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              <text>Knopps and Rubin Address "a Gathering of the People"</text>
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              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
VOLUME 3 NUMBER 14 MAY 3,1971&#13;
—FREEStalbaum&#13;
and Molinaro&#13;
Interviewed -page 3&#13;
Knopps &amp; Rubin&#13;
Address "a gathering of the people"&#13;
By Marc Eisen of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Parkside had its "gathering of people" to&#13;
support the People's Peace Treaty last Wednesday,&#13;
and an overflow crowd responded, filling&#13;
the Activities Building to hear.Jerry Rubin and&#13;
Mark Knopps of Kaliedescope speak.&#13;
The Gathering was sponsored and financed in&#13;
part by Student Government. Much of the crowd,&#13;
an estimated 700 strong, was composed of area&#13;
high school students.&#13;
Other speakers were Father Luke MacArthur&#13;
of Dominican College, Helen Schiller of the Racine&#13;
Children's Breakfast program, and an unidentified&#13;
youth who had just finished a two year&#13;
stretch at Green Bay for a dope conviction.&#13;
Rubin, noted yippie and a defendant in the&#13;
Chicago 8 conspiracy trial, gave an hour long freeform&#13;
speech that touched upon almost every&#13;
radical cause and interest around.&#13;
Among the topics he discussed were: women's&#13;
liberation, children's liberation, gay liberation,&#13;
male chauvinism, a Freudian analyses of&#13;
education, ecocide, genocide, American imperialism,&#13;
economic imperialism, Christianity,&#13;
water beds, organic food, Joe Cocker, Calley and&#13;
Manson, Cuba, dope (marijuana), drugs (heroin),&#13;
pacifism, March on Washington, Tim Leary, dope&#13;
smoking as a religious act, closet acid heads, the&#13;
army, J. Edgar Hoover, and the Revolution.&#13;
Rubin exhorted those present to go to&#13;
Washington. "If you're worried about violence,&#13;
Washington is going to be a non-violent action."&#13;
"They can't jail all of us. If we all stick&#13;
together, we can't lose. That's our power," he&#13;
said.&#13;
"What's going to happen in Washington is that&#13;
masses and masses of people are going to it to&#13;
raise the cost of war so high that it can't be carried&#13;
on anymore," he explained.&#13;
"It's going to spread," he told the audience.&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
by John Koloen and Mike Kurth&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
The Southeastern Wisconsin Committee&#13;
to Preserve Parkside met last Friday night in&#13;
Greenquist Hall. The meeting was primarily&#13;
devoted to intra-organizational problems but&#13;
included an address by Assemblyman George&#13;
Molinaro D-Ken.&#13;
Prior to Mr. Molinaro's address the&#13;
chairman of the meeting, Mrs. Ralph&#13;
Jaeschke, outlined the business to be&#13;
discussed which included the election of a&#13;
board of directors to prepare by-laws. Several&#13;
Parkside students were nominated including&#13;
Dennis Cashion, Tim Eaker and Ken Antaramian.&#13;
&#13;
Made up of local citizens and alumni of&#13;
the university the group is opposed to the&#13;
proposed UW-State university merger and&#13;
invited Mr. Molinaro to the meeting to discuss&#13;
the status of the merger bill in the state&#13;
legislature.&#13;
Molinaro began by explaining his strategy&#13;
in opposition to the merger noting that "The&#13;
University itself is a little naive or a little&#13;
stupid or whatever you want to call it. They're&#13;
playing a game that they know very little&#13;
about and they're on thin ice and they're about&#13;
to go under." He was referring to the apparent&#13;
lack of interest on the part of President&#13;
Weaver since Weaver had not approached&#13;
him personally concerning the budget cuts.&#13;
He added that the Green Bay campus and&#13;
community has shown almost ho initiative in&#13;
fighting the merger expressing the attitude&#13;
that if Green Bay doesn't show some enthusiasm&#13;
he is going to concentrate on aiding&#13;
the Parkside campus only.&#13;
"Parkside is the most important thing to&#13;
me. Any other field of education you've got in&#13;
this state, including Mr. "Buck" Weaver and&#13;
all his other aides that I'm about ready to let&#13;
Assemblyman Molinaro&#13;
them play their game of chance, let them wind&#13;
up with an open end book and let them&#13;
struggle for these two years and the following&#13;
two years and we'll see what kind of political&#13;
plum game we're going to end up with."&#13;
He re-emphasized his disappointment in&#13;
the University's "Ivory tower" attitude&#13;
toward the merger crisis. Turning to factors&#13;
causing the merger he stated, "We have to go&#13;
-C&#13;
a ID&#13;
? O&#13;
£&#13;
Molinaro Speaks to&#13;
S.W.C.P.P.&#13;
back to the Kellett reorganization of state&#13;
government. We had 83 departments before&#13;
the Kellett reorganization committee came&#13;
about, they sold us a package deal that we're&#13;
going to save $3Vfe m illion the first biennium&#13;
by reducing the 83 down to 29 departments, I&#13;
lost the fight by three votes. Today we have&#13;
153 divisions within the 29 departments, we&#13;
By Marc Eisen of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Beginning his speech as Jerry Rubin would&#13;
later begin his, Mark Knopps, the editor of&#13;
Kaleidescope, questioned the audience why they&#13;
weren't smoking dope, and when someone threw&#13;
him up a joint, he lit it, took a couple of tokes, and&#13;
then passed u He began speaking then on what&#13;
it is to be young m America and to be living in the&#13;
midst of a crumbling empire.&#13;
Knopps, who chose six months in jail rather&#13;
|than to testify before a grand jury on how he obtained&#13;
a letter from the bombers of the Army&#13;
Math Research Building in Madison, described&#13;
how in traveling across the state he has seen the&#13;
same thing —- kids not knowing what's happening&#13;
to them.&#13;
He spoke in a slow, deliberate manner that&#13;
contrasted to the frantic disjointedness of Rubin.&#13;
Aptly, in the background the easy sound of D avid&#13;
Crosby's album, If I Co uld Only Remember My&#13;
Name, played.&#13;
Selected extracts from Knopps' speech are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
"Most importantly, if we want to understand&#13;
ourselves as a group (and we are a group), we&#13;
have to see one key word — it may sound strange&#13;
at first, but everything fits together once you get it&#13;
in your head — that word is empire, because that&#13;
is what we are living in. We're right in the heart of&#13;
it.&#13;
"That's why we are what we are. That's why&#13;
we're here. Maybe we have never heard that word&#13;
before, empire. It's something you read about&#13;
when you study Rome. To me that is the word that&#13;
describes exactly what is happening to my life,&#13;
and the lives of the people around me."&#13;
He went on to describe the United States to the&#13;
Roman Empire in its last days.&#13;
"You go up to Madison and they're building&#13;
about five or six huge new buildings on the&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
even increased the payroll by almost 7,000&#13;
employees, and it is costing us $13 million&#13;
more each biennium, that's what they call&#13;
austerity, economy and efficiency in government."&#13;
&#13;
Molinaro»cautioned the audience of the&#13;
foreseeable effects of the merger (ie.&#13;
limitations on out of state enrollment, etc.)&#13;
adding that the ruling body over the merged&#13;
system would "evaluate the whole system&#13;
within the next two years ... and then&#13;
determine what's going to be on any campus,&#13;
which campus is going to be eliminated . . .&#13;
which campus is going to be allowed to grow&#13;
and which ones will freeze."&#13;
He warned that the president of this ruling&#13;
body would be a "dictator" over state&#13;
education as a result of the extensive power&#13;
his position will have.&#13;
Returning to an earlier point in the address&#13;
he notes that "All the businessmen and&#13;
professional people and the unions and the&#13;
PTA's sit on their hands . . . and they will&#13;
have what they have got today and a little&#13;
less."&#13;
Concluding with a plea for organized&#13;
efforts by the citizens, and students in opposition&#13;
to the merger he assured them that&#13;
"I'll do my best and I trust that you'll do&#13;
yours."&#13;
A question period followed and soon after&#13;
the meeting was turned to its regular&#13;
business. The regular business primarily&#13;
involved haggling over parlimentary&#13;
procedures while discussing a "position"&#13;
paper the steering committee had proposed. A&#13;
motion was finally made and carried to refer&#13;
the paper to the board of directors.&#13;
The turnout for the meeting was very&#13;
light, about forty people and only four&#13;
students attended, two were reporters. &#13;
Page 2 NEWSCOPE&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
OUR&#13;
ADVERTIZERS&#13;
May 3,1971&#13;
HUXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY&#13;
STORE&#13;
302 Green Bay Rci&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
634-1336&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
far 4* xt#/&amp;*ve/&#13;
EMIL G ERLACH&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Candy&#13;
eooa 40th AVE&#13;
KENOSHA WIS&#13;
OL7-B174&#13;
Open Soturdays&#13;
9 A.M.- to Noon&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FREE CHECKI NG&#13;
ACCOUNTS TO STUDENT&#13;
AND R ETIREES&#13;
3928 Sixtieth Street&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Symposium To be Held This Saturday&#13;
A one-day symposium titled&#13;
"Corrections and the Offender:&#13;
Treatment or Punishment" will&#13;
be held Saturday (May 8) at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
The symposium, which will&#13;
run from 9:30 a.m. to 3:15 p.m.,&#13;
is sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
&#13;
Keynote speaker will be&#13;
Sanger Powers, director of the&#13;
Wisconsin Division of&#13;
Corrections and chairman of&#13;
the Wisconsin Parole Board.&#13;
Prior to taking his current posts&#13;
Powers was superintendent of&#13;
the Wisconsin State Reformatory.&#13;
&#13;
He will talk on •Current&#13;
Problems in Corrections".&#13;
Discussants of the keynote&#13;
address will be Joseph Rowan,&#13;
director of the John Howard&#13;
Association, an agency&#13;
dedicated to the rehabilitation&#13;
of former prisoners, and Prof.&#13;
William H. Hewitt, coordinator&#13;
of the Criminal Justice&#13;
Program at UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
Rowan is a former deputy&#13;
commissioner of corrections for&#13;
Minnesota and has done&#13;
probation and parole work in&#13;
California and Wisconsin. He&#13;
served for seven years as a^&#13;
member of the National Council&#13;
on Crime and Delinquency.&#13;
Hewitt previously taught in&#13;
the Center for Law Enforcement&#13;
and Corrections at&#13;
Pennsylvania State University&#13;
and the Police Administration&#13;
department at State University&#13;
of New York-Farmingdale. A&#13;
consultant to the President's&#13;
Crime Commission, he is the&#13;
author of two books on police&#13;
administration.&#13;
Their talks will precede&#13;
showing of three award-winning&#13;
films, "The Odds Against" ,&#13;
"The Price of a Life" and "The&#13;
Revolving Door", which deal&#13;
respectively with maximum&#13;
security prisons, probation and&#13;
jails. A panel discussion will be&#13;
held after each film.&#13;
Charles Gray, Kenosha&#13;
probation officer, will chair the&#13;
panel on probation which will&#13;
include Delmar Huebner,&#13;
director of the Wisconsin&#13;
bureau of probation and parole,&#13;
Rowan and Hewitt.&#13;
Andrew McLean of the&#13;
Parkside faculty will chair the&#13;
panel on jails including Vern&#13;
Verhulst, Wisconsin director of&#13;
detention; Robert Ellsworth,&#13;
associate warden for treatment&#13;
at the Wisconsin Correctional&#13;
Institution-Fox Lake; Huebner,&#13;
Rowan and Hewitt.&#13;
James McKeown of the&#13;
Parkside faculty will chair the&#13;
panel on prisons including&#13;
Ellsworth, Verhulst and Rowan.&#13;
Persons wishing to participate&#13;
in the symposium&#13;
should pre-register by May 6&#13;
with Prof. McLean at the UWP&#13;
Kenosha Campus.&#13;
LETTER TO THE EDITOR&#13;
To The Editor:&#13;
It seems the Parkside Police&#13;
threw a party last weekend&#13;
entitled "Meet the Parkside&#13;
Police", and as an extra added&#13;
attraction there was plenty of&#13;
pre-advertised FREE BEER!&#13;
Naturally with the free beer the&#13;
party' was a ripped roaring&#13;
success, as far as attendance&#13;
goes anyway.&#13;
To put it differently, the same&#13;
men who feel a need to carry&#13;
mace and revolvers while&#13;
passing out their $5.00 parking&#13;
tickets threw a bash. Anyone&#13;
and everyone who wanted to&#13;
could get drunker than a&#13;
roaring skunk, free.&#13;
To 'get it on' or whatever, the&#13;
officers were playing 'top forty&#13;
music' over the intercom on a&#13;
squad car they had parked in&#13;
front. The music was well&#13;
complemented by the red&#13;
flashing lights and blaring&#13;
siren. But that's not the point.&#13;
The point is . . . while&#13;
'Security' was getting into it&#13;
with their gesture of good will,&#13;
others were getting into&#13;
something else. Lost of suds and&#13;
M^AMPUS EVENTS^&#13;
Monday, May 3: Meeting.&#13;
Equestrian Club. 6:00 p.m.&#13;
Room Dill. Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Baseball. Rangers vs. '&#13;
Dominican. 1:00 p.m. at&#13;
Dominican.&#13;
Tuesday, May 4: Golf. UW-P&#13;
vs. UW-M and Carthage at&#13;
Petrifying Springs.&#13;
Music students at the&#13;
University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will present a free&#13;
public Honors Concert at 8 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday. May 4, in the Badger&#13;
Room at the UWP Racine&#13;
Campus.&#13;
Wednesday, May 5: Film.&#13;
"Loved One". Presented by&#13;
Parkside Film Society. Room&#13;
103. Greenquist Hall. Admission:&#13;
$.50.&#13;
Friday. May 6: Golf. UW-P&#13;
vs. Whitewater. Petrifying&#13;
Springs. Feature Film. "Four&#13;
for Texas". Student Activities&#13;
Building. 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Saturday, May 8: Symposium.&#13;
"Corrections and the&#13;
Offender: Treatment or&#13;
Punishment". Sponsored by&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
9:30 a.m. - 3:15 p.m.&#13;
Greenquist Hall. Baseball.&#13;
Rangers vs. U of Illinois&#13;
Chicago. Parkside Athletic&#13;
Field. 12:00 noon. Tennis. UW-P&#13;
vs. St. Norbert. 1:00 p.m. at&#13;
home. Dance. 9:00 - 1:00 a.m.&#13;
Student Activities Building.&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin I.D.&#13;
required.&#13;
Special Events&#13;
Summer Travel: Three&#13;
European Flights this summer.&#13;
Flight C departs August 15 from&#13;
Chicago to London and returns&#13;
September 12 from London to&#13;
Chicago. The cost is $197.00.&#13;
Flight D departs July 15 for&#13;
London and returns August 11&#13;
from Amsterdam to Chicago.&#13;
The cost is $197.00. Flight I&#13;
departs June 15 from Chicago to&#13;
London and returns September&#13;
18 from London to Chicago. The&#13;
cost is $218.00. Information&#13;
available at the Student Activities&#13;
Office in Tallent Hall.&#13;
r~&#13;
JOB HUNTING&#13;
We're So Proud of Mony's&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Program For College Seniors that we&#13;
will give you a copy of The Complete Job&#13;
Hunting Guide for the opportunity to&#13;
show you what&#13;
The Life Insurance Program for College&#13;
Students can do for you&#13;
for information send:&#13;
Name&#13;
Address&#13;
,Ci ty&#13;
Phone.&#13;
To: John J. Schmitz&#13;
612 15 th Place&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
652 4020&#13;
roaring and flexing their&#13;
muscles.&#13;
To get away from abstract&#13;
thoughts and state it bluntly&#13;
man, some people really got the&#13;
shit kicked out of themselves&#13;
there. Maybe because others&#13;
can't keep their beer down&#13;
without getting rowdy.&#13;
It's not the first campus 'get&#13;
together' with some "really&#13;
good fights" nor the last. But&#13;
with the proper encouragement&#13;
the Angel types could have a&#13;
hand in making Parkside by&#13;
creating the annual&#13;
McGovern&#13;
Committee&#13;
Formed&#13;
A Kenosha County McGovern&#13;
for President Committee has&#13;
been formed to promote the&#13;
candidacy of the South Dakota&#13;
Senator.&#13;
Co-chairmen of the committee&#13;
are Mrs. Linda Legler&#13;
and James M. Hansen. Hansen&#13;
was 1st District McCarthy&#13;
delegate to the 1968&#13;
Democratic National convention.&#13;
Other officers are&#13;
Robert Ormeth, secretary, and&#13;
James Taube, treasurer.&#13;
Hansen said the group was&#13;
aiming for a McGovern win in&#13;
the Wisconsin presidential&#13;
primary next year. He invited&#13;
persons to join the campaign by&#13;
contacting officers.&#13;
"We believe," a spokesman&#13;
said, "that Sen. George&#13;
McGovern is an independent&#13;
voice speaking on behalf of&#13;
millions of Americans, young&#13;
and old, who are deeply&#13;
disturbed and dissatisfied with&#13;
the performance of our&#13;
government at home and&#13;
abroad.&#13;
"We believe Sen. McGovern&#13;
is speaking to, and on behalf of,&#13;
millions of Americans who feel&#13;
alienated from their government."&#13;
&#13;
All interested students,&#13;
faculty, administration, call&#13;
654-4982 o r 694-2809.&#13;
GOnSORT&#13;
Policeman's Brawl.&#13;
We're supposed to be&#13;
proponents in the new third&#13;
world, not opponents doing the&#13;
same old shit. The energies&#13;
expended in fighting amongst&#13;
ourselves are not only wasted&#13;
but are a setback. If you gotta&#13;
get pissed off at least be constructive&#13;
— scream dirty words&#13;
or something about really bad&#13;
things.&#13;
A certain dude named Sly was&#13;
quoted in Rolling Stone: "We&#13;
just aren't into street-fighting&#13;
here."&#13;
Kevin McKay&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Warren 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. Mark Timpany&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
NareesSocha, Don Marjala, John&#13;
Gray, Barbara Scott.&#13;
BUSINESS PHONES&#13;
658-4861, Ext. 36&#13;
652-4177&#13;
Newscope is an independent&#13;
student newspaper composed by&#13;
students of The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside published&#13;
weekly except during vacation&#13;
periods. Student obtained advertising&#13;
funds are the sole&#13;
source of revenue for the&#13;
operation of Newscope. 6,000&#13;
copies are printed and&#13;
distributed throughout the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine communities&#13;
as well as the University.&#13;
Free copies are available&#13;
upon request.&#13;
2nd Class Postage paid at&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin&#13;
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Mav 3.1971&#13;
By Ken Konkol&#13;
of t he Newscope Staff&#13;
^ feature series&#13;
Finance Committee Member Stalbaum&#13;
NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
EDITORS NOTE: This is the first of a&#13;
four-part series on the merger vs.&#13;
UW-Parkside. The series will consist&#13;
of interviews with our state&#13;
legislators from Racine and Kenosha&#13;
counties.&#13;
Merrill Stalbaum is the assemblyman&#13;
from western Racine county.&#13;
Newscope asked Mr. Stalbaum if it was&#13;
true that Governor Lucey's merger would&#13;
save the state money.&#13;
"Governor Lucey has said we would&#13;
save the state $4 million by merging the&#13;
universities. I feel there are more funds&#13;
jeopardized than that because the amount&#13;
of federal funds for research purposes that&#13;
Wisconsin will receive during the next&#13;
bienpium amounts to $60 million a year,&#13;
which means a total of $120 million is&#13;
jeopardized."&#13;
Newscope then asked about the future of&#13;
the State universities.&#13;
Mr. Stalbaum answered: "It's impossible&#13;
for the state to afford to bring the&#13;
state university system up to the&#13;
University of Wisconsin system."&#13;
Newscope then inquired about&#13;
Parkside's future.&#13;
"There will be no priorities," he said.&#13;
"I'm not worried about Parkside or Green&#13;
Bay because we do have points in our&#13;
favor. After reapportionment we'll have&#13;
five more new assemblymen in&#13;
southeastern Wisconsin, the area sympathetic&#13;
to our cause."&#13;
Newscope questioned Stalbaum about&#13;
Parkside's ambitious building program.&#13;
"It will be costly," Mr. Stalbaum said.&#13;
"There should be quite a large amount of&#13;
funds for both Green Bay and Parkside in&#13;
the next two years. At Parkside the&#13;
potential for students is great. In order to&#13;
keep up with enrollment they've got to&#13;
build."&#13;
Will. Parkside funds be restored?&#13;
"I should think that Parkside would&#13;
have considerable of their funds restored&#13;
— so would Green Bay. The enrollment&#13;
determines the size of the faculty and the&#13;
amount of buildings you're going to need."&#13;
"Governor Lucey argues that the cost&#13;
per student going to Parkside is too high.&#13;
But you have the start-up costs and&#13;
potential for increased enrollment. I feel&#13;
when the dust is settled considerable of the&#13;
funds will be restored."&#13;
"I've been on Finance Committee for&#13;
four years and I've never really had to do&#13;
very much for Parkside. That is&#13;
changing."&#13;
Stalbaum said some state universities&#13;
may be in for a sad awakening. He considered&#13;
a partial merger of the two&#13;
systems, favoring bringing Stevens Point&#13;
and Platteville into the UW system.&#13;
He said: "There are three adjacent state&#13;
universities in three adjacent counties;&#13;
River Falls, Menominee and Eau Claire. It&#13;
is rather doubtful that all three of those&#13;
institutions will be kept in operation,&#13;
Menominee and Eau Claire might be&#13;
gone."&#13;
The topic then switched to taxes. Mr.&#13;
Stalbaum said there will be an increase in&#13;
both corporate and personal taxes as well&#13;
as property taxes. It may drive some of&#13;
our corporations out of the state by raising&#13;
the corporate tax from 7 to 8.4 per cent&#13;
"Taxes will go up to 14 per cent over the&#13;
present ten per cent on incomes over&#13;
$14,000. All the brackets will be increased&#13;
20 per cent, but the exemptions will only be&#13;
raised from $10 to $20." By this method&#13;
lower brackets will pay less and higher&#13;
brackets more.&#13;
Newscope then asked if Governor&#13;
Lucey's budget was going to make it&#13;
through the legislature or if there were&#13;
going to be any drastic changes.&#13;
Stalbaum answered that it probably&#13;
would be amended, spelling out every&#13;
phase of the UW system right in the&#13;
merger. The legislature could even&#13;
completely tie the hands of the Board of&#13;
Regents.&#13;
Newscope concluded the interview by&#13;
asking if the merger would make it&#13;
through the assembly.&#13;
"In the Democratically controlled&#13;
house, Governor Lucey is assured of 45&#13;
votes of the 66 Democrats, and he'll also&#13;
pick up some Republican votes."&#13;
will have a two-week's debate&#13;
Finance Committee Chairman Molinaro h&#13;
.^£i&#13;
what they amend, so it will go to&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Do you think the&#13;
merger will help or hinder the&#13;
University?&#13;
"At the start of the merger it&#13;
was such a loose affair which left&#13;
complete control to just one&#13;
person, the president of all the&#13;
universities. That kind of a&#13;
merger is the worst type of&#13;
merger you can get with all the&#13;
open loose ends for someone else&#13;
to tie for political purposes."&#13;
"The merger can be good and it&#13;
can be bad. The savings we would&#13;
make on the proposed merger as&#13;
it now stands since they lowered&#13;
their aims of an absolute dictatorial&#13;
type of merger. They&#13;
can't save more than $3 million in&#13;
the biennium and could cost us&#13;
$10 to $15 million more in the next&#13;
ten years."&#13;
"As it now stands, the merger&#13;
provides where the degrees&#13;
would be set, what the academic&#13;
course would be, and other items.&#13;
Mr. Molinaro can't see anyone&#13;
handling this other than Madison&#13;
— to the detriment of the other&#13;
schools."&#13;
Regents Must Change&#13;
"Eventually it will have to&#13;
wind up with 16 paid regents. If&#13;
you have to have 16 people who&#13;
are paid a salary to serve on that&#13;
it's not only the amount of dollars&#13;
that goes into it but it will turn&#13;
over the field of higher education&#13;
to a group of professionals and&#13;
that is bad since no one else will&#13;
have anything to say except the&#13;
group of professionals and&#13;
professionals are just like anyone&#13;
else, once they get control no one&#13;
knows anything but the pros. And&#13;
that is highly detrimental to the&#13;
field of education."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Would the&#13;
merger affect Parkside in particular?&#13;
&#13;
"If the merger says that they&#13;
will not phase anyone out by&#13;
statutory provisions and if the&#13;
merger says that Parkside and&#13;
Green Bay will be permitted to&#13;
have Master's Degrees, then that&#13;
won't be so bad."&#13;
"If they don't give us enough&#13;
money to start up that will again&#13;
stymie the whole program in both&#13;
Green Bay and Parkside. A&#13;
merger that will be worth&#13;
anything is a merger that&#13;
guarantees with statutory&#13;
provisions that state legislators&#13;
will have full control of&#13;
designating what is going to be&#13;
taught in any of these institutions,&#13;
the amount of money&#13;
that's going to be released for all&#13;
those institutions, that under no&#13;
circumstances can anyone phase&#13;
one out because they feel that&#13;
they can merge with someone&#13;
else."&#13;
..NEWSCOPE: Is the budget&#13;
being amended?&#13;
"The building commission has&#13;
now given Parkside the Student's&#13;
Union, the buildings for the&#13;
classrooms and a few other&#13;
items."&#13;
"They have come out with a&#13;
position paper of a mission for&#13;
each one of the institutions."&#13;
"They've hurt Parkside and&#13;
Green Bay by cutting off a certain&#13;
amount for the start up&#13;
money. I think half of that ought&#13;
to be restored, then that would&#13;
put them back in the proper&#13;
place "&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Is the merger&#13;
going to save money?&#13;
"In four years it will quadruple&#13;
the amount of money (spent) you&#13;
have saved."&#13;
"Five years ago 83 departments&#13;
were merged into 29&#13;
departments. This was supposed&#13;
to save $3V2 million for the&#13;
biennium. Now that same&#13;
program is costing us $13 million&#13;
for the biennium. And we now&#13;
have 153 divisions in the 29&#13;
departments with executive&#13;
secretaries in charge with no one&#13;
in charge."&#13;
Mr. Kellett is now in charge of&#13;
the university merger proposal.&#13;
Even so, the governor is only&#13;
paying attention to half of his&#13;
program.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: What about the&#13;
building program?&#13;
"We are getting just about 100&#13;
per cent of what we orginially&#13;
asked for. We did scratch out&#13;
BEER&#13;
&amp; WATER&#13;
21 F LAVORS&#13;
POP&#13;
STOP&#13;
24—7 oz. bot. 12—24 oz. bot.&#13;
$1.11 $1.39&#13;
plus tax &amp; d eposit&#13;
2428 Washington RdKenosha&#13;
housing for students because I&#13;
am not in favor of putting&#13;
student's housing on the campus.&#13;
I want private enterprise to&#13;
handle that at all times."&#13;
"County trunk E is going to be&#13;
four lane all the way to Sheridan&#13;
Road. We are planning a new four&#13;
lane freeway coming by. Somers&#13;
road, county trunk E, is going to&#13;
be four lanes going to the Isystem.&#13;
We're building a belt line&#13;
that is coming around it. It goes&#13;
in from Racine, takes into Highway&#13;
20, comes around just about&#13;
a mile west of the Green Bay&#13;
Road. By about 1980 we'll have it&#13;
all done."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Will there be tax&#13;
increases?&#13;
"Corporations and industry&#13;
haven't had an income tax raise&#13;
in 20 years. So maybe it is time&#13;
that they adjust their brackets&#13;
slightly. I don't think they're&#13;
getting too big a hit. I think&#13;
between 5 and $12 thousand income&#13;
is where the real tax bite&#13;
is."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Will merger&#13;
pass?&#13;
"That's anybody's guess.&#13;
Everyone has a pet. I imagine&#13;
you'll agree to my type of merger&#13;
provided your interest is well&#13;
protected by statutory law."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Has there been&#13;
any discussion on the floor:&#13;
"Nothing has been talked over&#13;
on any floor yet, either the&#13;
assembly or the senate, until that&#13;
budget bill gets out."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Will there be a&#13;
great deal of argument once it&#13;
does come out?&#13;
"I'm hopeful we'll get it out of&#13;
there after we get it on the floor.&#13;
It's going to take three weeks to&#13;
get it out of finance if not more.&#13;
Once it gets on the floor it's going&#13;
to be a week's debate if n ot more.&#13;
When it gets over to the senate it&#13;
the committee on negotiations."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: When will the&#13;
budget come out?&#13;
"When we get through with it. I&#13;
don't know. If the budget isn't&#13;
adopted by July 1 we operate on&#13;
the last budget. It could get a&#13;
little tight."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Will the merger&#13;
be in the final budget?&#13;
"Some say no, some say yes.&#13;
We don't even know how many&#13;
votes we've got in Finance&#13;
Committee. We could send the&#13;
budget up for indefinate postponement&#13;
with 11 votes of 14 now,&#13;
then send it to senate and kill it&#13;
there too."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Are other&#13;
campuses for the merger tie.&#13;
Steven's Point and Platteville?&#13;
"Not at Steven's Point. They're&#13;
going to get eliminated. They&#13;
have a lot more to worry about&#13;
than they think. Eventually a lot&#13;
of campuses will be phased out."&#13;
NEWSCOPE: If merger goes&#13;
through, will salaries of State&#13;
Universities be brought up to the&#13;
level of the UW system?&#13;
"No, because they can't teach&#13;
the same level of education. The&#13;
merger doesn't upgrade the&#13;
standards, it's not going to give&#13;
you the type of education any&#13;
different than what you have&#13;
now."&#13;
"It's just a fancy deal that you&#13;
think you've got to do something&#13;
because you got into the governor's&#13;
chair and because Kellett&#13;
was crazy enough to think he had&#13;
another second hand dream like&#13;
the first one which I lost with&#13;
three votes."&#13;
"You don't upgrade by consolidation&#13;
and merger, you&#13;
create bigger chaos, bigger&#13;
dynasties."&#13;
Next week: Senators Dorman&#13;
and Devitt.&#13;
Parkside's Fea ture F ilm Series&#13;
presents&#13;
HOW THE WEST WHS LOST.&#13;
FRANK • EAN&#13;
s IN n ma • Ma R tin&#13;
ANITA URSULA&#13;
E 11 IE RG AND Rl ESS&#13;
i&#13;
mm&#13;
i x :&#13;
FOR TEXAS&#13;
mm&#13;
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Talent Hal! &#13;
Page 4 NEWSCOPE May 3,1971&#13;
By Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
For the sake of all you people&#13;
who believe that the adage, "If&#13;
you ean't say something nice,&#13;
don't say anything at all",&#13;
applies to music critics, I ask&#13;
you to turn to the sports section.&#13;
The David Baker group simply&#13;
did not live up to its advance&#13;
publicity. But I'll do this much;&#13;
I'll begin with a few remarks in&#13;
their defense.&#13;
First of all, the Greenquist&#13;
Concourse is intended to be a&#13;
concert hall about as much as&#13;
La Scala is intended for Roller&#13;
Derby. That afternoon I often&#13;
felt as if I was listening to a&#13;
concert in a sewer tunnel with a&#13;
pail over my head. Secondly,&#13;
the group had been playing, I&#13;
was told, till 3 a.m. the day&#13;
before and therefore was not at&#13;
its peak of proficiency. But for&#13;
lack of further argumentative&#13;
material, the defense must now&#13;
rest, and give way to the&#13;
prosecution.&#13;
The music itself was little&#13;
more than pure West Coast&#13;
funk, ala Quincy Jones, and at&#13;
times Don Sebesky. It's very&#13;
suitable for background music;&#13;
you can hear it on the Bill Cosby&#13;
show, but when put out front in&#13;
the limelight, it just doesn't&#13;
seem to fit. Besides, I went to&#13;
hear something new, somethihg&#13;
a little innovative. I was&#13;
listening to this same stuff ten&#13;
years ago and it didn't thrill me&#13;
then.&#13;
As far as the individual&#13;
members go, I'd have to admit&#13;
that I liked what Baker was&#13;
doing on trombone. Unlike the&#13;
others, you could tell that on his&#13;
solos he had a command of both&#13;
style and the chord procession&#13;
behind him. If the tunes weren't&#13;
innovative, at least he was. But&#13;
other than Dave, I was hard&#13;
pressed to find anything impressive.&#13;
The drummer did&#13;
nothing but whack out a«&#13;
m o not o n ous C H U N K - A&#13;
CHUNK-A CHUNK-A Boogalooooff,&#13;
ad nauseum, until my&#13;
head throbbed. The alto man,&#13;
who could best be described as a&#13;
musical sisyphus, seemed to&#13;
pick up an idea, work on it, build&#13;
it up to a point where he was&#13;
just about to really do&#13;
something, and then drop it.&#13;
The trumpet player constantly&#13;
used every trick in the book to&#13;
make the audience think he was&#13;
playing jazzy.&#13;
To think that I thought I was&#13;
getting a bargain by only&#13;
paying 50 cen ts to get in!&#13;
•MaAat ^acle&#13;
By James Madura&#13;
Opposites are often the most&#13;
interesting and entertaining&#13;
aspects of life. Dominican&#13;
College's Lakefront Players with&#13;
their production of Marat-Sade&#13;
provided an evening of delightful&#13;
opposites.&#13;
The play itself is the greatest&#13;
opposite of all when compared to&#13;
the "terribly worthwhile" but&#13;
boring plays usually done by&#13;
college companies. Peter Weiss'&#13;
Marat-Sade is a modern play&#13;
filled with life, and manifesting&#13;
stimulating theatre as rarely&#13;
seen in this area.&#13;
Dominican's production has&#13;
strong and weak points. The&#13;
uneffective set, tired lighting,&#13;
and other minor defects are&#13;
overshadowed by the strikingly&#13;
strong points. Chief of these were&#13;
the inmates. Eight adept actors&#13;
playing hard roles that set both&#13;
mood and pace for the entire&#13;
production. Several of these&#13;
young actors developed and&#13;
maintained their insanity to near&#13;
perfection, without overshadowing&#13;
the main action of the&#13;
play.&#13;
Alex Korff as Marat had a&#13;
voice that was musical and&#13;
enhanced his speeches. Unfortunately,&#13;
he lacked, developed&#13;
or sustained characterization&#13;
which should have corresponded&#13;
with his vocal quality.&#13;
Dennis Lynch as De Sade and&#13;
Bruce Greening as the Herald&#13;
gave performances worthy of&#13;
seasoned actors. They were good&#13;
without being extraordinary and&#13;
complemented the rest of the&#13;
cast.&#13;
The acting highlight of the play&#13;
was given by three show-stealers,&#13;
the singers. Deb Clifton, as&#13;
Rossingol, Dan Pekarske as&#13;
Cucurucu, and Nick Bart portraying&#13;
Polpoch combined three&#13;
bodies and three voices to make&#13;
one or struck out seperately to&#13;
complement each other. These&#13;
people are ACTORS.&#13;
Unfortunately the director&#13;
chose to let his cast j)lay for the&#13;
audience and not to and with&#13;
them. This decision weakened the&#13;
emotional and dramatic effect of&#13;
the production upon the audience.&#13;
Rarely did the audience react&#13;
