operated hi,&#13;
OW1'1 firm, Environments. tnc.,&#13;
of Cambridge, Masoachus&lt;tlS&#13;
NaliOc'L8llY rec:ognittd proje,ctl&#13;
mllled numerous plans for&#13;
•development ol Um\-en.1ty and&#13;
commun1ty relat~ en•&#13;
viroomeotal projects whach&#13;
have had sut.a.a.nbal IUCCHI&#13;
As was hIS on'1-J\11 ,nt.en&amp;.&#13;
HolzbOI has shifted much cf tho&#13;
resp,on.\ibihbes to the Kadffli1c&#13;
area and now teaches ona .. twotlunls'.'&#13;
baslS, the mnauuna&#13;
considerable skill in the area d&#13;
design or modern u~~anindustrtal&#13;
commun1t!es.&#13;
Although he has betn trained&#13;
primarily a$ , landscape ar·&#13;
chltect, his experience and&#13;
competence cover all the fat·&#13;
tors that influence the environment&#13;
of modern rnan. He&#13;
will make a significaot con-&#13;
'a rare combination of taknts'· Wyllie&#13;
RKu&gt;••K--- arr• llolzbOI&#13;
lfd the h&amp;tutt erw1ronme!nta1&#13;
role d Pamld• a, one ,,&#13;
··,nttJh&amp;ently muh1n1 a&#13;
p,&gt;lffl~lly r1pid-1rowinc tn&#13;
dtilUiaJ sooety and ill Ml"\'~ ••th I still vruquf:ly NWral&#13;
en~,rorvnmc. •• Thal '°''" would ..... tude IUldin&amp; ,.ll&gt;e &lt;rMUOCI o(&#13;
a~ urban fn,.:e·• wbach wtll&#13;
dtv-e.Lop m:o • ma)Of ,r.tw,znal&#13;
t.a'banarea&#13;
Until ,_ Holtbo&amp; had ..,.&#13;
miontd t.tw ,b&gt;denta' Nik on&#13;
dtwlopuC the tftVH"Ol'\ffifflt U&#13;
lnduchna I concrete elf ort 11 ttcltt1""in1&#13;
vanout ••l)O&lt;b d tho&#13;
ph)'11&lt;:ll tnvinJnmfflL Al atlvJ~or&#13;
to the Ludd,t•&#13;
orpmuuon bt had also boped&#13;
that Studfflta would becom•&#13;
involved tn solvtng social&#13;
problems as wdl&#13;
n:ununicalion rrom the&#13;
:llalli•e committee in regard&#13;
~' role ln the Art Depart• ·-this been "sadly lacking".&#13;
When fint hired in t969,&#13;
~~or lNin Wyllie was&#13;
11 . In a local newspapu 35&#13;
Yina "Charles Hokbog&#13;
~ts a rare combination&#13;
ents. He brings to Parkside&#13;
Hol1bog Dropped Because of Budget Cuts . . . · d NS n,m included WJut,ha\l ooe-third cf two nm• is devoted&#13;
~but~on ,!n our new campu.S V 111 age , A mes bury. to pta.nnm&amp; ~nd tonS~on.&#13;
situation. M chusett:. which ..-on an With a gra.r from Amenc•n&#13;
Ho&#13;
t .. N&gt;O received a Master's a!~ from the American Moton. It~ has beftl u,. """" I · t .. , Design strumental 10 selecunc a degree In landscape ar- nsutu e ,,,. . computtt procram whJch wtU&#13;
chitecture from Harvard h ~ -•b'· Par•·1dt, in a JOlllt ' 1965 a Holzbog hrSt btgan IS .. ~ - ~ ~ Graduate schoal in ' at Parkside as a mtmbe.r d the relationship wilh the&#13;
Bachelor of Pine Arts delJ'Oe d c 1· Southeast- R-•o-•I ~·- d&#13;
or Planning an onslruc ,on ~.. -.- ,_ r,..,- rrom Cranbrook Aca em)' d t •h' a mn• Commwion. to mue a&#13;
nd h I ludl'ed Department an au. .. . ., Art in 1958, a as a so 5 course entitled Man and hts definiti\'e ex.amin1ibon of tbe&#13;
at the Uniyer5ity or WisconSin, 1 H ~ envaronmental mak~up d the&#13;
Northwestern University, Visual En'lironrnen . e su&#13;
ln other educational tn•&#13;
deavors, Holzbot has hdped&#13;
dtvt.lop rtl!'N degree programs&#13;
descnbtd H being re-la ltd to a.n&#13;
i.nterchsciplinary approach to&#13;
educauon&#13;
Newscope congratulates Th• Class of t 71 ' &#13;
UPTOWN&#13;
RESTAURANT&#13;
Ind LOUNGE ~ QC&#13;
. .&#13;
PUl#tUtlf " J-1],&#13;
uwltli.t ., INntt[,ut,&#13;
N&gt;-'JIN me/I.&#13;
v,/J 6.u-c)I13&#13;
BEER&#13;
&amp; WATER&#13;
24-7 oz. bot.&#13;
$1.ll&#13;
PdCAl(lRffTAUIIAHT&#13;
&#13;
Sunday • Thursday&#13;
6 • J\fidnight&#13;
Friday • Saturday&#13;
6·- 3 A.J\f. _ J61' ,0 AVE -&#13;
PANCAKES&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
STOP&#13;
12-24 oz. bot.&#13;
$1.39&#13;
plus cax &amp; deposit&#13;
2-f!B lf'ashm ton Rd., Kenosha&#13;
YOUR&#13;
'1rt$10ttt&#13;
S TOR ES&#13;
IN KENOSHA AND RACINE ARE GIVING YOU&#13;
01'1 ol I ovtomotiv., urvic:el.&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
That's besides their normal&#13;
greot tms bvy1 Just b&lt;ing&#13;
in this ad&#13;
''BRAT'' 1 The is ·&#13;
Where It's At!&#13;
DAIi. Y SPE CIA L&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.&#13;
A Bottle of&#13;
BiNJTmlE&#13;
l New lrmd of&#13;
Akoholk ltvtragt&#13;
ood •BEEFBURGER S~~AK99&#13;
BRAT&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
HOUR&#13;
MONDAY thru FRIDAY&#13;
6 p .m. to 7 p .m.&#13;
PITCHER'S $1.00 GLASS 20¢&#13;
Avo ilobil• For Parties&#13;
l"d1.1di"g F,oternity ond So,o,itv Por1t•s&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M. - 12 P .M.&#13;
8)' PHI Lomartire ot the r,:ewscoptSUff te - .• th,,-~ti$sue for the second semes r, a&#13;
rnlS... l,O.l&gt; ds and take ood bme for me to tie up lose en '&#13;
g •~•·nd-the-., .. enes tour oC the column. e,1eryone on I ucul -&#13;
my mlnd and stomach. t to&#13;
Any fat kJd reviewing restatmrnts has go ncl&#13;
t a few. e]b,0..-\·1 toward the ribs, snickers. a :'~ts but even 1 have to admit it 'bas it umes ~ a 'tough four months and nine restaura~ts.&#13;
Gerlerally all my c-omments w~ ~en recewed,&#13;
,as most everyone respected my opmion a~~con· sumer in lhe restaurant field. Many comme me on my 'middJe of the road opinions when it came to&#13;
By Jim Kol~n ot a.be Newscope.St.aff&#13;
Title: ,ndicalioos, Vol. II, No. 2 , Having re.td through this latest 1ssu0 of lndlcalion,&#13;
I've come to the conclusion that ~is&#13;
public•bon must be judged on two points&#13;
separately· Namely, the art-wort-production. and&#13;
the litt=rary content&#13;
Erotic is :i. good word tn de.\Cribe the theme of&#13;
the drawings and chapter Ulustrations, what also&#13;
comes to mind an more judge-mental wocdi s.uch as pcofeS5ional, captivating, etc. 'l"her:e ls ~o doubt&#13;
in my mind tb3t Matt Golden and Kns Tr1bys. the&#13;
artjsts. Juave presented the reader with surprisingly&#13;
good G"awtngs. Thtte is no doubt 1n my n'!.ind that&#13;
the people involved 1n layout and pnxluction have&#13;
created the most proressional and \'isually arli$lic&#13;
publication that has ever borne the stamp of&#13;
-&#13;
-&#13;
Parkside on its cover.&#13;
The Contents. Diane Lawler has three poems&#13;
included in this final i1»ueof the school year, o( the&#13;
three .. Poem JI" impressed me the most Her style&#13;
seems to have.softened somew-hat, tht poem doesn't&#13;
move quite as quickly as pre\•ious poems of hers, we&#13;
aren't rushed. a.nd the imagery seems to be much&#13;
more consciousJy chosea&#13;
Pat Nelson, the editor, has two poems in this&#13;
issue, or wruch "BifocaJs for a blind man'' seems to&#13;
be the superior. He has eliminated the indefinite&#13;
and di!luUte articles (a, an, the) and thus creates a&#13;
collision or ideas and rhythm which work&#13;
progr,essively toward the end of the poem.&#13;
Peter Back.Nielsen has one pQtm included in&#13;
tndica\ions. lt is entitled "Voodoo Assasination".&#13;
1be poem ls surrealistic in imagery and theme, and&#13;
voodoo assasination is impossible. don't worry.&#13;
There are five short stories in this issue of Indications&#13;
Ted Wilson·s 0 The Runaway" opens the&#13;
magazine, The ste&gt;ry concern~ o 36 ye:ir- old s.ingle&#13;
woman who resents the (act that she has to Lake&#13;
care of her 70 year old father. It is written in first&#13;
pefS(lCl and tells the story or the Last time the old&#13;
man ran away, and the en.suing firs.l week$ of his&#13;
stay 'In an old people's home.. The story is at times&#13;
l\l,,k1,1,•ard and the conc.luston leaves us somewhat on&#13;
a preC.tpic:e; $he caught the bus yet she missed iL&#13;
Next comes, "The Short Circuit" written by&#13;
writing about a field where I have&#13;
education. But one incident involving It! hO ~ the Bill or Fare. restaurant deserves:gorny, 1&#13;
as rm sure that was their motive t~&#13;
When I reviewed the Bill or f"~e&#13;
was critical. but I backed every SI•~-..&#13;
faclS that led me to write what J di~.~&#13;
eluding employ= and former empio,,-·"ti,"&#13;
was lair and the complaints I lcxlgedha~:. 1111&#13;
before. So I thought no one would bt "oi&#13;
returne\l tothe reatauranttose.;: it they had._ I&#13;
any of their ways. 111111,j&#13;
Alter I sat down, I saw the .,.&#13;
proaching me. I figottd the p...,,den, or;'°"' ,. had called him and told him it wasn't..,. 'l&gt;lic:.i,&#13;
the public with is product. Tbe small sari•-~""&#13;
large ooes are relatively the same Silt .711111., prices. I thought be would tell me u,. ~ ..... been sol\•ed. .. . ...._. ._&#13;
1 figured the worst that he -.Id 18&#13;
he wished I would reconsider my ,~11:lni_;.u ..&#13;
would oiler new facts that would "'"'1aclt "I~&#13;
evaluate my stand. Dltla~&#13;
The first thing he said was that J&#13;
elsewhere to be served because he didll;'::&#13;
myself, It is suwooed to be the lint five..,._ a much longer work-in·progr~s. CriUeisiri 1&#13;
£icult for me when I approach my O\\"Q 1"0tt. ~ *&#13;
needs revision, it is too sentimental 11&#13;
pretentious and ultimately emban-a...;.,;. 1111,a&#13;
Next in line is "The Birthday" bl' Jciu,""'-&#13;
The story concerns a is year old', flil~&#13;
rrontatlon with sex, wine, and asb the,-: "hOw do you do n1·· Tbls story comes Off 121!&#13;
successfully of all the stories contained • ,_ magazine. The writer basically cap,t,.ua h ta&#13;
noc&lt;?nce and naivete or the •dols«t.t.&#13;
characterization i• good and the story Is,_,,: "YOU ate the wind, and I the shadow,• • 1&#13;
page story by Peter Back-Niels,,,. It -., to,,&#13;
lesbian losing her virginity, i.s 1,T111rt1 ~ pressionislically and is somewhatesotenc 11-.&#13;
into poetry and paradox, creates no charlCltt&#13;
lacks a £irm continuity. ll is d&gt;\iousl)' 11 •&#13;
perimenla) story and as such is intemtm&amp;,&#13;
SaUy Mengo ls the last entrant in a field ct&#13;
with "Whal's In the News, Henry'?" It 11 Vint»I&#13;
straightforward concrete styJe aOO tht SlOl"f ca&#13;
cerns a bank teUer murdering hii wde Pedall&#13;
lacks some &lt;fepth in the characteriz.ation ,at•&#13;
presentation ol the c,,nlral action ( U.. ...,.,&#13;
utilizes too much irony as a major fOl'f.SbadMI&#13;
devide which teods to make the ccdM&#13;
somewhat anti-climatic. JJ you t'ind tbt ~&#13;
to be somewhat con£usingil is becaustUit,-&#13;
view i:;cems to shift without w11rruog Still. I•&#13;
interesting story.&#13;
This issue of lnd.Jc1tions is a ~l artla&#13;
production, the artwork ultimately 1t1ird a.t •&#13;
superior to the literary content. I \ulb 1t ccam:l ll&#13;
d.irrerent but that's the way it i:s. lt take:J Stt•&#13;
years for a writer to develop his taleot and 1Dlr.a1:&#13;
enough about t.echrti(lue and st~t\D'e IO~&#13;
good story. But an i.ncipient \\Ttter alst&#13;
confidence and the only way he cao g.a!.D. U.1&#13;
fidence is through publishing his earl)• s~.,&#13;
ju.st too bad that the most memorabataspK1&#13;
issue of Indications wiU be the _artwork. I--:&#13;
you simply can' t have tvel')'lh~ )"OIi •d 11&#13;
you want iL But it's still a t,mal&lt;d• blrpi:&#13;
cents.&#13;
Parkside Open House Offers Music and Tours&#13;
TIie umversity oC WlsconslnPa,,ulde&#13;
will ],old a public open&#13;
hous.e featuring a number or&#13;
spe,cial programs and tour from&#13;
t tos p.m on Sunday, June 6, at&#13;
the Wood Road campus midwar&#13;
between Kenosha 1.rnd&#13;
Racine.&#13;
About MOO pe.-.ons attended&#13;
Parkside'• lint open house last&#13;
iprrng.&#13;
The open house is planned as&#13;
afamdy &amp;£fair. with both indoor&#13;
and outdoor activities.&#13;
GN!Onquist and Tallent Halls,&#13;
the lw&lt;l major buildings completed&#13;
50 far on the new cam•&#13;
Pll'- will be open for Inspection&#13;
and sidewalk. superintendents&#13;
art invited to (.beck con•&#13;
structton progress on the&#13;
Library•Learning Ceriter.&#13;
permanent neanng and crw11ng&#13;
plant and various Site&#13;
de\-elopment pra)eC"llll ('Urrtontty underway&#13;
Special demonstrations are&#13;
planned in the chemistry.&#13;
computer science, earth&#13;
science, engineering,&#13;
geography, Hre science,&#13;
physics. p•ychology and&#13;
language laboratories in&#13;
Greenquist HaU.&#13;
A student art fair will be held&#13;
on the lawn near Tallent Aall&#13;
and a studtnt rode group, "The&#13;
Warrior Potato" , will play near&#13;
Greenqui~t Hall (Rnlh IN" art&#13;
fair and the CO(l(..'er'i wiJl be&#13;
moved Wide in case of rain.)&#13;
Members of the Ule science&#13;
faculty will conduct tours or&#13;
nature study areas on the 700-&#13;
acre campus and guests are&#13;
Invited to walk across the&#13;
country trail which traverses&#13;
the campus and affords views&#13;
not available from any other&#13;
vantage poinL&#13;
A l"Ugby match is scheduled&#13;
for 2 p.m, 11t. the Athletic Field&#13;
on Wood Rood where Parkside'$&#13;
first nigby team will meet the&#13;
Chicago Lions. • K '&#13;
team. ··""" Or A slide sl&gt;"" d.,...... 11&#13;
master de,•elopn&gt;t"' S:-,&#13;
the campus _1u'ld vt~&#13;
acUviUes "~ ~" - II&#13;
at G~q111sl .,.. ,...&#13;
and a Dixieland B•~ ;_..&#13;
ol UW·P swdeots "'CIO"""&#13;
tn the GreeoqUJSt&#13;
I ' l1f Several dliP .;;a. J1&gt;1&#13;
scheduled for the "" ti •&#13;
Ubrary and • ,.,., nJt'&#13;
minlstrati, .. olfi&lt;d .':,. 11'&#13;
Hall also will be_. r,t ,,,-&#13;
c,unpus bo(llcslD" 11 -.ii 1,1&#13;
and re£rt~h1&#13;
nt"e Atb..,-&#13;
available &gt;D tJI t,OJDCl'lf&#13;
Building, ss \I.ell as&#13;
the ch~dret&gt;-&#13;
. ··'" be .,.IJIII'....: ParktDS ww .,,, .-:.&#13;
the Tallent Hall IOI ~&#13;
.,... """""' .. ,u "'..,,..- between Oft'tD'IU111&#13;
Halls. &#13;
--&#13;
eotumn I had done about his restaurant. t had to&#13;
d,eCk with a friend who had come with me to see if&#13;
he really said~ could hit me with a slan~r suit if&#13;
he wanted to, I didn't think anyone in a manager;aJ&#13;
position ol even a hamburger stand could convlnce&#13;
memselves that I })ad writ.teD anything slanderous&#13;
n,en 1 _heard him say that he didn' t want any d~&#13;
fiends m his place, I checked to sec if anyone was&#13;
shuddering m the corner. T~n t ~lized he meant&#13;
...&#13;
be-ca~sheisanex.waitresswho helped me handle&#13;
certain aspects of evaluations&#13;
. _This: column was born one ·e\·enifli v.hen twas&#13;
Silting around an apartment dressed in cupboards&#13;
that were naked enough to get an ·•x" ratinc&#13;
anywhere. I thought 1t a good idea co guarantee&#13;
myself one free meal a week by tt\·1ewu1g restaur-anllS.&#13;
His behavlor wasn't as unbelievable as I first&#13;
thOUght after I re-read the specific review. I did&#13;
~ke the statement about the Pepsi, and invited&#13;
0nyone to try it theinselves; I did say that the food&#13;
_,...,e&lt;J to me was unimaginative, and I made the&#13;
wild generaliiation Uu,t notling at the BUI of Fare&#13;
oclted me. I would imagine that all this quali£ies me as an irrHponsible youth ot today but to think&#13;
when I sat listening to the manager ~r the Bill 0(&#13;
Fare restaurant I didn't even have long hair.&#13;
I decided lo handle most m the writing in a li,ght&#13;
vem. so the paper would have a reatutt that ... -as&#13;
simply. entertaining. 1 ha\,e no formal ttstaurant&#13;
oduc~tlon as the Galloping Gourmet does I trltd to&#13;
&amp;tay m ~ middle Of the road, which should ansv.er&#13;
the queslion of OOf MadiS()ft student raised as to why&#13;
1 generally wrote good things about restaurants&#13;
I~ has proven to be interegtina for me, but tho5e&#13;
few ~e,s when t was uneasy did make me question&#13;
the hrespan of this ~umn. Because somewhe-re I&#13;
still have_f~i~ ln human beings and their ability to&#13;
accept cr1llcasm, t have decided to continue wrihna&#13;
re1tauranlreviews 1 mayevengobacktotheBUI or&#13;
Fare, bu.t on)y when my lawyer's scheduJe permits&#13;
him to join me. There 1.sn't always safety in number$&#13;
as the irresponsible youth lCd.ay sometim4!S&#13;
think.&#13;
The rest of Lile writing in ".t;aUng our went all&#13;
right. 1 made a rew mist.lkes, like not telling&#13;
eYeryone that Andy's Restaurant is located at 2301 • 13rd Street. And t failed to identify Maggie a few&#13;
times as my companion on all my re-st.au rant jaunts&#13;
-powering. He was, ln that&#13;
particular bag. the best horn&#13;
player anywhere.&#13;
But now, along w1th the&#13;
dancing sangers singing dan•&#13;
cers and comedian acl0f$, Bdl&#13;
&lt;llase, Jazz musician, reveals&#13;
his suppressed desire to be a&#13;
n&gt;ek and roll star. The initial&#13;
attempl is extremely sad. Sure,&#13;
there is some fant.a.slic horn&#13;
worlc: and a few inspired solOi&#13;
("Invitation to a River··. "Get&#13;
By Bob Borchardt • virtuoso at something the)' It On",), OOt there is too much&#13;
oftheNewscopeStaff k new nothing about. Un• pure garb8ge or this album to&#13;
RECORD REVIEW: fortunately this album does make it worth listemng to&#13;
"Chase·• of """"'c J II B1·11y Chase lltU e more th an a dd er ed'b I i I1ty ' W ho' s h e tryini to kid with&#13;
Rocka•Rocka Really Growy to lhat observation. lyrics hke "Get It on In The&#13;
Brass Ensemble". Bill Chase., cm th.is album, is Mormn , ··tt's Got to be Jei'&#13;
Epic Records E30472 the proverbial fish out of water. You and Me in Extaseeett" and&#13;
1 once knew a man wbo was 1 can remem~r him playing wte Jillie inserts or "Sunshme&#13;
involved in writlng music lor a lead trumpet with Woody or Your Love'"? The rock&#13;
lol of well-known TV and :novie H~n'$ band i.n the midcUe audience is just not that&#13;
people when they put an act '60's, unquestionably the besl in ~ceptib1e to circa 1955 lyrics&#13;
together for a tour. His biggest his trade. To me, he was CIJf. anymore. H's too bad that h,s&#13;
problem, he said, was that no ford Brosn. Maynard Ferguson idea of rock is doomed to alwa)·s&#13;
one wanted to do what they and a hydro--electric power ~ a sloppy welding of rock and&#13;
were best at. Singers wanted to ~ant all in one. To see hun .)a.it with the accencs in an the&#13;
dance~ dancers wanted to sing, s1n,gle-handedl)' ta1ce char'J(e ol •,vrong place!. ~c let the dancers&#13;
and actors wanted to be that group, pushing it, swinging dance, let the singers sins. and&#13;
~medians. Everyone, it it., demanding every last ounce let Cha.-.e get bock to where he&#13;
5temed, was a frustrated or energy from it, was over• belongs..&#13;
~~::::.~:~:~:;:;:::::..~::::,:,:.~::::;:~-:-::•:•::-~-:-:-:-,-:-:❖••❖,"!~:~": ll)• ~: %.: •• ' • ;:::;~:~;::;.;.;~~i&#13;
t Alice laquinta Wins $10,000 Fellowship ij&#13;
I A senior at the University or includes stipends and tuition. credit exchange between the~&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, Alice EDPA feUows.hips are funded two insLitutions. She will;;&#13;
l&#13;
laquinta of 3706 Roosevelt by the Officeof Educabon of the recei\'e a bachelor of arts&#13;
Road, Kenosha, has been Department or He.11th, degree in Englis., w,th distinc·&#13;
awarded a £ederal Education Education and Wel!are. tion in commencemtrtt ~xer•&#13;
Professions Development Act cises at UW•P on June L2&#13;
CEPDA) Fellowship worth Miss Jaqulnta was ooe of 1.be&#13;
r&#13;
boul $10,000 by th&amp; UW• Or,;t •ludent• to transl..- to AL UWM $hP ,.;n study ro~ a&#13;
Milwaukee graduate school. Parkside in 1969 from the masterolart5degree,n .:::~J The fdlowship C()'Vers tY..'O l(enosha Technical Institute in preparation for a career as a ,&#13;
~~~: or :.~~i~-=:~~:~~::¼!1t~::~~.~~: .. ~ a ~=~ ... ~=~-~f.~~~:.~=?~~~:~~ . ~&#13;
'The End' Features 'Your Father's Mustache'&#13;
"Your Father's Mustache"&#13;
will be back !or "The Begjnning&#13;
or the End" al the University of&#13;
Wiscoos:in•P:J.rkside this sp-ing.&#13;
fl a U that sounds more than a&#13;
little confusing, here's a bit&#13;
more background.&#13;
'"Your Pather's Mustache" ls&#13;
a road show remlniscent of the&#13;
Roanng T\l;·enties billed as "a&#13;
cross between Alice·s&#13;
Restaurant and Mountain&#13;
Dew". (D..,.n't that help to&#13;
clt,r things up?)&#13;
•·The End" is just lhat -&#13;
Parkside students' annual&#13;
webnltion o( the end o( cla..,s&#13;
for the spring semester. And&#13;
"11le Beginning of the End" i~ ihe opening ol the two-day&#13;
event, which this year Is&#13;
Saturday and Sunday, June 12&#13;
and 13.&#13;
The two-day event will be held&#13;
lo the 1'aUent Hall parking lo«,&#13;
with the shows being presented&#13;
under a big.top tenL&#13;
"Father's Musu1che01 will&#13;
perform Saturday evening from&#13;
9 to 1 ht also was the featured&#13;
group at last year's "The End"&gt;&#13;
and several rock groups wall&#13;
play in a ,e3rnival almosphere&#13;
COfllplete with booths spo~red&#13;
by various student&#13;
organizations on Sunday.&#13;
Groups and tines will be an·&#13;
nounced £or Sunday. "The End" as open to&#13;
Pnk.Jtde stude!lCS, raculty &amp;nd&#13;
staff members and their guests&#13;
(Uc~ets SLl&#13;
Additional European Flight Scheduled&#13;
An additional 1&amp;-day flight to&#13;
Europe has been added to the&#13;
package or £lights being&#13;
•J&gt;OflSOred this summer by tJ,e&#13;
University of WiS&lt;'Onsin-~&#13;
Parttside for students and staff&#13;
members, and their immediate&#13;
families, from throughoot the&#13;
l.:rv.1 system.&#13;
l'he new flight will lea ... e MUwii.uktX fur Am:,terdollm July&#13;
~ and rebJ.rn rrom Paris to&#13;
ll!Uwaukee Allg,\!jt 17. CO$! ol&#13;
the !light (called F) is $240&#13;
round trip including tax.&#13;
'lbe new llighL also is th• only&#13;
one leaving {rom Milwaukee.&#13;
The other three UW•P summer&#13;
charters originate rrom and&#13;
rel trn to Chicago. They are:&#13;
Fligbt 1-round trip Otlcago&#13;
to London, Juno 13 • August 18,&#13;
$221 including tax. Tills n,ght&#13;
origlru, Uy had been scheduled to&#13;
leaive June \.5.&#13;
Flight D - Chicago to London&#13;
Amsterdam to Chicago,&#13;
July 15. SepL It. $®O inclucling&#13;
tax. This flight originally was&#13;
listed from July 15. August 11.&#13;
but has been extended one&#13;
montll&#13;
Flight C - Chicago to L..,_&#13;
don. Amsterdam to Chicago,&#13;
August IS • $&lt;pl J2. $100 in·&#13;
cuding tax&#13;
Neibuhr emphasited that&#13;
students and stall and their&#13;
ammediate famllies on all UW&#13;
campuses are ehgi~e ror the&#13;
flights, which cover Jet air fare&#13;
onl)' He said openin8,,\ exist on all fligh\~. Additional in•&#13;
formition is available lrom&#13;
Niebhur al UW-Parkside's&#13;
Student Activities Office,&#13;
KenO&amp;ha. Wis.&#13;
'11) ll, tt71&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
"Chtck Ou,&#13;
P,·irts Lflst''&#13;
4801 ilh \\r,,.&#13;
k~ ,O~II \ "l'-tt"0''"&#13;
Of UNOINA&#13;
MEMIU f.0.1.C.&#13;
WEST&#13;
SIDE&#13;
SWEET&#13;
SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St,&#13;
6 o.m. till 11 p.111.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phon• 657-97'7&#13;
Open Seturdr,s&#13;
9 A.M. to Noon&#13;
For Your Conven,enc.e&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FREE CHECK/ NG&#13;
ACCOUNTS TO STUDENT&#13;
AND RETIREES&#13;
SftS~Sftttl t&#13;
Ktrcsbe&#13;
I ... SPACE ... l 1111 ••• , ... .,.,~,...._.,, n ,-n,r&#13;
IF YOU WANT&#13;
SOMETHING&#13;
A LITTLE EX TRA . . TRY&#13;
Budweiser.&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
• • . but you •&#13;
know that!.!!&#13;
lamous to,&#13;
CARL'S/ PIZZA&#13;
Inf--,, S.nt , ... 12 ... 14". 16"&#13;
..... • lllS • ltACMO.ll • (IOC:UN&#13;
GMOCCHI • U'YIOU • L4 SM;MA&#13;
• Sl.A ,000 • S4NOWICH[)&#13;
CU lY-OUTS • DtLIVUY ••rou 11..c; Wf I IIHC ..&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922 &#13;
C.ndic»le for lb# bedwlor o/. arts degl'ft&#13;
1r• ~MIi A~I. IOU 17th Avenue, Keno1ha , Guy T Addlffl. ;~ 1511&gt; Avmut K.-ha,&#13;
EdNI Anderson, 7019 :17th A••au•. K....i..&#13;
LawrOl!a P Arentz, 9146 24th Avenue,&#13;
Kfflooba , Den C "'11Gidini, Slit !Jler1dln&#13;
Roacl. Kenooha Le5he Arthur, Cur.-, Ill&#13;
Bar1&gt;1r1 Backlund 7'41 s,xu, A•enue,&#13;
Keno.hi. Dani Ben,,djct, South ~llwa,.ee.&#13;
!lhtblelJ Bone111.4901 XthAvenue, Ke-ha:&#13;
Undl Bllndlard, ~116 Pttiht,c Boule•·lnt&#13;
KtrlOIM, George R,chard Rtt1wa Ill, 4'02&#13;
31U1 Avonue Kenosha, Donald R Borwntll,&#13;
Jr , )13$ 1- Wisc&lt;lmln Slrffl 'RKIM. Ma.-.111&#13;
Lavon Bn1tnn1ng, $31l -r.1h A,onue K~&#13;
Jam" J Casper, 3417 Undtrmann A•enue,&#13;
RadlW', La- A Cbrootolffflffl. lfl 22nd&#13;
Slreet, Kenc,gha ~n,. R Conll a14 32nd&#13;
A••nue. KfflOOhl , £uaen• Cooper, 1108 Park A-. RxiM Paul OIi&gt;~ i.auk-. °"'""&#13;
~lerk 043 ShOreha•tn Lane, Racuic; £&lt;1na&#13;
l&gt;Hrbom !1137 Spnng Strfft Rac,n.,, ~Mt&gt;&#13;
J t:Uung T40:?30lh A,...., •• Kenoolla , '.11lliam&#13;
R t:vans -'827 Zllh Avenue, Ke-ha ;&#13;
Jolln Thomas f wunmons Y:IICA Ra•u~. Qlrolyn )Iara• CaMilWI). 1116:' 16th A,onue,&#13;
Keno.Ila Colleen K Cic-ntt Pleasanl Prair,e,&#13;
LalT) L CN,rge, :loo: 871h Slrtd. k'.•-ha Br. Tt-rttnce Gorslu. or:.,1, St fi'nntu Fraar).&#13;
Burlington, Jobft I( (lotUredsen 7803 22nd&#13;
~,~mw. Kenosha, Carl Cnswold )lcnomcxiee&#13;
t'all&amp;, Gnce Paine a llall. Selem, Greg F.gon&#13;
Hamm 15(77 711111 -• Kffi&lt;4ha lklen ,\nn&#13;
Harmon 7903 22nd A\tnue ~• Lenora&#13;
t: It•)" 21128 Roc...velt Road Kenooha: Ardis&#13;
E H.aycrman 26 01:10 Sllttl, Racine:&#13;
R1dlard P Hrbtrt. 1()67 Sheridan Road.&#13;
KfflOlha &lt;'hark,i Alan Henkel, 7116 Grove&#13;
A •=ue, HKille Karl 0. eo ll•rbrechsrne1er.&#13;
r.627 se.enth A• tnue Keno:iha, Robert R&#13;
Horaby, &amp;lN 49th A-enuc. Kmc,gt,a , Terry L.&#13;
Horodlffla JU:11 IClth Strttt, K•-ha . Roeer&#13;
t: tlundt, ~14 '8th A\.t:nue kPnOti.ha; AMa&#13;
)lay Hu1d11nson. 701 IUmo,s Stttel. Racine:&#13;
Alice B laqwnll. 37U6 ~•II Rold&#13;
Ktnooha, t'ranres A Jaesrhke. 6220 Third&#13;
A,tt1ue, Kffl05ha . J•mes C Johl\$on, 2712&#13;
Lln&lt;'Oln Road. KellOSb.t . James D JohDIOO.&#13;
5401 32nd Avenu•. Kenosha , Da,'id Juclt1k1. ;01, 5th Avenu• Kenosha:&#13;
Abe• L Ke111ne Ml7 :r,u, A•enue. Keno,,ha,&#13;
e.vt-rly Ann f11lt:nilltr, 5138 Sixth AVt&gt;nue,&#13;
Kenmlla, ll chol klabo, 113:! RbChke A,·enue.&#13;
Racine . David A Klimek, 4().1$ Montery Dr1,·e,&#13;
!Ycine. Ann K Kline j(ll$$ Green Day Rood,&#13;
Rae,.,... }l;l~ra Jo Kloet, 2022 3.'&gt;lh Place.&#13;
KenOfoha, JamH I. Koloen. 4323 3111 Avenue,&#13;
KftlGObl, '&gt;lkba~ '1 Kurth, Waukegan. IU :&#13;
David A Lauer. ~ll Luedtke Avenue Areme.&#13;
Theodore I. Lrinenweber. 2108 64th Street,&#13;
Kenosha , \'ale11 A ~"'"· 12811 \\,aslulljlton&#13;
~\tnue, Murltvanl. Thomas J. Lukas, 1815&#13;
Jerome Bou ltnrd, Racine. Freder1c R.&#13;
M•dson 1816 H•llmes \,enue, Racine: Edna&#13;
Way.,.. Mathe..,., 1508 Tiffany Drive, Racme:&#13;
9 DorSel Avenue, Kathf)D A Mauer. 561 bs 6329 21111&#13;
R.acme; KaU,lttn Mary McCom M • rill 912&#13;
Avenue Kenosha; John I, er 'd c&#13;
CJ~vel~nd Av~nue, Ractn~. Davi . :&#13;
Mickelsen, 1534 Melvio Avenue, Racine,&#13;
arleoo AM Miller. o/111 36th Avenue, :,nooba l,,nda Lee MuuJ&lt;el, 5226 40UI Avenue.&#13;
Kenosha; Ma,iarel Munz, ~05 "'7th ~~• Keooaha Jamel T. Munay, Jr., . .&#13;
Chatham° Street. Rac,ne: Mary A. MavOIC%)'k..&#13;
1700 ltsl Street, Keno&amp;ha; Kent New""!', ~123&#13;
£icbth A,.,,.... Keno&amp;ha: Michael G O Br en,&#13;
720 Cool&lt;I Street, Racine; ~o...-ard C. Olsoo,&#13;
5010 Biscayne Avenue, Racme; !'°lorence C.&#13;
OnnJnlr; 45%7 Blut!,ide Drive Rael.De, Marsha&#13;
Role Chvens, 490136th Avenue, r&lt;eoosha;_ Ferne&#13;
L Paul 2315 $3rd Street, Kenosha; Nicholas&#13;
Anlhony Pemn•. !I005 45th Stree!, Kenosha;&#13;
Daruel Petersen, 1337 w,sconstn A\'tnue,&#13;
R•&lt;in•. Ell•n Claire Petersen, 4123&#13;
Wash1ncton Avenue, Racine; Dett.Y A.&#13;
Peterson, 4014 56th Strtet, Kenosho; l&gt;bchael&#13;
H Popansltl. Uruon cro,e. Julla W. Pur".'ance,&#13;
5328 Valley Trail, Racine. Donna E Quin, 412&#13;
Melvin Avenue, Racine, Vick, Ann Rem, 1705&#13;
75u, Street Keno.hi Janet Ly1U1 Richards.&#13;
Union Grove, Lotttta Marianne Richards,&#13;
Zioo, UI Brenda Sue Robinson, 1812 83rd&#13;
Street. Konosha w,lbam Lavmonce RoUa,&#13;
South Milwaukee; DoMa Morie Salemo, 2010&#13;
s;;rd Sll'ftl. Keno,sha, John Schlax, Salem;&#13;
Jane \I Sclumu. 7617 Cooper Road, Kenosha·&#13;
Kal't'n Ann Schueller, 1415 Grand Avenue,&#13;
Racine: Paul John Sdwlz. Janesv1Ue; Helen&#13;
Lou11e Schumacher, 19Z4 38Ul Street, Ken011ha;&#13;
Patricia Peterson Schwall, Mukwonago;&#13;
~hchlel Jay Scott, 10302 Sheridan Road,&#13;
Kenosha, David Earle Sco,1Ue, 1919 45th&#13;
Stttet, Kell06ha Janis Anne Scoville, 1204 60th&#13;
Slrttt, Ken06ba, ~ M. Sielslu, 4118 75th&#13;
Street , Kenosha; Shoron S. Silk, 2301 Golf&#13;
A•'Onue. Racine. Ema H. Sippola, 5548 331'd&#13;
Avenue, Ken06ha, James Jay Skarda, Lake&#13;
Geneva; James 8'&lt;rtloy Smith, 6406 ?8th&#13;
Avenue, Kenllliha. Stephen A. Smith, 1422&#13;
Blame Avenue, Racine, Susan R. Smith, 3223&#13;
47th A,enue, Kenosha, William G. Smith, 1209&#13;
Grand A,,.nue Racine Dorothy M. Sl&lt;olow•ki. Lake Villa, 111.: Sandra I. Spitzer, 8013 Cooper&#13;
Roacl, KenOtiba. Robert E. Stonich, 3205 18th&#13;
Avenue, Kenosha; .Lawrence B. Thielen, Jr., 1640 College Avenue, Racine; Dione Lynn&#13;
Thomas, 117 71st st~t, Kenosha; Mark&#13;
\\llliam Timpany, 209 W. Racine Street.&#13;
JanesvlllP · Kalhleen A. Todish, 2\JOS Douglas&#13;
A,,.nue. Racine, Howard R Turtle, W . 6801&#13;
75th Street, Kenosha; Carie Ruth Whalen, 2152&#13;
Rodney Lane. Racine; Susan Nan Welner, 7917&#13;
18th A,·enue, Kenosha , Florence Paul&#13;
We!ll!elius, Route 3, Kenosha; Demus R.&#13;
Wheeler. 1927 We&amp;t Boulevard, Racine; Vernon&#13;
L. W1enlte, 5813 23rd Avenue, Kenosba : Br.&#13;
Thomas A Wojciechowski, OFM, St. Francis&#13;
Fnary. Burlinaton.&#13;
candidates for the bachelor of science&#13;
degree are: Jolin S. Gray, 5000 G&#13;
Boulevard, Racine; James \I, NG!aa raeoi..,.&#13;
Avenue, KenOlha; Robert Axtell · '1kt ... Avenue; Thomas J. Balo, 75~ 241JJ ~ a..&#13;
Kenosha; James Braun, 46:IO Taylor A""'-.&#13;
Racine; Rex Harley Br01&lt;11, IS21 o.~&#13;
Drive, Racine; Sharla Ann Burgin -~ A,-enue, Kenosha; Mlc:hael P. Can,,jJ llcl&#13;
Avenue, Kenosha; Michael cou;::Z, 1111&#13;
Kearney Avenue, Racine; Martha' LIU.&#13;
Dearborn, 702 Lake Avenue, Racine-J.., ha&#13;
Denzine, 1428 Hayes Avenue, Rael~- T~&#13;
J Devine, 1330 Quincey Avenut ' R~--&#13;
Palricia Ann Ericksen, 1812 cartaie -,,-&#13;
Racine; Waller C. Cayan, Sr., 5403 53rd ~- KNiosha; James E. Gollfreclse,i, • ---.&#13;
Avenue, Kenosha; Rochlty Gnt1s Rou Ill&#13;
Ken06ha; Neil Austen HagJov. 1117 ~&#13;
Avenue, Racine; B~ F Hennan. 1813 Street, Kenosha; David C, Hout, 5011 ~ Avenue. Kenosha; Dennis H Ide &amp;ru..;;," Stephen C. Irving, 3'l20 Tobin Road K...._&#13;
Alfroo Lee Jantz, 3411 Wasb111&amp;1on "-•&#13;
KenOtiba. William James Jorano1t. 11:i'""'&#13;
Avenue, Kenosha; Marilyn o Johnoo,, -&#13;
Norman Street, Racine: Barry E J-: =&#13;
31st Avenue, Kenosbl. Larry E. Kacm, 4,&#13;
7200 '75th Street, Kenosl&amp;; t.nch Ka,. 4&#13;
-&#13;
93rd Street, Kenosha; Calvin Kapb •&#13;
Middle 1111 Road, Racine, Gat; D K,iJer&#13;
Arlllur _Avenue, Racine; Rlia R, Ktliey,.:&#13;
Park Ridge, Racme: Florence M. Kti"Ur •&#13;
33rd A venue, KeJ'IOSha , Thomas xi.m )Ill&#13;
23rd Avenue, Kenosha; Jerry E Ko0t, Oil&#13;
Creek: James H. Krupp,~ Ll&gt;!dll,. ~ ....&#13;
Racine; Peggy A. Kruse, 1018 61111 ~&#13;
Kenosha: Peggy Ann LaCoursler 11114 er._ Avenue, Racine; Timo-hy Paui ~&#13;
Waukesha; \~ilHam R. Loendorf, 14111 S....&#13;
Avenue, Racine; James Maddocb. Jr&#13;
SheralDn Drive. Racine; Mart Elll&lt;&gt;tt lloat,&#13;
4910 Biscayne Avenue, Racine; Dan Cwla&#13;
Miner, Route 3, Racine; Donald V w.i.&#13;
3515 48th Avenue, KenG6ha, Paul I. M,-.&#13;
Waukegan, Ill : David Potniu. 7411 •&#13;
Avenue, Kenosha; Enk Prentnieb, u a&#13;
Street, Kenosha; John v. Reg,euna, MU -.i&#13;
A venue, Keooehl, LiJ'lda M Roberts 11111•&#13;
Street, Keooeha, Daruel J Ruffalo. 7lll •&#13;
Avenue, Kenosha; Jane Rynders, San Flit&#13;
clsco, Caltf.; Nancy Jean ScblielNewman&#13;
Road, Racine, RICl!anl f&#13;
Seidemann, 2608 32nd Street, Kenooha llu:J&#13;
Arthur Seidman, Roule 2, Kenaslla . .,._,&#13;
Sisak, 1122 Goold Street, Racine, RoouJ P&#13;
Slagter, 1907 Carlisle Avenue, Rarlllt Jllllll&#13;
P. Smith, 1916 Deane &amp;wevanl Rlaa&#13;
Robert L. Sternberg, 637 58th S~t. Kmllil.&#13;
Karl Edward Stomner. 102 I0IJJ S!rMl Rm.&#13;
Kevin L. Tagaart, 2029 West Lan ARacine;&#13;
PauJThiesen, West Bend; Karin..&#13;
9305 Caddy Lane, Caledonia. Sw,lr) A M&#13;
4627 37th Avenue, Kenosha, Betty J \1111,•&#13;
21st Avenue, Kenosha: Jerome H Zellmir •&#13;
11th Stttet, Kenc,gt,a.&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE GRADUATES&#13;
From&#13;
CJ WAVRO ANO SON INC 3637-30 AVENUE KENOSHA&#13;
P'~OWERS DY .JOSCPH 473'1-..2 AVLNUE KENOSHA&#13;
AMERICAN STATE BANK 3928-60 STREET KENOSHA&#13;
KROK'S HIGHWAY 32 BETWEEN KENOSHA AND RAC NE&#13;
VALEO'S PIZZA KITCHEN !iOZl-30 AVENUE KENOSHA&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS 512 MAIN STREET RACINE&#13;
E F ,..,DR1GRA'IO 1831-55 STREET KENOSHA&#13;
MIKE 0'-V15 SPEED CITY 4807-7 AVENUE&#13;
MARGUFliTTE'S 6207-22 AVENUE KENOSHA&#13;
VILLA O'CARLO 5140-6 AVEN rE KENOSHA&#13;
CHAT'N CHEW !5204-40 AVENUE KENOSHA&#13;
VILLAGF.: INN 3619-30 AVENUE KENOSHA&#13;
SPARCO BEVERAGES 2428-WASHINGTON ROAO KENOSl&lt;A&#13;
VENTURA AND SONS JEWELERS 5617-6 AVENUE KENOSHA&#13;
UPTOWN REST6, URANT ANO LOUNGE 6216-22 AVENUE ~EN09-'&#13;
SUNNYSIDE FLORISTS AND GREENHOUSES 302t-7$ STREET K~.,o9t'&#13;
KEHL AND NELSON ROOFING AND INSULATION CO.&#13;
I ANO A SHEET METAL INC 1010-ST. PA PllCK STREET RACINE&#13;
830-RACINE STREET&#13;
SUPERIOR-KUETEMEYER&#13;
S231-N 12• STREET MILWAUKEE&#13;
0 TIRABASSI ANO SONS INC&#13;
8539-39 AVENUE KENOSHA&#13;
KOOS AND CO.&#13;
4S00-13 COURT KENOSHA&#13;
Nl'=LSON IRON WORKS&#13;
142(;-13 STREET RACINE&#13;
PARKSIDE VILLAGE INC.&#13;
T.C. ESSER&#13;
566-STATE STREET RACINE&#13;
GORDON LUMBER AND SUPPLY CO&#13;
2929-75 STREET KENOSHA&#13;
NELSON INC Of WISCONSIN&#13;
4~-MAIN STREET RACINE &#13;
Reflections of a Graduating Senior&#13;
8y Ma.te Elten&#13;
ef 1.M' N•wseete Stan&#13;
Aff\Ong the t84 grac1uau,,_ ,_ion Is Jim Smith. Jim has&#13;
Mffl active, « at leMt at the&#13;
periphery, a, most of Ou: ,n•jcr&#13;
-1tr0,wsiel that have &lt;K'•&#13;
c,irttd OCl campus clmJll 1111!&#13;
ov• y,ars he'a been here.&#13;
TW• years ago be wu&#13;
..,..,d&lt;nt of the ad ho&lt;: student&#13;
P'·era.meot He reslaned .,.,, amona ocher tlungs,&#13;
,-PSGA as a governing body Is&#13;
ool .,,_., ll II a JNppd&#13;
,oYff'nment • • . ..&#13;
1n a memorable letter to the&#13;
c.-•ktet be outhned hlil own&#13;
p1u1oooimy and why he thought&#13;
1&#13;
t aettssar&gt;' to r,sl,gn. "My&#13;
pi, tu pr•ldenU have been&#13;
1,0deVt!op a.n awareness among&#13;
111e atudfflll, to e~urage&#13;
lruli.ati,·e and inquiry so II to&#13;
create an 1Lmo1pbere con•&#13;
cl.iavt to tht maxunum at•&#13;
tainm•nt or each Individual's&#13;
poi,nllal by o."PO'lng him to&#13;
new vtstas of thought, and a&#13;
a,ullitudt or dfrtrst opinions.&#13;
--u 11t abo my Klea thl't rn&#13;
attain the~e goals, It is&#13;
_..,ry to encow-age the&#13;
c1ove1opmen1 or orw,niutltns&#13;
and to worlc with and wllhln&#13;
a-to de,~lop tbe aunoapl:&lt;tt&#13;
conducive to acade.nic&#13;
lrtfdom&#13;
"It IS becallle of these Ideas I&#13;
decided to aeelt the office of&#13;
Ptt,,dent or the Park5ide&#13;
Student Government&#13;
Auodalloo; toatta&lt;h tho status&#13;
tJ{ that offl&lt;e to tile rule ol&#13;
18.der or the movement for&#13;
lkldtnl ~ll and academic&#13;
lretdom.&#13;
'"!'ht rec&lt;'llt actions or tho&#13;
Stll&lt;MDl Allalrs Olrice bas&#13;
lllfl•d this role, and redllctd the&#13;
llallll of President. and tbe&#13;
•tirt Student Go·H~:rnme:nt&#13;
As~l1tlon to that of a&#13;
powerleas Adminlatrative&#13;
puppet." nothlQ&amp; lAOO\rlbvt •bout It. u ·, restr1ctave - it·• b&amp;rd lo A)'&#13;
lnlditlon-bound .,.,._ - are oo tracLu- hero. but then&#13;
ha&gt;tbNn tradJ-lrwn etber&#13;
pl.ei;eit Im~ un ...._&#13;
• He cited th.n a number of&#13;
mddenta of what ht laid v,.a,&#13;
lbt admln!s1t11Uon ba,_,,, student o-rcanluti0t\a. &lt;The&#13;
Luddltes can take comfort In&#13;
lbat the charges or ha,..._ Thtre's a lrtmendous lad: o(&#13;
qmabty here. Mc,,t a 1t. I&#13;
think, llem1 from the albtud,, of&#13;
1hr adminlltrabatl lft'lrd the&#13;
la&lt;ulty and the lludenta. ll'a&#13;
- of d11trus1 and I lad,, of&#13;
CODOde :e&#13;
Jomes Smith&#13;
they make ,_ .n IUlU!ar to&#13;
L~e charges or the Young&#13;
.S...ahst ~- th, c,.,,,.&#13;
mittee for an Open Fon.im, and&#13;
the Committee made two years&#13;
ago.I&#13;
ln way of bockground in•&#13;
formation, pnor to &lt;01111:e Jim&#13;
,.ortced •• • bu~ding e!&lt;ped,"r for four y,ars, and thcn enliJtod&#13;
and seirvs tine yean u, tho&#13;
army. In the future he plans to&#13;
go to iJ'a&lt;Wte echool, tbo&lt;t&amp;h&#13;
next year ht will be m Kleadl&#13;
ng two philosophy&#13;
~uu gn:,upt at Kn&#13;
H11 reOectJons on h1s )·ean at&#13;
Paruide are as lollows.Smlllo:&#13;
Tho thinl that probabb&#13;
disapl)Oints me molt about&#13;
Parkside II that ~·bH It llrst&#13;
bttame a ruUt&gt; lhere .... re au&#13;
ldnd1 of promisu about how It&#13;
W'N gotn&amp; to be an imovatwe&#13;
university Actually, there·,&#13;
1 Newa.cope: \1,-'hol,e (au.It ia lh~'!&#13;
I Sralttii I've always bff:n&#13;
1 reluctant to pef'IOnl.Oy blame&#13;
Wylli1 lor tbis. Maialy bta-&#13;
• his)Ob1n~Parb;df&#13;
~ ~r'ft bun to be IGll'le moat ot&#13;
the Ume. He has the mt.N&#13;
resJ)Oaalbthly for :lie UNYff·&#13;
111y, but the nin11U11 of the&#13;
unl,·trsll)' ls dome by h11&#13;
,ubonlmalel - 111 a ngid&#13;
bureaucracy&#13;
U an)-0.,,, 1-....,,.. yua&#13;
axe the guy who is rapo1U1bie&#13;
Jl·s an ampersonal&#13;
dobumanntd 1ys1em 1r1 1na,&#13;
or any umv,n1ty Th,&#13;
&lt;nticisms of Par(qjde an not&#13;
umque&#13;
Nt."'SC:ope: The fault LI th,,&#13;
llrud'utt thffl4'&#13;
Smtih: Yes Some peopif': tt&#13;
cuse variout poeple in lhe ad&#13;
mu1islration of cbnc lm,eJ&#13;
wnlll8 - as II to U) if you g&lt;t&#13;
rid of llus - lhlnp -~1 be&#13;
au n&amp;)ll. I dllagno&#13;
'1ews,opo: Do Yell think the adm..-..- boa pci,_iy&#13;
watch.cl out ror Jam Smith'!&#13;
Sm.ilia: I know they havt. I haw&#13;
beffi , •• ,rnc1auy told tbat 1&#13;
have been lnves~iCAltd The&#13;
lmplkatica, •as that up until&#13;
last spnng the) -,, try1111 to&#13;
Ue me to IOfflt IUb\'e:fll\-"t&#13;
,._ Whal the oa,~&gt;t'llllllon&#13;
round was that I -.·isn't&#13;
I alt0 know I.bey have a l1Je on&#13;
COHTtNUIEO 0"'1 PAGE 10&#13;
Ferrall Quizzed on Merger&#13;
Oy Ktn Konkol&#13;
of the Ne"scopt-SLart&#13;
\IICHAL FERRALL is&#13;
ll&amp;emblyman from Racine&#13;
llr Fernll opened ,.,tu, his&#13;
op1mon on the impact of I.be&#13;
mtrgtt 11Whether lhe merger&#13;
llurla • hell" d._t, on """ it&#13;
11 implemented. The more&#13;
lmporunt issue is ~ho is comg&#13;
to be on the board of Rel,'etlt.s.&#13;
On• 54!ll o( ti men would .net&#13;
*lertJltly than another The&#13;
mttg&lt;r Impact depend$ on th&lt;&#13;
II mtn determining policy.&#13;
llr Ferrao looked II the&#13;
merger In terms of higher&#13;
tduca1100 a.od aaid he hoptd tbe&#13;
-ier .,'llUld nOC be made&#13;
a&amp;orw political considerations&#13;
liut rathtr oa the balis of Its&#13;
Impact on education.&#13;
lit ca,-e lhree prime , .. sons&#13;
""7 U. merger bothers poope.&#13;
11 lt ll bemy pushed aloog&#13;
"'IU...t pn,per cons1deratl0t&gt;.&#13;
Wt ahould delay Im·&#13;
P1tmtntation for a year or so to&#13;
f&gt;alaat, Its ,mpact. 2) It is hard&#13;
lo Wldentand the total impact. lit can't doltrmine how ea&lt;h&#13;
campus ...UI be afft&lt;ttd. 31 We&#13;
doo't know how it will aflec:l the&#13;
niabanalup betio'ffll the two&#13;
l)lt.ema. Tberc are differences&#13;
•tlh adm111lons te.nure.&#13;
~l and faculty recnuUng. -N lrall$ler of credits, All of&#13;
thtse dtffertoces musl be&#13;
'l'Oned out so the preeent symm • neitlltr damaged or hurL A&#13;
dr-lay would at,·e •~me to lrm&#13;
•.a 1)1'6bltms."&#13;
When asked if he ... any&#13;
llltnl to the &lt;onttpl of me,aer&#13;
::. replied, "There II merit to&#13;
&lt;lln«pl of m.,...er. The&#13;
~er &lt;culd be accomplished ,. • ~n difltrenl ways. The&#13;
~ .,._an eould bike • lot&#13;
at different shapes,"&#13;
Wile,, asked in parti&lt;Ular .._t Lu«&gt;·• morger, be ''"led. "Lucey•s shape is loo&#13;
vague. Ho ..-ould havt a sin!Oe&#13;
Board, would ehmlnotc the&#13;
CCHE, and sot up eampus&#13;
councils. Beyond that tr,&#13;
vacue. People don't know what&#13;
the md rerull "ould be " I have malntaintcl as • edutat« that Wf' ha\"t the DNd&#13;
!or some agen&lt;y to plan and&#13;
coordjnate higher tducatlon&#13;
throughout Wlscocsln We&#13;
should h•v• coordinauon and&#13;
planning nol only for the uw&#13;
and wsu. but lor the ttdtn,eal&#13;