with the cast and then only out of&#13;
curiosity.&#13;
As a whole "The Persecution&#13;
and Assassination of Jean-Paul&#13;
Marat as performed by the inmates&#13;
of the Asylum of&#13;
Charenton under the direction of&#13;
the Marquis de Sade" is a play&#13;
well worth seeing. It can shock,&#13;
entertain and make you think.&#13;
Dominican should be complemented&#13;
for bringing this kind&#13;
of theatre to our local stage and&#13;
praised for its fine production.&#13;
While the cost of tickets $1.75&#13;
could be a little lower for&#13;
students, its worth the money to&#13;
see this play. Tickets are&#13;
available at the box office. The&#13;
curtain goes up at 8:00 p.m. on&#13;
May 1, 2, 6, 7, 8, and 9. Everyone&#13;
should see this production.&#13;
VISITING PROF. HOLDS EXHIBITION&#13;
. .Note: On April 181 attended&#13;
an exhibition held by Ian&#13;
Fraser at NEW GALLERY&#13;
ONE in Racine. I was very&#13;
much impressed with Mr.&#13;
Fraser's work, but I felt I was&#13;
in no position to make a&#13;
statement about it other than&#13;
to say it was most enjoyable&#13;
and easy to look at. I asked&#13;
Mr. Fraser to make a&#13;
statement about art for the&#13;
average person — Robert&#13;
Mainland, Staff Photographer.&#13;
&#13;
Ian Fraser&#13;
While I do not pretend to make&#13;
prints for philantropic reasons —&#13;
my primary reason being that I&#13;
enjoy the medium as a language&#13;
Ian Fraser&#13;
Verfuufov&amp;S&amp;m,&#13;
It dots make a dif fart net where you shop!&#13;
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distinct from painting — I&#13;
nevertheless believe that prints&#13;
do afford an opportunity for a&#13;
greater number of people to own&#13;
and enjoy original works than the&#13;
average market price of paintings&#13;
allows. In this sense I&#13;
believe it fair to argue that the&#13;
various print media have done&#13;
much to increase public understanding&#13;
and appreciation of&#13;
contemporary art.&#13;
The variety of styles and&#13;
techniques is enormous, even&#13;
bewildering on the first few visits&#13;
to the average commercial&#13;
gallery. There are, of course,&#13;
many books on the subject,&#13;
written, I imagine with the avid&#13;
collector in mind. These books&#13;
quite often dwell on such matters&#13;
as authenticity, pedigree and&#13;
generally how not to buy a pig in&#13;
a poke. This certainly can be a&#13;
fascinating study, though beside&#13;
the point as far as I am concerned&#13;
as an artist. It can also be&#13;
daunting for someone wishing to&#13;
buy something simply because&#13;
they enjoy it. My advice on this&#13;
matter is that you cannot go&#13;
wrong is you choose what you&#13;
enjoy — it is only when a purchase&#13;
is made as a possible&#13;
financial investment that&#13;
disappointment results from&#13;
having backed the wrong horse —&#13;
and deservedly so!&#13;
There should be no difficulty in&#13;
discerning that which moved you,&#13;
whether violently or gently: the&#13;
sensation is unmistakable. The&#13;
only measure of true art is that&#13;
the sensation does not subsequently&#13;
diminish, but continues&#13;
to move the viewer or listener —&#13;
quite often with growing conviction.&#13;
&#13;
The faculty for such sensation&#13;
is within all of us and should be&#13;
nourished, for it is one of the&#13;
great redeeming features of a&#13;
beast that is still plenty savage.&#13;
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CD&#13;
3&gt;&#13;
Z &#13;
May 3,1971 NEWSCOPE Pagea&#13;
By William Sorensen&#13;
FIVE EASY PIECES&#13;
Cast&#13;
Jack Nicholson Robert Dupea&#13;
Karen Black Rayette Dipesto&#13;
Bill "Green" Bush Elton&#13;
Lois Smith Partita Dupea&#13;
Helena Kallianiotes Apodace&#13;
Ralph Waite Karl Dupea&#13;
Susan Anspach&#13;
Katherine VanOst&#13;
William Challe Nicholous Dupea&#13;
Five Easy Pieces is a film that&#13;
concerns something that has&#13;
become a universal in our time&#13;
. . . alienation ... man encased&#13;
in himself, uttering words&#13;
that never quite mean the same&#13;
thing after they have left the&#13;
confines of one's mind. The&#13;
obstacles are so great and the&#13;
words are so small that the&#13;
battle of stimulus-response is&#13;
never won and communicating&#13;
finally seems futile.&#13;
Despite trying to understand&#13;
and to be understood is the&#13;
gifted hero, clad in a self that&#13;
has been stripped of all&#13;
tradition, of all things that&#13;
would hold him anywhere in this&#13;
society's time and space . . .&#13;
brought closer to pain, lust,&#13;
sorrow and anger. His voyage&#13;
brings him into a contact with&#13;
reality that shows him he can&#13;
never understand that contact.&#13;
This classic idea has imbellished&#13;
the writings of many a&#13;
philosopher... but here, on the&#13;
screen, the flesh is warm with&#13;
color and the words ring in the&#13;
ear and the sights soothe and&#13;
pain the eyes:&#13;
I couldn't help but look at the&#13;
man next to me in the theatre&#13;
and wonder what he was&#13;
thinking, but then I received the&#13;
message ... I knew it was all&#13;
in my head. All the impressions&#13;
were mine and it was only from&#13;
that frame of reference that I&#13;
could judge, however feebly,&#13;
what he really thought. A&#13;
special blindness is Man's, a&#13;
blindness that can destroy him&#13;
or leave him with a greater&#13;
creative vision.&#13;
Filming techniques varied&#13;
from the lashing of sunlight to&#13;
the cool blue twilight of a&#13;
dream, all accomplished&#13;
quietly and meaningfully.&#13;
Jack Nicholson is powerful, a&#13;
character lay angry beneath the&#13;
skin, like a tormented beast&#13;
being poked and stabbed by&#13;
truth and lie alike. The pain&#13;
resulted in confustion and&#13;
eventual frustration. He could&#13;
not say 'yes' to life because it&#13;
was not understandable and in&#13;
portraying this he was highly&#13;
successful in relating the theme&#13;
of t he film. It seems safe to say&#13;
that Mr. Nicholson carried the&#13;
entire film almost on his own&#13;
... so much of the dialogue&#13;
produced by Karen Black as&#13;
Rayette Dipesto, his almost&#13;
alive, almost thinking girl&#13;
friend, and that interaction with&#13;
his sister portrayed by Lois&#13;
Smith did reflect Robert's interior&#13;
monologue more than a&#13;
dialogue. The photography&#13;
seemed to imply a greater inner&#13;
search as well with close-ups of&#13;
Nicholson.&#13;
To generalize . . . further&#13;
. . . this film is what might be&#13;
called truly a product of the&#13;
United States. The difficulties&#13;
seem almost exclusive of the&#13;
rest of the world and the things&#13;
that surround this alienation&#13;
smell of Detroit, Pittsburgh,&#13;
New York and Chicago. As the&#13;
character moves from the oil&#13;
fields of Texas to the forests of&#13;
Washington State the dirt and&#13;
auto fumes that so deeply affect&#13;
us are made to live. In the end&#13;
he stands naked and unsure as&#13;
he was in the beginning . . .&#13;
alienated.&#13;
The film is a well integrated&#13;
piece of communication matter.&#13;
I think its effect has been understood&#13;
as I have put it down&#13;
here. In this way the film is selfdefeating&#13;
for in making such a&#13;
fine piece of work as this I can&#13;
see that it isn't all futile. See it.&#13;
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTIZERS&#13;
Management Club News&#13;
By Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
Sec., Mgt. Club.&#13;
Mr. Roy Cougle, Assistant&#13;
Professor in the Management&#13;
Science Division of Parkside,&#13;
will speak to the Management&#13;
Science Club, and other interested&#13;
students, on the role of&#13;
the Management Science&#13;
Division here at Parkside.&#13;
The time for this discussion&#13;
will be on Tuesday, May 11, at&#13;
3:30 p.m., location to be announced.&#13;
All students interested&#13;
in the business management&#13;
field should attend and find out&#13;
just what the .Management&#13;
Science Division has to offer.&#13;
Mr. Cougle will also answer&#13;
any questions on the subject. Be&#13;
in the know! Plan now to attend&#13;
this session — it should prove to&#13;
be very interesting.&#13;
The Management Club is now&#13;
making plans to organize a&#13;
Summer Carnival to run in&#13;
'conjunction with the annual end&#13;
of the year Beer Blast sponsored&#13;
by Student Activities. The&#13;
Management Club is contacting&#13;
all the other school clubs with&#13;
the hopes of bringing about a&#13;
joint effort of the clubs to make&#13;
this the biggest event of the&#13;
year.&#13;
There are more than twenty&#13;
clubs here at Parkside. If we all&#13;
work together, this could be the&#13;
highlight of the year. So, clubs,&#13;
start brainstqrming for an idea&#13;
for a booth to represent your&#13;
club. Students, plan now to&#13;
attend the Summer Carnival&#13;
and end of the year Beer Blast.&#13;
The best way to relax and&#13;
release tensions after finals.&#13;
The next regular meeting of&#13;
the Management Club will be&#13;
Wednesday. May 5, at 2 30 p.m.&#13;
in room D101, Greenquist Hall.&#13;
All members are urged to attend,&#13;
and bring a friend.&#13;
For students interested in&#13;
Business Management, these&#13;
are the dates for you to&#13;
remember: Tuesday, May 11,&#13;
Mr. Cougle talks on the Role of&#13;
the Management Science&#13;
Division at Parkside and&#13;
Wednesday, May 5, the nefct&#13;
regular meeting of the Parkside&#13;
Management Science Club. All&#13;
students remember the Summer&#13;
Carnival June 12 and 13,&#13;
Plan to attend them all!!&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
JOIN THE NEWSCOPE STAFF&#13;
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED&#13;
S T A F F MEMBERS NEEDED FOR NEX T YE A R&#13;
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Open 8:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m&#13;
Monday — Frida y&#13;
Saturday to 5 p.m.&#13;
Bri n g m is Ad a n d Re c e i v e 1 0 ° / o D i s c o u n t o n a ll&#13;
automotive services until June 6, 1971 &#13;
Fagefi NEWSCOPE May 3,1971&#13;
Rllbin (Continued from Page 1)&#13;
"Because if Washington is&#13;
in uproar, the army is going&#13;
to revolt, Saigon is going to&#13;
burst out in revolution, and&#13;
demonstrations will occur&#13;
all over in Europe.&#13;
"If you're sitting back&#13;
listening to rock music&#13;
getting stoned, you're&#13;
missing out on the&#13;
Revolution!" he warned.&#13;
Speaking of the Calley&#13;
trial, he said, "I think Calley&#13;
should have been put on&#13;
trial. I think Medina and&#13;
Westmoreland and every&#13;
Pentagon general should be&#13;
put on trial.&#13;
"There's only one thing&#13;
— they should all be flown to&#13;
North Vietnam and put on&#13;
trial there! That's what war&#13;
crimes are all about. It&#13;
doesn't mean the naziis try&#13;
the naziis!" he said with&#13;
incredulity.&#13;
"What other agressive&#13;
power in the world has said,&#13;
'I won't end the war till you&#13;
release the prisoners?" he&#13;
elaborated.&#13;
"What an incredible&#13;
demand. A guy flys over&#13;
North Vietnam with the&#13;
intention of destroying&#13;
bridges, schools and&#13;
hospitals. He gets shot down&#13;
and they expect 'Oh. sorry&#13;
you're shot down. We'll send&#13;
you right back so you can hit&#13;
us again the next day.'&#13;
"That's what Richard&#13;
Nixon thinks. That's incredible!"&#13;
he emphasized.&#13;
Rubin told of his&#13;
meeting with Che Guevara&#13;
in 1964. "A group of us were&#13;
in Cuba for about two&#13;
months and we had a&#13;
meeting with Che. All of us&#13;
were sick of being&#13;
Americans and wished we&#13;
could be Cuban&#13;
revolutionaries.&#13;
"Che told us, 'You're&#13;
talking like you want to be a&#13;
Cuban or Venezuelan and&#13;
stay here. That's wrong. If I&#13;
had my wish I wish I could&#13;
be out in the audience with&#13;
you, and go back to America&#13;
and fight there. Because you&#13;
live in the middle of the&#13;
beast. Everything you do&#13;
back there is much more&#13;
important than what we do&#13;
here. Because we're only at&#13;
the fringe of imperialism. I&#13;
envy you!', Rubin related.&#13;
Rubin spoke, too, of&#13;
dope and heroin (which he&#13;
called poison) and of Tim&#13;
Leary. He said of Leary,&#13;
"Tim Leary was busted for&#13;
smoking dope and was given&#13;
30 years in the penitentiary.&#13;
He's put in jail for&#13;
something which everyone&#13;
here is probably going to do&#13;
in the next couple of hours..&#13;
"What happened?&#13;
Suddenly everyone forgot&#13;
about him. Tim Leary?&#13;
Who's that? All the acid&#13;
heads became closet acid&#13;
heads," Rubin contended.&#13;
"It broke the most&#13;
important thing about pot&#13;
smoking, which is the&#13;
community. I consider&#13;
smoking marijuana to be a&#13;
religious and sacred act&#13;
because of the way it is&#13;
done," he stated. "Take a&#13;
puff, pass it on. Take a puff,&#13;
pass it on."&#13;
He was interrupted by&#13;
long and sustained applause;&#13;
the loudest applause&#13;
of the afternoon.&#13;
"There's a solidarity to&#13;
it; a brotherhood, a&#13;
sisterhood," he explained.&#13;
"They arrested one of us&#13;
because we smoke dope. Not&#13;
because Tim Leary smokes&#13;
dope. They didn't care about&#13;
one person. But because&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
ge t Red Carp et tre at me nt&#13;
a t the&#13;
BANK O F&#13;
ELMW00D&#13;
(e ve ryon e el se do es !)&#13;
2704 La thro p Ave .&#13;
R ac in e , Wi s.&#13;
KnOppS (Continued&#13;
campus. There is only one&#13;
way to describe them. They&#13;
all look like fortresses. Like&#13;
huge brooding Teutonic war&#13;
helmets that you'd see in a&#13;
medieval wood cut. These&#13;
buildings don't represent&#13;
life or happiness. They're&#13;
brooding, and sad, and&#13;
grim.&#13;
"You walk around that&#13;
campus and look at those&#13;
buildings — especially if&#13;
you're stoned and it's late at&#13;
night. It's the scariest experience&#13;
you'll ever have.&#13;
It's like walking through the&#13;
gears of a giant machine.&#13;
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KENOSHA&#13;
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Op en 6 Day s a Week Fr om 4 p. m., C lose d Mon da vs&#13;
from Page 1)&#13;
You get the feeling those&#13;
buildings, those gears, are&#13;
going to engage and you're&#13;
going to get ground up like&#13;
an insect.&#13;
"You realize then that&#13;
type of architecture occurs&#13;
only in the last days of an&#13;
empire.&#13;
He went on to say that&#13;
type of architecture is&#13;
pervasive in America —&#13;
especially in Washington.&#13;
"The people there they&#13;
see themselves as the imperial&#13;
custodians — as the&#13;
men who have the mission of&#13;
determining the direction of&#13;
the planet in the next century.&#13;
&#13;
"Once you begin to&#13;
understand this thing about&#13;
the American empire, and&#13;
once you begin to see&#13;
yourself as a rebellious self&#13;
inside of this empire, I think&#13;
it helps you understand your&#13;
own head.&#13;
"Essentially, you have&#13;
two options. One is to go on&#13;
and get yourself a job and&#13;
help run the empire, in&#13;
effect.&#13;
"The other alternative&#13;
is to begin to build a totally&#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 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;
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;
different culture — a culture&#13;
of resistance to that empire,&#13;
as an attempt to try to tear it&#13;
apart, and at some point to&#13;
kill it.&#13;
Knopps sees Vietnam in&#13;
this light. It's murder. You&#13;
can go through legal&#13;
channels to stop it, but the&#13;
victim will probably die in&#13;
the meantime, or, you can&#13;
step in and try to stop it&#13;
yourself.&#13;
"Vietnam is like that.&#13;
Hopefully, in 1976 or 1984&#13;
some president will end the&#13;
war, or else, you can step in&#13;
and try to stop the hand of&#13;
the murderer right now&#13;
yourself.&#13;
"A lot of us have made&#13;
our moral decision. We see&#13;
over one million human&#13;
beings murdered in Vietnam&#13;
over the last ten years.&#13;
One out of three babies born&#13;
in Vietnam is a monster.&#13;
The child is so deformed he&#13;
can't live more than a few&#13;
days or weeks. This is&#13;
because of the herbicides we&#13;
have dropped on the&#13;
countryside.&#13;
"Vietnam is a people's&#13;
war. The only way to break&#13;
the back of a people's war is&#13;
Tim Leary is a symbol they&#13;
arrested him, and we didn't&#13;
do anything about it. The&#13;
family has been broken."&#13;
"Tim Leary was taken&#13;
away and the hippies didn't&#13;
do anything about it," Rubin&#13;
said. He claimed Bernadine&#13;
Dohrn and Jeff Jones of the&#13;
Weatherman underground&#13;
engineered his escape.&#13;
Speaking of himself,&#13;
Rubin said, "In America&#13;
you work till you're 65, then&#13;
you retire. It's a trick.&#13;
Retire? I'm retired right&#13;
now! The technology is so&#13;
developed here that if we&#13;
just take it from the monsters&#13;
who have it now we&#13;
can turn this country into a&#13;
paradise in 24 hours.&#13;
"But you saw what&#13;
happened at Kent State.&#13;
This country will kill its own&#13;
children if it doen't like what&#13;
they're doing. It will wipe&#13;
them out."&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
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to kill the people.&#13;
"That's what the United&#13;
States is doing. One million&#13;
of them murdered in the&#13;
past ten years by this&#13;
country.&#13;
"I see the only thing a&#13;
person who has any sense of&#13;
moral worth can do, is to&#13;
step in and try to stop the&#13;
hand of the murderer.&#13;
"To a lot of us that is&#13;
what sabotage is.&#13;
"Sabotage is our answer.&#13;
It's not embraced&#13;
lightly. It's not embraced&#13;
even joyously. It's seen as a&#13;
grim necessity, at this point,&#13;
to uphold the honor of our&#13;
generation.&#13;
"I'll say now what I said&#13;
once before, that if five&#13;
people were killed in the&#13;
bombing of the Army Math&#13;
Research Building, I would&#13;
still back it. Because that&#13;
building had to go. That&#13;
building was responsible for&#13;
the deaths of 100 times five&#13;
people, a 1,000 times five&#13;
people.&#13;
"That's my side of the&#13;
coin. The other side is that&#13;
we're trying to build a&#13;
culture. We may have to&#13;
fight and we may have to be&#13;
grim and we may have to&#13;
die.&#13;
"The major thing we're&#13;
trying to do s i build a culture&#13;
that hopefully will at some&#13;
point in time replace the&#13;
culture of the whole society.&#13;
"That can be a culture,&#13;
a way of life that will make&#13;
sure that never again will&#13;
another generation go&#13;
through what our generation&#13;
has gone through."&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS / RACINE'S ;&#13;
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on the west side of Monument Squire DISCOUNT HOUSE -&#13;
; • o &#13;
May 3,1971 NEWSCOPE Page?&#13;
Trackmen Second to Marquette&#13;
Courtesy Public Information.&#13;
1971 GOLF TEAM: Left to right: Leif Guttormsen, Bob Toeppe&#13;
Dan Weyrauch, Tom Bothe, Randy Dreifke, Rick Willems George&#13;
Horvat, Mark Hjortness, Mike Niles.&#13;
Golfers Post 2 Victories&#13;
With Leif Guttormsen capturing medalist honors twice, Parkside&#13;
scored dual meet victories over both Dominican College and Loyola&#13;
University of Chicago.&#13;
In the Dominican meet, the Rangers totaled 198 s trokes to the&#13;
losers' 222. Guttormsen led the way with a 37 in the 9-hole event at&#13;
Johnson's Park. Tom Bothe had 39 and Dan Weyrauch 40. Rich&#13;
Willems and Ken Rossi each turned in 41's.&#13;
Guttormsen's 73 paced the 464-496 victory over Loyola at the rainsoaked&#13;
Petrifying Springs course. Tom Bothe was next with a 74, while&#13;
Dan Weyrauch and George Horvat had 78's. Rich Willem's 79 and Bob&#13;
Toeppe's 82 rounded out the scoring.&#13;
Russ Coley, assistant athletic director, acted as a clinican at the&#13;
62nd annual Drake Relays. Coley, whose area was baton passing, was&#13;
the featured speaker at the Friday night clinic.&#13;
Mr. Suh, Parkside judo instructor, will demonstrate techniques at&#13;
the Junior National in Odessa, Texas, on July 9-10. His partner will be&#13;
Mr. Park of Eastern Montana.&#13;
Grant Anderson, Parkside fencer, participated in the Junior&#13;
World Fencing Championships which were held in the United States&#13;
for the first time. Seventeen countries competed in this event.&#13;
Keith Herbrechtsmeier and John Hanzalik competed in the&#13;
Martini-Rossi International Fencing tournament held in New York.&#13;
This tournament had participants from 15 n ations.&#13;
Freshmen Top Track&#13;
Netmen Place 5th in&#13;
A pair of freshmen from&#13;
Milwaukee, Bob Waters and&#13;
Eugene Prince, have turned in&#13;
UW-Parkside's most impressive&#13;
track performances&#13;
this season.&#13;
Waters, a sprinter from&#13;
Milwaukee Lincoln, has times&#13;
of :09.7 and :21.9 in the 100 and&#13;
220, while Prince, a high jumper&#13;
from Milwaukee Lutheran, has&#13;
soared 6-6.&#13;
Mark Kohen, Mike Kmetz and&#13;
Pat Kekic won their respective&#13;
divisions in the Parkside intramural&#13;
bowling tournament&#13;
which had 70 participants. Some&#13;
of the top scores are listed:&#13;
Men's Scratch Division&#13;
Mark Koehn 592&#13;
Steve Stone 567&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
'66 Ram. Amer. Con. 7843 - 2 0th&#13;
Keno.&#13;
'63 VS (40,000 mi) $600; '66&#13;
Dodge Coronet (12,000 mi) $700.&#13;
12911 W ashington Ave. Raci.&#13;
'65 Chevy Bel. 4 dr. Auto, 6, PS,&#13;
Rad. Reas. 633-3963.&#13;
'60 Ram CIsc, Auto, 6, $150. Also&#13;
2,7075-15 BFG tires, rims &amp; Bal.&#13;
$40; 2, 9.90-15 OBFG tires (500&#13;
mi) Rims &amp; Bal $60. 859-2653&#13;
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'64 Pont. Temp. 326, Sp. Coup,&#13;
Stick $300. 658-8043.&#13;
'64 Ram. 770 2 dr HT, 287, St.&#13;
Shf. 857-2016.&#13;
Freshmen, in fact, dominate&#13;
theUW-P best-times chart: Jim&#13;
McFadden of Waterford has a&#13;
4:21.5 mile and 15:17.9 threemile;&#13;
Tim McGilsky of Racine&#13;
is 1:58.7 and :52.7 in the 880 and&#13;
440; Mike Zugich of Racine is&#13;
:58.2 in he t 440 and intermediate&#13;
hurdles; and Dennis Fechhelm&#13;
of Mayville is :15.8 in the 120&#13;
high hurdles.&#13;
Junior Leonard Bullock, who&#13;
Mark Haabrauer 552&#13;
Men's Handicap&#13;
Mike Kmetz 643&#13;
Jerry Grezener 639&#13;
A1 Anderson 638&#13;
Women's Handicap&#13;
Pat Kekic 600&#13;
Linda Olsen 592&#13;
Judy Knutson 576&#13;
'66 Chevelle 301-350 hp, 4 sp. 4&#13;
Brl. Astro's 8&lt; More. 654-4440,&#13;
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'62 Buick LeSabre $100. 1-634-&#13;
6127.&#13;
'68 Tri. Spitfire Mk III, Conv.,&#13;
Low miles. 637-7966 o r 654-9471&#13;
(after 6 p.m.) Rod Marescalo.&#13;
'63 Ram. Amer. Wag. Stk, new&#13;
clutch, muff, trans. 694-6353.&#13;
'63 Pont. Conv. Auto $250. 652-&#13;
1443 after 5 p.m.&#13;
'69 Ply. Rdrnn'r, 4 spd, 383-335&#13;
hp, rad, htr. 637-5520 after 5:00.&#13;
'63 Olds 88 Hoi. 495 3 Brl, high&#13;
comp. Best offer. 654-6746 after&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Marquette, avenging earlier&#13;
loses to Parkside, defeated the&#13;
Rangers in a quadrangular&#13;
track meet held at Marquette&#13;
Stadium.&#13;
The Warriors totaled 90&#13;
points, with Parkside second&#13;
with 65. Northwestern College&#13;
had 23 and Dominican College&#13;
five.&#13;
Highlighting the meet for&#13;
Parkside were Jim McFadden&#13;
and Mike Zugich, who both&#13;
scored double victories while&#13;
setting school records.&#13;
McFadden won the mile and&#13;
the two mile with times of 4:27.4&#13;
and 9:48. His time in the two&#13;
mile set an outdoor school&#13;
record. Zugich set a school&#13;
record in the 440 in termediate&#13;
hurdles at :58.2, and also won&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Facing some tough competition,&#13;
the Ranger netmen&#13;
finished fifth in a six-team meet&#13;
in Oshkosh, and dropped an 8-1&#13;
decision to UW-Green Bay.&#13;
The Green Bay defeat left the&#13;
Rangers with a 1-2 record in&#13;
dual meets, the lone victory&#13;
coming over Dominican.&#13;
In finishing fifth in the Titan&#13;
Invitational at Oshkosh, the&#13;
Rangers picked up five points,&#13;
three of them coming on byes;&#13;
two in competition.&#13;
Todd Nelson defeated&#13;
Milton's Roy Gelin 10-2 in&#13;
singles. Nelson also teamed&#13;
with Dave Herchen to give&#13;
Parkside a 10-3 win over a Stout&#13;
doubles team.&#13;
In team totals, Oshkosh&#13;
dominated the meet with 54&#13;
Team&#13;
moved to Kenosha this summer&#13;
from El Paso, Tex., leads the&#13;
long jump, 21-1V2, and triple&#13;
jump, 40-5, while junior John&#13;
Patton of Santa Cruz, Calif., has&#13;
gone 13 feet outdoors in the pole&#13;
vault, a height that has been&#13;
matched indoors by freshman&#13;
Keith Merritt of Kenosha.&#13;
Because of injuries, the&#13;
Rangers have had no entries in&#13;
the shot put, discus or javelin.&#13;
Parkside plunges into the&#13;
heart of its outdoor season&#13;
beginning Saturday with the&#13;
Northern Illinois Invitational at&#13;
DeKalb. That will be followed&#13;
by the Whitewater Invitational&#13;
May 4, the LaCrosse State Invitational&#13;
May 8 and the&#13;
Stevens Point State Invitational&#13;
May 15.&#13;
'69 Opel GT Silver $2,400 or best&#13;
offer. 652-3312 after 4.&#13;
'63 MG Midget Conv. New Batt,&#13;
$275. 250854th Keno. R. Smith or&#13;
C. Lawler.&#13;
'64 Jeep 4-wheel drive Red conv.&#13;
Built up; like new. Racine 633-&#13;
3367.&#13;
WANTED TO BUY — 2 u sed 3&#13;
or 5 speed 26" bicycles. Call 633-&#13;
3131 after 5.&#13;
RIDES NEEDED-WANTED&#13;
DRIVE a Pugeot to Minneapolis.&#13;
Must get there before&#13;
June. Call 843-2225 after 5 or 657-&#13;
5121 ext. 36.&#13;
NEED ride to Seattle or Anchorage,&#13;
May or June. Will split&#13;
cost. Call Barb 654-9631.&#13;
the high hurdles in 16.4.&#13;
Tim Martinson won the pole&#13;
vault for Parkside, and Tim&#13;
McGilsky triumphed in the 880&#13;
with a 1:59 clocking. McGilsky&#13;
placed second in the 440 also.&#13;
A number of other Rangers&#13;
placed second. They were Ken&#13;
Bullock in the triple jump, Keith&#13;
Merritt in the pole vault, and&#13;
DenniS Fechhelm in both the&#13;
high hurdles and two relay&#13;
teams. Chuck Dettman ran&#13;
second in the mile.&#13;
Gary Geoby, Len Bullock,&#13;
Fechhelm, and Dean Maschoff&#13;
comprise the 440 relayVteam.&#13;
Judd Johnston, Fechhelm,&#13;
Merritt and McGilsky ran&#13;
quarters in the mile relay.&#13;
While Parkside finished&#13;
second in the meet, 25 points&#13;
behind Marquette, the Rangers&#13;
might have won had Bob Waters&#13;
points. Lagging behind were St.&#13;
Norbert with 21, Stout 10,&#13;
Lakeland, six, Parkside five,&#13;
and Milton three.&#13;
Parkside coach Dick Frecka&#13;
said Oshkosh has one of the&#13;
strongest teams in the state.&#13;
They finsihed 9th nationally in&#13;
the NAIA last year.&#13;
The match with UW-Green&#13;
Bay was highlighted by&#13;
Parkside's Mike Safago's&#13;
victory over Larry Kropp in&#13;
three sets.&#13;
Coach Frecka was pleased&#13;
with Safago's effort. "Kropp is&#13;
a highly experience player who&#13;
only lost about two matches last&#13;
year," said Frecka.&#13;
Despite the modest record&#13;
compiled so far, Frecka feels&#13;
that the team has been getting&#13;
better.. "We're playing top&#13;
competition now so we can have&#13;
WANT ED TO BUY — Tickets to&#13;
Chicago Concert. Contact Dale&#13;
Martin 878-2992.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
MADISON summer suoiet 2&#13;
bed. near Vilas Park. Call 608-&#13;
251-8632, $65 p er person.&#13;
ROOM — Men only, $9.00 per&#13;
wk. 3 blocks from Racine&#13;
Campus. Inquire 832 S.&#13;
Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
FOR RENT — Office Space -&#13;
Modern, Carpeted, Partitioned,&#13;
Air Cond. Ideal for Acctg.,&#13;
Insurance or Sales. Good&#13;
proximity to Parkside and&#13;
Carthage. 4058 7th Ave. Call 652-&#13;
3945 or 654-7410.&#13;
and Eugene Prince been able to&#13;
participate.&#13;
Waters, the flashy Ranger&#13;
sprinter, would very likely have&#13;
scored victories in the 100 an d&#13;
the 220. Waters would also have&#13;
run on one or both of the relay&#13;
teams which could have given&#13;
Parkside more scoring in these&#13;
events. He missed the meet&#13;
because of a death in his family.&#13;
Eugene Prince, school record&#13;
holder in the high jump at 6'6",&#13;
was competing in the Drake&#13;
Relays and had to miss the&#13;
Marquette meet. Prince was&#13;
unable to place at the Drake&#13;
meet as four jumpers went over&#13;
seven feet.&#13;
Another Ranger, Mike&#13;
DeWitt, ran in the marathon at&#13;
Drake, but had to quit after 22'&#13;
miles when he suffered dizzy&#13;
spells.&#13;
Oshkosh&#13;
a good schedule for the future.&#13;
We could schedule lighter&#13;
competition now but it would be&#13;
more difficult to develop a&#13;
major schedule later," Frecka&#13;
said.&#13;
Frecka readily admits that&#13;
the team will have rough going&#13;
with this year's schedule. Some&#13;
improvement will have to be&#13;
measured in defeats.&#13;
Although soundly beaten by&#13;
the Bay team, Fredta saw&#13;
improvement over last year's&#13;
performance against Green&#13;
Bay: "Last year we dropped&#13;
two matches to them by 9-0&#13;
scores. Besides winning a&#13;
match this year, several other&#13;
matches went to three sets."&#13;
The meet against Marquette,&#13;
scheduled for April 27. was&#13;
postponed because of poor&#13;
weather.&#13;
MISC. FOR SALE&#13;
AMP — Silvertone 4 channel.&#13;
Also mike. Best offer. Call&#13;
Cathy, 694-2769. M ust sell.&#13;
•&#13;
ELECTRIC RANGE — West&#13;
inghouse 30", $75; Refrigerator&#13;
Westinghouse, $75. Box&#13;
spring mattress for double bed,&#13;
$75. Call 633-0541.&#13;
TAPE DECK — Sony - T C 355.&#13;
List FYice $219. Sacrifice for&#13;
$100. Phone 654-1731 a fter 4 or&#13;
see Frank Chiapetta.&#13;
SPmile&#13;
Bowling Results &#13;
Page 8 NEWSCOPE May 3,1971&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of The Newscope Staff&#13;
Title: Positively Main Street&#13;
Author: Toby Thompson&#13;
Publisher: Coward McCann &amp; Geoghegan&#13;
Inc. ($5.95)&#13;
This week's column is dedicated not to&#13;
literary hunchbacks but to Dylan Freaks. It&#13;
has been my good fortune to have fall in my&#13;
lap (with a crash) Bob Dylan's first&#13;
biography (Positively Main Street), and (end&#13;
of four year quest for blackprint grail)&#13;
Tarantula, his one and only prose work, the&#13;
one he refused to publish at the last minute.&#13;
Where do I start? The beginning. Toby&#13;
Thompson took a trip to Hibbing, Minnesota,&#13;
(Dylan's hometown) and looked up the&#13;
Zimmerman family, old friends, and high&#13;
school teachers of Robert Zimmerman (Bob&#13;
Dylan). In a style which Toby calls "New&#13;
Journalism" but which is really prolix "Bad&#13;
Writing", Bob Dylan's days as Bob Zimmerman&#13;
are relived (relive here has no&#13;
connection with life) through the words of his&#13;
brother David, Echo Helstrom (the "Girl&#13;
From the North Country"), his uncles who&#13;
"don't know that much about him", his&#13;
English teacher (his best subject), and his&#13;
mother. Much of what is reported is contradictory;&#13;
Toby would hear something about&#13;
Dylan from one person and later someone&#13;
else would say that it was a lie. However,&#13;
everyone does agree on one thing, they all&#13;
deny Dylan's self-confessed intimate&#13;
relationship with Crystal Methadrine, Mrs.&#13;
Zimmerman most emphatically. A lot of tall&#13;
tale telling here, tongues hanging out coated&#13;
with white lies. Everybody's got good intentions&#13;
(and they "don't want to make Bob&#13;
angry"), but good biographies are made of&#13;
much harder stuff than a syrupy varnish.&#13;
Actually we discover that Dylan was a fat&#13;
kid, eccentric (for Hibbing), a wild dresser,&#13;
played with an electric band at a high school&#13;
assembly at full decibels and blew die&#13;
principal's wig off, nobody liked his voice,&#13;
everyone laughed, he loved first love Echo,&#13;
lived in Dinky town for awhile (Dinkytown is&#13;
the student section of the U. of Minnesota),&#13;
listened at night to a southern radio station to&#13;
hear dem good ole blues, waylaid every Black&#13;
who sauntered through Hibbing to check him&#13;
and his experiences out, was self-conscious&#13;
about his Jewishness, and wanted to be a rock&#13;
and roll star, made it big and never forgot the&#13;
folks back home.&#13;
Hibbing itself is behind the times, high&#13;
school students laughed at Toby's long hair,&#13;
and no one listens to Dylan albums, in fact the&#13;
local record shop only had a couple copies of&#13;
"Greatest Hits". It becomes obvious that&#13;
Dylan had to escape Hibbing in order to make&#13;
it, it was oppressive to him, but the stories&#13;
about his running away from his family are&#13;
untrue, his father gave him money to go to&#13;
New York, and before his mecca to Fun City&#13;
at the age of 19, Bob had never been out of&#13;
Hibbing.&#13;
The trouble with this biography is that the&#13;
biographical information takes up about forty&#13;
pages, the rest is Toby on Toby. Toby in&#13;
Madison where a couple of Dylan Freaks say&#13;
to leave Dylan alone, his past is his own and&#13;
no one has any business fucking around with&#13;
Bobby D's past. Toby in Hibbing and getting&#13;
drunk and making a spectacle of himself in a&#13;
bar, singing "Girl From the North Country",&#13;
everybody applauding, waking up with a&#13;
hangover, and Echo later, telling him that he&#13;
sounds a lot like Bob did. Bullshit. 140 pages of&#13;
bullshit and 40 pages of interview which does&#13;
little to clarify the young Bob Zimmerman. I&#13;
expected more. Maybe Robert Shelton, who&#13;
has reportedly (Toby tells us) been working&#13;
for five years on a Dylan biography, will fill&#13;
the many gaps Toby only stumbles into. Oh&#13;
yah, good ol' Tobe has never met Dylan, but&#13;
you know Dylan Freaks, yeah I know a lot&#13;
about one anyway.&#13;
Title: Tarantula&#13;
Author: Bob Dylan&#13;
Publisher: none listed (bootlegged) ($1.75)&#13;
I approach this book like I. . . like I never&#13;
approached a book quite like this one before.&#13;
Let's get one thing straight, Dylan is&#13;
something of a god to me and well, like&#13;
Tarantula is a bible of sorts. In a literary&#13;
sense it isn't worth more than a few quill&#13;
pens, but then again, we don't always read the&#13;
Bible for its literary value. No, this is BOB&#13;
DYLAN'S first published (even if it's&#13;
bootlegged it's still published) prose work,&#13;
and its literary pretensions are attested to by&#13;
the fact that Dylan himself refused to publish&#13;
it.&#13;
Tarantula is a % page book composed of&#13;
short story sequences, a few long poems, and&#13;
short letters appearing at the end of each&#13;
story and signed by non-characters with&#13;
names like "louie louie", or "Shorty Cookie".&#13;
Dylan is "shadow boxing" the language, he is&#13;
using words in unusual contexts, he is being&#13;
complex and absurd, simple and poignant,&#13;
and he tells us not to be afraid of&#13;
meaninglessness.&#13;
It is a speedfreak-poet-folk legend's&#13;
collection of poem-prose sketches whose&#13;
metaphoric ambiguity and complexity&#13;
reminds me of some of Dylan Thomas' prose&#13;
pieces. With Dylan it is the words themselves&#13;
rather than what is behind words which is of&#13;
prime importance. Dylan has always been&#13;
eminently quotable and Tarantula is no exception.&#13;
Literally hundreds of Dylanisms are&#13;
contained here, phrases and sentences which&#13;
are as poetic as they are often overwhelming.&#13;
Within Tarantula there are references to&#13;
his songs, "somebody once said the sun ain't&#13;
yellow, it's chicken", also the "Memphis&#13;
Blues" paranoia caused by Dylan's discovery&#13;
of the absurdity and meaninglessness of life is&#13;
rampant. It is a speed trip, spread out, spaced&#13;
out and confusing. It begins with the&#13;
"Freewheelin' " Dylan and ends with the&#13;
"Blonde on Blonde" SuperDylan. There is a&#13;
great deal of self-mockery, for example&#13;
"sang at the vegetarian convention my new&#13;
song against meat, everybody dug it excpt&#13;
(sic) for the plumbers neath the stage."&#13;
As a whole I can't find any real structure in&#13;
Tarantula, it is a collection of weird incidents&#13;
and absurd stories, huncreds of noncharacters&#13;
come into view for a few lines and&#13;
then disappear. The only continuing&#13;
characters in the book are aretha and prince&#13;
hamlet, and even they are seen only in the&#13;
beginning and the end.&#13;
If you ever get the opportunity to read&#13;
Tarantula, approach it with an open mind,&#13;
don't expect anything because everything in&#13;
Tarantula is to be unexpected. It's a&#13;
bootlegged book (I bought it in Madison) and&#13;
maybe it's not right to buy from bootleggers,&#13;
but Dylan Freaks will understand. I tried to&#13;
pull Tarantula.s legs off but they only&#13;
disappear.&#13;
"here lies bob dylan&#13;
demolished by Vienna politeness —&#13;
which will now claim to have invented him&#13;
the cool people can&#13;
now write Fugues about him&#13;
&amp; Cupid can now kick over his kerosene&#13;
lampbob&#13;
dylan — killed by a discarded Oedipus&#13;
who turned around&#13;
around&#13;
to investigate a ghost&#13;
&amp; discovered that&#13;
the ghost too&#13;
was more than one person"&#13;
Positively Main Street may be&#13;
purchased at the Book Mart 622-&#13;
. 59th Street, Kenosha.&#13;
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              <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
by John Koloen&#13;
or The Newscope Staf!&#13;
"BiD 225virtually disenfranchises all of those,&#13;
comingto Wisconsin to study," -:sspeechby State Senator Dale McKenna (D-&#13;
....:.,) last Thursday sponsored by the Racine&#13;
--- of the ACLU, he warned the small :::e "They will not be qualified to register in&#13;
: t where they attend school and they&#13;
:.::: at all in the United States of America if&#13;
IIill passes in the Assembly,"&#13;
• AtClJIdiog to McKenna, "Th~ bill, in effect,&#13;
IIIIdset up stringent voting requirements that the&#13;
_city clerk could ask of a student or a person in&#13;
JlDSieDtvocationwhether he intended to remain&#13;
~.district heis living, whether he owns property&#13;
.1IIe district, whether he filed an inco~e tax&#13;
IIIII'D in the district, whether his driver's hcense&#13;
• Issued in the district, whether he has his&#13;
lIIDIJIObile registered in that district. All of these&#13;
.. are criteria the clerk can use to exclude you&#13;
hili voting inthat district if you answer no."&#13;
"It also disenfranchises all veterans returning&#13;
... VletDam going to school under the G.r. Bill&#13;
.. use unless they have established legal&#13;
IIIidmcY at home for voting purposes and because&#13;
11.18 year old vote change most of them will not&#13;
qaaUfied to register in the precinct in which they&#13;
II'lIIchool."&#13;
JlrKenM characterized the bill as an attempt&#13;
.~ the effect of the new 18 year old voting&#13;
IIlr JIaDy legislators expect the addition of 18 year&#13;
tIIII to lbe electorate to significantly affect the&#13;
IIRlIme of the local and state elections in college&#13;
-.tties.&#13;
MeKenM said the bill stood a good chance of&#13;
~ lbe Assembly but added on his own behalf,&#13;
ti this bill is a bad bill ... but it passed 25-4."&#13;
IIcKenna then spoke about Senate Bill 180, 314&#13;
illleAl8embly,that is designed to test the power&#13;
lillie President to commit U.S. troops in un-&#13;
__ red wars. Similar to a bill passed by the&#13;
by Dean Loumos&#13;
or The Newscope Start&#13;
Alan alt Faculty meetiug last Wednesday,&#13;
.\frIl 21, a resolution was presented fly Professor&#13;
Jell. Harbeson, representing the Social Science&#13;
DlYlsion. The resolution stated:&#13;
Tbal lbe Parkside Faculty opposes the&#13;
Prtsfnce on campus of armed security&#13;
personnel carrying sidearms and mace&#13;
dlring daylight hours,&#13;
"0 further explained that armed security were&#13;
: muchin evidence in Greenquist Hall and that&#13;
ItmOSpllereat Parkside did not warrant the :U.. of the security patrol. He added that "we&#13;
...d better resolve this now before somethmg .::::s." He ~lso said that there have been a few&#13;
.. Is where guns were not involved, but could&#13;
.. " been,&#13;
.. t\ancollor Irvin G, Wyllie then introduced&#13;
..:c:.nson, from Central Administration m&#13;
1IIeech" WhoISthe security head. He gave a short&#13;
llIu ' InWhichhe continually emphasized that "If&#13;
L.llve the security the authority to make arrests&#13;
~1 Shouldbe armed."&#13;
~e also revealed that some of our campuses,&#13;
1Ocu' Bay for example, do not have armed&#13;
~ty" a decision that was made in Madison.&#13;
~ Ylholookthe noor and explained that he was&#13;
1Ir~ by the Regents to "beef up security and&#13;
llibarhon On campuses, even if it meant 'canIlitQ~lDgFaculty&#13;
positions'." This order was later&#13;
IOcu '1ed because of outside pressure, but the&#13;
1llI~ Y patrol were armed and received the&#13;
lld~rn 20 hours training on the use of their&#13;
s. lbatrofessor Applebaum added he didn't believe&#13;
lld~en the .authority to arrest meant having a&#13;
M ,To him that reasoning didn't follow.&#13;
ba\'e r. Hanson answered, "admittedly arrests&#13;
.. ~n made Without sidearms," but then Cited&#13;
lilt' p,lewhere a gun was needed "to give out a&#13;
IIIg ticket."&#13;
Supports Anti-War Bill&#13;
SENATOR DALE McKENNA&#13;
Massachusetts legislature, it forbids state citizens&#13;
from serving in undeclared wars. The&#13;
Massachusetts bill was taken to the Supreme Court&#13;
to test its constitutionality. The court refused to&#13;
make a ruling on the grounds that the state had not&#13;
gone through the standard procedure of litigation in&#13;
the lower federal courts.&#13;
According to McKenna the Wisconsin bill,&#13;
introduced March 18, was immediately' mel b)&#13;
opposition senators who attempted to dilute its&#13;
effectiveness via amendment. He said, .. ection 1&#13;
mb states 'Any agrieved inhabitant of this stale on&#13;
his own behalf . . . may bring an appropriate action&#13;
in the United States Supreme Court ... 10&#13;
defend and enforce such rights of the indi\'idual&#13;
under section B . - .. "&#13;
Faculty Opposes&#13;
A rmed Security&#13;
On Campus&#13;
&gt;&#13;
•o&#13;
v&#13;
•~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
•&#13;
Describing secuon B and the I lent of I&#13;
documenl he said, "What thi bill means n elf t&#13;
that we would oot perrmt the )'lJW1 peopl of&#13;
Wisconsm to fight in undeclared" ar We re It'lhn&#13;
the President. 'really, we've had II nd II'&#13;
time 10 sa)' good-bye' ..&#13;
"When IIcame up on the nate ncor th first&#13;
amendmenl tha; "a gg ted "ould hav&#13;
destroyed It For exampl a am nded the bill&#13;
would not hold If th Unrted tat am Ill\ol\ ~&#13;
III an undeclared war In any counl!') thaI I'&#13;
.S aid, Also, thelf amended bill ould no lak&#13;
effect until the .Iassachu t la" "a declared&#13;
constilullonal I took stron e puon and con&#13;
sidered Wisconslll a sovereign tate."&#13;
Accorcing to tale la any bill pa ed b. the&#13;
two houses In, tadison. unl otherwt lpulated&#13;
lakes effect the day alter .1 pubh.hed in th&#13;
ficial stale publication he WI! co n. tal&#13;
Journal)&#13;
"We hould have th right on our 6"n to In&#13;
troduce Bill 180 and g I .1 th h th nat&#13;
without waiting for .Ia ch 10 reach t&#13;
Supreme Court"&#13;
Describing the dIfficulty III n th bill he&#13;
noted thai though there "as debate on the ncor&#13;
almost no one opposed the bill IIIthe pubhc he nn&#13;
attended by "aboul :;00" people&#13;
", 'ow even the forc Lhal had n III upport&#13;
of the war have come full err I nd re III opposition&#13;
to il If Un 0.01 c,idenc nough 10&#13;
con\'lnce thl! Prldenl Lhal th peopl I thl&#13;
countr)' don t anI their men d. I III&#13;
Vietnam then I don't kllO" "hat&#13;
A member 01 the audl nc SUJitRl'SlcdI&#13;
thoughl the I ue of th bill hould be pul fo&#13;
referendum to the peopl 01 the t, n a&#13;
thai thi was too Important a mal r for th r&#13;
elected rep"" ntall' to hand!&#13;
tConI1J1U on Pa 5&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
McKenna Fights Voting Bill&#13;
Supports Anti- by John Koloen&#13;
of The Newscope Staf!&#13;
"B'll 225 virtually disenfranchises all of those .&#13;
en~ coming to Wisconsin to study."&#13;
1 8 peech by State Senator Dale McKenna (D-&#13;
:SOn) last Thursday sponsored by the Racine&#13;
ter of the ACLU, he w~~ned the . sm~ll&#13;
~nee, "They will not be quahf1ed to register m&#13;
precinct where they attend school and they&#13;
vote at all in the United States of America if&#13;
bill passes in the Assem?}Y.' ' . . According to McKenna, The bill, m effect,&#13;
et up stringent voting requir~ments that the&#13;
city clerk could ask of a student or a person in&#13;
1 ansient vocation whether he intended to remain&#13;
district he is living, whether he owns property&#13;
Ille district, whether he filed an income tax&#13;
in the district, whether his driver's license&#13;
· ued in the district, whether he has his&#13;
, mobile registered in that district. All of these&#13;
are criteria the clerk can use to exclude you&#13;
voting in that district if you answer no."&#13;
•·u also disenfranchises all veterans returning&#13;
Vietnam going to school under the G .I. Bill&#13;
use unless they have established legal&#13;
idency at home for voting purposes and because&#13;
the 18 year old vote change most of them will not&#13;
qualified to register in the precinct in which they&#13;
to school."&#13;
cKenna characterized the bill as an attempt&#13;
minimize the effect of the new 18 year old voting&#13;
. lany legislators expect the addition of 18 year&#13;
to the electorate to significantly affect the&#13;
come of the local and state elections in college&#13;
unities.&#13;
lcKenna said the bill stood a good chance of&#13;
Ing the Assembly but added on his own behalf,&#13;
I think this bill is a bad bill . . . but it passed 25-4."&#13;
lcKenna then spoke about Senate Bill 180, 314&#13;
the Assembly, that is designed to test the power&#13;
the President to commit U.S. troops in unred&#13;
wars. Similar to a bill passed by the&#13;
by Dean Loumos&#13;
of The Newscope Staff&#13;
At an all Faculty meeting last Wednesday,&#13;
pril 21, a resolution was presented f&gt;y Professor t»/ _Harbeson, representing the Social Science&#13;
ion. The resolution stated:&#13;
That the Parkside Faculty opposes the&#13;
pre ence on campus of armed security&#13;
P r~onnel carrying sidearms and mace&#13;
during daylight hours.&#13;
Ile further explained that armed security were&#13;
f&gt;" much in evidence in Greenquist Hall and that&#13;
~tmosphere at Parkside did not warrant the&#13;
~ 1: of the security patrol. He added that "we&#13;
lter resolve this now before something Tns.'' He also said that there have been a few&#13;
1 ents where guns were not involved, but could&#13;
\ been.&#13;
Ral ~hancellor Irvin G. Wyllie then introduc~d&#13;
S· Hanso~, from Central Administration m&#13;
150~, Who 1s the security head. He gave a short&#13;
~ ~ in Which he continually emphasized that "If&#13;
give the security the authority to make arrests&#13;
Y should be armed "&#13;
He J · Gr a so revealed that some of our campuses,&#13;
~ Bay for example do not have armed&#13;
nty a d · · ' · M di \\. • ec1s1on that was made m a son. )Ir ered •e took the floor and explained that he was&#13;
Protecr by the Regents to " beef up security and&#13;
bar !0n on campuses even if it meant 'canUo~ing&#13;
Faculty positi~ns'." This order was later&#13;
rit ect because of outside pressure, but the&#13;
lllinint Y Patrol were armed and received the&#13;
idea urn 20 hours training on the use of their&#13;
rrns.&#13;
t:afessor Applebaum added he didn't believe&#13;
lldear1&#13;
ven the authority to arrest meant having a&#13;
1~ · To him that reasoning didn't follow. ve b · Hanson answered "admittedly arrests&#13;
~n ' · ed eJtarn made without sidearms," but then cit&#13;
rlti P_le Where a gun was needed " to give out a&#13;
ng ticket."&#13;
SENATOR DALE 1cKE. ·.'&#13;
&gt;&#13;
0&#13;
u&#13;
., •&#13;
J&#13;
J&#13;
•&#13;
Massachusetts legislature, it forbids state citizen&#13;
from serving in undeclared wars. The&#13;
Massachusetts bill was taken to the Supreme Court&#13;
to test its constitutionality. The court refused to&#13;
make a ruling on the grounds that the state had not&#13;
gone through the standard procedure of litigation in&#13;
the lower federal courts.&#13;
According to McKenna the ·Wi co in bill.&#13;
int oduced farch 18. w imm i te ~ ~&#13;
opposition senators who attempted to dilut i&#13;
effectiveness via amendment. He said " ' tion 1&#13;
rob states 'Any agrieved inhabitant of thi tat on&#13;
his own behalf . . . may bring an appropria c- tion in the United States upreme Court ... to&#13;
defend and enforce such rights of th individu I&#13;
under section B . . . . "&#13;
Faculty Oppose&#13;
Armed Security&#13;
On Campus&#13;
~ re&lt;-olut&#13;
ilh four Facull~&#13;
ar &#13;
April 2&amp;. I!HI..&#13;
Hearing Attracts Two&#13;
'lIKE t\l RTIt of The 'e~ ...cope taU&#13;
The Open Public Hr-artngs on&#13;
tenure crrteria held b} a special&#13;
rl'gt'nt eornrmttee last Frida&gt;&#13;
"as attended b~ ''''0 peopl~&#13;
("tIl( \\ a a "('Y.. cope reporter&#13;
th&lt;' other wu \ "" Prof of&#13;
l't \ rc Ben Grt"t"n('haum&#13;
(irecncllaum pre cered the onlv&#13;
I , lIollS on cnrcrta&#13;
(,r rt~um remark were&#13;
unun f) or n draft report of&#13;
ht . lentl 1&gt;1\ I IOn Sub&#13;
eornmrt tue un Pl'r onnel&#13;
Ih'\ It'\\ PU!ll'IC Ttw draft&#13;
n'port I':\elf tot,11s ~flmt' 1("0&#13;
pil~t&#13;
'Ill", ,'ntlal or hi remarks&#13;
In' a folll)\\&#13;
lh'luhH" \\"'I~hl~ or 50 pt'f&#13;
ll'nl, Jl} pl'f (:t'Ol Olndlil per c('nl&#13;
huuld t&gt;(o.1 l~nl"(l to the thrt '&#13;
tr.llhllOIMI ar'iI or actl\ It).&#13;
IC.ldlln~ fo('holart) ..u:lI\'11yand&#13;
~'nH"&#13;
"In n,O('",al promoll nand&#13;
,,'nun' 11ua"01\.... whl'n' the&#13;
t-: "t;ull"'" ('omnllltt"· ha!'t&#13;
(Irt..rlllmlUanll~ ad\('r.l' 10&#13;
lurtll"llUn l'lln(:l'rntn~ an 10&#13;
ill\ Idu.l) hi' h~lll bt.' notlflt.'d of&#13;
1111 I.,·, ,lIld hall bt' 10\ 1t&lt;'&lt;110&#13;
kelch I&#13;
3032 Lathrop Ave.&#13;
Racine&#13;
Phone 637-2533&#13;
Uhl_u ••• .tj. lMIarli .n" "lolli's)&#13;
speak to the committee on his&#13;
0\\0" behalf If he w ishes He may&#13;
brmg another member or the&#13;
Iacuhv as an advisor ..&#13;
Teacher:-. should be evaluated&#13;
pr irn arily b~ student&#13;
que:-.t1onnal re 'Ideally. the&#13;
(IUeStionnaire should be&#13;
developed administered and&#13;
tabula led b) students In&#13;
. peclat snuauore ....such as that&#13;
of an IOstructor trying real&#13;
1000\ auom the opmtnn of his&#13;
(..ollea~u~ "ill be invited"&#13;
"Some publishable scholarly&#13;
&lt;JClI\·ll} should be expected of&#13;
all faculty The amount expected&#13;
mUSl recognize the&#13;
hmltal10n duc to facilities and&#13;
other duties under which the&#13;
IOdlvldual faculty member may&#13;
hr working." Extraordinary&#13;
puhlic service could count as a&#13;
lempOrar) subsl1tute for&#13;
...cholarly activity&#13;
Finally. sen'ice ",ork should&#13;
melude both general public&#13;
st.'rVlce and Universit',- sen'ice.&#13;
.. An individual ought not to&#13;
rl.... &lt;..eiv(' an)· service credit for&#13;
ck)ing only public service arid&#13;
leaving his colleagues home to&#13;
do the dirty work."&#13;
The members of the regents&#13;
committee Suggested Prof.&#13;
Greenebaum check with UW!\1&#13;
and Green Bay re: student&#13;
evaluation. Evidently there&#13;
have been significant problems&#13;
with student evaluation at these&#13;
campuses&#13;
After the heanng Newscupe&#13;
spoke briefly with Asst. Prof.&#13;
Greenebaum. He explained that&#13;
his committee was composed&#13;
primarily of interested teachers&#13;
(five tenured and five nontenured&#13;
members of the Science&#13;
Division I. He also mentioned&#13;
that six students were consulted.&#13;
VISTA:&#13;
Advisor Hopes To Instill&#13;
by Mark Timpany&#13;
or The :\ewscope Starr&#13;
Joseph G. Baier is an advisor&#13;
to the Parkside faculty and&#13;
administration. He represents&#13;
the University Faculty Council,&#13;
the executive committee of the&#13;
University Faculty Assembly.&#13;
.:'\lr. Baier was sent here, with&#13;
the approval of the Parkside&#13;
administration and University&#13;
Committee, early in January of&#13;
this year. At that time. shortly&#13;
after the dismissal and reinstatement&#13;
of 27 Parkside&#13;
faculty, the Council felt the need&#13;
for someone" . . who had had&#13;
a broad ~ulty government and&#13;
They make things happen in the rural pove t h&#13;
the big city slum, the, Indian reservati~nY 0110"·.&#13;
attorneys make the law serve the . VISTA&#13;
business specialists help develop m\lOO,·r. VISTA . nonty enterprIses.&#13;
VISTAS teach, work with street&#13;
develop adult education programs and 0 g~.&#13;
cooperatives. They do all these things and I rga....&#13;
.. a ot m&lt;rt&#13;
. you ve got to hang tough to be a VISTA.The&#13;
IS tough and the road to accomplishment· JOb&#13;
one. You've got to be mature, dedicated an~ca7&#13;
You've got to want to donate a year of your"hr '&#13;
helpmg th,IS natI?n's poor quit being poor. e to&#13;
If you re sertOUS about changing the wa f&#13;
world, if Y&lt;lUhave the skills and the desire toy~&#13;
0&#13;
lbr&#13;
you think you can make things better check' rye,if&#13;
1&#13;
. ,tnWlth&#13;
the. Vo unteers In SerVIce To America re&#13;
tatIves on campus. VISTA films will be Shown~&#13;
today and tomorrow. .GO&#13;
Have a question on VISTA?? Call toll free-Ill&gt;&#13;
424-8589·&#13;
Interested in changing the way things are?? You&#13;
can explore various ways to make the scene better by&#13;
talking with former VISTA Volunteers on campuS&#13;
today and tomorrow. Ex-Volunteers In Service to&#13;
America have an information booth set up in&#13;
Greenquist Hall from 9:00 to 5:00 to discUSS the&#13;
program and recruit mature, skilled men and women&#13;
who want to help solve some of the problems this&#13;
country faces.&#13;
Within VISTA the emphasis has shifted to the&#13;
specialist volunteers who bring specific knowledge&#13;
and skill to the people they serve. Therefore. in addition&#13;
to men and women with natural ability and a&#13;
well-rounded education, VISTA representatives will&#13;
actively seek out specialiSts. They will look for those&#13;
with professional training and degrees in law,&#13;
business, education, health services, architecture,&#13;
city planning, the social sciences and other fields.&#13;
The specialist volunteer puts skills into action.&#13;
Tuesday, May 4&#13;
TRANSCENDENTAL&#13;
as taught by Maharishi Mahesh '!'ogi&#13;
Introductory meeting&#13;
MEDITATION&#13;
Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall&#13;
4 p:m. and 8 p.m.&#13;
SantaJta&#13;
Snag&#13;
Skelch II&#13;
2133 91st SI.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Phone 694·1727&#13;
(Anol&gt;S ffOnt. 51. Thc:rue's)&#13;
administrative exper"&#13;
able to assist the f lence to be&#13;
d&#13;
'" acuIty a ministration in and&#13;
th . . perform,&#13;
err respective roles " ng&#13;
Baier states that h· h&#13;
instill in the facult&#13;
e&#13;
oPes to&#13;
derstanding of the Y Ian Un·&#13;
regulations of the Un,:U es. and&#13;
W&#13;
·· versltv of isconsm and the "w· .&#13;
tradition" which . ISConsin lllvolves&#13;
great faculty role in OV ,a&#13;
the University. He no~ese~~ng&#13;
faculty is strongly d'. he 'hth aViSO WIt e administratio l)&#13;
decision makers and" the&#13;
Regents, the final d . Ihe&#13;
maker." eCISlon&#13;
Mr. Baier is largely unaware&#13;
A Chance For Change&#13;
LIDDY CORRECTION&#13;
It has come to our attention&#13;
that the recent article on&#13;
visiting poet James Lidd'&#13;
contained two errors c011-&#13;
cerning the poet's coming to&#13;
teach at Parkside. First. James&#13;
Liddy will be guest writer-inresidence&#13;
during the 1972-73&#13;
school year. Second, Herbert&#13;
Kubly.. present writer-inresidence,&#13;
will remain at&#13;
Parkside and will not be&#13;
replaced by Liddy as the article&#13;
indicated. Newscope regrets&#13;
these ambiguitIes.&#13;
NEWH&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
Budweise&amp;&#13;
•.. but you&#13;
•&#13;
know that!!&#13;
being murdered, in defense ci&#13;
anticommunism, a slogan&#13;
which conceals a sinisler&#13;
combination of economic aad&#13;
political. justification by tbe&#13;
Wall Street-Pentagoo Eo·&#13;
terprise. Supporting dictators&#13;
who claim to be friendsin onler&#13;
to maintain profitable alliances&#13;
with capitalism is the game that&#13;
Washington has been plal111&amp;&#13;
for decades. Franco in SpaiD&#13;
Chiang . Kai-shek ID&#13;
"nationalist" China, Stroessnef&#13;
in Paraguay, la Junta in&#13;
Greece, and Ky io Sooth&#13;
Vietnam (who recently galt&#13;
concessions. to all Americanoil&#13;
companies) are a few of tlf&#13;
allies of American democrat1&#13;
The military organizatioll&#13;
that defends the interestso/tir&#13;
American government (noltit&#13;
people) has finally been ".&#13;
posed in the Calleyaffair.",.&#13;
lieutenant, as a hwnan l)eUIg.lS&#13;
guilty of the charges passed by&#13;
his comrades, but perhaPSI&#13;
professional military mill&#13;
should not be tried in ",on, "&#13;
even ~onsidered a hum~&#13;
species, since the d~ree&#13;
alienation in this caste IS sam;&#13;
that it has ceased to func~ II&#13;
a sensitive or moral edJIY&#13;
Duty, honor, palriotism,1W&#13;
free world, national "'::&#13;
have evidenllY subdued t!Jt&#13;
principles attached to ~&#13;
universal concept of lo\'t&#13;
the human condition. ed frOI'&#13;
A lession can be learn is III&#13;
defeat, and the first one&#13;
LETTERS&#13;
VISTA&#13;
(Volunteers In Service To America)&#13;
NEEDS: BUSINESS MAJORS HEALTH SPECIALISTS&#13;
LIBERAL ARTS MAJORS EDUCATION MAJORS&#13;
and THOUSANDS of others!&#13;
WE HAVE A LOT TO SHARE.&#13;
REPRESENTATIVES IN GREENQUIST HALL. TODAY AND TOMORROW. - 9- 5&#13;
VISTA FLICK' TO • DAy AND TOMORROW 4:00 P.M.&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The war in Indochina is lost, it&#13;
has been sinc~ it started, and is&#13;
now a smelling cadaver that has&#13;
been exposed to the open for ten&#13;
years. The Vietnamese (these&#13;
are people too) and American&#13;
lives have been sacrificed in&#13;
vain, and the mental and&#13;
physical suffering that have&#13;
been paid by those directly or&#13;
indirectly involved in this&#13;
bloodbath is hard to be&#13;
evaluated. We are left with a&#13;
war-guilt complex that will be&#13;
in our conscience, if we have&#13;
any left, for the rest of our lives.&#13;
The military termination of&#13;
the war (the moral occurred a&#13;
long time ago) is far from sight&#13;
in spite of the time-table&#13;
produced by the president,&#13;
since it is quality, not quantity,&#13;
that in the last instance will&#13;
determine the final question of&#13;
hostilities. While personnel are&#13;
leaving Vietnam, new kinds of&#13;
bombs are tried in the most&#13;
sadomasoquistic experiments&#13;
that the world has known:&#13;
napalm, Riot Control Agent CS,&#13;
blockbusters, etc. It is indeed&#13;
symptomatic that in this&#13;
culture, one of our heroes has&#13;
been James Bond, the agent&#13;
With permission to kill.&#13;
The means of communication&#13;
~re used by the forces in power&#13;
to such a fashion that one&#13;
won~ers if they are maintaining&#13;
a dlalogue with a zombieculture.&#13;
"Our boys .... "our&#13;
brothers" keep murdering, and&#13;
Students' International&#13;
Meditation Society&#13;
iL°.., \e\\ - it"", Here -it":'; Feminine&#13;
ilos FOR FR.\I LES ONLY!&#13;
It's all in the Cut-It\ the "SEX LOOK"&#13;
~tS~;&#13;
iNI §:))0U9&#13;
LERMAN HAIRDRESSERS&#13;
THE FIRST WI1'l1 THE NEWEST&#13;
Stylists at your service Tues. 8:30 - 6;&#13;
Wod., Thurs., Fri. 8:30 - 8; Sal. 8 to 5&#13;
Member or Wise. lIair Fashion Committee&#13;
-:\::'\D ::'\OWFor.&#13;
the Budget-Minded, a Mini-Salon with TtIlNI·PRICESbehInd&#13;
Sketc:::hll-'"The Back Boo It CaJl CM-I121 ask lor "n. BI" .,. {or young and old.&#13;
, , . e au DOOI',"&#13;
p 2&#13;
aring Attract&#13;
:\JIKEKLH111 ofThe&#13;
\pdl-. I •l.&#13;
T\\'O&#13;
hould&#13;
public&#13;
rvice.&#13;
TRANSCENDENTAL&#13;
MEDITATION&#13;
as taught by Maharishi Mahesh yogi&#13;
Introductory meeting&#13;
Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall&#13;
4 p:m. and 8 p.m.&#13;
Students' International&#13;
Meditation Society&#13;
lhe&#13;
Sa11ta11a&#13;
Sltag&#13;
-iL·s Fe1ni11i11e&#13;
it·. L ~, -L&#13;
H's all i11 th ,ut- It'-. the · SEX LOOK"'&#13;
it\ ) O\IIS - at&#13;
LEHMAN -I IRDR&#13;
'l HE FIR T WI'l'II THE I'\EWEST&#13;
• lw li!ts at your service Tues. 8.30 - 6;&#13;
W'! ., Thur ., Fri. 8:30 - 8: Sat. 8 to 5&#13;
. kt l&lt;'h I&#13;
ERS&#13;
3032 Lathrop ve.&#13;
Raine&#13;
Phone G37-2533&#13;
2133 91st St.&#13;
Cl!ltt,.tta lla4 • at._ aDd h:ohl"•&gt;&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Phone 694-1727&#13;
(A&lt;"ro~ from St. Tht:rese'~)&#13;
emb r of Wi c. Hair Fa bion Committee&#13;
- .\ D _"O\V - or. the Budget-. tinded, a . tini-S 1 'th .. II",... PRICE&#13;
beh1ntl · etch 11-"The Back O ~.on " 1 " ,u · S-&#13;
'all ,112'7 1 k !or "Th oor .. . for young and old. · · · e Back Door."&#13;
lea\·ing his colleagues home lo&#13;
do the dirt~ work."&#13;
The members of the regents&#13;
committee suggested Prof.&#13;
Greenebaum check with CWM&#13;
and Green Bay re: student&#13;
e\'aluation Evidently there&#13;
h3ve been significant problems&#13;
"1th ·tudent e\'aluatJon at these&#13;
campu e:- After the hearing :\'ewscope&#13;
~poke briefly with Asst Prof&#13;
Greenebaum. He explained that&#13;
h1. committee was composed&#13;
primarily of intere ·ted teachers&#13;
tf1\'e tenured and five nontenured&#13;
member· of the c1ence&#13;
Di\'uon). He al o mentioned&#13;
that 1x student were conulled.&#13;
&#13;
Advisor Hopes To Instill&#13;
by :\lark Timpany&#13;
of The :\'ewscope Staff&#13;
Joseph G. Baier is an advisor&#13;
to the Parkside faculty and&#13;
administration. He represents&#13;
the University Faculty Council,&#13;
the executive committee of the&#13;
University Faculty Assembly.&#13;
:\Ir Baier was sent here, with&#13;
the approval of the Parkside&#13;
administration and University&#13;
Committee, early in January of&#13;
this year. At that time. shortly&#13;
after the dismissal and reinstatement&#13;
of 27 Parkside&#13;
faculty, the Council felt the need&#13;
for someone " ... who had had&#13;
a broad ~ulty government and&#13;
administrative exper·&#13;
able to assist the f ience to&#13;
administration in peacuflty and&#13;
th · r orrn&#13;
eir respective roles . in&#13;
Baier states that h · h&#13;
instill in the facult~- op to&#13;
derstanding of the · 1&#13;
an un.&#13;
regulations of the Cni'.~ e . and&#13;
W. · \Crs1t\' of&#13;
1sconsin and the "\\" . . tradition" which i·n . tlscon in&#13;
\O ve great faculty role in ov . a&#13;
the University. He no1e e:.;ng&#13;
faculty is strong!~· ct' . he . h , a \'ISO&#13;
wit the administrat· I)&#13;
d . . ion the&#13;
ec1s10n makers and&#13;
Regents, the final d . ~he&#13;
maker." ec1s1on&#13;
Mr. Baier is largely un&#13;
VISTA=&#13;
aware&#13;
A Chance For Change&#13;
Interested in changing the way things are?? You&#13;
can explore various ways lo make the scene better by&#13;
talking with former VISTA Volunteers on campus&#13;
todav and tomorrow. Ex-Volunteers In Service to&#13;
Ame.rica have an information booth set up in&#13;
Greenquisl Hall from 9:00 to 5:00 to discuss the&#13;
program and recruit mature, skilled men and women&#13;
who want lo help solve some of the problems this&#13;
country faces.&#13;
They make things happen in the rural pove t h&#13;
the big city slum, the. Indian reservatiiny ; 11011&#13;
attorneys make the law serve the poo · ,&#13;
1&#13;
STA&#13;
business specialists help develop mi· r .. \ISTA . nor,ty&#13;
terpnses. VISTAS teach, work with str l&#13;
develop _adult education programs andee O ga&#13;
cooperatives. They do all these things and I rgal!Ut , a ot more . You ve got to hang tough to be a VISTA. The&#13;
1s tough and the road to accomplishment ·s joh&#13;
Y , 1 a ro&#13;
one. ou ve got to be mature dedicated and&#13;
Within VISTA the emphasis has shifted to the&#13;
. pecialist volunteers who bring specific knowledge&#13;
and skill lo the people they serve. Therefore, in addition&#13;
to men and women with natural ability and a&#13;
well-rounded education, VISTA representatives will&#13;
actively seek out specialists. They will look for those&#13;
with professional training and degrees in law,&#13;
busines , education, health services, architecture,&#13;
city planning, the social sciences and other fields.&#13;
, ' capabl&#13;
You _ve go~ to w_ant to donate a year of your rr&#13;
helping th1&#13;
1s· nati_on's poor quit being poor. 1 e lo&#13;
If you re ser10us about changing the way r&#13;
world,_ if y-0u have the skills and the desire to s:~, the&#13;
you thmk you can make things better check · 'If&#13;
1 . ' In,,,,,&#13;
the Vo unteers In Service To America re tat. ~e&#13;
1ves on campus. VISTA films will be shown at 4&#13;
today and tomorrow.&#13;
llave a question on VISTA?? Call toll free_&#13;
424-8580.&#13;
The specialist volunteer puts skills into action.&#13;
LIDDY CORRECTION&#13;
Il has come to our attention&#13;
that the recent article on&#13;
visiting poet James Lidd·&#13;
contained two errors co~-&#13;
cerning the poet's coming lo&#13;
teach at Parkside. First. James&#13;
Liddy will be guest writer-inre&#13;
idence during the 1972-73&#13;
- chool year. Second, Herbert&#13;
Kubly, present writer-inresidence.&#13;
will remain at&#13;
Parkside and will not be&#13;
replaced by Liddy as the article&#13;
indicated. Newscope regrets&#13;
these ambiguil,P.s.&#13;
NEW!!&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
Budweisec&#13;
... but you&#13;
-&#13;
know that!!&#13;
LETTERS&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
The war in Indochina is lost, it&#13;
has been sine!'! it started, and is&#13;
now a smelling cadaver that has&#13;
been exposed to the open for ten&#13;
years. The Vietnamese (these&#13;
are people tool and American&#13;
lives have been sacrificed in&#13;
vain, and the mental and&#13;
physical suffering that have&#13;
been paid by those directly or&#13;
indirectly involved in this&#13;
bloodbath is hard to be&#13;
evaluated. We are left with a&#13;
war-guilt complex that will be&#13;
in our conscience, if' we have&#13;
any left, for the rest of our lives.&#13;
The military termination of&#13;
the war (the moral occurred a&#13;
long time ago) is far from sight&#13;
in spite of the time-table&#13;
produced by the president,&#13;
since it is quality, not quantity,&#13;
that in the last instance will&#13;
determine the final question of&#13;
hostilities. While personnel are&#13;
leaving Vietnam, new kinds of&#13;
bombs are tried in the most&#13;
sadomasoquistic experiments&#13;
that the world has known:&#13;
napalm, Riot Control Agent CS,&#13;
blockbusters, etc. It is indeed&#13;
symptomatic that in this&#13;
culture, one of our heroes has&#13;
~en James Bond, the agent&#13;
with permission to kill.&#13;
The means of communication&#13;
~re used by the forces in power&#13;
m such a fashion that one&#13;
won~ers if they are maintaining&#13;
a dialogue with a zombiecul&#13;
tur e. "Our boys", "our&#13;
brothers" keep murdering, and&#13;
VISTA&#13;
being murdered, in deferu e ct&#13;
anticommunism, a slogan&#13;
which conceals a sini ter&#13;
combination of economic and&#13;
political justification b\' the&#13;
Wall Street-Pentagon· Eoterprise.&#13;
Supporting diclalol'$&#13;
who claim to be friends in order&#13;
to maintain profitable allian&#13;
with capitalism is the game that&#13;
Washington has been playmg&#13;
for decades. Franco in pa&#13;
Chiang . Kai-shek 1n&#13;
"nationalist" China, Stroe&#13;
in Paraguay, la Junta •&#13;
Greece, and Ky m out•&#13;
Vietnam (who recently ga1&#13;
concessions to all American oiJ&#13;
companies) are a few of tll'&#13;
allies of American democracy&#13;
The military organizall&#13;
that defends the interest oltbe&#13;
American government nol tll'&#13;
people) has finally been&#13;
posed in the Calley affair 'l1uS&#13;
lieutenant as a human bem ,&#13;
guilty of the charges passl'd •&#13;
his comrades, but perhaps 1&#13;
professional military ma&#13;
should not be tried in court. or&#13;
even ~onsidered a hu!ll d&#13;
species, since the d~ree&#13;
alienation in this caste is so&#13;
that it has ceased to functiO!l 15&#13;
a sensitive or moral entI&#13;
Duty, honor, patriotism,. f]Jg&#13;
free world, national m&#13;
have evidently subdued&#13;
principles attached to&#13;
universal concept of love&#13;
the human condition. ,,&#13;
A lession can be learned ,&#13;
defeat, and the fir5t one&#13;
(Volunteers In Service To America)&#13;
NEEDS: BUSINESS MAJORS HEALTH SPECIALISTS&#13;
LIBERAL ARTS MAJORS EDUCATION MAJORS&#13;
and THOUSANDS of others!&#13;
WE HAVE_ A LOT TO SHARE.&#13;
REPRESENTATIVES N&#13;
5&#13;
I GREENQUIST HALL, TODAY AND TOMORROW , 9-&#13;
VISTA FLICK: TODAY ANO TOMORROW 4:00 P.M. &#13;
'Wisconsin Tradition'&#13;
jar concerns regard-&#13;
, l/Jt ilia nnel decisions&#13;
IC f'cul~~ at the time of&#13;
~ we: ;iring. He responded&#13;
Ibt: lfIauestion concerning ,the&#13;
III a ~ent of faculty review&#13;
fllabll&#13;
called for in the&#13;
;.odeh~~;,sDecember 10 [Klint&#13;
",..net 0"1 have no idea. I was&#13;
l"'I"~ved and will not be&#13;
~ ~ed" Baier was unaware&#13;
",01&gt; ";"ent Parkside Faculty&#13;
~ lbCi;uon statement calling&#13;
~e establishmento~ those&#13;
~h1iCguidelines.Mr. Baler ~as&#13;
..... officially met With llt,'er id&#13;
C&#13;
oncerning the Parksi e&#13;
JO'i(lle .'&#13;
r~euIlYAssOcIatIOn.&#13;
ReIlardingthe use of a. special&#13;
rt'iieW commi ttee, In the&#13;
~atter of the "super six" at th&#13;
time of the firing of 27 ParkSid:&#13;
faculty, Mr. Baier said, "This&#13;
has not b~n University custom&#13;
nor practice. I think it was&#13;
c~eat:d under very special&#13;
~lrcuI?stances. I have heard of&#13;
Its e~lstence. I have also heard&#13;
that It no longer does exist." He&#13;
stated that " ... there is no&#13;
!egal ~tatu~for that committee&#13;
In University structure."&#13;
In a speech before the faculty&#13;
last Wednesday, Joseph Baier&#13;
suggested that the admnustr-ator&#13;
is the only person&#13;
who can seen the whole picture&#13;
of the University. He did state&#13;
the " ... administrator doesn't&#13;
last long if he loses his&#13;
faculties. "&#13;
Recipients of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-P arkside Dis ti nguished&#13;
Teaching Awards for 1971 are Oliver&#13;
Hayward, Peter Martin, Robert Schrader&#13;
and James Ward. Each will receive an&#13;
award check for $500, which will be&#13;
presented to him at the Spring Honors&#13;
Convocation.&#13;
Recipients of Honorable Mention for&#13;
Distinguished Teaching Awards are Paul&#13;
Beyer, Walter Graffin, Henry Mann and&#13;
Roman Schauble .&#13;
Teachers Awards Committee Members:&#13;
Leon Applebaum, Stella Gray, Alan&#13;
Grossberg, Norbert Isenberg, Herbert&#13;
Kubly (chairman), Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
William Jeranek, William Loendorf,&#13;
Warren Nedry, Florence Onnhfk, Evelyn&#13;
sagat, Kathleen Turner. '&#13;
It&#13;
a&#13;
I:&#13;
..&#13;
•&#13;
..&#13;
APriI!!..ta. Vietor Christ Janner&#13;
Mythology and magic in architecture&#13;
P!f ..i&#13;
"I say that one stands before&#13;
the object condemned, helpless,&#13;
and fundamentally out of&#13;
control." "We think we can take&#13;
a simp.le idea like analysis,&#13;
synthesis and solution as a&#13;
mock-up model of life and learn&#13;
from iL"&#13;
It is Christ-Janner's belief&#13;
that man exists rationally in 8&#13;
profoundly irrational world, as&#13;
he said Thursday night in&#13;
Greenquist hall. It is this&#13;
TOTHE EDITOR&#13;
recognize that we are&#13;
nIpCIIlSibiefor having killed 1.5&#13;
milIiGIl Civilians,most of them&#13;
Americanand allied actions,&#13;