schools, the two year schools.&#13;
and tht private acholls "&#13;
,. . . . The governor ...,. the&#13;
argument that a me,aed board&#13;
would result in bolter plannl"I&#13;
ln ~ucation In Wlscenstn. , .&#13;
A mlnorily f1 people have said&#13;
Parkaide aad Gr.,n Bay&#13;
shouldn't have been lormed I&#13;
haven't beord the ,.,wnor&#13;
artul!.. • , . I can't vi.suahze the&#13;
leglalature voti"II for • me,aed&#13;
S)~t•m harmful to aay camou.&#13;
To the question, .. 19&#13;
Parbkie'I C,,,Wlh ,..,,. to be&#13;
stymied lo 1111 dorms al&#13;
Whltewater?'•. he replltd,&#13;
•-n,,,t deptr&gt;ds .., tho CUlure&#13;
Board. I can see piclullll and&#13;
cboosina: with one campus&#13;
getung sorntthtna and aac,thtr&#13;
aomclhing tlse."&#13;
Wheo uttd what lhe&#13;
governor .. m do aince d• Board&#13;
of Regtnt1 voted aga1nIt m0f111'. he said. ·'1be ..,,_,&#13;
eould hit the merger out ol tht&#13;
budgtL Bui COlll;dffln&amp; lhe&#13;
decision of the Board of&#13;
Regents. I can imagine •. ~:.&#13;
1a,n amount of ..U-Mr'\'lllg&#13;
"Any •cency about to under&amp;O&#13;
1ranarormalloa to al"r&#13;
,ts powers and malleUp la likoly&#13;
to oppose iL 1 am not certain&#13;
this ditcmOn •·as madt on • sound educatumal bD ..&#13;
"Ther~ww bf- 1ememberl on the ,_ Board of ._ts. five&#13;
from each of toe ex1sun1&#13;
___ ,,_, ....... llOrlal&#13;
and technical 1chooll, one&#13;
of&#13;
IO!)I&#13;
the&#13;
e&amp;&lt;ntaU,·e&#13;
11n1nn,ty,&#13;
f1&#13;
and&#13;
the ~&#13;
lour aew&#13;
membtrs appointed by th•&#13;
coveroor Any •ppoentmtat mado by lhe ,.,.....,. ., ill be&#13;
&lt;0ntrolled by lhf l\ep&lt;Jbhcan _,lrolltdStnat,&#13;
In reply to Iha queolioo,&#13;
"Wbat about tht campus&#13;
tounc,1 concept"•". he an,.&#13;
1wcred, "0r1&amp;tn1Uy IN"y had no&#13;
po,,...-. then •1'&gt; ha,-,, them. I&#13;
am not SUN ft rull&gt; need&#13;
thtm They n:ighl h&lt;1f to&#13;
maintlu.o lot.al autOD&gt;my. I&#13;
would llke to see tM counell&#13;
-pt mo,e clarly dollMd&#13;
V.'ho are !My, -t do the)&#13;
advise. how olle,i do they m""'&#13;
rd hate to - the &lt;OUDdl lJ&gt;.&#13;
"rfere ,.,;th the gowmna of the&#13;
unlvenlty. I'd bate to sot •&#13;
clminJSbed role of &lt;tadonll «&#13;
racuhy, uaurpin1 them in&#13;
I0\'!'111111C lilt t:niv...,ty '&#13;
"U rundin&amp; la&lt;Ul bac:k to W'Sll&#13;
levels. Partu.ldo aod Crt&lt;ll Bay&#13;
,.111 ~rUlllly bo burl. Wt haft&#13;
noguar11nteeth1t thty won•t be&#13;
I ffllldn'l support a reduction of&#13;
l\tndS until the) an IObdly ..,&#13;
lhffl fttL II is mott acceptsble&#13;
10 Dlt to bl,·e OM •d·&#13;
mmistrath-. board and Nn tbe&#13;
ry5tem olheN~ lhe samt than&#13;
h,ure 13 l 11verslli• ol&#13;
WilcMSln. We should allow&#13;
Neb camp.at lo mamWI\ its&#13;
own ml111on.&#13;
Senator JOMpb Louripn was&#13;
too busy lo do a &lt;Omplt.. ioltn'lew,&#13;
but I did lalk to h,m on&#13;
the phoot the day alter&#13;
Gov..- 1..u&lt;,y·s •- belott the senate to d111&lt;UN the&#13;
merger He ~t.ated. ..,.. I&#13;
batentd to the gD\ffllOI', I gOC&#13;
the unpreuloo that Parkside Uni,.._..,,,-~ bt tt.ltuted&#13;
to t.M statua of an m1wanted&#13;
,tepch11d ln the mtraer&#13;
l)'Meffl t&#13;
"-lll.1'11&#13;
SUMMER NEWSCOPE&#13;
BEGINS J UNE 28&#13;
HUXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY&#13;
STORE&#13;
302 Gmn Bay Rd.&#13;
Kt111Rha&#13;
634·1536&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
De/it:try Frtt ; -&#13;
654-0774 a.a~&#13;
You Owe It&#13;
to&#13;
Yov.--lf&#13;
to Drink&#13;
FRESH&#13;
BEER&#13;
Drinlc •••&#13;
Bucht-eiser.&#13;
t11•011 •us&#13;
. . . but you&#13;
bow Mil&#13;
•&#13;
UW PARKSIDE&#13;
STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES&#13;
SUMMER&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
••HfW Ft..l~HT orFER "flC• •&#13;
IIILlfAUKH TO AIASTUOAII&#13;
,-A'-IS TO MILWAUM[C.&#13;
JULY SO-AUCUST U&#13;
$24) .. cl ti•&#13;
""Ef OTHE• DE•••Tu•Es&#13;
JUNE - JULY • AUCUIT&#13;
,11ot1 SlOO lftc I I•-'&#13;
FOIIII: INFO,tr1AT10,;&#13;
CONTACT:&#13;
STUDt:IIT AC flVtTIU&#13;
OFFICE - fALENT HALI.&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN THRU THURS,&#13;
11 A II. TILL IJIONITE&#13;
FRI &amp;SAT.TILL2A M,&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40( &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
,. ,, ,,.,........... .,,,,mai&#13;
HAYE A 600D TIMI WITH&#13;
Ii&#13;
• Cl &#13;
Pa •• M• JI, 1'11&#13;
June 12-13&#13;
,, -,:--.- ... ........ '. .&#13;
fun • Food • Entertainment&#13;
----SATURDAY----&#13;
COMING . . . . IN PERSON&#13;
\'Ulm rlTHtKl Mmmlll&#13;
THE WORLD'S WORST BANJO BAND&#13;
' LIVE FRO~ NEW YORK CITY&#13;
9:00P,M, 101:0'.l A,M,&#13;
t.t!OER THE TEH - TALLENT HALL PARKING LOT&#13;
* AUIISSIOH: ~¢ FOR STUDENTS. FACULTY&#13;
~ STAFF WITH PARKSIDE 1, 0.&#13;
l ll9¢ FOR GUESTS&#13;
* FREE flll.!STAQ\ES&#13;
* FREE flJSTAGlE GARTERS&#13;
* Flff ~USTAQIE tV\TGIES&#13;
* FREE PEAi'lJTS&#13;
* FREE 1.AUiHS&#13;
• BEER Aflll SODA (PAY AS YOU CONSUME)&#13;
-----SUNDAY-----&#13;
3:00 P .M. - FREE CONCERT FEATURING&#13;
Johnny Yoalll&#13;
&amp; HIS SOUTH SIDE BLUES BAND&#13;
NT 6'&#13;
6:00 P .M. TO 12:30 A .M. - CONTINUOUS LIVE ENTERTAIN~E&#13;
THE GENEVA coNVE¢10&#13;
PASSION&#13;
SOUP&#13;
ADM. $1.00 STUDENT, FACUL TY &amp; STAFF&#13;
$1,50 GUESTS ACCOMPANIED BY ABOVE&#13;
STARTING 4:11 P.M. - BURGERS - BRATS - BEER &#13;
NORMAN MAi l.ER TO&#13;
DEAN DEARBORN&#13;
DESI ARNEZ TO&#13;
VERN MART INEZ&#13;
euoOHA T O&#13;
CHANCELLOR WYLLIE&#13;
LUCILLE BALL TO&#13;
KAREN BAYER&#13;
WALTER MATH EAU TO&#13;
BOB OLSEN&#13;
PAUL NEWMAN TO&#13;
TOM ROSANOICH&#13;
Faculty Senate Honors Retirees&#13;
Resolutions honoring rour&#13;
retiring faculty members ol the&#13;
University of Wisconsin•&#13;
Parkside for devoted and cf.&#13;
fecti\·e ttaching were approved&#13;
Thw-sday by the UW·P Senate,&#13;
the principal racuJty govern- ment unit.&#13;
The resolutions clte Henry L.&#13;
Mann, assistant professor of&#13;
English; Bernard C. Poru,k,&#13;
ass1s1&lt;1nt prol~r of Engl!sh;&#13;
Mrs. Elizabeth Poriak, lecturer&#13;
1n English; and Arthur N:&#13;
Ogden. lecturer in physics.&#13;
Mann, who has taught 22&#13;
years in the University Center&#13;
'1:::l&#13;
p&#13;
c,,&#13;
c,,&#13;
~ ~&#13;
~ ~ ~&#13;
;i ~&#13;
~ p C")&#13;
..... ..... ~ ..... ;:s&#13;
~ ~&#13;
ac;· ~ O"&#13;
~&#13;
~ ~&#13;
~ c,,&#13;
~ ~ ....&#13;
~ (f.) ...... ~8 ......&#13;
'1:::l ~ '1:::l ..... ~~ C")&#13;
~&#13;
c5 ~ ~ ... . ~ 0 2 0&#13;
~ "'!&#13;
"1 -§ A..&#13;
.... . 0 0 c,, p ;:s C")&#13;
~ "'! ~&#13;
A&#13;
~ ~ ~ ~ ~&#13;
c,,&#13;
..... . ,_&#13;
"'-·-&#13;
System and at Parkside, wilJ be&#13;
one of four recipients or&#13;
distinguished teaching awards&#13;
at UW~P commencement&#13;
exercises o~ June 12.&#13;
Porzak has UU!8hl in the&#13;
Center System and at Parksjde&#13;
for 25 years :.and Ml"6. POl"Ulk&#13;
t&gt;ej:an her UW teaching career&#13;
in 1946. Both have been active in&#13;
a number or area civic&#13;
organizalions including the&#13;
Racine--Kenosha Chapter of the&#13;
Wisconsin Civil Liberties Union&#13;
and the United World&#13;
Federalists:.&#13;
Ogden, who joined the UW&#13;
faC\llty in 1962 after a career lo&#13;
private industry. served as&#13;
acting dean of tbe Kenosha&#13;
Center from February, 1966, to&#13;
June, 1967, lheperfodwluchsaw&#13;
the completion ol lhie addition to&#13;
the Cen~rOgden&#13;
and Porzak share&#13;
cliaUt1g1.u.ffled records of l!RTYicc&#13;
to the Universlt), both as&#13;
teachers and u active par~&#13;
ticipantS in faculty gO\•emance.&#13;
Cleden was was a mtmber ol the&#13;
faculty executive committee&#13;
~d facult,• oarhmentui.an at&#13;
the Kenosha Center a,,d Panak&#13;
tffVed for 18 yeBr1 as lacull)&lt;&#13;
secretary at the Racine Center.&#13;
CASH&#13;
FOR YOUR BOOKS&#13;
WE WILL BE&#13;
BUYING BOOKS&#13;
ON&#13;
JUNE 4 - JUNE 12&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
'". t "4 co, h· ~ •!, ~Cl •&#13;
,t\~"-1••• \Jn:x\~c~,o1,1S&#13;
JCI 2:'. c.11 ... _,v A--,ve&#13;
R,,_._,., ~ .. ,' llJ,,. , f&gt;5'1C3&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
ALSC&#13;
CHICKEN DINN ERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
FREE DELl\'fRY&#13;
4:00 ,.,.._ TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
5021 30th Ave. KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Open 6 Ooy s a Weelc From 4 p.m .• Cloud Mondaya&#13;
SECOND TIRE&#13;
1/2-PRIOE&#13;
109 WISCONSIN AVE,&#13;
RACINE Ul- 9591&#13;
Open 7:30 a.m. - 8 p.m.&#13;
Monday - Friday&#13;
Saturday lo 5 p.m.&#13;
• '&#13;
•1- - ,. ....... .......&#13;
·----·----- -----.... -- .. ...,. ___ '-&#13;
....... .............. --.. FUU.4 ,PLY NYLON&#13;
001\0 CONSTRUCTION&#13;
1111 6Dltl SI,&#13;
KENOSHA 554-2111&#13;
Open 8:00 a.m. - 9 :00 0.m.&#13;
Monday - Friday&#13;
Saturdsy to 5 0.m. &#13;
.,. •.. Mayll,Hfl&#13;
Smith Raps&#13;
CONTlttUE.0 FRO-.i. PAGE 7&#13;
towards ~e destructtv_e&#13;
upheaval nu.l's n:ticulous U 1t&#13;
does come about, it will&#13;
p.-obably be th&lt; .....,11 ol ad1ons&#13;
ol the ad1mmstrauon.&#13;
:--.f"KKOpt-: \\1')' are &amp;tudents so&#13;
apatht'Uc at ParltSide"&#13;
me de..,...,.. at lk Kfn(IS,ha Poli~&#13;
Orpartmmt Latd to my K ¥&#13;
tav1tin hen&#13;
'•• ..,.,., Ho,, dJd )VU ru,d&#13;
l.hct out ..&#13;
s..,u., I happen to he , ecy good&#13;
ft1tnds -..1th a touplt of&#13;
pollt'fflltn 13111&lt;:all) 1·,-.&#13;
bttn U)'Ull th&lt;! sarnt th._. m&#13;
pubbc. in • r lh.ftl. in stvdtnt&#13;
Sovt-rND-tnl. lft '°nt Commtl~.&#13;
u, ,t&lt;a..co,t' to anyone•• will&#13;
taa1m t.o nw: Some of LheN&#13;
prolll•ma could bo IOlvtd&#13;
for lm1111&lt;·t I .,.,.. that&#13;
The way&#13;
to buy the&#13;
insurance&#13;
you need&#13;
but may&#13;
feel you&#13;
can't&#13;
afford.&#13;
For Further&#13;
lnlor,not,on Co/I;&#13;
JOHN J. SCHMITZ&#13;
CS2-4021&#13;
l&#13;
\&#13;
I&#13;
Ir-~~~~:·~::~::_,&#13;
I Jenn J Schmit, I&#13;
612 ISlh Pio&lt;• I&#13;
Kono,ho. w;, 53140&#13;
't'n, I .,. lnte,uted In&#13;
getting IU:rtfltf lflfOf·&#13;
ffllbOO on "PRIME."&#13;
.... , -&#13;
\&#13;
AOOflU,I&#13;
e,r, ___ _&#13;
I II ,ran _ _ _ ,,,.. _ _ _&#13;
L------------&#13;
Doan Dtarbom this P6St !all&#13;
""" bragc,n&amp; to p&lt;OPle that he -.·u the only Dean of Students 1n&#13;
the Vnt\-ers1ty ,ystem th.at v.as&#13;
Ill\ en a ralw lnt )ear btt&amp;U&amp;e&#13;
,,_., have no problems or&#13;
d,sotders at PifJSJde&#13;
U ht really btllt\'t1i this i$ so&#13;
hecaust ol lus pal1cy. he resll)&#13;
haS a chstort.td conception ol&#13;
1tudtnts at Parkside 'Ibne&#13;
people are really paranoid&#13;
hecaU.W ol th&lt;! lhlnC,S that t,a,t&#13;
happtn('d at Mad1sai Cnlic1sm&#13;
bf,rt " 5N'll as the fint step&#13;
You Ow• It&#13;
to&#13;
y-,wlf&#13;
to Drllllk&#13;
FRESH&#13;
BEER&#13;
Drink •• •&#13;
Budweiser.&#13;
• • • but you&#13;
know that!! I&#13;
Smllb: First. you have to go&#13;
back to tht old centtr system. 1&#13;
,..,,t to high schoOI UI both&#13;
Ktno&lt;eha and Racine. and&#13;
there's a difference l)er,ir,·cen tbe&#13;
two cities. Racine has more&#13;
wtute collar peop.e. and more&#13;
parents with coHege&#13;
bac~ground5 than Kenosha. The&#13;
,ndustry 1n Kf:l'losha is basically&#13;
absentee-owned. v. hile Racine&#13;
industry for the m06l part ha~&#13;
A professional&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
that is safe&#13;
legal &amp;&#13;
• • 1nexpens1ve&#13;
can be set up on an&#13;
outpatient basis by calling&#13;
Tho 1'1111blem Preguncy&#13;
lteferr.t Service&#13;
21s-n2-s360&#13;
24 hou.n-7 days&#13;
for proftfl.lONI, conHdtnt,-11&#13;
1nd c,,ing help.&#13;
Recycle&#13;
This Paper&#13;
f7arno«4 fin, fJ'i,,ud&#13;
fY&gt;ena gt' .91a1«u,, fJ'oO&lt;M&#13;
Liquor Store&#13;
::::=~&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE ...&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
In M&gt;tJnd equipment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
and ~ •s at discount prices.&#13;
Stop In and bl- your m ind, not your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk lo Marl&lt;, our&#13;
Department Mllriager, who Is a Parl&lt;slde&#13;
111Jdent and will talk yoiJr' language, both In&#13;
equipment purchaMI. records and money.&#13;
SONY- Tape rec«den, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
PANASONIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
KOSS - Headsets&#13;
KENWOOD - Receivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANTZ - Receivers, Speaken, Record players&#13;
AZTEC - Speakers&#13;
J.a .L. - Speake.-1&#13;
J.V.C. - Recelven &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntables&#13;
G. E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are here, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin"s lowest prices.&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS&#13;
117MAI N STREET&#13;
RA(IN ~';J&#13;
GRE;.. T&#13;
DCiJ..-'\ T U,V"'-J&#13;
r f'&gt;~~ .,r·, l'-l&#13;
·ts home offices in that city. 1 Whal you had in the mid •so•s&#13;
were kindi in Kenosha who&#13;
we.re not really colle~e&#13;
motivated I noticed the di!·&#13;
with a \en foot Pol&#13;
somt good f)CO!)te ~- ~ "-&#13;
!"'•I, but lhe) •,.&amp;oat'°'-"'' JUSI =lly a l'Oor ,._ no,,&#13;
News&lt;1&gt;pt: Wbat -.-, you give lncomin 14'1&lt;., Smlth:lnthefallJ-~&#13;
fiut raninto0..,~"1-t,.&#13;
us were sold 00 u..-"-,&#13;
iMovative SChool" ~ • decided to stay. ft•aU- C&#13;
r rence wheB I transferred&#13;
(~m Bradford to Hor-lick Hi~,&#13;
"['he kids who were talltin~&#13;
ot&gt;out going to eollegc weren I&#13;
talking about going to the center&#13;
system, they were talking ab?ul&#13;
Madison, selo1t, etc. 'J'.he kids.&#13;
who went to the n.acine and&#13;
Kenosha ceniers didn't really&#13;
know lf college was for them or&#13;
not. so they 'A'ent to the c;:e'lter&#13;
schools.&#13;
WhaVS happening now is th•l&#13;
the sam• ~ind ol people come to&#13;
Parkside. 1 think very rew&#13;
people who would have gone to&#13;
:Madison during the center&#13;
system days go to Parkside&#13;
now. The kids who en to Parkside&#13;
now corne from a blue collar&#13;
background. They see ~Uege&#13;
as an opPOrtunity to get a )'lb, to&#13;
be better orfthan their parents.&#13;
n,ey're career oriented. You&#13;
talk to them and what they say&#13;
is "I w•nl lo be an engjneer. I&#13;
~n•t s,ee why I ba,.,e to take all&#13;
these soc. course!."&#13;
To me. gelUng an education&#13;
means more than just getting a&#13;
job. My id .. iS that il should&#13;
develop a person's ability to&#13;
think. ll's supposed to teach&#13;
you what to think, but how to&#13;
lhlnk. This is the difference&#13;
t,eh\·een a W1iversity and a&#13;
t,chnh;al school. Newscope: How do you&#13;
evaluate the education you've&#13;
gotten from ParkSide'?&#13;
Smith: I've always said I'm&#13;
getthtg a degree from Parkside&#13;
and got my education from&#13;
sitting over at the Ranch&#13;
reading books. I've got between&#13;
800 and 900books; most of them&#13;
aren't coUege oriented. To me, a.n instructor at the&#13;
college level is not a teacher~&#13;
he's more like a guide. He's a&#13;
critic, He gives you the fun•&#13;
damental framework from&#13;
which to attack the problem.&#13;
To mt, a tremendous&#13;
example c,f this is Lee Air&#13;
plebaum. My nrst economics&#13;
~urSe was from him. t.ee&#13;
Applebaum stimulaled me to go&#13;
beyond what w"" oflered in the&#13;
classroom, He's the reason why&#13;
I took $0 'Cl\8ny econ courses&#13;
afler that lle's the epitome or&#13;
an instructor. The man knows&#13;
his field inside and out.&#13;
I told lhe Chancellor this- let&#13;
me teU yru what happened. One&#13;
night a couple or years ago after&#13;
we bad a program for high&#13;
school SEOiors in Racine, we&#13;
were sitting in the Big Boy, and&#13;
Wyllie was asking some of the&#13;
students .,hat we thought of the&#13;
faculty at Parkside.&#13;
I told him about Lee Applebaum,&#13;
and how he&#13;
stimulated me to study more.&#13;
His reply was "Do you really&#13;
think that's important?" I said,&#13;
"Yes, don't yout'' He said. .. No!" I didn't know what to&#13;
say. I was dumbfounded. His&#13;
reply reminded me what you&#13;
would get !rom a faclory&#13;
worker.&#13;
Newscope: What majors do you&#13;
have'?&#13;
Smith: l have a major in&#13;
philosophy completed, and I'm&#13;
just shy of majors in economl&lt;$&#13;
and sociology.&#13;
Newsco;rt: How Would you rate&#13;
the departments'?&#13;
Smilh: I think the eeonomic&#13;
department is basically sound.&#13;
There are some fine pMp!e in it.&#13;
In p,ilosophy ii runs the gamut.&#13;
Sociology. which was my&#13;
original major, I wouldn't touch&#13;
1l soonded &amp;OOd Y. t...,;&#13;
Uriving a lcb~&#13;
into contact With • ~ 1...., scl100l kid\ alld Ii •&#13;
wbenllalkedtou;;. .. "'&#13;
was goi,. to bt I llilll&#13;
"!'lversity SOlne&lt;by T! ..,. kid ask• me lf he - Parkside, 1 would~ II&#13;
He should go to II hai - Milwoukee. 1 ttll lht .... are already hert lbt kill, II&#13;
they get out, the btot., ~ are. 111111&#13;
Ne-scope: Is Pa.rbidt&#13;
tellectual communrt , •&#13;
Smith: There's I i:...,__ lack ol it here. Tht _ -~ that moot Sl\ldelll$ ::'-&#13;
their !acuity memb,n (:&#13;
looked at thetr Ilia!, a.&#13;
teach..-s; as ,m_ 'ioo&#13;
I have gOOd c:ontoa, llill&#13;
ol laculty memi,.,.. ~• an individual bba, h •&#13;
like facult)' manbcr, ._&#13;
:-imng to intmc:t n,, Plllio&#13;
~s that $0 many sflldieda&#13;
,n. go to clas&lt;, u..., i..,,&#13;
U you talk 10 - ""lfl&#13;
members their g-• ,._ ol ';•11csi~• sl .... • II&#13;
lhey re unmteres:led •&#13;
care . Ntwstopt: Whltdo,-w&#13;
Parkside studmls'&#13;
Smith, It's like an)'llloc-.&#13;
youhavetohesel""" IIII&#13;
there•, a 101 rt d,amaod, 11 .,&#13;
rough here. 1 lot d p,1 •&#13;
interesting peopl, Bli ,-11o&#13;
to dig them ..,L&#13;
What holds l)f&lt;&gt;pl, llocl la&#13;
is that Ibey still hl,e _._&#13;
high sdlool lrlenda. I Ila•&#13;
thing that could 1'111) - Parkside would lit aa tlll&#13;
bring in out of 1ta\t ...&#13;
U you're IOl"IJ ~ - here ~ith a group d ...&#13;
rigl&gt;I out ol big)&gt; ~ •&#13;
you chum around wlll - people IOI' four ,...,. _,&#13;
expose )ou...U lo ..,..&#13;
else. that's iL You'lt • your hed and )'Olll k1 a&#13;
Unfortunalely, Olal'l'dtt&#13;
ol students are dole •&#13;
E,•entuaUy •'hat will'"""&#13;
th•t they will spend 111t • their lives in this &amp;rel&#13;
Whal'sreallY ~•&#13;
you took a ranclall - about 1oostuc1a&gt;1Sud11U•&#13;
~ 11st 111• larthdl pd•&#13;
west, north and """' W"&#13;
traveled. I'd l'emwt•ll/11&#13;
better lhan 90 per""' .. have lived tber ...,. 111&#13;
within an are. ota&amp;.-.•:&#13;
west, northem 11-ia-::., north, Cmcago to the&#13;
about 30 fffl "'l 1 (jt&#13;
Michigan to ll&gt;&lt; .- Ill'&#13;
That's tl!t P=--,,.&#13;
people hav• lbt ...W , 11&#13;
that the enttre&#13;
l{eilOlha, Wi- - A last note. I speot•&#13;
degree ol authOl'lcy • ""'""&#13;
been here I'°'" llilll&#13;
anybody else. 1 lik;:;L11&#13;
sort&#13;
been&#13;
ol&#13;
here&#13;
groVl!I&#13;
so I"°'&#13;
111' ~&#13;
toes. ...... l•&#13;
Bui I c1on•t --,,.i,i!&#13;
sense you can say tbli.&#13;
and the problt:" s&#13;
frustrations ~ ., fl,&#13;
companied i~ ~&#13;
preparaUOO for lllt ,_, ti'&#13;
you rind in . ~ "'&#13;
ntat•s how it lt.&#13;
Pike River Cleanup ,,&#13;
share&#13;
Let's&#13;
cl&#13;
do&#13;
the&#13;
OW'&#13;
Pike&#13;
share&#13;
River.&#13;
lor&#13;
Help&#13;
our&#13;
name&#13;
worlt -&#13;
eod&#13;
"°&#13;
pb~&#13;
pal ~ 111&#13;
clean up the portion oC Pike R...,, 3119, G .,.ti~~ ..&#13;
River lhal Dows through our en,1roomental ~ ~ campus. Dale: Saturday, June contacl. T•"' ,~&#13;
19. Til'le: Meet in front of Tom KrOl!t, 111"9 •&#13;
Greenquist Hall al 8:30 a.m: Gaslorki..,..'""&#13;
______...... &#13;
,:och Named 'Coach of the Year'&#13;
l{och. park.side wresUing or w!estlers. Besides his&#13;
c~ac~ing, his overall con .. tr1but.1on to wrestling is out•&#13;
standing.&#13;
'Insects' Defeat 'Non-Sequitors'&#13;
Jilfl v.·as named Amat~r .-c"Ulll8 News' College Rookie&#13;
t~,,. 8 coach o1 the Year.&#13;
l~n in the NCAA '-'?aJOr&#13;
~ cb\Pision were eligible&#13;
~r, 1.,...,rd a.li.o.&#13;
p,,t-&lt;IP for this national os Buddy Wilkerson of&#13;
IOI"'; tee! states International ., v01,. san Diego.&#13;
~ding to Jesse Hoke,&#13;
_-of the Amateur Wrestling ..- o,ach Koeh was chosen&#13;
'i,tn,-.- ,t the time he was&#13;
~ 1l was too late to recruit&#13;
ht ,...estled a winning&#13;
~ with a limited number&#13;
Koch directed the Firs'. An•&#13;
nu~I Parkside Wrestling Clinic&#13;
which attracted, more than ,oo&#13;
high school wrestlers and&#13;
coaches. This was only one or a&#13;
series of clinics he has con- ducted.&#13;
In an atternpt to promote the&#13;
wresUing program at Parkside&#13;
Koch developed a corps oi&#13;
twelve mat maids who$e&#13;
responsibility was to su;,port&#13;
and promote the program by&#13;
advertl•ing matches and acting&#13;
as officials and cheerleaders.&#13;
r&#13;
•&#13;
Cooch Koch&#13;
Ranger '9' Lose Doubleheader&#13;
By Jim Cuptr or the News.cope Slaff&#13;
Parkside concluded its initial baseball eam-&#13;
""1 by dropping both ends of a doobleheader to&#13;
:I' v ,-oand6-1 at Liocoln Part in Milwaukee. lb&lt; pitching ol Tom Tanski stymied the Ranger&#13;
11~en in the opener as the UW·M hurJer per.&#13;
a:l!d just four hits en rout&lt;; to a shulool Tanski&#13;
tit not $lllrt strong as the first two Rangers had&#13;
,..., followed by a walk whtch loaded the bases.&#13;
Belilell pitched his way out ol trouble by striking&#13;
1111 i. side, a feat which he repeated in the second&#13;
~en Rangers went down via strikeouts and&#13;
ParU1de had no extra base hit,.&#13;
UW,!tJ also managed onl,f four hits. but two of aer were doubles. The Panthers picked up two&#13;
c in the third atxl completed their scoring with • 111 the fourlh. Cad Talsma was the Ylclim of .. pport and picked up the toss.&#13;
Cycle Club Holds 1st&#13;
th In thenightcaptheUW-Mofrense~rretoureat&#13;
e exl:"'nse of starting pitcher Rici&lt; Pet~t. drillir«&#13;
IS hits mdudiog two triples and a double by IJW-111'&#13;
Cary Stephan. 8&#13;
. Th~ Panthers scored three times in the third.&#13;
twi~e i~ the fifth, and once in the sixth to atcOWll for&#13;
thelr SlX tallies.&#13;
The lonP MJn of lhe game for rark.sidt cam, in&#13;
lhesix_lh ~he~ PetJt cameupv.-itha run s«ringhJl . ~mnmg P•.kher Kevin King allowed the Ranger&#13;
Six ~ts. including doubles by Pettil and Otan Kans_&#13;
Pettit and Tom Gedeme.r led Parkside batters with&#13;
two hits ~a.ch. Gedemcr totaled tour hill in the&#13;
doubleh .. d.,..&#13;
Despite a lack of depth this year &lt;Parkside had&#13;
only ten men at UW•M&gt; the team had a &amp;+2 record&#13;
which was comprised mosUy agamst varsit)&#13;
competilion. In Its initial year the club team showed&#13;
that it ca:1 play varsity calibre ball.&#13;
Race&#13;
miles. was sponsored by lht&#13;
Parkside C}'cle club.&#13;
S.hiod 1M •lr\q .. -i., cl&#13;
8111 h}' the Shldfflt lll&gt;«'b&#13;
deteattd lbt f'acult&gt; • ,cm&#13;
Stqu1torJ ' bi-• lu•l ocor, in 1&#13;
be~fit pmf' for lt&gt;e Hulcrw&#13;
MlUs SCbola.rstup tu.nd.&#13;
Jumparc olf to •n earl)' leed&#13;
lhe 1tl.adent1 mai.ntat.Md an&#13;
edge throughout the came-&#13;
""h'th U'W freq\llt'lll subs,btuliOD&#13;
by both IJd ..&#13;
W1th1 Jl.13 hall•me ltlld, tho&#13;
students ap...,,.1rtd to b•"~&#13;
command. but the. r1cu.lty&#13;
tllmod 10 I ,.....,. t«&lt;llld half&#13;
Alter the Stlldall lltttcbed&#13;
their lead to 37-111, the l1C'Ult)&#13;
poured 1.D taffie Wlllnt•'1!'nd&#13;
points, ~ ,1 :17-32&#13;
The pine got noclote, u tho&#13;
students put on a 1Cor1n1&#13;
4splay, outpo,nbllJ the l1C'Ulty&#13;
15-9 the rut ot UM ••&gt;&#13;
Ivy, .,bo INIQ\lffltly &lt;lvppod&#13;
an ..,,lh key bltkN •-hen tbt&#13;
pme got ~lo&amp;tt .. paced 1todtnt&#13;
ac«i.ng with ti PQ1nl$&#13;
Mike Olandtr 1uth 10 and&#13;
Jolin Krummtl. sna,. -,,,..&#13;
----&#13;
lYJI chM'f Ulbt~ U( ul&#13;
I~ P:(et.l lludmll broil• Into&#13;
tho ll«lrlq &lt;du1&lt;,c&#13;
The f1Nlty bad a balarred&#13;
at11da,. tb II S:U)&lt;n - tiiu t nonr- .n 0i:ubftt nt;urn.&#13;
J•n-y Mialdl bad .,.. ta ,1,it,,&#13;
\\allu Gr1ff1a and )I Z&#13;
\lo illiams eacti had ll•&#13;
Alt"°'Ch tho pby •u lflll•&#13;
racgtd II times, tllm! "&lt;ff&#13;
some lpN:laculair lndnldual&#13;
puyo, iodudil1l oe&lt;ul&lt;mal klOC&#13;
""'I• -... and ad'I)( blU&#13;
handl,ng. pha a &lt;r....S pitas 111&#13;
behind-lhf'back pua by Carl&#13;
undor&#13;
Al!tt talkuC with sntnl of&#13;
tbt pa~1pani. arltt tM s,,nw&#13;
,t lppeln IS ., the ront.rst WM&#13;
en,oyabk and l1:litHt ,. a!. in-,&#13;
tttftl tn makln&amp; ll • tt~r&#13;
.,..,l Ctnaloly the fO&lt;Ult&gt;&#13;
would hM lo N"ent tht oul&#13;
CClll"-f' UI futurt 11'\N'llap.&#13;
The faculty,_.,,.., plllfd&#13;
scanlf torWOla 1 ion duri.na: • abort&#13;
Mt.n.1me pmt •Mm • tHm ol&#13;
•omen fat111ly mNnb-ff1&#13;
lhul40Jt • a,rlsflUda&gt;t ••m 7-0&#13;
The winning tune was tv.-o&#13;
hours, nine minutes, and 39&#13;
seconds. Coming in second&#13;
place was a team captamed by&#13;
Dennis Craves Graves• team&#13;
was llmed in two hours.. 28&#13;
mmutes, and $4 seconds&#13;
Ken Mort 1n&#13;
8y Jim C.tper&#13;
lfTbt .Newscope Starr&#13;
Pubtde's eye.le club com•&#13;
pltt,,I • 2111 lap race at the&#13;
lllllangtm Bowl in Kenosha in&#13;
..... ' ...................... . : :&#13;
FREE ' . .&#13;
r,jjet aJ the .&#13;
. NEWSCOPE .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. . qffice . .&#13;
.&#13;
. : . ""ring finals . . . . .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
. i """IJ trunk A l . • &amp; wrxxl road : 1-o......... . ··················•&#13;
- '#MIILS&#13;
.......&#13;
--••· h:lw Tlrn ~d Rims.&#13;
- "'· , :30 ...... "-. . Arn.-, Con. 7&amp;4J • 20th,&#13;
which the team of Kari&#13;
Llekoski, tom .Krummel, Ron&#13;
Wilson and SoMy Richmond&#13;
emerged victorious.&#13;
Martin Voted Outstanding Athlete&#13;
The e,·ent which ran 40.2&#13;
SPORT SHORTS&#13;
The new Rugby team dropped an 18-9 dec1s1on to IJW.&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Kari Llekoski was named to the All-Mid American ski team.&#13;
He was selected by the Central Intercollegiate Ski Coacheo&#13;
Association.&#13;
Kt:n Martin. tnshma ·&#13;
v.-restler from Cdeman. w"'&#13;
wu named the outatandif\l&#13;
•thf.ete- at the l'l'll\ft'llly d&#13;
Wuc-on.sin,Parltside at th•&#13;
annual 1.;'W P Awudl Banquet&#13;
Salllrdoy &gt;U&amp;ht&#13;
Some 200 pe.n,om attended&#13;
the banquet II BNIOI O.u&#13;
Ccunlr) Club whi&lt;II hotiGttd&#13;
athletes in l'W Ps to \'arstt)&#13;
sports Most Valuable Pla)t:N&#13;
UniYersity of Wisconsin•Parksidt skitt Kari Liekoski has been in ucb sport tttt11vfd awa.rdl,&#13;
named to the Central lntercoUe1Pate Ski Associabon AJl~~Ud- and at Jetter -.,nnen -~ American ski team voted by Association coaches. announced&#13;
Fred Lonsdorf, Ass.oc;iation president and Michigan Tech ~di. ca r1 Maddox, atlaJelic&#13;
ru1nouneed theseleclion.s. Liekos.k1 wtlS Ortf" nr five skittS named 10 lhe director at Loui•iana St.ate&#13;
men's Nordic team, Other teams were chosen in men and "''omen't Unt\ tts:1ty, •as the taturtd&#13;
AJpinc and women's cross country. Northern Michigan dominated lhe speUtr. Speoal uurd&amp; •ett&#13;
choices with 10, Michiaan Tech had three, and Michigan S!.ltt, Lake presented to Alfritd S&#13;
Superior· and Parkside one each. OtS1mone ar Ktn01ha and&#13;
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              <text>CCC Votes to Recommend Its Own Dissolution</text>
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              <text>"]OIlmalism is literature I"a hurry"_ M the UlIiversity oj Wiscollsi,,_P arltside&#13;
~,~-",•••••&#13;
MAY24.1171&#13;
Assemblymen&#13;
On Merger&#13;
See Page 5&#13;
CCCVotes To Recommend&#13;
Its Own Dissolution&#13;
'y Marc Elsen of The Newscope Staff&#13;
1be Campus Concerns Committee will no&#13;
.... exist - if the memhers of the committee&#13;
... tbeir way.&#13;
1lIeY voted last Friday, 6-1. to recommend to&#13;
tt faculty Senate that the CCC he dissolved&#13;
....... Student Government now fills the needs&#13;
IIIIIIOrlY provided by that committee.&#13;
TIle committee did this after rejecting another&#13;
.... '" the resolution that said, in addition, the&#13;
~ should be dissolved because it has heen&#13;
.. IS a repressive instrument by the adJIliIb'8tiOD.&#13;
ne "Dissolution Resolution", as it was called,&#13;
• sp&gt;mOred by Luddite members of the comIilIIt.&#13;
Ian MacTaggart, Edmund Gilday, and&#13;
JIIdeIeine Thielen. The three are among the five&#13;
.... student appointments to the committee.&#13;
TIle other students, Dennis Cashion and Student&#13;
(ill8'mDentPresident Tim Eaker, were absent&#13;
hoD !be meeting.&#13;
TIle unanswered question is now what is the&#13;
•• of the committee since it urged its own&#13;
IIIoIIlioa but lacks the power to accomplish it by&#13;
.... Chairman of the committee, Eugene&#13;
r.iortiewicz, life science, has indica ted he will&#13;
.. tile Faculty senate to place the item on its&#13;
...&#13;
Be said if the Senate doesn't consider it, the&#13;
-wee itself would have to investigate faculty&#13;
...... 18 to see if there is any stipulation stating&#13;
lietlIIUIlitteemust exist.&#13;
Clouding the issue more, and possihly&#13;
)IIpudizing the legality of the dissolution, is a&#13;
.... e to the right of the five students to sit on&#13;
lieCGIIUIlittee.Allen Dearborn, Dean of Students,&#13;
~11eUerto Gasiorkiewicz pointed out the selection&#13;
• tbe .ludent members was not done in the way&#13;
IpIdfiecI by faculty documents.&#13;
Facultydocument No.9 states the president of&#13;
llelludent government and the president of the&#13;
IlIdent union (an office which presently doesn't&#13;
- are automatically members of the comIIIIlBe,&#13;
whilea third memher is to be chosen in a&#13;
...-.J election by the student body.&#13;
1'be other two student members are to be&#13;
by Man T1mpany&#13;
" tileNewscope sta If&#13;
D.~~ recent dismissals of five&#13;
;,: .. ide facUlty was one of the&#13;
....I~ disCussed at the May 12&#13;
D1eetlng of the Executive&#13;
~OD1mittee of the Parks ide&#13;
ba~ty AsSOCiation. The P.F .A.&#13;
requested a mora torium on&#13;
"'orr 0" 1I011-renewa/s&#13;
See page 3&#13;
lUdI actions until acceptable ~I~-&#13;
,,--"""'for faculty review had&#13;
...... adopted. 1Ili't P.F .A. Executive Comfro&#13;
moved, "That a letter&#13;
Assm .tb~ Parkside Faculty&#13;
~I~hon be sent to the&#13;
II hve Committees of the&#13;
IlUDlanties and Science&#13;
Iy i .&#13;
~ons expressing&#13;
"dis .m~nt with their actions&#13;
ill ViewIlIisslng faCUlty members&#13;
!Plir of the lack of faculty&#13;
~ed evaluation criteria.&#13;
IIIat ,the letter will request&#13;
the Executive Committees&#13;
. selected by the Chancelior from a panel of six&#13;
prepared by Student Government.&#13;
What happened instead was that Student&#13;
Gover?men~ submitted a list of five students to the&#13;
comml~tee Itself at the last meeting. They were&#13;
recognized as provisional members of the committee.&#13;
until such time when the requirements&#13;
governing these positions could be met.&#13;
The intent behind this action was to allow the&#13;
committee to officially begin to function with&#13;
student representation .&#13;
The cce, after discussing the "Dissolution&#13;
Resolution". for more than two hours, adjourned&#13;
before considering the issue raised by Dearborn in&#13;
his letter.&#13;
The resolution was placed before the committee&#13;
after it voted to suspend its regular order of&#13;
business. The committee soon after voted to ternporarily&#13;
form into a comIJlittee of the whole in order&#13;
that students present might give their views.&#13;
The crux of the student arguments was that the&#13;
committee was used to repress students, that&#13;
students have their natural right to govern their&#13;
own affairs, and that the committee serves 00 real&#13;
purpose since its functions have been, or can be,&#13;
absorbed by student government, and the Office of&#13;
Student Affairs.&#13;
A student, Dave denHartig, argued, "I think&#13;
repression exists just in the way the committee is&#13;
set up. The.re are seven faculty members. five&#13;
students and the Dean of Students. That's an 11-5&#13;
ratio.&#13;
"If I were sitting on this committee." he continued,&#13;
"I'd make a motion that we set up a c0ncerns&#13;
committee to deal with faculty problems .&#13;
Except it would be eigbt students and five faculty&#13;
members."&#13;
Madeleine Thielen, a member of the committee,&#13;
said, "It seems that the cec has come into&#13;
existence with a grand spurt because student&#13;
government has come into existence."&#13;
Joseph Balsano, life science, objected to this.&#13;
He pointed out the committee had met previously tn&#13;
the year, and had, in fact, arbitrated the con-&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
-&#13;
Led by Alaska Senator Mike&#13;
Gravel, an attempt to kill the&#13;
draft by filibuster is underway&#13;
with support from a diverse&#13;
group of other sena tors. A&#13;
coalition 01 peace groups has&#13;
organized a lobby to support the&#13;
senator's actions.&#13;
They are asking that lobbying&#13;
activities, including letters,&#13;
wires, phone calls and cormng to&#13;
Washington, be focused on the&#13;
final three weeks of June, when&#13;
the first vote to cut 011 debate is&#13;
expected.&#13;
The filibuster aims to talk the&#13;
2-year draft extension bill CH.R.&#13;
6530 to death by preventinl! it&#13;
from coming to a vote, leavmg&#13;
the present draft authorization&#13;
to expire on June 30th.&#13;
The move requires support&#13;
from 34 senators to be effective;&#13;
and it can be stopped only by a&#13;
cloture vote to cut 011 debate.&#13;
Two-thirds, or 66 senators, are&#13;
needed to cut olf debate, and the&#13;
fU"St cloture vote will come up&#13;
sometime around the middle of&#13;
Summer comes la Par1t .. e&#13;
lo.l. eo_. JIl&#13;
June.&#13;
Exptration 01 ~ draft may&#13;
"the last chance bdore 0&#13;
1971" to get the . out 01 the&#13;
Vietnam war, accordIng to&#13;
Gravel. Endmg the draft would&#13;
cut olr the IimitJess upply 01&#13;
manpower whIch malt COIltinua&#13;
tion 01 the war pou,ble, be&#13;
reasoos.&#13;
PF A Calls For Moratorium&#13;
On Non-Renewals&#13;
Gravel Leads Attempt To&#13;
Filibuster Draft Extension&#13;
The filibuster is being used&#13;
because anti-war senalor&#13;
cannot must the 51 votes&#13;
necessary for outrighl defeat 0(&#13;
the draft&#13;
The sena tors pn!SeI1t1y allied&#13;
with Gravel are: William&#13;
Proxmire &lt;D.-Wis), Alan&#13;
Cranston ID.-ealif.), Vance&#13;
Hartke lD.-Ind.), Marlow Cook&#13;
CR.-Ky.), and Harold Hughes&#13;
CO.-Iowa). Coordinator 01 the&#13;
steering committee for the anti·&#13;
draft coalition is Ann Pallie.&#13;
Approximately 88 per cent 01&#13;
young men in front-line active&#13;
combat duty in Vietnam are&#13;
draftees_&#13;
immediately rescind the termina&#13;
tion decisions pending the&#13;
consideration by the Parkside&#13;
faculty of the criteria developed&#13;
by the Committee on Personnel&#13;
Policy, in view of the fact tha t&#13;
there is time vto delay these&#13;
decisions while waiting for&#13;
criteria to be adopted."&#13;
The motion was passed by the&#13;
Executive Committee and&#13;
sixteen members of the P.F.A&#13;
present at the meeting. It has&#13;
since been adopted by a&#13;
majority vote of the membership&#13;
of the P.F .A. The letter&#13;
is now being drafted.&#13;
Regent Gordon WaIker, a t a&#13;
raIly last December, referred. to&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie'S ten pomt&#13;
program of December 10, 1970,&#13;
as a Magna Charta for the&#13;
students. Published criteria for&#13;
faculty review was on~ of&#13;
Wyllie'S promises at that ~~&#13;
There is as yet no orgaruz&#13;
student reaction to .the rece~&#13;
faculty dismisS8;1s .m the a&#13;
sence of such cntena.&#13;
"Journalism is literature in a hurry" -Mathe!! :~~e;:sity of W isconsin-P arksidt ~,'!E!t'e@epa MAY 24, 1971&#13;
Assemblymen&#13;
On Merger&#13;
Pa&#13;
CCC Votes To Recommend&#13;
Its Own Dissolution&#13;
by Marc Eisen of The Newscope Staff&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee will no&#13;
r exist - if the members of the committee&#13;
1-e their way. TheY voted last Friday, 6-1, to recommend to&#13;
Ille Faculty Senate that the CCC be dissolved&#13;
t,ecau.se Student Government no~ fills the needs&#13;
(ormerly provided by that committee.&#13;
The committee did this after rejecting another&#13;
inn of the resolution that said, in addition, the&#13;
((llllllittee should be dissolved because it has been&#13;
med as a repressive instrument by the ad-&#13;
. · tration.&#13;
The "Dissolution Resolution", as it was called,&#13;
sponsored by Luddite members of the comttee,&#13;
Ian MacTaggart, Edmund Gilday, and&#13;
Madeleine Thielen. The three are among the five&#13;
rettnt student appointments to the committee.&#13;
Toe other students, Dennis Cashion and Student&#13;
Government President Tim Eaker, were absent&#13;
!run the meeting.&#13;
The unanswered question is now what is the&#13;
tus of the committee since it urged its own&#13;
abolition but lacks the power to accomplish it by&#13;
. Chairman of the committee, Eugene&#13;
orkiewicz, life science, has indicated he will&#13;
the Faculty Senate to place the item on its&#13;
enda.&#13;
He said if the Senate doesn't consider it, the&#13;
canmittee itself would have to investigate faculty&#13;
6&gt;cuments to see if there is any stipulation stating&#13;
committee must exist.&#13;
Clouding the issue more, and possibly&#13;
~rdizing the legality of the dissolution, is a&#13;
cballenge to the right of the five students to sit on&#13;
committee. Allen Dearborn, Dean of Students,&#13;
a letter to Gasiorkiewicz pointed out the selection&#13;
ri the tudent members was not done in the way&#13;
ll'Cified by faculty documents.&#13;
Faculty document No. 9 states the president of&#13;
student government and the president of the&#13;
lllident union (an office which presently doesn't&#13;
l are automatically members of the comwhile&#13;
a third member is to be chosen in a&#13;
ra1 election by the student body.&#13;
The other two student members are to be&#13;
, selected by the Chancellor from a panel oC&#13;
prepared by Student Government.&#13;
What happened instead was that Student&#13;
Government submitted a list of five students to the&#13;
commi~tee itself at the last meeting. They were&#13;
recognized as provisional members of the committee.&#13;
until such time when the requirements&#13;
goverrung these positions could be met.&#13;
The intent behind this action was to allow the&#13;
committee to officially begin to function with&#13;
student representation.&#13;
The CCC, after discussing the "Dissolution&#13;
Resolution". for more than two hours, adjourned&#13;
before considering the issue raised by Dearborn in&#13;
his letter.&#13;
The resolution was placed before the committee&#13;
after it voted to suspend its regular order of&#13;
business. The committee soon after voted to temporarily&#13;
form into a committee of the whole in order&#13;
that students present might give their \iews.&#13;
The crux of the student arguments was that the&#13;
committee was used to repress students. that&#13;
students have their natural right to govern their&#13;
own affairs, and that the committee serves no real&#13;
purpose since its functions have been, or can be,&#13;
absorbed by student government, and the Office of&#13;
Student Affairs.&#13;
A student, Dave denHartig, argued, " I think&#13;
repression exists just in the way the committee i&#13;
set up. There are seven faculty mem 1v&#13;
students and the Dean of Students. That's an 8-5&#13;
ratio.&#13;
"If I were sitting on this committee," he con·&#13;
tinued, "I'd make a motion that we set up a concerns&#13;
committee to deal with faculty problems.&#13;
Except it would be eight students and five faculty&#13;
members."&#13;
Madeleine Thielen, a member of the committee,&#13;
said, "It seems that the CCC has come into&#13;
existence with a grand spurt because student&#13;
government has come into existence."&#13;
Joseph Balsano, life science, objected. to ~ - He pointed out the committee had met preVIously m&#13;
the year, and had, in fact, arbitrated the con-&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
m&#13;
PF A Calls For Moratorium&#13;
On Non-Renewals&#13;
Gravel Lead Atte&#13;
by Mark Timpany&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
The recent dismissals of five&#13;
Pa~kside faculty was one of the&#13;
topic~ discussed at the May 12&#13;