lid that we are not in any&#13;
p:ition to dictate moral conllJrt&#13;
10 anyone,and finally, too,&#13;
daIt the empire is collapsing in&#13;
lpiteor the injection to revive it&#13;
poriodicallythrough the circus&#13;
IIIoa 10 the moon.&#13;
Ilidtey Mouseshould retire to&#13;
Ibole and meditate about how&#13;
..... nUy,beastly and insane&#13;
- has been. After this&#13;
....ration he should self-&#13;
~ and perhaps from the&#13;
1Sb~ will emerge a New&#13;
.\alorO:an, a total human being&#13;
Who will see in himself a more&#13;
bumble, limited, and conIrIcktory&#13;
person and in his&#13;
10lio.. man another human&#13;
~ rather than a client to&#13;
I With in business or&#13;
IOm.thing that has to be&#13;
:::.OYedin order to get the job&#13;
Jose Ortega&#13;
Dear Editor' As' ,&#13;
Parkaia&#13;
concerned student at&#13;
~ . de Ueelthat it is my duty&#13;
....."':"~ oul a gross injustice&#13;
lbest~ been perpetrated on&#13;
I1IIde t bodtbody of UWP BY the&#13;
Then. y of UWP.&#13;
II theIn''·U JY.;&gt; ce to which I refer&#13;
IUd ~Iection of the New ~:~tGovernment&#13;
IlUdenlUon. The reason the&#13;
oJlI!ticebody perpetrated the&#13;
On Itself was not by&#13;
commission of an act, rather by&#13;
the omission of an act.&#13;
The act was voting in the&#13;
recent SGA elections.&#13;
FAILURE to vote by some 3,000&#13;
plus students was the reason for&#13;
the election of an SGA with&#13;
Luddites in control (Nice&#13;
campaigning Luddites!).&#13;
I, for one, have nothing&#13;
against any individual Luddite,&#13;
nor the group for that matter.&#13;
However, my' beliefs do not&#13;
happen to coincide with theirs.&#13;
To set matters straight, neither&#13;
am I an avid Tim Eaker fan. I&#13;
am, however, an advocate of a&#13;
strong stud~nt government&#13;
acting on those matters which&#13;
affect the relationship between&#13;
the student hody and the&#13;
university administration.&#13;
I cannot stand idly by while a&#13;
Luddite-sponsored, Ludditecarried&#13;
proposal to ratify the&#13;
"People's Peace Treaty" is&#13;
carried. Anyone who read the&#13;
last issue of Newscope could not&#13;
help but notice that those&#13;
members of SGA voting to&#13;
ratify are either declared&#13;
Luddites or were elected on the&#13;
Halloween Party ticket, itself&#13;
loaded with Luddites. No&#13;
matter who sponsored the&#13;
proposal, however, the SGA had&#13;
no business voting on it. According&#13;
to Article I, Section A.6.&#13;
under Student Government of&#13;
the Constitution: "The senate&#13;
shall investigate all policy&#13;
affecting student life and interests&#13;
they deem necessary."&#13;
If the SGA now seated deems it&#13;
necessary to ratify something&#13;
pertaining to anything so&#13;
personal as my beliefs concerning&#13;
the points covered in&#13;
the "People's Peace Treaty",&#13;
then it's already time for the&#13;
senate to investigate itself on&#13;
the matter of its collecth·e&#13;
swelled head. The senate can&#13;
"investigate" to its heart's&#13;
content, but it had better dray.&#13;
the line there Wltil the investigation&#13;
is complete. (I&#13;
believe "investigation" caJls for&#13;
a gathering of facts before&#13;
reaching some conclusion.)&#13;
My congratulations to&#13;
Senator Jeanette Dremel and&#13;
the other members or SGA who&#13;
had the forethought to consider&#13;
whether individual students&#13;
would desire to have someone&#13;
else voting for them on so&#13;
touchy a matter.&#13;
Meanwhile the SGA had&#13;
better clean its own constitutional&#13;
house before telling&#13;
me how to run mine. I'didn't&#13;
vote Halloween Party so 1 have&#13;
to thaok the pathetically&#13;
apathetic silent majority for my&#13;
plight.&#13;
John Leighton&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
OUR&#13;
ADVERTIZERS&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
JOIN THE NEWSCOPE STAFF&#13;
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED&#13;
STAFF MEMBERS NEEDED FOR NEXT YEAR&#13;
CREDITS AVAILABLE SALARIES&#13;
Get your name in the paper&#13;
DO SOMETHING FOR UWP -IT NEEDS IT AND NEll/SCOPE NEEDS YOU&#13;
COME TO THE STAFF MEETING THURSDAY, 1:30&#13;
KENOSHA CAMPUS, ME'SCOPE OFFICE&#13;
Tuesda)', Apnl 27 Red .. 1&#13;
Joanne Schlegel of l;WP musIc&#13;
facult)' will present a plano&#13;
recital 8:00 p.m Room 103,&#13;
Greenquist Hall T~nnl&#13;
Rangers vs ~Iarqu&lt;tte 2.&#13;
p.m. Pershing Courts. Racine&#13;
Golf. Rangers V5 Lo~ola&#13;
:. .... -$' «ll~~~~'8ll1~'I8IliIllll"lSlIllllll_•• __ ._"lIllllilll;l~illl;l~&#13;
Newscope&#13;
rationality which makes man&#13;
believe he can marupulate the&#13;
world with schemes of interaction.&#13;
This feeling is caughl m hi&#13;
creations 10 which he relies&#13;
beavily on myth and the natural&#13;
lay of the land He cnueued&#13;
technology for Its funcllOnal&#13;
aspect as lo the human 0,&#13;
perience. As be sa) _ "whoever&#13;
said thal functionalism ,. a&#13;
archilecll.o-e'! "ben we belle\e&#13;
that eVer)1hmg is packaged In a&#13;
place and everything in lIS&#13;
place, then "'e run mto thiS kmd&#13;
of reliance that totally depends&#13;
upon this perfect kInd of Idea&#13;
that I do architecture because II&#13;
CA p&#13;
He ho.. eel som&#13;
""urche .. hI"" are d&#13;
using hi archtol)pI(a) m&#13;
lo create an .lmaM m~ heal&#13;
appear.nC' of the nOt rlor&#13;
desIgn Som of the oho "ere&#13;
so spectacular that the aud.&#13;
.. round 100) r etten ap&#13;
proached that of a fIr "&#13;
dlsplay&#13;
. Ir Chn t ·Janner not onl)&#13;
poke but demon Ira. d&#13;
through hi 0,,""" cnoaho that&#13;
"archJtectw-- \erb. not a&#13;
noun, and UlIert'for It 10\"01\:&#13;
I A bean ~hlCh nolonl)&#13;
ph) !Calbut PJrI'Ua! a '" II&#13;
BE T&#13;
$amota In §,ined&#13;
,o/J~ w /J1aIian §'oorM&#13;
liquor Store&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
Monday. April 26, 0 lrlCI&#13;
Attorne) Talk. Burton SCOll ,.,11&#13;
speak on "Lawful Dissent'·&#13;
7:30 p.rn Room 0111&#13;
Greenqwsl Hall ponsored b)&#13;
the Pre-La .. Club&#13;
Warren 'edry Edllor&#13;
Marc Eisen :-.;-~ EdItor&#13;
John Koloen Copy EdI.or&#13;
Jim 'o)an BuslOe. tana er&#13;
John LeIghton Amerll IIlg&#13;
. lana ft'"&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, BoIl Soren~. BIll&#13;
Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Bob&#13;
Mainland, Dean Lowno , ,hke&#13;
Kurth, Bob Borchard., Ken&#13;
Konkol, Ke\'In .leKay. James&#13;
Casper, Paul LornarUre, "en&#13;
Talis&#13;
PetTlf) In&#13;
Ba tball&#13;
Dominican&#13;
Domm n&#13;
prlr&#13;
Ran100&#13;
('our&#13;
r v&#13;
pm at&#13;
BUSI1''ESS STAFF'&#13;
areesSocha, Don .Iarjala, John&#13;
Gary, Barbara Scott&#13;
(loll&#13;
I t&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA- 658.3131&#13;
~wisconsin Tradition'&#13;
jor concerns regard- ,..., rna d .. ,J LU" It . personnel ec1s10ns&#13;
facu Yi·ssues at the time of were ded I ass firing. He re~pon&#13;
rn su·on concermng the&#13;
8 que . IO . tunent of faculty reV1ew&#13;
iablt es called for in the&#13;
d hn ' o · t 11 r's December 1 pom ce o "d I .,1 have no I ea. was&#13;
::ived and will not be&#13;
1.ed ,. Baier was unaware 011 -ec· ent Parkside Faculty lbt • a11· ation statement c mg&#13;
th establishment of those ~ e B. h _,11licguidelines. Mr. aier _as i-- officially met with&#13;
ere concerning the Parkside&#13;
lll,l'OO . t· raculty Assoc1a ion.&#13;
R arding the use of a. special&#13;
rt\iell committee, m the&#13;
~atter of the "super six" at the&#13;
time of the firing of 27 Parkside&#13;
faculty, Mr. Baier said, "This&#13;
has not been University custom&#13;
nor practice. I think it was&#13;
c~eat~d under very special&#13;
~1rcur_nstances. I have heard of&#13;
its e~1stence. I have also heard&#13;
that 1t no longer does exist.., H&#13;
stated that ". . . there is n~&#13;
!egal ~tatu:'"for that committee m University structure."&#13;
In a speech before the faculty&#13;
last Wednesday, Joseph Baier&#13;
su_g~ested that the administrator&#13;
is the only person&#13;
who can seen the whole picture&#13;
of the University. He did state&#13;
the " ... administrator doesn't&#13;
last long if he loses his&#13;
faculties."&#13;
Recipients of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Distinguished&#13;
Teaching Awards for 1971 are Oliver&#13;
Hayward, Peter Martin, Robert Schrader&#13;
and James Ward. Each will receive an&#13;
award check for $500, which will be&#13;
presented to him at the Spring Honors&#13;
Convocation.&#13;
Recipients of Honorable Mention for&#13;
Distinguished Teaching Awards are Paul&#13;
Beyer, Walter Graffin, Henry Mann and&#13;
Roman Schauble.&#13;
Teachers Awards Committee Members:&#13;
Leon Applebaum, Stella Gray, Alan&#13;
Grossberg, Norbert Isenberg, Herbert&#13;
Kubly (chairman), Jewel Echelbarger,&#13;
William Jeranek, William Loendorf,&#13;
Warren Nedry, Florence Onninlc, Evelyn&#13;
Sagat, Kathleen Turner. '&#13;
Victor Christ Janner&#13;
Mythology and niagi in ar hi&#13;
.&#13;
' "I say that one stands before&#13;
the object condemned, helple ,&#13;
and fundamentally out of&#13;
control." "We think we can take a simple idea like analy i .&#13;
synthesis and solution as a&#13;
mock-up model of life and learn&#13;
from it."&#13;
It is Christ-Janner's belief&#13;
that man exists rationally in a&#13;
profoundly irrational world, a&#13;
he said Thursday night in&#13;
Greenquist hall. It is thi&#13;
tur,&#13;
TO THE EDITOR&#13;
recognize that we are&#13;
responsible for having killed 1.5&#13;
ion civilians, most of them&#13;
American and allied actions,&#13;
and that we are not in any&#13;
ition to dictate moral condiet&#13;
to anyone, and finally, too,&#13;
the empire is collapsing in&#13;
SJXle of the injection to revive it&#13;
nod1cally through the circus&#13;
to the moon.&#13;
1ckey Mouse should retire to&#13;
1 bile and meditate about how&#13;
arroganUy, beastly and insane&#13;
ha been. After this&#13;
ration he should selfct&#13;
and perhaps from the&#13;
e. will emerge a New&#13;
en~an, a total human being&#13;
will see in himself a more&#13;
mble, limited, and condictory&#13;
person and in his&#13;
ellow man another human&#13;
~ rather than a client to&#13;
1 with in business or mething that has to be&#13;
oyed in order to get the job&#13;
Jose Ortega&#13;
r Editor· As • I&#13;
Park ~ concerned student at&#13;
lo _ide 1 feel that it is my duty&#13;
~~ out a gross injustice as been perpetrated on&#13;
~Udent body of UWP BY the&#13;
Thent ~y of UWP.&#13;
thelnJUSlice to which I refer&#13;
hid ,election of the New -:t t Government&#13;
dent ion. The reason the&#13;
lice body_ perpetrated the on itself was not by&#13;
commission of an act, rather by&#13;
the omission of an act.&#13;
The act was voting in the&#13;
recent SGA elections.&#13;
FAILURE to vote by some 3,000&#13;
plus students was the reason for&#13;
the election of an SGA with&#13;
Luddites in control (Nice&#13;
campaigning Luddites! ).&#13;
I, for one, have nothing&#13;
against any individual Luddite,&#13;
nor the group for that matter.&#13;
However, my beliefs do not&#13;
happen to coincide with theirs.&#13;
To set matters straight, neither&#13;
am I an avid Tim Eaker fan. I&#13;
am, however, an advocate of a&#13;
strong student government&#13;
acting on those matters which&#13;
affect the relationship between&#13;
the student body and the&#13;
university administration.&#13;
I cannot stand idly by while a&#13;
Luddite-sponsored, Ludditecarried&#13;
proposal to ratify the&#13;
"People's Peace Treaty" is&#13;
carried. Anyone who read the&#13;
last issue of Newscope could not&#13;
help but notice that those&#13;
members of SGA voting to&#13;
ratify are either declared&#13;
Luddites or were elected on the&#13;
Halloween Party ticket, itself&#13;
loaded with Luddites. No&#13;
matter who sponsored the&#13;
proposal, however, the SGA had&#13;
no business voting on it. According&#13;
to Article I, Section A.6.&#13;
under Student Government of&#13;
the Constitution: "The senate&#13;
shall investigate all policy&#13;
affecting student life and interests&#13;
they deem necessary."&#13;
P7amout&gt; ~ f7med&#13;
@)~ w- #lalian P7oo&lt;/4&#13;
Liquor Store&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
KENOSHA- 658-313 1&#13;
If the SGA now seated deems it&#13;
necessary to ratify something&#13;
pertaining to anything . o&#13;
personal as my beliefs concerning&#13;
the points covered in&#13;
the "People's Peace Treaty•·,&#13;
then it's already time for the&#13;
senate to investigate itself on the matter of its collecth·e&#13;
swelled head. The enale can&#13;
"investigate" to its heart'.&#13;
content, but it had better dra\\&#13;
the line there until the inves&#13;
ti ga tion is complete. (I&#13;
believe "investigation" call for&#13;
a gathering of fact before&#13;
reaching some conclusion.)&#13;
My congratulation to&#13;
Senator Jeanette Dremel and&#13;
the other members of SGA who&#13;
had the forethought to con ider&#13;
whether individual student&#13;
would desire to have someone&#13;
else voting for them on so&#13;
touchy a matter.&#13;
Meanwhile the SGA had&#13;
better clean its own con·&#13;
stitutional house before telling me how to run mine. I · didn't&#13;
vote Halloween Party so I have&#13;
to thank the pathetically&#13;
apathetic silent majority for my&#13;
plight. John Leighton&#13;
PATRONIZE&#13;
OUR&#13;
ADVERTIZERS&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
JOIN THE NEWSCOPE STAFF&#13;
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED&#13;
STAFF MEMBERS NEEDED FOR NEXT YEAR&#13;
CREDITS AVAILABLE SALARIES&#13;
Get your name in the paper&#13;
DO SOMETHING FOR U P - IT NEEDS IT AND E SCOPE EEDS YOU&#13;
COME TO THE STAFF EETIHG THURSDAY, 1:30&#13;
KEHOSH A CAMPUS, NE SCOPE OFFICE&#13;
r &#13;
Pag~"&#13;
April 26, 1911&#13;
by Bob gorchardt&#13;
of the ewsrepe Staff&#13;
good the musicians are they've&#13;
got to have consistently good&#13;
charts to prate it.&#13;
A second flaw which is totally&#13;
inexcusable for an innovative&#13;
group is thrs- Chicago made It&#13;
by having an original sound and&#13;
10 a time when Imitation groups&#13;
arc dcminaung the market an&#13;
orjgmal sound should be held as&#13;
almost sacred With that in&#13;
rrund listen to "fUght 602&#13;
Bhnd". and tell me why they&#13;
gave it up for an exact copy of&#13;
Cr""by·. SlIUS. 'a h and Young.&#13;
ClI1Co\GO&#13;
Columbia Obi album)&#13;
110&#13;
1J in S('raphln('&#13;
ItntN.'rt l.dmm&#13;
"Ir rr&gt; Kuth guuar and vocats&#13;
\ It Pt.'rn Woochl.lnd.&#13;
I t ,nu~nan(' Trumpet&#13;
Pete C'l,t('ru Ra!'o~and vocals&#13;
JlIll P nku..... Trombone&#13;
I hrfl' can be no questioning&#13;
Ih(' (', Irbcr of the musrctans In&#13;
tfu groop If thl') had. lOPped&#13;
rl'( orthng .dttr tht'lr first&#13;
album thC'lr prohcl '1)(:) both as&#13;
\\,nlt'rs and In....trumentahsts&#13;
"HuhJ h.t\(' hi't'n proven There&#13;
(an ,lbu hi' no qU&lt;'slIonmg the&#13;
f,lC:I that If JJ1Z rOt:k I· 00\\&#13;
lUtl ,d('n'd a Il~~lllmat~ In·&#13;
.11\Idual form, 'hlca~o was the&#13;
~rnllpmO-'ot rlosponslble for Its&#13;
l'fMl(·l'ptlun and M:!) done the&#13;
I1lU' to propugalc It smce&#13;
Irr) BS&amp;T no apology IS&#13;
Ilt'n r))&#13;
T'u;,n- cun, ho\\('n~r. be some&#13;
I ~llI11l3Il' cfll1cal qU~liomng&#13;
,.tlnt:t'rntn~ thiS latest album&#13;
FIr I, and most ob\'lous or all,&#13;
I (IUt'~hon the It."gillmacy of Ihis&#13;
IS a daubl album Like too&#13;
lIlan) &lt;klubl~ diSCS commg out&#13;
luclay It could have made a hell&#13;
1t1.1sll\~l(' but suffers when only&#13;
Ih.lt mUl'h material IS stretched&#13;
tl,l,I(·(' as far No maller how&#13;
Drums&#13;
Key board and&#13;
Lastly. and very simply,&#13;
....ongs like "1 Don't Want Your&#13;
.\10ney··. "Travel Suite" and&#13;
..An Hour In the Shower"&#13;
cannot be tolerated from artists&#13;
with the formerly apparent&#13;
expertise of Chicago. These&#13;
songs are simply not worth&#13;
listening to.&#13;
Unlike their first album their&#13;
brilliance is seen only in&#13;
Oashcs, never sustained over&#13;
the length of an entire com+&#13;
position, Many people will&#13;
undoubtedly disagree, pointing&#13;
out songs like "Free" and&#13;
"Lowdown". But compared to&#13;
some of their earlier works&#13;
("Time", "Make Me Smile",&#13;
etc) they just don't measure up.&#13;
It SQunds corny, but they can&#13;
and should have done better.&#13;
FEATURE FILM SERIES&#13;
presents&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
of The NewscopeStaff&#13;
.&#13;
flapjacks were first created by Jack ~;~p ~~&#13;
de e Missouri on December 30, 1 . ~adl~~m~sin' aroWld in his kitchen wh~ fhe c::&#13;
up with a unique batter, that when heate h orm k a&#13;
very tasty and filling cake. people ealled t e ca f~ne&#13;
flapjack in honor of Jack. EverythlOg went 1&#13;
around Independence until a hot shot newspaperman&#13;
from New York got on to the idea.&#13;
The city slicker took the flapjack back to, New&#13;
York with him, and of course clayr;ted credIt. fO,r&#13;
discovering it. Jack Flap was an Indian and didn t&#13;
tr-avel much, so the reporter ~idn't have to worry&#13;
about the true inventor becomlOg we~l known, ,&#13;
Once the flapjack hit New York, It was r-evised,&#13;
refined and renamed the pancake, The newspaperman&#13;
tried to tag his name onto it, but no one could g~t&#13;
used to asking for a Harvey Flourcake first thing In&#13;
the morning. Ever since this beginning, the pancake has enjoyed&#13;
international acclaim. Jack Flap die~ a pauper&#13;
on a reservation, and Harvey Flourcak~ died ,a very&#13;
unhappy man. He went i,nto eaudeville with the&#13;
pancake, juggling and aaung them 10 ev.ery small&#13;
town between Arne, Iowa, and Wheeling, West&#13;
Virgina. "&#13;
Al this history came to mind while I was m the&#13;
Village Inn one morning. I assumed that they don't&#13;
know the true story behind the pancake, because I&#13;
didn't see one memorial picture of Jack Flap or even&#13;
Harvey Flourcake on any of. the walls .&#13;
Other than this obvious slight on a great man, I&#13;
like the atmosphere of the place. Restaurant~ are~'t&#13;
built helter skelter. The building and mteflor&#13;
decorating are very important in the sal&#13;
products. Colors like orange and red are su e of ~&#13;
induce one into becoming hungry. The ~Plloed~&#13;
important if the customer is to feel relaxed. AU&#13;
ung&#13;
put together quite nicely at the Village Inn a th"&#13;
chain. ' nalllllll&#13;
No matter how the place is built or f&#13;
colors, the food still remains the most'dete&#13;
0&#13;
~1al&#13;
factor in popularity. The Village Inn speci:11I1IIC&#13;
pancakes, an.d as expe~ted, they have it downaes 1lI&#13;
tried the baSIC buttermilk pancake, with an PI! 1&#13;
coffee. egg and&#13;
The pancakes were excellent. The comb,nati&#13;
the butter and hot syrup with the pancake ot~&#13;
satisfy anyone's breakfast tastes. The egg was&#13;
5&#13;
r&#13;
over easy, .and done v.ery well, Some restaurants:&#13;
to serve ffled eggs WIth a tough skin underneath&#13;
yolk, I a~swne so the egg doesn't break if it is:&#13;
ped. Frymg eggs, I have concluded, is an art.&#13;
. Coffee is served i~ pitc~ers and left on the latit&#13;
WhIle the customer IS eatmg. There is no ...&#13;
'The London Merchant' Here This Week&#13;
Murder, Prostitution, and Women's Lib will&#13;
all be presented when the Parkside Players&#13;
group presents George Lillo's "The London&#13;
Merchant". The play opens Friday at 8:15&#13;
p.m. and will continue for Saturday at the&#13;
same time and Sunday at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts Room.&#13;
"The London Merchant", or "The History&#13;
of George Barnwell", is an 18th century&#13;
British play by George Lillo. It teUs the story&#13;
of George Barnwell, a London apprentice,&#13;
who falls in love with a prostitute, Mistress&#13;
MillWood, and is influenced by her to cheat&#13;
his master and kill his uncle for money.&#13;
Lillo based the play on a 17th century ballad&#13;
which told the true story of just such a London&#13;
apprentice. The original ballad has been&#13;
arranged by Marvin Pollard, assistant&#13;
professor of music at Parkside. It will be&#13;
played on guitar and sung by Mike Ingram&#13;
between scenes of the production.&#13;
"The London Merchant" is considered by&#13;
theatrical historians as one of the significant&#13;
plays which moved the theater in England&#13;
and all of Europe towards realism.&#13;
Lillo's play was one of the first to present a&#13;
common man as the hero of a tragedy. Lillo&#13;
wrote the play in prose instead of blank verse&#13;
and started the trend toward prose as the&#13;
principal medium of expression in serious&#13;
drama. .&#13;
In this production, Don Rintz who is&#13;
directing the play for· the Parksid~ Players,&#13;
ho~s to achIeve some of the realistic impact&#13;
WhICh the play made upon London audiences&#13;
r;~rRo~'~;;"'~l&#13;
I OUR r&#13;
I ADVERr'ZERS i&#13;
1 I&#13;
WINNER OF&#13;
4 ACADEMY&#13;
AWARDS&#13;
FRIDAY, APRIL 30th 8:00 P.M.&#13;
ELOT&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
ADM. 15C&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
AND&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
Please order your Caps &amp;.&#13;
Gowns for Graduation now&#13;
all orders must be in by&#13;
April 30th.&#13;
NEW!!&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
Budweiser.,&#13;
but you&#13;
•&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE know that!!&#13;
. . .&#13;
two hundred and forty years ago.&#13;
In 1731 audiences were stunned by the&#13;
"reality" of Lillo's dia19gue and were moved&#13;
to tears by the fate of George Barnwell.&#13;
"Realism in the theater has come a long way&#13;
since then," Rintz commented. "Today, 'The&#13;
London Merchant' reads more like soap opera&#13;
than serious drama, Some of the old·&#13;
fashioned conventions of the play, like&#13;
soliloquies and asides, often provoke laughter&#13;
from modern audiences. Yet in 'The London&#13;
Merchant', Lillo dealt with basic human&#13;
experience and emotions that are as strongly&#13;
felt today as they were two centuries ago.&#13;
These will be the focus of the productioo."&#13;
In this production Mitch Hebert (Kenosha)&#13;
will play George Barnwell and Annabene&#13;
Current Rintz (Racine) will play Mistress&#13;
Millwood. John S. Gray (Racine) has beeIl&#13;
cast as the merchant, Thorowgood; Karen&#13;
Glaeser (Kenosha) will play his daughter&#13;
Maria. Rick Donnely (Racine) has been cast&#13;
as Barnwell's friend and fellow apprentice,&#13;
Trueman, and Todd Rattle (Racine) will play&#13;
Barnwell's uncle. Millwood'S servants and c0-&#13;
conspirators, Lucy and Blunt, will be played&#13;
by Janet Gerler (Racine) and Rick PonziO&#13;
(Kenosha). Completing the cast are RaY&#13;
Waldie (Kenosha) and Art Dexter (Un""&#13;
Grove), who will play the policeman and the&#13;
hangman, Marc Colby (Kenosha) is the&#13;
assistant director and wilt be the stage&#13;
manager of the production. James C~xfocd&#13;
(Kenosha) is in charge of set construction and&#13;
lighting.&#13;
"Interested in starting r&#13;
your own business this a&#13;
nationally-known product?&#13;
summer with a new h&#13;
Write R.A.H. Distributing Company,&#13;
Suite 14. 4821 Sahler Street&#13;
Omaha, Nebraska 68104 • ,&#13;
or call 402-455-3995 (no collect callS) •&#13;
distributing company&#13;
:::?x::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::&#13;
i\\ Sunnyside :~j:&#13;
~\ Florists :~~\&#13;
~\&amp;Greenhouses j\\l&#13;
::::l KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 53140 l:&#13;
~:; '::: .:,' PHONE: 69"-6700 :-:-&#13;
::*:::;:;:::~:::;:::;:;:;:~:~:;:i:~=*~:~:~:~:;:i:;;=:::;:;:;:::::::::;:::;:;&#13;
it's t~e&#13;
real thing&#13;
Rowen - Fruit Bal,ts - Gifts&#13;
VI and FRANK WEINSTOCK&#13;
•&#13;
I' e \pril 26, I 971&#13;
La ti), and \ery imply .&#13;
h " I Don't \\'ant Your&#13;
ton)", ''Tra \' I uite" and&#13;
" \ n Hour ln the hower"&#13;
c nno b tolerated from arti t ·&#13;
\\1th U1 formerly apparent&#13;
•• - • bv Paul Lomartire&#13;
of The ;o.;ewscope Staff .&#13;
Flapjacks were first created by Jack F1apHm . · December 30 1851. e Independence, ~l1ssouri'. on. . h • he came&#13;
wasju t messin' around 1:1 his kitchen w en&#13;
up with a unique batter, that when heated formed a&#13;
\·erv tastv and filling cake. People called the cakf~ a · ·. k E th·ng went me&#13;
flapjack m honor or Jae . very 1&#13;
around Independence until a hot shot newspaperman&#13;
from , ·ew York got on to the 1de~.&#13;
The citv slicker took the flapJack back to_ New&#13;
York with ·him. and or course cl~imed credit_ f~r&#13;
di co\·ering it. Jack Flap was an Indian and d1dn t&#13;
travel much, o the reporter didn't have to worry&#13;
about the true inventor becoming we_ll known, . Once the flapjack hit New York, 1t was revised,&#13;
refined and renamed the pancake. The newspaperman&#13;
tried to tag his name onto it, but no o~e cou_ld g~t&#13;
used to asking for a Harvey Flourcake first thmg m&#13;
the morning. Ever ince this beginning, the pancake has enJOYed&#13;
international acclaim. Jack Flap die~ a pauper&#13;
on a re ·ervation , and Harvey Flourcake died a very&#13;
unhappy man . He went into vaud~ville with the&#13;
pancake. juggling and eating them m every small&#13;
town between Ame, Iowa, and Wheeling, West&#13;
Virgina. . . . Al this history came to mmd while I was m the&#13;
Village Inn one morning. I assumed that they don't&#13;
know the true story behind the pancake, because I&#13;
didn't ee one memorial picture of Jack Flap or even&#13;
Harvey Flourcake on any of the walls. Other than this obvious slight on a great man, I&#13;
like the atmosphere of the place. Restaurants aren't&#13;
built helter skelter. The building and interior&#13;
ft •&#13;
decorating are very important in the sa]&#13;
products. Colors like orange and red are sue or&#13;
induce one into becoming hungry. The ~l&gt;Osed&#13;
important if the customer is to feel relaxed· 4Jlli&#13;
put together quite nicely at the Village Inn· '&#13;
chain. • ana&#13;
No matter how the place is built O r&#13;
colors, the food still remains the most' de~ 0&#13;
factor in popularity. The Village Inn spec~~&#13;
pancakes, and as expected, they have it do&#13;
tried the basic buttermilk pancake, with anV.TI&#13;
coffee.&#13;
The pancakes were excellent. The combina&#13;
the butter and hot syrup with the pancak&#13;
satisfy anyone's breakfast lastes. The egg v.as r&#13;
over easy, _and done v_ery well. Some restaura&#13;
to serve fried eggs with a tough skin underneath&#13;
yolk, I assume so the egg doesn't break if it ·&#13;
ped. Frying eggs, I have concluded, is an art 15 dnt&#13;
Coffee is served in pitchers and left on ·th&#13;
while the customer is eating. There is no&#13;
• I rt1 . or h1cago. These n : are . imply not worth&#13;
hsl nmg to&#13;
'The London Merchant' Here This Week&#13;
nl1ke th ir first album th ir&#13;
brillian i een only in&#13;
na. h ·, never u ·tamed over&#13;
th length or an entire composit&#13;
ion . :\1any people will&#13;
undoubtedly disagree, pointing&#13;
out ng like " Free" and&#13;
" Lowdown" But compared to ,&#13;
ome or their earlier works&#13;
("Time' ', "Make l\le mile" ,&#13;
etc ) th y Just don 'l measure up.&#13;
It . ounds corny. but they can&#13;
and hould have done better.&#13;
FEATURE FILM SERIES&#13;
presents&#13;
WINNER OF&#13;
4 ACADEMY&#13;
AWARDS&#13;
Cll.M:ELOT&#13;
FRIDAY, APRIL 30th 8:00 P.M.&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
ADM. 75C&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
AND&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
Please order your Caps &amp;.&#13;
Gowns for Graduation now&#13;
all orders must be in by&#13;
April 30th.&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
1urder, Prostitution, and Women's Lib will&#13;
all be presented when the Parkside Players&#13;
group presents George Lillo's "The London&#13;
1erchant". The play opens Friday at 8:15&#13;
p.m. and will continue for Saturday at the&#13;
same time and Sunday at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Kenosha Campus Fine Arts Room.&#13;
"The London Merchant", or "The History&#13;
of George Barnwell", is an 18th century&#13;
British play by George Lillo. It tells the story&#13;
or George Barnwell, a London apprentice,&#13;
who falls in love with a prostitute, Mistress&#13;
1illwood, and is influenced by her to cheat&#13;
his master and kill his uncle for money.&#13;
Lillo based the play on a 17th century ballad&#13;
which told the true story of just such a London&#13;
apprentice. The original ballad has been&#13;
arranged by Marvin Pollard, assistant&#13;
professor of music at Parkside. It will be&#13;
played on guitar and sung by Mike Ingram&#13;
between scenes of the production.&#13;
"The London Merchant" is considered by&#13;
theatrical historians as one of the significant&#13;
plays which moved the theater in England&#13;
and all of Europe towards realism.&#13;
Lillo's play was one of the first to present a&#13;
common man as the hero of a tragedy. Lillo&#13;
wrote the play in prose instead of blank verse&#13;
and started the trend toward prose as the&#13;
principal medium of expression in serious&#13;
drama. ·&#13;
In this production, Don Rintz who is&#13;
directing th~ play for the Parksid~ Players,&#13;
ho~s to achieve some of the realistic impact&#13;
which the play made upon London audiences&#13;
two hundred and forty years ago.&#13;
In 1731 audiences were stunned by the&#13;
"reality" of Lillo's dialogue and were moved&#13;
to tears by the fate of George Barnwell.&#13;
"Realism in the theater has come a long way&#13;
since then," Rintz commented. "Today, 'The&#13;
London Merchant' reads more like soap opera&#13;
than serious drama. Some of the old·&#13;
fashioned conventions of the play, like&#13;
soliloquies and asides, often provoke laughter&#13;
from modern audiences. Yet in 'The London&#13;
Merchant', Lillo dealt with basic human&#13;
experience and emotions that are as strongly&#13;
felt today as they were two centuries ago&#13;
These will be the focus of the production."&#13;
In this production Mitch Hebert (Kenosha)&#13;
will play George Barnwell and Annabelle&#13;
Current Rintz (Racine) will play Mistress&#13;
Millwood. John S. Gray (Racine) has been&#13;
cast as the merchant, Thorowgood; Karen&#13;
Glaeser (Kenosha) will play his daughter&#13;
Maria. Rick Donnely (Racine) has been ca&#13;
as Barnwell's friend and fellow apprentice&#13;
Trueman, and Todd Rattle (Racine) will play&#13;
Barnwell's uncle. Mill wood's servants and coconspirators,&#13;
Lucy and Blunt, will be played&#13;
by Janet Gerler (Racine) and Rick Ponzio&#13;
(Kenosha). Completing the cast are Ray&#13;
Waldie (Kenosha) and Art Dexter (Union&#13;
Grove), who will play the policeman and the&#13;
hangman, Marc Colby (Kenosha) is the&#13;
assistant director and will be the stage&#13;
manager of the production. James Croxford&#13;
(Kenosha) is in charge of set construction and&#13;
lighting.&#13;
"Interested in starting&#13;
your own business this&#13;
ADVERTIZERS !&#13;
•• •mJ&#13;
NEWll&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
nationally-known product?&#13;
Write R.A.H. Distributing Company,&#13;
Suite 14, 4821 Sahler Street&#13;
Omaha, Nebraska 68104 ' ,, or call 402-455-3995 (no collect calls} ·&#13;
distributing company&#13;
::if .. :..· ............ , ..... :, ............. ,' .. ';:;:&#13;
lj\l Sunnyside !Iii&#13;
Budweiser. iii Florists iiii&#13;
I&amp; Greenhouses I&#13;
. . . but you&#13;
-&#13;
know that!!&#13;
\{ Rowers - Fruit Baskets - Gifts [)l&#13;
VI and FRANK&#13;
-&#13;
WEINSTOCK&#13;
•:•:· I ·t= lf KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140 {&#13;
:)::._ ...•••• _F'HONE: 694-6700 :):)&#13;
.. ,. ·•·•·• ...... -...... --.- ~ ~ ~ :.~ :.:::· ...... • ..... :::. &#13;
waitress to fill your cup every so often, .&#13;
~ th;' only charged fifteen cents. This is the&#13;
;,.d'~ I have come across In a. restauram&#13;
,deasomeplace, is on the !&gt;all, thinking of the&#13;
~eone, f st at least in this respect.&#13;
cuswrnec I~~r anything other than the dozen or so&#13;
If)-oU°ou may be disappointed here and there.&#13;
;tU"skes,~ the chili was served 50 hot that it seems&#13;
'01' tnsta':opriatefor J~ar~~, Mexico: B~t.Chili is one "",pr differs from Individual to individual. I did&#13;
..,od tha ir chili, but the next person might.&#13;
.",rliie~~lther visit I had a chicken dinner which at&#13;
~Iars didn't seem all that good. There were four&#13;
... 00 r chicken that would seem to benefit from a&#13;
~ 00g in the breading. Included in the dinner&#13;
;tt5OI'I}renchfries, a sli~~ of candied apple, a&#13;
ttre e and a choice of JUice or salad.&#13;
t!t'~ are the only tw~ foods I ventu,red into&#13;
my visits to the Village Inn. Their menu&#13;
tiJrinB around pancakes, which start at seventy&#13;
ceo:7orbuttermilk pancakes, on up. There. are six or&#13;
"" different kinds of syrup that add variety to the&#13;
...."'1 that an individual could eat breakfast there&#13;
CIU" davsa weekand not run out of combinations of&#13;
....... k&#13;
;rup and panca es.&#13;
" '!be VillageInn chain seems to be a worthwhile&#13;
restaurant. Iwould look for one of these restaurants if&#13;
Iwere in a stran~e city,.ifthe Kenosha branch is any&#13;
odJ&lt;Ouon of their quality.&#13;
I realize the responsibility that Village Inns&#13;
"""America have shouldered in serving the public&#13;
• inStitution: the pancake. It seems only poetic&#13;
jIIi&lt;e that a descendant of Jack Flap be working&#13;
,....mere in the chain. If doing nithing, just&#13;
MSSiD' around in the kitchen.&#13;
McKenna on vote, war i:idinued from Page I) -&#13;
McKenna responded by wars the cost of litigation would&#13;
1I)'iDg, OlWesupport this piece rest entirely on his shoulders.&#13;
~ iogisIation because we feel He also noted that the ultimate&#13;
Ille peopleof Wisconsin are in purpose of the bill was not to&#13;
_olit ... if this is not true prevent Wisconsin men from&#13;
lIIeIl we'D hear about it in the serving in Vietnam but to test&#13;
n election." the constitutionality of the&#13;
President's .power to commit&#13;
the United States to an undeclared&#13;
war. "Referendum is not good&#13;
lO'm1ment. We are in a&#13;
"IIftIODtatiDnal form of&#13;
.....,..ent. What we're doing&#13;
laying that you have a right&#13;
10 10 10 the Supreme Court to&#13;
lIodout U the President has the&#13;
flD'I!I' to send young men to&#13;
lPt in an undeclared war ...&#13;
Ilis I based fundamentally on&#13;
" C4mstitutionof the United&#13;
.....:'&#13;
AlIted to characterize the&#13;
dill! IOUJ'ce of opposition he&#13;
IlIltd, liThe wording was&#13;
*ittly political maneuvering&#13;
was the strategy of the&#13;
_bOIl by delaying the ef-&#13;
~.' date of the bill thereby&#13;
-all it."&#13;
According to McKenna&#13;
~ the bill would give a~&#13;
lo'Crieved inhabitant" the right&#13;
refuseto serve in undeclared&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
t SUN. THRU THURS. ;~~ l11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE'{&#13;
~~FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.;:&#13;
« ~&#13;
~~f\HAMBURGERS~:~ 109 WISCONSIN AVE. 1011 60lb SI• II 40( &amp; 24( )!!: RACINE 631-9591 HNOSHA 654-2186&#13;
.. .. Open 7:30 a.m. - 8 p.m. Open 8:00 a m. - 9.00 pm&#13;
m SUP ERC HEW 1 Monday - Friday .Ionday - Frld&#13;
iii. (triple decker) :::: s::~::a~;:::a:~ Receivel:~.tu~~::o~:::n:1I&#13;
!il[:::::::::::::::::::::;:~:~::::::~:~::;:;:::~:;:!t a~.'.~~~.'.i~.e..~~:~:~~.s..u.~:i.'.~.u.n.~.~:.~~~.1 '!&#13;
Suggesting that the Nixon&#13;
administration left much to be&#13;
desired, McKenna was&#13;
reminded of the two democratic&#13;
administrations by a member of&#13;
the audience. McKenna&#13;
responded by explaining&#13;
"Johnson sent twice as many&#13;
men as were needed to Vietnam&#13;
and now Nixon is taking advantage&#13;
of this mistake by withdrawing&#13;
this surplus of men."&#13;
Concerning the proposed&#13;
State University-UW merger,&#13;
he said, "I have indicated that if&#13;
the merger would respect the&#13;
various areas of expertise of the&#13;
various state schools and it&#13;
would not impair the education&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin&#13;
. yes, I would support it."&#13;
VALED'S&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Open 6 0&#13;