meeting of the Executive&#13;
~0mmittee of the Parkside&#13;
~~ulty Association. The P .F .A.&#13;
requested a moratorium on&#13;
More on non-renewals&#13;
See page 3&#13;
~~h _actions until acceptable bee ena for faculty review had&#13;
n adopted.&#13;
rni~e P .F .A. Executive Comfro&#13;
ee moved, "That a letter&#13;
As~ _th~ Parkside Faculty Ex oci~tion be sent to the&#13;
Ii ecutive Committees of the&#13;
D ~~~n!ies and Science&#13;
dis 1s1ons expressing&#13;
in i~m~nt with their actions&#13;
In Vi rtliss1ng faculty members&#13;
ap r ew of the lack of faculty&#13;
~~Ved evaluation criteria.&#13;
that ther, the letter will request&#13;
e Executive Committees&#13;
immediately rescind ~e termination&#13;
decisions pending !,he&#13;
consideration by the Parkside&#13;
faculty of the criteria developed by the Committee on Personnel&#13;
Policy, in view of the fact that&#13;
there is time .to delay these&#13;
decisions while waiting for&#13;
criteria to be adopted." The motion was passed by the&#13;
Executive Committee and&#13;
sixteen members of the P .F .A&#13;
present at the meeting. It has&#13;
since been adopted by a&#13;
majority vote of the membership&#13;
of the p .F .A. The letter&#13;
is now being drafted.&#13;
Regent Gordon Walker, at a&#13;
rally last December, referred_ to&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie's te~ point&#13;
program of December 10, 1970,&#13;
as a Magna Charta. fo~ the&#13;
students. Published cntena for&#13;
faculty review was on~ of&#13;
Wyllie's promises at that ~e.&#13;
There is as yet no orgaruzed&#13;
student reaction to . the rece:&#13;
faculty dismis~ls .m the a&#13;
sence of such cntena.&#13;
Filibuster Draf&#13;
Led by Ala a nator 1i&#13;
Gravel, an attempl to ill&#13;
draft by hlibu ter · und. I'\\ y&#13;
with support from a di ·&#13;
group of other ena to -. coalition of peace grou ha&#13;
organized a lobby to upport&#13;
senator's actions. They are a ing that lobb)ing&#13;
activities, including letter·,&#13;
wires, phone calls and coming to&#13;
Washington, be focused on the&#13;
final three week of June, w en&#13;
the first vote to cut off d bate ·&#13;
expected.&#13;
The filib~ter aims to talk the&#13;
2-year draft extension bill ~H.~. 6531) to death by preventin~ 1t&#13;
from coming to a vote, leaving the present draft authorization&#13;
to expire on June 30th. The move requires support&#13;
from 34 senators to be effective;&#13;
and it can be stopped only by a&#13;
clob.lre vote to cut off debate.&#13;
Two-thirds, or fi6 senators are&#13;
needed to cutoff debate, and the&#13;
first cloture vote v.ill come up&#13;
sometime around the middle of&#13;
D••&#13;
t&#13;
5 &#13;
... 11,1171&#13;
SIIPPO"&#13;
YOIIr Local&#13;
LIIWIbtr Yam&#13;
pnme&#13;
The way&#13;
to buy the&#13;
insurance&#13;
you need&#13;
but may&#13;
feel you&#13;
can't&#13;
afford.&#13;
For Further&#13;
In/ormation Coli:&#13;
JOHII J. SCHfl'ITZ&#13;
152-4020&#13;
.. n. c.. ,on btl ••&#13;
r--------------, Jdm J. Schmitz I&#13;
612 15th Place I&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140 I&#13;
Yn. I em Inleresled In&#13;
getting further Infor·&#13;
melion on "PRIME."&#13;
..... I&#13;
-.-- I&#13;
ClTY _&#13;
LlTATt %1' _ _&#13;
HOXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY&#13;
STORE&#13;
302 Green Bay Rd,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
634-1536&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
LETTERSTQ&#13;
To the Edllol": .&#13;
The purpose of this letter is to&#13;
express openly to both students&#13;
and faculty our deep concern&#13;
over Ibe non-renewal of the&#13;
contract of Mr. Darrell&#13;
Douglas, Assistant Professor,&#13;
UW-P Music Departmenl. We&#13;
reel in a case such as this, that&#13;
ev,;,y means possible must ~&#13;
utilized in order that this&#13;
serious injustice to both Mr.&#13;
Douglas and the music students&#13;
themselves may be known and&#13;
rectified.&#13;
We know of no olber educator&#13;
held in a position of such high&#13;
es teem by virtually every&#13;
student in his department, as IS&#13;
the case with Mr. Douglas. Tbe&#13;
sincere respect and admiration&#13;
lelt lor him both within and&#13;
without the department is&#13;
clearly apparent and could not&#13;
be more deservedly so. The fact&#13;
that in his six years here he has&#13;
averaged a 25 credit hour&#13;
teaching load, while the school&#13;
average is between 12 and 15&#13;
would attest to his sincerity and&#13;
dedication. As for his competency&#13;
and ability as a&#13;
teacher, every student who has&#13;
ever been fortunate to have&#13;
You Ow. It&#13;
to&#13;
Yourself&#13;
to Drink&#13;
FRESH&#13;
BEERDrink.&#13;
, ,&#13;
Budweiser..&#13;
RINaOf" .UItS&#13;
been in one of his classes will&#13;
leU you that it is far beyond&#13;
questioning.&#13;
Wben we inquired as to ·tbe&#13;
reasons for his non-renewal, we&#13;
were told that he had not heen&#13;
publishing enough and had not&#13;
yet completed work on his Ph&gt;&#13;
D. Concerning his Ph.D, we&#13;
know of extenuating circumstances,&#13;
that through no&#13;
lault of Mr. Douglas, have&#13;
delayed the awarding of his&#13;
doctorate until, at the latest, tbe&#13;
fall of Ibis year. And as we see&#13;
it, publishing is not a maj~r&#13;
contributing factor to his&#13;
teaching effectiveness, which&#13;
is, above all, his primary 0bjective.&#13;
We believe in the importance&#13;
of our education and we know&#13;
that men like Mr. Douglas are&#13;
essential 00 us in achieving that&#13;
end. But when a man of his&#13;
calibre is dismissed, we cannot&#13;
belp wondering if the students&#13;
are the only ones so concerned.&#13;
Finally, we feel that in order&#13;
to have an accurate teacher&#13;
evaluation, it must come as the&#13;
result of a combined facultystudent&#13;
body effort, In this case,&#13;
we cannot help but leel that the&#13;
wisbes 0( the sludenb&#13;
!t'v~n the importance ...,.. ..&#13;
if, In fact, such w'S&#13;
considered at all. IShes ~&#13;
We are asking YOU .&#13;
name of any honor0 .. Ill!&#13;
claim are the b~val ... ,.,&#13;
universi ty, to re~e cI ....&#13;
Douglas' contract in "lit&#13;
we and future stUdllrdot tI1I(&#13;
benefit from him. enta "'"&#13;
MUSic~&#13;
NationalCoor '-'&#13;
U.W.Parksideo,'::&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Poet-philosopher K&#13;
Gunderson was not still&#13;
by the Humanities OJ """""-&#13;
reported in the ~.&#13;
Calendar. The Parksid p..,.&#13;
. Forum was able to b~ ...,&#13;
young poet to UWp&#13;
=&#13;
Iloo&#13;
help of Student Activitilo'"&#13;
the cooperation of the Dao.-&#13;
Students. (&#13;
====CAMPUSEVENTS====~a&#13;
ThaEb,&#13;
A.Ma..&#13;
Monday. May 24&#13;
Tennis. NAJA Regional in&#13;
Whitewater. Also May 25.&#13;
Meeting. Milwaukee Circuit·&#13;
Court Judge Robert Landry&#13;
will speak on "Criminal&#13;
Delays in the Criminal Court&#13;
System." Sponsored by the&#13;
Pre-Law Club. 7:30 p.m. Rom&#13;
Dill. Greenquist Hall.&#13;
5021 30lh Ave.&#13;
K Et-!OSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Open 6 Doys a Week From 4 p.m.,. Closed Mondays&#13;
but you&#13;
know that!!!&#13;
• • •&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
ALSC&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE • • •&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
In sound equipment, plus over 3,000Albums&#13;
and -tS's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop In and blow your mind, not your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark. our&#13;
Department Mariager, who Is a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk yoUr' language, both In&#13;
equipment purchases, records and mciney.&#13;
SONY - Tape recorders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
PANASONIC - Radio. TV. Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
KOSS - Headsets&#13;
KENWOOD - Receivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANTZ - Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC - Speakers&#13;
J.8.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C, - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD ,- Turntables&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories Whil&#13;
are here, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and .Glf~ you&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's lowest prices. .at.&#13;
Thursday, May 27&#13;
Dr. Myron Kaufman, chief&#13;
transplant surgeon at&#13;
Milwaukee County General&#13;
Hospital, will speak. Sponsored&#13;
by Pre-Law Club. 8&#13;
p.m., Room 101. Greenqusit&#13;
HI!.&#13;
Friday, May 28&#13;
Dance. "Bulldog Harry" 9 p.m.&#13;
to 1 a.m, Student Activities&#13;
Building. Parks ide and&#13;
Wisconsin O.D. 's required..&#13;
Admission: $1.00&#13;
The Grievance and Clearing&#13;
House Committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Senate will&#13;
hold a public meeting at 10: 30&#13;
a.m. Friday, May 28, in room&#13;
D105 Greenquisl. Persons interested&#13;
in pro"'ll1I&#13;
grievances to the St_&#13;
Sena te and studenb in!enllol&#13;
In becommg voting members&#13;
the committee are invited :&#13;
attend.&#13;
Saturday, Mayll&#13;
Track. UW-P [nvilttiCllll&#13;
Tremper High Scbo1l,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Dance. 9-1 p.m. StudEltAttivities&#13;
Building. W*,-&#13;
and Parkside I.D.' nqIirIl&#13;
During the period JlIIlef.ll,&#13;
1971, (Final Examinalicll&#13;
the regular inter-aqll&#13;
buses and shuttle bus will III&#13;
operating as usual.&#13;
r:.;snc:ss· .i jjj::iXF C&#13;
Newscope •&#13;
BUSINESS PHONES&#13;
658-4111,Ed&#13;
lIMJI&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
W"!'"en Nedry Editor&#13;
Marc Eisen News Editor&#13;
John Koloen Copy Editor&#13;
Jim Nolan Business Manager&#13;
John Leighton Advertising&#13;
Manager&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, Bill Sorensen, BiB&#13;
Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Dean Loumos, Mike&#13;
Kurth, Bob Borchardt, Ken&#13;
Konkol, Kevin McKay, James&#13;
Casper, Paul Lomartire, Sven&#13;
Taffs.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Narees Socha, Don Marjala, John&#13;
Gary, Barbara Scoll.&#13;
Newscope is an ~&#13;
student newspaper compaoll&#13;
students of The Univlt1lllWisconsin-Parkside&#13;
pdiIlII&#13;
weekly except during.'''":&#13;
periods. Student oblJmoI&#13;
vertising funds are tilt ..&#13;
source of revenue r« .,&#13;
.operation of New~ ';:&#13;
copies are prmted&#13;
distri buted throughOU'':&#13;
KenoS"ha and RaCine&#13;
munities as well as tilt t;:&#13;
sity. Free copies are IV&#13;
upon request.&#13;
--.... -. ----&#13;
Pa eJ&#13;
Support&#13;
a H, lt71&#13;
HOXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY&#13;
STORE&#13;
LETTERS.TO&#13;
Your Local&#13;
Lumber Yard&#13;
bu ufJodm dou els&#13;
302 Green Bay Rd,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
634-1536&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
You Owe It&#13;
to&#13;
Yourself&#13;
to Drink&#13;
FRESH&#13;
BEER&#13;
Drink •••&#13;
Budweiser.&#13;
KING Of 9[£11S&#13;
To the Editor: . The purpose of this letter 1s to&#13;
express openly to both students&#13;
and faculty our deep concern&#13;
over the non-renewal of the&#13;
contract of Mr. Darrell&#13;
Douglas, Assistant Professor,&#13;
uw-P Music Department. We&#13;
feel in a case such as this, that&#13;
eve~ means possible must ~ utilized in order that this&#13;
serious injustice to both Mr.&#13;
Douglas and the music students&#13;
themselves may be known and&#13;
rectified.&#13;
We know of no other educator&#13;
held in a position of such high&#13;
esteem by virtually ever_y student in his department, as 1s&#13;
the case with Mr. Douglas. The&#13;
sincere respect and admiration&#13;
felt for him both within and&#13;
without the department is&#13;
clearly apparent and could not&#13;
be more deservedly so. The fact&#13;
that in his six years here he has&#13;
averaged a 25 credit hour&#13;
teaching load, while the school&#13;
average is between 12 and 15&#13;
would attest to his sincerity and&#13;
dedication. As for his competency&#13;
and ability as a&#13;
teacher, every student who has&#13;
ever been fortunate to have&#13;
been in one of his classes will&#13;
tell you that it is far beyond&#13;
questioning. When we inquired as to the&#13;
reasons for his non-renewal, we&#13;
were told that he had not been&#13;
publishing enough and had not&#13;
yet completed work on his Ph.-&#13;
D. Concerning his Ph.D, we&#13;
know of extenuating circumstances,&#13;
that through no&#13;
fault of Mr. Douglas, have&#13;
delayed the awarding of his&#13;
doctorate until, at the latest, the&#13;
fall of this year. And as we see&#13;
it, publishing is not a maj~r&#13;
contributing factor to his&#13;
teaching effectiveness, which&#13;
is, above all, his primary objective.&#13;
We believe in the importance&#13;
of our education and we know&#13;
that men like Mr. Douglas are&#13;
essential to us in achieving that&#13;
end. But when a man of his&#13;
calibre is dismissed, we cannot&#13;
help wondering if the students&#13;
are the only ones so concerned.&#13;
Finally, we feel that in order&#13;
to have an accurate teacher&#13;
evaluation, it must come as the&#13;
result of a combined faculty- student body effort. In this case,&#13;
we cannot help but feel that the&#13;
wishes of the stude&#13;
~v~n the importan: We~&#13;
if, m fact, such w· ~ - considered at all. 18hes&#13;
We are asking&#13;
name of any honor /OU In&#13;
claim are the b r_valu~&gt; . . asts &lt;i umvers1ty to D gl , ' renew 1.,_&#13;
ou as contract in "ll'&#13;
we and future stud order&#13;
benefit from him. ents&#13;
The way&#13;
to buy the&#13;
insurance&#13;
you need&#13;
but may&#13;
feel you&#13;
can't&#13;
afford.&#13;
====CAMPUS EVENTS===,,..&#13;
For Further&#13;
Information Coll:&#13;
JOHN J. SCHP!CITZ&#13;
652-4020&#13;
tr uu coupon below&#13;
r--------------, Jclm J. Schmitz I&#13;
612 15th Ploce I&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140 I 1&#13;
Yet, I am interesied In&#13;
gettlng further lnlor·&#13;
m11lon on "PRIME."&#13;
NAME __ _&#13;
A00IIESS_&#13;
CITY ___ _&#13;
STATE ___ ZIP___ J L----_.... _______ ..J&#13;
• • • but you&#13;
know that! ! !&#13;
ALSC&#13;
Monday, May 24&#13;
Tennis. NAIA Regional in&#13;
Whitewater. Also May 25.&#13;
Meeting. Milwaukee Circuit&#13;
Court Judge Robert Landry&#13;
will speak on " Criminal&#13;
Delays in the Criminal Court&#13;
System." Sponsored by the&#13;
Pre-Law Club. 7:30 p.m. Rom&#13;
D111. Greenquist Hall.&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KE~OSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Open 6 Days o Week From 4 p.m.,_ Closed Mondays&#13;
QRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE • • •&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
In sound equipment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
and ~·s at discount prices.&#13;
Stop In and blow your mind, not your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, our&#13;
Department Manager, who Is a Parkside&#13;
student and wlll talk your language, both In&#13;
equipment purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY - Tape recorders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
K&#13;
PA0 N5 ASONIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
S - Headsets&#13;
KENWOOD - Receivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANTZ - Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC - Speakers&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.y.c. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntables&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories wh·1&#13;
are here, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and -G:f~ ~:~ ~ Southeastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
Thursday, May 27&#13;
Dr. Myron Kaufman, chief&#13;
transplant surgeon at&#13;
Milwaukee County General&#13;
Hospital, will speak. Sponsored&#13;
by Pre-Law Club. 8&#13;
p.m., Room 101. Greenqusit&#13;
Hll.&#13;
Friday, May 28&#13;
Dance. "Bulldog Harry" 9 p.m.&#13;
to 1 a.m. Student Activities&#13;
Building. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin O.D.'s required. Admission: $1.00&#13;
The Grievance and Clearing House Committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Senate will&#13;
hold a public meeting at 10:30&#13;
a.m. Friday, May 28, in room&#13;
D105 Greenquist. Persons inWarren&#13;
Nedry Editor&#13;
Marc Eisen News Editor&#13;
John Koloen Copy Editor&#13;
Jim Nolan Business Manager&#13;
John Leighton Advertising&#13;
Manager&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, Bill Sorensen, Bill&#13;
Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Dean Loumos, Mike&#13;
Kurth, Bob Borchardt, Ken&#13;
Konkol, Kevin McKay, James&#13;
Casper, Paul Lomartire, Sven&#13;
Taffs.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Narees Socha, Don Marjala, John&#13;
Gary, Barbara Scott.&#13;
te~ested in presen grievances to the Stu&#13;
~nate and students int , m becomin~ voting members&#13;
the committee are imiled ID&#13;
attend.&#13;
Saturday, May?t&#13;
Track. UW-P InvilaU&#13;
Tremper High Sch&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Dance. 9-1 p.m. Studeot&#13;
tivities Building. W1&#13;
and Parkside I.D.' requittd&#13;
During the period June 4-1&#13;
1971, (Final Examinatioos&#13;
the regular inter-ca!DIU&#13;
buses and shuttle bus will&#13;
operating as usual.&#13;
BUSINE~ PHONES&#13;
658-4861, Ext I&#13;
Newscope is an ind&#13;
student newspaper com~&#13;
students of The Univ&#13;
Wisconsin·Parkside&#13;
weekly except during_,;&#13;
periods. Student obt.a1ntd&#13;
vertising funds are lhe&#13;
source of revenue for&#13;
· operation of Newscopt. li&#13;
copies are printed&#13;
distributed throughou1 Kenosha and Racint&#13;
munities ·as well as the l:&#13;
sity. Free copies are 11&#13;
upon request.&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
• &#13;
THE EDITOR&#13;
Ibe Editor, ,&#13;
11 , Arthur M, Gruhl s&#13;
R"Le!ler of ,May 17,&#13;
Gruhl says that he adlit·a&#13;
rotten, hateflll"&lt;;l,article&#13;
,.ues describes as a candid&#13;
iblt ~tfUI weekly" called&#13;
,.d, Talk" about "Three&#13;
,.I~S 'dG"&#13;
IP ""Hooks' an oons,&#13;
~inlltheir environment as&#13;
de¢' lingtn!ally of "dirt, pot,&#13;
....... "and "lazy-do-nothing&#13;
II&lt;':.'~ as they laugh their way&#13;
.,. lb.ir "potted pads. and&#13;
to " I wonder If this IS&#13;
~ib1e, factual reporting.&#13;
• calling and unfounded&#13;
=ations, whether by a&#13;
hin Erdman, or Gruhl Ru t t •&#13;
'bUleS nethlng.&#13;
",,11'1 Patrick Nelson&#13;
11Ibe Editor:&#13;
When he was at Parkside,&#13;
Ifff'I Rubin spoke of an international&#13;
conspiracy with&#13;
clredion from Hanoi and said&#13;
.. sbOOldnot be ashamed of it.&#13;
/oJ Luddilies, operatmg at&#13;
Putside we are not.&#13;
AfewPeople were surprised&#13;
dill !bere was no official or&#13;
lIIDi-dficialresponse to the&#13;
IIlti-Ludditeletters appeanng&#13;
in the last few weeks issues of&#13;
Newscope, As a Luddite, Iview&#13;
theseletters as Luddite letters,&#13;
Luddites are interested in the&#13;
manipulation of media in&#13;
quantitative rather than&#13;
qualitative terms. A letter from&#13;
Art Gruhl is every bit as good as&#13;
a letter from George Melesky&#13;
I Would like to quote from t~&#13;
Firesign Theatre, in contrast to&#13;
the quotes last week from Jake&#13;
Erdman's death culture&#13;
column, "I'm not talking about&#13;
hate, I'm talking about eight.&#13;
Dinner at eight. Let's eat!" The&#13;
saccharine response to this is&#13;
of course, "More sugar!" •&#13;
Luddites role on this campus&#13;
has always been that' of a&#13;
Feenichts Playhouse, That&#13;
means you don't pay, We advocate&#13;
a free country. That&#13;
means you don't pay,&#13;
Luddites do not believe that&#13;
death is a refutation of life. The&#13;
only Marshall we shall support&#13;
is Marshall Mcl.uhan All power&#13;
to the imagination! There is no&#13;
freedom for the enemies of&#13;
freedom,&#13;
Verbosely yours,&#13;
Mark Timpany,&#13;
Luddite Conspira tor&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Let's not be ludicrous IDCI&#13;
verbose this time, We are&#13;
fortunate to have Mr, Arthur&#13;
Gruhl as a student at Parbide&#13;
if ~ly as an example of w&#13;
afn,cted with what Nietzche&#13;
terms consumption of the seal.&#13;
To explain this malady further&#13;
let us quote from TIl... S~&#13;
Zaratbustra.&#13;
"There are those with conswnption&#13;
of the soul: hanlly are&#13;
they burp when they begin to die&#13;
and to lbolt for the doctrines of&#13;
weariness and renunciation.&#13;
They would like to be dead, and&#13;
we should welcome their wish.&#13;
Let us beware of waking the&#13;
dead and disturbing these living&#13;
coffins!"&#13;
Perhaps Mr. GruhJ's affliction&#13;
is not irreparable. As a&#13;
first step in his possible&#13;
awakening, we suggest that be&#13;
begin to see that education goes&#13;
beyond satisfying the economic&#13;
interests of the University and&#13;
its capitalist superstructure.&#13;
The hopes of all the Luddites go&#13;
with you, Mr. Gruhl, for a&#13;
speedy recovery,&#13;
Sincerly,&#13;
Ian MacTaggart&#13;
1965, then the Kenosha Ex- chamber group in competition&#13;
ension of the Center System, he against the 11 other centers&#13;
'Nas the only full-time member system schools for the first&#13;
of the Music department, a time, his group placed second..&#13;
situation that continued for the The following year in that same&#13;
next two years. At that time the competion he entered four&#13;
Music department consisted of groups and captured the first&#13;
a 13 member choir, one student four places.&#13;
enrolled in Music theory. and no . Under his guidance by 1967&#13;
school band. By the end of his choral enrollment had in.&#13;
first year at UWK he had creased to over one hundred&#13;
Darrell Douglas:&#13;
Parkside's Architect&#13;
In Music&#13;
by Warren Nedry&#13;
and Bob Borchardt&#13;
Ytor's Note: The Humanities&#13;
Divisional Executive com·&#13;
IIIUee has voted not to renew&#13;
1ft toIltractof Darrell Douglas.&#13;
SfWICOpehas learned "there is&#13;
1101or politicalmaneuvering in&#13;
cHpluslcdepartment". Using&#13;
lewsclippings, timetables. a&#13;
porl conversation with&#13;
,refessor Douglas. and the&#13;
1eltlm000y of many students in&#13;
lIIe music department Ne.scope presents the r--------------------- "&#13;
.... wlDgarticle,&#13;
This article is intended to be&#13;
• ..ua documented history as&#13;
(IllIIibleof the background of&#13;
lIIrrelDouglasand his service&#13;
IDtbe university during his six&#13;
J!IJ'S with the institution.&#13;
1Ir, Douglas received his&#13;
bocheIorofScience degree from&#13;
IIIe Universityof Minnesota and&#13;
• MAfrom Arizona State at&#13;
Tempe, In 1965 he completed&#13;
tiftually all course-work&#13;
-ry for his Doctora te but&#13;
_Ihe aummerof that year, his&#13;
lredemicadvisor died. Due to&#13;
• _ficient staff at Southern&#13;
Cal. DOadvisor was available&#13;
.w 11167,&#13;
WithIhe cbange of an advisor L_...._!"" ~ ....~~-~~~~~::~"::::::':-::::~:::-::::::__:~&#13;
..... a corresponding change established a performing and the first Kenosha chapter of contact hours taught b)&#13;
.. coursew k R t . t concert band, increased the the National Music Educators Douglas compiled u n&#13;
_rn .... L Cal eve or, e urmng 0 chol'r to 47, initiat a secon ed d Conference was formed. In it's ti'melables from 1 to 1971&#13;
ry summer, .th bersh'p (The a"erage gem Ie.- eonllct .... the ' th se formed a I'nl'tia}year WI a mem I&#13;
-'.. exception of 1970, he musIc eory cour , mNC hour load at 'WP 12,15) llIalp1&lt;ted tbe' permanent pep band that of less than a dozen, ~=&#13;
IftrQrk in 1969reVlsededco~. performed at atheletic events, established an annual faU. ~ "'M_ ,pass t e and established several scholarship award program and 196$-U JO 3'&#13;
~ ... examinations, and s,'nce has increased it's mem- 1~ 30 30 ..... WlH'kon a d" t t' chamber groups, while spen- 27 _ lit lsser a lOn, t bership to 75 and has awarded 1967-68 _&#13;
"Peels to receive his PhD ding approximately 30 contac 1_ 30 30&#13;
"later tha thi f II hours Wl'th his students, 17 scholarships,&#13;
U n sa, Also ,'n 1967Douglas initiated 1969-70 -0 POnarrival in Kenosha in In 1966, entering a UWK&#13;
....... "''' ~.~".' , ~_;.; .. 1 • '" ...... "'. "-",... "c&#13;
You Owe It&#13;
to&#13;
Yourself&#13;
to Drink&#13;
FRESH&#13;
BEER&#13;
Drink ••&#13;
Budweisec.&#13;
lUNG0' eUM&#13;
"'laal Is il! • tWa .. _ ...... 1 to H. U l.t~ ..&#13;
WIs..... Io-P.rt&lt; rt '-"" \tart&lt; J... P.rt&lt; " ••&#13;
Radna (I.m 41RkUni L..... 41"- ".. K""", '"&#13;
dncribla&amp; 111m II s ,. fOOlmarat .. ~f ~ I H.aD .&#13;
""'Ie ..I t..".P. The I•• Mop. l lr ··pkter1.a1 .'" ~&#13;
coa~" .. AprU MI H it _ill eevee W n. brf4 We.&#13;
lhtoyarecoa lanll)addlalKW'MSe .nto q~ t.b~ ••• iLt'4 ..... \f&gt;&#13;
the IIMntl somethiDl f•• to 'I ... W ... * plat. • if&gt;&#13;
«meat block .. U~E,tor')OM'. rttS to: H\W ttl ,,"N. ,."an&#13;
andgreens eire .. tit. _ " andtIt.ld.. pre dia .. elller&#13;
.. ails 01 t.be room .-eU.&#13;
the annual v.riel) show.&#13;
established stage band competition.&#13;
served as chairman&#13;
of the Leelure-&lt;:on&lt;::ert sen ,&#13;
was a founding member oflhe&#13;
nivers.it)' of WlSCORSln .A.rb&#13;
Council, and had one of h&#13;
worl&lt;s published, a ~lled&#13;
"Simple GlflS"&#13;
The (ollowing is a conservatl\'e&#13;
eshmate of lhe&#13;
2&#13;
o&#13;
•&#13;
•1&#13;
•o&#13;
•2&#13;
1970-7' 20&#13;
GRADUATING?&#13;
i'Jell a 1'1,,' ad l!f&#13;
UNIVERSIT&#13;
(~BOOK STORE&#13;
THE EDITOR&#13;
the Editor, , toe· Arthur M. Gruhl s&#13;
R '1,etter of May 17.&#13;
Gruhl says that he adir.&#13;
rotten hatefilled article !lllresa b describeS ' " d'd as a can 1&#13;
1h11 ;oughtful weekly" called and , Talk" about "Three&#13;
•Let 5 ., "Hooks" and Goons", ms . t b·ng their environmen as&#13;
~ ti~g totally of "dirt, pot,&#13;
((t!Sl~x" and "lazy-do-nothing&#13;
fretlds" as they laugh their way&#13;
their "potted ~ads . an.d&#13;
to ., I wonder 1f this 1s&#13;
'-~ible, factual reporting.&#13;
e calling and unfounded&#13;
~:gations, whether by a&#13;
b·n Erdman, or Gruhl Ru 1 , • tributes nothing. cal Patrick Nelson&#13;
To the Edi tor:&#13;
When he was at Parksi~e,&#13;
Jerry Rubin spok~ of an .mroational&#13;
conspiracy with&#13;
mrection from Hanoi and said&#13;
,e should not be ashamE;d of it.&#13;
AS Luddities, operating at&#13;
Parkside, we are not. . A few people were surprised&#13;
that there was no official or&#13;
semi-official response to ~he&#13;
ti-Luddite letters appearmg&#13;
Edilor's Note: The Humanities&#13;
Divisional Executive commiltee&#13;
has voted not to renew&#13;
lht contract of Darrell Douglas.&#13;
:\tw cope has learned "there is&#13;
a lot of political maneuvering in&#13;
tJJlUSicdepartment". using&#13;
t11sclippings, timetables, a&#13;
ort conversation with&#13;
pro!essor Douglas, and the&#13;
1n1imony of many students in&#13;
lilt music department&#13;
St'liScope presents the&#13;
lowing article.&#13;
This article is intended to be&#13;
ell a documented history as&#13;
ible of the background of&#13;
Darrel Douglas and his service&#13;
the university during his six&#13;
J ars with the institution.&#13;
Ir, Douglas received his&#13;
chelor of Science degree from&#13;
University of Minnesota and&#13;
.tA from Arizona State at&#13;
T_ pe. In 1965 he completed&#13;
mtually all course-work&#13;
ry for his Doctorate but&#13;
the summer of that year, his&#13;
ICedemic advisor died. Due to&#13;
an ufficient staff at Southern&#13;
Cl!, no advisor was available&#13;
in the last few weeks issues of&#13;
Newscope. As a Luddite, I view&#13;
these letters as Luddite letters&#13;
Ludd.ites a~e interested in t~&#13;
manipulation of media in&#13;
qua~trt~tive rather than&#13;
quahtabv~ terms. A letter from&#13;
Art Gruhl 1s every bit as good as&#13;
a letter from George Metesky&#13;
.I w~uld like to quote from t~&#13;
F1res1gn Theatre, in contrast to&#13;
the quotes last week from Jake&#13;
Erdman's death culture&#13;
column. "I'm not talking about&#13;
hate. I'm talking about eight&#13;
Dinner at eight. Let's eat!" Th~&#13;
saccharine response to this is&#13;
of course, "More sugar!" '&#13;
Luddites role on this campus&#13;
has always been that · of a&#13;
Feenichts Playhouse. That&#13;
means you don't pay. We advocate&#13;
a free country. That&#13;
means you don't pay.&#13;
Luddites do not believe that&#13;
death is a refutation of life. The&#13;
only Marshall we shall support&#13;
is Marshall McLuhan. All power&#13;
to the imagination! There is no&#13;
freedom for the enemies of&#13;
freedom.&#13;
Verbosely yours,&#13;
Mark Timpany,&#13;
Luddite Conspirator&#13;
l965, then the Kenosha Exension&#13;
of the Center System, he&#13;
·Nas the only full-time member&#13;
of the Music department, a&#13;
situation that continued for the&#13;
next two years. At that time the&#13;
Music department consisted of&#13;
a 13 member choir, one student&#13;
enrolled in Music theory, and no&#13;
school band. By the end of his&#13;
first year at UWK he had&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Let's not be ludicrous and&#13;
verbose this time. We are&#13;
fortunate to have 1r. Arthur&#13;
~ruhl as a student at Parkside,&#13;
if ~nly as an example of one&#13;
afflicted with what 'ietzche&#13;
terms consumption of the soul&#13;
To explain this malady further&#13;
let us quote from Th ;&#13;
Zarathustra.&#13;
"There are those with consumption&#13;
of the soul: hardly are&#13;
they borp when they begin to die&#13;
and ½&gt; lbnR for the doctrines of&#13;
wearmess and renunciation.&#13;
They would like to be dead, and&#13;
we should welcome their ..., ish.&#13;
Let us beware of waking the&#13;
dead and disturbing these living coffins!"&#13;
Perhaps Mr. Gruhl' affliction&#13;
is not irreparable. As a&#13;
first step in his possible&#13;
awakening, we suggest that he&#13;
begin to see that education goes beyond satisfying the economic&#13;
interests of the niversity and&#13;
its capitalist superstructure.&#13;
The hopes of all the Luddite go&#13;
with you, 1r. Gruhl, for a&#13;
speedy recovery.&#13;
Sincerl_.&#13;
Ian facTaggart&#13;
chamber group in competition against the 11 other centers&#13;
system schools for the first&#13;
time, his group placed second.&#13;
The following year in that same&#13;
competion he entered four&#13;
groups and captured the first&#13;
four places.&#13;
Under his guidance b · 1967&#13;
choral enrollment had increased&#13;
to over one hundred&#13;
Darrell Douglas:&#13;
Parkside's Architect&#13;
In Music&#13;
by Warren Nedry&#13;
and Bob Borchardt&#13;
z&#13;
0&#13;
..&#13;
...&#13;
l&#13;
I:&#13;
0&#13;
...&#13;
z&#13;
ayH.1921&#13;
til 1967.&#13;
With the change of an advisor L--------------~~~-----~~~~----~--~~~-:'~ ame a corresponding change established a performing and the first Keno.5ha chapter f&#13;
coursework. Returning to concert band, increased the the National tusic Educators&#13;
rn Cal every summer, choir to 47, initiated a second Conference was formed . In it'&#13;
th the exception of 1970, he music theory course, formed a initial year with a membership&#13;
CO!llpleted the revised cour- permanent pep band that of less than a dozen, • IE. ·c ork. in 1969, passed the performed at atheletic events, established an annual lifymg examinations, and and established several scholarship award program and&#13;
n work on a dissertation. chamber groups, while spen- since has increased it' memla&#13;
expects to receive his PhD ding approximately 30 contact bership to 75 and has awarded&#13;
,, !er than this fall. hours with his students. 17 scholarships. "P00 arrival in Kenosha in In 1966, entering a UWK Also in 1967 Douglas initiated&#13;
.. ' ............ .&#13;
You Owe It&#13;
to&#13;
Yourself&#13;
to Drink&#13;
FRESH&#13;
BEER&#13;
Drink •••&#13;
Budweiser.&#13;
KJNG OF IIUJIS&#13;
• but you&#13;
know that! 11&#13;
GRADUAT&#13;
UNIVERSIT&#13;
BOOK STORE &#13;
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Open 7:30 a.m. - 8 p.m.&#13;
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ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS&#13;
Scholarship awards to be made at&#13;
graduation, June 12&#13;
A variety of awards available to&#13;
qualified students on basis of&#13;
G.P.A (at least 3.25)&#13;
and financial need.&#13;
Applications available at:&#13;
Tallent Information Center&#13;
Main Office Kenosha &amp; Racine campus&#13;
RETURN TO CHARLES KUGEL&#13;
BY MAY 28&#13;
FULL 4 ·PLY NYLON&#13;
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657·9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
Keith Gunderson:~&#13;
by Jim Koloen dungeon, as the war .&#13;
ollheNewscopeStafl came '?"t syllable to ~I~&#13;
Have you ever seen a poet a traffic Jam. He rere y table io&#13;
almost running out of breath, poems and prose I'redlo""&#13;
his larynx running. over a "rhy.l!.'m .(lOems" :,,", ..&#13;
crosscountry course set In mea rung IS sometim ere tht&#13;
rhythm poems, or a poet the rhythm. Seemin es lost II&#13;
reading a poem on fis~ng ~nd unwritten music th g set to III&#13;
throwing his line out while doing read in a singing'vot floet &lt;tte.&#13;
it while simultaneously rm- a flowing river alce&#13;
, creath..&#13;
, ? the-' prisoned in a dungeon. Jams. He threw a few ~&#13;
Lucky 13 was the number of concrete poems on ~~&#13;
people who can answer yes, I which Iwas stupid eno e ~&#13;
have seen, I have heard, yes I copy down and therefo~!lOt1o&#13;
am one of the chosen, I was reproduce here Of c C&amp;JIIat&#13;
there. poet-Philosopher Keith of you were stupid en"Jrse, ......&#13;
Gunderson held a reading at come to the dungeon&lt;&gt;ugh !lOt10&#13;
7:30, no 7:35, no 7:45, in RO&lt;!m vie. ., SO,If: II&#13;
101, no lOlD in Greenqwst The poet read in a&#13;
Wednesday night and nobody shaky voice for an h som"",*&#13;
came. . tuating the reading w:' ......&#13;
Keith Gunderson IS a young, hand went up to ne~l&#13;
blond haired, dark eyed, stocky, questions and just ta~IlI'"&#13;
student·looking North Country poetry in general. Near lbooa&#13;
poet and profe~sor of philosophy ~f the reading he Pres:: tid&#13;
at the UniverSIty of Mmnesota. color poem" which be ted I&#13;
His mouth barely opened that called a "merry. ...&#13;
night, in the near empty poem", the concept w::-~&#13;
YOUTHPOWER Announces&#13;
Registration and Clinic&#13;
Numbers, etc.)&#13;
B. John Beige, Assist...&#13;
Employment Manager of thr S&#13;
C. Johnson &amp; Son, will dIoaa&#13;
the attitude which youngP"IIt&#13;
should be considenng wIiIt&#13;
summer job hunting, pi.. ~&#13;
right and wrong ways of •&#13;
plying for summer jobs.&#13;
C. Mary Husby, PenGlllll&#13;
Secretary of the J. L C.&#13;
Company will talk about ...&#13;
grooming and appearanee 8Ir&#13;
comments will be directed •&#13;
both young men and wlllllOlllll&#13;
will cover the grooming k",.&#13;
success.&#13;
YOUTHPOWER will hold its&#13;
registration and Clinic at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside-Racine, Saturday,&#13;
June 5. The Registration and&#13;
Clinic will operate continually&#13;
from 9:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon for&#13;
youths ages 16-21.&#13;
The Clinic will feature a&#13;
training session for young&#13;
people looking for summer&#13;
work. Itwill also give those that&#13;
were signed up last year an&#13;
opportunity to r .. register. All&#13;
that will be necessary is to&#13;
check and make a notation on&#13;
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Schedule&#13;
1 Registration.&#13;
2. 'Special Gift given at the&#13;
session "Right Start in the&#13;
Business World".&#13;
Clinic&#13;
1. Right Start in the Business&#13;
World. .&#13;
A. M. M. Michael Connolly,&#13;
Director of Corporate Personnel&#13;
and Industrial Relation&#13;
Service at Western Publishing&#13;
will talk abou t the job interview:&#13;
what information&#13;
young people should be&#13;
prepared to offer (resumes,&#13;
references, Social Security&#13;
Registration for new .,.&#13;
plicants and those •&#13;
registered with Youtbpooer&#13;
last year will check in for It'&#13;
registering. Those woo atlllll&#13;
Clinics will be given flrlt ..&#13;
.opportunities. Please ..&#13;
register at the Clinic.&#13;
This summer in RaciDf.&#13;
Youthpower will be ope!! J.&#13;
7th througb August 27th .,.&#13;
9: 00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Theallit&#13;
will be located at 222Nt&#13;
Street and the lelel'l*'&#13;
numbers are 637-5461and 17-&#13;
5822.&#13;
This Space For Sale&#13;
Phone 652-41777&#13;
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House Committee of the&#13;
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'will hold a public mee~ng&#13;
at 10:30 a.m. Friday, MaY&#13;
28 in room 0105 Greel1-.&#13;
quist. Persons interested&#13;
becoming votingmember5" ... on the committee or Phi&#13;
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Jo~ep Y 4437 - 22nd Ave•&#13;
WEST SIDE.&#13;
SWEET&#13;
SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 o.m. till 11 p.m.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97 47&#13;
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS&#13;
Scholarship awards to be made at&#13;
graduation, June 12&#13;
A variety of awards available to&#13;
qualified students on basis of&#13;
G.P.A (at least 3.25)&#13;
and financial need.&#13;
Applications available at:&#13;
Tallent Information Center&#13;
Main Office Kenosha &amp; Racine campus&#13;
RETURN TO CHARLES KUGEL&#13;
BY MAY 28&#13;
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Monday - Friday&#13;
Saturday io 5 p.m.&#13;
• '&#13;
•1-._, ___ __ _ ..,.. __ • __ w lllllldld ~ pau the mtire b.d "'",_.,...._ __&#13;
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FULL 4-PLY NYLON&#13;
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Open 8:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.&#13;
Monday - Friday&#13;
Saturdij~ to s p.m.&#13;
PANCAKE HOUSE&#13;
RHTAURANT&#13;
SundaJ - Thursday&#13;
6 - Midnight&#13;
Fridn:y - Saturday&#13;
6 - 3 A.M.&#13;
-3619 30 AVE . _&#13;
PANCAKES&#13;
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111 Four Si&amp;es 9'" • ·12" • 14" • 16 ..&#13;
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• RIIS • SPAGHOTI • CHICKEN&#13;
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CAltlY-OUTS . DELIVERY "YOU •IHG .. , . Wf HIN"''&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
Keith Gunderson: A&#13;
by Jim Koloen dungeon, as the wo ds&#13;
of the Newscope Staff came out syllable tor I QUi&#13;
Have you ever seen a poet a traffic jam. He refe~ labl&#13;
almost running out of breath, poems_ and prose ed to&#13;
his larynx running . over . a "rhy_t!_}m poems" ,:ltli&#13;
crosscountry course set m meamng is sometim ere&#13;
rhythm poems, or a poet the rhythm. Seemin es last&#13;
reading a poem on fishing ~nd unwritten music th g set to&#13;
throwing his line out while do~ng read in a singing'vot P&lt;&gt;et U&#13;
it, while simultaneously 1m- a flowing river of.ce, crea&#13;
prisoned in a dungeon? jams. He threw a few the&#13;
Lucky 13 was the number of concrete poems O ~IJJno&#13;
people who can answer yes, I which I was stupid ~no e boa&#13;
have seen, I have heard, yes I copy down and therero~ not&#13;
am one of the chosen, I w_as reproduce here. or cou ca~&#13;
there. Poet-Philosopher . Keith of you were stupid enou rse,&#13;
Gunderson held a readmg at come to the dungeon gh net&#13;
7:30, no 7:35, no 7:45, in Room vie. · ' so,&#13;
101 , no 101D in Greenquist The poet read in a Wednesday night and nobody shaky voice for an h orn&#13;
came. tuating the reading w°i:· Keith Gunderson is a young, hand went up to tle\era&#13;
blond haired, dark eyed, stocky, questio!ls and just ta;~&#13;
student-looking North Country poetry m general. Near~&#13;
poet and professor of philosophy of the reading he presen&#13;
at the University of Minnesota. " color poem" which he led 1&#13;
His mouth barely opened that called a "merry-g .&#13;
night, in the near empty poem" , the concept w~ ~&#13;
YOUTHPOWER Announces&#13;
Registration and Clinic&#13;
YOUTHPOWER will hold its&#13;
registration and Clinic at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside-Racine, Saturday,&#13;
June 5. The Registration and&#13;
Clinic will operate continually&#13;
from 9:30 a .m. to 12:00 noon for&#13;
youths ages 16-21.&#13;
The Clinic will fea ture a&#13;
training session for young&#13;
people looking for summer&#13;