ay, a Week From 4 p.m., Closed Mondays&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
21 FLAVORS&#13;
BEER 'Il' POP&#13;
WA';--$qjjjjV'==;,OP 4ItfJ&#13;
24-7 oz. bot. 12-24 oz. bot.&#13;
Stu $1.39&#13;
plus tax &amp; deposit&#13;
1428 Washin ton Rd., Kenosha&#13;
UW.PARKSIDE&#13;
STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES&#13;
SfJ.IIf,(MA&#13;
).w&#13;
o p&#13;
Spaid&#13;
THREE OPTIONS&#13;
CHICAGO to&#13;
LONDON&#13;
THREE DEPARTURES&#13;
June - Ju Iy - Augusl&#13;
$19710 $218 plus lax&#13;
For Information Contact:&#13;
Siudeni Aclivi Ii .. Olli'ce I&#13;
Talenl Hall&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
AprilZC.19il&#13;
rt ~--~--~--~~-~---r&#13;
1971Original Equipment&#13;
DOUBLE&#13;
BELTED&#13;
LONG MILEAGE TIRES&#13;
AS LOW AS&#13;
25&#13;
jirt$.ont&#13;
DELUXE CHAJllPION&#13;
SUp·R-BELT&#13;
WHlTEWALLS ADD '5.00&#13;
3ways to charge&#13;
·tn__ DE -.&#13;
·L...C£.TU..OTOOn'.I'l'.- ...... --.....&#13;
.QOl&amp;1.Lll£Ln:D~''!!~:::''!~~'~&#13;
.......... --- ....&#13;
DRIVE IN TODAY FOR&#13;
FAST TIRE SERVlCEl&#13;
·&#13;
·&#13;
····· .&#13;
·&#13;
.&#13;
·· . · . : •.••.•.•...•.....•..••..•............................................... ~&#13;
:- .&#13;
:&#13;
vaitress to fill your cup every so often,&#13;
~ the 'only charged fifteen cents. This is the&#13;
OU are . &gt; 1 have come across m a restaurant.&#13;
idea meplace , is on the ball, thinking of the&#13;
-~e so . h' . t CV" ' frst at Jeast m t 1s respec .&#13;
torner 1&#13;
rd~r anything other than the dozen or so&#13;
If you 0,&#13;
0u may be disappointed here and there.&#13;
. e. · Je the chili was served so hot that it seems&#13;
ror ta~opriate for J~ar~~· Mexico.- B~t_Chili is one&#13;
app differs from mdiv1dual to md1v1dual. I did&#13;
1ha~ ir chili, but the next person might.&#13;
e ;!her visit I had a chicken dinner which at&#13;
Onll~ didn't seem all that good. There were four&#13;
ck&gt; f chicken that would seem to benefit from a 0 g in the breading. Included in the dinner&#13;
;rench fries, a slice of candied apple, a&#13;
l!ft'ra e and a choice of juice or salad. ni!e are the only tw~ foods I ventu_red into&#13;
my visits to the Village Inn. The1r menu&#13;
around pancakes, which start at seventy&#13;
te~or buttermilk pancakes, on up. There_ are six or&#13;
different kinds of syrup that add variety to the&#13;
"\ that an individual could eat breakfast there&#13;
ltll davs a week and not run out of combinations of&#13;
an·d pancakes.&#13;
• The Village Inn chain seems to be a worthwhile&#13;
urant. I would look for one of th~se restaurants if&#13;
1 ere in a strange city, if the Kenosha branch is any&#13;
cation of their quality.&#13;
I realize the responsibility that Village Inns&#13;
America have shouldered in serving the public&#13;
institution: the pancake. It seems only poetic&#13;
uce that a descendant of Jack Flap be working&#13;
ewhere in the chain. If doing nithing, just&#13;
· ' around in the kitchen.&#13;
McKenna on vote,war Continued from Page 1) ·&#13;
cKenna responded by wars the cost of litigation would&#13;
g, "We support this piece rest entirely on his shoulders.&#13;
ltgi Jation because we feel He also noted that the ultimate&#13;
people of Wisconsin are in purpose of the bill was not to&#13;
r of it ... if this is not true prevent Wisconsin men from&#13;
·e'll hear about it in the serving in Vietnam but to test&#13;
t election." the constitutionality of the&#13;
'·Referendum is not good&#13;
erament. We are in a&#13;
rtpre entational form of&#13;
mment. What we're doing&#13;
saying that you have a right&#13;
ID go to the Supreme Court to&#13;
out if the President has the&#13;
er to send young men to&#13;
in an undeclared war . . .&#13;
based fundamentally on&#13;
Constitution of the United&#13;
.,&#13;
ked to characterize the&#13;
source of opposition he&#13;
ated, ' 'The wording was&#13;
llrictly political maneuvering&#13;
~~s the strategy of the&#13;
ttion by delaying the efe&#13;
date of the bill thereby&#13;
tn It."&#13;
ccording to McKenna&#13;
gh the bill would give a~&#13;
lo eved inhabitant" the right&#13;
refuse to serve in undeclared&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
President's power to commit&#13;
the United States to an undeclared&#13;
war.&#13;
Suggesting that the Nixon&#13;
administration left much to be&#13;
desired, Mc Kenna was&#13;
reminded of the two democratic&#13;
administrations by a member of&#13;
the audience. Mc Kenna&#13;
responded by explaining&#13;
"Johnson sent twice as many&#13;
men as were needed to Vietnam&#13;
and now Nixon is taking advantage&#13;
of this mistake by withdrawing&#13;
this surplus of men."&#13;
Concerning the proposed&#13;
State University-UW merger,&#13;
he said, "I have indicated that if&#13;
the merger would respect the&#13;
various areas of expertise of the&#13;
various state schools and it&#13;
would not impair the education&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin&#13;
. . yes, I would support it. "&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:oo P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Open 6 D '&#13;
ays a Week From 4 p.m., Closed Mondays&#13;
21 FLAVORS&#13;
BEER 'f' POP ~~'~---&#13;
&amp; WA u?·,//q --=: --==== 1//II\''~"' STOP&#13;
24- 7 oz. bot. 12-24 oz.&#13;
$1.11 $1.39&#13;
plus tax &amp; deposit&#13;
2428 Washington Rd., Kenosha&#13;
bot.&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES&#13;
SIUIUMA&#13;
Spui.ai&#13;
THREE OPTIONS&#13;
CHICAGO to&#13;
LONDON&#13;
THREE DEPARTURES&#13;
June - July - August&#13;
$197 to $218 plus tax&#13;
For Information Contact:&#13;
Student Activities Office&#13;
Talent HaH&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
(j;j SUN. THAU THURS. \ii&#13;
t 11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE t&#13;
1f:FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.MJ&#13;
11llHAMBURGERsllli&#13;
III 40¢ &amp; 24¢ J&#13;
:!II SUPERCHEW i~i&#13;
i1t{triple decker) !\11&#13;
Ifi: s s ¢ Ill!&#13;
April_, I ;1&#13;
1971 Original Eq ·pmen&#13;
DOUBLE&#13;
BELTE&#13;
ILEA&#13;
1&#13;
109 ISCO SI AVE.&#13;
RACINE 631-9591&#13;
Open 7:30 a.m. - 8 p.m.&#13;
• onday - Friday&#13;
Saturday to 5 p.m.&#13;
Bring this Ad and R&#13;
0&#13;
1011 01 s,. ~ OSH&#13;
tur&#13;
E&#13;
:.::.:•:•:•.•:•.•.•.• ... ; .. -:.:•:•:•.: ... :::.:;:.:;:::.:;:~:.:_:~_:.:.:::.:~~· ·-~~;:~: ................................................................ ..................... .. ! . . .&#13;
. .&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
NOW&#13;
The Rolling Stones&#13;
GIMME&#13;
SHELTER 1&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
.&#13;
: ............................................................................ ... =················· &#13;
Palel Speak""At PSGA 'Gathering'&#13;
Centel' complex has been dr?pped. The&#13;
reason for the change is ~at It generally&#13;
has been University practice to h.av.&#13;
e&#13;
state&#13;
architects design state funded bUIldings. A&#13;
general architectural plan has already&#13;
been laid out but is still open to&#13;
modifications. . .&#13;
SGA then passed a resolutIOn 10-&#13;
troduced by Walter Ulbrict to appoint Ian&#13;
MacTaggert chairman of an A.d .. ~oc&#13;
Committee to investigate the possibilities&#13;
of student imput and review of present and&#13;
future construction. MacTagge~t&#13;
suggested having paintings place? 10&#13;
classrooms and that rooms be pam ted&#13;
colors other than white as possibilities for&#13;
improving the present conditions.&#13;
With the unanimous approval of the&#13;
Senate Eaker appointed himself (a&#13;
mandatory appointment), Dennis Cashion,&#13;
Edmund Gilday, Ian MacTaggert and&#13;
Madeline Theilen to the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee.&#13;
f&#13;
~'~::'::::'- ,S--h-p"'!"" P ,-,~"""".,&#13;
'r~ WW l&#13;
I rm~.J~·&#13;
I 7 :30-0~&#13;
6t_,..-..m"",",""",_''''''''''lII_."""m,''''"'''''II"",",ml'&#13;
Rubin To&#13;
b) \\ arren l"~dr)&#13;
or The 'e~scope- Starr&#13;
Arter a long and dehcate debate over&#13;
workmg , hnances and securuy, the&#13;
tudera senate passed a resolunon to&#13;
upport a gathering where people" III be&#13;
able to learn more about the Peoples&#13;
Peace Treaty The resoluuon was introduced&#13;
by Recording ecretary David&#13;
weber and reads&#13;
The tudent enate of the&#13;
UOlverslty of WI. on In-Park Ide&#13;
upport a gathering of people for&#13;
the purposes of tnW'·ldually endor&#13;
109 th Joint Treat) of Peace&#13;
-tween the peopl of Amertea and&#13;
orrh Va'lnam nd outh Vietnam.&#13;
and educating people about this&#13;
pnnK anti war movement and&#13;
related tOPiC .\ tentative list of&#13;
peaker mclud Jerr)' Rubin,&#13;
'lark Knopp,. eduor of MadISon&#13;
Kal.,do cope, Father Luke&#13;
\13 Arthur. 0 mtnlcan College.&#13;
Helen chiller, coordmator.&#13;
Ch,ldrt&gt;n': nre kIa I Program The&#13;
l'oordlnators 8rC Mark Tympany&#13;
and Dave W('ber PrOVisions will be&#13;
madt-. for lUdent marshalls and&#13;
stud nt government funds are not&#13;
appropn8tl'd m this mohon&#13;
The gathenng IS heduled to beg," at&#13;
10 a m Wednesday, Apnl 28, at the&#13;
Athie,," field on Wood Road Free food and&#13;
music "ill be provided. The county highway&#13;
department has warned that cars&#13;
parked on Wood Road will be ticketed.&#13;
The resolution met with a srngle opposing&#13;
vote, cast by Ken Ko~ol. ~fter ~&#13;
Involved discussion regarding (manclal&#13;
support of the event. Konkol inlrodu~e? a&#13;
motion to allot $25 for advance publicity.&#13;
The motion passed with only ~eane~te&#13;
Dremel in opposition. Further fmanclal&#13;
support will be taken up at this week's&#13;
meeting. .&#13;
In other business SGA passed a motion&#13;
to have Academic policies committee&#13;
investigate all the committees at Parkside&#13;
to which students are appointed and report&#13;
their findings to SGA. At an ear-lier&#13;
meeting SGA voted not to recognize&#13;
committees with student appointments&#13;
that have not been cleared with SGA. SGA&#13;
also passed a measure to send letters to all&#13;
student organizations requesting each one&#13;
to recommend one representative to serve&#13;
on the Ad Hoc Judiciary Committee.&#13;
Ian MacTaggert appeared before the&#13;
Senate and spoke concerning the architecture&#13;
of Parkside. "It's design is&#13;
rooted in decoration. It is designed from&#13;
the outside in, It is an expression of&#13;
technology." In his remarks he brought to&#13;
light the fact classrooms lack windows and&#13;
that most have no windows at all. He&#13;
reported that the firm from Sl. Louis thaI&#13;
designed. the Greenquist-Library Learning&#13;
?? PREGNANT ??&#13;
TEST YOURSELF IN YOUR HOME!&#13;
ACCURATE RESULTS IN TEN MINUTES'&#13;
TWO TESTS PER KIT&#13;
PROMPT DELIVERY&#13;
SEND: CASH, CHECK OR MONEY ORDER&#13;
PRICE: $6.95 PER KIT + 55~ HDLG. CHGS.&#13;
BE SURE PRODUCTS, INC.&#13;
375 Sylvan Avenue&#13;
Englewood Cliffs, N. J- 07632&#13;
NEWH&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
MALT LIQUOR&#13;
GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
PSGA presents Budweise&amp;&#13;
PEOPLE'S PEACE TREATY&#13;
GATHERING&#13;
with Jerry RUbin - Mark Knopps - others&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28&#13;
MAIN UW-P CAMPUS&#13;
AC1ivilies start at 10 a,m,&#13;
Peace is coming because the people&#13;
are making Ihe peace.&#13;
• • •&#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 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 - Receill'er" 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 - Turntable~&#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;
Faculty&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
. In business conducted .&#13;
10 the meeting, two :arher&#13;
were heard from HarbesoCJ&gt;orts&#13;
introduced a resolution n ..He&#13;
the Parkside Faculty 0 puttiog&#13;
as being against tiln recOtd.&#13;
executive budget proPO~alSlate&#13;
recommended m sand&#13;
Professor John Buenke~rfer&#13;
Personnel Policies Com o. the&#13;
reported that they are ~lIttee&#13;
process of establishing te~~~he&#13;
evaluation criteria w·th iii&#13;
emphasis on student im' an&#13;
. hich put .. Issue w lC he said Will'&#13;
handled separately beca be&#13;
its Importance. use fA&#13;
Professor Norbert Is berg&#13;
read a tribute to then I&#13;
Professor Harlow Mil~ ale&#13;
announced the establish and&#13;
1&#13;
. menlo(&#13;
a Har ow Mills Mem .&#13;
Scholarship in Mills' fiel~l~&#13;
Anamology.&#13;
Wyllie reported that lh&#13;
building program was go' e 109 as&#13;
planned and wasn't expecti&#13;
any cut-backs. He also ad~&#13;
that bids for the PhYeal&#13;
Education BUilding Wil~l be&#13;
received this week and that thr&#13;
Communication Arts Buildmg&#13;
will be bid on soon.&#13;
Members and Friends of&#13;
"Another Mother For Peace"&#13;
will hold a Mother's Day Few&#13;
Peace on Sunday, May 2, 1m.&#13;
at 2:00 p.m. at United AIM&#13;
Workers Local 72, :IlIlS&#13;
Washington Road, Kenosha&#13;
Les Aspin, Congressman IJIJI&#13;
member of tbe House ArmoI&#13;
Services Committee, will he lito&#13;
guest speaker in an informll&#13;
program which will include&#13;
open dialogue and Concl!l1lOd&#13;
Voices for Peace. There wi!&#13;
also be refreshments aDd&#13;
music. Open to all.&#13;
NEWS BRIEFS&#13;
At the Young Democratic&#13;
Clubs of Wisconsin's State&#13;
Convention, held April 16, 17&#13;
and 18 in Milwaukee, Gregory&#13;
Barrette, Chairman of the V.W.&#13;
Parkside delegation, addressed&#13;
a caucus of the South Lake&#13;
District, which is composed of&#13;
the Young Dem clubs from&#13;
Racine County, Kenosha&#13;
County, WSU-Whitewater and&#13;
the U.W. Parkside unit.&#13;
He urged all delegates to vote&#13;
in opposition to the platform&#13;
plant supporting the proposed&#13;
tUliversity merger and budget.&#13;
but you&#13;
•&#13;
know that!!&#13;
The grievance and clearing&#13;
house committee of the&#13;
Parkside student senate is&#13;
looking for ad hoc student&#13;
members to serve. Interested&#13;
3tudents must meet this Friday&#13;
in room Di03 Greenquist at&#13;
10:30 a.m., when three ad hoc&#13;
mem bers will be selected to be&#13;
on the committee. They will&#13;
have full voting powers.&#13;
Free&#13;
Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
WEST&#13;
SIDE&#13;
SWEET&#13;
SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657 -97 47&#13;
The Kenosha Symphony&#13;
Orchestra, under the dir&lt;c\IJJJI&#13;
of Mr. Istvan Jaray, with the&#13;
Carthage College-Communil!&#13;
Chorus will present a emcertized&#13;
arrangement or "Dir&#13;
Fledermaus" by Joba"&#13;
Strauss at the Mary D. Bradford&#13;
High School AuditoriJll\.&#13;
8:15 P.M. Wednesday, AJIllI.&#13;
1971.&#13;
Soloists will be nona KOID'&#13;
brink, soprano. as orIofsky&#13;
Arcenia Moser, sopraoo, ..&#13;
Rosalinda; Jane Carm~&#13;
soprano as Adele; Ri&#13;
, EO'&#13;
Sjoerdsma, tenor, as&#13;
enstein; Davis Astor, teD'&#13;
as Alfred; Slephen M"""",&#13;
baritone, as Frank; and ~&#13;
Hottmann, baritone, as f&#13;
The performance will bt •&#13;
English.&#13;
The Cartbage Coll~&#13;
Community Chorus is com':-:&#13;
of more than 85 VOiCes WI'&#13;
directed and rebearsed bY&#13;
John Windb. . lie'&#13;
Tickets will be availa adttl&#13;
the box offi,e at $3.00 per&#13;
and $1.00 per student.&#13;
A professional&#13;
ABORT~&#13;
that is safe&#13;
legal St.&#13;
inexpensWt&#13;
be sel uP onfl .&#13;
can '111&#13;
outpatient baS.•1..5 ... ~I&#13;
The ,rOIJIenI ._-Jd Referral )P'-:-&#13;
215~722.536'&#13;
24 hOUrs-7 da~&#13;
for prOflSSiOJ\l1, :;.&#13;
and ,,",'OIl&#13;
Pa , ·e"' cop&#13;
Rubin To Sp~ai··'At PSGA 'Gathering'&#13;
Center complex has been dropped. The&#13;
reason for the change is ~at it generally&#13;
has been University pracbce to h_av_e state&#13;
architects design state funded buildings. A&#13;
general architectural plan has already&#13;
been laid out but is still open to&#13;
gin at&#13;
music ,,ill be provided. The county highway&#13;
department ha w~med _that cars&#13;
par eel on Wood Road w1I_I be t1~keted.&#13;
Th re. olution met with a smgle oppo&#13;
·mg vote, cast by Ken Konkol. ~Iler an&#13;
involved discussion regarding fmanc1al&#13;
upport of the event, Konkol introduced a motion to allot S25 for advance publicity.&#13;
The motion pas eel with only ~eane!te&#13;
Dremel in opposition. Further fmanc1al&#13;
upport will be taken up at this week's&#13;
meeting. . In other busines GA passed a motion&#13;
to have Academic Policies committee&#13;
m·e:-tigate all the committees at Parkside&#13;
to which tudents are appointed and report&#13;
their finding to GA At an earl!l!r&#13;
m tin GA vo•ed not to recognize&#13;
committee with student appointments&#13;
that have not been cleared with GA. SGA&#13;
al. o pa:. ed a measure to send letters to all&#13;
~tudent organizations requesting each one&#13;
to recommend one repre ·entative to serve&#13;
on the d Hoc Judiciary Committee.&#13;
Ian :'\lacTaggert appeared before the&#13;
modifications. . . SGA then passed a resolut10n introduced&#13;
by Walter Ulbrict to appoint Ian&#13;
MacTaggert chairman of an A_d. -~oc&#13;
Committee to investigate the poss1b1hbes&#13;
of student imput and review of present and&#13;
future construction. MacTagge~t&#13;
suggested having paintings placed m&#13;
classrooms and that rooms be painted&#13;
colors other than white as possibilities for&#13;
improving the present conditions.&#13;
With the unanimous approval of the&#13;
Senate Eaker appointed himself (a&#13;
mandatory appointment), Dennis C~shion,&#13;
Edmund Gilday, Ian MacTaggert and&#13;
Madeline Theilen to the Campus Concerns&#13;
Committee.&#13;
-&#13;
-~----UNUltlUHt .. ,,,,. .. _,,.,...,,_, __ .. ;&#13;
,~s~ i&#13;
! rm~ .T~-&#13;
1 7 :30-0~&#13;
tii••••v•r---HHftH"INIHIUIHIHUUIIIIIUUUIHHtt; un1muumt111tllUIIIMIIIIII&#13;
Faculty&#13;
(Continued from Page ll&#13;
In business conducted e . in the meeting, two r arher&#13;
were heard from Harb ep0r&#13;
introduced a resolutioneson. He&#13;
the Parkside Faculty O PUtling&#13;
as being against th n record&#13;
executive budget prop0:a1 Slate&#13;
recommended m sand&#13;
Professor John Buenke~rfer&#13;
Personnel Policies Com O. the&#13;
reported that they are ~ilt&#13;
process ?f esta~lishing tea~ ihe&#13;
evaluabon criteria w·thhing&#13;
emphasis on student im1 an . hi h put an lSSUe W C he said Will'&#13;
handled separately bee&#13;
its importance. aUSe of&#13;
Professor Norbert ls ....._&#13;
read a tribute to th en"i""&#13;
Professor Harlow l\1i1\: ate&#13;
announced the establishm and&#13;
a Harlow Mills Mement_of&#13;
Sch l h. . or1a1 o ars 1p m Mills' field _ Anamology.&#13;
~y_llie reported that the&#13;
bmldmg program was go 1 d mg as&#13;
P anne and wasn't expecti&#13;
any cut-backs. He also addl'd&#13;
E&#13;
thdat bti~s for the Phy. ica]&#13;
uca 10n Building will be&#13;
received this week and that the&#13;
Communication Arts Buildi&#13;
will be bid on soon.&#13;
nate and poke concerning the architecture&#13;
of Parkside. "It's design is&#13;
rooted in decoration. It is designed from&#13;
the outside in. It is an expression of&#13;
technology." In his remarks he brought to&#13;
light the fact classrooms lack windows and&#13;
that mo t have no windows at all. He&#13;
reported that the firm from St. Louis that&#13;
d signed the Greenquist-Library Learning NElNS BRIEFS&#13;
?? PREGNANT ??&#13;
T T YOURSELF lt,j YOUR HOME!&#13;
CCURATE RESULTS I TEN MINUTES!&#13;
TWO TESTS PER KIT&#13;
PROMPT DELIVERY&#13;
D: CASH, CHECK OR MONEY ORDER&#13;
NEW!!&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
PRICE: $6.95 PER KIT + .55¢ HDLG. CHGS.&#13;
BE SURE PRODUCTS, INC.&#13;
375 Sylvan Avenue&#13;
Englewood Cliffs, N. J. 07632 GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
PSGA presents Budweiser*&#13;
PEOPLE'S PEACE TREATY&#13;
GATHERING&#13;
with Jerry Rubin - Mark Knopps - others&#13;
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28&#13;
Activities&#13;
MAIN UW-P&#13;
start&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
at 10 a.m, • • • but you&#13;
-&#13;
Peace is coming because the people&#13;
are making the peace.&#13;
know that!!&#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 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 - Receiver,, 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 - Turntable~&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are here, shop_ for _J~welry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin s lowest prices.&#13;
At the Young Democratic&#13;
Clubs of Wisconsin's State&#13;
Convention, held April 16, 17&#13;
and 18 in Milwaukee, Gregory&#13;
Barrette, Chairman of the U. W.&#13;
Parkside delegation, addressed&#13;
a caucus of the South Lake&#13;
District, which is composed of&#13;
the Young Dem clubs from&#13;
Racine County, Kenosha&#13;
County, WSU-Whitewater and&#13;
the U.W. Parkside unit.&#13;
He urged all delegates to vote&#13;
in opposition to the platform&#13;
plant supporting the proposed&#13;
university merger and budget.&#13;
The grievance and clearing&#13;
house committee of the&#13;
Parkside student senate is&#13;
looking for ad hoc student&#13;
members to serve. Interested&#13;
students must meet this Friday&#13;
in room D103 Greenquist at&#13;
10:30 a.m., when three ad hoc&#13;
members will be selected to be&#13;
on the committee. They will&#13;
have full voting powers.&#13;
Free&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
WEST&#13;
SIDE&#13;
SWEET&#13;
SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97 47&#13;
Members and Friends f&#13;
"Another Mother For Peace·&#13;
will hold a Mother's Day F&#13;
Peace on Sunday, May 2, 1971&#13;
at 2:00 p.m. ~t United Auto&#13;
Workers Local 72, !615&#13;
Washington Road, Keno ha&#13;
Les Aspin, Congressman&#13;
member of the House Arm&#13;
Services Committee, will be thr&#13;
guest speaker in an inform&#13;
program which will inclu&#13;
open dialogue and Concern&#13;
Voices for Peace. There v.&#13;
also be refreshments and&#13;
music. Open to all.&#13;
The Kenosha Symphon&#13;
Orchestra, under the directi&#13;
of Mr. Istvan Jaray, with thr&#13;
Carthage College-Commum.&#13;
Chorus will present a caicertized&#13;
arrangement of ''Die&#13;
Fledermaus" by Johs&#13;
Strauss at the Mary D Bra~&#13;
ford High School Auditorium&#13;
8:15 P.M. Wednesday, AJXi)&#13;
1971.&#13;
Soloists will be Ilona Ko&#13;
brink, soprano, as Orlof )&#13;
Arcenia Moser, soprano,&#13;
Rosalinda· Jane Carmich&#13;
soprano, 'as Adele; Richard&#13;
Sjoerdsma, tenor, as E •&#13;
enstein; Davis Astor, te!Of&#13;
as Alfred; Stephen Ma~&#13;
baritone, as Frank; and !)a;&#13;
Hottmann baritone, as F&#13;
The pe;formance wiU be&#13;
English. The Carthage Coll&#13;
Community Chorus i~ com and 11&#13;
of more than 85 vmces&#13;
directed and rehearsed by&#13;
John Windh. _ lie at&#13;
Tickets will be availa&#13;
the box office at $3.00 per a&#13;
and $1.00 per student&#13;
A professional ABORTION&#13;
that is safe&#13;
legal&amp;.&#13;
inexpensa\'f&#13;
can be set u_P on:&#13;
outpatient ba915 bY&#13;
The pn,blelll Prtl.&#13;
Referral servi"&#13;
21s-122-s360&#13;
24 hours- 7 dafjdtf'lt · · nal o,n for profeSSIO . • t,tlP· and carin!I &#13;
GolfersWhip Lake Forest&#13;
uWP '9'&#13;
~JlmCasper&#13;
"'" Ne",cope Staff&#13;
(1IIl baseball, new at&#13;
!ItIdo Ibis year, got off to a&#13;
"" lIIrt as the Rangers won&#13;
... 01 a doubleheader&#13;
arcb-rival Dominican&#13;
The Rangers took the&#13;
..... 11-3, and won a 1-0&#13;
,..... duel in the second&#13;
....&#13;
played well for the first meet.&#13;
The course was in good shape&#13;
and the scores indicated it."&#13;
After their i~itial victory. the&#13;
Rangers ran Into two of the&#13;
state's best college golf teams&#13;
UW-Madison and Oshkosh, and&#13;
lost to both.&#13;
UW·Madison finished with 383&#13;
strokes, Oshkosh 391, and&#13;
Parkside 416, in a match held at&#13;
the tough Cherokee Course in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
~oach ?tevens was disappointed&#13;
with the Scores in the&#13;
Madison meet. Only one&#13;
Ranger, Leif GUHormsen&#13;
broke 80. He just barely did it'&#13;
shooting a 79. Tom Bothe shot&#13;
80, Bob Toeppe 84, Dan&#13;
Weyrauch 86. and Ken RossI Sf&#13;
Stevens attributed the&#13;
relahvel.y high Scores in part to&#13;
the rainy conditions that&#13;
plagued the meet. "The course&#13;
was w~t and it played long and&#13;
tough. said Stevens&#13;
Despite the poor weather&#13;
cond~tlons the Badger Golfers&#13;
had five men below SO. paced be&#13;
medalist Willy Tack's rj Tack&#13;
was not originally scheduled 10&#13;
play. but one of the starting&#13;
golfers had an exammatlon so&#13;
he was put in as a substitute&#13;
The Badgers were readv (0&#13;
play, having had considerable&#13;
pr.actice time dur-ing a spring&#13;
tr-ip down South. "Thev alreadv&#13;
had played three or iour matches."&#13;
said Stevens.&#13;
Oshkosh, finishing only eight&#13;
strokes behind the Badgers, had&#13;
balanced scoring with three&#13;
79's, an 80 and a 75.&#13;
Take Doubleheader&#13;
the first game, managed only&#13;
one ru~ in the second game. It&#13;
came In the sixth inning when&#13;
Jeff Koleske-s- walk was&#13;
followed by Ron Schmitz's&#13;
triple.&#13;
Coach Kenneth "Red"&#13;
Oberbruner was happy about&#13;
the double win. "The team&#13;
played well despite having no&#13;
place to practice. We hadn't&#13;
been able to get outside too&#13;
much before these games," he&#13;
said.&#13;
What pleased Oberbruner&#13;
most was the defense. "The&#13;
defense held up and didn't make&#13;
the number of errors that would&#13;
be normal for early games,"&#13;
said Oberbruner. He was happy&#13;
with the 13 hits lhe team&#13;
collected 'during the&#13;
doubleheader.&#13;
Although the squad has no&#13;
uniforms yet, it will Soon have a&#13;
home field if the weather&#13;
remains favorable. A new&#13;
diamond, with a freshly sodded&#13;
infield, should be readv shorth&#13;
It is located west of the soccer&#13;
field on the Wood Road campus.&#13;
According to Oberbruner. the&#13;
addition of a home playing field&#13;
located on the campus will be a&#13;
great asset to the team. The&#13;
field has been watered&#13;
frequently and looks quite green&#13;
now. Some miscellaneou&#13;
chores remain to be taken care&#13;
of, such as acquiring bases. but&#13;
nevertheless, the team should&#13;
be playing its remaining home&#13;
games on the new diamond.&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS-----&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
¥W (~.ooo ml) S6OO; '66&#13;
c:.r.net (12,000 mt.) $700,&#13;
.... Inoton Ave, Raei.&#13;
"'Osc, Auto, 6, $150, Also&#13;
lIIl-lSBFG tires, rims &amp; Bal.&#13;
ifill-IS OBFG Ilres (500&#13;
~ &amp; 801 560_ 859-2653&#13;
.,,-:"!!Idget COllY,New Ban,&#13;
'- lMto Keno, R, Smllh or&#13;
~ 'so! t&#13;
... aio .... p. 326, Sp, Coup, _ ' 6II-aocl,&#13;
....... 710&#13;
lD2Iit 2de HT, 287,51, Sh-&#13;
•Cllo.oi=-It---- -&#13;
Ao1ro' 301-350 hp, 4 sp, 4&#13;
.. ..... &amp; More_ 654-4440,&#13;
____ Ave, Keno,&#13;
~ twa. ltSobre $100, 1-634-&#13;
---------&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
-0&lt;1 Corpet treatment&#13;
0' the&#13;
ANK OF&#13;
MWOOD&#13;
".ryOne I&#13;
e Se does!)&#13;
1704 L .&#13;
_ ,.fhrop Ave,&#13;
tc, •• VI' , IS.&#13;
'68 r-r. Spitfire Mk III, Conv..&#13;
Low miles. 637-7966 or 654-9471&#13;
(after 6 p.m.) Rod Marescalo.&#13;
'63 Ram. Amer. Wag., Stk. new&#13;
clutch, muff, trans. 694-6353.&#13;
'62 Pont. Conv. Auto $250. 652-&#13;
1443 after 5 p.m.&#13;
'69 Ply. Rdrnn'r, 4 spcL 383-335&#13;
hp; rad, htr. 637-5520 after 5:00&#13;
'63 Olds 88 HoI., 4953 btt, high&#13;
comp. Best Offer. 654-6746 after&#13;
5:30 p.m. '&#13;
WANTED TO BUY - 2 used 3&#13;
or 5 speed 26" bicycles. Call 633-&#13;
3131 after 5.&#13;
RIDES NEEDED-WANTED&#13;
DRIVE a Pugeot to Min·&#13;
neapolis. Must get there before&#13;
June. Call 843-2225 after 5 or 657-&#13;
5121 ext. 36.&#13;
NEE 0 ride to Seattle or Anchorage,&#13;
Mayor June. Will split&#13;
cost. Call Barb 654-9631.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
MAOI SON summer sublet 2&#13;
bed. near Vilas Park. Call 608&#13;
251-8632, $65 per person.&#13;
ROOM - Men only, 59_00 per&#13;
wk. 3 blocks from Racine&#13;
Cam pus. Inquire 832 S&#13;
Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
MISC, FOR SALE&#13;
AMP _ Silvertone .4 channel.&#13;
Also mike. Best offer. Call&#13;
Cathy, 694-2769. Must sell.&#13;
ELECTRIC RANGE&#13;
Weslinghouse 30", $75;&#13;
REFRIGERATOR.&#13;
Westinghouse, 575. Box spnng&#13;
mattress for double bed. 575.&#13;
Ca II 633,0541.&#13;
e&#13;
-&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
"Prilai.• 1..&#13;
Netmen BIonic Dominican&#13;
In the double, , la&#13;
Herchen-. "elson d lea f'd&#13;
Tennis Tournament Set&#13;
A sprmg teem&#13;
for students and (a ult~&#13;
members at Par will&#13;
held at th(' R vx ("am&#13;
tennis court In P&lt;-Nh n Park&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
""&#13;
..., It CERLACH&#13;
~&#13;
s&#13;
117I1( Bill If&#13;
"Check OUI'&#13;
Price. 1.11_\("&#13;
4 07 ; lh \ \ I 'l I&#13;
'Tradition&#13;
.••• .•••&#13;
~::&#13;
~~;&#13;
~~&#13;
~~&#13;
=$&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
$'&#13;
~::&#13;
:~&#13;
~&#13;
f.&#13;
II&#13;
~~&#13;
.:-- For Cuafanh·ed Service &amp; Trade-in Value&#13;
~~; See Jim Merrie ~ ·'1114, HOllunond"&#13;
IHAMMO&#13;
~; STUDIO&#13;
::~: I ~29 lIa bonClOn PbOM 6H-216 I 1&lt; i'If Better Organs ore BUilt, Hammond _til bu.ld them,: ~.&#13;
;:::. :"':::-.:«:::::::*,~~":~..-..::.:.::.-:;:::s.w;::~""" - ~.&#13;
olf ers Whip Lake· Forest Weyrauch 86, and Ken Ro 1 ;&#13;
Ste\·ens attributed h&#13;
relati\'ely high :core_ in part t~&#13;
the rainy cond111on that&#13;
plagued the meet '"The cour ,&#13;
\\as w~t and it played long and&#13;
tough. said 'te\en.&#13;
Jil11 Casper&#13;
b1 \e11scope Staff&#13;
1/'fhe • won their first&#13;
Ri,.nr~r the season,&#13;
tc1.,akc Forest ~Y 15&#13;
nd Rockford by ;il.&#13;
a rn was paced by junior&#13;
uch and freshman&#13;
t}Ta \\'e1Tauch fired a I e •&#13;
a i4 . th r Ranger scores_ m e&#13;
d at oeerpath ~n Lake&#13;
Ill., were Leif Gut78,&#13;
Bob Toeppe 78, and&#13;
ilJjams 83. fil'e of six men shoot&#13;
iO' In the first meet was&#13;
'usfying to Coach Steve&#13;
n said, • 'The team&#13;
UWP '9'&#13;
b1 Jim Casper&#13;
,~ Sewscope Staff&#13;
baseball, new at&#13;
this year, got off to a&#13;
art as the Rangers won&#13;
of a doubleheader&#13;
arch-rival Dominican&#13;
The Rangers took the&#13;
e S-3, and won a 1-0&#13;
's duel in the second&#13;
de came up with eight&#13;
the opening game, and&#13;
the second. Dominican,&#13;
ile, was held to five hits&#13;
fi game, and only three&#13;
leap. Parkside's Carl&#13;
threw a three hit&#13;
in that game.&#13;
Ra ers, who scored in&#13;
of e first six innings of&#13;
played well for the first meet.&#13;
The course was in good shape&#13;
and the scores indicated it."&#13;
After their initial victory. the&#13;
Rangers ran into two of the&#13;
state's best college golf teams&#13;
UW-Madison and Oshkosh, and&#13;
lost to both.&#13;
UW-Madison finished with 383&#13;
strokes, Oshkosh 391, and&#13;
Parkside 416, in a match held at&#13;
the tough Cherokee course in&#13;
Madison.&#13;
Coach Stevens was disappointed&#13;
with the scores in the&#13;
Madison meet. Only one&#13;
Ranger, Leif GuHormsen&#13;
broke 80. He just barely did it:&#13;
shooting a 79. Tom Bothe shot&#13;
80, Bob Toeppe 84, Dan&#13;
Desp11e the poor wea her&#13;
cond1t1ons the Bad er Golfo&#13;
had fiw men below 80. paced b,&#13;
medalist \\"illy Tack' ii Ta ·.&#13;
was not originally .-cheduled 0&#13;
play· but one of the ·•artm&#13;
golfers had an examination&#13;
he was put in a. a ,ub tllut&#13;
The Badgers were r ad, to&#13;
play, ha\'ing had con~1d r"abl&#13;
practice time during a ,pri&#13;
trip down outh. ··Toe, alread,&#13;
had played three or r our mai.&#13;
ches," said Ste\'en .&#13;
Oshkosh, fini hmg only eight&#13;
strokes behind the Badgers. had&#13;
balanced scoring \\ith thr "&#13;
79's, an 80 and a 75.&#13;
Take Doubleheader&#13;
the first game, managed only&#13;
one run in the second game. It&#13;
came in the sixth inning when&#13;
Jeff Koleske 's · walk was&#13;
followed by Ron Schmitz's&#13;
triple.&#13;
Coach Kenneth " Red"&#13;
Oberbruner was happy about&#13;
the double win. " The team&#13;
played well despite having no&#13;
place to practice. We hadn't&#13;
been able to get outside too&#13;
much before these games," he&#13;
said.&#13;
What pleased Oberbruner&#13;
most was the defense. "The&#13;
defense held up and didn't make&#13;
the number of errors that would&#13;
be normal for early games,"&#13;
said Oberbruner. He was happy&#13;
with the 13 hits the team&#13;
collected during the&#13;
doubleheader.&#13;
Although the quad ha no&#13;
uniforms yet, it will oon ha,·c a&#13;
home field if the weather&#13;
remains favorable A ne,,&#13;
diamond, wilh a freshh· .odded&#13;
infield, should be read,: hortlv&#13;
It is located west of the occer&#13;
field on lhe Wood Road campu.&#13;
According to Oberbruner. the&#13;
addition of a home playing field&#13;
located on the campu will be a&#13;
great asset to the team The&#13;
field has been watered&#13;
frequently and look quite green&#13;
now. Some mi cellaneou.&#13;
chores remain to be taken care&#13;
of, such as acquiring ba.- .. bu&#13;
nevertheless. the team :hould&#13;
be playmg its remaining horn&#13;
games on the ne,, diamond.&#13;
----CLASSIFIEDS----&#13;
WHEELS&#13;
(~.000 mi) $600; '66&#13;
Qironet (12,000mi.) $700.&#13;
ash,ngton Ave. Raci.&#13;
Clsc, Auto, 6, $150. Also&#13;
i 15 BFG tires, rims &amp; Bal.&#13;
l 9.'I0-15 OBFG tires (500&#13;
ms &amp; Bal $60. 859-2653&#13;
)&#13;
td Co&#13;
rpet treatment&#13;
ot the&#13;
8ANK OF&#13;
llMwooo&#13;
...&#13;
• tryone I&#13;
e se does!)&#13;
b 4 L · _othrop Ave .&#13;
0C111e W' • I S .&#13;
'68 Tri. Spitfire Mk 111, Conv .,&#13;
Low miles. 637-7966 or 654-9471&#13;
(after 6 p.m.) Rod Marescalo.&#13;
'63 Ram. Amer. Wag., Stk, new&#13;
clutch, muff, trans. 694-6353.&#13;
'62 Pont. Conv. Auto $250. 652-&#13;
1443 after 5 p.m.&#13;
'69 Ply. Rdrnn'r, 4 spd, 383-335&#13;
hp', rad, htr. 637-5520 after 5: 00&#13;
'63 Olds 88 Hol., 495 3 btl, high&#13;
comp. Best Offer. 654-6746 after&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
WANTED TO BUY - 2 used 3&#13;
or 5 speed 26" bicycles. Call 633-&#13;
3131 after 5.&#13;
RIDES NEEDED-WANTED&#13;
DRIVE a Pugeot to Minneapolis.&#13;
Must get there before&#13;
June. Call 843-2225 after 5 or 657-&#13;
5121 ext. 36.&#13;
NEED ride to Seattle or An&#13;
chorage, May or June. Will split&#13;
cost. Call Barb 654 9631.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
MADISON summer sublet 2&#13;
bed. near Vilas Park. Call 608-&#13;
251 -8632, $65 per person.&#13;
ROOM - Men only, S9.00 per&#13;
wk. 3 blocks from Racine&#13;
Campus. Inquire 832 S&#13;
Wisconsin Ave.&#13;
MISC. FOR SALE&#13;
AMP _ Silvertone A cha ncl.&#13;
Also mike. Best offer. Call&#13;
Cathy, 694-2769. Must sell.&#13;
ELECTRIC RANGE&#13;
Westinghouse 30", s75 :&#13;
REFRIGERATOR&#13;
Westinghouse S75. Box spC"ing&#13;
mattress for double bed, S75.&#13;
Call 633-0541 .&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
Netmen Blan&#13;
Re&#13;
the Ran&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
PED&#13;
.. h&#13;
Cl y I&#13;
111"&#13;
p,-j . I... ,.. i&#13;
• ilh \ ,.&#13;
'1 r, die ion&#13;
For Guoro&#13;
Su Ji&#13;
Do • • ,n,can&#13;
• • &#13;
PaseS AprilZS.IS71&#13;
.....---Jethro TullBringsOutTherUnderground'-----&#13;
b) Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Se'Ascope Starr&#13;
America's cngtnal longhair. weaned on purple&#13;
hate acid and ''In·A-Gadda-Da-Vida''. by Iron&#13;
ButterOy. IS to. 109 hi imege 10 the underground he&#13;
created If the Jethro Tull concert in Milwaukee on&#13;
Apnl14 is any indicauon of the counter-culture of the&#13;
day&#13;
It seems to me that those ....ho Identify with the&#13;
I ft hav reached a new plateau of wealth The drab&#13;
clothing con. I ling of blue Jeans. fatigues. and other&#13;
urplu items. have en replaced by $8 T-shirts with&#13;
tars nd lIghtenmg bolt sewn on, fringe coats made&#13;
of leath rand uede, boots with an accessory atchm&#13;
nt. for spurs, and clever patches including&#13;
l\hckl''\o'Motbc and marijuana leafs. that cover the&#13;