work. It will also give those that&#13;
were signed up last year an&#13;
opportunity to re-register. All&#13;
that will be necessary is to&#13;
check and make a notation on&#13;
their last year's card.&#13;
Schedule&#13;
1 Registration.&#13;
2. 'Special Gift given at the&#13;
session "Right Start in the&#13;
Business World".&#13;
Clinic&#13;
1. Right Start in the Business&#13;
World. .&#13;
A. M. M. Michael Connolly,&#13;
Director of Corporate Personnel&#13;
and Industrial Relation&#13;
Service at Western Publishing&#13;
will talk about the job interview&#13;
: what information&#13;
young people should be&#13;
prepared to offer (resumes,&#13;
references, Social Security&#13;
Numbers, etc.)&#13;
B. John Beige, A ill&#13;
Employment Manager ol the&#13;
C. Johnson &amp; Son, will&#13;
the attitude which young&#13;
should be considering&#13;
summer job hunting, pl&#13;
right and wrong way of&#13;
plying for summer jobs.&#13;
C. Mary Husby, Pe&#13;
Secretary of the J I.&#13;
Company will talk aboul&#13;
grooming and appearance.&#13;
comments will be directed&#13;
both young· men and women&#13;
will cover the grooming kc,&#13;
success.&#13;
Registration for new a&#13;
plicants and those&#13;
registered with Youthpowlast&#13;
year will check in r« reregistering.&#13;
Those who at&#13;
Clinics will be given first&#13;
opportunities. Please&#13;
register at the Clinic&#13;
This summer in Rae&#13;
Youthpower will be open J&#13;
7th through August 27th&#13;
9:00 a .m. to 4:00 p.m. The&#13;
will be located at 222&#13;
Street and the Lele&#13;
numbers are 637-5461 arxl&#13;
5822.&#13;
This Space For Sale&#13;
Phone 652-41777&#13;
The Grievance &amp; Clearing&#13;
House Committee of the&#13;
Parkside Student Senate&#13;
will hold a public meeting&#13;
at 10:30 a.m. Friday, M0Y&#13;
28 in room D105 Green-.&#13;
quist. Persons interested 1&#13;
· be~ becoming voting rnern&#13;
,, ....&#13;
on the committee or P&#13;
senting grievances '? t~;J.&#13;
Student. Senate are ,n~ &#13;
poet in a Dungeon&#13;
it consisted Of words re~o~i.ng the readings from the&#13;
"", ~ in different colors and Activities BUilding. If you can't&#13;
""tle, the form of a merry- bring poetry to where the people&#13;
paced; read faster and faster are I suppose. a dungeon is an&#13;
... "" ~rry_go-round picks up Ideal place for it to whith&#13;
~ m People ha ve to he exposed e~&#13;
sp&lt;"-' hour went quickly, a poets, especially the public&#13;
",. of it was spent trying to drunks, which many poets are&#13;
qIlrtertand how to listen to his themselves. Mayhe next tim&#13;
~ delivery of "rhy:thm the Humanities Division COUI~&#13;
qUIC and the remaining time pass ,around a cassette tape of a&#13;
poern~nt searching for the clue reading to the lucky 13 who&#13;
... ~. title philosopher-poet. would attend the next reading&#13;
to his poems named anyway I this would save a great&#13;
~~ ... pI1ers, other than that 'deal of expense, then maybe the&#13;
I;title poet seemed the most savings could be donated to&#13;
validone. . some more worthy cause such&#13;
It is somewhat parado~lc~l as stocking the library with a&#13;
for'Ibe Division of Humam~tic recorded volume of James&#13;
StUdies to bring. poe~ to P-slde Dickey's poems as read by Burl&#13;
and them imprison him out of Ives, or an autographed sel of&#13;
!ightin a far flung corner of the the complete philosophical&#13;
Greenquist basement. Why works of Snoopy.&#13;
I:I'inJ him over at all, if the (ED: Mr. Gunderson was not&#13;
ciJjeclis merely to see how well presented by the Humanities&#13;
poet can be hid. It was ex- Division, but by the Parkside&#13;
Ilained to me that public Poetry Forum with assistance&#13;
~ess was amajor factor in from the Student Affairs oUice.)&#13;
~-,::~:!=,»:";:~::::::~-=i:::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~:!:::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::!:::::::::::::~~::::::::::::~:::: i Suggestion Box !~l&#13;
:::~&#13;
Place ttRraslh&#13;
l&#13;
cans at each end of tile walkway to .~·.:~::.:1&#13;
Greenqws a.&#13;
Patrick Nelson .,&#13;
»,:.,::::::::;:::~~::;:~:;:~;;:~:;:~:::~::::;:~:~~::::::=::~::::;:~:::~:;::::::::::::::::JII&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
.IThe Newscope Staff&#13;
The third of a series of four&#13;
articles on our legislators and&#13;
lb. merger. This week&#13;
Assemblymen Dorff and&#13;
Brown.&#13;
Eugene Dorff is the freshman&#13;
Assemblyman from Kenosha.&#13;
Mr. Dorff started with&#13;
background on Parkside.&#13;
"Parkside was slated to be in&#13;
the UW system, not the state&#13;
lIliversity system. In the year&#13;
II its inception the ci tizens of&#13;
Kenosha contributed ten to&#13;
eleven million dollars to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin·&#13;
Parbide, not to WSU Parkside.&#13;
Nowwe have a move to regula te&#13;
it into mediocrity."&#13;
"We should allow Parkside to&#13;
develop. Here we have the&#13;
potential for advancement,&#13;
reoearch, and development into&#13;
I post-graduate institution.&#13;
Madison is stymied&#13;
etonomicaUy. Here we have the&#13;
available land and the&#13;
possibility of 40,000 students."&#13;
Mr. Dorff continued with how&#13;
he {elt lbe merger would affect&#13;
the entire system. "The merger&#13;
wouldtend to freeze the level of&#13;
tbeUWsystem and bring up the&#13;
I,vel of the thirteen state&#13;
lIliversities." Mr. Dorff looks&#13;
til this as a mistake because of&#13;
the differences -of missions&#13;
between the UW and WSU&#13;
IyItems. The WSU system' is&#13;
~e up mostly of teacher&#13;
\'uueges.&#13;
'IMadison and Milwaukee will&#13;
DOtbe immediately hurt by the&#13;
merger. Green Bay and&#13;
Parkside have been singled out&#13;
for cuts and will definitely&#13;
suffer under the present&#13;
proposal. No other departmental&#13;
budget was cut like&#13;
Parkside's $3.5 million to $,7&#13;
million."&#13;
On the WSU system he said,&#13;
"The increase in teacher wages&#13;
there will help the morale. I do&#13;
not think there will be any&#13;
phase-out of any state&#13;
universities. I feel they are&#13;
more compatible with each&#13;
other than with an individual&#13;
mission as in the UW."&#13;
Mr. Dorff commented on the&#13;
cost of the merger. "As to save&#13;
.,M..111 P.,e5&#13;
today The m.., ... produced on a l}p.""nlCr, 1M&#13;
dime store ~pnnts 01 famous plon~nas on 1M&#13;
Wills, a pi" of hlndmade "",Is b the I Ihlndlcrlft&#13;
expert (Gene"e"" Turltl, the mall all&#13;
capecity, the ,mple cberee d. foods.1Ild '01'&#13;
dressed tn whue umforms ""th plA,d and aclld&#13;
colored aprons, all ref) t th m,ddl Ammcan&#13;
culture&#13;
I especially bked th '" a,&#13;
They blend tnformahty ""th good nee. rm&#13;
many regular cu tomers ror the lhree mlln mt'8ls I&#13;
day, Kay Bennett, Anne Popp, her motMr tt"f&#13;
and others. help reduce the uneasln 10m peopl&#13;
experience eaung oot. But tt l$n·t ev rdo,..&#13;
I ordered a shnmp dinner and .Iaggl hid a&#13;
PIlot pecial w hicb tncluded a lad. teall nd·&#13;
"ich and French tn for a dollar twenty.five ""&#13;
both found nofaults "Ith the meal The food fl&#13;
atmosphere or the r laurant ~ery v.~l,&#13;
pleasant.&#13;
The place ",a preuy busy durIng the m"ldle of&#13;
the week. v.hen we ale lllere Icier people 10 coupJ&#13;
and groups d. four ale their hot dinners which COOl&#13;
about a dollar on the a...·era e for thtn hke&#13;
speghetti and hoI beef . laggle made th obsenat,on&#13;
thaI there seemed 10 ,,'gel8 I ed&#13;
with most of the meals, v.hlch Itold her V.a \; I"}&#13;
thoughUul on the part of the managemcn~ n to&#13;
it lhat tl)Clr customers "ere health&#13;
While obser"mg the LUn .. e II te:ned to&#13;
\\"L1P. "hich played throughou'lhe tauranl The&#13;
un was setl1ng.a v.e reaht.ed It "'. a little "arm&#13;
InsIde. I asked for a second cup d. coif and I&#13;
noticed the old lady next to me didn't fln. h her&#13;
peas It "a all "e&lt;)' qulel, ~Iaxtng and ,nl ... ling&#13;
I paid the bill and walked OUl pa,t th bubbl&#13;
gum machine, askmg. taggJe If thou~ht It would&#13;
be stupid to call Jack. ',cholson and ,ell hIm about&#13;
Andy·s. It "ould be a . hame for anyone 10 I up&#13;
this fine slice of American Me.&#13;
basis for increased&#13;
enrollment. ..&#13;
"All building in the state has&#13;
heen affected by the budget and&#13;
we have to save money by&#13;
holding back on the athletic&#13;
bUilding to stabilize. The&#13;
governor has not shown that the&#13;
merger would sa ve money."&#13;
Mr. Dorff gave his opinion on&#13;
the politics of the merger. "By&#13;
establishing an educational&#13;
super board we would put too&#13;
much authority in the hands of&#13;
one particular group to dictate&#13;
policy. t,&#13;
"There is a lot of nit-picking&#13;
in the house. But when it comes&#13;
to the real issues the legislators&#13;
the merger ". (ecllt would be a&#13;
good thing I'm tired d. com·&#13;
petition for dollars for hIgher&#13;
education. Ican see merit to the&#13;
plan if it's worked out&#13;
properly."&#13;
When asked if he felt an)&#13;
university would be hurt by the&#13;
merger he answered.. ". '0. t&#13;
don't. Jusl because the) sa) so&#13;
doesn't mean irs gOing to&#13;
happen thal way_ l"m gelting&#13;
sick and tired or people Ii\,jng In&#13;
ivory towers thinking that&#13;
they're untouchable because&#13;
they're so hIgh and mighty·'&#13;
Mr. BrOVo'n had a dlrferent&#13;
opinion on the cost of the&#13;
merger also. "1 don't lhink the&#13;
By P~uI Lomatire of The :\'e"scope Starr&#13;
I Jack NIcholson has said thaI his movies have no&#13;
p at; ~ey ~re just an attempt to show a slice of&#13;
American life. Other producers and wTiters have&#13;
caught .on, and. realize that there is art in the&#13;
mannensms and life styles of the everyday people&#13;
who make America what it is.&#13;
10 many movies, locations have gone from&#13;
elatorate sets to truck stops, bus stations and&#13;
sldestreets. This doesn't seem strange to many&#13;
people because the secondary highways of America&#13;
have taken them from the all· night truck stop in&#13;
West Wombat, Iowa, to the diner in 'O\lo'here Ohio&#13;
. If Jack Nicholson is looking (or another ;Ii~or&#13;
life r.epresenting the city, I have a fine restaurant&#13;
f?r hlffi. On location in Kenosha, Wisconsin. he can&#13;
fIlm an eV~ing at ~ndy's Restaurant This place&#13;
has every mteresting characteristic or middle&#13;
America.&#13;
Andy's Restaurant is a Cine place to eat The&#13;
food is good, but the atmosphere and people ~ke It&#13;
what It IS. The simplicity makes it one of the mo t&#13;
}X&gt;pular restaurants in town, according to a random&#13;
sampling I tool&lt;.&#13;
Just one visit here points out the simple&#13;
characteristics or a restaurant in middle America&#13;
1~._D-:"o_r"":""'tT..,...' ..,...B_r,":,:,",O_W-:,n-::-_o~p-=p_o_s __it,:,"","es-:--::o:-:::n:::"7':'":M=e:-:-.:r-:::g~er::=1&#13;
money by elimina ti ng the do the job. There may be a merger is going to cost money.&#13;
CCRE to create a super board, I deadlock on the merger. The When you consolidate funcII"""&#13;
don't think it would work. This final count will be close." you'll always sa\'e."&#13;
is just a move to create a "Bureaucracy is getting too Mr Brown gave the example&#13;
bureaucracy to give ad- damn big, too powerful, too. We of the lew York Unh:ersHy&#13;
ministrators jobs, and would be should maintain a high stan· system a a fine educational&#13;
uncontrollable. Establishing 13 dard or educational opportunity s)'stem. This is the very system&#13;
individual councils on cam· and even step beyond." that Senator Devitt has gl\·en 8&#13;
puses wouldn't save too much." "People want the develo~ an example of the type of&#13;
"Presently Parkside is being ment and expansion of system to guard agalOst&#13;
funded at $17 per credit hour by Parkside. There is good rapport Mr Brown "ould like to&#13;
the state at the Junior-Senior between students and citizens. the criteria and gUIdeline&#13;
level. The merger would reduce We should work to maintain a implemented and would like to&#13;
h&#13;
. g ey program of exceUence." see a lesserung of autonomy for&#13;
this to $15, t us savIO man each campus He does not feel&#13;
but hurting curriculum, + + +&#13;
students and the quality of Manny S. Brown is Chairman any indwlduaJ school would&#13;
education. There is a proposed of the Assembly Educational hurt by the merger; he feel alt&#13;
th&#13;
o ty t hi g Committee. classroom pace on all cam·&#13;
cut of about Ir eac n eel he puses should continue In&#13;
P k'd This Mr. Brown does not f t positions at ar Sl e. When asked if he felt the&#13;
would save money but leaves no same way as others in regard to&#13;
NEWSCOPE IS MOVING IT'S OFFICES TO&#13;
STOP&#13;
HIGHWAY 'A' AND WOOD ROAD AND SEE US&#13;
quality or education '" ould&#13;
diluled he replied. "I don't lIunk&#13;
LI\ quahly "ould be dllu{ '"&#13;
We "ould oontlnue to ha\ thesame&#13;
program Lhc:. .. wid J\1\t&#13;
under dlrreT('nt TIl('&#13;
late um\"er'S111 ... 111 h IPfd&#13;
by enhghlened educatlonll&#13;
leade ....lup ,.&#13;
~Ir Br n ta'ed that tlk&#13;
gro" th and th quahl) of Gr" n&#13;
Bay and Parkslde would not&#13;
affected even though the ~ h 1&#13;
uDlverslt)' ) tern .. a ta 109 I&#13;
run m,lllon doltar cut .' d Ibt'&#13;
level of fundIng for 1h&lt;'S&lt;' t" 0&#13;
school !'Chool. In particular&#13;
"ould he reduced&#13;
~Ir Bra"'" g8\ hl rt'as«&#13;
for . uppo&lt;t of the m -rgor .. ,&#13;
will only supporl thc m rg flf"&#13;
I prop rly dIalled, 1m&#13;
plemcnled, and planned I do&#13;
not v. nt m I1t r pt'r I&#13;
,",ouldn'l . upport a morRor&#13;
C()rthn (0 th KO" 'rOOf",&#13;
onglnal oUllln I" uldn'l&#13;
upport ('\ t"ry hool 'InK&#13;
n8m d nl\:f"r II)' or&#13;
WISconsin' a t t v.ould&#13;
d,m,n, h Ih quality of a&#13;
d&lt;-(l«'e ••&#13;
"r Ol"Q",lonhk tht' l'1('\('O&#13;
m mbe'r campu council Ide&#13;
He "ould hk '0 0&#13;
member 0( l- h ('OlU)('11 an&#13;
x.&lt;:J.flc'o m"mher of th R rd&#13;
d. Regent.!&gt; II, fl· I th t the I&#13;
app0lnled m ·mt&gt;cn. to" h nl&#13;
the counc,1 "ould be appointed&#13;
fairly by th 0\ 'rnor ...ho&#13;
"ould not th apPolntm nt&#13;
to gam conlrol of th UOl\' '~It}&#13;
(Continued on P I&#13;
STUDENTS t#f'~lIr4I/ __ .&#13;
it's the MIKE real thing EMIL GERLACH get Red Carpet treatment DAVIS&#13;
/~_1886 of the SPEED&#13;
Fruit Baskets' BANK. OF CITY&#13;
Corsages ElMWOOD "Check Our&#13;
=:::e&#13;
Prices Lasl"&#13;
(everyone else does!)&#13;
4807 71b AVE:\I'F&#13;
OA.:,_.,.- -•.••.._~ ~/ 2704 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Roci ... , Wis-&#13;
-&#13;
IF YOU WANT&#13;
SOMETHING&#13;
A UnLE EXTRA&#13;
TRY&#13;
Budweise&amp;&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
• but you&#13;
•&#13;
know thatl!!&#13;
• •&#13;
poet in a Dungeon&#13;
·t consisled of words re~o~i_ng the readings from the&#13;
Ill~· ~ in different colors and A~tiv1ties Building. If you can't&#13;
;ritte ·n the form of a merry- brmg poetry t h&#13;
..iacedndt read faster and faster O w ere the people&#13;
~rou , d . k ~dre 11 suppose. a dungeon is an e- the merry-go-roun pie s up I ea place for it to whith&#13;
.......t People have to be exposed er&#13;
-1"'·-· hour went quickly, a poets, especially the publi~&#13;
Th~ r of it was spent trying to drunks, which many poets are &lt;flr e tand bow to listen to his themselves. __ Maybe next time&#13;
un f delivery of "rh)'.thm the Humaruhes Division could&#13;
qutc and the remaining time pass _around a cassette tape of a&#13;
piem~nt searching for the clue reading to the lucky 13 who&#13;
as ;e title philosopher-poet. would attend the next reading&#13;
~ne his poems named anyway, this would save a great&#13;
..i.;iosophers, other than that ·dea~ of expense, then maybe the&#13;
~; title poet seemed the most savings could be donated to&#13;
\'lllid one. . some more worthy cause such&#13;
It is somewhat parado~1c~l as stocking the library with a&#13;
for The Division of Humam~tic recorded volume of James&#13;
U(!ies to bring a poet to P-s1de Dickey's poems as read by Burl&#13;
;d them imprison him out of Ives, or an autographed set of&#13;
ighl in a far flung corner of the the complete philosophical&#13;
Greenquist basement. . Why works of Snoopy.&#13;
t,ring him over at all, 1f the &lt;ED: Mr. Gunderson was not&#13;
objeCt is merely to see how well presented by the Humanities&#13;
a poet can be hid. It was ex- Division, but by the Parkside&#13;
plained to me that public Poetry Forum with assistance&#13;
drunkness was a major factor in from_ the Studen~ Affairs office.)&#13;
)~·.·-~·-·=··-&lt; .' ........ _._._._.- -._._ . --. --. --·;:: •.•.. -. ·-·-·-·-·-·--------- -- ---·---~::::: .•• ::_; ..••.•••.... •:.•~·=&#13;
-~ Suggestion Box ii~&#13;
I ",~'.~::;::;~~::~:;~~~;,~~;:::J by Ken Konkol&#13;
of The Newscope Staff&#13;
The third of a series of four&#13;
articles on our legislators and&#13;
the merger. This week&#13;
A semblymen Dorff and&#13;
Brown.&#13;
Eugene Dorff is the freshman&#13;
Assemblyman from Kenosha.&#13;
fr. Dorff started with&#13;
background on Parkside.&#13;
"Parkside was slated to be in&#13;
the UW system, not the state&#13;
wiiversity system. In the year&#13;
ri its inception the citizens of&#13;
Kenosha contributed ten to&#13;
eleven million dollars to the&#13;
t.:niversity of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
not to WSU Parkside.&#13;
• ow we have a move to regulate&#13;
it into mediocrity."&#13;
merger. Green Bay and&#13;
Parkside have been singled out&#13;
for cuts and will definitely&#13;
suffer under the present&#13;
proposal. No other departmental&#13;
budget was cut like&#13;
Parkside's $3.5 million to $.7&#13;
million."&#13;
On the WSU system he said,&#13;
"The increase in teacher wages&#13;
there will help the morale. I do&#13;
not think there will be any&#13;
phase-out of any state&#13;
universities. I feel they are&#13;
more compatible with each&#13;
other than with an individual&#13;
mission as in the UW."&#13;
Mr. Dorff commented on the&#13;
cost of the merger. "As to save&#13;
By P~ul Loma tire of The. 'e" c pe. taU&#13;
~ack N1chol~on has said that hi mo,·i ha\'e no&#13;
~t, ~ey ~re Just an attempt to h~ a lice of&#13;
encan life. Other producers and writers ha,·&#13;
caught _on, and realize that there i. ar in the&#13;
mannerisms and life styles of the e\'ervday I&#13;
who make America what it i . •&#13;
lo many movies, locations have gone from&#13;
~atorate sets to truck stops bus tatio . nd&#13;
s1destreets. This doesn't seem !range to many&#13;
people because the secondary highwa) o{ merica&#13;
have taken them from the all-night true top in&#13;
West Womba~ Iowa, to the diner in. ·~·her~. Ohio. . If Jack Nicholson is looking for ano her Ii of&#13;
life r~presenting the city, I have a fine re taurant&#13;
f?r hun. On location in Kenosha, \\ isconsm, he can&#13;
film an eve~ing at ~ndy's Restaurant. Thi plac&#13;
has ~very mteresting characten tic of middle&#13;
America.&#13;
~ndy's Restaurant is a fine place to eat. The&#13;
food 1~ g_ood, but the atmosphere and people m ke 1t&#13;
what 1t 1s. The simplicity makes it one of th mo t&#13;
popular restaurants in town, accordin to a random&#13;
sampling I took.&#13;
Just ?n~ visit here points out the 1mpl&#13;
characteristics of a restaurant in middle Am rica&#13;
basis for increased&#13;
enrollment."&#13;
"All building in the state has&#13;
been affected by the budget and&#13;
we have to save monev bv&#13;
holding back on the athletic&#13;
building to stabilize. The&#13;
governor has not shown that the&#13;
merger would save money."&#13;
Mr. Dorff gave his opinion on&#13;
the politics of the merger. "'By&#13;
establishing an educational&#13;
super board we would put too&#13;
much authority in the hands of&#13;
one particular group to dictate&#13;
policy."&#13;
"There is a lot of nit-picking&#13;
in the house. But when it come&#13;
to the real issues the legi lators&#13;
"We should allow Parkside to&#13;
develop. Here we have the&#13;
potential for advancement,&#13;
research, and development into&#13;
a post-graduate institution.&#13;
lad is on is stymied&#13;
I Dorff, Brown-Opposites On Merger&#13;
economically. Here we have the&#13;
available land and the&#13;
po ·ibility of 40,000 students."&#13;
Ir. Dorff continued with how&#13;
he felt the merger would affect&#13;
lhe entire system. "The merger&#13;
·ould tend to freeze the level of&#13;
the UW system and bring up the&#13;
le~el of the thirteen state&#13;
uruversities." Mr. Dorff looks&#13;
on this as a mistake because of&#13;
tbe differences of missions&#13;
tween the UW and WSU&#13;
S) terns. The WSU system is&#13;
tna&lt;le up mostly of teacher&#13;
colleges.&#13;
" ladison and Milwaukee will&#13;
not be immediately hurt by the&#13;
money by eliminating the&#13;
CCHE to create a superboard, I&#13;
don't think it would work. This&#13;
is just a move to create a bureaucracy to give administrators&#13;
jobs, and would be&#13;
uncontrollable. Establishing 13&#13;
individual councils on campuses&#13;
wouldn't save too much."&#13;
"Presently Parkside is being&#13;
funded at $17 per credit hour by&#13;
the state at the Junior-Senior&#13;
level. The merger would reduce&#13;
this to $15, thus saving money&#13;
but hurting curriculum,&#13;
students and the quality of&#13;
education. There is a proposed&#13;
cut of about thirty teaching&#13;
positions at Parkside. This&#13;
would save money but leaves no&#13;
do the job. There may be a&#13;
deadlock on the merger. The&#13;
final count will be close."&#13;
"Bureaucracy is getting too&#13;
damn big, too powerful, too. W&#13;
should maintain a high tan- dard of educational opportunity&#13;
and even step beyond.''&#13;
"People want the development&#13;
and expan ion of&#13;
Parkside. There is good rapport&#13;
between students and citizen . We should work to maintain a&#13;
program of excellence."&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Manny S. Brown is Chairman&#13;
of the Assembly Educational&#13;
Committee. Mr. Brown does not feel the&#13;
same way as others in regard to&#13;
NEWSCOPE IS MOVING IT'S OFFICES TO&#13;
HIGHWA y 'A' AND WOOD ROAD&#13;
STUDENTS it's thel"f'K~/~&#13;
&#13;
EMIL GERLACH get Red Carpet treatment&#13;
real thing&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886 ot the&#13;
Fruit Baskets BANK Of&#13;
Corsages ElMWOOD&#13;
Candy (everyone else does!)&#13;
2704 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
RaciRe, Wis.&#13;
STOP&#13;
AND SEE US&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
"Check Our&#13;
Prices Last"&#13;
-1807 7th \t-,tf'&#13;
IF YOU WA T&#13;
SOME HING&#13;
A LITTLE EXT A&#13;
TRY&#13;
u&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
• • • but you&#13;
-&#13;
know that! ! ! &#13;
PSI pa:9P!. MayU.lI11&#13;
eee e&#13;
'&#13;
the life of the student"&#13;
ont 'd (Continued from Page Il A review of the explicit ",,,poses~f ':':t c"'::r&#13;
mtttee. which include determlDlIlll s. ~ s&#13;
troveny over the student governmegt constitution. student clubs, evaluating student publication c:&#13;
1lIat the CCC had served as an arbiter in the establishing rules and procedures for gr':'i :;'e&#13;
pest was the bIggest faculty argument against tivities, presenting a combined club budlje o. I&#13;
chssoluhon Propooenls of the dissolution conceded administration, and supervIsing fman:1&#13;
8&#13;
that there was a need for this type of body procedures for the clubs, revealed the une ons&#13;
. . ti or were so&#13;
Mark Tympany, student senator present at the could be bandIed by other organlZ8 ODS, been hanmeeting.&#13;
said. "1 Uunk student government is vague as to mean nothing,· or had never&#13;
perfecUy capeble of taking over all of the stated died at all by !be CCC. d its&#13;
purpoIeS 01 the CCC. It 15 the proper organization to The committee then voted to recommen&#13;
deal WIththese functions slDee they dIreCtly affect own dissolution.&#13;
excepted&#13;
c:=:E!!- I&#13;
'!::-,-=- -e:-&#13;
lOP •• Dirl. I&#13;
w--. -"'"*'&#13;
--~t.~ ....&#13;
....,.&#13;
.... Dor~&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
fYamota fbi fl7ffled&#13;
&amp;&gt;i:1Ja W #1aIuMt f¥o0d6&#13;
liquor Store&#13;
r;::=~~&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. Kf'NOSHA 658..'l\~1&#13;
YOUR Tire.10n.&#13;
STORES&#13;
IN KENOSHA AND RACINE ARE GIVING YOU&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
on all Qutomotiv. services.&#13;
Thot's besides their normal&#13;
great tire buys. Just bring&#13;
in th is ad.&#13;
I ._,..._",.......,..,......,,_",.,"""_..'W'W""'''l&#13;
'I ~~BRAJr.' I&#13;
Where It's At! i&#13;
DAILY SPECIAL i&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4.P.M. !&#13;
A Bottle of I&#13;
BIE :&#13;
A New Kind of&#13;
AkohotlC 'eYerage&#13;
.nd .BEEFBURGER&#13;
S~ErAK99'&#13;
BRAT&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
HOUR&#13;
MONDAY thru FRIDAY&#13;
6 p.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity ond Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M .• 12 P.M.&#13;
• .H,;.;.rt.h~w;.;.;.;I;.;t..;c;.;m;;;.;:.::.• .I.:-~9.::4..;.::n:.:d:..:::H~i !gh:.w:.:.r.y~SO~ __ ':"J&#13;
A professional&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
that is safe,&#13;
legal &amp; • •&#13;
Inexpensive&#13;
can be set up on an&#13;
outpatient basis by calling&#13;
The Problem Pregn ..ncy&#13;
Referr..1 Service '&#13;
215-722-5360&#13;
24 hours-7 days&#13;
for professional, oon#idential&#13;
and t'.aring hel.p.&#13;
IF YOU WANT&#13;
SOMETHING&#13;
A LITTLE EXTRA •••&#13;
TRY&#13;
Budweiser.&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
• • • but you&#13;
•&#13;
know thatll!&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
FREE&#13;
CLASS FlED&#13;
Dorff, Brown&#13;
system. Mr. Brown is of the&#13;
froZen at any level. The State&#13;
same political party as the&#13;
governor.&#13;
When asked if he felt the&#13;
criticism of the merger was&#13;
unwarranted, he answered,&#13;
"Criticism is proper. Compromise&#13;
makes the be~t&#13;
legislation. We need to beat It&#13;
out meet the opposition and get&#13;
mutual points of view."&#13;
When asked if he felt any part&#13;
of the merger needed changing,&#13;
he answered, "We need a&#13;
detailed bill with guidelines and&#13;
criteria defining the mission of&#13;
each school, planning commi&#13;
ttees tenure and faculty&#13;
relatio';ships, pay differentials&#13;
and other things. This can't be&#13;
done overnight."&#13;
When asked to comment on&#13;
Parkside in particular, he&#13;
stated, "Parkside was made a&#13;
member of UW. It was planned&#13;
as a research center rather than&#13;
as a liheral arts college to be put&#13;
into WSU. Parkside is committed&#13;
to keep growing. It will&#13;
have a major role in&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin."&#13;
In regard to the merber&#13;
freezing the university, he said,&#13;
"I don't think education sball be&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
MADISON-Summer sublet, 2 bed.,&#13;
near Vilas Park. call 6QI.~1.8632.&#13;
165 I?er person.&#13;
ROOM - Men ,enly. $9.00 per wk. 3&#13;
blocks from Racine Campus.&#13;
inQuire 832 S. Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
FOR RENT - Office Space&#13;
Modem: carpeted. Partitioned. ,Air&#13;
Cond. Ideal for Acdg .• Insurance 0(&#13;
58les. Good proximity to ParkSlde&#13;
and carthage . ..059 7th Ave. Can 652·&#13;
3945 or 6~·7"10.&#13;
DUPLEX, unfurn. 3 bedrm. 1V2&#13;
baths off street parking, 4-6 girls.&#13;
Avail. June 10. 4612 - 35th Ave. Can&#13;
be seen after 4:30 So weekends.&#13;
MISC. FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SAL'" - Poodle Puppies. 6 wk!&#13;
Old, AKC. 2 male. 1 female. Cream.&#13;
Toy. Excellent blood 11""". $100 ea.&#13;
17.. 2992.&#13;
AMP - Silverlane 4 channel. Also&#13;
mTl~•• Best offer. Call Cathy. 694·&#13;
7169. Must sell.&#13;
ELECTRIC RANGE - Westing·&#13;
hOuse 30", - 175; Refrigerator -&#13;
Westinghouse, $75. Box spring&#13;
mattress fdr dOuble bed, $75.· Clill&#13;
~OSll.&#13;
TAPE DECK-SonY - TC· 355. List&#13;
price $219. Sacrifice for SlOG. PhOne&#13;
6rU-lnl an... .. or He Fr.... k&#13;
OIl_a. .&#13;
BED - Blond, Hollywood 3/&lt;1 size.&#13;
Rollers, box spring &amp; headboard&#13;
bookcase. $150 new. Will sell for $60.&#13;
Call 633-9331.&#13;
(Continued from PI&#13;
115)&#13;
University and U&#13;
continue to be f W ~&#13;
present levels. ~ al ~&#13;
no cbange in the wa IboI,jj&#13;
are being run. ~~&#13;
upgrade the quality __&#13;
campuses." ..&#13;
When asked his ..&#13;
board which WouId'tlllioo..&#13;
of the system he rtf" ~&#13;
don't favor suPerboanl.""l&#13;
there is a c_ti ....&#13;
I&#13;
. On boo....~&#13;
po ICY makers ~&#13;
ministrators. Tbe lDd '"&#13;
councils willacl"~"'"&#13;
agamst a slate .... _.1&#13;
education." -.ra "&#13;
Mr. Brown d... llOt&#13;
merger as the sm lit&#13;
Sena.tor Devil! d.... ,~&#13;
talking in order '.&#13;
something. Ithink ~&#13;
merger are oneandthe III&#13;
the merger does nollO_I&#13;
the hudget might llOt10=::&#13;
either, The merger is&#13;
Integral part of the ~&#13;
"The merger migtt-'"&#13;
follOWing party Ii lid ,&#13;
assembly. voting ror It&#13;
senate votlDgagainsl It.,.&#13;
entire budget will wind&#13;
conference commiUee."tt ••&#13;
(Next week ~&#13;
Michael Farrah. And, d lit&#13;
lind the time, Senator ~&#13;
Lourigan.)&#13;
WH •• U&#13;
1970 c.m.-o. Snow T......&#13;
639·8863 .tt. 4:.&#13;
1962 Pontiac Convert. SUI. CII&#13;
1443 after S.&#13;
1969 Dodoe GTS 4tO Auto. til.&#13;
4786 between 5-6:30.&#13;
1961 Jeep CJS. call 6f'.S'6l&#13;
1963 Impala Convert. 317.CII&#13;
5649.&#13;
1964 VW, $.450or beSt otMr (II_&#13;
6482 after 5.&#13;
1949 Harley·OavidSOn. WlI&#13;
Call 652-6335 betWeen .4'''_&#13;
1967 Triumph TR4-A... _&#13;
IRS, radials. wires: 11,_&#13;
652.8419 after 6 p.m.&#13;
1963 VW 1_ ml.l ...&#13;
Dodge Co&lt;onet 11 ,.u&#13;
12911 WaShington Ave ~&#13;
1965 Chevy Be1. • f!I. ~'&#13;
Rad. Ree, ..&amp;J»"l&#13;
1960 Rlim. OK. N/iO.",:&#13;
7075.15 8FGtlr •• ri""~'"&#13;
990-15 OBFGtl ... tllO...&#13;
Bal. $40. l59-2A53 I"" ~&#13;
p ,,, OPE M ) 2~. 1971&#13;
_...._ ____ '_/ ______ -------_.;..-::===~:::,~:.:.-:.-- ··*~-=~:~:::::.::~~:::--:--:::::~::$::::::::;:;:;:;:;:~:=::&#13;
V~aSMU ~~ ~ Sunnyside I • • 'iHetftff ·,()1%,.. ~ 1 --·-=--~~---~ ii Florists I&#13;
~o~~::,~~t~':~OtJnt ·=e.-=·· i&amp; Greenhouses ~l.&#13;
F I UrAtl Dl,t. X• .•••&#13;
acu t Y w.-..- . ,_.,., ~3. ,,_11 _ Frvit Wets - Gifts [~)&#13;
ust Show I.~,) D---' s.ttat ~t• lo•"&#13;
Fairtrade 1 .., ~.~.1111 A,&#13;
excepted DOWNTOWN KENOSHA w&#13;
a1nouJ /&lt;n, f!l'ind&#13;
~ gt g1a1t,&lt;M't fke&lt;M&#13;
Liquor Store&#13;
r==--~0----&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KFNOSHA 658 1ll1&#13;
YOUR&#13;
,irt$fOftt TORES&#13;
IN KENOSHA AND RACINE ARE GIVING YOU&#13;
10% OFF&#13;
on all automotivir services.&#13;
That's besides their normal&#13;
great tire buys. Just bring&#13;
in th is ad .&#13;
I _ ___ , ..._ ..................... _ .., ...... -.......... '"'&#13;
1~!BRAT~'&#13;
1&#13;
l&#13;
Where It's At! I&#13;
DAILY SPECIAL ~&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4 .P.M. I&#13;
A Bottle of ~&#13;
BiBIIIIIIE&#13;
A New Kind of&#13;
Alcoholic Beverage&#13;
0nd 0BEEFBURGER S~~AK99·&#13;
BRAT&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
HOUR&#13;
MONDAY thru FRIDAY&#13;
6 p.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
;:&#13;
Avoiloble Far Parties j I"""""' F .. , ... ;,, aod s.,.,;,y Pa,he• I I&#13;
Op~~.,h~~_i,1&#13;
~.:.. ~;~:d :;!~.,~;~&#13;
VI and FRANK WEINSTOCK&#13;
3021 • 75TH ST.&#13;
}]~ KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140 ([))&#13;
l:m. ·:.P~~0~~' -~~~J~---:--··:.)f:&#13;
A professional&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
that is safe, legal &amp;&#13;
• • 1nexpens1ve&#13;
can be set up on an&#13;
outpatient basis by calling&#13;
The Problem Pregnancy&#13;
Referral Service&#13;
21S-722-S360&#13;
24 hours- 7 days&#13;
for professional, ·con'idential&#13;
and r.aring hel_p.&#13;
~~&#13;
IF YOU WANT&#13;
SOMETHING&#13;
A LITTLE EXTRA • • •&#13;
TRY&#13;
Budweise:c&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
• • • but you&#13;
-&#13;
know thatl!!&#13;
Dorff, Brown&#13;
system. Mr. Brown is of the&#13;
frozen at any level. The State&#13;
same political party as the&#13;
governor. When asked if he felt the&#13;
criticism of the merger was&#13;
unwarranted, he answered,&#13;
"Criticism is proper. Compromise&#13;
makes the be~t&#13;
legislation. We need to beat 1t&#13;
out meet the opposition and get&#13;
mutual points of view."&#13;
When asked if he felt any part&#13;
of the merger needed changing,&#13;
he answered, "We need a&#13;
detailed bill with guidelines and&#13;
criteria defining the mission of&#13;
each school, planning committees&#13;
tenure and faculty&#13;
relation'ships, pay differentials&#13;
and other things. This can't be&#13;
done overnight."&#13;
When asked to comment on&#13;
Parkside in particular, he&#13;
stated, "Parkside was made a&#13;
member of UW. It was planned&#13;
as a research center rather than&#13;
as a liberal arts college to be put&#13;
into WSU. Parkside is committed&#13;
to keep growing. It will&#13;
have a major role in&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin.''&#13;
In regard to the merber&#13;
freezing the university, he said,&#13;
"I don't think education shall be&#13;
(Continued from pa te S)&#13;
University and U&#13;
continue to be run W&#13;
present levels. Th~ed at&#13;
no change in the wa are being run WY ca&#13;
d . e&#13;
upgra e the quality campuses." ~&#13;
When asked his op· . board which WOUid :)oo ~ of the system he o( 111&#13;
don't f_avor super~ertd.&#13;
thel~e 1S a connection&#13;
po icy makers&#13;
ministrators. Th and&#13;
councils will act as 1~ . ca&#13;
against a state \ISOO I&#13;
education." Oard&#13;
Mr. Brown does not&#13;
merger as the srnct&#13;
Senator Devitt does "H ,&#13;
talking in orde~ ~'&#13;
something. I think ~&#13;
merger are one and the&#13;
the merger does not go&#13;
tl.te budget might not go&#13;
~1ther. The merger is 1&#13;
m!~gral part or the rn&#13;
The merger might&#13;
following party Jin&#13;
assembly . voting for ard&#13;
senflte votmg against. 11&#13;
entire budget will wind&#13;
conference committee ..&#13;
(Next week, A~·l!lh,. ...&#13;
Michael Farrall. And if&#13;
find the time, Sena~ J&#13;
Lourigan.)&#13;
NE1NSCOPE&#13;
FREE&#13;
CLASSFIED&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
MADISON-Summer sublet, 2 bed.,&#13;
near VIias Park. call 608-~1-86:J2,&#13;
165 1:1er person.&#13;
ROOM - MM! ~iy, $9.00 per wk. ~&#13;
blocks from Racine Campus.&#13;
Inquire 132 S. Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
FOR RENT - Office Space&#13;
Modem; Carpeted, Partitioned, Air&#13;
COnd. Ideal tor Acctg., Insurance Of'&#13;
Sales. Goad proximity to Parkside&#13;
and carthage . ..059 7th Ave. Call 652-&#13;
3945 or 6SC-7'10.&#13;
DUPLEX, unfurn. 3 bedrm. l½&#13;
baths off street parking, 4-6 girls.&#13;
Avail. June 10. 4612 . 35th Ave. Can&#13;
be seen after 4 :30 &amp; weekends.&#13;
MISC. FOR SALE&#13;
FOR 5AL1:- Poodle Puppies. 6 wk!&#13;
old, AKC, 2 male, 1 female. cream,&#13;
Toy. Excellent blood lines-. $100 ea.&#13;
171-2992.&#13;
AMP - Sllvertone 4 channel. Also&#13;
mike. Best offer. Call Cathy, 694-&#13;
2169. Must sell.&#13;
ELECTRIC RANGE - Westlng- hDuse 30", $75; Refrigerator -&#13;
Westinghouse, S75. Box spring&#13;
mattress fdr muble bed, S75. · call&#13;
~o.sn.&#13;
TAPE DECK- Sony . TC. 355. List&#13;
price $219. Sacrifice for $100. PhOne&#13;
654-1731 after -' or - Frank&#13;
Ollapetta. ·&#13;
BED - Blond, Hollywood 3/4 size.&#13;
Rollers, box spring &amp; headboard&#13;
bookcase. $150 new. Will sell for $60.&#13;
Call 633-9331.&#13;
P.0.0.G.0.: Would be dtl&#13;
permanently compltlt IO&#13;
therapy of 28 ~ - Hwmen&#13;
WHHU&#13;
1970 Camaro. Snow Tim 11111&#13;
639-8863 after -4: 30&#13;
1962 Buick 2 dr hardtop, $~&#13;
634--4-445 or 633-2791.&#13;
1969 Dodge GTS 440 Auto. Cl&#13;
4786 between 5-6:30.&#13;
1961 Jeep CJS. Call 69H1'4&#13;
1958 Ford 6 cyl. auto. Mau&#13;
657-7'5/J7.&#13;
1969 Chevelle 396 auto. Sl&#13;
657-3128.&#13;
1963 Impala Convert. 377&#13;
5649.&#13;
1967 Triumph TR4-A.&#13;
1 RS, radials, wires. Sl,&#13;
652-8-419 after 6 p.m.&#13;
1963 vw uo,ooo ml.I&#13;
0oc1ge eoronet (12,-&#13;
12911 Washington Avt, ~ &#13;
by Jim Casper or The ~ewsc~pe Staff&#13;
rt&lt;side'S&#13;
tennis team ran mto stiff competition in&#13;
PI against UteUW-M and UW-Green Bay. losing to&#13;
",atdl&lt;" tile identical score of 9-0. The Rangers found&#13;
bOIl&gt; by ore to their liking. defeating them 7-0 at the&#13;
1IiI~ m park courts.&#13;
persJ1il''!tangersknew they would be in for a rough time&#13;
. Th;' road matches against the two UW schools&#13;
.,111 UteY had lost to both of them at home earlier in&#13;
beC"useson. So in lour matches against these schools this ;,- __ "-&#13;
lbesea Ute Rangers came up WIth only one individual&#13;
~ whichcame in th.IH loss to UW-Green Bay back&#13;
vIC ril 24. .&#13;
'" AP 'nst UW-Green Bay. Mike Safago, th~ Rangers' :~nesingles player. was the only Parkside netter&#13;
..un hiS match to three sets before losing. Safago had&#13;
II&gt; run ted for parkside's only victory over a Green Bay&#13;
~ this year --in the earlier home match. He had .....H'+W_&#13;
playted highly regarded Larry Kropp in three sets. but&#13;
:: lime.after winning the first set. Mike lost the next&#13;
llf&lt;I'All the matches against UW-M were dropped in two&#13;
sets, as thePanthers scored their second shutout against&#13;
PafkSide. The team bounced back from the two one-sided&#13;
de!"ts to administer a sound thrashing to the Milton net&#13;
d. The score in this match was 7-0.&#13;
"""Thevisiting school was short handed for this match,&#13;
so cWy five singles and two doubles matches were&#13;
played. Withthe easy victory, the Rangers continued their&#13;
UWP Tennis Lose,Win&#13;
The UWP 1978-71 Tennis Team&#13;
trend of either winning big or losing big. Close con~ts&#13;
have been lacking in this up and down season.&#13;
Coach Frecka noted that there are some very strong&#13;
teams on the schedule. Apparently the tough comgugtch,&#13;
Maschott, Fechhelm&#13;
and Merritt teamed up to take&#13;
thirds in both the 480 low hurdle&#13;
shuttle and Ute high hurdle&#13;
shuttle of the same distance.&#13;
The team 01 McGilsky. McFadden.&#13;
Dettman. and Mike&#13;
DeWitt took lourth in the two&#13;
mile relay.&#13;
In field events Leonard&#13;
Bullock leaped 22 leet2'. inches&#13;
which was good lor lourth place&#13;
in the long jump. John Patten&#13;
set a Parkside record in the pole&#13;
vault with a 13leet6 inch erlort.&#13;
Trackmen Place In Relays&#13;
Several Ranger trackmen&#13;
placed in the first annual&#13;
Wisconsin Relays held at&#13;
StevensPoint. Team scores&#13;
.ere not available in the 12&#13;
Ie8m fieid. .&#13;
EugenePrince ~as sec~nd 10&#13;
Ibe high jump wiUta 6'4" Jump.&#13;
His jwnp was the same height&#13;
IS the winner's, but he had&#13;
moremisses.&#13;
The metric hurdles team 01&#13;
Mike Zugich, Dennis Fechhelm,&#13;
Dean Mascholl and Keith&#13;
Mer!':'itt set a school record en&#13;
route ,to a second place finish .&#13;
Their time was 3:54.5. .&#13;
Jim McFadden. Chuck&#13;
Dettman. Gary Lance. and Tim&#13;
McGilsky comprised the lour&#13;
mile relay team whIch also took'&#13;
second place.&#13;
pelltion has Mlped the Raa&amp;en when !hoy meet&#13;
lormidable oppaoenlo.&#13;
UW-MI, P..... IIk.&#13;
Siegel. UW-M. over Safago. &amp;-9. 6-41&#13;
N...... onIti. UW-M. over MIeCZIt_i. 6-3. 6-2&#13;
Sc~iber. UW-M. over Haase. 6-41. 6-1&#13;
J.tczak. UW-M. over Kaplan, 6-41. 6-1&#13;
Bernstein. UW·M. over HereMn, 6-1. 6-1&#13;
Runle. UW-M. over Ka~. 6-0. 6-2&#13;
Schreiber-Bernstein. UW-M. over Safago-M,e&lt;:Zkowolu.&#13;
6-1, 6-2&#13;
J.tczak-Gordoo, UW-M, over Haa~mlth. 6-1.6-3&#13;
Felm-Runte, UW-M. over HereMn- elaoo. 6-3. 6-1&#13;
UW.(;reeD Bay I. P ..... ..., •&#13;
KropP. GB. over Salago. U. 6-1. 6-3&#13;
Meru, GB. over Mie&lt;:Zk_" 6-2, 6-2&#13;
Adams. GB. over Kaplan, 6-0. 6-3&#13;
Brautigan. GB, over Smith, 6-2, 6-0&#13;
Thielman, GB. over Kangas, 6-2. 6-41&#13;
Engelbrecht. GB, over eIsoo. 6-3. 6-0&#13;
Mertz-Adams. GB. over Sal.go-Mleczk_i, ~, 6-1&#13;
____ Thielman-Brautig.n. GB. over Kaplan-Kangas. 6-0. 6-l&#13;
.Engelbrecht-Schultz. GB, over Smith-Nelson, 6-1. s-r&#13;
P..... id.7. MUloa'&#13;
Salago. P. over Gibson. 1-6. 6-2. W&#13;
Mieczkowski, P, over Skaggs. 6-2. 6-2&#13;
Haase, P, over Zimmerman, 6-1, &amp;-1&#13;