, hoi an the old faded Jeans&#13;
But weather the COIlOOI .eurs of rock dress well&#13;
or not. It . e m. that a group like Jethro Tull brings&#13;
f\tqOO tDgNher. 81 least for one evening of music.&#13;
Bolh concerts \\ ere sold out in advance, With a few&#13;
hundred people "31lmK outSIde the Perform 109 Arls&#13;
Ct.'nt r for lick L~to fall out of the sky, or someone's&#13;
ket&#13;
Thf En~hsh musicians use the name of an 18th&#13;
c ntury 10\ enter. Jethro Tull. who among other&#13;
Ihl~ • founded fle\l, uses for manure in his native&#13;
England Th group consists of Jan Anderson. nute,&#13;
\'()('al and gUitar· ClI\'C BWlkcr. drums (the only two&#13;
orlKmal Tull member&gt; I.ft). Jelfrey HammondHammond&#13;
bass gUitar; John Evan. plano. organ,&#13;
nd !\larlln Barre, lead gUitar&#13;
Ian Ander~n is the founder and leader of the&#13;
group H appe red wearing knee high moccasins.&#13;
hghts, on e \\torn Inmerry old England, and a ripped,&#13;
pl ld, kn length robe. HIS dress and stage antics&#13;
prompted a ~1I1wukee Jow-nal writer to say that&#13;
Ander. n "100 as though he's stepped straight out&#13;
I an 18lh century· a ylurn."&#13;
Before an)"one could enjoy the music of Jethro&#13;
Tull. lhey were subjected to another English group&#13;
called Cun'ed Air. A female vocalist named Sonja&#13;
Krl ·tlona tried to get It on, as Tina l\Irner does and&#13;
Jopltn did. but came up short. Curved Air also has a&#13;
menacing V10hnist named Darryl Way. His function&#13;
was to abuse the viohn and capture the intensity of&#13;
Grand Funk&#13;
When thiS nonsense was over, and after a fifteen&#13;
minute Intermission, everyone seWed back to hear&#13;
Ian Anderson and company. The appearance of the&#13;
robe-clad nute player broughlthe entire second show&#13;
audience to its feet. To many. h~ has ~id ~s d~les ~&#13;
the underground with albwns Iike This Was, an&#13;
Cp, and Benefit, and cross-country tours the past&#13;
three years. . ed The new album Tull was to introduce IS nam&#13;
Aqualung. It is mainly the creation of Ian Anderson,&#13;
who calls the album ·'anti-religious". The album was&#13;
released in England awhile ago, but has not come out&#13;
in America yet.&#13;
Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull&#13;
After turnng-up and greeting the crowd, the group&#13;
began with "Nothing Is Easy" from the Stand-Up&#13;
album, The rest of the show followed the pattern of a&#13;
few old favorites and then two or three songs off the&#13;
new album. This mixture provided for a fine show.&#13;
The appearance of Jethro Tull at Uihlein Hall at&#13;
the Performing Arts Center was somewhat of a rarity&#13;
in rock. It isn't very often that anyone can enjoy the&#13;
plush surroundings of the Center and see a&#13;
rock group. IlOlIU1ar&#13;
Concerts are usually in huge arenas, or cav '&#13;
the Aragon and the Syndrome in Chicago. Th~like&#13;
peting, comfortable seats, elevator and car·&#13;
"luxuries" (not to mention the excellent accou~~her&#13;
proved to be welcome but confusing. Itwas too ~cS)&#13;
learn that crashers, who didn't get in, smash d to&#13;
glass door that caused some $400 damage. With ~ a&#13;
like this, Milwaukeens may have to get used t antics&#13;
accommodations like the Oriental "Theater w~ ~&#13;
costs $4 to sit on the floor. ' ere It&#13;
Individuals who have "followed this group 8i&#13;
1968 may argue that the group Anderson brou nee&#13;
MiNl""kee is not up to the standards set by thgh~&#13;
groups. on the first three albums, The first ~b&#13;
included Anderson, Bunker, Mick Abrahams IUIn&#13;
guitar, and Glenn Cornick, bass guitar. Abrciliead&#13;
started his own group after this album naams&#13;
Blodwyn Pig. Glenn Comic did two more albumsmed&#13;
then went on his way. For the current tour and alb and&#13;
the five member Jethro Tull is somewhat new urn,&#13;
Any skeptics as to the quality of the perform'&#13;
of the group were answered with Ian Ande:&#13;
Though solos on lead and bass guitars were&#13;
somewhat weak as compared to the original Tu1I&#13;
guitarists, the performance of Ian Anderson left&#13;
one questioning his talents, which I thought w no&#13;
worth the price of admission. eft&#13;
His lyrics in Aqualung concern a dirty old rnaa&#13;
who sit~ in the park "eyeing up little girls withbod&#13;
mtent.' SIde one IS devoted to the antics or the&#13;
'*&#13;
man Aqualung. Side two is called "My God" 8tId&#13;
her .. Ian Anderson displays his philosop,ies' .....&#13;
cernmg religIOn. The whole album which Jethro TuB&#13;
performed in full, seems to be an excellent wort&#13;
Many concert goers will either have to buy the&#13;
English copy, or anxiously await the release of the&#13;
album by Reprise.&#13;
o&#13;
..&#13;
o&#13;
..•&#13;
"•z&#13;
":&gt;&#13;
o&#13;
"w&#13;
w&#13;
•:&gt;&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
"&#13;
•&#13;
The lyrics of one song in particular will COII'1Oj&#13;
the tone of the "anti-religious" theme Anele....&#13;
spok,e of. The last song Jethro Tull performedia&#13;
Milwa.ukee, and the last song on side two ofthealbum&#13;
is called "Wind-Up". Standing alone on stage with biI&#13;
gUitar, Ian Anderson sang, "Well you caD a·&#13;
communicate me on my way to Sunday school,"udl&#13;
assume after hearing this album, someone,&#13;
somewhere will try to. But they weren't in tilt&#13;
audience the night Ian Anderson and Jethro M&#13;
captivated the Milwaukee counter-culture.&#13;
SUPPORT THOSE WHO SUPPORTU&#13;
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTIZERS&#13;
f,lol;' RRr~f\ooJ'o\-&#13;
~l:NOS)i" Cl\~&#13;
F\mJ~30 -MR~\t 2.. --::~-- ~~~..,.,&#13;
F~\- .. SAI. i:I!'t".·S,\.IN.'l:30r. .. ~&#13;
i\(.¥.~\S 4\.50 STUO}:Nls~.oo&#13;
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ABORTION&#13;
pregnancies up to 12&#13;
weeks tenninated fr&#13;
$17&amp;.00&#13;
Medication) Lab Test&#13;
Doctors fees include&#13;
Hospi~ &amp; Hospital&#13;
affiliated clinios.&#13;
(212) TR 7-8803&#13;
24 hours-7 days&#13;
PHYSICIANS REFERRAL&#13;
w. know .. can help you, eveft H&#13;
It's juat to talk to ·aomKn •.&#13;
NEW"&#13;
THE FIRST&#13;
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GOOD ENOUGH&#13;
TO BE CALLED&#13;
Budweisen&#13;
• • • but you&#13;
•&#13;
know that!!&#13;
~~BRAT'~&#13;
Where It's At!&#13;
DAILY SPECIAL&#13;
9 A.M. TO .4 P.M.&#13;
A Bottle' of&#13;
BiIllIIilE&#13;
A New If'meI of&#13;
Alcoholic Beverage&#13;
andaBEEFBURGER&#13;
ST~~K99· ~&#13;
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HAPPY&#13;
HOUR&#13;
MONDAY thru FRIDAY&#13;
6 p.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
Available Far Parties&#13;
, . PClrti,1&#13;
Op~~'uD;ilyat9niA."M .5&#13;
0&#13;
:&#13;
0&#13;
"l&#13;
Y&#13;
2 p.M.&#13;
d H· h"aY SO Narthwest Corner 1-94 an .g&#13;
pg Aprll ?6, 1971&#13;
.-----Jethro Tull Brings Out The 'Underground'-------&#13;
audience to its feet. To many, h: has ~id his dues~~&#13;
the undergrolllld with albwns like This Was, Stan&#13;
l'p, and Benefit. and cross-country tours the past&#13;
three vears. . ed&#13;
The new album Tull was to introduce 1s nam&#13;
Aqu lung. It is mainly the creation of Ian Anderson,&#13;
\·ho calls the album ··anti-religious" . The album was&#13;
released in England awhile ago, but has not come out&#13;
in America yet.&#13;
Ian Anderson of Jethro Tull&#13;
After turung-up and greeting the crowd, the group&#13;
began with " othing ls Easy" from the Stand-Up&#13;
album. The rest of the show followed the pattern of a&#13;
few old favorites and then two or three songs off the&#13;
new album. This mixture provided for a fine show.&#13;
The appearance of Jethro Tull at Uihlein Hall at&#13;
the Performing Arts Center was somewhat of a rarity&#13;
in rock. It isn't very often that anyone can enjoy the&#13;
0&#13;
....&#13;
0&#13;
X&#13;
6.&#13;
J&#13;
&lt;&#13;
z&#13;
a:&#13;
:,&#13;
0&#13;
.,&#13;
w&#13;
w&#13;
~&#13;
:,&#13;
&lt;&#13;
3:&#13;
J&#13;
i&#13;
plush surroundings of the Center and see a rock group. PClPlllar&#13;
Concerts are usually in huge arenas, or cav .&#13;
the Aragon and the Syndrome in Chicago. Th~ hke&#13;
peting, comfortable seats, elevator and car.&#13;
"luxuries" (not to mention the excellent acco other&#13;
proved to be welcome but confusing. It was too ~tic I&#13;
learn that crashers, who didn't get in, smash ad lo&#13;
glass door that caused some $400 damage. With ed a&#13;
like this, Milwaukeens may have to get used t anuc&#13;
accommodations like the Oriental "Theater, wi ro~ costs $4 to sit on the floor. ere U&#13;
Individuals who have followed this group si&#13;
1968 may argue that the group Anderson brou nee&#13;
MiN11111kee is not up to the standards set by th gh~o&#13;
groups. on the first three albums. The first ~b ll&#13;
in~luded Anderson, B~ker, Mick Abrahams, 1~rn&#13;
gmtar, and Glenn Cornick, bass guitar. Abrah d&#13;
started his own group after this album na allls&#13;
Blodwyn Pig. Glenn Comic did two more albums me(!&#13;
then went on his way. For the current tour and alb and&#13;
the five member Jethro Tull is somewhat new urn,&#13;
Any skeptics as to the quality of the perform'ance&#13;
of the group were answered with Ian Anderson&#13;
Though solos on lead and bass guitars wer ·&#13;
somewhat weak as compared to the original run&#13;
guitarists, the performance of Ian Anderson left&#13;
one questioning his talents, which I thought w no&#13;
worth the price of admission. re&#13;
H!s l~rics in Aqu~lun~ conce~n a dirty old man&#13;
~ho s1~ 1~ the pa~k eyemg up little girls with bad&#13;
mtent. Side one 1s devoted to the antics of the old&#13;
man Aqualung. Side t_wo is cal!ed "My God'', and&#13;
here_ Ian ~~derson displays his philosophi concernmg&#13;
religion. The whole album which Jethro Tull&#13;
performed in full, seems to be an excellent worl.:&#13;
Many concert goers will either have to buy u..;&#13;
English copy, or anxiously await the release of the&#13;
album by Reprise.&#13;
The lyrics- of one song in particular will COlll'ey&#13;
the tone of the "anti-religious" theme Andersai&#13;
spo~e of. The last song Jethro Tull performed ·&#13;
Milwaukee, and the last song on side two of the album&#13;
is called "Wind-Up". Standing alone on stage with hJs&#13;
guitar, Ian Anderson sang, "Well you can excommunicate&#13;
meon my way to Sunday school," and I&#13;
assume after hearing this album, someone,&#13;
somewhere will try to. But they weren't in the&#13;
audience the night Ian Anderson and Jethro Tull&#13;
captivated the Milwaukee counter-culture.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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              <text>Student Government Elections - Eaker Wins Presidency</text>
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              <text>tree University oj Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
••••••••&#13;
Jazz Comes To UWP&#13;
s« page.5&#13;
NUMBER 12 APRIL 19, 1971&#13;
- Student Gov't Elections&#13;
". Eaker- Student Government President.&#13;
c&#13;
z&#13;
".J&#13;
Z&#13;
;(&#13;
WI.i.....aiIllo-_......~&#13;
o&#13;
Dou LoalOi - Top senatorial Vole-Getler. m&#13;
Eaker Wins Presidency&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
01 the New8cope Slall&#13;
After nearly two years without a student&#13;
government the Parkside student body now has&#13;
one.&#13;
In a general election that saw only 885students&#13;
vote out of a student body of 4,000, Tim Eaker&#13;
w.as elected President; R. E. (Ron) Williams,&#13;
VIce. president; Debbie Kemper, treasurer;&#13;
David Weber, recording secretary; and Jean&#13;
Koehler, corresponding secretary.&#13;
In the Senate 1601the 17positions were chosen.&#13;
For the 17th position there was a tie between&#13;
Tom Taskonis and Ed Toth. Taskonis has asked&#13;
for a recount, and if the 'tie remains the chairman&#13;
of the election committee will randomly&#13;
select the winner.&#13;
The 16 winners are: Dean Loumos, Tom&#13;
Garner, John Gottfredsen, Ken Antaramian,&#13;
Walter Breach, Jeanette Dremel, Walter&#13;
Ulbricht, Ken Konkol, Tom Fletcher, Chris&#13;
Crowe, Mark Timpany, Tom Meier, Mike&#13;
Mayeshiha, Gary Davis, Gary Adelson and Dale&#13;
Martin.&#13;
For the Student Union Committee, the four&#13;
students on the ballot, Tim Daley, Greg&#13;
Barrette, Tom Kreul and Jerry Horton, were all&#13;
elected. Sue Nevin won the fifth position on a&#13;
write-in campaign.&#13;
The race for the presidency saw Tim Eaker&#13;
defeat Madeleine Thielen of the Halloween party&#13;
by 87 votes. Eaker has been active in lobbying&#13;
for the restoration of cuts in the Parkside budget&#13;
in Madison. He was also a leader of the Commlttee&#13;
for United Student Action (CUSA), and&#13;
fought against the ratification of the Constitutional&#13;
Committee constitution.&#13;
.. Eaker had 38 per cent of the votes cast for&#13;
president and carried all three campuses. Don&#13;
Koser was second in votes cast at the Kenosha&#13;
campus.&#13;
The unofficial results are:&#13;
Rac. Ken. Gr. Tol&#13;
Tim Eaker 91 92 142 325&#13;
Madeleine Thielen 85 52 101 238&#13;
Don Kosher 54 68 57 179&#13;
David Karls 28 12 31 71&#13;
Ian MacTaggert 11 14 14 39&#13;
Per&#13;
Cl&#13;
38&#13;
28&#13;
21&#13;
8&#13;
5&#13;
Regents Meet At Parkside&#13;
WI Friday the University 01 Wisconsin Board of&#13;
....... met on the Parkside campus.&#13;
'I1&gt;emorningsessionbegan minus regents Walker and&#13;
... , duringwhich the grout&gt;approved an 18 credit&#13;
-c:bina certificate. The non-major, non-minor course ~s&#13;
dItIped for the full-time student, particularly .10&#13;
-lion, whomight be pressed into coaching dulles&#13;
tIiJe teaching.&#13;
.....~~ a break for lunch the group returned to the&#13;
~ti1 at full attendance and listened to Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie explainParkside. Wyllie stressed the land grant&#13;
lradilionasit relates toParkside's industrial mission. He&#13;
IIDted thatthearea is in tbe midst of changing from an&#13;
Ilri&lt;uJluralbackgroundto a solidly industrial base..He&#13;
Iloo mentionedParkside's nine interdisciplinary majors&#13;
• a part of its program. . .&#13;
During the course of Wyllie's address statisllea&#13;
;:emmg studentbodymake-up revealed 70 per cent of&#13;
studentbody work20hours per week, while takmg 12&#13;
::18 per semester and for this reason classes are held&#13;
B a.m. until 10 p.m, to provide as fleXible an&#13;
lC!dem!cprogramas Possibleto meet the demands of the&#13;
~ student.Itwas also mentioned that the average&#13;
of a Parkside student is 22.&#13;
~ Late:, Tom Rosandich Athletic Director, told the&#13;
~ts that Parkside "is in a situatiorl where the fan&#13;
lac:k't knowwhereteams are playing," referring to the&#13;
__ of, permanent athletic facilities on .campus. He&#13;
--a the unique nature of the club-Oriented sports&#13;
:tam directedat student participation in activities vs.&#13;
nt competitionon a varsity level. He S81d the ;::.m is "a model innovation" aud predicted other&#13;
Ilea: WOUlddevelop their programs along the same&#13;
'I1&gt;eIIleeliDg then turned to the committee Report on&#13;
the Budget which resulted in the group being informed&#13;
that the findings have nol yet been completed. Regent&#13;
Walker stressed that the public oughtto be kept aware of&#13;
whatever happensto the budget as it happens rather than&#13;
waiting until all the infonoation has been analyzed and&#13;
finalized. . bid TheRegents alsovoted downthe Madisoncampus&#13;
for COoedhousing; allocated $90,000 for th;, Library&#13;
Learning Center; and approved a measure allOWlng.the&#13;
developers of off-campus housing to coenect 1010&#13;
Parkside's sewer system.&#13;
For vice president Roo Williams soundly&#13;
trounced Lyn Van Eimeren, who did litUe&#13;
campaigning, 50&amp;-266 votes.&#13;
The unofficial results are: Per&#13;
Rae. Ken.. Gr. TaL Ct.&#13;
Ron Williams In 134 203 sal 6S&#13;
Lyn Van Eimeren 81 III lOS 2li6 35&#13;
For treasurer, Larry Thielen, long a campus&#13;
activist and the husband oC Madeleine Tlllelen,&#13;
was beaten convincingly by Debbie Kemper.&#13;
The unofficial results are: Per&#13;
Rae. ~en. Gr. Tol Ct&#13;
Debbie Kemper 151 t47 t91 4 62&#13;
Larry Thielen 104 83 119 306 38&#13;
Dave Weber, of the Hallov.een party, ran&#13;
unopposed for recording secretary and picked up&#13;
542votes. The [act that 885votes were cast would&#13;
seem to indicate there was a backlash against&#13;
the Halloween party candidates.&#13;
The contest for corresponding secretary was&#13;
the closest race among the Senate offices. Jean&#13;
Koehler emerged with a 33 vote edge over Sutton&#13;
Kinter. Kinter won the Kenosha campus b one&#13;
vote but lost heavily in Racine.&#13;
Miss Koehler was the only Halloween party&#13;
candidate to win an office in direct competition.&#13;
The unofficial results are:&#13;
Per&#13;
Rae. Ken.. Gr. To Cl&#13;
Jean Koehler 130 tOS 154 389 52&#13;
Sutton Kinter 104 106 t46 356 8&#13;
In the at-large election [or the Student Senate,&#13;
Dean Loumos paced all candidates in pulling In&#13;
340 votes, 45 votes more than runnerup, Tom&#13;
Garner.&#13;
In electing the Senate each voter cast six&#13;
votes.&#13;
Loumos ran on the Halloween party ticket and&#13;
opposed the candidacy of Tim Eaker [or&#13;
president. He WlIS a member of the Constitutional&#13;
Committee and was a leader of last&#13;
spring's campus strike.&#13;
Five of the six Halloween party senatorial&#13;
candidates, Loumos, Gary Davis, Mike&#13;
Mayeshiba Marl&lt; Timpany and John Gottfredsen&#13;
";011 senate seats. The sixth, Tom&#13;
Taskonls, is tied for the 17th positioo.&#13;
The unofficial results for the senate are: ( ote&#13;
discrepancies in totals.)&#13;
Rae. Ken. Gr.&#13;
141 01 132&#13;
117 62 116&#13;
89 75 126&#13;
74 85 118 277&#13;
44 110 lOS 259&#13;
82 55 110 247&#13;
49 lIS 89 231&#13;
60 75 89 224&#13;
43 92 84 219&#13;
rt 39 94 2tO&#13;
81 49 n 2111&#13;
(Continued 011 Pile I)&#13;
Dean Loumos&#13;
Tom Garner&#13;
John Gottfredsen&#13;
Ken Antararnian&#13;
Walter Breach&#13;
Jeanette Dremel&#13;
Walter Ulbricht&#13;
Ken Konkol&#13;
George Fletcher&#13;
01ris Crowe&#13;
Mark Timpany&#13;
Tot&#13;
340&#13;
29!;&#13;
0:&#13;
W&#13;
"&#13;
0:&#13;
o&#13;
m&#13;
.J&#13;
.J&#13;
W&#13;
0:&#13;
0:&#13;
"o&#13;
11IeBe...... lb._ ... -. Hall u.rary tu&amp; Frilia .&#13;
F ,ee University of Wis,onsin-Parkside&#13;
------"'-&#13;
NUMBER 12 APRIL 19, 1971&#13;
Jazz Comes To U&#13;
S pat 5&#13;
Student Gov't Elections&#13;
Eaker Wins Presidency&#13;
nm Eaker - Student Government President.&#13;
Dea.n Loamo11 - Top Senatorial Vote-Getter.&#13;
0&#13;
z&#13;
&lt;&#13;
.J&#13;
z&#13;
&lt;&#13;
::E&#13;
m&#13;
0&#13;
m&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
After nearly two years without a student&#13;
government the Parkside student body now ha&#13;
one.&#13;
In a general election that saw only 885 students&#13;
vote out of a student body of 4,000, Tim Eaker&#13;
was elected President; R. E. (Ron) Williams,&#13;
vice_ president; Debbie Kemper, treasurer;&#13;
David Weber, recording secretary; and Jean&#13;
Koehler, corresponding secretary.&#13;
In the Senate 16 of the 17 positions were chosen.&#13;
For the 17th position there was a tie between&#13;
Tom Taskonis and Ed Toth. Taskonis bas asked&#13;
for a recount, and if the ·ue remains the chairman&#13;
of the election committee will randomly&#13;
select the winner.&#13;
The 16 winners are: Dean Loumos, Tom&#13;
Garner, John Gottfredsen, Ken Antaramian,&#13;
Walter Breach, Jeanette Dremel, \ 'alter&#13;
Ulbricht, Ken Konkol, Tom Fletcher, Chris&#13;
Crowe, Mark Tilnpany, Tom eier, iike&#13;
Mayeshiba, Gary Davis, Gary Adelson and Dale&#13;
Martin.&#13;
For the Student Union Committee, the four&#13;
students on the ballot, Tim Daley, Greg&#13;
Barrette, Tom Kreul and Jerry Horton, were all&#13;
elected. Sue Nevin won the fifth position on a&#13;
write-in campaign.&#13;
The race for the presidency saw Tim Eaker&#13;
defeat Madeleine Thielen of the Halloween party&#13;
by 87 votes. Eaker has been active in lobbying&#13;
for the restoration of cuts in the Parkside budget&#13;
in Madison. He was also a lead of the Committee&#13;
for United Student Action ( SA) , and&#13;
fought against the ratification of the Con·&#13;
stitutional Committee constitution. Eaker had 38 per cent of the votes cast for&#13;
president and carried all three campuses. Don&#13;
Koser was second in votes cast at the Kenosha&#13;
campus.&#13;
The unofficial results are:&#13;
Rae. Ken.&#13;
Tim Eaker 91 92&#13;
Madeleine Thielen 85 52&#13;
Don Kosher 54 68&#13;
David Karls 28 12&#13;
Ian MacTaggert 11 14&#13;
Gr.&#13;
142&#13;
101&#13;
57&#13;
31&#13;
14&#13;
Tot.&#13;
325&#13;
238&#13;
179&#13;
71&#13;
39&#13;
Per&#13;
Ct.&#13;
38&#13;
28&#13;
21&#13;
8&#13;
5&#13;
Regents Meet At Parkside&#13;
Last Friday the University of Wisconsin Board of&#13;
Regents met on the Parkside campus.&#13;
The morning session began minus regents Walker an~&#13;
7.ieg}er, during which the group approved an 18 cred~t&#13;
CO&amp;~ing certificate. The non-major, non-minor course ~s&#13;
designed for the full-time student, particularly . m&#13;
education, who might be pressed into coaching duties&#13;
Ylhile teaching.&#13;
Aftei: a break for lunch the group returned to the&#13;
. ary at full attendance and listened to Chancellor&#13;
Ylli~ explain Parkside. Wyllie stressed the l~~ grant&#13;
tradition as it relates to Parkside's industrial mission. He&#13;
lrl~ that the area is in the midst of changing from an&#13;
&amp;gricu]tural background to a solidly industrial base .. He&#13;
mentioned Parkside's nine interdisciplinary maJors&#13;
a., a pa~t of its program. . .&#13;
During the course of Wyllie's address statistics&#13;
~ming student body make-up revealed 70 per cent of&#13;
Sbident body work 20 hours per week, while taking 12&#13;
~ts per semester and for this reason classes 8:re held&#13;
om 8 a.m. until 10 p.m. to provide as fleXIble an&#13;
~~ic program as possible to meet the dem~ds of the ~ student. It was also mentioned that the average&#13;
e of a Parkside student is 22.&#13;
11-Later, Tom Rosandich Athletic Director, told the&#13;
~ts that Parkside "is in a situation where the fan&#13;
lack 't know where teams are playing," referring to the&#13;
~ ti permanent athletic facilities on _campus. He&#13;
i'o ed ~e unique nature of the clut:H&gt;nen~. ~ports&#13;
~m directed at student participation in activi~es vs.&#13;
i-- nt competition on a varsity level. He srud the&#13;
C&gt;gram is "a model innovation" and predicted 0ther&#13;
~ Would develop their programs along the same&#13;
The meeting then turned to the Committee Report on&#13;
the Budget which resulted in the group being informed&#13;
th t the findings have not yet been completed. Regent&#13;
w:UCer stressed that the public ought to be kept aware of&#13;
whatever happens to the budget as it happens rather than&#13;
waiting until all the information has been analyzed and&#13;
finalized d' · bid&#13;
The Regents also voted down the ta ison cam~ .&#13;
for co-ed housing; allocated $90,000 for the ~brary&#13;
Leaming Center; and approved a mea ure allowuig . the&#13;
developers of off-campus housing to connect mto&#13;
Parkside's sewer system.&#13;
a:&#13;
Ill&#13;
C)&#13;
oc&#13;
0&#13;
m&#13;
.J&#13;
.J&#13;
Ill&#13;
oc&#13;
oc&#13;
&lt;&#13;
0&#13;
'lbe Rege ts meetm&#13;
Rae.&#13;
Ron 'illiams li2&#13;
Lyn \an Eimerens1&#13;
For treasurer, Larry T&#13;
activ " t and the husband&#13;
wa beaten com;nci 1 b&#13;
The unofficial resul&#13;
Jean Koehl r&#13;
Sutton Kinter&#13;
In th at-1&#13;
DeanLoum&#13;
340 VO&#13;
Gamer. In electi&#13;
Dean Loom&#13;
Tom Gar r&#13;
John GoWr n&#13;
Ken Antaramian&#13;
Walter Br ch&#13;
Jeanette Dremel&#13;
Walter lbricht&#13;
Ken Ko ol&#13;
~r e Fl tch r&#13;
01 . o&#13;
ark Timpany&#13;
Rae.&#13;
141&#13;
117&#13;
74&#13;
44&#13;
82&#13;
l&#13;
(Coo&#13;
e Ta ftll Hall f') la l Frid.a ••&#13;
p&#13;
m&#13;
4i&#13;
231&#13;
l&#13;
210&#13;
2(f/ &#13;
Pa.eZ i\Jll'lII'. l\lql&#13;
Volunteers Needed for Headstart&#13;
_Temple Baptist Church, 4715&#13;
5200 Avenue (2 classes)&#13;
Classes are from 9 a.m. until 1&#13;
pm., Monday through Friday.&#13;
There is a teacher and a&#13;
teacher-aide working with 20&#13;
four-year olds in each classroom.&#13;
Extra hands are needed to help at&#13;
most times. Those volunteering&#13;
should like cluldren and be able&#13;
to accept guidance from the&#13;
teacher.&#13;
Anyone interested in giving&#13;
some time and loving attention to&#13;
children please call 658-2371,&#13;
extension 77, and leave your&#13;
name and phone number.&#13;
Someone will contact you to give&#13;
you more information.&#13;
The Kenosha Head Start&#13;
Session&#13;
Offers&#13;
Summer&#13;
About 2,000 students are expe&#13;
ted to register for the 1971&#13;
summer session at the University&#13;
or Wisconsin·Parkside, according&#13;
to John Va laske. Director or&#13;
Summer Session and Extended&#13;
Day Programs. Enrollment last&#13;
. ummer was 1,789&#13;
Detailed umetables ror the&#13;
eight-week summer session&#13;
beginning June 28 now are&#13;
available from Valaske"s office&#13;
and at the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
campuses&#13;
The timetable lists 109 separate&#13;
courses In 'n different academic&#13;
and prctes ronal Cields including&#13;
18 courses which have not&#13;
previously been orrered during&#13;
ummer session.&#13;
The new summer courses are&#13;
Introduction to Accounting,&#13;
Personnel Management, Employe&#13;
Evaluation, Introduction to&#13;
Biochemistry, Mass Media in&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
New&#13;
American Society, Introduction&#13;
to Earth SCience, Government&#13;
and Business, Advanced&#13;
Calculus, Analytical Techniques&#13;
in Music, Contemporary Issues in&#13;
Public School Music Education,&#13;
Philosophy or Religion,&#13;
Psychology or Personality,&#13;
Seminar in Motivation, Introduction&#13;
to Social Theory,&#13;
Cervantes and Latin American&#13;
Perspectives.&#13;
Valaske pointed out that a&#13;
number of introductory courses&#13;
are being offered this summer to&#13;
accommodate students who have&#13;
just completed their high school&#13;
. work and wish to get a head start&#13;
on college.&#13;
A number of upper division&#13;
courses also will be offered to&#13;
meet the needs both of continuing&#13;
Parkside students and students&#13;
home for the summer from other&#13;
institutions, Valaske added.&#13;
"We will have a slightly different&#13;
mix of day and evening&#13;
courses this summer," Valaske&#13;
said, "to allow flexibility for&#13;
students combining employment&#13;
and study."&#13;
Valaske said the deferred&#13;
program is in need of volunteerS&#13;
to work with children 10 the&#13;
classrooms. Head Start is a&#13;
federally runded program Ior&#13;
children of families of low Income&#13;
(specificattons determined by&#13;
guidelines set up by the government).&#13;
We have centers at:&#13;
Beth Hillel Temple, 6050 8th&#13;
Avenue&#13;
Immanuel Methodist Church,&#13;
5410 Sheridan Road&#13;
St. Mark School, .1J17 14th&#13;
Avenue (2 classes)&#13;
St. Matthew Guild Hall, 5900 7th&#13;
Avenue&#13;
Courses&#13;
credit program for high school&#13;
juniors begun several years ago&#13;
also will be continued. Under the&#13;
plan, students completing their&#13;
junior year in high school In the&#13;
upper 50 per cent of their class&#13;
may enroll for summer work on&#13;
the recommendation or their high&#13;
school counselor with college&#13;
credits earned held in "escrow"&#13;
until completion of high school&#13;
work.&#13;
Courses will be offered on all&#13;
three Parkside campuses, with&#13;
registration June 22 through 25 at&#13;
Greenquist Hall on the Wood&#13;
Road Campus.&#13;
Summer session fees are&#13;
scaled to the number or credits&#13;
taken and are uniform at all touryear&#13;
UW campuses. Fees for&#13;
state residents are $37.50 (or one&#13;
credit, $55.50 for two credits,&#13;
$73.50 for three credits, $91.50 for&#13;
four credits, $109.50 (or five&#13;
credits, $127.50 (or six to nine&#13;
credits and $181.50 (or len or&#13;
more credits.&#13;
For non residents,&#13;
corresponding fees are $91.50,&#13;
$163.50, $235.50, $307.50, $379.50,&#13;
$451.50 and $667.50.&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE, , ,&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000Albums&#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;
·equlpment 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 - 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;
Soutneastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
WednesdaY, April 21&#13;
Ecology Lecture .&#13;
Michael Cafferty, acting&#13;
assistant secertary of the t,J.S.&#13;
Department of Transpo:tatlOll&#13;
,&#13;
will talk on ''TransportatlOn and&#13;
the Environment" at 7:~O p.m.&#13;
in Room 103, GreenqUlst Hall&#13;
under sponsorship of Umverslty&#13;
Extension. (free)&#13;
University League&#13;
University League will m~et&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. in the Ra,lOe&#13;
Campus Badger Room where&#13;
Eugene GasiorkiewlcZ, assocIa~e&#13;
professor of life science, Will&#13;
speak on "A Fight for Space&#13;
-Daisies vs. Grasses at the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie."&#13;
Tbursday, Apnl'U&#13;
Lecture-Recital&#13;
Tenor Eugene Conley will&#13;
present a lecture-recital from&#13;
12:30 to 2 p.rn. in Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall. (free)&#13;
Architecture-Art Lecture&#13;
The noted architect, Victor&#13;
Christ-Janer, holder of&#13;
numerous awards and prizes for&#13;
architecture, will lecture on&#13;
"Architecture as Art" at 8 p.m.&#13;
in Room 103 Greenquist Hall&#13;
under sponsorship of the&#13;
Le c t u re and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee. (free)&#13;
Friday, April 23&#13;
Feature Film&#13;
Feature film "True Grit" will&#13;
be shown at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Activities Building. (adrn. 75&#13;
cents)&#13;
Saturday, April 24&#13;
Alumni Founder's Day&#13;
The UW Alumni Association&#13;
of Kenosha will hold a&#13;
Cheerleading&#13;
Tryouts&#13;
There will be cheerleading and&#13;
Rangerette tryouts coming up&#13;
this spring. All interested girls&#13;
are encouraged to come to the&#13;
practices or contact Mrs.&#13;
Patricia Mattek if interested and&#13;
can't come.&#13;
Practices will be held at&#13;
Kenosha and Racine, with the&#13;
final tryout to be held in the&#13;
Badger Room-Racine Campus .&#13;
Tuesday, May 18, from 3:30 to&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
CARL'S/ PIZZA&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
In four Sizes 9" - ·12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RI8S • SPAGHnTI • CHiCKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI. LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD. SANDWICHES&#13;
CARlY -OUTS • DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU IUNC ... WE alUNC"&#13;
Founder's Day dinner dance at&#13;
6:30 p.m. at Bristol Oaks&#13;
Country -Club. Speaker will be&#13;
UW President John Weaver&#13;
Tickets at $6.50 per person ar~&#13;
available on campus frorn&#13;
Charles Kugel (Ext. 391) Or&#13;
Coach Stephens (Ext. 245).&#13;
Dance&#13;
T he Booster ClUb&#13;
(Cheerleaders and Rangerettes)&#13;
'will sponsor a dance at8 p.rn, in&#13;
the Activities Building. (adm&#13;
charge) .&#13;
Sunday, April 2S&#13;
University Artists Series Concert&#13;
The David Baker Jazz&#13;
Ensemble will present a&#13;
University A!ltsts Series concert&#13;
at 4 p.m. In Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse. (Gen. adm. $1&#13;
student adm. 50 cents, childre~&#13;
12 and under free)&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
Parkside Poetry Forum will&#13;
feature Carl Lindner. assistant&#13;
professor of' English, speaking&#13;
on "concrete poetry" at 2 p.m,&#13;
at the Kenosha Public Museum&#13;
Rally Race .&#13;
Zeta Beta Tau will sponsor a&#13;
road rally wi th registration at&#13;
12:30 p.m. in the Tallent Hall&#13;
parking lot and the first car&#13;
scheduled to leave at I p.m&#13;
Cost of $5 per car (two per';'';&#13;
per car) includes free beer, food&#13;
and a party at the end of the&#13;
race. A traveling team trophy&#13;
will be introduced for&#13;
organizations wishing to sponsor&#13;
two or more cars as a team.&#13;
Teams also are eligible for&#13;
regular place trophies (six&#13;
trophies for the first three&#13;
places).&#13;
PRACTICE SCHEDULE&#13;
Athletic Room-Kenosha&#13;
Tuesday, May 4,3:30-5:30 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday, May 11, 3:30-5:30&#13;
Thursday, May 13, 3:30-5:30&#13;
Racine Campus&#13;
Tuesday, May 4, 3:30-5:3Op.m.,&#13;
Room 201&#13;
Tuesday, May 11, 3:30-5:30&#13;
p.m., Badger Room&#13;
Thursday, May 13, 3:30-5:30&#13;
p.rn., ..Badger Room&#13;
_Final Tryouts&#13;
May 18, 3:30-5:30 p.m., Badger&#13;
Room- Racine.&#13;
For further information CODtact:&#13;
Mrs. Patricia Mattek, Advisor,&#13;
Extension 245.&#13;
Kathy Mauer, Captain of&#13;
Cheerleaders, Racine 633-1664,&#13;
Bev Noble, Captain or Pom·&#13;
Pom Girls, Kenosha 654-1OW. 'N"ij"wscope"&#13;
• Edit« Warren Nedry&#13;
Marc Eisen NewsEdit«&#13;
John Koloen Copy Eelt«&#13;
Jim Nolan Business Mallll'l&#13;
John Leighton Adv:':;:::&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF Bill&#13;
Jim KolDen, Bill Sorensen, BGb&#13;
Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Mike&#13;
Mainland, Dean LoUIDOS,Keo&#13;
Kurth, Bob Borchardt,&#13;
Konkol, Kevin McKay,J=&#13;
Casper, Paul LomartiJ'O,&#13;
Taffs.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF _&#13;
Narees Socha, Don Marjola,&#13;
Gray, Barbara Scott.&#13;
BUSINESS PHONES ESl--&#13;
658-1881&#13;
isw77&#13;
Newscope is an ~&#13;
sludent newspaper c~ .IY 01&#13;
students of The uruv .....bIiib"l&#13;
Wisconsin-Parks,de po ,,-&#13;
d&#13;
·ng va ....&#13;
weekly except un ined IOf&#13;
periods. Student oblJl lh&lt; .-&#13;
vertising runds are rOI tb'&#13;
source of revenue 6.&#13;
operation or NeWSCOPd·aod&#13;
copies are prln~~utl1I'&#13;
distributed throug. ..--&#13;
d Rac,ne&#13;
Kenosha an Unltll'&#13;
munities as well as lh&lt;av~&#13;
sity. Free COpies are&#13;
upon request.&#13;
Volunteers Needed for Headstart&#13;
program is in need of vol~teers&#13;
to work ..... ;th children m the&#13;
classrooms. Head Start is a&#13;
federally funded progr3:m for&#13;
children of families of low mcome&#13;
(specifications determined by&#13;
guidelines set up by the govern·&#13;
Temple Bapll ment). t Church, 4715&#13;
52nd Avenue (2 classe-)&#13;
Cla. · are from 9 a .m. until 1&#13;
p.m., 1onday throu h Frida} .&#13;
There i a teacher and a&#13;
t ch r-aide wor · ing with 20&#13;
four-year olds in each classroom.&#13;
E. tra hands are needed to help at&#13;
most tim . Th volunteermg&#13;
hould like childr n and be able&#13;
to accept guidance from the&#13;
teacher.&#13;
Anyone interested in gi\'ing&#13;
some time and lo\·ing attention to&#13;
children please call 658-2371 ,&#13;
extension n , and leave your&#13;
name and phone number.&#13;
Someone .,., ill contact you to give&#13;
you more information.&#13;
The Kenosha Head Start&#13;
We have centers at: Beth Hillel Temple, 6050 8th&#13;
Avenue&#13;
Immanuel Methodist Church,&#13;
5410 Sheridan Road&#13;
St. lark School, 7117 14th&#13;
Avenue (2 classes)&#13;
St. Matthew Guild Hall, 5900 7th&#13;
Avenue&#13;
Summer Session&#13;
Offers New Courses&#13;
for the&#13;
umrn r&#13;
American Society, Introduction&#13;
to Earth Science, Government&#13;
and Business, Advanced&#13;
Calculus, Analytical Techniques&#13;
in tusic, Contemporary Issues in&#13;
Public School tu ic Education,&#13;
Philosophy of Religion,&#13;
Psychology of Per onality,&#13;
eminar in totivation, In·&#13;
troduction to Social Theory,&#13;
Cervante; and Latin American&#13;
P r:;peclives.&#13;
Valaske pomted out that a&#13;
number of introductory courses&#13;
are being offered this summer to&#13;
accommodate students who have&#13;
ju t completed their high school&#13;
work and wish to get a head start&#13;
on college.&#13;
credit program for high school&#13;
juniors begun several years ago&#13;
also will be continued. Under the&#13;
plan, students completing their&#13;
junior year in high school in the&#13;
upper 50 per cent of their class&#13;
may enroll for summer work on&#13;
the recommendation of their high&#13;
school counselor with college&#13;
credits earned held in "escrow"&#13;
until completion of high school&#13;
work.&#13;
Courses will be offered on all&#13;
three Parkside campuses, with&#13;
registration June 22 through 25 at&#13;
Greenquist Hall on the Wood&#13;
Road Campus.&#13;
Th n · ·ummer cour e are&#13;
Introduction to Accounting,&#13;
P r onn I 1anagement, Employ&#13;
Evaluation, Introduction to&#13;
B1och •mi try, la s Media in&#13;
A number of upper division&#13;
courses also will be offered to&#13;
meet the needs both of continuing&#13;
Parkside students and students&#13;
home for the summer from other&#13;
institutions, Valaske added.&#13;
Summer session fees are&#13;
scaled to the number of credits&#13;
taken and are uniform at all fouryear&#13;
UW campuses. Fees for&#13;
state residents are $37.50 for one&#13;
credit, $55.50 for two credits,&#13;
$73.50 for three credits, $91.50 for&#13;
four credits, $109.50 for five&#13;
credits, $127.50 for six to nine&#13;
credits and $181.50 for ten or&#13;
more credits. it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
"We will have a slightly different&#13;
mix of day and evening&#13;
courses this summer," Valaske&#13;
said, "to allow flexibility for&#13;
students combining employment&#13;
and study."&#13;
Valaske said the deferred&#13;
For non residents,&#13;
corresponding fees are $91.50,&#13;
$163.50, $235.50, $307.50, $379.50,&#13;
$451.50 and $667.50.&#13;
NATIONAL BANK or KENOSHA&#13;
MEMBER F.D.I.C.&#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 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;
GARRARD - Turntable!&gt;&#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;
Sout,,eastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
Wednesday, April 21&#13;
Ecology Lecture .&#13;
Michael Cafferty, acting&#13;
assistant secertary of the ~.J.S.&#13;
Department of Transpo~tat10n ,&#13;
will talk on "Transportation and&#13;
the Environment" at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
in Room 103, Greenqui_st H_all&#13;
under sponsorship of Umvers1ty&#13;
Extension. (free) University League&#13;
University League will m~et&#13;
at ? :30 p.m. in the Racine&#13;
Campus Badge~ R.oom w~ere&#13;
Eugene Gasiorkiew1cz, assoc1a~e&#13;
professor of life science, will&#13;
speak on "A Fight for Space - Daisies vs. Grasses at the&#13;
Chiwaukee Prairie."&#13;
Thurs&lt;iay, Aprtl U&#13;
Lecture-Recital&#13;
Tenor Eugene Conley will&#13;
present a lecture-recital from&#13;
12 :30 to 2 p.m. in Room 103&#13;
Greenquist Hall. (free)&#13;
Architecture-Art Lecture&#13;
The noted architect, Victor&#13;
Christ-Janer, holder of&#13;
numerous awards and prizes for&#13;
architecture, will lecture on&#13;
"Architecture as Art" at 8 p.m.&#13;
in Room 103 Greenquist Hall&#13;
under sponsorship of the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Committee. (free)&#13;
Friday, April 23&#13;
Feature Film&#13;
Feature film "True Grit" will&#13;
be shown at 8 p.m. in the&#13;
Activities Building. (adm. 75&#13;
cents)&#13;
Saturday, April 24&#13;
Alumni Founder's Day&#13;
The UW Alumni Association&#13;
of Kenosha will hold a&#13;
Cheer leading&#13;
Tryouts&#13;
There will be cheerleading and&#13;
Rangerette tryouts coming up&#13;
this spring. All interested girls&#13;
are encouraged to come to the&#13;
practices or contact Mrs.&#13;
Patricia Mattek if interested and&#13;
can't come.&#13;
Practices will be held at&#13;
Kenosha and Racine, with the&#13;
final tryout to be held in the&#13;
Badger Room-Racine Cam1;ms&#13;
Tuesday, May 18, from 3: 30 to&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S/ PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" . 12" ~ 14" . 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHOTI • CHICKEN&#13;
GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • U SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARII.Y-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU II/HG •. . WE BIIIHG"&#13;
657-9843 or&#13;
658-4922&#13;
Founder's Day dinner dance at&#13;
6:30 p.m. at Bristol Oaks&#13;
Country Club. Speaker will be&#13;
UW President John Weaver&#13;
Tickets at $6.50 per person ar~&#13;
available on campus from&#13;
Charles Kugel (Ext. 391) or&#13;
Coach Stephens (Ext. 245).&#13;
Dance&#13;
The Booster Club&#13;
(Cheerleaders and Rangerettes)&#13;
·will sponsor a dance at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Activities Building. (adm&#13;
charge) ·&#13;
Sunday, April 25&#13;
University Artists Series Concert&#13;
The David Baker Jazz&#13;
En_sem?le ~ill present a&#13;
University A~l!sts Series concert&#13;
at 4 p.m. m Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse. (Gen. adm. $1&#13;
student adm. 50 cents, childre~&#13;
12 and under free)&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
Parkside Poetry Forum will&#13;
feature Carl Lindner, assistant&#13;
professor of English, speaking&#13;
on "concrete poetry" at 2 p.m.&#13;
at the Kenosha Public Museum&#13;
Rally Race ·&#13;
Zeta Beta Tau will sponsor a&#13;
road rally with registration at&#13;
12:30 p.m. in the Tallent Hall&#13;
parking lot and the first car&#13;
scheduled to leave at I pm&#13;
Cost of $5 per car (two personi&#13;
per car) includes free beer, food&#13;
and a party at the end of the&#13;
race. A traveling team trophy&#13;
will be introduced for&#13;
organizations wishing to sponsor&#13;
two or more cars as a team.&#13;
Teams also are eligible for&#13;
regular place trophies (six&#13;
trophies for the first three&#13;
places).&#13;
PRACTICE SCHEDULE&#13;
Athletic Room-Kenosha&#13;
Tuesday, May 4, 3:30-5:30 p.m&#13;
Tuesday, May 11, 3:30-5:30&#13;
Thursday, May 13, 3:30-5:30&#13;
Racine Campus&#13;
Tuesday, May 4, 3:30-5:30p.m.,&#13;
Room 201&#13;
Tuesday, May 11, 3:30-5:30&#13;
p.m., Badger Room&#13;
Thursday, May 13, 3:30-5:30&#13;
p.m., .,Badger Room&#13;
. Final Tryouts&#13;
May 18, 3:30-5:30 p.m., Badger&#13;
Room-Racine.&#13;
For further information con·&#13;
tact:&#13;
Mrs. Patricia Mattek, Advisor,&#13;
Extension 245.&#13;
Kathy Mauer, Captain of&#13;
Cheerleaders, Racine 633-1664&#13;
Bev Noble, Captain of Porn·&#13;
Porn Girls, Kenosha 654-1020 . .............................. ,&#13;
Newscope&#13;
WarrenNedry - rut•&#13;
Marc Eisen News Edit«&#13;
John Koloen Copy Editcr&#13;
Jim Nolan Business Ma~~er&#13;
John Leighton Ad~~ger&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF ill&#13;
Jim Koloen, Bill Sorensen, ~ Jacoby, Darrell Borger, Mtkt&#13;
Mainland, Dean 1,ownos, ell&#13;
Kurth Bob Borchardt, K&#13;
' K James Konkol, Kevin Mc a~, S\'e!I&#13;
Casper, Paul Lomartire,&#13;
Taffs.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF . Jolil&#13;
Narees Socha, Don MarJala,&#13;
Gray, Barbara Scott.&#13;
BUSINES.S PHONES Ext&#13;
658-4861, - 652-4111&#13;
Newscope is an ind~&#13;
student newspaper co_m~: ·&#13;
students of Th~ uruversJ?&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside pu cab · g va weekly except durm . ed ,d-&#13;
'od Student obtain pen s. the&#13;
vertising funds are for&#13;
source of revenue&#13;
operation . of Newsco~- a&#13;
copies are pnn~e ut t&#13;
distributed throug O co d Racine Kenosha an the un1\1!&#13;
munities as well as availablt&#13;
sity. Free copies are&#13;
upon request. &#13;
James Liddy : Magician and Satanist&#13;
by JIm Koloen of the Newsc&#13;
' ope Staff&#13;
Liddy, Irish poet, red haired, portly,&#13;
~ DYlan Thomas, read poems, lectured and&#13;
...-!~~parkside students during the week&#13;
~ WJ Easter vacation. Instr:uctors, taking no&#13;
~ fat chance that their students would&#13;
~ OIlwn to hear Mr, Liddy voluntarily, invited&#13;
~~ and lecture in their classes. Few students,&#13;
""~- (asked, knew quite what to say about this&#13;
~,.raanY&#13;
&gt;-&#13;
ID&#13;
o&#13;
lJ&#13;
"~&#13;
-'&#13;
-'&#13;
ID&#13;
During tha t night th .&#13;
would be taking Herbert" poet ~nformed us that he&#13;
reSIdence next year H ~UblY s place as artist-infrom&#13;
Denison Unive~ite ~~ 0bf: coming to US directly&#13;
San Francisco State ~l hio andbefore that from&#13;
ther, Mr. Liddy said he wege&#13;
., When interrogated Iurof&#13;
course he would be t as~.t sure exactly what type&#13;
traduced Lidd eac 109, Mr. KUbly, who 10-&#13;
discussing poeJy&#13;
~~th ~:n aUdle~ce. told of Liddy&#13;
bis room till fou . th Francisco State students in&#13;
r In e mormng&#13;
The next day Wednesd .&#13;
terviewed Mr Lidd i ay . t? be exact, I inconvivial&#13;
tankards Y&#13;
OfnA&#13;
the Activities Building over&#13;
be . rnencan ale Whe di d&#13;
co~~~eto write ~lry.? "I started' in 1~9. II ~:&#13;
ke t ond myself scribbling quite unconsciously and I&#13;
p. It ... after aU the whole secret to writin is to&#13;
perSIst, not to give up, As Iget older [ feel Ih g&#13;
~ent. bU~I get lazier. As I get older I believ::o~:~~&#13;
mortality and another life so Idon't th'nk I' .&#13;
to do a~ything this time around. __ and las fa~ a~m~&#13;
po~trYI'S concerned, Istill think Isuffer from be~&#13;
so , a most sentimental, and try to consciously keep&#13;
awa&#13;
b&#13;
Y&#13;
I&#13;
from that, especially when approaching the&#13;
pro em of love."&#13;
I tbiLi~dYon poetry, "Poetry is a part of one's destiny&#13;
n a lord of creation or some great power .&#13;
wherever the power comes from or wherever' th~&#13;
• source of energy is, is the same place where poems&#13;
come from ... messages are brought to US from&#13;
''In America one becomes a non-human being.&#13;
it seem$ you've given up the ideo of Community. "&#13;
nb poet after hearing him speak in their classes.&#13;
Sort&lt; 01 judgementaluncertainty: Few students had&#13;
!"Ift'seen a poet close up before and, hence the first&#13;
Uddy contactwas in some ways equivalent to shaking&#13;
!Id with one's first martian; second reason conC8'D5&#13;
poet Liddy's Satanic obsession (Satanic in a&#13;
;odital sense) which obsession Ishall keep vague as&#13;
PDftI to remain poets must live behind a veil.&#13;
Mr. Liddyheld a reading in the Activities Building&#13;
11 Tuesday in which perhaps four score sat in at1IIIdance,&#13;
Helookedvery much like Dylan Thomas, his&#13;
_ the wavein his hair, the protruding stomach, and&#13;
Iipoeticreodering, interrupted by explanations and&#13;
-.Jtalk,provedthe night to be worthwbile. Except&#13;
louloudchOl1lS of beligerent drunks near the har, the&#13;
NICiDg was good, and though no one in the audience&#13;
." any questionsto ask the poet, he wasn't able to&#13;
lint the building for more than an hour after he&#13;
*liIIed down from the podium as be found bimself&#13;
.arded bystudents and curious onlookers. So this is&#13;
alrilb poet. Yup. •&#13;
faraway places, a spiritual world. The poems we \\-TIte&#13;
have, Ithink, little to do with ourselves except that we&#13;
mus~ receive them and acknowledge them and try to&#13;
public them out and cast them into the language we&#13;
have. The poet is the vehicle, the poem is the property&#13;
of the world."&#13;
During the reading yesterday, you spoke of evil&#13;
and Satanic qualities in Baudelaire and yourself Could&#13;
you expand on this: "I believe in evil as a sort of&#13;
necessary part of the world, evil as experienced in Its&#13;
duration. America has lost out because it never really&#13;
believed in evil, because it is facile and shallow in the&#13;
sense that it's an overoptimistic society_ I think it&#13;
needs a kind of a love of Baudelaire, of that coo) French&#13;
decadence. As for Satan, 1 think an ultimate reconciliation&#13;
between good and evil is theoreticall)&#13;
possible. You must realize that Satan is not totally evil.&#13;
he has sufficient evil in him to make him a wonderful&#13;
figure. "&#13;
How do you view the poet? "The poet is a magician&#13;
and a satanist. He can put a spell on us, and we can&#13;
either reject the spell or accept it. It should be&#13;
dangerous to meet poets, mothers should tell their kids&#13;
when young that one should read poets but not meet&#13;
them."&#13;
ApriI't.'tll PE&#13;
You were advertLsed as an 1nsh poe "'''hat 15 an&#13;
Irish poet' "An extIe E&gt;a.le has atways the g~'&#13;
lAlrment01tbe Imh 11'. our desuny to a"ay from&#13;
home, to be outsl&lt;le at"a) s: did you know there are&#13;
more IrtShmen In England than In Ireland' Another&#13;
thlllg is thai " .. underslal'd death. are b 1&#13;
11'. partly a cultural Ieelmg that th world not the&#13;
only ""orld That's wh e aren't too ve We&#13;
give death Its proper recogntuon In .. and In&#13;
funerals. in Ireland death IS an important al&#13;
event"&#13;
What are scrne 01 )"OUr obsen:allons on Amenca"&#13;
"In America one becomes a non-human bet OU'rf'&#13;
conUnually being Ioid to "ash a"a) our bod al'd&#13;
deodorize it. me loses ones pit) lcohl)' In Amenco&#13;
you all slay homeal 01 ht in froot 01the box, Illlrelal'd&#13;
~.eleavehome ""egolOlhepubs tt~l.hat)ou·&#13;
ll1"enup the Idea 01communI ' Hope for Amena I&#13;
10 tIus present generation. th IS tbe first Cl\lhud&#13;
generation that Amenca has t produced 1be au&#13;
are tT)i.ng to re..define It In human terms ..&#13;
On the poet and drugs "I I people" ho dn&#13;
.....Tite better than people vtho smoke ((lope. For .n·&#13;
stance. Colendge beeame addIcted 10 laudanum 'a&#13;
mixlure 0180 per cent ak&lt;Jboland 20 per cellt Opium&#13;
and wasn'l able to "nle an 'thlll&amp; for the \asl thlrt)&#13;
~eon oItus life Baudela1re expenmenled siroogl)&#13;
with opium and hashish, be " .. n "TOle a boolo. a , It&#13;
called the "Arbflcial Paradlse'·, and then me&#13;
slrUtgly anU~g Personall)', I don't like the ITIP&#13;
poem, At San FranCISCOI banned SO' ral ",-ords OM&#13;
was krishna, another ""as O. t 'T'be) came up lOG&#13;
(requently. I don'. mind so much If peopI &lt;:orne to&#13;
class sloned. there'. nothlll&amp;Ican do abou' tha bu'&#13;
Please doo't V.Tlle poems hen )o'OU're tcmtd.."&#13;
What ",auld ~ou .. ~ are major lbem n&#13;
poetry~ "Death al'd sex I ha,'e a profound de Ih&#13;
croosed '" Ith a burnl oullo,'e, burnt oul heart '&#13;
What do )' ou lhtnk of ,.,Ien h a Bob&#13;
D)"lan, Tim Buckley "It's al".} a question of&#13;
.....hether theyv.T1te poetry Of' nol I thl 0)Ian tumst'U&#13;
says someplace that }us 'IAOor&lt;bdon't tand alone.. HE."&#13;
an artist~ a complete arUSt. soph ucated. exc1 u·&#13;
roolless. be changes hi sl)'le. he dO\'eIops for the e&#13;
or his art extraonlmaril) ~erful, he tin back&#13;
belierinwords Iremember,lthmklt'lAOa earl,y D. Ian.&#13;
where he sur.g 01 the un IblIlt~ 01 Io-e beea&#13;
everythmg IS fadmg, nothmg g.. n to Iasl I It&#13;
James Taylor, 00'"&#13;
What poets Imp. ess you most and "hal quahll&#13;
make for a good poem' "Wben I gl'! a of&#13;
astonishment, .....hen I'm a tonlshed afttl" reach a&#13;
poem Poets hke Baudelaire and Pat" Ca\ ana&#13;
and lately Jack Spicer mix U1te1hg~ and ernot.iOn m&#13;
a way that forces the poem mlo my mind good&#13;
poems stay fore\'er m}our mind Hi II) the. tum&#13;
the reader 1010lbe poet •&#13;
For the students ",ho d,dn'l hO\ a chance to t I&#13;
with James Udd '. you'Uha\~)our cha~ nnt ar&#13;
He is quicl&lt; to laugh. kno led , al'd enJOY&#13;
tailing with .tudents In fac!. me or the problem I&#13;
encountered while mten'le"o'in him a • perpetual&#13;
circle of students cr"OVOdi~ me ou In hlm&#13;
quesllons like what makes a good poem&#13;
Senator Jeanl'! Dremel qu limed&#13;
"hat the encbn 01the lmJlO'llloo 01 the&#13;
llueu.Ky regIme ould mean&#13;
"'oodered 100If ,be Sena'e could act 00&#13;
on behalf of the studenl body. rallf)' lhe behalf 01the'luden' bod) In raur in lbe&#13;
Joint Trealy of Peace between tbe people treal)&#13;
of the United Stales, Soulh Vielnam and Pre, ,den TIm Eaker m ed to lab!&#13;
North Vietnam and urge other the mOlJon unlll the' nt t mnLJn 111&#13;
organizations and persons to supporl tbe ",as ,o,ed do....nU "'aller Breach, Cary&#13;
principles of the People's Peace Treaty" Adelson and Tom Carner' aled to la&#13;
The treaty says In part the U iL&#13;
agrees to immediate and total ¥lith· The \0 e on 1M rnouon i&#13;
drawal from Vielnam, al'd to end the £0&lt;..- jo'OIn~ the three ou no l\&#13;
imposition of the Tlueu-Ky regime in AnLaramian and Jeanette DrtmeJ abo&#13;
South Vietnam. The Vietnamese in tum sLained from \ 011 Tlmpan) Dtan&#13;
would enter into discussions concenung Loumos, Gary Da\ 1 ,Jean K r. John&#13;
the safety of withdrawing troops and CotLfredsen. 00\ Weber, Tom I r&#13;
release of military'r-!:pr;:l:so~ne;:;,:.rs::;,-:::: .. _~:,,:,_...;;Con=::u:n:,:u::;ed::..;:0::;n:.:p:.;:~e:,,:8,:,).....,&#13;
Student· Senate Ratifies Treafy by Marc Eisen&#13;
of lbe Newscope staff&#13;
1be Student Senate in its initial&#13;
~ tast Thursday ratilied "The&#13;
PtapIe's Peace Treaty", a joint peace&#13;
holy betweeolhe people of the United&#13;
.... , South Vietnam and North Viet-&#13;
.... by an 8-4 margin with two ab1IIIlboIl;,&#13;
Abo in the 3'h hour meeting the&#13;
Saat. appointed chairmen to the&#13;
~cornrnittees, passed a resolution&#13;
IIId Student Government does not&#13;
fltoBnize as legal any campus com- :llte that has heen functioning without&#13;
studentrepresentation intended for&#13;
taJnlDdpassed. a resolution concerning a&#13;
I'IS secw-Ity-studentmeeting set for&#13;
April 23,&#13;
Mark Tympany introduced the&#13;
resolution supporting the people'S Peace&#13;
Treaty, It read:&#13;
"Whereas we do not believe ourselves&#13;
10 be at war with the People of&#13;
Vietnam, and&#13;
"Whereas the lighting of an un·&#13;
declared war in Southeast Asia has inflicted&#13;
a great toll in human lives and has&#13;
been the cause of immeasurable suffering;&#13;
"We the elected student government&#13;
of the U~iversity of Wisconsin·Parkside&#13;
James Liddy : Magician and Satanist&#13;
by Jim Koloen of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Liddy, Irish poet, red haired, portly,&#13;
es Dylan Thomas, read poems, lectured and&#13;
like~ Parkside students during the week&#13;
111 Easter vacation. Instructors, taking no&#13;
fat chance that their students would&#13;
:wn to hear Mr. Liddy voluntarily, invited&#13;
d and lecture in their classes. Few students&#13;
::,~y I asked, knew quite what to say about thi~&#13;
During that night th . would be taking Herbe te poet informed u that he&#13;
residence next year. H/ w~u~:ts P!ace as ar~ t-infrom&#13;
Denison University i Oh coming to us direcUy&#13;
San Francisco State Coll n io and _before that from&#13;
ther, Mr. Liddy said hew ege., When interrogated furof&#13;
course he would be t as~.t sure exactly what type&#13;
troduced Liddy t th eac t~g, Mr. Kubly, who indiscussin&#13;
~ e audience. told of Lidd,&#13;
hi g pootry with San Francisco State stud ts .- s room till four in the mornin n m&#13;
The next day Wednesda g.&#13;
terviewed Mr Lidd . Y . t?. be exact, I inconvivial&#13;
tankards ~ft~ the _Act1V1tie Building over&#13;
begin t ·t mencan ale. When did you&#13;
coveredo mwrt e ~try_? "I ~tar~ed in 1959. I d1 • ke t . yself scribbling qu1te unconsciously and 1&#13;
p _on it ... after all the whole secret to \\Titin i t&#13;
ki:~:\~~\ t;ef~e ~p. As I get older I feel I havegmor:&#13;
im ' . azier. As I get older I believe more in&#13;
mortaht~ and ~nother life so I don't think I'm oi&#13;
to do a~ything this time around . . . and as far ag ~ :~try1&#13;
is concer~ed, I still think I suffer from be~&#13;
' a most sentimental, and try to consciously keep&#13;
~;o~ezo~ lthat:, especially when approaching the&#13;
ove.&#13;
1 ~iddy on poetry. "Poetry is a part of one's destiny&#13;
think a lord of creation or some great power ·&#13;
wherever the power comes from or wherever · th; • source of energy is, is the same place where poems&#13;
come from . . . messages are brought to us from&#13;
"In America one becomes a non-human being .&#13;
poet after hearing him speak in their classes.&#13;
e o! judgemental uncertainty: Few students had&#13;
seen a poet close up before and, hence the first&#13;
Ld!)' contact was in some ways equivalent to shaking&#13;
with one's first martian; second reason conpoet&#13;
Llddy's Satanic obsession (Satanic in a&#13;
'cal sense) which obsession I shall keep vague as&#13;
to remain poets must live behind a veil.&#13;
Ir. Liddy held a reading in the Activities Building&#13;
Tuesday in which perhaps four score sat in atHe&#13;
looked very much like Dylan Thomas, his&#13;
the wave in his hair, the protruding stomach, and&#13;
poetic rendering, interrupted by explanations and&#13;
I talk, proved the night to be worthwhile. Except&#13;
aloud chorus of beligerent drunks near the bar, the&#13;
mng was good, and though no one in the audience&#13;
any questions to ask the poet, he wasn't able to&#13;
the building for more than an hour after he&#13;
down from the podium as he found himself&#13;
led by students and curious onlookers. So this is&#13;
Irish poet. Yup.&#13;
it seems you've given up the idea of Commun ity."&#13;
faraway places, a spiritual world. The poem we \\Tile&#13;
have, I think, little to do with ourselves except that e&#13;
mus~ receive them and acknowledge them and try to&#13;
pubhc them out and cast them into the language we&#13;
have. The poet is the vehicle, the poem is the property&#13;
of the world."&#13;
During the reading yesterday. you spoke of evil&#13;
and Satanic qualities in Baudelaire and yourseli. Could&#13;
you expand on this'? "I believe in evil a a ort or&#13;
necessary part or the world, evil as experienced m its&#13;
duration. America has lost out because it ne\'er really&#13;
believed in evil, because it i facile and hallo\\ an th&#13;
sense that it's an overoptimistic ociety. I think it&#13;
needs a kind of a love of Baudelaire. of that cool French&#13;
decadence. As for Satan, I think an ultimate reconciliation&#13;
between good and e ii is theoretically&#13;
possible. You must realize that Satan is not totally e\·il,&#13;
he has sufficient evil in him to make him a \\ onderful&#13;
figure.''&#13;
How do you \'iew the poet'? "The poet i a magician&#13;
and a satanist. He can put a spell on us, and we can&#13;
either reject the spell or accept it. It hould be&#13;
dangerous to meet poets, mothers should tell their kid&#13;
when young that one should read poets but not meet&#13;
them."&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
or the Newscope Staff&#13;
Tb Student Senate in its initial&#13;
~ last Thursday ratified "The&#13;
· ' Peace Treaty", a joint peace&#13;
ty b tween the people of the United&#13;
Student-Senate Ratifies Treaty&#13;
South Vietnam and North Vietby&#13;
an 8-4 margin with two ablio&#13;
.&#13;
Also in the 31&#13;
1:! hour meeting the&#13;
te appointed chairmen to the&#13;
lliing committees, passed a resolution&#13;
laid Student Government does not&#13;
·ze as legal any campus comthat&#13;
has been functioning without&#13;
dent representation intended for&#13;
d pa sed a resolution concerning a&#13;
P-IS security-student meeting set for&#13;
April 23.&#13;
Mark Tympany introduced the&#13;
resolution supporting the People's Peace&#13;
Treaty. It read:&#13;
"Whereas we do not believe ourselves&#13;
to be at war with the People or&#13;
Vietnam, and&#13;
"Whereas the fighting or an undeclared&#13;
war in Southeast Asia has inflicted&#13;
a great toll in human lives and has&#13;
been the cause of immeasurable suffering&#13;
;&#13;
"We the elected student government&#13;
of the U~iversity of Wisconsin-Parkside &#13;
. April I'. 1'71&#13;
Anyone who has been exposed to the television&#13;
medium, knows that the Pondorosa is's giant&#13;
.pread in Nevada inhabited by the Cartwrights.&#13;
They work hard. play hard. and devour the lood&#13;
prepared by Hop Sing, their hired cook.&#13;
Well Pardner, Kenosha has a Ponderosa, but it&#13;
is a steak house and not a ranch. The only steer or&#13;
head of calUe you may run into is on a plate. The&#13;
hired help aren't quite as tan or strong as the ranch&#13;
hands on the television Pondorosa, but they are&#13;
more efficient.&#13;
Pondorosa Steak House enjoys a very good&#13;
business on Tuesday nights. people seem to come&#13;
out 01 the woodwork in Kenosha, just to eat a Ribeye&#13;
stead dinner for ninty-nine cents. Tuesday is the&#13;
only mght that is termed "Family Night", and this&#13;
is when 1 went to the steak house to eat.&#13;
I was very surprised to see all the cars in the&#13;
parking lot when I first arrived. Ithought maybe&#13;
one of the Carlwrights was making a personal&#13;
appearance or something. The first thing Idid see&#13;
when Iwalked in was 8 line. I'm not used to standing&#13;
in line at a restaurant.&#13;
The Pondorosa is a cafeteria type restaurant.&#13;
The building is one large room full of picnic tables.&#13;
There are pictures of cowboys and Indians around&#13;
on the walls. and holsters and guns. The people&#13;
working here all wear black cowboy hats, black&#13;
sklfts or pants and red checkered shirts. The atmo&gt;phere&#13;
is all here, and I noticed it delighted&#13;
children&#13;
Their menu consists of steaks and hamburgers .&#13;
by Paul Lomartire 01 the Newscope stal!&#13;
You can get any number 01 steaks. but on TueSday&#13;
night the Ribeye dinner is the mover. I went along&#13;
with the crowd and the weekly sale and ordered a&#13;
rare steak asked for blu cheese dressing on my&#13;
salad, baked potato and a roll and collee. Itall adds&#13;
up to a little over a dollar as the drink is not mcluded&#13;
in the ninty-nine cents. .&#13;
Noone was more surprised than Ito reahze that&#13;
my steak was indeed rare, and very good. I got&#13;
more blu cheese dressing than other places usually&#13;
eke out to you, and the coffee is very good. The&#13;
reason 1 would return to the Ponderosa is the fact&#13;
that there are coffee pots out (or the customers to&#13;
help themselves.&#13;
The meal I had was good enough to make me&#13;
return. So, Idid eat there again, but not on Tuesday&#13;
night. Maggie and Ireturned on a regular night and&#13;
paid the usual dollar seventy-nine (or the Ribeye&#13;
dinner. After eating here on a regular night, 1&#13;
realized that Tuesday evening is the best time to&#13;
frequent this place. The meal is well worth a little&#13;
..~~~~o&amp;=.:':-:'~~:::':*:::::::::::::::::::::$:::::==::~8~8;:§'~~:&gt;-::~X::::::&gt;~~"m:::;:.~:::::.,,:~::~-:::;::~;s.m?.~:~~&#13;
; ".: III Could Only Remember My !~::j1&#13;
Name - David Crosby - with&#13;
Grace Slick, Jane Mitchell. Jack&#13;
Casady, Jorma Kaukonen,&#13;
Graham Nash, Neil Young. Paul&#13;
Kantner, Jerry Garcia and&#13;
anybody else Atlantic could&#13;
round up. Atlantic Records&#13;
S07203.&#13;
I suppose that alter the solo&#13;
albums by McCartny. Harrison&#13;
and Lennon, Ibegan to expect too&#13;
much of recordings released&#13;
under one name. To me, the&#13;
purpose 01 doing a solo album is&#13;
lo reveal yourself as an individual&#13;
artist, away from the&#13;
influence of any group that you&#13;
had been with. Except for&#13;
Ringo's album that was precisely&#13;
what the Beatles had done. This&#13;
album as a definite contrast.&#13;
Dave Crosby was probably the&#13;
one most responsible for the&#13;
overall sound 01 Crosby Stills&#13;
Nash and YQUng; the close.&#13;
defined Inur-part harmony over&#13;
the subdued lolk guitar, much the&#13;
same as Lennon and McCartny,&#13;
were mostly responsible for the&#13;
particular style 01 the Beatles.&#13;
The difference is that when you&#13;
listen to Lennon's or McCartny's&#13;
album, you are very definitely&#13;
listening to Lennon or McCartny's&#13;
album, you are very&#13;
definitely listening to Lennon or&#13;
McCartny singularly, in-.&#13;
dependent 01 eaclr other. the&#13;
group, and anyone else they've&#13;
been connected with - at least as&#13;
much as that is humanly&#13;
possible. But Crosby. whether&#13;
intentionally or not, never left his&#13;
group sound. This album is obviously&#13;
one-hall CSN&amp;Y and onehall&#13;
Jeflerson Airplane, the latter&#13;
hall due to the fact that the whole&#13;
band is on the album.&#13;
So. taking the album lor what it&#13;
is, I'd rate it as slightly above&#13;
average, for the simple reason&#13;
that I enjoy the Airplane and&#13;
CSN&amp;Y. Unfortunately, with&#13;
Dave Crosby trying to come up&#13;
with a more or less original&#13;
sound, he succeeded in doing&#13;
nothing more than watering down&#13;
the style 01 the two groups.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
"III Could Only Remember My&#13;
Name" courtesy of Bidinger'S&#13;
Record Shop.&#13;
(Audio Realm would like to&#13;
review records that are of particular&#13;
interest to you, the&#13;
reader. If you have any&#13;
suggestions, drop us a line and&#13;
we'll see what we can do.)&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
meet the Parkside Fuzz at&#13;
fREE BEER PARTY&#13;
April 23 from 10 p,m.-12 p.m.&#13;
after the movie&#13;
FEATURE FILII SERIES PRESENTS:&#13;
--- JOHN WAYNE&#13;
GlEN CAMPBELL&#13;
KIM DARBY&#13;
Th• .rran .... trio&#13;
.ver to trod ..a kill....&#13;
rtTf'dJ/e--&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
HAlWAWS'&#13;
--&#13;
over a dollar, but il two people eat here on a regular&#13;
night. the prices add up (drinks. deserts, ete.) I&#13;
figured tha t an average couple would work their&#13;
way up toward live dollars il they had a good meal&#13;
equipped with a lew extras, like pie, jello, and&#13;
maybe seconds on a baked potato or something.&#13;
If this were the case, I would assume that&#13;
someone spending five dollars would not appreciate&#13;
mess hall type atmosphere. The confines of&#13;
conventional restaurant would be more a;&#13;
preciated, at least by me. .&#13;
But on Tuesday night you can't beat it. Eating&#13;
at the Pondorosa on this night is a good chance to&#13;
catch up on all the old friends that you thought lell&#13;
town, got married and moved. away, died, Or&#13;
blended into the woodwork. I noticed a lew people&#13;
who tried to crawl into the wood work when Isaw&#13;
them, as they were a couple 01 old lriends who OWed&#13;
me money. But all in all I can't say Iwould eat at&#13;
the Pondorosa on any night but Tuesday, because it&#13;
is a good deal. 'if money was of no consequence for&#13;
someone else, they might eat. here every night&#13;
appreciating the fast, e(flcl~nt service, the&#13;
cleanliness 01 the place, the quality and quantity 01&#13;
the lood and the dillerent atmosphere.&#13;
So Pardner, mosey on over to the Pondorosa&#13;
but ya don't have to go armed, ya won't get robbed&#13;
here. To me it is a big chuck wagon that doesn't&#13;
move, and I expect to meet Roy Rogers, Dale&#13;
Evans. Gene Autry, Hopalong and the Long Ranger&#13;
lor a good deal on a Tuesday night.&#13;
LITTLE BIG MAN&#13;
Jack Crabb Dustin Hollman&#13;
Old Lodge Skins&#13;
Chiel Dan George&#13;
Gen. George A. Custer&#13;
Richard Milligan&#13;
Mrs. Pendrake Faye Dunaway&#13;
Wild Bill Hickock Jell Corey&#13;
A. T. Merriweather&#13;
Martin Balsam&#13;
as the theme he relates hiI&#13;
existence with the Indians,&#13;
showing their natural love 01&#13;
Terra and of each other as a part&#13;
01 that matrix. Calling themselves&#13;
"Human Beings" they see&#13;
themselves as extensions of&#13;
nature rather than as tbe&#13;
whiteman's stolid spiritoal&#13;
"Image of God". In one sequerw:t&#13;
Jack Crabb's adopted Grandlather&#13;
says to the youngwarri"',&#13;
"There is an endless suWly01&#13;
whitemen, but there is only •&#13;
limited supply 01 H._ Beings." a statement that ..&#13;
perhaps, even more true todaY·&#13;
The film did an exceDen! job 01&#13;
relating the cruelty dealt lD !be&#13;
indians by what we sometilllt'&#13;
haphazardly call "heroes" 01 !be&#13;
old west. Raids upon the JndiaD&#13;
villages are quite believableaJ&gt;!&#13;
remove many histOrical&#13;
distortions.&#13;
A desirable experience t...&#13;
those who like bumor 01 a dil·&#13;
lerent kind than Howdy[JoOdY.&#13;
The film is accurate in ...&#13;
complishing its aims. See It&#13;
-BilI~&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657':5191&#13;
DUSTIN HOFFMAN has&#13;
certainly done it again with a&#13;
superb performance as Little Big&#13;
Man - a role that demanded that&#13;
he play everything from a boy in&#13;
puberty to a 121 year old man.&#13;
As an ancient narrator he&#13;
conducts an imagery lilled&#13;
odyssey into the world 01 the&#13;
Cheyenne "Human Beings"&#13;
telling his experiences as a&#13;
satireal character moving from&#13;
one historical western figure to&#13;
the next, inviting many of the&#13;
same impressions common to&#13;
films of this genre.&#13;
The century which separates&#13;
tOe topics discussed in productions&#13;
like Catch 22 and this lilm&#13;
S d b P . make true social commentary&#13;
ponsore y rotecnon &amp; Security second run to aesthetic inquiries&#13;
D&#13;
and make comedy possible&#13;
epartmcnt OL7·t1174 without disdain. The Ancient&#13;
i&#13;
t=:::::=:::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::~ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * graphically General Custer and describes his recalls his disgust 01&#13;
- -&#13;
_ .c~ _ attempt to destroy him at The _ O"~ LitlIe Big Horn. His descriptions&#13;
i'\ .. are clouded into a sometimes&#13;
: ,.j\e.,v - . comical and sometimes painlul&#13;
_ s:' : . dream 01 times gone by. With this&#13;
: ~~ e-&lt;':&gt;-&#13;
'::...'b-~ -&#13;
- &lt;".V: -&#13;
- &lt;~ if {j)'" -•&#13;
- rO~"O -&#13;
- V -&#13;
.- -&#13;
- -&#13;
-- ~&#13;
'" --&#13;
• _ V&#13;
- 0&lt;':&gt; -&#13;
-&#13;
_ • b,'b-.... - .'" -&#13;
- ~ ..&#13;
. - 1:11 ".M. : CJ'b-~ :&#13;
AOTIYITI .. IUILDI •• - ADM. 11, - -&#13;
~...c----.... ""'~............ _~. * * * * * -:* * * * **.-&#13;
by Bob Borchardt 01 the Newscope Stall&#13;
~ ...__( I&#13;
':---.1 .&#13;
PIZZA 'h?t:.&#13;
KITCHEN ---.'.~~_&#13;
ALSO ",~g."'~~&#13;
CHICKEN D1NNj:RS and -t~~&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Doys a Week From 4 p.m., posed MondaY'&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
Page EWSCOPE pril 19. 1971&#13;
by Paul Lomartire of the Newscope Staff&#13;
You can get any number of steaks, but on Tuesday&#13;
rught the Ribeye dinner is the mover. I went along&#13;
with the crowd and the weekly sale and ordered a&#13;
rare steak, asked for blu cheese dressing on my&#13;
salad, baked potato and a roll and coffee. It_ all adds&#13;
up to a little over a dollar as the drink is not mcluded&#13;
in the ninty-nine cents. . No one was more surprised than I to realize that&#13;
my steak was indeed rare, and very good. I got&#13;
more blu cheese dressing than other places usually&#13;
eke out to you, and the coffee is very good The&#13;
reason I would return to the Pondorosa is the fact&#13;
that there are coffee pots out for the customers to&#13;
help themselves.&#13;
The meal I had was good enough to make me&#13;
return. So, I did eat there again, but not on Tuesday&#13;
night. Maggie and I returned on a regular night and&#13;
paid the usual dollar seventy-nine for the Ribeye&#13;
dinner. After eating here on a regular night, I&#13;
realized that Tuesday evening is the best time to&#13;
frequent this place. The meal is well worth a little&#13;
If I Could Only Remember My&#13;
Name - David Crosby - with&#13;
Grace Slick, Jane Mitchell, Jack&#13;
Casady , Jorma Kaukonen, Graham Nash, Neil Young, Paul&#13;
Kantner, Jerry Garcia and&#13;
anybody else Atlantic could&#13;
round up. Atlantic Records&#13;
SIY7203.&#13;
over a dollar, but if two peopl~ eat here on a regular&#13;
night, the prices add up (drmks, deserts, etc.). 1&#13;
figured that an average couple would work their&#13;
way up toward five dollars if they had a good meal&#13;
equipped with a few extras, like pie, jello, and&#13;
maybe seconds on a baked potato or something.&#13;
If this were the case, I would assume that&#13;
someone spending five dollars would not ~ppreciate&#13;
mess h~ll type atmosphere. The confmes of a&#13;
conventional restaurant would be more appreciated,&#13;
at least by me.&#13;
But on Tuesday night you can't beat it. Eating&#13;
at the Pondorosa on this night is a good chance to&#13;
catch up on all ~e old friends that you thought left&#13;
town, got married and moved_ away, died, or&#13;
blended into the w~work. I noticed a few people&#13;