Kaplan, P, over Mccanna 6-0. 6-0&#13;
Herchen, P, over Celio. 6-0. 6-1&#13;
Salago-Mieczkowslti. P, over Skaggs. 6-1. 6-4&#13;
Haase-Smith, P, Over Zlmmennan-Ge:hn. &amp;-l, 10-8&#13;
COURTESY 0'" PU8L.1C: IN FO"""A.T10N&#13;
Rogers To '"end UWP&#13;
Ted Rogers. EH) forward Irom&#13;
10nooa Grove high school, has&#13;
become lhe second state&#13;
basketball star to announce h1s&#13;
intention of attending the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
next season, UWP&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens announced&#13;
today.&#13;
Rogers averaged 16 pomts&#13;
and a team-leading 14 rebounds&#13;
per game in leading Coach&#13;
Frank Hlavac's . tMona Greve&#13;
team lo a 12-2 Badger Conference&#13;
record. runntrup to&#13;
unhealedn Sun Prairie He ....a&#13;
named AII-Conlerence. second&#13;
team AlI-.lad,son and MVP at&#13;
tanona Grove.&#13;
Tom Heller. 6-6 CBthohc&#13;
Conference sLar from Kenosha&#13;
l. Joseph, recenUy announced&#13;
his intention to aU nd W·&#13;
Park ,de. UWP ~9'Split Doubleheader&#13;
The visitors broke a scoreless tie in the third Golfers Lose to UWM&#13;
inning by coming up with three runs. Parkside got&#13;
one of the runs back in their hall 01 the third, making&#13;
it three to one.&#13;
The Rangers. however. could not get any closer&#13;
as 81. Norbert scored two more in both the fourth&#13;
and fifth innings. To complete their scoring, the&#13;
visitors added three in the sixth and one in lhe&#13;
seventh.&#13;
byJim Casper of The Newscope Staff.&#13;
Behind the sharp pitching 01 Rick Jackson,&#13;
Parkside'sb~ball team edged 51. Norhert in the&#13;
~er or a doubleheader at Parkside's athletic&#13;
Ileldby a 2-1 score. •&#13;
81.Norbert, however, came up with a thun~&#13;
derws barrage 01 timely hilling which enabled&#13;
Ibem to lake the nightcap 11-3..&#13;
In thetight first game. the Rangers broke a 1-1&#13;
lie in thelast inning by pushing across the winning&#13;
nil 00 a triple by Carl Talsma and a single to lelt&#13;
put the pulled in infield by winning pitcher Rick&#13;
Jackson.The Rangers' first run came on Dennis&#13;
Serpe'sinfield hil.&#13;
Pacing the Ranger olfense in the low scoring&#13;
affair was Joe Johnson, who went two for three,&#13;
includinga double.&#13;
.WhileParkside was able to get out 01 a number&#13;
ci tightsituations in the first game, that was not the&#13;
case in the second. The st. Norhert olfense got&#13;
1I:Itrackedas they pounded. out 11 runs on ten hits.&#13;
Ranger gollers lound a tough&#13;
opponent at Milwaukee as tM&#13;
UW-M Panthers scored a 37&amp;-&#13;
403 victory over Parkside.&#13;
with a 78.&#13;
Other PBrkside scores were&#13;
Tom Bothe WIth eo. Le,I Guttormsen&#13;
81, Randy Onefke 81.&#13;
and Rick Willem 13&#13;
The defeat gave Porks,de Its&#13;
fourth loss again t nine VIC·&#13;
Lones&#13;
Roo Barry of UW-M won the&#13;
medal with a 73. Pacing the&#13;
Rangers were Dan Weyrauch&#13;
Parkside was only able to manage lone runs in&#13;
the third, fourth and sixth innings, as they failed to&#13;
get a sustained attack going.&#13;
Carl Talsma ran into serious trouble on the&#13;
mound and absorbed the loss. Talsma was the&#13;
starter, while Tom Jaehne came in to hurl the final&#13;
inning.&#13;
The split lelt the Iledgling learn with a 4-2-1&#13;
record for the year with two games left on the slate.&#13;
The team, therefore, is already assured of a winning&#13;
s~ason in its first year of existence.&#13;
::O~II'n.Am.,.. Con. 780t3 • 20th. FOR SALE-sail Boat, Snipe Class.&#13;
Make oHer. Call6S7·676Safter'' p.m .&#13;
... PlY. Rdrm'r," 'Pd. 313-335 hp.&#13;
FIll, htr. 637-5520 after 5:00.&#13;
RIDES NEEDED-WANTED&#13;
DR'IVE a pugeot to MIMeapoils.&#13;
Mlat get there ... tore June. Call a.o.&#13;
2225 after'S or 657-5121 ftl. 36.&#13;
NEED ride to seettle or AnchOrage.&#13;
Mayor June. Will split cost. call&#13;
Barb 6$4·9631.&#13;
Ita 0kIs II HoI ... " 3 tM1. high&#13;
~ ..... offer. 654-67-46after 5: 30&#13;
::.. Opel GT SlIv GAM» or beSt&#13;
_ . 152-3312after ...&#13;
WANTED TO BUY 2 used 3 br 5&#13;
speed bicycles. call 633-3131 after 5.&#13;
'WANTED - Hot "26" blcY~le. c.lI&#13;
6.12-7307 or. lewe }nfO.&#13;
::: MG M1_ Conv. New Batt.&#13;
Lnie,2lII.s.th.K_. R. Smith or C.&#13;
:, JtIp 4-Wheel drive Red cOny.&#13;
_ up; like new. Racine 633-3367&#13;
.. ,,'- IoItftt-e Mk III. Conv. Low&#13;
~ ~-7tf4 or _"71 I.fter a&#13;
_ - MlrtICalo.&#13;
WANTED _ New Boyfriend for&#13;
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(608) 252-9502, or wr1te: 661 Mendota&#13;
Ct., Apt. 301, Madison, Wis.&#13;
BEER&#13;
&amp; WATER STOP&#13;
24-7 oz. bot. 12-24 oz. bot.&#13;
$1.11 $1.39&#13;
plus tax &amp; deposit&#13;
_ '4,_~Kenosha&#13;
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lndiculions&#13;
is 1tvailable&#13;
al l~e llookslore for&#13;
LAST CHANCE DANCE&#13;
(Lost Social Ev.nt of ,he S.mes'.r) music by&#13;
--&#13;
~&#13;
-4&#13;
.. ::I:&#13;
0- m&#13;
~&#13;
-4&#13;
&gt;- ::I:&#13;
« -::a&#13;
:e c&#13;
... ::I:&#13;
•&#13;
.... 0&#13;
« c&#13;
en '"&#13;
m&#13;
-- ACTIVITIES BUIWING • 9·1&#13;
ADMISSION $1.50&#13;
with PARKSIDE &amp; WIS. I.D.&#13;
by Jim Ca~per of The ~ewsc~pe Staff ..&#13;
k 'de's tennis team ran mto stiff competition in&#13;
par 5~ainst the UW-M and UW-Green Bay, losing to&#13;
tche5 :he identical score of 9--0. The Rangers found&#13;
th by re to their liking, defeating them 7-0 at the&#13;
UWP Tennis Lose, Win&#13;
1Ut~ m~ark courts.&#13;
pershin~ngers knew they would be in for a rough time&#13;
. T~ road matches against the two UW schools&#13;
\\,th theY had lost to both of them at home earlier in&#13;
i,ecause n so in four matche~ against these schools this r,'&#13;
the seast~ Rangers came up with only one individual ___ ,,__.&#13;
~son which came in the 8"1 loss to UW-Green Bay back 1,ctol"Y&#13;
April 24. 'k Saf ~ ainst UW-Green Bay, M1 e ago, the _Rangers'&#13;
! one singles player, was the only Parkside netter&#13;
oum his match to three sets before losing. Safago had&#13;
to run ted for Parkside's only victory over a Green Bay .&#13;
,ccoun this year --01 the earlier home match. He had . +l-W n&#13;
plr~d highly regarded Larry Kropp in three sets, but "it' t1' :&#13;
de ~:"'e after winning the first set, Mike lost the next •·4 4 ! Hit&#13;
thiS UJU , " ~· t •4-,&#13;
two.All the matches against UW-M were dropped in two :?ttf;7f;&#13;
sets, as the Panthers scored their second shutout against&#13;
Parkside. The team bounced back from the two one-sided&#13;
def ea ts to administer a sound thrashing to the Milton net&#13;
ad The score in this match was 7-0.&#13;
COURTESY OF PUBL IC INFOR,...A T ION&#13;
The UWP 1970-71 Tennis Team&#13;
squ The visiting school was short handed for this match,&#13;
50 only five singles and two doubles matches were&#13;
trend of either winning big or losing big. Close con~ts&#13;
have been lacking in this up and down season.&#13;
Coach Frecka noted that there are some very strong&#13;
p1ay~tll the easy victory, the Rangers continued their teams on the schedule. Apparently the tough comth&#13;
m t I&#13;
3, 2&#13;
1, l&#13;
Trackmen Place In Relays&#13;
The metric hurdles team of&#13;
Mike Zugich, Dennis Fechhelm,&#13;
Dean Maschoff and Keith&#13;
Mer~itt set a school record en&#13;
route _to a second place finish.&#13;
Their time was 3: 54.5.&#13;
Zugich, Maschoff, Fechhelm&#13;
and Merritt teamed up to tak~&#13;
thirds in both the 480 low hurdle&#13;
shuttle and the high hurdle&#13;
shuttle of the same distance.&#13;
Rogers To Attend UWP&#13;
Several Ranger trackmen&#13;
placed in the first annual&#13;
Wisconsin Relays held at&#13;
Stevens Point. Team scores&#13;
v,·ere not available in the 12&#13;
team field. . Eugene Prince was second m&#13;
the high jump with a 6'4" jump.&#13;
His jump was the same height&#13;
as the winner's, but he had&#13;
more misses.&#13;
Jim McFadden, Chuck&#13;
Dettman, Gary Lance, and Tim&#13;
McGilsky comprised the four&#13;
mile relay team which also took'&#13;
second place.&#13;
The team of McGilsky, tcFadden,&#13;
Dettman, and Mike&#13;
DeWitt took fourth in the two&#13;
mile relay.&#13;
In field events Leonard&#13;
Bullock leaped 22 feet 21 4 inches&#13;
which was good for fourth place&#13;
in the long jump. J ohn Patten&#13;
set a Parkside record in the pole&#13;
vault with a 13 feet 6 inch effort.&#13;
Ted Rogers, ~ forward from&#13;
, lonona Grove high chool, ha&#13;
become the econd _ tate&#13;
basketball star to announce h"&#13;
intention of attending the&#13;
'niver ity of \ 'i con_inPark&#13;
ide next sea on, '\ 'P&#13;
Coach Steve tephen announced&#13;
toda)&#13;
Rogers averaged 16 point&#13;
and a team-leading 14 reboun&#13;
per game in leading Coach&#13;
UWP '9' Split Doubleheader&#13;
by Jim Casper of The Newscope Staff The visitors broke a scoreless tie in the third&#13;
inning by coming up with three runs. Parkside got&#13;
one of the runs back in their half of the third, making&#13;
it three to one.&#13;
Golfers Lose to UWM&#13;
Behind the sharp pitching of Rick Jackson,&#13;
Parkside's baseball team edged St. Norbert in the&#13;
opener of a doubleheader at Parkside's athletic&#13;
field by a 2-1 score. •&#13;
St. Norbert, however, came up with a thunderous&#13;
barrage of timely hitting which enabled&#13;
them to take the nightcap 11-3. ·&#13;
ln the tight first game, the Rangers broke a 1-1&#13;
tie in the last inning by pushing across the winning&#13;
nm on a triple by Carl Talsma and a single to left&#13;
past the pulled in infield by winning pitcher Rick&#13;
Jackson. The Rangers' first run came on Dennis&#13;
Serpe's infield hit.&#13;
Pacing the Ranger offense in the low scoring&#13;
affair was Joe Johnson, who went two for three,&#13;
including a double.&#13;
While Parkside was able to get out of a number&#13;
rx tight situations in the first game, that was not the&#13;
case in the second. The St. Norbert offense got&#13;
untracked as they pounded out 11 runs on ten hits.&#13;
The Rangers, however, could not get any closer&#13;
as St. Norbert scored two more in both the fourth&#13;
and fifth innings. To complete their scoring, the&#13;
visitors added three in the sixth and one in the&#13;
seventh.&#13;
Parkside was only able to manage lone runs in&#13;
the third, fourth and sixth innings, as they failed to&#13;
get a sustained attack going.&#13;
Carl Talsma ran into serious trouble on the&#13;
mound and absorbed the Joss. Talsma was the&#13;
starter, while Tom Jaehne came in to hurl the final&#13;
inning. The split left the fledgling team with a 4·2-1&#13;
record for the year with two games left on the slate.&#13;
The team, therefore, is already assured of a winning&#13;
season in its first year of existence.&#13;
Ranger golfers found a to h&#13;
opponent at iilwau ee a the&#13;
UW- f Panthers scored a 375-&#13;
403 victory over Par ide.&#13;
Ron Barry of UW- I "°" the&#13;
medal .,.,.;th a 73. Pacing the&#13;
Rangers were Dan \\ e Tauch&#13;
LS&#13;
o.l the&#13;
ndic nlion&#13;
nilnble&#13;
ook lore for&#13;
1"' Ram. Amer. Con. 7M3 - 20th,&#13;
Ktno.&#13;
1'tt Ply, Rdrnn•r,, spd, 313-335 hp.&#13;
rid, hlr · 637-5520 after 5:00.&#13;
f'OR SALE- Sall Boat, Snipe Class.&#13;
Make offer. Call 657-6765 after, p .m.&#13;
. RIDESNEEDED-WANTED&#13;
DRIVE a Pugeot to Mlmeapolls.&#13;
Must get there before June. Call UJ. 2225 after '5 or 657-5121 ellt. 36.&#13;
LAST CHANCE DANCE&#13;
10Q Olds ea Hot. 495 3 brl. high&#13;
comp. Best offer. 654-67"6 after 5: 30&#13;
P-m.&#13;
1'tt ()pef GT Sliver S2AOO Of' best °"" · '52-3312 after ,.&#13;
: : Midget Conv. New Batt, ~ · 54th, Keno. R. Smith Of' C.&#13;
tr.&#13;
:;' hep "-'IIWtleel drive Red c:onv. 11 up; 11kt new. Racine 633-3367&#13;
:.Tri&#13;
- . Spiffire Mk Ill, CAinv. Low&#13;
P.111 1• R637·79'6 or 654-9'71 (after 6 · Dd Mlrescalo.&#13;
NEED ride to Seattle or Anct,orage.&#13;
May or J'-"le. WIii split cost-. call&#13;
Barb 654-9631.&#13;
WANTED TO BUY - 2 used 3 br 5&#13;
speed bicycles. call 633-3131 after 5.&#13;
'WANTED - Hot "26" blcy~le. call&#13;
632-7307 or, le~e ·'"'°&#13;
·&#13;
WANTED - New Boyfriend for&#13;
personal interview. Call Margaret at&#13;
c6081 252-9502, or write : 661 Mendota&#13;
ct., Apt. 301, Madison, Wis.&#13;
21 FLAVORS&#13;
BEER ,,,,, POP&#13;
..,.il=- - : ..•&#13;
&amp; WATER z::J))}II\'''''"" STOP&#13;
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d. ,. Kenosha&#13;
....&#13;
(Lost Social Event of the Seme ster}&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING - 9-1&#13;
ADMISSION $1.50&#13;
with PARKSIDE &amp; WIS. I.D.&#13;
music by&#13;
-&#13;
-I -&#13;
:c&#13;
m&#13;
-I&#13;
:I:&#13;
-,a&#13;
C&#13;
:I:&#13;
0&#13;
C&#13;
V,&#13;
m&#13;
--&#13;
Pap' NEwSCtWE Mal 14. 1171&#13;
ol Ecology • wisdom. and Amun AmunRa_Hoffman-Rubin&#13;
the God ol Street&#13;
Roits." 1be myth is a strung out ca talogue&#13;
ol gods and goddesses, earthlmgs, honkpork&#13;
space1ings, etc, etc.&#13;
Sa~ders knows the language .and .approacheS&#13;
the novel with poetry m mind,&#13;
the very nature and scope of the theme&#13;
view of Yippie. Only the Db&#13;
been changed to protect the~ '-&#13;
and liberals from themsel~ :s&#13;
us a measure of the absurd ,llld ..&#13;
the truth and the myth of y~ ~&#13;
Shards of God is written in'IlPit.&#13;
first person, heat and if y ~ ....&#13;
enough you'll be hlided f::: S&#13;
and your own hand-ups just 1m ~&#13;
see how ullimately true it .ong ~&#13;
acco~plishes its task, how~eUboa&#13;
Yippie and the Chicago 0'1al U&#13;
I declare that the Universe m.&#13;
itself as life. l¥II1&#13;
I declare that Iggdrasail is a ""-I&#13;
God! hail force share! haiI&#13;
music! PDrIII&#13;
Cop, 01 resolut,ons opposing the proposed&#13;
merger of the University of Wisconsin and&#13;
\\ lst'Ql'lSin Slale University systems and supporting&#13;
the budgets submitted by regents 01 the two&#13;
unl\'erslly systems over the "drastic cuts" in the&#13;
gO\' rnor's proposed budget have been forwarded to&#13;
GO\'ernor Palrick Lucey. UW President John&#13;
Weaver and state legislature by the Wisconsin&#13;
Ol\'i Ion o( !.he American Association of University&#13;
Women&#13;
The state AAUW adopted the resolutions at its&#13;
annual convention in Wausau recently, accorcting to&#13;
Irs Arlhur Rothe, 1214Lorraine Ave., Racine, the&#13;
newly elected state president.&#13;
The resolutions werl~ introduced by Mrs.&#13;
Francis Wendt of Racine, who was state president&#13;
of the AAUWin 1936-38.&#13;
Mrs. Rothe said that since the resolutions were&#13;
not on the convention agenda. a two-thirds vote of&#13;
IIle 250 delegates was required to bring the&#13;
resolutions before the body and a three-fourths vote&#13;
was required (or adoption.&#13;
~J"'K_&#13;
of lIle ... cepe Staff&#13;
SU" of God IS a 179pag. modem&#13;
poeudo-lliad Ithere are references to Ajax&#13;
and Achill.. ) mto Y'pp,e. and Ed Sandon&#13;
lleader 01 IIle Fogs, editor·publisher of&#13;
Faell V..,- a magazine of the arts, poet,&#13;
proprietor of Peace Eye Bookstore,&#13;
Ylpp", "TIter) is shouling-smging the&#13;
mylh olllle great American m)1hmakers.&#13;
H. portrays Yippl. ,n all Its splendorsuck,&#13;
new mytho-culture pasted over the old&#13;
myth-ce::wnerslone01 the Amencan ...·ay of&#13;
lile What com" to mond is the phra"&#13;
'only 10 Amenc.'&#13;
When I \Was InChicago for the Festival of&#13;
Ufe. or Maller put I~ the "Surge of&#13;
C1ucago", "luch IS the primary subject 01&#13;
the novel. I kepi my eye on Sanders, I&#13;
lollowed tum around because he was the&#13;
only YIp I could relat. to, aod .veryone in&#13;
Chicago \Wa a Yip althat lIme Abbie and&#13;
RubIO ....ere too electriC. too Yip for my&#13;
POlche till bathed m the ml&lt;ho.eslem&#13;
mnlOhC nuu!5 of Keno, DeUlOger was too&#13;
tnl)). 100 fatherly and one is enough,&#13;
Hal den and Dav .. ere too polilical,&#13;
ales too violently rhetoncal, Froines&#13;
and W("lntr too in\,tSible. but Sanders, well&#13;
.. a poet. a calm ,n the eye of the&#13;
clich and the chaos, a warm and totally&#13;
mullt r. led human rather than a oneIdtd&#13;
oratOl'"or an electriC )·o-yo champ&#13;
such a Ablll Another Yip lunnamed)&#13;
....he I relaled to was a long hair who kept&#13;
)' lling oul 'God BI Captain Vere', at&#13;
four In lhe- morning&#13;
SIlar* begins with the "".,..,ism of the&#13;
Pentagon and eods on the saucer zagreus90&#13;
alter the bIea~ liberals and tearY&#13;
eyed McCarthy virgins came down to&#13;
Grant ParI&lt; to sit next to IIle dirty&#13;
hunhonls. Perhaps the best way to review&#13;
a myth is to let it perpetuale Itself ~n&#13;
nunor, but I'm paid to wnle reviews so 111&#13;
.....&#13;
-&#13;
disallows the possibility for a subtle&#13;
presentation 01 satire and parody, butthe&#13;
satire is, if not particulary subtle, striking,&#13;
original and humorous. The facts of&#13;
August 1968 are manipulated, the&#13;
characters are parodied, one-sided god~ or&#13;
demons precisely what one expects t? fInd&#13;
in a myth, they are giants, Euc~lde~n&#13;
characters, a type not necessarily In&#13;
existence in re, but still valid in so far as&#13;
their functions in the myth are concerned.&#13;
The more I think of it, and the less sober&#13;
Ibecome, the more Irealize that this is the&#13;
only real way the Festival of Live could be&#13;
depicted, in myth, in fantastic. parodIC&#13;
computer-poetry myth of the coming Aeon&#13;
01 Yippie. Do~notpick this book up to find out what r-------------&#13;
happened in Chicago during the 1968&#13;
Democratic Convention, nay. pick it up to read a mcxlern myth and one poet's eye,o- -'&#13;
say this much about the mytho olYippie as&#13;
SWIgby bard-parodist sanders, it contains&#13;
The Council 01 the Eye; I-mouthed&#13;
saucerlings, porn flowers, smut ape&#13;
commie freakos, suck and suck trysts,&#13;
exorcism of Puritan guilt, subversives, the&#13;
psycbcodelic concentration camp of the&#13;
United Stales, nying saucers, hellsoup.the&#13;
wraiths ol Che, Tom Eliot, Bob Brownmg,&#13;
a lot 01 radical good guys both dead and&#13;
undead, Akhnaton, Oral Annie, She-WhoSuell-Ir,.A.Skirt-Of-Snakes,&#13;
Madame BWl&#13;
Doctor, Pearpuke the undercover porke~.&#13;
Complete wristwatches, the farmer s&#13;
daughter or wife, galactic vibrators, a stud&#13;
robol for the pentagon in "The Great&#13;
Pentagon Hunching Contest", weregenerals,&#13;
PARODY, mammal, Danger&#13;
lucking, spread shots, "Thoth the God of&#13;
Gnosis &amp; Emanation, Jesus the God or&#13;
Sharong and GenUeness, Buddha the God&#13;
WP. weep for the chaCfi we&#13;
lension and blood ~t bl~eep !It&#13;
sacrifice .' iI -.&#13;
for we are eternal, .weare the&#13;
we are the people ~&#13;
we are marijuana&#13;
we are mascon SUckers&#13;
•'Nt"&#13;
mold for you a new civilizationor&#13;
and love -..&#13;
&amp; you! you will haveit ""----.&#13;
In your face. -.&#13;
Shards of God courtesy of the Boot ••&#13;
622-59th Street, Kenosha. • IIlI&#13;
Merger Opposed&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Therefore, we recommend that the&#13;
issue be assigned to a legislative interimm:::&#13;
committee for an in-depth study.&#13;
The resolution dealing with the bUdget staIIt&#13;
We, the Wisconsin Division of the A.rncftII&#13;
Association of University Women, go on ~&#13;
supporting the budg7ts aspresented bythe 8Ganlll&#13;
Regents 01 the Umverslty of WisconsinlIld ..&#13;
Board of Regents of the Wisconsin State UnMnIr&#13;
system. The drastic cuts proposed in theGover-.&#13;
budget would very seriously impair lIld ...&#13;
necessitate cutting out.present programs lIldWllM&#13;
seriously jeopardize the research programsudlit&#13;
graduate .schools. Wisconsin, through the "&#13;
its leaders and the support of its taxpay III&#13;
developed one of the great universities".&#13;
country and is internationally recogni2led.II&#13;
Wisconsin citizens realize that quality educItiII&#13;
costs money - we wish to go "forward" UDder.&#13;
stale motto. The Governor's· budget would .....&#13;
backwards.&#13;
by the Wisconsin AA UW&#13;
The Wisconsin Division of AAUW has 4B&#13;
branches and some 5,000 members.&#13;
The resolution on the proposed merger states:&#13;
We. the Wisconsin Division of the American&#13;
Association of University Women, go on record as&#13;
opposing any legislation at this time merging the&#13;
University of Wisconsin and the Wisconsin State&#13;
University system, on the grounds (1) that such a&#13;
merger would create a giant, centralized system&#13;
under which individual campuses would tend to lose&#13;
their identity, be less responsive to local needs, and&#13;
reduce the variety of educational choice for&#13;
students; (2) that such a merger might be more&#13;
costly than maintaining the separate Boards of&#13;
\&#13;
its i~~S'€cOt\. d c.oMit\~&#13;
of' BuJI d03 f-I Qrr r&#13;
. , .&#13;
\&#13;
\&#13;
J H, 1'71&#13;
ants begins with the exorcism of the&#13;
Pentagon and ends on the saucer Zagreusafter&#13;
the bleating liberals and teary&#13;
eyed tcCarthy virgins came down_ to&#13;
Grant Par lo sit next lo the ~ty&#13;
hunhords. Perhaps the best way ~ rev1e_w&#13;
a myth is to let it perpetua~ itself ~ rumor, but I'm paid to write reVJews so I II&#13;
say this much about the my tho o~ Yippie_ as ung by bard-parodist Sanders, 1t cont.ams&#13;
Th Council or the Eye; I-mouthed&#13;
saucerlings, porn flowers, smut ape&#13;
commie freakos, suck and suck trysts, e orcism of Puritan guilt, subversives, the&#13;
psychcodelic concentration camp of the&#13;
nited States, flying saucers, hellsoup_ the&#13;
v.ntlhs of Che, Tom Eliot, Bob Browmng,&#13;
a lot of radical good guys both dead and&#13;
undead. Akhnaton, Oral Annie, She-Whouck-In-A-Skirt-Of-Snakes,&#13;
Madame Bun&#13;
Doctor, Pearpuke the undercover porke~,&#13;
Complete wristwatches, the farmer s daughter or wife, galactic vibrators, a stud&#13;
robot for the pentagon in "The Great&#13;
Pentagon Hunching Contest", weregenerals,&#13;
PARODY, mammal, Danger&#13;
fucking, pread shots, "Thoth the God of&#13;
Gnosis &amp; Emanation, Jesus the God of&#13;
Sharong and Gentleness, Buddha the God&#13;
of Ecology &amp; Wisdom, and odAm~ ~un~&#13;
Ra-Hoffman-Rubin the G O ee Roits." The myth is a strung ou_t catalogue&#13;
of gods and goddesses, earthlings, honkpork,&#13;
spacelings, etc, etc.&#13;
Sanders knows the language _and _approaches&#13;
the novel with poetry m mmd,&#13;
the very nature and scope of the theme&#13;
disallows the possibility for a subtle&#13;
presentation of sat~e and parody, ~t.the&#13;
satire is, if not particulary subtle, str1k1ng,&#13;
original and humorous. The facts of&#13;
August 1968 are manipulated, the&#13;
characters are parodied, one-sided god~ or demons precisely what one expects to fmd&#13;
in a myth, they are giants, Euc!ide~n&#13;
characters, a type not necessarily m&#13;
existence in re, but still valid in so far as their functions in the myth are concerned.&#13;
The more I think of it, and the less sober&#13;
I become the more I realize that this is the&#13;
only real 'way the Festival of Li~e could ~e&#13;
depicted in myth, in fantastic parod1c&#13;
compute~-poetry myth of the coming Aeon&#13;
view of Yippie. Only the b. been changed to protect ~ lectiVity&#13;
and liberals from themselv e · us a measure of the absurdes, a~ 14&#13;
the truth and the myth or y~nd_ ·&#13;
Shards of God is written in PP1.e.&#13;
first person, heat and if y ~hitt, a&#13;
enough you'll be blided fr:i OOk_ c and your own hand-ups just I ob&#13;
see how ultimately true it . ong e~&#13;
accomplishes its task how is, ~~&#13;
Yippie and the Chicago or;: •t&#13;
I declare that the Univers Ill:&#13;
itself as life. e ~1n&#13;
I declare that Iggdrasail is&#13;
a Spflld&#13;
God! hail force share' hail&#13;
music! · l&gt;Orn'&#13;
WP. weep for the chaos we&#13;
tension and blood ix;t bl~~ for&#13;
sacrifice · ' IS o«&#13;
for we are eternal, .we are the we are the people&#13;
we are marijuana we are mascon suckers, we&#13;
mold for you a new civilizaUon of&#13;
and love&#13;
&amp; you! you will have it m your face.&#13;
of Yippie. r----- -------- Do·not pick this book up to find out what&#13;
happened in Chicago during the 1968&#13;
Democratic Convention, nay, pick it up to&#13;
Shards of God courtesy or the 8&#13;
622-59th Street, Kenosha. read a modern myth and one poet's eye, ______________ _J&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Merger Opposed Therefore, we recommend that the m&#13;
issue be assigned to a legislative interim&#13;
committee for an in-depth study.&#13;
by the Wisconsin AAUW&#13;
The resolution dealing with the budget&#13;
We, the Wisconsin Division of the Amen&#13;
Association of University Women, go on&#13;
supporting the budgets as presented by the Boardd&#13;
Regents of the University of Wisconsin and&#13;
Board of Regents of the Wisconsin State Unh&#13;
system. The drastic cuts proposed in the Governcr 1&#13;
budget would very seriously impair and er&#13;
necessitate cutting out.present programs and&#13;
seriously jeopardize the research programs and&#13;
graduate schools. Wisconsin, through the effonsd&#13;
its leaders and the support of its taxpayers&#13;
developed one of the great universities ol aur&#13;
country and is internationally recognized&#13;
Wisconsin citizens realize that quality educatian&#13;
costs money - we wish to go "forward" under&#13;
state motto. The Governor's budget would lead 11&#13;
backwards.&#13;
The Wisconsin Division of AAUW has 48&#13;
branches and some 5,000 members.&#13;
The resolution on the proposed merger states:&#13;
We, the Wisconsin Division of the American&#13;
Association of University Women, go on record as&#13;
opposing any legislation at this time merging the&#13;
University of Wisconsin and the Wisconsin State&#13;
University system, on the grounds (1) that such a&#13;
merger would create a giant, centralized system&#13;
under which individual campuses would tend to lose&#13;
their identity, be less responsive to local needs, and&#13;
reduce the variety of educational choice for&#13;
students; (2) that such a merger might be more&#13;
costly than maintaining the separate Boards of&#13;
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              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
•••••••• Volume 3-Number 16 :May 11, t&amp;n&#13;
F&#13;
r&#13;
e&#13;
e&#13;
Inside: Chancellor Com merits on Faculty&#13;
Review Process&#13;
· State Senators Interviewed on Merge,&#13;
.&#13;
Newscope Interview: &#13;
Edltoc·s Note: Last Monday recording&#13;
group "Chicago" played at the Case&#13;
Fieldhouse In Racine. Following the&#13;
concert two of the band members, Bob&#13;
Lamm. organ. and Terry Kath, guitar.&#13;
were lntel"vlewed by Bob Borchardt ol the&#13;
Newscope Staff.&#13;
Newscope: Are you, as you've been called&#13;
in recent articles, a political band?&#13;
Lamm: We're a musical band that does&#13;
some political lyrics.&#13;
N ewscope: Do you feel that that accom&#13;
plishes something politically'?&#13;
Lamm: Well, you see, the basis of art is&#13;
communication, and while we may be&#13;
thinking the same thing as people like you,&#13;
there are other people who don't have their&#13;
minds on those things al all. We're a&#13;
vehicle for those kinds of thoughts. We get&#13;
on stage and sing things or say things that&#13;
may change people's heads. Not offering&#13;
solutions, let's say, but acting as a catalyst&#13;
• ... Anyway, we're not a political band.&#13;
We're a musical band that sometimes&#13;
phrases political ideas. Music Is the most&#13;
important part of my life. If politics was,&#13;
I'd be running for president. I couldn't do&#13;
that. But I can play piano and write songs&#13;
about what I think is wrong.&#13;
NS: Do you do things outside of the band to&#13;
further . . . those ideas1 ·&#13;
Lamm: Yeah, only we don't publicize it&#13;
... We're not saying, "This ls what we do.&#13;
we help people. Student mobilization for&#13;
one. We just do what we think needs to be&#13;
done. NS: You slarted saying something about&#13;
music critics before, during the concert.&#13;
(Al one point In the concert, Lamm&#13;
remarked. "Rigl\t there to music critics,"&#13;
and was observed giving a gesture that.&#13;
was known among Marines in WW n as a&#13;
MUS6olini Salute.) When you were talking&#13;
about Leonard Feather ...&#13;
Lamm: I'm not talking about Leonard&#13;
Feather, ·because at least be has some&#13;
background In music . . . I'm talking&#13;
about people who write for Rolling Stone,&#13;
Rock Magazines and those things. I'm&#13;
talking about your typical rock critic who&#13;
can't do anything else and happens lo be a&#13;
Journalism major. so they send him out to&#13;
cover a concert. He doesn't get into the&#13;
music at all. He doesn't know anything&#13;
about music except that he's got a few&#13;
records at home. When he criticizes you,&#13;
he doesn' t criticize you ln terms of music,&#13;
he criticizes what he see!.&#13;
NS: About that free form thing you dld on&#13;
( Continued on Page 3) &#13;
Page2 SEWSCOPE May 17,Jt'll&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
"violation", I found that I was&#13;
just one of a small minority o{&#13;
350 who l:l!!ve protested throuah&#13;
written petition. ll's boos that&#13;
the only recourse a student has&#13;
for justice is filllng out a worthless&#13;
piece of paper which the&#13;
~rkside pigs donate to the&#13;
cj!'cular file. I inquired to the&#13;
pigs on who I could see personally&#13;
to appeal my ticket and&#13;
I was told "we don't know who&#13;
is in charge, we just collect tre&#13;
money". This leaves the student&#13;
two options, pay up or don't gel&#13;
your grades. Where the hell is&#13;
our student court? Democracy&#13;
at work - bullshit!&#13;
1'0 the Editor:&#13;
The City or Racine is ror•&#13;
lunate in having a weekly&#13;
newspaper called THE&#13;
SHORELINE LEADER. It's&#13;
editor is Jake Erdman who&#13;
writes a candid and thoughtful&#13;
weekly "Let's Talk" column.&#13;
I'd like all ol you to read a few of&#13;
bis paragraphs. Here they are:&#13;
Three clowns talk in a&#13;
publicly-owned building and&#13;
promote revolution and get&#13;
applause. cheers!&#13;
fyo of these lhree are, and In&#13;
roe way or another, responsible&#13;
£or the deaths, injury and&#13;
displacement of bard-working,&#13;
serious, students and taxpayers.&#13;
Yet, they were permitted&#13;
to use "our" tax-paid-for&#13;
buildings to promote their&#13;
revolution ... why?&#13;
Besides support from a couple&#13;
rundred "curious·• kids, these&#13;
kooks get headlines and front&#13;
page photos In some&#13;
newspapers . . . but not this&#13;
~&amp;St:nu&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
u .......&#13;
-·-. ~,_,. ... _ ........ c._,,._ ....... OU -" • Iii#,-_, • "'• JOU shop/&#13;
10% -·&#13;
Courtesy Discounl&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Faculty itP,\IR l&gt;lPT.&#13;
(Must Show 1.D.J&#13;
F a irtrade&#13;
excepted DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
IF YOU WANT&#13;
SOMETHING&#13;
A LITTLE EXTRA •• •&#13;
TRY&#13;
Budweise:c&#13;
MALT LIQUOR ,. ;&#13;
• :,t ~ ~ .,.J/Ti&#13;
:v ~ :"t&lt; '.'&#13;
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t; .... '~,J/1,-J•&#13;
. ~-.,. "ti \ •&#13;
• • • but you&#13;
know that!.! !&#13;
The way&#13;
to buy the&#13;
insurance&#13;
you need&#13;
but may&#13;
feel you&#13;
can't&#13;
afford.&#13;
For Further&#13;
lnlormotion Call:&#13;
JOHN J. SCHMITZ&#13;
652-4020&#13;
or use coupon below&#13;
r-------------, John J. Schmitz I&#13;
612 15th Place I&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140 I&#13;
Yes. I am Interested In I&#13;
geUlng further lnlor• 1&#13;
ma 1 tion on "PRIME."&#13;
NAME&#13;
WEST&#13;
SIDE&#13;
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SHOP&#13;
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6 o.m. till 11 p.m.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 6.57-97 47&#13;
A professional&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
that is safe, legal &amp;&#13;
• • 1nexpens1ve&#13;
can be set up on an&#13;
outpatient basi'l bv calling&#13;
The Problem Preg~ncy&#13;
Referral Service&#13;
215-722-5360&#13;
24 hours- 7 days&#13;
for professional, con'idential&#13;
and caring heto.&#13;
,&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
; CHEW&#13;
:§&#13;
, ..&#13;
%&#13;
~: 40th Ave.&#13;
~ &amp; I ~ 52nd St. I&#13;
i_t_:~1 =·=.! KENO SH A j~~ SUN. THRU THURS. i&#13;
t 11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE l •• • :::t&#13;
f.FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.t&#13;
" ~ •❖&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
CITY&#13;
~,: HAMBURGERS ~&#13;
40'" &amp; 24'" ~) . i I i SUPERCHEW ~.&#13;
l&#13;
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STAT£ _ ___ ZIP _ _ _&#13;
L------------.J&#13;
· 55( t!&#13;
1-ll::::.~-:-:..~..,;.~;.,:::«,~ ' ~&#13;
one.&#13;
Just how anyone can get so&#13;
excited, and give such a spread,&#13;
to these rotton, hate-filled goons&#13;
is beyond me. I'll bet they&#13;
laughed all the way to their&#13;
potted pads and banks.&#13;
Yes, the Commies were&#13;
happy last week . . . Racine&#13;
a.raced and promoted their&#13;
prime pushers.&#13;
A!&gt;d, if you want to live in&#13;
their so-called "new culture" of&#13;
dirt, pot, free sex, lazy-donothing&#13;
worlds, you should have&#13;
your head examined.&#13;
'I heartily agree with Mr.&#13;
Erdman.&#13;
The one good thing that came&#13;
out rL Rubin's appearance Js&#13;
that a couple of Parkside&#13;
wheels got stuck with the cost or&#13;
his plane ticket and fee. (Ac·&#13;
cording to a report in The&#13;
Racine Journal-Times.) That's&#13;
okay with me. Let the ludicrous&#13;
and verbose Luddites learn the&#13;
hard way, as long as they are&#13;
doing it with THEIR OWN&#13;
money. Now, let us hope that&#13;
the Rubin-fanciers got a good&#13;
lesson in economics .•. which&#13;
they will probably remember&#13;
for about a weelt.&#13;
Arthur M. Gruhl&#13;
ecycle this Paper&#13;
Newscope&#13;
• Warren Nedry Editor&#13;
Marc Eisen News Editor&#13;
John Koloen Copy Editor&#13;
Jim N&lt;l\an Business Manager&#13;
John Leighton Advertising Manager&#13;
EDITORlAL STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, Bill Sorensen, Bill&#13;
Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Dean Loumos, Mike&#13;
Kurth, Bob Borchardt, Ken&#13;
Konkol, Kevin McKay. James&#13;
Casper, Paul Lomartire. Sven&#13;
Tatfs. Mark. Tlmpany&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Narees Socha, Don Marjala, John&#13;
Cray, Barbara Scott.&#13;
BUSINESS PHONES&#13;
653.486t.Ext.38&#13;
652-4177&#13;
Ncwscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
students or The University or&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student . obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole&#13;
source of revenue for the&#13;
operation of NeW1&gt;C&lt;tpe. 6,000&#13;
copies are printed and&#13;
distributed throughout the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine com•&#13;
munities as well as the University.&#13;
Free copies are available&#13;
upon req~t.&#13;
I&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Apathy at Parkside? You&#13;
bet.tel' believe there is and rtVf'r'J&#13;
bit or It is well rounded. This&#13;
place. which the big-shots up in&#13;
Tallent call a university, Is the&#13;
biggest rip-off I've ever seen.&#13;
The police state administration,&#13;
is out to skrew every student in&#13;
every imaginable way. First&#13;
they fuck the students over by&#13;
making us go to school second&#13;
shift so the Golden agers can&#13;
catch a few classes at night and&#13;
rap during the day at their card&#13;
parties on haw their college&#13;
"careers•· are going. One year&#13;
ago, Tom Weiss and I, along&#13;
with a petition signed by 400&#13;
students, contacted Dc1111&#13;
Mitchell to see if more classes&#13;
could be scheduled duri.ng the&#13;
day. lllitchell told us he could do&#13;
nolhiflg about It. Wyllle's yes.&#13;
man did it again, since Mlt•&#13;
chell's the one who makes the&#13;
class schedule himself!&#13;
Quoting our brother J en-y&#13;
Ruben, "that education is shit",&#13;
there is alot of shit flying&#13;
around under the disguise of the&#13;
university police. When&#13;
questioning the legality of a&#13;
ticket I received for a parkinu&#13;
Rip-off No. 3 is the library.&#13;
Cun you name a major&#13;
university in lbe U.S. whose&#13;
library isn't open on Saturday?&#13;
This only refers to the faithful&#13;
users at Racine and Ken06ba&#13;
who must then check 41l!t&#13;
materials for the weekend and&#13;
face up to a 50 cent an hour fine&#13;
If they aren·t returned by 9 a.m.&#13;
Monday. •&#13;
In closing, I hereby submit&#13;
that the name Parkside be&#13;
officially changed to University&#13;
ol Wisconsin-Backside Rip-off!&#13;
Peter J. Habeller Jr,&#13;
C AMPU S E V E NTS&#13;
TUESDAY. MAY 18&#13;
Band Concert: UW-P band and&#13;
orchestra will present a free&#13;
concert. 7:30 p.m. Bradford&#13;
High School, Kenosha.&#13;
TlllJRSDAY, lllAY 20&#13;
Golf: NAlA District 14 tourname11t&#13;
at Green Lake. Also&#13;
May 21 and 22.&#13;
F RIDAY, MAY2I&#13;
Tennis: NA IA District • 14&#13;
tournament at Whitewater.&#13;
Also May~ .&#13;
Open House: Student Government&#13;
will hold an open house&#13;
at their new facilities in the&#13;
old Physical Plant building. It&#13;
is located al the junctio11 ol.&#13;
Wood Road and Highway A.&#13;
Film: Feature film, "Goodbye&#13;
Columbus" wUl be shown at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Activities&#13;
Buildini;l. Admission 75 cents.&#13;
CCC TO MEET&#13;
There v.111 be an open meeting&#13;
of the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee Friday, May 23, at I&#13;
p.m., in room 221 of Greenquist&#13;
Hall.&#13;
SATURDAY, lllAY 22&#13;
Baseball: UW·P vs. UW-M at&#13;
Lincoln Park, Milwaukee. 12&#13;
noon (doubleheader).&#13;
Dance: "Touch McGraw". 9:00&#13;
p.m. • 1:00 a.m. Student&#13;
Activities Bldg. Sponsored by&#13;
Zeta Bela Tau fraternity.&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin I.D. required.&#13;
SUNDAY. MAY 23&#13;
Student Recital: Joe Gauche(,&#13;
tenor, and Sharron Johnson,&#13;
flute, will present a free&#13;
public recital at 4 p.m. In the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts&#13;
Room.&#13;
University League: Parkside&#13;
University League will hold&#13;
its annual picmc from 2 to 7&#13;
p.m. at Johnson Park, Hy. 38,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
P~U"Y Forum: UWP !11.w:lents&#13;
will read at the Parkside&#13;
Poetry Forum al 2 p.m. in the&#13;
Kenosha Museum patio&#13;
garden.&#13;
Honors Convocation: Spring&#13;
Honors Convocation will be&#13;
held at 2 p.m. in the&#13;
Greenquist Hall Concourse.&#13;
SPECIAL EVE NTS&#13;
Summer Travel - Thr ee&#13;
European F lights this&#13;
summer. Flight C departs&#13;
August 15 from Chicago to&#13;
London and retllrns September&#13;
12 from London to&#13;
Chicago. The cost is $im .oo.&#13;
Flight D departs J uly 15 for&#13;
London and returns September&#13;
11 from Amsterdam&#13;
to Chicago. Tbecostis$197.00.&#13;
Flight I departs June 15 from&#13;
Chicago to London and&#13;
returns September 18 from&#13;
London to Chicago. The cost is&#13;
~18.00. Information available&#13;
at the tudenl Office in&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
Patronize Our Advertisers&#13;
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- - CXl&#13;
. TALK OF THE TOWN&#13;
z&#13;
I &#13;
Editor's Note: The annual (acuity review process bas begun.&#13;
Among those noUfled lhat their contracts will noC be&#13;
renewed past lhe spring semester of 1912 ar e: Russell&#13;
Brokaw, Psychology; Salfinans Cacs, Math; Darrell&#13;
Douglas, mllillC; Charles Holibob. a rt; Marvin Pollard,&#13;
mu•lc; and Sidney Wal&amp;h, art.&#13;
By Warren Nedry&#13;
of The Newaeope Stan&#13;
Last Friday Newscope spoke with Chancellor Wyllie&#13;
concerning the procedures and evaluation criterion em•&#13;
ployed in the faculty review process.&#13;
The review process is initiated on the division level with&#13;
each divisional executive committee's review of all&#13;
probationary faculty up for review that year.&#13;
May 17. 1971 NEWSCOPE Page3&#13;
can cover a period of up lo 12 years, and that the six year&#13;
probationary period is designed 10 protect the man by •&#13;
assuring him the institution will make .a decision about him&#13;
within a reasonable time.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie Wyllie said that, "The normal practice of the University&#13;
is first to employ people who have the doctorate. Second is to&#13;
employ such persons as assistant professors for a three year&#13;
probationary term and, third, is to review, during that three&#13;
year term, whether they want to renew them for another&#13;
three year term.·•&#13;
Asked if newly-hired faculty are informed of the stan•&#13;
dards expected of them by the institution, Wyllie said, "The&#13;
extent to which an individual is told precisely by his&#13;
colleagues. who make the iniUal hiring recommendation, or&#13;
by his chairman that while you are here you should do&#13;
teaching, research, and institutional service, 1 don't really&#13;
know. My comment on this is that anybody who is bright&#13;
enough to gel a Ph.D. and to head into this profession and&#13;
has spent an extended period of time In graduate school,&#13;
can't be surprised by the expectation that these are the&#13;
standard functions and expectations of university&#13;
professors."&#13;
Wyllie mentioned that faculty members receive an&#13;
annual indication as to how well they are doing by way of the&#13;
annual review process. Each year a review is conducted l'o&#13;
determine If the faculty member receives a pay increase and&#13;
if so, what mangnitude. Wyllie commented that these&#13;
reviews are conducted in the same manner as rcnt&gt;wal&#13;
proceedings, "The initial review and recommendation on&#13;
salary merit increases come from the division and then on up&#13;
the line."&#13;
Comments on the " If they are renewed for the three year term, no later&#13;
than the sixth year. during which'l.ime he is still on probation,&#13;
the institution has to make a final determination whether to&#13;
promote him and grant him lifetime tenure or to send him&#13;
away. So, in effect, the ordinary circumstance is for a man to&#13;
be six years on probationary status, assuming he is renewed&#13;
for the second three years."&#13;
•&#13;
Faculty Review&#13;
In the case o£ non-renewal the employee is noti.fjed one&#13;
year in advance or the decision not to renew his contract.&#13;
Notification is by letter from either the dean or the chairman&#13;
or the division stating the reasons for non-renewal. U a&#13;
professor wishes to challenge the reasons given, he may&#13;
request a hearing, either open or closed. before the divisional&#13;
executive committee. However, al such a hearing only those&#13;
specific points as enumerated in the letter of non-renewal&#13;
may be taken up. Al.so in this hearing the bW'den of proof as&#13;
to the veracity or the reasons staled is upon the employee.&#13;
Asked whether there was any variance between divisions&#13;
on the emphasls given to evaluation criterion. Wyllie said.&#13;
"There shouldn't be, ordinarily, but I wooldn't guarantee&#13;
that there aren't."&#13;
Process&#13;
( Continued from Page 1)&#13;
piano. Do yoo think that's where music is&#13;
going; getting away from time and key&#13;
signatures?&#13;
Lamm: There's no reason lo do all music&#13;
like that. There's no reason that a simple&#13;
four chord thing can't be pleasing to listen&#13;
lo and pleasing to play. But on the other&#13;
hand I think that it's really good for people&#13;
lo hear new tthlngs. Maybe ''Lowdown"&#13;
isn't the most sophisticated thing in music,&#13;
bul if people come to hear "Lowdown" or&#13;
"25 or6 to4" and we lay some of this other&#13;
stuff on them, then I think we're influencing&#13;
the listening.&#13;
NS(Will you feel more of a success when&#13;
you're musically in front, having people&#13;
look to you for ideas, rather than you&#13;
looking lo someone else?&#13;
Lamm: You can measure success in a lot&#13;
or ways. Most groups measure it In terms&#13;
of money or in record sales. But I think the&#13;
success thal we feel is just U1e fact that a&#13;
lot of people come to see us play. Success&#13;
has to be judged in terms of how many&#13;
people like you.&#13;
''ln this whole area you're not in a mechanical process.&#13;
You're in the realm of human Judgement. But on balance I&#13;
think in our kind or institution the first thing that is looked at&#13;
is teaching effectiveness."&#13;
Asked to comment on the divisional executive committee's&#13;
dual role as judge and jury, Wyllie said, "When this&#13;
process was initiated some weeks ago, the dean contacted the&#13;
university attorney on this very point and it was his advice&#13;
lhal that is the proper hearing body on the appeal."&#13;
"This process is less rigid th.an you might imagine. That&#13;
is, we have people on the faculty who have tenure who&#13;
don't. have the Ph.D .. but they have something else that&#13;
identifies and marks their distinction. This is what you're&#13;
really always looking for. You're looking for nOI. just time in&#13;
service but distinction in service in teaching, research, andor&#13;
public service."&#13;
Asked to compare the percentage or faculty turnover at&#13;
Parkside with other similar institutions, Wyllie charac-&#13;
"I admil to some small surprise that the advise came terized it as "very light by comparison."&#13;
back that way, but the point yoo have to recognize is that in&#13;
the appeal as in the original judgement. presumably the&#13;
persons involved are not conducting a vendetta, but rather an&#13;
efforl to gel al tile basic facts or the case and come to a&#13;
professional judgement which will be fair lo the man and fair&#13;
to the institution."&#13;
Wyllie mentioned that al some institutions, particularly&#13;
the prestigious Ivy League institutions, probationary status&#13;
Wyllie said that within the review system as constituted&#13;
administrators make some personnel judgements. but only&#13;
after there has been a considerable amount or faculty in put.&#13;
"ln other word:s, the dean doesn't get in his judgements until&#13;
after these other steps have been taken. Then he ordinarily&#13;
would simply affirm the judgement made down the line. So&#13;
the idea that a dean sits up there and says, 'Nail this guy,' or&#13;
'Nail that one,' is untrue."&#13;
NS: Well, I think that could be argued.&#13;
Like the man· said, no one's ever lost&#13;
money undercstlmating the stupidity of&#13;
the American ?Jblic and I think that goos&#13;
for aesthetics, too.&#13;
Lamm: Yeah, but getting back to critics.&#13;
the ultimate crl tic is the pubUc. You know&#13;
as well as I do that when a band slops&#13;
being creative, yoo never hear of them&#13;
again, like Blood, Sweat and Tears . . .&#13;
their whole idea was lo structure a small&#13;
Count Basie. All America may love one&#13;
tune, but they might not like the next one&#13;
by that same group. Bui if all America&#13;
loves one group that continues lo grow&#13;
and, hopefully, makes the public grow in&#13;
terms ol what they appreciate musically,&#13;
then that's success.&#13;
SS: Could you compare the American&#13;
audience lo a European audience as far as&#13;
aesthetics?&#13;
Lamm: This (America ) is the center of&#13;
pop music. Like the Beatles aren' L even&#13;
that big in Europe. They're the Beatles.&#13;
But they never would have made it if they&#13;
had stayed in Europe, they had to come&#13;
here to make it.&#13;
NS: That's where the money was and is.&#13;
That's why they come Anyway, is it harder&#13;
for a band in Europe? 1 don't think they&#13;
pay to hel!r bad mlll!ic. .&#13;
Lamm: I'd say the European audience&#13;
understands whatever art pop music is.&#13;
They listen better. As a matter or fact,&#13;
we're heading for Europe the end o£ May&#13;
and then going around the world.&#13;
NS: What :t'a5 your reason for moving to&#13;
California?&#13;
Kath: Because there was then and still i:s,&#13;
no one in the Midwest that's into music as&#13;
far as ongineers, producers, manager:s,&#13;
companies, everything. 1'hey·rc just not&#13;
into music. They're inlo screwing the&#13;
group and making as much money as they&#13;
can. That's in lhe Midwest. 1n the Midwest&#13;
it's 100 per cent U:.at way. On the East&#13;
coast it's aboul99 per cent and on the West&#13;
about 98 per cent.&#13;
Lamm: Anything that's on the coast&#13;
doesn't get to the Midwest till a year later.&#13;
That goes for ev~ylhing from style of&#13;
_dress and musical taste to politica 1 idea.s.&#13;
:O.S: As far as yoor free form things, who&#13;
do you look to, someone like Miles&#13;
(Davis)?&#13;
Kath: l saw Miles about four months ago&#13;
and I can honesUy say that l didn't think&#13;
his group did shit. For me there are cer•&#13;
lain things that are just for the musician.&#13;
and are not really intended for a mass&#13;
audience.&#13;
NS: ls that wrong in itself or just wrong if&#13;
you try Lo play it for mass audiences?&#13;
Lamm: It's bcltc:r to bein a position where&#13;
can play a little of that and then a little of&#13;
whal people can understand.&#13;
NS: Woulctn·t that be compromising&#13;
yourself?&#13;
Lamm: Not really, because the choice is&#13;
doing that or not playing anything at all for&#13;
yourself. and that's compromising. If we&#13;
all dropped acid on stage and completely&#13;
freaked out, I'm sure that there would be&#13;
some people who could get behind it. but&#13;
I'm sure a lot of people would be disappointed.&#13;
I don·t think we have the right to&#13;
disappoint them.&#13;
Lamm on the r~ording power structure:&#13;
Unfortunat!!IY, arhsts don't have lhe kind&#13;
of people representing them that they can&#13;
trust. A lot of limes artists go to people&#13;
that can get their foot in the door. You&#13;
have lo be able to control your arl.&#13;
Columbia can never put oot anything that&#13;
we don't want them to.&#13;
NS: Are you in a better position to change&#13;
that by being on the inside even though&#13;
you're working for it?&#13;
Lamm: Just in terms or what we have&#13;
done, contracts, business decisions and&#13;
other things, we done it all different from&#13;
what was normally accepted. We want to&#13;
change the business. We play colleges for&#13;
relatively nothing just to play for colleges&#13;
Kath: we don·t like playing places where&#13;
you can gel more than 5 or 6 thousand&#13;
people in. It happens, but we know that&#13;
half the people aren't getting anything&#13;
near the experience they should be geumg&#13;
This Space For Sale&#13;
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nnn • ti¥ db ... 4 u who directed me in a way than an 11Jiterale would&#13;
understand. It turned out that I wasn't too far off&#13;
course.&#13;
DeRango's Restaurant is of course Italian.&#13;
They have a full menu of standard Italian dishes&#13;
and American favorites. They serve drinks that are&#13;
quite cheap as compared with other places; a wide&#13;
range of pizza, chicken, steak, a few fountain items.&#13;
The choices of what one can order are good,&#13;
especially if the individual likes ltaliap food.&#13;
u s,, n u u u u n • n a a n n 4 •-&#13;
1 ordered ravioli filled with meat, and Maggie&#13;
my frsquent guest ordered a hamburgP.r. french&#13;
by Paul Lomartir e fries and cole slaw, which only cost seventy-five&#13;
of the ~ewscope Staff cents. The ravioli dinner came with Italian bread&#13;
People slop me now and then to offer me a_ll and a salad, and cost a dollar seventy-five. '&#13;
kinds of advice concerning the writing of tlus Wewerediningoutin themiddleoftheweek 80&#13;
column. Everything from suggestions that I drop the place was expectedly quiet, and the ser~lce&#13;
dead; to writing articles mor e pertinent than my prompt. I would imagine that a weekend would be&#13;
eating habits. busy here, since it is a family type restaurant. The&#13;
One fellow stopped me last week and suggested interior looks as though someone was into a&#13;
that I eat in Racine more often, os l have only remodeling job, but they got called away before&#13;
written about one eating establishment in that city. they could finish. The inside is pleasant though.&#13;
I thought over this· weeks' suggestions and by- The Rolling Stones, Elton J ohn and various&#13;
passed those which appeared cynical, or in general, artists from thettop forty survey make up the music&#13;
non-creative, and decided to take that friendly on the jukebox. While we were waiting for our food,&#13;
fellows' advice and eat at DeRango's in Racine. I four junior high school sluut:nl:s shufned in. 1 figured U1is would be some sorl or consolation for Protected from the rain by sunglasses, and&#13;
the individual who wanted me to drop dead for I cigarettes dangling from thel.r mouths, the four&#13;
would at least leave town noisily chose a booth, pooled their money, and orI'll&#13;
admit to anyone that I go out of my way to dered one small cheese pizza. stay oul of Racine, simply because I al'fays get lost. Once we began to eat, Maggie found that her&#13;
those streets with names and no numbers, create a hamburger was good. Judging from the quanlily or&#13;
maze for me, when I search for anything that isn' l trench fries, nnd the size of the hamburger, I&#13;
next to the lake, or directly downtown. thought that her meal was quite a bargain. The&#13;
Wlien I first hit the cit.y limits on this Journey, 1 ravioli was a bit more involved though.&#13;
stopped at a gas station to ask where DeRango's Ravioli didn't seem to be worth the dollar&#13;
was. The attendant asked me which one I was seventy-five, which is a complaint I always seem to&#13;
looking for, and it was at this time 1 found out that find as a consumer in the restaurant field. The&#13;
there are four DeRango Restaurants. I decided lo ravioli tasted fine, was drenched in a tasty Italian&#13;
try the one on Douglas Avenue because I had at sauce, andwascoveredwiththefamouscheesethal&#13;
leasl heard of the street before. nine out often Americans can't stand the smell of. If&#13;
The attendant's directions included a turn the ravioli is any indication of the quality of their&#13;
where "the old Standard Station used to be", Italian food, and the hamburger and french fries,&#13;
followed by nwnerous cul'Ves leading to dead ends the American side, I would say that these are&#13;
and turns ril(ht and left. enough to confuse a &amp;11bstantial reasons why !our DeRango Restaurants&#13;
navigation expert. I listened for the first concrete operate in Racine. or course, that is if the other&#13;
direction and sort of nodded my head throogh the three fall in line with the one on Douglas Avenue.&#13;
rest. I left repeating "turn right at the first stop I have to admit that my meal was a bit preocsign.'&#13;
' cupied with U1e fact that I was worried about finding&#13;
After turning right at the sign. I sought out the the way back to Kenosha. I watched the four Junior&#13;
next station in my seareh for Oolll(las Avenue. high students fight over the last piece of pizui, a nd&#13;
by listening to only the first direction I didn't have even considered making a deal with them. to worry about becoming confused. In this manner I I would have been willing to turn them on to a&#13;
gotlost in only hall the lime, ending up after an hour way they could get into tile Kenosha county beer&#13;
· of driving behind a super markel At this time I bars before they were eighteen, for a clear precise&#13;
decided that any restaurant whose name even route home. It looked to me that they would go for a&#13;
resembled OeRango would be more than sufficlenl deal like that, and I would get home before running&#13;
From nowhere came a Racine police officer, oul ofgas somewherelnthewildsofRacine.&#13;
Philosopher-Poet Here Wedn~sday&#13;
Philosopher-poet Keith associate for the Minnesota havebeenpuhlished this month. Gunderson will read from his Center of Philosophy of Science. His poems have been printed&#13;
new book of poems at 7 :30 p.m. In addition to his reading, in a variety of periodical&#13;
vn Wednesday, May 19, at the Gunderson will meet with journals and he has given a&#13;
University of Wisconsin- several Parkside English and number of poetry readings both&#13;
Parkside in Room 101 philosophy classes during the in the Midwest and on the West&#13;
Grcenquist Hall. The program day. coast.&#13;
Is free and open to lhe public. Both his new book of poems,&#13;
Gunderson is a professor or "A Continual Interest in lbe Sun&#13;
philosophy al the University of and Sea" , and a nother book on&#13;
Minnesota and research "Mentality and Machines"&#13;
His Parkside visit is being&#13;
sponsored by (he Dlvlsion or&#13;
Humanistic Studies.&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE ...&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
In sound equipment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
and .45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop In and blow your mind, not your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, our&#13;
Department Manager, who ls a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk your· language, both In&#13;
equipment purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY-Tape recorders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
PANASONIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
KOSS - Headsets&#13;
KENWOOD - Receivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANTZ - Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC - Speakers ·&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntabl~&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are here, sh~ for Jewelry, Sportu,g goods and ~lfts at&#13;
Southeastern W1sconslR's lowest prices.&#13;
BRANDT'S . DISTRIBUTORS&#13;
512 MAIN STREET&#13;
on !hr- WP~t •;idp of Monurtwnt Squ~rp&#13;
RA&lt;_ INE "',&#13;
CRF-.'.1&#13;
.. ----' ..,. __ ,,--~· &#13;
State Legislators Dorman and Devitt sp';~flk OnM;;;';ger •·•·•&#13;
By Ken, Konkol urban un1vers1ty in !he twelfth "There will be language knowledge of the merger the previous b\enni~. which will&#13;
of The Ne .. uopeStalf la~ges~city m the Urutcd States. which will provide for the "The senate, before they vote hurt both uruvers1ty system~&#13;
Wilh 1l:&gt; urban goals and C continuation of the building on the merger, wants to know drastically." Henry Dorman is the Wisconsin&#13;
State Senator rrom Racine&#13;
county.&#13;
1 first asked Senator Dorman&#13;
hoW he personally fell about the&#13;
Governor's proP&lt;1Sed university&#13;
merger plan. "First of all there is oo&#13;
blueprint on the merger. What&#13;
we do know does not auger well&#13;
with the UW system.&#13;
"The govemor .has said we&#13;
should have one unified system.&#13;
Other than the central campus,&#13;
the other campuses should be on.&#13;
a more equal financial f~ting.&#13;
This would equate Parkside,&#13;
which is now supported on a&#13;
higher financial level, lo schools&#13;
like Oshkosh and Whitewater.&#13;
"If I were emotionally involved&#13;
with Oshkosh or&#13;
Whitewater, I might say this&#13;
was good. Bul since I am&#13;
associated with Parkside, I can&#13;
only deplore the downgrading of&#13;
the level of support with respect&#13;
to Oshkosh."&#13;
I asked if the merger would&#13;
hurt the University of Wisconsin&#13;
system in regard lo Madison&#13;
and Milwaukee.&#13;
schools it should_ be maintained program, and t am satisfied ii more on the details of the James C. Devill ,s the Senn tor&#13;
as ~ ~pec1al ur:iique inslllution willgoforwardunabated. There merger and the possible from a unique district that&#13;
meritin~. a higher level of will be statutory provisions to ramifications of the merger. spans three counties. He 1s on&#13;
sutpor[. . pro\;de that the quality of in- 'The merger has been modified the influential Educational&#13;
o_ncernmg the merger's struction shall remain on a high somewhat. Committee.&#13;
possible effects on Parkside and level. "I am satisfied that as the I asked Mr. Devill why the&#13;
~~een Bay_. _Dorman added. budget containing the merger proposed merger came about.&#13;
I m optimistic as lo the out- -...-------• wends its weary ,.ay cttrough "The merger proposal was&#13;
come of the merger because ·. the legislative processes, the brought out of the blue by lhe&#13;
there_ are too many people who merger that emerges will be Governor. ll is a non-problem.&#13;
f~I hke I feel. We don't mind much different than the merger There didn't appear to be anr&#13;
upgradmg an educational in• that entered." need to merge during the&#13;
stitution but we are fearful of 1 questioned Mr. Dorman on campaign - no citizens&#13;
dow~grading it. All of us aNund the conflict or sludies con- brought it up. This is a pressing&#13;
Rac~e, Kenosha and Rocle ,-erning whether lhe merger need not pressing to anyone but&#13;
counties are very much in- would save or cost money. the governor."&#13;
terested in Parkside. "It is pM-qible to look at ad- Concerning the Educational&#13;
" I entered the Leb'islature in ministrative savings and SN' a Committee's involvement he&#13;
1965. 1 was one of the authors or Sllvings of four million dollars commented, "The Educational&#13;
Senate Bill 48 that established but simultaneously anothcr committee sponsored the&#13;
Parkside University. I helped person can look at the ad- merger bill. not because the}&#13;
nurture Parkside University. I ditional cost due to an were ne&lt;'cssarily for the&#13;
was on joint finance for the past equalization of fatuity salaries merger, but because they th&lt;'fl&#13;
three sessions, and I did and see an increased ex- would be able 10 hold public&#13;
evel'ything I could to help penditure of thirty or forty meetings to find out how others&#13;
develop Parkside, lO get the Henry Dorman million dollars." felt. That is why Senators&#13;
additional rwids to build a fll'eat Questioned that if Governor Chiscn and Heinicn made ii a&#13;
Parkside University:• "The proposed merger plans Lucey did not like the final separate senate bill."&#13;
·•we have cause to be happy. are fearful. The Governor. in proposal for merger and vetoed Asked if the merger would&#13;
We did do a good job. We did his budgel proposals, says that it, would his veto have a chance h'.lrt the UW system. he replied,&#13;
build a good school. We do have the level of support to additional of being overturned, he replied: "The merger will dilute the&#13;
a good and growing student students at Parkside shall be on "You are asking me to quality of education and the&#13;
body. Wedohaveagoodfaculty the same le\'el as the Stale speculate and I will. The image of the l'nh•ersiLy ol&#13;
and we do have a good ad- University $)'$Lem." merger may or may not be Wisconsin which is now&#13;
ministration. I asked if Governor Lucey·s approved by both houses. The rocogni~ed us one of th&lt;&gt; top&#13;
•·1 will continue to do my best budget, as vague as il is, would assembly will go along with the five in the "?lion. After the&#13;
to see to it lbat Parkside is not make it through the legislature. governor but I am dubious if the merger education can be seen to&#13;
hurl, by merger. "Senate resolution 19 says in Senate will go along. I do not be going downhill." .&#13;
homogini.Ultion of campus-OS, or effect that the governor is in• know how this conflict will be When quest.1oned 1r the&#13;
by a lack of funds. There will be vited to appear before the resolved. merger was going to hurt the&#13;
provisions to provide in senate to explain the merger. A "lf wedo not have a budget by system. why then was&#13;
statutory language for the goodly number of senators have July first for the university Governor Lucey pushing it so&#13;
specific mjssion of Parkside taken the floor to decry U1e fact system, we will have a congreat&#13;
University. that they have such little tinuaUon on the same sy~tem as&#13;
"I am neither pleased nor&#13;
happy with the merger. We now&#13;
have one system, the IJW&#13;
system, that is recognized by&#13;
one and all. In ; UW-Madison we&#13;
have a unique university, a&#13;
special uni\-erslly and a na~I&#13;
university. It shall be mamtained&#13;
at a superior level and&#13;
with a higher quality or&#13;
education.&#13;
"Al UWM we have a&#13;
I ConlinuPd on Page 6 l&#13;
McGovern&#13;
Committee&#13;
Plans Drive&#13;
Students Death Prompts forum on Bus Safety&#13;
The Kenosha County&#13;
McGovern for President&#13;
Committee, al a meeting held&#13;
April 30, announced plans for a&#13;
membership drive lO be conducted&#13;
during the month of&#13;
May. Plans also were made t.o&#13;
attend the statewide McGovern&#13;
for President meetinl! May 8 at&#13;
Stevens Point, Wisconsin.&#13;
People interested in supporting&#13;
Sen. McGovern should&#13;
call Mrs. Linda Legler, 694-6612,&#13;
or James M. Hansen, 694-2809.&#13;
For further information&#13;
contact: James M. Hansen,&#13;
3401·104th St.. Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
53140. 394-2809.&#13;
'lbe recent accideol between a school bus and an armored&#13;
truck which resulted In the death of a student has generated a great&#13;
deal of concern within the southeastern corner of Wisconsin.&#13;
Kenosha's Berryville Elementery School P. T JJ·. is acting as&#13;
a spearhead In the community: researching the problem of school&#13;
bus safety, focusing on existing weaknesses, working to gel&#13;
corrective legislation passed at the state and federal level.&#13;
• Congressman Les Aspin has already stated his \Jllenl to introduce&#13;
a bill this session of congress which would have as its aim&#13;
the corr«tion of existing defects in the structural safety of school&#13;
buses. Two state assemblymen, Eugene Dorff or Kenosha and&#13;
Michael Ferrall of Racine, are interested in proposing legislation to&#13;
Improve the operational practices of school buses.&#13;
A public fact finding forum moderated by Les Aspin is&#13;
sdleduled to be held at Bullen Junior School0 on Friday, May the&#13;
21st at 7: 90 p.m. This forum Is being co-sponsored by the Berryville&#13;
P.T-0. and the administration of the Kenosha Unified School&#13;
District. The participants will be:&#13;
Mr. Robert Cromey, Administrative Assistant, Department&#13;
oC Transportation, Madison, Wisconsin.&#13;
Mr. Theodore Sorenson. Program Administrator. Pupil&#13;
Transportation Services, Madison, Wisconsin.&#13;
==== CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WHIILS&#13;
1910 C.mro. snow Tires and Rims.&#13;
61943&amp;3 alter •:30&#13;
1H6 Ram. Amer. Con. 7M3 - 20111,&#13;
ICtno.&#13;
1963 VW (-40,000 ml.) $6001 1966&#13;
llodve Coronet c,2,000 mi. J S100.&#13;
12911 Washington Ave. Rael.&#13;
1965 Olevy Bel. • dr. Auto, 6, PS,&#13;
Rad. RMS .. QJ-3%3,&#13;
19&lt;,0 Ram. Clsc. Auto. 6, S150. Also 2,&#13;
1075,15 BFG tires, rims &amp; Bal. MO; 9,&#13;
t ,,0.15QBFG!ires (500 ml.) Rims &amp;&#13;
Bal. $60, 159-2653 (totl free)&#13;
196' Pont. Temp. 32', Sp. Coup.&#13;
sllck. $300. ~--&#13;
1t6,I Ram. 770 2 cir HT. 'Jin, st, Shi. 157-2916.&#13;
IM6 Clavelle 301-350 hp, 4 op. 4 bl'I.&#13;
Aatro•a &amp; Nor•. '54 4440, "5t - 10III ........ ~.&#13;
19t2 Buick lAISabre. S100, 1-434-6171.&#13;
IHI Tri. Spllffr• Mk 111, Conv, ~&#13;
mll•. '37-7966 ..- 654-9471 (after 6&#13;
p.m.) Rod Mresc:•lo.&#13;
1,0 Ram. Amw. Wag. Stk. new&#13;
dutct,, mutt., """•· .,4-635:l.&#13;
1'U Pont. canv. AAlto $25. 652-140&#13;
aftw Sp.m,&#13;
1965 Chevy Bel ~ r , dr. autQ., 6 cyl.&#13;
Pow. st .. , 1650. 633-3963&#13;
1969 Ply, RdTM'r, • 11)(1, 383-335 hp.&#13;
red, hll'. 637-5520 alter 5:00,&#13;
1043 Olds 88 Hot. ffl 3 brl, hi9h&#13;
comp. Bfft ott.r. 654-47'6 alter 5:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
1969 Opet GT SIIVlt' $2,400 O&lt;' -t&#13;
otter. 652-3312 after 4.&#13;
19'3 MG MlclQel Conv. New Ball,&#13;
$275. 2508 . 54th, Keno. R. Smllh or C.&#13;
Lawter.&#13;
196' JNP +whMI drive RICI conv,&#13;
Bulll up; like new. Racine 633-3367.&#13;
WANTt:D TO BUY - 2 used 3 or 5&#13;
,opced t&gt;l')'Cleo. C.11 633-3131 alte.- S.&#13;
WANTED - Hot "26" bicycle. can&#13;
632,7307 or l•ev• Info.&#13;
P.0,O,G,O.: WOUid be ct.ilgftted lo&#13;
perm.,entty complete ld-eontrot&#13;
lh••PY Cl{ 21 • H•m•n In 0.&#13;
l'otlRENT&#13;
. MAOISON-Summlt'SUblel, 2bed.,&#13;
near Vilas Park. Cell «Je-~1-1632,&#13;
S6S eer person.&#13;
ROOM _ 1Mfl ,only, $9.00 per wk, 3&#13;
blocks from Racine campus.&#13;
Inquire 832 s. Wisconsin AVfl.&#13;
FOR RENT - Office si,ace •&#13;
M)dem, c.rpcttcl, P•rtltlOtled, Air&#13;
Oind, ldHI fOr Acctv-, lnaur-,ce_"'&#13;
Sites. Good proximity to Prksule&#13;
_,d carth•ge. 40597th Ave. CaU ~-&#13;
3HS or 65'-7•10.&#13;
RtD9S Nt:1D9D - WANT&amp;O&#13;
OR IVI a Pu9eot lo MiMHl)Oils,&#13;
Must get thlt'ebefOre June. Cell IIG222S&#13;
alter 5 or 657-5121 ext. 36.&#13;
N91Drldeto Seattle or Andlorage,&#13;
May Of JI.Ole, WIii ll)llt cost. C.ll&#13;
Berb 6$4,9631.&#13;
WANTID TO auv - Tlclcets to&#13;
Chicago Conc•rt. Contact Dele&#13;
Martin 1711-2992.&#13;
MISC, FOR SALi&#13;
FOR SALE -Poodle Puppltt. 6 wkl&#13;
Old, AKC, 2 mele, l temal•. CNem,&#13;
Toy. Eltcaler1t blOOCI II-. Jl OO ff,&#13;
171-2992.&#13;
AMI' - Sllvartone • channtl. AtlO&#13;
mllw. - Offlt'. Cell Caln'(, ,,.,&#13;
'1169, Must Hit, '&#13;
ILIICTRIC RANG• - WeslinQ,&#13;
nouse 30", f15; Rllfrlgel'elor -&#13;
WHllnghOUst, S75. II.ox spring&#13;
maftrHS lclr -· bed, $75. Call&#13;
633-0541.&#13;
TAPtl DtECI&lt; - Sony · TC , 355. LIii&#13;
prlc• $219. S.Crlflce for SlOO. Pllone&#13;
654-1731 •II.,. • or - Fr.,k&#13;
O,lapette.&#13;
FOR SALE-SIii Boat, Snipe Closs.&#13;
Makemler. Call 657-6765 alter• p,m.&#13;
FOR SALa - El«trlc. Stove · ex&#13;
cellent condition - realty hOI stutf.&#13;
SUch a de.,I. $50, 0y Vet,. u2.-&#13;
aftlt' 4:00&#13;
A Safety Engineer, Wayne Bus Company, Richmond. lndana,&#13;
Manufactures both the light weight school buses and the&#13;
heavier trans-it buses.&#13;
Annemarie Shelness, South Salem, New York, Co-author of&#13;
"How Safe is Pupil Transportation?" January 1970 supplement to&#13;
Pediatrics: The Journal of the American Academy of Pediatric ts.&#13;
.&#13;
'&#13;
:::.. ;:,='::;,;~,;:.._;:&#13;
$~-~-&#13;
Al the present time we are also working to obtain the&#13;
cooperation of too chairman or lhe National Transportation Safety&#13;
Board In send.Ing Mr. Henry Wakeland to this meeting for the&#13;
purpose or explaining lhe special study "lrnidequate Structural&#13;
Assembly of Schoolbus Bodies" report number: NTSB-HSS·70&#13;
2. 5-13-71, Mr. Wakeland will attend meeting,&#13;
A portion of this program will be reserved to answer the&#13;
questions or the public. The Jelco Bus Company will have buses at&#13;
the school the night of the forum- open for inspection.&#13;
This forum should be of great interest to all people. The buses&#13;
in question not only provide daily transportation for thousands of&#13;
children, they also provide transportation for field trips and extra•&#13;
curricular activities.&#13;
Anyone desiring more information call raith Mudge at 637·&#13;
3013 (Racine) or 654-5028 &lt;Kenisha&gt;.&#13;
BEER&#13;
&amp; WATER&#13;
24-7 -Oz. bot.&#13;
$1.11&#13;
plus tax&#13;
STOP&#13;
12-24 oz. bot.&#13;
$1.39&#13;
&amp; deposit&#13;
2428 Washin ton Rd., Kenosha &#13;
,P;:a;!g!;;e~6;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;N; E: :::;SC:;;O;; W P;;E, --~)~l--: •y~t 7~, 111~71&#13;
f' By Jim Koloen pushes Kelno and any empathy we might&#13;
have for him under the judges gavel,&#13;
smashed. He hero-worships his dead aviator&#13;
older brother, is good at baseball, flying and&#13;
writing. In the war he crash lands his Spitfire,&#13;
sustaining severe burns and the IO!;S of one&#13;
eyeball. While recuperating he blindly meets&#13;
his future wife. Cat out baseball, cut out&#13;
fiying, the only thing Cady has left is his&#13;
writing and eventually he writes "The&#13;
Holocaust" and must stand beside his&#13;
publisher, the inimitable Cranshaw, in a court&#13;
of civil law. By the time he is sued for libel in&#13;
1965, he has been divorced by his wiCe and&#13;
finds himself greatly worried over the safety&#13;
off. Uris foreshadows everything but not&#13;
lHUXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY&#13;
STORE&#13;
302 Ct'een Bay Rd.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
634-1536&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
of Thr NewscopeStarr&#13;
Thle: QB VII&#13;
Author: Leon Uris&#13;
PubHsher: Double day 1$7.95)&#13;
QB VII is what we call a straight, saleable&#13;
novel. Small surprise then when we discover&#13;
that QB Vil is numero uno on the best seller&#13;
lisL Leon Uris is what we call a straight,&#13;
saleable novelist who weaves a sometimes&#13;
interesting, occasionally tedious story in a&#13;
sty le which makes it somewhat discomforting&#13;
when we realise he is writing in the same&#13;
language as Joyce, Mailer and Kerouac &lt; to&#13;
name a few). From an anonymous narrationalways&#13;
successfully. •&#13;
cady and Kelno are opposites. Kelno is a&#13;
writer and therefore a carouser. He is the&#13;
vicUm of many doubts but ha11 a suf!icienUy&#13;
§l-r9nB ego to enBaie in much boudoir&#13;
research. Kelno is a refugee, a doctor, a&#13;
driven man ( you could say paranoid), when&#13;
he r~t.ers the modern world after his 14&#13;
year exile' In Sarawak, he opines that youth&#13;
and the new world are immoral and&#13;
despicable (Cady has the opposite view).&#13;
multiple character point or view, Uris churns&#13;
out a 504 page novel in which the style is best&#13;
described by the word Oat. Uris uses words to&#13;
express a straightforward, single level story,&#13;
words are devoid of nuances, connotations&#13;
are non-existent, symbolism and metaphor&#13;
are ugly rumors.&#13;
of his engaged daugJ-,ler and aviator son who&#13;
have moved to an Israeli kibbutz to fight the&#13;
war of liberaliQO. After Uris has supplied us&#13;
with sufficient foreshadowing the son is killed&#13;
The story and plot is well weaved with&#13;
many strands of subplots and biographical&#13;
sketches of the various characters in the&#13;
novel. This is Uris' strong point, In short&#13;
chapters be presents the reader with a long&#13;
story leaving nothlng pertinent unexposed.&#13;
Everyone from the main characters lo the&#13;
lawyers and U,e witnesses is given a&#13;
biography, everything from Sarawak to&#13;
Jadwiga is given an appropriate history that&#13;
leads to the fateful trial in lll6~. J U$t wnen we&#13;
become bored by one strand of the story, he&#13;
jumps over lo a new strand and we regain&#13;
interest.&#13;
There are too many characters to name,&#13;
but most of them are flat, the dialogue and&#13;
characterizations are basically uniform; no&#13;
one speaks with an accent, no one p05Se5Ses a&#13;
characteristic idiosyncracy, no one gets in the&#13;
way of the story, everythi.ng fits in with a&#13;
minimum of friction. The biographies tell the&#13;
stories of the characters, their individuality is&#13;
localed in their parts, not in Uieil' present&#13;
selves.&#13;
SAFE. lEliAl&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
LET US HELP YOU&#13;
(iwdann for&#13;
• Ccr11ficoJ Gynecologisls&#13;
• ('hml'e ot Top Privak&#13;
('hn1cs •nd I lo,p1tals&#13;
• Ap('lotntm~nh AvJ1lahk&#13;
Wuhm ! 4 flours&#13;
There are two main characters in this&#13;
novel, Dr. Adam Kelno (the antagonist), and&#13;
Abraham Cady (the protagonistl. QB VII is&#13;
Queen's Bench Seven, a court of civil law in&#13;
merrye olcle London, and Or. !Kelno is suing&#13;
writer Cady for libeling him in his latest and&#13;
greatest novel. In the first 268 pages, Uris&#13;
dn1ws the Ure histories of the two main&#13;
characters. Kelno is a survivor &lt; prisonerdoclor)&#13;
of Jadwiga Concentration Camp, and&#13;
he !eels he is being hounded by the Jews and&#13;
Commies. He nees London for the crown&#13;
colony of Sarawak and remains as a&#13;
physician for 14 years, returning to London&#13;
after copping a knighthood for instructing the&#13;
natives in Uie fine art of nutrition. In Albion,&#13;
Sir Kelno opens a clinic in a poor section of&#13;
town (where he can be superior to everyone&#13;
he comes into contact with&gt; and decides to sue&#13;
the Jew who libeled him in a novel concerning&#13;
WW 11 concentration camps. The libel con•&#13;
cerns Kelno's medical treatment or a group of&#13;
castrated Jews who also survived Jadwiga.&#13;
Abe Cady is a Jewish writer (he says&#13;
everyone betrays Jews. while Kelno says&#13;
Jews belray everyone - ah, counterpoint&gt;&#13;
whose treatment in the novel gradually&#13;
I'&#13;
·:'\\'lo, ....&#13;
·-~'.~&#13;
~ ·-............. -•·· .. ·, . ~--i~· ;,.:.,/.I/.,~&#13;
It is very difficult, indeed facetious, for&#13;
me to call this novel a work or art.. so I won't.&#13;
QB VII is a straightforward account of "the&#13;
longest libel ll'ial in British history", it gives&#13;
us an historical development of the various&#13;
elements which come to the fore during the&#13;
trial, in the most economical presentation&#13;
possible. But lhere is a difference between&#13;
literature and good story telling. Literature&#13;
bas a great deal to do with the language, with&#13;
how words are used. Ideally words are&#13;
literary colors on the paper palette of the&#13;
artistic writer, he painu; as well as types a&#13;
story. Uris is not an artistic \\-Titer. It's a good&#13;
story (both in terms of reader interest and&#13;
struclureJ presented in a straightforward&#13;
fashion. It's a best seller because the reader&#13;
does not have to really learn how to read to&#13;
understand this novel, but it's not good&#13;
literature.&#13;
QB Vil may be purdinsL-d al The Bnok&#13;
~art, 1122 • 59Ui Street, Kenosha. (2121 TR 7-8562&#13;
MRS. SAUL&#13;
CERTIFIED ABORTION&#13;
REFERRAL&#13;
Patronize&#13;
Our&#13;
Advertisers&#13;
tContinued from Page S)&#13;
hard' he responsed:&#13;
Dorm fin, Devitt&#13;
.-1 JI lnqu,rre1 ('011fidt'l1l1dl&#13;
NEED A LOAN?&#13;
r, nrANNOUNCING&#13;
&#13;
THE OPENING&#13;
OF THE&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
SERVICE CENTER~.";°;&#13;
..&#13;
\&#13;
MEET DORIS LANTZ----&#13;
/&#13;
CREDIT UNI ON REPRESENTATIVE&#13;
PLACE: Are&lt;1 245 Bursflr's Off ice&#13;
/-!OURS:&#13;
Tule111 Hall&#13;
Tues. &amp; Thurs. 12:30 p.m.-4:00 p.m.&#13;
Wed. &amp; Fri. 9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.&#13;
UNIVERSITY of WISCONSIN&#13;
CREDIT UNION .&#13;
25A A. W. Pt"h•r~on Blclg.&#13;
750 l 'n 1v(&gt;ri,. ity AvcnuC'&#13;
M11d1eon. WtH·onsin 53715&#13;
T&lt;'l&lt;'Phone Hi081 262-2228&#13;
"This whole thing is mostly&#13;
political. The governor is&#13;
adamant on particular items&#13;
and is using the merger as a&#13;
smokescreen to take the heat off&#13;
the rest of the budget - other&#13;
bad items rn the budget lhal he&#13;
rears wouldn't make it through&#13;
otherwise.·•&#13;
"Ther e is more politics involved.&#13;
Governor Lucey would&#13;
revamp the present Board of&#13;
Regents. He would then&#13;
establish campus councils to&#13;
make advisory recommendations.&#13;
On each of the&#13;
campuses would be a council ot&#13;
eleven members - two&#13;
students, two professors, the&#13;
campus chancellor and six&#13;
members appointed by the&#13;
governor.''&#13;
"These 78 appointments for&#13;
cronies of the governor,&#13;
political appointees, is a&#13;
blatant political move.''&#13;
IF YOU WANT&#13;
SOMnHING&#13;
A LITTLE EXTRA , , .&#13;
TRY&#13;
Budweiser.&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
•&#13;
• • • but you&#13;
know that! ! !&#13;
He is uncertain whether the&#13;
merger will save money.&#13;
"There will be changes in&#13;
administration. We will save&#13;
money where we can. I'm not&#13;
oonvinced it will save anything.&#13;
In 1967, before we merged the&#13;
state agencies along the&#13;
guidelines or the Kellett report,&#13;
(It is Kellett who bas also&#13;
designed the UW merger.) our&#13;
budget bi11 totaled $1.1 billion.&#13;
Today under this economical&#13;
merger system. Governor&#13;
Lucey is aJlking for $2 billion."&#13;
Asked where the WSU system&#13;
fits in, he answered,&#13;
"The merger is a backlash&#13;
over the creation o( Park.side&#13;
and Green Bay as UW's. The&#13;
state people felt they should&#13;
have been state schools. They&#13;
feel that the merger will put&#13;
Parkside on the same level as&#13;
the st.ale universities."&#13;
''The options available would&#13;
lie taken aw11 . P11rk8ide would&#13;
be regulaled to second class&#13;
status. This would prevent&#13;
future growth."&#13;
Concerning the truth of the&#13;
rumor that Governor Lucey had&#13;
offered the presidency of the&#13;
university to President Drefus&#13;
or Stevens Point in return for his&#13;
support of the merger, he said,&#13;
"I have also heard Uiat&#13;
rumor. It is fairly widespread&#13;
and might have some foun•&#13;
dation in (act. President&#13;
Weaver may just be a short&#13;
term president and the&#13;
governor probably sees this as&#13;
an opprotunity."&#13;
"I bave offered to debate the&#13;
governor on statewide T.V. on&#13;
the merger. I have not yet&#13;
received bis answer."&#13;
I asked if the merger was&#13;
going through.&#13;
"I hope it doesn't go through&#13;
at all. But even if it does, it&#13;
won't have anywhere near the&#13;
form it does now."&#13;
Paiksitle's Feature FIim Series&#13;
presents&#13;
IT BECOMES AN OLD FRIEND" "REFRESHING TO SEE&#13;
AS IT IS RARE TO&#13;
FINDI CLEARLY THE&#13;
WORK OF TALENTED,&#13;
SENSITIVE, HUMOROUS&#13;
PEOPLE!'&#13;
' GOODBYE, COLUMBUS IS&#13;
BOUND TO BE A GREAT&#13;
SUCCESS!"&#13;
FRIDAY, MAY~ZI&#13;
1:11 P,M, ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
JOll, l&amp;O•ITH PARKSIDE ID &#13;
•&#13;
Uay ·11, 1111 NEWSCOPE&#13;
Ranger Golfers Set Record&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
ol the Newscope 81.atr&#13;
Leif Gu ttormseo set a new 18 hole school record&#13;
with a three under par 68, pacing the Rangers to a •&#13;
451-:482 victory over Whitewater at Petrifying&#13;
Sprmgs.&#13;
Trackmen fifth at Lacrosse,&#13;
Second at Whitewater&#13;
In winning the match, the Rangers set a six&#13;
man team record for low average with a 75.1 mark.&#13;
Helping set the record were Tom Bothe with 72&#13;
Dan Weyrauch 74, Bob Tooppe 78. Rich Willems 79'&#13;
and Randy Dreilke 80. '&#13;
Guttorrilsen, a junior, turned in five birdies on&#13;
the front nine and one on the back en route to his 68.&#13;
For the round he collected ten pars, six birdies, one&#13;
bogey, and a double bogey which came on the&#13;
seventh.&#13;
Leif just missed an eagle on the third hole when •"-._,&#13;
he nearly holed his second shot. He had 28 puts and&#13;
hit 14 greens in regulation. Hitting a green in&#13;
regulation revers to reaching the putting surface in&#13;
two strokes less than par.&#13;
•&#13;
"1 didn't miss a put under ten feet," he said. •&#13;
When asked about his play for the entire season&#13;
Leif replied, "ln the past few weeks I've been hit'.&#13;
ting the ball better. In the beginning of the season I&#13;
wasn't hitting well but my putting was good."&#13;
losses ag;iinst individual teams.&#13;
Leif has been satisfied with the season so far.&#13;
"In the big meets !more than four teams) you&#13;
record what place you finished in," Stevens said.&#13;
G.ullonnsen's Card The team has compiled a 9-3 record in head to head&#13;
competition and a sixth place finish in the 19 team&#13;
Lakeland Invitational.&#13;
Front Nine Par 44 344 455-37&#13;
Guttorsmen 433 333 645- 34&#13;
Coach !'teve Stevens explained that in matches&#13;
up to and ir 'in~ four teams you count wins and&#13;
BackNlne Par 443 444 344-34&#13;
Guttorsmen 443 444 245 - 34&#13;
Ranger '9·' lose, Win , Tie&#13;
A fielding and pitching breakdown&#13;
Jed to Parkside's first&#13;
defeat, as the University ol&#13;
IIUnois-Chicago routed the&#13;
Rangers 15-5.&#13;
Except for one inning, the&#13;
Rangers played good ball. J etc&#13;
Koleske led the oflense with two&#13;
hits.&#13;
I n a doubleheader with&#13;
.Milwauk-.&gt;e Tech last week,&#13;
Parkside won and Ued. CARL&#13;
Talsma threw a three-hit shutout&#13;
in the 2-0 first game win. lie&#13;
supported his pitching by&#13;
CC)llling up with two hits.&#13;
In the second g;imc which&#13;
ended 5-5, Parkside had a 3-2&#13;
lead before Milwaukee Teclt&#13;
tied it in the last inning. The&#13;
Rangers came from behind&#13;
twice in the extra innings but&#13;
couldn't forge into the lead.&#13;
Tom Jaehne pitched the entire&#13;
game, along with contributing a&#13;
triple to the offense.&#13;
Other hitting stars were&#13;
Koleske, Tom Gedemer and&#13;
Dean Karas. A triple by Koleske&#13;
and Jaehnc's triple both Jed to&#13;
scores which resulted from&#13;
squeeze bunts.&#13;
With the score at 5-5, rain&#13;
clouds~ darkened the sky to an&#13;
extent that the game had to be&#13;
caUed.&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
of The NewscopeStaff&#13;
While placing firth in the&#13;
LaCrosse Invitational, the&#13;
Rangers came up with several&#13;
strong individual per•&#13;
formances.&#13;
Mike Zugich set school&#13;
records In the 120 high hurdles&#13;
and the 440 intermediates. He&#13;
placed fourth and fifth in the&#13;
two events. Tim Martinson went 13'5" for&#13;
a school record in the pole vault.&#13;
Gary Lance took a third in the&#13;
six mile race, while Jim McFadden&#13;
was fourth in the three&#13;
mile.&#13;
Tim McGilsky picked up a&#13;
fifth In the 880, the same&#13;
placement a.~ the 440 relay team&#13;
accomplished.&#13;
The Rangers were hampered&#13;
in the meet, which was won by&#13;
Mankato State, when ace&#13;
sprinter Bob Waters pulled up&#13;
lame in the preliminaries. It is&#13;
not yet known how serious his&#13;
injury is.&#13;
Scoring 44 points, Parkside&#13;
placed. second in a triangular&#13;
meet at Whitewater. The host&#13;
school won the meet with 106&#13;
points, whJle College of DuPage&#13;
had 41.&#13;
Jim mcFadden and Tim&#13;
McGilsky tied for first in the&#13;
mile with Umes of 4: 32.&#13;
Dennis Fechhelm "as first&#13;
with a 58.5 time in the 440 intermediate&#13;
hurdles, while a six&#13;
foot jump by Eugene Prince&#13;
was good for a victory in the&#13;
high jump.&#13;
Catholic Conference Star to Attend Parkside&#13;
Tom Heller, Catholic Conference star from Kenosha St. scoring with an 18 a game average.&#13;
Joseph, has announced his intention or attending the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, coach Steve Stephens announced today,&#13;
Heller, a 6-6 forward, was named to both the Milwaukee&#13;
Journal and Seatinel Catholic Conference second teams, was a first&#13;
team Catholic Conference All-Opponent selection, and made the&#13;
Kenosha News All-County first team. He was the top rebounder in&#13;
the conference Nort~lh All-Star game, and averaged 11&#13;
rebounds a game tor the season. He finished sixth in conference&#13;
A good shooter, Hellershot58 per cent from the field and72 per&#13;
cent from the free throw line for Dan Chubrilo's St. Joseph's team&#13;
which went Ul-4 for the season.&#13;
Parkside Coach Steve Stephens said he was extremely pleased&#13;
that a player of Heller's calibre had chosen UWP. Heller's other&#13;
offers had included Louisiana State University, Stephens said.&#13;
Heller also is an honor student at St. Joseph's and a member ol&#13;
the Student Council.&#13;
Sailing Team Opens Thursday&#13;
Competition for Parkslde's&#13;
sailing team will open at the&#13;
MilwaUkee Yacht Club Thursday,&#13;
May 20, at 5:30 p.m.&#13;
Members of the club who will be&#13;
samng include Mike Pobar,&#13;
Jerry Ruffalo, Karl Kishllne&#13;
~d James Dean.&#13;
Other teams sailing will be&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and Marquette.&#13;
Teams that have been Invited&#13;
irclude Whitewater, Oshkosh&#13;
and UW•Madison.&#13;
A summer league which will&#13;
compete on Tuesday evenings&#13;
will be set up after the initial&#13;
races.&#13;
Non Sequitors To Chase Insects 'up a wall'&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
An interesting post-season basketball contest&#13;
featuring the faculty "Non Sequitors" against a&#13;
student team called "Jnsects" has been scheduled.&#13;
The rivalry should be intense in tbls struggle&#13;
which is set for'7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 22 at Bullen&#13;
Junior High in Kenosha. The faculty's 23 man roster includes such&#13;
sharpshooters .as Michael "The Punkin" Holmes.&#13;
"Lawyer" John Harbeson, Carl "Cicil" Lindner,&#13;
Peter "the Purple" Martin, and "Hy-Gene"&#13;
Gasiorklewicz.&#13;
One student player will apparel\UY receive&#13;
special attention in the ·game. Faculty cager Walt&#13;
"R006ter'' Shirer issued fair warning to Bill Ivy.&#13;
Shirer says he will "drive Ivy up a wall."&#13;
For halftime entertainment the Parkside&#13;
gymnastic team v.ill perform. Also scheduled is a&#13;
game between the cheerleaders.&#13;
Proceeds for the game will go the the Harlow B&#13;
Mills Memorial scholarship fund. Ticket donation i!&#13;
$1.00. Tickets can be purchased from Student Affain&#13;
or any Lile Science major.&#13;
STUDENTS if 's the&#13;
S"lrf' ~ ~ truc real thing EMIL G RLACH get Red Carpet treatment&#13;
/~ ot the&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
Fruit Baskets BANK OF&#13;
Corsages ElMWOOD&#13;
Candy (everyone else does!)&#13;
110118 40,i, ,we.&#13;
KeNOeHAWIS&#13;
Ol.7-15174&#13;
2704 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Roci1te, Wis.&#13;
Recycle&#13;
this Paper&#13;
PANCAl&lt;f. MOUSE&#13;
REUAURANT&#13;
SundaJ • Thursday&#13;
6 - Midnight&#13;
Friday • Saturday&#13;
6 · 3 A.M. - 3619 90 AVE.-&#13;
PANCAKES&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
"Che,k Our&#13;
Pt·ices Last "&#13;
4807 7U1 AVE:\l' E&#13;
KENOSHA, I\ is&lt;·o:-.s1:-.&#13;
Leonard BuUoclc set a scnoo1&#13;
record in the triple jump with a&#13;
leap of 42 feet S inches, which&#13;
was good for second place. He&#13;
had a second in the long jump,&#13;
also.&#13;
McGilsky was second in the&#13;
880, as was McFadden in the&#13;
three miles. Keith Merrill ran&#13;
second in the 440, and Mike&#13;
DeWitt did likewise in the&#13;
steeplechase.&#13;
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              <text>F &#13;
. *-&#13;
'i - . • '&#13;
By Warren Nedry&#13;
of The Newscope Staff&#13;
It was a cool Thursday night&#13;
in Washington, D.C. After entering&#13;
the city on Wisconsin&#13;
Avenue we drove to the site of&#13;
"Peace City" in West Potomic&#13;
Park.&#13;
The site was ringed by a treelined&#13;
drive and bordered on&#13;
both sides by water — an ithmus&#13;
between the Jefferson and&#13;
Lincoln memorials, in the&#13;
shadow of the Washington&#13;
monument.&#13;
About 50 tents dotted the&#13;
park. Motorcycles, campers,&#13;
and campfires were scattered&#13;
throughout with the information&#13;
tent forming the hub. The half&#13;
mile oval generated an atmosphere&#13;
of calm anticipation.&#13;
Standing in the middle afforded&#13;
a complete view of its occupants.&#13;
&#13;
We went to the information&#13;
tent and were directed to the&#13;
Wisconsin section of the park.&#13;
When we arrived there was one&#13;
group from Milwaukee already&#13;
on the site. We set up our tent&#13;
and decided to make a fire.&#13;
Wood was scarce but with&#13;
donations of sticks, logs and&#13;
paper from the "community"&#13;
we easily managed a fire. The&#13;
warm fire was an oasis in the&#13;
cool night for those who had&#13;
recently arrived. People would&#13;
walk by and stop to warm up.&#13;
Every few minutes a new face&#13;
stopped in asking, "Is this Indiana?"&#13;
or a shout, "Where's&#13;
Iowa?" Fires were used to cook&#13;
everything from hot dogs to&#13;
exotic stews. Campfires&#13;
Irecame the focal point of the&#13;
evenings.&#13;
The morning brought&#13;
thousands more tents, including&#13;
occupants, cars, triple parked&#13;
around the oval, and about 150&#13;
more Wiseonsinites. The rest of&#13;
the day included tactical&#13;
meetings, a march to the&#13;
Justice Department, sightseeing,&#13;
more meetings, and the&#13;
campfire.&#13;
With Saturday came the sun.&#13;
About 10 a.m. the numbers&#13;
again began to swell.&#13;
Thousands had arrived during&#13;
the night and throughout the&#13;
morning groups of from five to&#13;
twenty arrived continually.&#13;
Areas previously thought to be&#13;
off limits to campers became&#13;
prime targets for the&#13;
homesteaders.&#13;
There is no accurate measure&#13;
to gauge crowd size, everyone&#13;
was mobile. At no time was&#13;
everyone in one place.&#13;
Throughout the concert, which&#13;
began at 11 a.m. and continued&#13;
to 4 a.m., there was a constant&#13;
flow of people. There was no&#13;
place within walking distance of&#13;
the park where there wasn't a&#13;
resident of Peace City. Bedtime&#13;
depended upon how much one&#13;
enjoyed music and-or campfires.&#13;
&#13;
Sunday morning was grey. At&#13;
7:00 a.m. the police informed us&#13;
our park permit had been&#13;
revoked. They granted Peace&#13;
City five hours to evacuate. In&#13;
the early morning confusion we&#13;
managed state-wide meetings&#13;
and planned to leave the park.&#13;
The end of the music initially&#13;
decimated our ranks and the&#13;
breaking of our camp further&#13;
reduced our numbers. Many&#13;
went to local universities, some&#13;
to nearby friends' homes and&#13;
others roamed the streets in&#13;
anticipation of Monday, while&#13;
the less hearty headed home.&#13;
We drove across the Potomic&#13;
to a friend's home. Eight of us&#13;
spent the night in the living&#13;
room of a slightly run down&#13;
suburban home. We rose at 3&#13;
a.m. and were to meet the&#13;
Wisconsin delegation at the&#13;
corners of Pennsylvania and&#13;
Constitution avenues at 5:45&#13;
a.m.&#13;
The sun was still down and the&#13;
air was cold as we crossed the&#13;
bridge into Washington. We&#13;
parked on the far side of the&#13;
capitol and waited until 5:15. At&#13;
that time we walked past the&#13;
capitol to our target site. The&#13;
capitol at 5:30 a.m. is quite a&#13;
sight. During the walk we encountered&#13;
groups of three and&#13;
four heading for their target&#13;
areas, greeted by shouts of "See&#13;
you in the streets."&#13;
When we arrived there were&#13;
about 50 people scattered about&#13;
the block. We headed for the&#13;
corners and began crossing&#13;
with the light. After about ten&#13;
minutes the crowd had swelled&#13;
to a few hundred. An announcement&#13;
that we were an&#13;
illegal assembly was followed&#13;
by a rush of police. The group&#13;
began quickly to disperse but&#13;
after a few minutes the ranks&#13;
had been reinforced and&#13;
regrouped on the corners. The&#13;
crossing continued for twenty&#13;
minutes, ever increasing in&#13;
size.&#13;
The streets one block away in&#13;
all directions were then filled&#13;
with police. They charged the&#13;
corner, closing most exits of&#13;
escape. They hearded the crowd&#13;
into two groups and waited for&#13;
vans to haul them off to jail.&#13;
Arrests were made on a&#13;
wholesale basis. Anyone not&#13;
wearing a tie or a skirt or not&#13;
looking like they worked for the&#13;
government was arrested.&#13;
Among those arrested were a&#13;
Boy Scout, a 12 year old on a&#13;
sightseeing tour with his&#13;
parents, lawyers, reporters,&#13;
photographers and various&#13;
passers by.&#13;
During the wait for the vans,&#13;
the constant sound of sirens,&#13;
hovering of helicopters and flow&#13;
of police throughout the city&#13;
was very much evident. After a&#13;
half hour the first bus loaded the&#13;
CContinued on Page 2)&#13;
Monday&#13;
By Dean Loumos&#13;
of The Newscope Staff&#13;
On Monday, May 3, at 6:14&#13;
a.m., I was among nearly 300&#13;
other anti-war demonstrators&#13;
who were "arrested" by nearly&#13;
150 police officers in&#13;
Washington, D.C.&#13;
For most of us the day started&#13;
early. We were evicted from&#13;
"Algonquin City" — Potomac&#13;
Park, named for the Algonquin&#13;
Indians who once lived there&#13;
and were driven out by the&#13;
colonialists, early Sunday&#13;
morning. None of us had slept&#13;
much the night before, instilled&#13;
with the idea of possibly&#13;
shutting down the U.S.&#13;
government. That excitement&#13;
quickly left us within a matter&#13;
of minutes after our street&#13;
tactics began, which proved to&#13;
be highly ineffective: We were&#13;
surrounded by the police and&#13;
herded into two circles. There&#13;
was no violence on the part of&#13;
the demonstrators, although the&#13;
failure to stop traffic may have&#13;
led to more violent tactics.&#13;
What the May-Day Tribe instructed&#13;
was not to resist arrest&#13;
but talk to the police and explain&#13;
to them why we were&#13;
there. Some people resisted&#13;
arrest and paid for it physically.&#13;
I saw the police club two&#13;
resisting protestors.&#13;
A noteworthy point about&#13;
Washington, D.C., is that 71 per&#13;
cent of the population is black&#13;
and not until recently, prompted&#13;
by the riot caused by the&#13;
assassination of Martin L. King,&#13;
have black policemen been&#13;
hired in large numbers;&#13;
although white policemen are&#13;
still very much in the majority.&#13;
The difference also was&#13;
reflected in the differing attitudes&#13;
of the black and white&#13;
cops. The Black cops, on the&#13;
whole were much more&#13;
rational, very cool, and many&#13;
sympathetic; while the white&#13;
cops were uptight, reactionary&#13;
and scared. While we were in&#13;
jail I noticed that this feeling&#13;
was evident with white cops&#13;
gloating over their victory and&#13;
Black cops less talkative and&#13;
subdued.&#13;
The first step in transporting&#13;
us to the jail was to load us on&#13;
buses. I was one of the first ten&#13;
loaded on the first bus. The first&#13;
thing I noticed were two&#13;
familiar faces from Parkside&#13;
and after I sat down five more&#13;
friends from Parkside came&#13;
sailing down the aisle. The bus&#13;
ride was noisy and short. Then&#13;
.came the first hint of my&#13;
relationship with my fellow&#13;
"inmates". The feeling on the&#13;
bus was joyous. There was a&#13;
togetherness which I have only&#13;
experienced a few times and&#13;
later in jail, a complete feeling&#13;
of total brotherhood overwhelmed&#13;
me. One bad thing&#13;
about the buses is that some&#13;
buses were gassed and when&#13;
unloaded the gas floated into the&#13;
cell area with nothing to protect&#13;
the already jailed prisoners.&#13;
Our bus was the first to&#13;
arrive, but we didn't have long&#13;
to wait for more. They put us in&#13;
large cells with a capacity of 75.&#13;
By 10:00 there were 150 people&#13;
in our cell which had one toilet&#13;
and one small sink. We were all&#13;
of one mind, one hope, and one&#13;
beautiful dream which comes&#13;
true everytime a group of us get&#13;
together. This probably explains&#13;
the party which the 980 of&#13;
us made out of this Washington,&#13;
D.C., jail. We chanted and sang,&#13;
loud enough so the whole&#13;
building heard us. We yelled at&#13;
the police and made fun of&#13;
(Continued on Page 3)&#13;
By Paul Lomartire of The Newscope Staff&#13;
Don't want to discuss it&#13;
I think it's time for a change&#13;
You may get disgusted&#13;
And think I'm strange&#13;
In that case I'll go underground&#13;
Get some heavy rest&#13;
Never have to worry&#13;
About what is worst and what is best&#13;
from the song Domino&#13;
by Van Morrison&#13;
These lyrics best capture the sentiment during&#13;
the days I spent in Washington, D.C., during "the&#13;
gathering of the tribes" on the banks of the&#13;
Potomic.&#13;
The tribes I speak of were comprised of middle&#13;
class kids from places like Houston, New York,&#13;
Cleveland, St. Louis and San Francisco, not to&#13;
mention the multitude of small towns between.&#13;
They came to hear music, dance in the streets, and&#13;
block the arteries of the capital, voicing their opposition&#13;
to the war in Indochina. The overall theme&#13;
that echoed throughout "Peace City" encampment&#13;
in West Potomic Park those first days in May was&#13;
non-violent civil disobedience.&#13;
These days were characterized by comedy,&#13;
tragedy, marshal law, and spirit. After observing&#13;
the actions of the youth. I thought the events were&#13;
best described as a collage of Woodstock, the&#13;
Chicago Democratic Ceonvention, Kent State, and&#13;
the smaller protest gatherings this country has seen&#13;
since the late '60's.&#13;
May Day was celebrated by about 50,000 people&#13;
in West Potomic park, where there was free food,&#13;
music, politics, wine, dope, sunshine, and a strong&#13;
sense of togetherness. One example of the&#13;
togetherness came on the afternoon of May Day&#13;
during the rock festival. Hot dog vendors from the&#13;
city came to the park to sell hot dogs for fifty cents,&#13;
which is even more expensive than major league&#13;
baseball parks. For twenty-five or thirty cents,.you&#13;
could buy a hot dog and help finance the people who&#13;
were providing free medical assistance to the park&#13;
inhabitants.&#13;
Word went around to the effect that it would be&#13;
much better to keep any profits within the festival, a&#13;
recycling of sorts. This announcement was made on&#13;
stage, between the Beach Boys and Mitch Ryder.&#13;
The fifty-cent vendors were boycotted. When I saw&#13;
this, I realized that this crowd had the potential of&#13;
accomplishing a purpose.&#13;
The park was divided into camping areas for&#13;
specific states and groups. Wisconsin, Indiana, Gay&#13;
Liberation, New York, all had areas to camp.&#13;
Literature was readily available stating the plans to&#13;
close down the city, the purposes, and the times.&#13;
(Continued on Page 4) &#13;
Page 2 NENVSCOPE May 10,1971&#13;
Black Poetess Here Sunday LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
Pulitzer prize-winning black poetess&#13;
Gwendolyn Brooks will present a free public&#13;
reading at 8 p.m. on Sunday, May 16, In&#13;
Greenquist Hall at the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Wood Road Campus.&#13;
The program is sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Poetry Forum.&#13;
Miss Brooks is the author of a number of&#13;
books of poetry including "A Street in Bronzeville",&#13;
"Annie Allen", "Maud Martha", "The&#13;
Bean Eaters", "Riot", and "Family Pictures".&#13;
Her book-length poem, "In the Mecca",&#13;
published in 1968, was highly acclaimed by&#13;
critics.&#13;
"Jump Bad: A New Chicago Anthology"&#13;
containing poems, short stories, essays and&#13;
criticism by writers in Miss Brooks' Chicago&#13;
Writers' Workshop, is to be published this month.&#13;
Miss Brooks has lectured and conducted&#13;
poetry seminars at colleges and universities&#13;
throughout the United States and has made a&#13;
number of guest appearances on major network&#13;
television shows.&#13;
Born in Topeka, Kans., Miss Brooks has&#13;
spent most of her life in Chicago and her poetry&#13;
deals principally with the city and its people—&#13;
particularly the people of its black ghettos. She&#13;
frequently tells audiences "I want to expand&#13;
your horizons, black-wise."&#13;
In 1968 she was named poet laureate ot&#13;
Illinois and in 1969 she was nominated for a&#13;
National Book Award. She currently is working&#13;
on her autobiography.&#13;
Miss Brooks has been awarded eight&#13;
honorary doctoral degrees as well as two&#13;
Guggenheim Fellowships and numerous prizes&#13;
for her poetry.&#13;
CAMPUS CALENADAR&#13;
Chicago Concert: The Student&#13;
Activities Office will sponsor&#13;
a concert by Chicago, the&#13;
popular recording group, at 8&#13;
p.m. in the Case High School&#13;
Fieldhouse, Racine. SOLD&#13;
OUT.&#13;
Meed the Legislators: 11:00&#13;
a.m. Student Activities&#13;
Building. Six Wisconsin&#13;
legislators will meet informally&#13;
with students to get&#13;
opinions on the proposed&#13;
UPTOWN&#13;
RESTAURANT&#13;
and L OUNGE&#13;
cid^ne/Ucan 9f&#13;
tftalian&#13;
Planning a party\&#13;
wedding or banquet,&#13;
no party too small&#13;
Call 6544123&#13;
merger and budget cuts.&#13;
Golf: UW-P vs. Whitewater.&#13;
Petrifying Springs.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, MAY 12&#13;
Group Opera Deadline:&#13;
Registrations close for the&#13;
Fall, 1971, Group Opera going&#13;
to the Lyric Opera in Chicago&#13;
at 8 p.m. Saturday evenings&#13;
sponsored by University&#13;
Extension. Register with Mrs.&#13;
Lillian James at the Racine&#13;
Campus.&#13;
THURSDAY, MAY 13&#13;
Variety Show: MENC will&#13;
sponsor a student variety&#13;
show at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts&#13;
Room. Also May 14. There is&#13;
an admission charge to be&#13;
announced.&#13;
FRIDAY, MAY 14&#13;
Golf: UW-P vs. UW-M. North&#13;
Shore Country Club,&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
SATURDAY, MAY 15&#13;
Baseball: UW-P vs. St. Norbert.&#13;
Aprime&#13;
The way&#13;
to buy the&#13;
insurance&#13;
you need&#13;
but may&#13;
feel you&#13;
can't&#13;
afford.&#13;
For Fu rther&#13;
Information Cal l:&#13;
JOHN J. SCHMITZ&#13;
652-4020&#13;
or use coupon below&#13;
John J. Schmitz&#13;
612 15th Place&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 53140&#13;
Yes, I am interesied in&#13;
getting further information&#13;
on "PRIME."&#13;
NAME&#13;
ADDRESS&#13;
CITY&#13;
STATE&#13;
Doubleheader. 1:00 p.m.,&#13;
Parkside Athletic Field.&#13;
Tennis: UW-P vs. UW-Green&#13;
Bay at Green Bay.&#13;
Dance: "Neighborhood". 9:30 -&#13;
12:30 a.m. Student Activities&#13;
Building. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin I.D. required.&#13;
SUNDAY, MAY 16&#13;
Poetry Reading: Pulitzer prizewinning&#13;
poet Gwendolyn&#13;
Brooks will give a free public&#13;
poetry reading at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Greenquist Hall Concourse&#13;
sponsored by the Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
Artists Series Concert: A trio of&#13;
UWP musicians —nAnnie&#13;
Petit, piano, Keiko Furiyoshi,&#13;
violin, and Harry Lantz, cello&#13;
— will present a University&#13;
Artists Series concert at 4&#13;
p.m. in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
General admission $1,&#13;
students 50 cents (Children 12&#13;
and under free).&#13;
Dear Editor Nedry:&#13;
I should like to make a&#13;
response for clarification in&#13;
regard to my presentation&#13;
before the faculty as reported m&#13;
the Newscope April 26, lv/iIn&#13;
the first place, I did not say&#13;
that newly elected Stident&#13;
Government President Tim&#13;
Eaker was not concerned about&#13;
the arming of the canJP"^&#13;
security patrol, as your article&#13;
suggests. As I recall my words,&#13;
I indicated that I had spent a&#13;
"delightful hour" with three of&#13;
the newly elected student officials,&#13;
and we talked of studentpolice&#13;
relationships, the forthcoming&#13;
rap session, and the&#13;
police cruiser. I expressed&#13;
surprise that the sidearm issue&#13;
had not been brought up. One of&#13;
the officers — not President&#13;
Eaker — su ggested that it was&#13;
recognized that the police&#13;
needed their sidearms but he&#13;
and the other two student officers&#13;
wanted to know if the&#13;
display of the weapons, particularly&#13;
in daytime, could be&#13;
.minimized. I answered in the&#13;
affirmative, and there was&#13;
some discussion on the wearing&#13;
of an appropriate blazer by the&#13;
campus police officer in the&#13;
daytime.&#13;
The point I wish to make is&#13;
that the three students had not&#13;
seen the wearing of sidearms by&#13;
campus police personnel as an&#13;
"issue". On the other hand, they&#13;
were interested and concerned&#13;
about the display of sidearms&#13;
particularly during the daytime&#13;
and suggested the use of blazers&#13;
under some conditions. All&#13;
three students indicated that&#13;
this position was favored by&#13;
most of the student body, at&#13;
least in the perceptions.&#13;
I believe what I have just&#13;
stated represents a fair appraisal&#13;
of what transpired&#13;
between the three, students and&#13;
myself on April 15, 1971, in&#13;
Tallent Hall. This, of course, is&#13;
in stark contrast to your printed&#13;
statement that :&#13;
". . . . newly elected Student&#13;
Government President Tim&#13;
Eaker, who, according to&#13;
Hanson, assured him that&#13;
students were not upset that the&#13;
security patrol was armed, and,&#13;
that incidents in the Student&#13;
Activities Building and on&#13;
campus have not effected the&#13;
students . . . ."&#13;
On the contrary. I was very&#13;
much impressed with Mr.&#13;
Eaker and his two associates,&#13;
and I found them most interested&#13;
and concerned with&#13;
student-police relationships in&#13;
all aspects.&#13;
In closing it would be my hope&#13;
that you would print this in your&#13;
Newscope at an early date.&#13;
Thank you for your attention to&#13;
this matter.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Ralph E. Hanson, Director&#13;
The Weekend&#13;
Recycle This Paper&#13;
YOUR&#13;
S T O R E S&#13;
BOTH IN KENOSHA AND RACINE ARE GIVING YOU&#13;
on all automotive services.&#13;
m a That's besides their normal&#13;
| /Q OFF great tire buys. Just bring&#13;
in this ad.&#13;
•S&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
group on the opposite corner.&#13;
Another hour-long wait brought&#13;
the second bus that took a&#13;
smaller amount from the last&#13;
group. A third bus further&#13;
diminished the second group.&#13;
After another hour the police&#13;
were called to different&#13;
locations and freed the&#13;
remaining prisoners, among&#13;
them six smiling RacineKenosha&#13;
residents.&#13;
During the two hour wait for&#13;
the bus that never showed up,&#13;
we talked with policemen on an&#13;
individual basis. They asked&#13;
where we were from and if we&#13;
went to school. After the initial&#13;
confrontation shock wore off an&#13;
almost "party" atmosphere&#13;
overcame the entire group —&#13;
police included.&#13;
The cold windy morning&#13;
prompted a black cop to ask,&#13;
"Hey, Buddy, can I rent your&#13;
coat?" or "How about your&#13;
mittens, Miss?" We talked of&#13;
the war, police-demonstrator&#13;
relationship and of one another.&#13;
One black officer I talked to had&#13;
been raised in the ghetto, kicked&#13;
out of high school for racial&#13;
reasons and joined the army.&#13;
He had spent 1V2 years in&#13;
Vietnam before becoming a&#13;
police officer. He, too, was&#13;
against the war, but he had his&#13;
job to do.&#13;
A girl passed the crowd with a&#13;
box of doughnuts and began&#13;
tossing them into the circle.&#13;
Some fell short of their target&#13;
because if she came too close&#13;
she was likely to be arrested.&#13;
One of the dpughnuts landed&#13;
behind a black cop. He picked it&#13;
up, looked at it, smiled, and&#13;
nonchalantly hid it behind his&#13;
back, but laughter and shouts&#13;
from the crowd made him&#13;
reluctantly give up his prize and&#13;
he tossed it into the circle.&#13;
We all became so involved in&#13;
discussion that when one black&#13;
officer tried to interrupt a group&#13;
already talking to another officer,&#13;
the officer replied,&#13;
"You're talkin' to them. This is&#13;
my group and you leave 'em&#13;
alone. Besides they block the&#13;
wind and I'll get cold if they go&#13;
by you."&#13;
We talked and joked with the&#13;
officers for more than two hours&#13;
and when they had to leave and&#13;
let the remaining prisoners free&#13;
there were feelings of regret&#13;
that we had to break up. Warm&#13;
regards were exchanged when&#13;
we left.&#13;
May Day was a success.&#13;
Newscope Staffers Needed&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Frf&gt;r G uaranteed Service &amp; Trade-in Val&#13;
See Jim Merrick, "Mr. Hammond."&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
ZIP&#13;
STUDIO&#13;
1429 Washington&#13;
IMRAC'NE.&#13;
UU Phone 643-2563&#13;
&amp; 'If Better Organs are Bui lt , Hammond wil l build them.' $&#13;
Second Class Postage Paid at&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
Warren Nedry Editor&#13;
MarcEisen News Editor&#13;
John Koloen Copy Editor&#13;
Jim Nolan Business Manager&#13;
John Leighton Advertising&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, Bill Sorensen, Bill&#13;
Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Dean Loumos, Mike&#13;
Kurth Bob Borchardt, Ken&#13;
Konkol, Kevin McKay, James&#13;
Taffs*' Lomartire, Sven&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
&amp;^RADSARIALA'&#13;
JOTA&#13;
BUSINESS PHONES&#13;
658-4861, Ext. 36&#13;
652-4177&#13;
Newscope is an independ^&#13;
student newspaper composed y&#13;
students of The Universityoi&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Pubhsb®°&#13;
weekly except during vaca i&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the&#13;
source of revenue for&#13;
operation of Newscope. -&#13;
copies are printed&#13;
distributed throughout "&#13;
Kenosha and Racine&#13;
munities as well as the Un&#13;
sity. Free copies are available&#13;
upon request. &#13;
May 10 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
Nusbaum Quizzed on Budget Cuts and Merger&#13;
by Mike Kurth&#13;
Ed's Note: Joe Nusbaum is&#13;
Gov. Lucy's chief administrative&#13;
assistant. Dr.&#13;
Harvey Brown is the head of the&#13;
CCHE (Coordinative Committee&#13;
of High Education) and&#13;
will be out of a job if the&#13;
Governor's merger is approved.&#13;
These men spoke to a public&#13;
meeting Friday, May 7, at&#13;
Greenquist, on the Governor's&#13;
merger and budget cuts.&#13;
What began as a casual&#13;
presentation of two viewpoints&#13;
on the proposed merger, ended&#13;
as a session of pointed&#13;
questions, with few answers on&#13;
the specifics of the Governor's&#13;
plan. The primary target of&#13;
these questions was Joe&#13;
Nusbaum the Governor's chief&#13;
administrative assistant.&#13;
Nusbaum maintained that the&#13;
two systems of higher education&#13;
are growing less distinguishable.&#13;
Evidently since Green&#13;
Bay and Parkside are&#13;
primarily undergraduate institutions.&#13;
He suggested that the&#13;
merger would save money since&#13;
the CCHE would be eliminated,&#13;
one board of regents would go&#13;
and costly competition between&#13;
the two systems would be&#13;
eliminated. He felt the prestige&#13;
of the UW system would continue&#13;
by assigning "peaks of&#13;
excellence" to various institutions.&#13;
He asked two things&#13;
of the faculty. First that they&#13;
consider the merger "not as a&#13;
move aimed at any campus in&#13;
particular,, but as in the contract&#13;
of students" and second,&#13;
as citizens of the state, the&#13;
faculty should view the move as&#13;
one "making effective use of&#13;
resources."&#13;
After Nusbaum spoke, Dr.&#13;
Harvey Brown presented the&#13;
pro's and con's of merger. He&#13;
said to merger could generate&#13;
more confidence in government,&#13;
offer more innovative&#13;
programs through the central&#13;
board, centralize admission,&#13;
control, and allow for the use of&#13;
network computers and intercampus&#13;
library service.&#13;
Brown then suggested the&#13;
hazards. A la ck of coordination&#13;
between the U's, Voc. Techs,&#13;
and 2 year campuses, and the&#13;
lack of a broad based group to&#13;
explore potential problems&#13;
(these problems would&#13;
primarily be administrative,&#13;
such as size, location etc. of the&#13;
various institutions, but also&#13;
would include the forseeable&#13;
faculty problems such an&#13;
tensure.) the merger would&#13;
encounter.&#13;
The audience then began their&#13;
questions. John Harbeson&#13;
wanted to know if t here was any&#13;
proof to support the Governor's&#13;
merger. Nusbaum "* ans wered&#13;
that "there is no proof ... the&#13;
merged system could be a&#13;
disaster ... but the problems&#13;
are mainly political." One&#13;
board'setting policy could&#13;
overcome the competition for&#13;
political favor by each system.&#13;
Brown then took the floor and&#13;
stated that of 100 programs&#13;
submitted by both systems only&#13;
15 were rejected. He suggested&#13;
that this was competition but&#13;
wondered if it was bad.&#13;
Fran Jaesche asked&#13;
Nusbaum how tuition would be&#13;
handled if Parkside is funded at&#13;
the USU level (two-thirds of&#13;
A Study in Parkside Politics&#13;
Prof. Resigns in Face of Non-Renewal&#13;
By John Koloen of The Newscope Staff&#13;
Because this has already happened and there is really nothing&#13;
that can be added to change it, I will not write this as a news story.&#13;
It is a closed case. Salimons Cacs, Assistant Professor of&#13;
Mathematics, has resigned.&#13;
What follows is intended to be as well a documented history as&#13;
possible of Professor Cacs resignation. It is a study in methodology&#13;
and should not be construed to represent the cause of his plight&#13;
since that lies much deeper. His example serves only as far as it&#13;
illustrates the effects on one man of the current approach to&#13;
teacher evaluation. _ _ _ , „ . f..&#13;
First of all, Salimons Cacs came to the Kenosha Center of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin in 1967 from the University of Khartoum,&#13;
where he taught for two years. Under an agreement between the&#13;
United States and the Sudanese government, he was sent from&#13;
Northwestern University to Sudan as an expert in his field to aid in&#13;
upgrading the University at Khartoum. He arrived in 1965 with the&#13;
official status of Visiting Associate Professor in Engineering and&#13;
Pure Mathematics and left as a full-professor.&#13;
Prior to 1965 he had taught elsewhere, including two years at&#13;
the Rose Polytechnic Institute of Terre Haute, Indiana, and at the&#13;
University of Indiana.&#13;
On March 11, 1970, Prof. Cacs received a letter from the&#13;
Executive Committee of the Division of Science to the Chancellor.&#13;
The letter served as a notice of dismissal. The paragraph referring&#13;
to the reasons for his dismissal read:&#13;
"The intent is for all staff&#13;
members to have the Ph.D. as&#13;
soon as possible where this is&#13;
the usual terminal degree.&#13;
Since you do not have the Ph.D.&#13;
and do not have a doctorate&#13;
program, and since this would&#13;
mean that you would not be&#13;
given tenure, it was the concensus&#13;
that it would be best not&#13;
to reappoint you to the faculty of&#13;
UW-Parkside after the&#13;
academic year 1970-1971. This&#13;
would give you all of next year&#13;
to seek a position elsewhere."&#13;
Upon receiving this letter&#13;
Prof. Cacs wrote for references&#13;
to offer as evidence after his&#13;
•status as a scholar.&#13;
Shortly after this recommendation&#13;
by the faculty body&#13;
the student body evaluated&#13;
Prof. Cacs by awarding him the&#13;
Standard Oil Outstanding&#13;
Teacher Award of 1970.&#13;
Whether they meant it or not a&#13;
letter sent from the Steering&#13;
Committee 1969-70 F aculty Awards said:&#13;
"This award, consisting of a $1,000 certificate, represents the&#13;
gratitude and esteem of the student body for your teaching excellence&#13;
and warm personal interest in student life."&#13;
When asked by Newscope to express his feelings concerning&#13;
the first notice of dismissal, he said: "In the beginning they thought&#13;
that a Ph.D. should actually be necessary, but when I was hired&#13;
they should have informed me that they don't recognize my&#13;
degree. . . that it would be just a temporary job. And then I would&#13;
understand, and at that time I actually had my choice between one&#13;
school and another school and at that time to find a job was very&#13;
easy. And so at that time they needed me and now that they have an&#13;
overflow of teachers they can just get rid of me."&#13;
In reply to Prof. Cacs request for references Dr. Irvin G.&#13;
Wyllie received a letter from Dr. Leonid Staucitjs dated August 5,&#13;
1970. Dr. Staucitajs' references include: Director of t he Institute of&#13;
Geophysics at Latvian University, Rige; Head of Department and&#13;
Professor, National University, La Pla, Argentina; and, Visiting&#13;
Professor of Geophysics, University of Hawaii, Honolulu. Addtionally,&#13;
he is listed on pate 2021 of the 1968 edition of Who is Who in&#13;
America. He holds three doctoral degrees, one each from Riga,&#13;
Stuttgart and the University of Sydney, Australia.&#13;
Staucitajs wrote: "Upon the request of Mr. S. Caca I certify&#13;
that: Mr. Salimons Cacs completed 209 semester credit hours of the&#13;
Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences at the University of&#13;
Latvia, with all its practical&#13;
works and examinations,&#13;
passed the final academical&#13;
state board examinations,&#13;
presented an excellent terminal&#13;
thesis on "Measurements,&#13;
evaluations and analysis of&#13;
Declination, Inclination and zcomponent&#13;
of magnetic field of&#13;
Latvian Territory" under my&#13;
guidance and supervision from&#13;
June 1940 through May 1941.&#13;
According to the decisions of the&#13;
Faculty Council at the conference&#13;
on Sept. 1941, Mr.&#13;
Salimons Cacs received the&#13;
Terminal Degree in&#13;
Mathematics.&#13;
"Furthermore, it is known to&#13;
me that Mr. Cacs received&#13;
additional 51 semester credit&#13;
hours from the Technical&#13;
University Karlsruhe and 48&#13;
credits from the Technical&#13;
University Dresden, GerProf&#13;
(Continued on Page 5) essor Salimons Cacs&#13;
Parkside's present level per&#13;
student) "If WSU tuition is not&#13;
raised would Parkside students&#13;
receive a refund?"&#13;
Nusbaum questioned the twothirds&#13;
figure. He maintened the&#13;
funding difference was only&#13;
eight per cent, but admitted&#13;
that Parkside seemed to be&#13;
"losing money somewhere".&#13;
Sid Walesh of Budget and&#13;
Planning questioned Nusbaum&#13;
about the drastic cuts on&#13;
decision items. He pointed to&#13;
specific cuts listed in the&#13;
University Budget printout&#13;
(Green book, etc.).&#13;
Nusbaum at first was not&#13;
convinced that these figures&#13;
were accurate. After a thorough&#13;
explanation of the importance&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
Mond ay&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
them. Brothers (everybody&#13;
called each other brother — and&#13;
meant it) talked to the police&#13;
and explained why we thought&#13;
we should be let go and why&#13;
they should join us in our fight&#13;
against the war.&#13;
After 13 hours of this they&#13;
finally fed us. We were given&#13;
two sandwiches each, but no one&#13;
would eat until everyone had a&#13;
sandwich in his hand. We were&#13;
not given anything to drink, but&#13;
we had one canteen and two&#13;
small plastic squeeze bottles&#13;
which we filled with wafter and&#13;
passed around.&#13;
They then told us that we&#13;
could pay a $10 bail and get out&#13;
that night, which prompted the&#13;
longest and most spirited&#13;
celebration. When things&#13;
calmed we laid plans for what&#13;
we would do to be more effective&#13;
the next day ; we saw our&#13;
arrests as a victory, not a&#13;
defeat.&#13;
The first person was&#13;
"liberated" around 11:30 after&#13;
spending a total of I8V2 ho urs in&#13;
cramped quarters and with&#13;
little food. I had the "honor" of&#13;
being the last person to be&#13;
released. This was around 1:30&#13;
Tuesday morning after I had&#13;
spent 19V2 hours in jail.&#13;
The May Day Tribe said our&#13;
action was a success. It didn't&#13;
shut down the government, but&#13;
just the fact that there were&#13;
enough people in open defiance&#13;
of their government and willing&#13;
to go to jail to stop this war is a&#13;
victory for human dignity. The&#13;
government was ready for us;&#13;
they had everything, troops,&#13;
clubs, mace, gas, helicopters, a&#13;
few tanks around town, spies,&#13;
jeeps, buses, motorcycles, the&#13;
whole military establishment.&#13;
All we had was our communication&#13;
and our love Rennie&#13;
Davis is saying we'll try it again&#13;
soon (July 4th has been mentioned.)&#13;
This time we'll be more&#13;
prepared, and most likely won't&#13;
be arrested as easily.&#13;
Old Edition textbooks&#13;
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Kenosha, Wis. 53140 &#13;
Page 4 NEW SC OPE - May 10,1971&#13;
WOMEN IN LOVE&#13;
Amidst the tenuous embraces&#13;
of body and the tenuous embraces&#13;
of words stirs the film&#13;
Women In Love. The final word&#13;
of D. H. Lawrence's title is thei&#13;
topic dissected to the pitch and I moan of those in climax, those&#13;
who know a climax that is not&#13;
only in an earthly heaven but in&#13;
arr earthly hell as well. The&#13;
many dimensions of what love&#13;
is: or seems to be are explored&#13;
with thoughts of the present in&#13;
mind.&#13;
How appropriate that in a&#13;
time when love is carried by&#13;
standard bearers that the&#13;
concept should be so accurately&#13;
defined in such a way as to give&#13;
it substance, subtracting the&#13;
order and beauty that seem so&#13;
readily a part of its first impression.&#13;
&#13;
The games of love and hate&#13;
that are hardly inseparable are&#13;
played in an atmosphere of&#13;
soured wealth and an absurd&#13;
variance from British&#13;
Utilitarianism, surrounded by&#13;
pastoral settings of an English&#13;
country estate. The time is near&#13;
World War I and the estate&#13;
belongs to the Crich family,&#13;
owners of a coal mine run by the&#13;
only son Gerald. We also find&#13;
Rupert Birkin, a young&#13;
naturalist whose sensitivity is&#13;
too great for most to follow him.&#13;
The involvement begins&#13;
almost as simultaneously the&#13;
search for love begins with the&#13;
sisters, Brangwen, Gudrun and&#13;
Ursula, the first being sensual&#13;
and the second impressionable.&#13;
Gerald falls with Gudrun and&#13;
Rupert falls to Ursula. With the&#13;
blossoming of these anguished&#13;
romances another comes about&#13;
and the triangle establishes&#13;
itself. A stigmatic love develops&#13;
between Rupert and Gerald.&#13;
Surrounding the characters&#13;
Gudrun and Ursula, the story&#13;
saturates their desparate&#13;
definitions of love and the&#13;
almost bestial sensuality and&#13;
great sensitivity of the women&#13;
are contrasted to the power and&#13;
brutishness of the man leading&#13;
to a sado-masochismic clash.&#13;
Their portrayal of torturer and&#13;
tortured clouds again the idea of&#13;
love and the ritual turns into&#13;
hate. The woman is savagely&#13;
motivated toward an artist who&#13;
asks her to work with him in&#13;
Dresden. With impressions of&#13;
early Picasso spotted through&#13;
his bedroom at a Swiss Alps ski&#13;
resort, they invent an absurd&#13;
dialogue and act out a strange&#13;
play, symbolic of their desire.&#13;
Gerald destroys himself and the&#13;
film is ended with a glaring&#13;
survival of hate over love. In the&#13;
final moments Rupert is heard&#13;
saying that both loves are&#13;
possible between man and&#13;
woman, and it seems to me with&#13;
that the hate and love will carry&#13;
on too.&#13;
The photography was superb&#13;
with every shot containing&#13;
highly generating color accents&#13;
and the mood was projected into&#13;
a time and not just a space.&#13;
With Glenda Jackson's acting&#13;
the film became highly&#13;
equateable with our time . . .&#13;
again.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
BRAT \ \&#13;
Thei^r m • is&#13;
Where It's At!&#13;
1!&#13;
DAILY SPECIAL I&#13;
9 A . M . T O 4 P.M .&#13;
A Bo t t le of&#13;
nifim nnE&#13;
A New Kind of&#13;
Alcoholic Beverage&#13;
and "BEEFBU RGER&#13;
STEAK&#13;
o r&#13;
BRAT&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
HOUR&#13;
M O N D A Y t h ru FRIDA Y&#13;
6 p .m. to 7 p . m.&#13;
PITCHERS $ 1 . 0 0 GL A SS 20&lt;&#13;
Ava ilab le For P art ies&#13;
Includ ing Fraternity a nd Sorority P a rti es&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M. • 12 P .M.&#13;
N o rthw e st Corne r 1-9 4 and H i g hw a y 50&#13;
parmg&#13;
mm&#13;
by Paul Lomartire of The Newscope Staff&#13;
If there are those who envision the good, old&#13;
small American restaurant, where individuality is&#13;
not traded for the buck, it is needless to say that these&#13;
people are constantly disappointed. National chains&#13;
of eating places have taken over in America.&#13;
Every city seems to look the same as you pass&#13;
McDonalds, Roy Rogers' Roast Beef Sandwiches,&#13;
Burger Chef, Colonel Sanders' Fried Chicken, Fish&#13;
and Chips, and scores of others that even share the&#13;
same architecture. If someone does find a small&#13;
restaurant, it is either an all night greasy spoon, or a&#13;
high priced novelty. It is safe to assume that the&#13;
Alice's Restaurant we all saw in the movie is one in a&#13;
thousand.&#13;
So, if Arlo Guthrie is looking for another place to&#13;
eat, Kenosha might just have one to his liking.&#13;
Frank's Diner attracts those who want a good meal&#13;
that isn't pre-packaged and ready before they come&#13;
in to eat it.&#13;
About eight or nine in the morning, Frank's is full&#13;
of longhairs about to descend upon Kenosha Billiards&#13;
(Popularly known as the Hole), store clerks readying&#13;
for a work day, and a half dozen or so high school kids&#13;
who have taken an unauthorized day off.&#13;
I was at first fooled into thinking that the&#13;
structure was once a car on the Chicago and Northwestern&#13;
Railroad that was derailed one fine spring&#13;
day. The building is built like a dining car on a train,&#13;
but in fact, it was intended this way and Frank has&#13;
been serving his customers for four and a half&#13;
decades here.&#13;
I had just returned fro.m the ordeal in Washington&#13;
and I felt comfortable eating with those my age.&#13;
There are times when a friendly atmosphere can&#13;
make food taste better, and to me this seemed like&#13;
one of those times.&#13;
Frank and-his waitresses use an honor system in&#13;
running their restaurant. The only place I know of&#13;
that still has faith in people. No checks are issued for&#13;
the food, as the individual is supposed to report to the&#13;
register and tell what he ate after his meal.&#13;
It would be a cardinal sin to rip-off Frank, according&#13;
to all of his regulars. Strangers eating there&#13;
only infrequently wouldn't even consider it because it&#13;
would reduce them to a level in society that would&#13;
align them with swindlers who steal from old ladies.&#13;
Frank's honor policy works.&#13;
The prices wouldn't motivate one to try to sneak&#13;
out without paying, or lieing. Hamburgers are forty&#13;
cents, roast beef sandwiches seventy, homemade&#13;
soup is thirty cents, and hamemade chili is forty&#13;
cents. The all time favorite at this restaurant is a hot&#13;
hamburger which includes gravy and mashed&#13;
potatoes for only sixty cents.&#13;
The food is good, nothing is overly greasy or&#13;
bland. The service is good, since anyone can go&#13;
• behind the counter to get their own choice of soft&#13;
drink or coffee. The whole set-up at Frank's has given&#13;
birth to a number of regular customers who successfully&#13;
support the business so there can be a note&#13;
of individuality here. Among the regulars are&#13;
businessmen, longhairs, detectives, shoppers and&#13;
retired gentlemen from the Hotel Dayton.&#13;
When days don't seem to be starting too well for&#13;
you, or you get sick of assembly line food, I suggest&#13;
you go to Frank's Diner humming an Arlo Guthrie&#13;
tune, and you're bound to meet some good people.&#13;
J-IU-J-.I - - - - - • • •••&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
I thought it was too&#13;
idealistic to think that those who&#13;
had come to protest would go as&#13;
far as participating in mass&#13;
arrest. I couldn't imagine&#13;
thousands of people going to jail&#13;
for a cause or even personal&#13;
principles. It was amazing to&#13;
see the arrested groups on&#13;
Monday, waiting for rides to the&#13;
camps and jails. They sang,&#13;
chanted, and rode the buses&#13;
with fists sticking out of every&#13;
available window, spirits didn't&#13;
even fail once everyone was&#13;
imprisoned.&#13;
After a few thousand were&#13;
taken to the Coliseum on May&#13;
3rd, it wasn't long before a Viet&#13;
Cong flag was hung, chants and&#13;
popular protest songs filled the&#13;
air. A couple was married&#13;
during their detention at the&#13;
Washington Redskins' practice&#13;
field, to make all aspects of the&#13;
protests very different.&#13;
The funnier things that&#13;
happened included the Gay&#13;
Liberation delegation in&#13;
Georgetown on May 3rd as they&#13;
carried small cars into the&#13;
streets and let the air out of the&#13;
Observations&#13;
tires. After a dozen or so&#13;
demonstrators successfully&#13;
lifted a car and carried it a few&#13;
feet, they would joyously jump&#13;
up and down, hug each other&#13;
and have a little celebration of&#13;
sorts with each vehicle they&#13;
used to clutter the street.&#13;
On the last day of demonstrations&#13;
there was the&#13;
beautiful 84 year old lady who&#13;
was led down the steps of the&#13;
Capitol, under arrest, hands on&#13;
her head P.O.W. style, with a&#13;
smiling D.C. police officer&#13;
leading the way.&#13;
The sadder moments included&#13;
a 23 year old man in&#13;
court explaining during his&#13;
arraignment that he had a wife&#13;
eight months pregnant who was&#13;
roaming around Washington&#13;
penniless searching for him.&#13;
The judge simply told him that&#13;
the District of Columbia had a&#13;
fine welfare system, and he&#13;
didn't think the man showed&#13;
any responsibility characteristic&#13;
of fathers and husbands.&#13;
A cash bond of $250.00 w as set.&#13;
The man was led away weekping.&#13;
&#13;
After the 7,000 arrests on&#13;
Monday., the courts turned into&#13;
misdemeanor factories, court&#13;
personnel working 12 hour shifts&#13;
in eight courtrooms. Judges&#13;
listened to many reasons why&#13;
individuals felt they should be&#13;
re leased on their own&#13;
recognizance, but only those&#13;
who lived in the District of&#13;
Columbia were released, on the&#13;
condition they were home every&#13;
night before ten p.m. until their&#13;
court date.&#13;
My function at the demonstrations&#13;
was strictly as a&#13;
reporter. I tried not to get involved&#13;
with any of the&#13;
demonstrations, but I can&#13;
remember running at least six&#13;
times from club wielding police&#13;
officers who worked like robots,&#13;
arresting anyone who looked&#13;
the part of a dissenter. Press&#13;
credential meant little or&#13;
nothing, considering even&#13;
medics were arrested. There&#13;
was an energy generated by the&#13;
people that fascinated me.&#13;
There seemed to be a blind faith&#13;
among everyone who sat or&#13;
marched in the streets. They&#13;
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KENOSHA, WISCONSIN &#13;
May 10,1971 NEWSCOPE Pages&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
many."&#13;
An additional letter dated&#13;
June 27,1945, indicated that Dr.&#13;
Cacs had been working at the&#13;
Institute for Applied&#13;
Mathematics at the FriedrichSchiller&#13;
University. Prof. Cacs&#13;
was engaged as a scientific&#13;
assistant and studying on his&#13;
own but, "Due to the destruc-,&#13;
tion of the institute by an Allied&#13;
Forces air-attack it was not&#13;
possible to finish the doctor's&#13;
work of Mr. Tshatschs." (ed.&#13;
Prof. Cacs Americanized his&#13;
name.)&#13;
In view of Dr. Slaucitajs&#13;
references Prof. Cacs said:&#13;
"The reasons that they gave&#13;
were not valid. Other reasons I&#13;
wouldn't mind. I don't fit in this&#13;
university . . . sorry, I can&#13;
understand and then I know it,&#13;
but if my degree is somehow&#13;
inferior for these reasons, then I&#13;
know the reasons are not&#13;
because of my education."&#13;
A second letter dated January&#13;
29, 1971, was sent from Dr.&#13;
Isenberg, Chairman, Social&#13;
A Study in Parkside Politics&#13;
Sciences Division to Professor&#13;
Cacs the body of which read:&#13;
"After due consideration of&#13;
the credentials submitted,&#13;
several questions have been&#13;
raised* by the Executive&#13;
Committee that the burden of&#13;
proof is upon you to provide.&#13;
The following information is&#13;
requested:&#13;
1. What is the nature of the&#13;
terminal degree issued to you&#13;
* by the University of Latvia?&#13;
2. What is the nature of the&#13;
requirements for the terminal&#13;
degree that is referred to in the&#13;
documents?&#13;
3. What is the academic&#13;
equivalency of the University of&#13;
Latvia degree to American&#13;
academic degrees?&#13;
In the letter of February 26,&#13;
1970, the termination recommendations&#13;
raised two issues:&#13;
(1) the question of the Ph.D.&#13;
degree and (2) the lack of&#13;
research beyond a master's&#13;
level. It is recommended that&#13;
you provide supporting&#13;
evidence for research or&#13;
were sure that they wre doing&#13;
what had to be done for their&#13;
cause; ending the war. The&#13;
clown princes, Jerry Rubin and&#13;
Abbie Hoffman, preached nonviolence,&#13;
and did not go out on&#13;
their usual political limbs with&#13;
wild generalizations about the&#13;
government and leaders.&#13;
I don't see how anyone can&#13;
say this whole Festival of Life&#13;
failed. The only time the laws in&#13;
this country will ever be&#13;
changed through the system is&#13;
when those who physically&#13;
make and can change the laws&#13;
are directly affected. When&#13;
their kids are getting arrested&#13;
by the thousands through&#13;
planned civil disobedience in&#13;
the-nation's capital, put into a&#13;
detention camp, and they are&#13;
released vowing to do ir over&#13;
again; eyes should open and&#13;
closed minds had better open.&#13;
At least for now the youth&#13;
culture is not playing into the&#13;
hands of their enemies and&#13;
critics by irresponsible bombings&#13;
and destruction. They are&#13;
constructively working the best&#13;
they can within the system,&#13;
without the vote within the&#13;
system. .&#13;
When it was all over, the dirty&#13;
sleeping bags slung over&#13;
shoulders, the stink from imprisonment&#13;
still fresh, those&#13;
who came to Washington to&#13;
protest the war were still&#13;
smiling, with thumbs asking for&#13;
rides back home all over&#13;
America, applying the lyrics of&#13;
Van Morrison "Many think it's&#13;
time for a change," and they&#13;
are "heading underground for&#13;
some heavy rest," but they will&#13;
return again, somewhere else,&#13;
until the war they hate is over.&#13;
Meetings were held among the&#13;
groups to vote on plans of action.&#13;
It was truly a make-shift&#13;
but efficient army.&#13;
When the permit for the&#13;
park was revoked, and&#13;
everyone had only a few hours&#13;
to leave, it seemed to me the&#13;
protest would dissolve in the&#13;
rain that was beginning to fall.&#13;
Knapsacks, sleeping bags, and&#13;
tents were hastily packed by the&#13;
frustrated people of Peace City.&#13;
It was assumed before hand&#13;
that many of the 50,000 had&#13;
come just for the free rock&#13;
festival, but those who had&#13;
come to protest hoped they&#13;
would at least have a place to&#13;
meet and plan for the Monday&#13;
shutdown.&#13;
When darkness and cold set&#13;
in, fifteen or twenty thousand&#13;
people were faced with the&#13;
dilemma of nowhere to stay in a&#13;
city with a high crime rate. I&#13;
think the closing of the park did&#13;
more to bring about a sense of&#13;
unity than a mass meeting&#13;
could have done. Every time&#13;
groups or individual protests&#13;
passed on the Washington&#13;
streets a fist shot up, followed&#13;
by the greeting, "See you&#13;
Monday morning in the&#13;
streets."&#13;
scholarly activity since the date&#13;
of your terminal degree, and&#13;
also provide evidence of any&#13;
publications to support the&#13;
research activity."&#13;
Subsequently, in a letter&#13;
dated January 2?, 1971, and&#13;
addressed to Dr. Isenberg,&#13;
Professor Slacitajs reemphasized&#13;
the facts of his&#13;
previous, adding that "In my&#13;
opinion his terminal thesis is&#13;
equivalent to the Ph.D. thesis in&#13;
U.S.A."&#13;
In an additional letter from&#13;
Olgarts Balodis of the&#13;
Association of Latvian Catholic&#13;
Students explaining that at the&#13;
time Prof. Cacs had finished his&#13;
work at Latvian University&#13;
(1941) he had "ammassed a&#13;
total of 209 semester credit&#13;
hours at Latvian University,"&#13;
but that "Russia had invaded&#13;
Latvia and degrees were not&#13;
officially awarded." But the&#13;
letter added, "There is no&#13;
question but that the Terminal&#13;
Degree in Mathematics from&#13;
the University of Latvia is the&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Candy&#13;
6058 40th AVE&#13;
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OL7-6174&#13;
wwwwwwwwwwy&#13;
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to&#13;
Yourself&#13;
to Drink&#13;
FRESH&#13;
BEER&#13;
Drink . . .&#13;
Budweiser,&#13;
KING OF BEERS&#13;
. . . b u t y o u&#13;
know tha t!!!&#13;
equivalent, or even superior to,&#13;
the Ph.D. degree that is granted&#13;
by an American University."&#13;
Cacs said at this point that&#13;
"Since I proved it (held a terminal&#13;
degree), I proved that the&#13;
reasons they dismissed me&#13;
were wrong, they don't even&#13;
comment on it."&#13;
In a following letter dated&#13;
April 15, 1971, addressed tp&#13;
Prof. Cacs, Dean William&#13;
Morrow quoted Dr. Isenberg as&#13;
writing:&#13;
"In a meeting of the&#13;
Executive Committee of the&#13;
Division of Science on Wednesday,&#13;
March 24, 1971, all the&#13;
documents presented by Mr.&#13;
Salimons Cacs in support of his&#13;
appeal generated by his letter of&#13;
December 1, 1970, were considered.&#13;
The Executive Committee&#13;
re-affirmed its previous&#13;
recommendation of nonrenewal&#13;
dated February 26,&#13;
1970."&#13;
Cacs said of t his letter, "They&#13;
just avoided this question&#13;
completely. In personal interviews&#13;
by two Deans, Dean&#13;
Mills andDean MacKinney, the&#13;
reason is, first of all, I did not&#13;
contribute to the university&#13;
community. Teaching does not&#13;
count Dean MacKinney told&#13;
me; and, I did not publish."&#13;
"Actually I was told by Dean&#13;
MacKinney that I just don't fit,&#13;
but actually it's happened that&#13;
he is no more here." (ed. Dean&#13;
MacKinney was removed from&#13;
his post as Dean of the College&#13;
of Science and Society last&#13;
semester.)&#13;
"In a personal interview Dr.&#13;
Wyllie told me you cannot put&#13;
on the paper the real reasons.&#13;
They have the power to fire&#13;
anyone . . . it's one of those&#13;
things."&#13;
"I could win the argument in&#13;
an open hearing but still I would&#13;
lose the job. I could present a&#13;
court case with all the papers,&#13;
but if they really wanted to&#13;
learn the truth about my&#13;
degrees they could have called&#13;
me at least a year ago. They&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
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Page 6 NEWSCOPE May Iff. 1971&#13;
Smik&#13;
A Study in Park side Politics&#13;
(Continued from Page 5)&#13;
never called, they never asked&#13;
me questions directly."&#13;
According to Cacs his reason&#13;
for tendering his resignation&#13;
before the end of the semester&#13;
was due to a combination of&#13;
factors that so deteriorated his&#13;
teaching effectiveness that&#13;
teaching became a strain.&#13;
Newscope asked Prof. Cacs to&#13;
discuss his views of the faculty&#13;
review committee. The&#13;
following are his opinions&#13;
regarding the procedures involved&#13;
in faculty review.&#13;
"The university has to certify&#13;
that my degree is equivalent to&#13;
an American Ph.D. And I don't&#13;
believe any European&#13;
university will certify this&#13;
because, in their opinion, their&#13;
degrees are higher than&#13;
American degrees. Secondly,&#13;
even if the university would&#13;
certify this somebody asked,&#13;
'how can you prove that this&#13;
degree is equivalent or higher?'&#13;
Somebody from the University&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
s&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
of the decision items to a new&#13;
and developing University, and&#13;
their accuracy, Nusbaum&#13;
conceded the point and&#13;
remarked that he would convey&#13;
the groups concerns to the&#13;
governor. He also suggested&#13;
that many "one shot programs"&#13;
set up for Madison and&#13;
Milwaukee could have their&#13;
funds diverted to other campuses.&#13;
These funds however,&#13;
are not a part of the decision&#13;
items itenerary and are apof&#13;
Wisconsin would ask the&#13;
University of Illinois if their&#13;
degree is equivalent to U.W.&#13;
degree. Who would certify&#13;
this?"&#13;
Outlining the problems&#13;
revolving around certification&#13;
of international degrees, Cacs&#13;
stated that because the&#13;
University of Latvia is behind&#13;
the iron curtain he said, "They&#13;
are not allowed to write directly&#13;
to capitalist countries. The&#13;
documents might have been&#13;
destroyed but I think they just&#13;
would like to hurt as much as&#13;
possible because I do have the&#13;
originals of my papers and they&#13;
sent a letter that said they had&#13;
no records."&#13;
"They (USSR) also think&#13;
their degrees are higher than&#13;
American degrees, and I can&#13;
see their reasons. For instance,&#13;
I teach Math. 221-222, in the&#13;
Soviet Union they teach this in&#13;
high school. The German&#13;
university (too) does not&#13;
Nusbaum&#13;
plicable only to basic budget&#13;
considerations.&#13;
Mrs. Greenquist suggested&#13;
that a commission be set up,&#13;
similar to4 the Governor's&#13;
commission on crime, to study&#13;
the full implications of the&#13;
merger.&#13;
Tim Eaker asked if he could&#13;
expect the same education at&#13;
Whitewater he could at&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Harbeson wished Nusbaum to&#13;
convey his sentiments to the&#13;
&amp;&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
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the brands you know&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
and 45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, not your&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, our&#13;
Department Manager, who is a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk your language, both in&#13;
equipment purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY — Tape recorders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
PANASONIC — Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players&#13;
KOSS — Headsets&#13;
KENWOOD — Receivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANTZ — Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC — Speakers&#13;
J.B.L. — Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. — Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
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G.E. — Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
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recognize an American high&#13;
school diploma. An American&#13;
would have to take two years of&#13;
course work before he would&#13;
become a freshman in a German&#13;
university."&#13;
."But I don't think any German&#13;
university would ask,&#13;
'would you certify that your&#13;
degree is equivalent' they would&#13;
never do this. First of all it's&#13;
only jealousy and second, you&#13;
can't prove those things. It's a&#13;
matter of opinion. Try to&#13;
compare the University of&#13;
Illinois degree with Wisconsin.&#13;
Wisconsin for sure would say&#13;
their degree was much more&#13;
valuable, but try to convince&#13;
Illinois that Wisconsin was&#13;
higher."&#13;
Expressing his attitude&#13;
toward research work and work&#13;
directed mainly at publication,&#13;
he said: "When Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie drew up the ten points,"&#13;
for faculty evaluation, "it was&#13;
said of these ten points that&#13;
teaching would be the first&#13;
consideration of a faculty&#13;
member. The promises of&#13;
teaching are just on the paper,&#13;
but not in real life."&#13;
"I did a ol t of research for the&#13;
sake of my students. I&#13;
researched the best ways of how&#13;
to expalin, not what is in the&#13;
textbook, but how the student&#13;
can better understand the&#13;
material. I believe in this type&#13;
of research, I don't believe in&#13;
the research for publishing&#13;
purposes only. People who like&#13;
to publish should do this and be&#13;
rewarded, but still the prime&#13;
objective is that the student be&#13;
taught to the best of an instructor's&#13;
abilities."&#13;
(Newscope learned that the&#13;
Executive Committee of the&#13;
Science Division is unable to&#13;
discuss the specific reasons for&#13;
Prof. Cacs' non-renewal&#13;
because such information is&#13;
considered to be of a confidential&#13;
nature.)&#13;
Governor. He said '.'The basis of&#13;
tenure, the missions, and&#13;
faculty governance are the very&#13;
soul of this university and our&#13;
chances for quality depends on&#13;
those being preserved and what&#13;
we don't want to see is these&#13;
being put in the hands of new&#13;
regents of unknown quality —&#13;
your'e putting what we think is&#13;
quality on the line and saying&#13;
well, we'll see."&#13;
At the end of the meeting Dr.&#13;
Brown responded to a question&#13;
concerning the formation of&#13;
A professional&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
that is safe,&#13;
legal &amp;&#13;
inexpensive&#13;
can be set up on an&#13;
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The Problem Pregnancy&#13;
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215-722-5360&#13;
24 hours—7 days&#13;
for professional, confidential&#13;
and caring help.&#13;
CCHE. In the course of his&#13;
answer, he explained that&#13;
CCHE was free from the&#13;
political pressures of lobbying&#13;
and arbitration. He was then&#13;
asked "What will assure us that&#13;
there would be no political&#13;
pressure exerted on that one&#13;
board. . . We aren't sure where&#13;
we are going, so why to&#13;
something we are sure of."&#13;
Brown agreed 100 per cent,&#13;
and reiterated his desire for a&#13;
thorough study of the merger so&#13;
that "We know exactly what we&#13;
are buying."&#13;
4437 - 22nd Ave&#13;
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Need men interested in professional law enforcement. Salary&#13;
starting at $658.00 p er month with advancement to $1,108 per&#13;
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continued education and training. Veterans benefits for on-the-job&#13;
training available for the first two years service. Full pay during&#13;
16-week pre-service training program. Excellent fringe benefits,&#13;
vacation leave, hospitalization, life and wage insurance, sick time,&#13;
accumlation. U/2 pay for excess of 8 hours per day and 40 hours per&#13;
week; double time for holidays and excess of 12 hours per day;&#13;
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&amp;amou4&#13;
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2129 BIRCH RD. KFNOSHA 658--1131 &#13;
Ranger '9' Extend Winning Streak&#13;
May 10.J971 NEWSCOPE Page,7&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of The NeWscope Staff&#13;
Remaining undefeated in three games, the&#13;
Ranger baseball team crushed Dominican 20-3 in&#13;
the first night game of the season. All three&#13;
Ranger victories have come at the expense of&#13;
Dominican.&#13;
Playing in bitter cold weather, the Rangers&#13;
broke the game open in the eighth inning with a&#13;
13-run outburst. Combining walks with some&#13;
timely hitting, which included a pair of bases&#13;
loaded doubles, the Rangers came up with their&#13;
biggest inning of the season.&#13;
• ,^ oac&#13;
^ Cberbruner was extermely pleased&#13;
with the display of fireworks from the Ranger&#13;
bats. Chuck Christiano went 4 for 5 and Nick&#13;
Perrine 3 for 5 to pace the Ranger offense.&#13;
Rick Jackson, one of the batting practice&#13;
pitchers for the Milwaukee Brewers, started for&#13;
Parkside. He was followed on the mound by Jim&#13;
Kobierski and Carl Talsma.&#13;
The team is now practicing on the new ball&#13;
diamond west of the Athletic Office on the Wood&#13;
Road campus. All remaining home games will be&#13;
played on that diamond. The infield is in excellent&#13;
shape, but the outfield is still quite&#13;
bumpy.&#13;
A bicycle race sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Cycling Club and&#13;
the Club Sports Council will be&#13;
held at the Washington Park&#13;
Bowl in Kenosha on May 23.&#13;
The 40 and one-fifth mile race&#13;
will be relay style, with a team&#13;
composed of four riders. All&#13;
four riders must ride in the&#13;
race, but there is no set limit as&#13;
to how much each member&#13;
must ride.&#13;
Any type of bike (except&#13;
motorized) may be used, but a&#13;
narrow bike tire is preferable.&#13;
Trackmen 10th at NIU&#13;
by Jim Casper of The Newscope Staff&#13;
Scoring 13% points, Parkside finished tenth in the Northern&#13;
Illinois Invitational track meet in DeKalb, Illinois. Bob Waters and&#13;
Eugene Prince, both freshmen from Milwaukee, accounted for all&#13;
the Ranger points.&#13;
Eastern Illinois topped the 14-team field with 106 points. Northwestern&#13;
was second with 95, followed by Northern Illinois, and&#13;
Lincoln University of Jefferson City, Missouri.&#13;
Waters finished third in both the 100 and the 220. His time in the&#13;
100 was 9.3 seconds — the same as the first and second place winners.&#13;
The other runners, as Waters put it, "beat him to the tape".&#13;
He ran in lane ten while the other two 9.3 runners were in lanes two&#13;
and three. This positioning may have kept him out of the judges&#13;
eye. Waters ran a 9.5 in the preliminary.&#13;
The time of 9.3, only two-tenths of a second off the world record,&#13;
was his best time of the season. When asked if he felt any different&#13;
during the race, Waters replied, "I felt the same as usual, and it&#13;
seemed like the race was kind of slow." In a short distance running&#13;
event you don't get much time to think about the race; you just&#13;
perform.&#13;
Bob's 100 yard dash was not eligible for a school record because&#13;
it was aided by a nine-mile-an-hour wind. Always seeing room for&#13;
improvement in his running, Waters termed his 21.7 timing in the&#13;
220 as "kind of slow".&#13;
Prince was the only other Ranger to score in the northern&#13;
Illinois meet, clearing 6'4" in the high jump. Although 6'4" is one of&#13;
Eugene's best jumps to date, he was not satisfied with it. "Just&#13;
before the jumps I felt good enough to clear 6'8"," he said. I really&#13;
felt like I could have made it."&#13;
Eugene just missed at 6'6", which is his best so far. His goal in&#13;
the immediate future is to clear the 6'8" mark. "A 6'8" jump would&#13;
make me eligible for the NAIA Championships in Billings, Montana,"&#13;
he added.&#13;
Prince works on jumping virtually every day, trying to build up&#13;
strength and perfect his form. He is not satisfied with his form yet,&#13;
and feels that improvement is necessary in order to add inches to&#13;
his jump.&#13;
An entry fee of $4 will be used&#13;
to purchase awards and help&#13;
defray expenses.&#13;
A two mile race for women&#13;
will also be held. There will be&#13;
two members to each women's&#13;
team.&#13;
Hans Nurenberg, president of&#13;
the cycling club, is the director&#13;
of the race. Completed entry&#13;
blanks should be returned to the&#13;
Office of Athletics.&#13;
Parkside will hold an 18 hol e&#13;
intramural golf tournament at&#13;
the Petrifying Springs course&#13;
from May 10-14.&#13;
Golfers can play any time&#13;
during that period, but they&#13;
must have their score attested&#13;
by a partner. The score sheet&#13;
blanks, which are now&#13;
available, must be turned in by&#13;
May 17.&#13;
Further details can be obtained&#13;
from Coach Vic Godfrey.&#13;
The Milwaukee School of&#13;
E n g i n e e r i n g def eat ed&#13;
Parkside's new Rugby team 9-5.&#13;
Tom Jaehne and Tom Thompson&#13;
scored all the Ranger&#13;
points.&#13;
The next game will be at&#13;
Milwaukee with Milwaukee&#13;
School of Engineering again&#13;
furnishing the opposition. Game&#13;
time is 2:30 p.m.&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
1970 Camaro. Snow Tires and Rims.&#13;
639-8863 after 4:30&#13;
1966 R am. Amer. Con. 7843 - 20th,&#13;
Keno.&#13;
1963 VW (40,000 mi.) $600; 1966&#13;
Dodge Coronet (12,000 mi.) $700.&#13;
12911 Washington Ave. Raci.&#13;
-1965 Chevy Bel. 4 dr. Auto, 6, PS,&#13;
Rad. Reas. 633-3963.&#13;
1960 Ram. CISC. Auto. 6, $150. Also 2,&#13;
7075-15 BFG tires, rims &amp; Bal. $40; 9,&#13;
9.90-15 OBFG tires (500 mi.) Rims &amp;&#13;
Bal. $60. 859-2653 (toll free)&#13;
1964 Pont. Temp. 326, Sp. Coup,&#13;
stick. $300. 658-8043.&#13;
1964 Ram. 770 2 dr HT. 287, St. Shf.&#13;
857-2916.&#13;
1966 Chevelle 301-350 hp, 4 sp. 4 brl.&#13;
Astro's 8c M ore. 654-4440, 3559 - 10th&#13;
Ave. Keno.&#13;
1962 Buick LeSabre. $100. 1-634-6127.&#13;
1968 Tri. Spitfire Mk III, Conv. Low&#13;
miles. 637-7966 or 654-9471 (after 6&#13;
p.m.) Rod Marescalo.&#13;
1963 Ram. Amer. Wag. Stk, new&#13;
clutch, muff., trans. 694-6353.&#13;
1963 Pont. Conv. Auto $25. 652-1443&#13;
after 5 p.m.&#13;
1969 Ply. Rdrnn'r, 4 spd, 383-335 hp.&#13;
rad, htr. 637-5520 after 5:00.&#13;
1063 Olds 88 Hoi. 495 3 brl. high&#13;
comp. Best offer. 654-6746 after 5:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
1969 Opel GT Silver $2,400 or best&#13;
offer. 652-3312 a fter 4.&#13;
1963 MG Midget Conv. New Batt,&#13;
$275.2508 - 54th, Keno. R. Smith or C.&#13;
Lawler.&#13;
1964 Jeep 4-wheel drive Red conv.&#13;
Built up; like new. Racine 633-3367.&#13;
Track Records Set&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
WANTED TO BUY — 2 used 3 or 5&#13;
speed bicycles. Call 633-3131 after 5.&#13;
WANTED — Hot "26" bicycle. Call&#13;
632-7307 or leave info.&#13;
P.O.O.G.O.: Would be delighted to&#13;
permanently complete Id-control&#13;
therapy of 28 Apr. Herman in O.&#13;
RIDES NEEDED-WANTED&#13;
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Must get there before June. Call 843-&#13;
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NEED ride to Seattle or Anchorage.&#13;
May or June. Will split cost. Call&#13;
Barb 654-9631. '&#13;
WANTED TO BUY — Tickets to&#13;
Chicago Concert. Contact Dale&#13;
Martin 878-2992.&#13;
MADISON — Summer sublet, 2 bed.,&#13;
near Vilas Park. Call 608-2$!-8632,&#13;
$65 per person.&#13;
ROOM — Men only, $9.00 per wk. 3&#13;
blocks from Racine Campus.&#13;
Inquire 832 S . Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
FOR RENT — Office Space -&#13;
Modern, Carpeted, Partitioned, Air&#13;
Cond. Ideal for Acctg., Insurance or&#13;
Sales. Good proximity to Parkside&#13;
and Carthage. 4059 7th Ave. Call 652-&#13;
3945 or 654-7410.&#13;
MISC. FOR SALE&#13;
FOR SALE — Poodle Puppies. 6 wks&#13;
old, AKC, 2 male, 1 female. Cream,&#13;
Toy. Excellent blood lines. $100 ea.&#13;
878-2992.&#13;
AMP — Silvertone 4 channel. Also&#13;
mike. Best offer. Call Cathy, 694-&#13;
2769. Must sell.&#13;
ELECTRIC RANGE — Westinghouse&#13;
30", $75; Refrigerator —&#13;
Westinghouse, $75. Box spring&#13;
mattress f&lt;5r double bed, $75. Call&#13;
633-0541.&#13;
TAPE DECK — Sony - TC - 355. L ist&#13;
price $219. Sacrifice for $100. P hone&#13;
654-1731 after 4 or see Frank&#13;
Chiapetta.&#13;
Ranger trackmen set several&#13;
school records in an eight team&#13;
meet at Whitewater last&#13;
Tuesday. Parkside finished&#13;
with 24 points in the meet, which&#13;
was won by Stevens Point with&#13;
58 Va.&#13;
Tim McGilsky set two school&#13;
records; one of them coming in&#13;
the mile, the other in the 880.&#13;
Jim McFadden was a record&#13;
setter in the three mile, and&#13;
Gary Lance did likewise in the&#13;
six mile. Len Bullock accounted&#13;
for a school record in the long&#13;
jump.&#13;
Scoring first place finishes for&#13;
Parkside in the meet, which&#13;
was held in wet and windy&#13;
conditions, were Bob Waters in&#13;
the 220 and Eugene Prince in&#13;
the high jump.&#13;
Tennis Team Loses, Wins&#13;
After dropping a 7-2 decision&#13;
to Marquette University,&#13;
Parkside came back the next&#13;
day to defeat Dominican 8-1.&#13;
Against Dominican, the&#13;
Rangers swept all the doubles&#13;
matches in two sets. Parkside's&#13;
lone defeat came in singles&#13;
competition.&#13;
In the Marquette match, Mike&#13;
Safago and Dave Herchen were&#13;
the only Ranger winners.&#13;
Safago, turning in a good effort,&#13;
defeated Marquette's number&#13;
one singles player in three sets,&#13;
6-0, 6-8, 7-5. He rcheon won his&#13;
match in two sets.&#13;
Ranger Golfers Busy&#13;
After defeating Milton&#13;
College and Lake Forest in a&#13;
golf triangular at Petrifying&#13;
Springs, the Rangers finished&#13;
sixth in the 19-school Lakeland&#13;
College Invitational held at&#13;
Elkhart Lake. Following the&#13;
meet, the Rangers last Tuesday&#13;
defeated Carthage, but lost to&#13;
UWM in a triangular at&#13;
Petrifying Springs.&#13;
In the Milton and Lake Forest&#13;
triangular, Rick Willems&#13;
grabbed the medal for&#13;
Parkside, firing a 72.&#13;
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Sat., 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. </text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 15, May 10, 1971</text>
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