who tried to crawl mto the wood work when I saw&#13;
them as they were a couple of old friends who owe(!&#13;
me ~oney. But all in all I can't say I would eat at&#13;
the Pondorosa on any night but Tuesday, because it&#13;
is a good deal. 'If money was of no consequence for&#13;
someone else, they might ~t. here every night&#13;
appreciating the fast, efflc1~nt service, the&#13;
cleanliness of the place, the quality and quantity of&#13;
the food and the different atmosphere.&#13;
So Pardner, mosey on over to the Pondorosa&#13;
but ya don't have to go armed, ya won't get robbed&#13;
here. To me it is a big chuck wagon that doesn't&#13;
move, and I expect to meet Roy Rogers, Dale&#13;
Evans, Gene Autry, Hopalong and the Long Ranger&#13;
for a good deal on a Tuesday night.&#13;
by Bob Borchardt of the Newscope Staff&#13;
1 uppos that after the solo&#13;
!bums by McCartny, Harrison&#13;
nd Lennon, I began to exl)l!ct too&#13;
mu h of recordings released&#13;
und r one name. To me, the&#13;
purpos of doing a solo album is&#13;
to r v al yourself as an individual&#13;
artist, away from the&#13;
influence of any group that you&#13;
h d b n with. Except for&#13;
Hingo' album that was precisely&#13;
what th Beatles had done. This&#13;
album is a definite contrast.&#13;
Dave Crosby was probably the&#13;
one mo t responsible for the&#13;
overall ound of Crosby Stills&#13;
a h and Young, the close,&#13;
defined four-part harmony over&#13;
the ubdued folk guitar, much the&#13;
same a Lennon and McCartny,&#13;
were mostly responsible for the&#13;
particular style of the Beatles. The difference is that when you&#13;
listen to Lennon's or McCartny's&#13;
album, you are very definitely&#13;
listening to Lennon or McCartny's&#13;
album, you are very&#13;
definitely listening to Lennon or&#13;
McCartny singularly, independent&#13;
of each other, the&#13;
group, and anyone else they've&#13;
been connected with - at least as&#13;
much as that is humanly&#13;
possible. But Crosby, whether&#13;
intentionally or not, never left his&#13;
group sound. This album is obviously&#13;
one-half CSN&amp; Y and onehalf&#13;
Jefferson Airplane, the latter&#13;
half due to the fact that the whole&#13;
band is on the album.&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
meet the Parkside Fuzz at&#13;
FREE BEER PARTY&#13;
April 23 from 10 p.m.-12 p.m.&#13;
after the movie&#13;
pon orcd by Protection &amp; Security&#13;
Department&#13;
FEATURE FILM SERIES PRESENTS:&#13;
- JOHN WAYNE&#13;
GLEN CAMPBELL&#13;
KIM DARBY&#13;
The strongffl trio&#13;
ever to trock o killer.&#13;
HALWAWS' """'&lt;&gt;UCTlON&#13;
So, taking the album for what it&#13;
is, I'd rate it as slightly above&#13;
average, for the simple reason&#13;
that I enjoy the Airplane and&#13;
CSN&amp;Y. Unfortunately, with&#13;
Dave Crosby trying to come up&#13;
with a more or less original&#13;
sound, he succeeded in doing&#13;
nothing more than watering down&#13;
the style of the two groups.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
"If I Could Only Remember My&#13;
Name" courtesy of Bidinger's&#13;
Record Shop.&#13;
(Audio Realm would like to&#13;
review records that are of particular&#13;
interest to you, the&#13;
reader. If you have any&#13;
suggestions, drop us a line and&#13;
we'll s~ what we can do.)&#13;
rtrr~wJt/~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
OL7-5l74&#13;
LITTLE BIG MAN&#13;
Jack Crabb Dustin Hoffman&#13;
Old Lodge Skins&#13;
Chief Dan George&#13;
G.en. George A. Custer&#13;
Richard Milligan&#13;
Mrs. Pendrake Faye Dunaway&#13;
Wild Bill Hickock Jeff Corey&#13;
A. T. Merriweather&#13;
DUSTIN HOFFMAN has&#13;
certainly done it again with a&#13;
superb performance as Little Big&#13;
Man - a role that demanded that&#13;
he play everything from a boy in&#13;
puberty to a 121 year old man.&#13;
As an ancient narrator he&#13;
conducts an imagery filled&#13;
odyssey into the world of the&#13;
Cheyenne "Human Beings"&#13;
telling his experiences as a&#13;
satireal character moving from&#13;
one historical western figure to&#13;
the next, inviting many of the&#13;
same impressions common to&#13;
films of this genre.&#13;
Martin Balsam&#13;
as the theme he relates his&#13;
existence with the Indians,&#13;
showing their natural love of&#13;
Terra and of each other as a part&#13;
of that matrix. Calling themselves&#13;
"Human Beings" they see&#13;
themselves as extensions of&#13;
nature rather than as the&#13;
whiteman's stolid spiritual&#13;
"Image of God". In one sequerx:e&#13;
Jack Crabb's adopted Grand·&#13;
father says to the young warrior,&#13;
"There is an endless supply of&#13;
whitemen, but there is only a&#13;
limited supply of Human&#13;
Beings," a statement that Ii.&#13;
perhaps, even more true t~Y· The century which separates&#13;
the topics discussed in productions&#13;
like Catch 22 and this film&#13;
make true social commentary&#13;
second run to aesthetic inquiries&#13;
and make comedy possible&#13;
without disdain. The Ancient&#13;
graphically recalls his disgust of&#13;
: * * * * * * * * * * * * * General Custer and describes his&#13;
41 -0 ~ : attempt to destroy him at The&#13;
The film did an excellen~ JOb of&#13;
relating the cruelty dealt ~ tht&#13;
Indians by what we sometimes&#13;
haphazardly call "heroes" of tbe&#13;
old west. Raids upon the Indian&#13;
villages are quite believable .84&#13;
r.emove many his tori ca&#13;
distortions.&#13;
A desirable experience f~&#13;
those who like hwnor of a different&#13;
kind than Howdy I)oO(ly.&#13;
The film is accurate in al'-&#13;
complishing its aims. See it.&#13;
• O'li.'-' Little Big Horn. His descriptions&#13;
41 C tr are clouded into a sometimes&#13;
• ....1\ c; tr comical and sometimes painful&#13;
tr ~ : . dream of times gone by. With this&#13;
: ~~ •&#13;
tr&#13;
•&#13;
tr&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
•&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
•&#13;
tr&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
- Bill SorefJSt!II&#13;
II if&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
tr&#13;
CHICKEN DINN~RS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30th AV9•&#13;
KENOSH;A&#13;
657..:.5191&#13;
· - l:H P.M.&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING - ADM. 11•&#13;
tr .&#13;
tr •&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
tr&#13;
~~~ ................ ~··············&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
4:00 P .M. TO 12:00 P .M.&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m., Closed Mondoy• &#13;
April g, 11'11 ,'EWSCOPE Pages&#13;
.-- -----Jazz ComesToParkside------- ....&#13;
ftQm the Uchey Foot Mose,&#13;
. ore West, Fillmore East&#13;
ru:n LoS Angeles' Shrine,&#13;
•~.• go - the popular&#13;
C llcmbia recording group not&#13;
ClJU t R . , city - comes 0 acme S&#13;
~seHighSchoolField House on&#13;
/dondaY May 10, under sponsorship'of&#13;
the University of&#13;
lI'isconsin.parkslde Student&#13;
ActivitiesOffice.&#13;
Theltehey Foot is the college&#13;
beeJ' bar in Los Angeles where&#13;
(bicago got its start after&#13;
movingto California from its&#13;
oamesake city.&#13;
(bicago has had much more&#13;
illustrious bookings since, but its&#13;
populartty with college&#13;
.audiences remains. Last year&#13;
the seven-piece group was th~&#13;
top album seller in college&#13;
campus and community record&#13;
stores as well as in jukeboxes&#13;
according to Billboard&#13;
magazine.&#13;
Robert Gold of the Los&#13;
Angeles Free Press calls&#13;
Chicago "the most inventive&#13;
hardest. blowing jazz-rock -or:&#13;
chestra I ever heard ... They&#13;
are excellent musicians in every&#13;
way."&#13;
A limited number of $4.50&#13;
tickets for their Racine apThe&#13;
award winning David Baker Jazz&#13;
Ensemble will present a University Artists&#13;
Series Concert at 4 p.m. on Sunday, April 25,&#13;
in the Greenquist Hall Concourse at the&#13;
Universityof Wisconsin-Parkside Wood Road&#13;
campus.&#13;
Baker is a widely-known artist, composer&#13;
and performer. He has been chairman of jazz&#13;
studies at the Indiana University School of&#13;
Musicsince 1966 and is associate director of&#13;
the IU Black Music Center.&#13;
His ensemble has appeared in concerts&#13;
from Athens to Bombay and is a two-time&#13;
winner of the Big Band Award at the Notre&#13;
Dame Collegiate Jazz Festival.&#13;
Baker's own awards and citations include&#13;
the Indiana Philharmonic Gold Award, the&#13;
DownbeatHall of Fame Scholarship Award,&#13;
theDownbeat New Star Award for Trombone&#13;
and the Outstanding Music Award of the&#13;
National Association of Black Musicians ..&#13;
Baker has played with such jazz greats as&#13;
stan Kenton, Maynard Ferguson, Lionel&#13;
Hampton, Slide Hampton, Buddy Jones and&#13;
Quincey Jones. He also has appeared as&#13;
soloist with the Boston Symphony Orchestra&#13;
writers in the band, has been&#13;
playing eight years .&#13;
Terry Kath (guitar-vocals)&#13;
has also been playing eight&#13;
years, and, although has had no&#13;
formal training, is one of the&#13;
prolific writers in Chicago.&#13;
Walt Perry (woodwinds)&#13;
earned a degree from DePaul In&#13;
orchestral clarinet. studied WIth&#13;
woodwind players in the&#13;
Chicago Symphony, has been&#13;
.playing 14 years.&#13;
Lee Loughnane (trumpetflugel&#13;
horn) studied at DePaul&#13;
two years, then at the Chicago&#13;
Conservatory College for two&#13;
years, played in several local&#13;
Chicago rock groups and big&#13;
bands.&#13;
Pete Cetera (bass-vocal)&#13;
began playing accordian at 12.&#13;
worked with several local&#13;
groups, the last for six years&#13;
with his city's top rock group.&#13;
Jim Pankow (trcmbone)&#13;
studied at DePaul and Quincy&#13;
College, played with the Bobby&#13;
Christian and Ted Weems orchestras,&#13;
Bill Russo's Clucago&#13;
Jazz Ensemble and his own Jazz&#13;
quintet, does much of Chicago's&#13;
composition and brass&#13;
arrangements.&#13;
pearance still are available at&#13;
Cook-Gere in Racine and&#13;
Bidinger's House of Music in&#13;
Kenosha. The $5.50 seats have&#13;
been sold out for several weeks.&#13;
The seven members or&#13;
Chicago call themselves "a&#13;
creative community" and bring&#13;
a variety of musical&#13;
backgrounds to their unique&#13;
sound wluch incorporates jazz,&#13;
blues, rock and symphonies.&#13;
The inhabitants of the&#13;
"creative community":&#13;
. Dan Seraphine (drums)&#13;
studied percussion at DePaul&#13;
University, then with Chuck&#13;
Flores, ex-member of Maynard&#13;
Ferguson and Woody Herman&#13;
bands. Has been playing for 11&#13;
years.&#13;
Robert Lamm (organ-electric&#13;
piano-vocals) studied piano and&#13;
composition at Roosevelt&#13;
University, is one of the prolific&#13;
and has been guest conductor of the Indianapolis&#13;
Symphony and the Indianapolis&#13;
Civic Orchestra.&#13;
His credits also include some 15 reeordings,&#13;
scores of jazz compositions and four&#13;
books on jazz techniques.&#13;
A proponent of the tlurd stream in Jazz,&#13;
Baker believes experimentation i of some&#13;
consequence to the progression of jan. "With&#13;
improvisation being the motivation, the new&#13;
third stream in jazz is a marriage between&#13;
classical form, composition and pure Jan,"&#13;
he asserts.&#13;
His Jazz Ensemble presents both the&#13;
music 01 the contemporary jazz composer and&#13;
classic big band numbers.&#13;
Members of the ensemble are Paul&#13;
Demarinis, alto sax, Larry Wiseman,&#13;
trumpet, Don Pickett, piano, Mark Dr er,&#13;
bass, Emory Whipple, drums, and Baker on&#13;
trombone.&#13;
Concert tickets wiU be available at the&#13;
door. General admission is $1 and studenl&#13;
admission is SO cents (children 12 and under&#13;
admitted freel.&#13;
FLARES. BELLS. BODY SHIRTS&#13;
george A lester's&#13;
10% Discount with Georgeand Lester'sStudent ID.&#13;
[lj'amou6fin [lj'~&#13;
g'J~ w: 91aiian [lj'~&#13;
liquor Store&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. K~NOSHA 658·1131&#13;
-------------Jazz Comes To Parkside--------.&#13;
the Itchey Foot Mose,&#13;
from west Fillmore East&#13;
f1llm0&#13;
:s A~geles' Shrine,&#13;
an? 0 _ the popular&#13;
Ch1cat·a recording group not&#13;
Colun:1 1&#13;
comes to Racine's&#13;
the_ c~rgh School Field House on&#13;
case May 10, under spon-&#13;
:,toniay, of the University of&#13;
so~s 0&#13;
1&#13;
pnsin-Parkside Student w,sc . ctivities Office.&#13;
A The Itchey Foot is the college&#13;
bar in Los Angeles where&#13;
be:r go got its start after&#13;
onca . f ·t . g to califorma rom i s movm&#13;
namesake city.&#13;
Chicago has had 1!1uch mo_re&#13;
illustrious bookings smce, but its&#13;
popularity with college&#13;
audiences remains. Last year,&#13;
the seven-piece group was the&#13;
top album seller in college&#13;
campus and community record&#13;
stores as well as in jukeboxes&#13;
aceording to Billboard&#13;
magazine.&#13;
Robert Gold of the Los&#13;
Angeles Free Press calls&#13;
Chicago "the most inventive,&#13;
hardest . blowing jazz-rock orchestra&#13;
I ever heard . . . They&#13;
are excellent musicians in every&#13;
way."&#13;
A limited number of $4.50&#13;
tickets for their Racine apThe&#13;
award winning David Baker Jazz&#13;
Ensemble will present a University AJ:tists&#13;
Series Concert at 4 p.m. on Sunday, April 25,&#13;
in the Greenquist Hall Concourse at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Wood Road&#13;
Campus.&#13;
Baker is a widely-known artist, composer&#13;
and performer. He has bee~ cha~rman of jazz&#13;
studies at the Indiana Umversity ~c~ool of&#13;
Music since 1966 and is associate director of&#13;
the IU Black Music Center.&#13;
His ensemble has appeared in concerts&#13;
from Athens to Bombay and is a two-time&#13;
\!,inner of the Big Band Award at the Notre&#13;
Dame Collegiate Jazz Festival.&#13;
Baker's own awards and citations include&#13;
the Indiana Philharmonic Gold Award, the&#13;
Downbeat Hall of Fame Scholarship Award,&#13;
the Downbeat New Star Award for Trombone&#13;
and the Outstanding Music Awa~d. of the&#13;
National Association of Black Musicians. '&#13;
Baker has played with such jazz grea~ as&#13;
Stan Kenton Maynard Ferguson, Lionel&#13;
Hampton Slide Hampton, Buddy Jones and&#13;
' ed as Quincey Jones. He also has appear&#13;
soloist with the Boston Symphony OrcheStra&#13;
FLARES, BELLS, BODY SHIRTS&#13;
pearance still are available at&#13;
Cook-Gere in Racine and&#13;
Bidinger's House of 1usic in&#13;
Kenosha. The 5.50 seats have&#13;
been sold out for several weeks. The seven members of&#13;
Chicago call themselves " a&#13;
creative community" and bring&#13;
a variety of musical&#13;
backgrounds to their unique&#13;
sound which incorporates jazz,&#13;
blues, rock and symphonies.&#13;
The inhabitant of the&#13;
"creative community"·&#13;
· Dan Seraphine drums&#13;
studied percussion at DePaul&#13;
University, then v.ith Chuck&#13;
Flores, ex-member of 1aynard&#13;
Ferguson and Woody Herman&#13;
bands. Has been playing for 11&#13;
years.&#13;
Robert Lamm (organ-electric&#13;
piano-vocals) studied piano and&#13;
composition at Roo evelt&#13;
University, is one of the prolific&#13;
f/taniou o-i flt',&#13;
9'i~ !Jtalian ~ o&lt;./4&#13;
Liquor Store&#13;
d -,e &amp; Jester's&#13;
eeOre G and Lester's Student JD.&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
10% Discount with eorge&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KF.NOSHA 658-1131 &#13;
Election TENURE HEARING!&#13;
EWSCOPE AprU 19. 1971&#13;
Results&#13;
&lt;Continued from Page 1l&#13;
Tom Meier&#13;
Mike Mayeshiba&#13;
Gary Davis&#13;
Gary Adelson&#13;
Dale Marlin&#13;
Tom Taskonis&#13;
Ed Toth&#13;
Della Simpson&#13;
Jack Tucker&#13;
Mike Lofton&#13;
Da vid Scharneck&#13;
For the student Union Committee votes were&#13;
cast evenly for the lour people on the ballot. Sue&#13;
evin beat C. E. Sahakian and others in write-ins&#13;
lor the filth position.&#13;
Greg Barrette&#13;
Tim Daley&#13;
Jerry Horton&#13;
Tom Kreul&#13;
ue evan&#13;
E Sahakian&#13;
This Friday a special regents&#13;
committee will conduct an open&#13;
hearing on tenure criteria. The&#13;
Committee, composed of Frank&#13;
Pelisek, George Strother -&#13;
acting chancellor of extension,&#13;
and Eric SChenker - UWM, is&#13;
researching criteria for&#13;
evaluation used in determining&#13;
the granting of tenure. The&#13;
committee will hear anyone who&#13;
wishes to offer constructive&#13;
suggestions regarding the&#13;
granting of tenure and will answer&#13;
pertinent questions. As a&#13;
pre-condition of appearing before&#13;
the committee speakers must&#13;
submit a written summery of&#13;
what they intend to say. A study&#13;
committee list of questions is&#13;
available at the chancellor's&#13;
office. The hearing will be held at&#13;
1:30 in room 221 at Greenquist&#13;
Hall.&#13;
70&#13;
72&#13;
72&#13;
40&#13;
58&#13;
72&#13;
27&#13;
36&#13;
40&#13;
49&#13;
21&#13;
57&#13;
45&#13;
50&#13;
61&#13;
45&#13;
33&#13;
f;l&#13;
49&#13;
49&#13;
25&#13;
36&#13;
78&#13;
78&#13;
68&#13;
87&#13;
78&#13;
56&#13;
66&#13;
53&#13;
46&#13;
43&#13;
34&#13;
205&#13;
195&#13;
190&#13;
188&#13;
178&#13;
161&#13;
161&#13;
137&#13;
135&#13;
117&#13;
91&#13;
Rae.&#13;
81&#13;
17&#13;
58&#13;
78&#13;
22&#13;
9&#13;
Ken.&#13;
45&#13;
73&#13;
38&#13;
27&#13;
15&#13;
5&#13;
Gr.&#13;
64&#13;
62&#13;
53&#13;
65&#13;
37&#13;
12&#13;
Tot.&#13;
190&#13;
152&#13;
149&#13;
170&#13;
74&#13;
26&#13;
Management Science Club Formed&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
and Walter lJlbricht voted yes.&#13;
An additional resolution was passed&#13;
concerning the trea Iy in which SGA&#13;
"acknowledge and morally support, to&#13;
the fullest extent a delegation under the&#13;
chairmanship of Gary Davis to present&#13;
Ute ratified people's Peace Treaty to&#13;
congress," passer' unanimously.&#13;
Eaker introduced a resolution that&#13;
called for the non-recognit~on of a~y&#13;
campus committee that required but did&#13;
not have student representation. He&#13;
extended this to include Student&#13;
Government would not recognize any&#13;
past actions of a committee of this sort.&#13;
The resolution passed unanimously.&#13;
The Sena te passed another resolution&#13;
concerning a meeting between students&#13;
and campus security alter a film on April&#13;
Student Government Meets&#13;
0-101, Greenquisl Hall, at 2:30&#13;
p.m. All members are urged to&#13;
attend. There is still time to join&#13;
the club, it's open to all students&#13;
interested in business&#13;
management. Become a member&#13;
of Parkside's progressive new&#13;
club!&#13;
Dean Loumos questio&#13;
meeting was just a pub!' .lIed d&#13;
d&#13;
. . tr . lelk• ...~ a mIDIS ~t1onwould try to '1 ~y&#13;
Gary-Davis said there sbouId~&#13;
WIth the campus police be ..&#13;
disarmed. lIDtilIlloy&#13;
The Senate passed .&#13;
resolution that said "W~ I&#13;
d&#13;
. ,e acknn...:.·&#13;
an appreciate the party s _-="q&#13;
campus security as an t ~ It&#13;
prove relations with Slu~temptto&#13;
cann~t endorse as a SOI:~' but&#13;
security-student problems 10'1 to&#13;
dards are accepted Illat lIDbI"-&#13;
during negotiations." are Il'r'i"'d&#13;
In other business Eaker .&#13;
right to. name commitll!e1OIiYod-.&#13;
because he felt he didn'l&#13;
=-&#13;
Senators well enough and&#13;
for nominations from the ~ .....&#13;
Dean Loumos was el":'&#13;
01 Ihe Siudent Union Corn .thaonr"&#13;
Tom Meier was the other nullo&lt;&#13;
pomted. They will join the fi,:"b ..&#13;
elected, three faculty appointed:::-&#13;
faculty sena le, two alumna lite&#13;
of Auxiliary Enlerprises ~ -...&#13;
dinalor of Student Activities.. lite e.".&#13;
of the Studenl Union Comrnit:e--&#13;
Walt Breach was elected·1I&#13;
Finance Committee, andGary0...&#13;
elecled Chairman of the&#13;
Policies Committee. Four&#13;
appointments, Jeanette DrerneI.&#13;
Gottfredsen, Walter Ulbricht, lid&#13;
Konkol were made to the&#13;
Committee. Gottfredsen WII&#13;
temporary chairman.&#13;
23. Security plans to provide free beer at&#13;
the meeting.&#13;
At the last meetmg or the&#13;
Management Science Club of&#13;
Park Ide, an election of otficers&#13;
wa held The new club officers&#13;
are' President, John leighton;&#13;
Vlce.PreslC~ent, Art Oulan.&#13;
ecretary. Vincent Gigliotti,&#13;
Treasurer, Dan Modrijan.&#13;
Plans are no-.wbeizlg made to&#13;
have Mr Roy Coubte. Assistant&#13;
Professor In the Management&#13;
Science Division of parkside, to&#13;
speak to the club members and&#13;
anyone else interested in the&#13;
Business Management field.&#13;
Mr Coogle plans to discuss&#13;
with the students the role or the&#13;
Management Science Division&#13;
here at Parkside. He will also&#13;
explain its goals. curriculum and&#13;
what students can expect in the&#13;
future.&#13;
The date of this discussion will&#13;
be May 4, lime and place to be&#13;
announced. All interested&#13;
students are Invited and urged to&#13;
attend. This will be a great opportunity&#13;
to lind out all the facts&#13;
on what the Management Science&#13;
Division has to offer.&#13;
The next regular meeting of the&#13;
Management Science Club will be&#13;
on Wednesday, April 21, in Room&#13;
The first malt liquor&#13;
good enough to be&#13;
called BUDWEISER~&#13;
E. F. MADRICiRANO Inc&#13;
BUDWEISER • BUDWEISER MALT I •. • MICHELOB&#13;
Phone 658-3553&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
1831 55th Street&#13;
A"HEUSER·BUSCH, INC.• ST. lOUIS&#13;
Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
Secretary, Mgl. Sci Club&#13;
WBITEWAW&#13;
6.50-13&#13;
(Blaekwolls 110.151&#13;
Itwn.u, ....... _ maa:r e-.tI, c..-&#13;
adV_&#13;
PlUI 'us Feel. Es. fIR&#13;
mdUzeoff,.-&#13;
Tt,e$ton,&#13;
ORAMPIONS&#13;
Fu1l4-1'J.y&#13;
Nylon Cord&#13;
A great tire. buy at these&#13;
low prices! Built to Firestone's&#13;
rigid quality standards to&#13;
deliver excellent mileage and&#13;
dependable performance,&#13;
Check our low&#13;
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5.60-15or7.35-14 7.75-14u7.75-15 8,25-1401'8.10.15 8.~~&#13;
$iS10 $fij15 $2F5 $23~&#13;
B1aekwaJls$l5.70 BlackwaIlsS16.75 ~'18.85 ~ ......&#13;
1'100 .l.14 or IZ.01F'tod. E:L I'1WlIlL14 orI:L16 VecL E&amp;. I'!UltuSorfU'l Ft&lt;LEL "" ...... i!:::' kI:__ Dff,...,.ca:r. ta __ off,...,.__ __Il.-atl~"" fM';::::::;-&#13;
~~~~~;~~:irtir8~&#13;
3J.tILJ: III. kidSiP'"&#13;
1011 10111SI.&#13;
KENOSHA 154-1lII&#13;
9·(Jl ~&#13;
Open 8:00 a.m. - ~&#13;
Monday- pi&#13;
5 P'-'&#13;
Saturday to 5 p.m. saturday to •&#13;
. . ••1'" Brin_g this Ad and Receive 10% DisCI 1111&#13;
automotive services until June. It&#13;
109 -WISCONSIN AVE.&#13;
RACINE 631-9591&#13;
Open 7:30 a.m. - 8 p.m.&#13;
Monday - Friday&#13;
OPE&#13;
Election Results&#13;
&lt;Continued from Page 1)&#13;
Tom Meier 70 57&#13;
1ike 1ayeshiba 72 45&#13;
Gary Davis 72 so&#13;
Gary Ad Ison 40 61&#13;
Dale Martin 58 45&#13;
Tom Taskonis 72 33&#13;
Ed Toth 27 61&#13;
Della impson 36 9&#13;
Jack Tucker 40 9&#13;
1ike Lofton 49 25&#13;
D vid Scharneck 21 36&#13;
pril 19, 1971&#13;
78 205&#13;
78 195&#13;
68 190&#13;
87 188&#13;
78 178&#13;
56 161&#13;
66 161&#13;
53 137&#13;
46 135&#13;
413 117&#13;
34 91&#13;
TENURE HEARING&#13;
This Friday a special regents&#13;
committee will conduct an open&#13;
hearing on tenure criteria. The&#13;
committee, composed of Frank&#13;
Pelisek, George Strother -&#13;
acting chancellor of extension,&#13;
and Eric Schenker - UWM, is&#13;
researching criteria for&#13;
evaluation used in determining&#13;
the granting of tenure. The&#13;
committee will hear anyone who&#13;
wishes to offer constructive&#13;
uggestions regarding the&#13;
granting of tenure and will anwer&#13;
pertinent questions. As a&#13;
pre-condition of appearing before&#13;
the committee speakers must&#13;
Student Government Meets&#13;
(Continued from Page 3)&#13;
and Walter Ulbricht voted yes.&#13;
An additional resolution was passed&#13;
concerning the treaty in which SGA&#13;
"acknowledge and morally support, to&#13;
the fullest extent a delegation under the&#13;
chairmanship of Gary Davis to present&#13;
the ratifiM People's Peac.- Treaty to&#13;
congress, 11 passetl unanimously.&#13;
Dean Loumos questi&#13;
meeting was just a pub!' 0.lled if&#13;
administration would try ~•ty ~&#13;
Gary Davis. said there shoUldrnaru&#13;
with the campus police _be llo&#13;
disarmed. llntil th&#13;
The Senate passed un . resolution that said "W anun&#13;
d , I e ar~~ an appreciate the party ""'IQV,&#13;
campus sec_urity as an atte~&#13;
prove relations with studen ~ to&#13;
cannot endorse as a sol ~.&#13;
security-student problems ution to&#13;
dards are accepted that llntil&#13;
d . ,1 • • are aurm6&#13;
negotiations." .. ,&#13;
Rae. Ken. Gr. Tot. ubmit a written swnmary of&#13;
what they intend to say. A study&#13;
committee list of questions is&#13;
available at the chancellor's&#13;
office. The bearing will be held al&#13;
1:30 in room 221 at Greenquist&#13;
Hall .&#13;
Eaker introduced a resolution that&#13;
called for the non-recognit!on of a~y&#13;
campus committee that reqmr~ but did&#13;
not have student representation. He&#13;
extended this to include ~tudent&#13;
Government would not recognize any&#13;
past actions of a committee of this sort. . In other business Eaker ,. . right to name committee 'ah&#13;
81 5 64 1&#13;
17 73 62 152&#13;
58 38 53 149&#13;
78 27 65 170&#13;
22 15 37 74&#13;
9 5 12 26&#13;
The resolution passed unanimously.&#13;
The Senate passed another resolution&#13;
concerning a meeting between students&#13;
and campus security after a film on April&#13;
because he felt he didn't cha&#13;
Senators well enough and kkno.,&#13;
f . t· as ed or nomma ions from the fl&#13;
Dean Loumos was elec~r.&#13;
of the Student Union Com . T M . m1 o~ e1er was the other&#13;
pomted. They will join the ns:na&#13;
elected, three faculty appointed&#13;
faculty_ s~nate, two alumnae, the Management Science Club Formed 23. Security plans to provide free beer at&#13;
the meeting.&#13;
1 nee Di\ i ion of Par ide, to&#13;
k to the club members and&#13;
anyone el e inter ted in the&#13;
Bu ·10 lanag ment field .&#13;
Ir. Cougle plans to di cu&#13;
with the tudents the role or the&#13;
t nagcment cience D1vi ion&#13;
her at Park ide. He will al o&#13;
xplain it goal , curriculum and&#13;
what . tud nts can expect in the&#13;
future.&#13;
The date of this discussion will&#13;
be • fay 4, time and place to be&#13;
announced. All interested&#13;
stud nts are invited and urged to&#13;
attend . This will be a great opportunity&#13;
to find out all the facts&#13;
on what the Management Science&#13;
Division has to offer.&#13;
The next regular meeting of the&#13;
lanagemenl Science Club will be&#13;
on Wednesday, April 21, in Room&#13;
The first malt liquor&#13;
good enough to be&#13;
called BUDWEISERe&#13;
ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. , ST LOUIS&#13;
Distributed by&#13;
E. F. MADRl&lt;iRANO Inc&#13;
BUDWEISER • BUDWEISER MALT I M • . • ICHELOB&#13;
1831 55th Street Phone 658-3553-&#13;
D-101, Greenquist Hall, at 2:30&#13;
p.m. All members are urged to&#13;
attend. There is still time to join&#13;
the club, it's open to all students&#13;
interested in business&#13;
management. Become a member&#13;
of Parkside's progressive new&#13;
club!&#13;
Vincent Gigliotti&#13;
Secretary, Mgt. Sci Club&#13;
of Auxiliary Enterprises and&#13;
dinator of Student Activities as&#13;
of the Student Union Committee&#13;
Walt Breach was elected to&#13;
Finance Committee, and Gary 0&#13;
elected Chairman of the A&#13;
Policies Committee. Four&#13;
appointments, Jeanette Dr&#13;
Gottfredsen, Walter Ulbrich a&#13;
Konkol were made to the G&#13;
Committee. Gottfredsen wa&#13;
temporary chairman.&#13;
WHITEWALLS&#13;
OBAMPIONS:&#13;
FuH 4-Ply Ny.fonCJord&#13;
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and tll9off ,-cu.&#13;
RACINE 631-9591&#13;
Open 7:30 a.m. _ a p.m.&#13;
1011 &amp;0th Sf,&#13;
KENOSHA &amp;54-21"&#13;
m _g:~&#13;
Open 8:00 a. · . frtdS&#13;
Monday - Friday Monday -&#13;
• day to 5 P· · Saturday to 5 p.m. ~atur 11&#13;
· · aunt•• 1&#13;
Srin_g this Ad and Receive 1~% oisc 1971&#13;
automotive services until June &amp;, &#13;
�ngerTrackmen Take Thirdby&#13;
Jim Casper&#13;
r&#13;
I F:&#13;
Eugene Prince setting school record.&#13;
,.uiderrestunan Bob Waters&#13;
4........ won- two events but&#13;
• _ took third in a&#13;
........ meet with Illinois and&#13;
..... tern.&#13;
, .... turned in a 9.9 100 yard&#13;
and ran the 220 in 21.9. He&#13;
.. ""anchoron Parkside's 440&#13;
relay team which placed second.&#13;
Eugene Prince set a new&#13;
personal record and also a school&#13;
record by leaping 6'6" in the high&#13;
jump. His jump was good for&#13;
third place.&#13;
Jim McFadden placed third in&#13;
the.mile with a time of 4:20.5 .&#13;
ermen _Drop Openner&#13;
Pubide opened its 1971 tennis&#13;
_on a losingnote, dropping&#13;
....... opener !HI to uw-&#13;
...... at Pershing Park.&#13;
Dt Salago, Dan Miec1IIftkj,&#13;
Mark Haase, Cal&#13;
=:DaveHercben and Todd&#13;
aullered losses lor&#13;
IlIIIide in singles competition.&#13;
l'-Rangers also lost the three&#13;
"'maldles.&#13;
Parkside gets another shot at&#13;
UWM on April 28. The schedule is&#13;
listed. All home meets are at&#13;
Pershing Park in Racine.&#13;
1971 Tennis Schedule&#13;
April 12 - UW-Milwaukee&#13;
home, 2 p.m. •&#13;
April 16 - Dominican College,&#13;
home, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
April 23 - Oshkosh Invitational&#13;
&lt;oshkosh, Milton, Stout,&#13;
Bowling Tournament Sunday&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
It, Red C arpet treatmen t&#13;
at the&#13;
BANK OF&#13;
ELMWOOD&#13;
IOVery 1 - one e se does!)&#13;
broad concepts of "The&#13;
American Training Pattern".&#13;
which is the title 01 a book put out&#13;
by Rosandich, Lawson and Paul&#13;
Ward. It deals with the&#13;
development 01 skill, speed,&#13;
stamina and strength - all 01&#13;
which are attributes that&#13;
characterize the successful&#13;
athlete&#13;
John Patten soa&#13;
pole vault taki:ed I? feet in the&#13;
ParkSid~ had g third.&#13;
- Tim MeG'} \pal~ of fourths&#13;
(1:21.1), and l\~i~: z~n the 660&#13;
440 intermediate hur~lch 10 the&#13;
Illinois won th es .(59.0)&#13;
points e meet WIth 103&#13;
second ~i~~thwestern placed&#13;
Parkside' 50, lollowed by&#13;
s 30.&#13;
InclUded is the bal&#13;
track schedule: ance of the&#13;
Remainder of Tr-ack Schedule&#13;
1\1 - men's&#13;
April 17 Loui W - women's&#13;
'. - ursrana Stat In Vltallonal (M) LSU H e - , • ouston,&#13;
Tulane, McNeese Balon Rouge&#13;
La. ' ,&#13;
April 23-24 - Drake Relays (MW),&#13;
Des Moines, Ia.&#13;
May 1 - Northern Il1inois invitational&#13;
(M), DeKalb, Ill.&#13;
M.ay 4 - Whitewater Invitational&#13;
(M), Whitewater.&#13;
May 8 - LaCrosse Invitational&#13;
(M-W), LaCrosse.&#13;
~ay 11 Whitewater&#13;
Triangular, Whitewater.&#13;
May 15 . Wisconsin Relays&#13;
Stevens Point. '&#13;
May 22 -&#13;
May 29 -&#13;
June 2-5 - N.A.I.A. ationals,&#13;
Billings, Mont.&#13;
June 15-19 - N.C.A.A., Seattle&#13;
Wash. '&#13;
Parkside) , away, 9 a.m.&#13;
April 24 - UW-Green Bay,&#13;
home, 9 a.m.&#13;
April ~ . Marquette niversity,&#13;
home, 2 p.m.&#13;
April 28 - VW-Milwaukee&#13;
awaY,2 p.m. '&#13;
April 30 " Dominican College,&#13;
away, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
May 8 - SI. Norbert College,&#13;
home, 1 p.m,&#13;
May 15-,UW-Green Bay, away,&#13;
12 noon.&#13;
May 21-22 - NAtA. Dislrict14&#13;
play-offs at Whitewater.&#13;
April I'. 1171&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
"Check Our&#13;
Prices Last"&#13;
PE Page 7&#13;
Golfers Organize&#13;
Parksioe's gol£ team I' bus,&#13;
rounding mte shape for the ne";'&#13;
season&#13;
Leif Guttorsmen hea&lt;b til II t&#13;
or Ranger linksmen cornpetm,g&#13;
lor spots on the squad Coach&#13;
Steve Stevens says he win carT)&#13;
12 men this lear&#13;
Gultormsen was last )ear's&#13;
MVP, and is capable of shootull&#13;
Scores that could earn him&#13;
medaJist honors 10 rnanv meets&#13;
Other golfers Ste~ens IS&#13;
counting on include Tom Both~&#13;
Randy Dreilke, George Hon'at'&#13;
Bob Toeppe, Tom Krummel \&lt;..;&#13;
Rossi and Dan We)Tauch&#13;
Ji~ Vakos, a lop prospect from&#13;
Racine, has a broken finger 00&#13;
his left hand and will not be&#13;
available for a fe'4 weeks&#13;
Stevens says the toughest part&#13;
01 the schedule comes firsL "UW.&#13;
Madison, Platteville and Oshkosh&#13;
~e three of the strongest learns&#13;
on the state," said Stevens All&#13;
three will appear with Par SIde&#13;
on April 19.&#13;
'971 Goll&amp;hodute&#13;
(All home matches are at&#13;
Petrifying Spr-ings gol£ course I&#13;
April t6 - Lake Forest College.&#13;
Rocklord College. away&#13;
April 19 - '-Madison. Platteville,&#13;
Oshkosh. away.&#13;
Apnl 23 - Dominican College.&#13;
Racine.&#13;
April 77 • Loyola t.:niVer5lt)&#13;
home.&#13;
April 30 - Lake Forest College.&#13;
home.&#13;
May I - Lakeland Invitallonal,&#13;
away.&#13;
May 4 - VW.I, Carthage&#13;
College, hol1U!.&#13;
May 7 - Whitewater. home.&#13;
May 10 - Domllucan College,&#13;
home.&#13;
May 14 - 'M. away&#13;
May 26-22. NA LA Dl InCI ..&#13;
Tourney. La~"SOOia,Green Lake,&#13;
Wis.&#13;
Baseball Club Formed&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
This year Parkside has formed&#13;
a club baseball team. The&#13;
organization is different from a&#13;
varsity sport in that it is not part&#13;
of Parkside's formal athletlc&#13;
program.&#13;
The new team has secured a&#13;
schedule that includes such&#13;
schools as Dominican College. St&#13;
Norbert and UWM, among&#13;
others.&#13;
Some of the more promising&#13;
players according to Coach&#13;
"Red" Oberbruner include&#13;
pitchers Joe Johnson, Rick&#13;
Jackson, Carl Talsma, Tom&#13;
Jaehne, Tom Pinzger and Jim&#13;
Kobierski. Some of these men&#13;
will play at other positions when&#13;
not on the mound.&#13;
Other team members who will&#13;
figure in Oberbruner's plans ~re&#13;
infielders Tom Gedemer, Nick&#13;
Perrine, Dennis Serpe, Ron ~hmitz&#13;
John Pills and JIm&#13;
Moh;bacher. Dean Karis and&#13;
Tom Elsen are tbe catchers.&#13;
Scot Piemeisl, Chuck&#13;
Christiano, Jef£ Koleske and Scot&#13;
Nelson will handle outfield&#13;
hrkside's intramural division.&#13;
IIponmentis sponsoring the Sunday, April 25 is the date&#13;
It AIl.University bowling of the tournament to be held at&#13;
mament. The tournament Sheridan lanes in Kenosha.&#13;
consist of three divisions: Bowling will begin at 10:00 a.m.&#13;
.', handicap, women's Those interested should&#13;
1IMicap, and scratch. To be contact Jim Koch, Room 144&#13;
dIiHe to participate in either Kenosha; or Dick Frecka, Room&#13;
the handicap divisions a 302 Racine. Other registration&#13;
fImn must bowl in either the places are Sheridan Lanes and&#13;
Iacile or Kenosha intramural the Athletic Office.&#13;
~~~th,e physical education Registration fee is $1.25 to&#13;
-",woadeague. be paid at Ihe time of&#13;
Bowlers in any of these registration. This fee will&#13;
:' who average 170 or include the cost of trophies&#13;
... or anyone not In these which will be awarded In all&#13;
mUlt bowl In the scratch divisions.&#13;
~ ~onl&amp;M UJfit!t !7ainl6&#13;
~~~s athletic director&#13;
... -.,h spent last Friday&#13;
~rday In Louisiana&#13;
IIlI pia Withboth the coaches&#13;
~ ren 01 the NFL New&#13;
e..t Sllnla.&#13;
~ Bob Lawson, who was&#13;
~ In Louisiana with the&#13;
Rosie, tra.ck team, joined&#13;
.... lIdich In discussing the&#13;
WEST&#13;
SIDE&#13;
SWEET&#13;
SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phane 657-9147 27 4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
04 Lothrop Ave.&#13;
... Racine, Wis. KENOSHA, WISCONSIN . .... ..~!::=:::=:::::---:----.-a&#13;
duties ~elson may see some&#13;
action in lhe infield also.&#13;
The schedule as It nO\\ stands lS&#13;
listed here:&#13;
April 15 - Domlrucan College&#13;
(2), home or away&#13;
April 2li - Domin n CoIldlle.&#13;
awaY&#13;
May 3·Dormnican CoIleRe12 ,&#13;
away.&#13;
May 8 - .01 III -Ch,ca 0 C...de&#13;
(2), home&#13;
May 11· dwaukee Tech 2.&#13;
away.&#13;
May 15- l. Norbert 121• home&#13;
!\lay 22 - VII'-, hluukee 2'.&#13;
away.&#13;
Carthage and Parks,de ""II&#13;
play a home and a home&#13;
scrimmage to be decIded upon at&#13;
a future date&#13;
!IIa!l dla&lt;k?a1l&#13;
()J~ J"cwJ&#13;
For&#13;
Resenations&#13;
PhOl1'&#13;
69-HJ-+55&#13;
1([ os"" ....&#13;
'rs;~Y;id;'&#13;
I&#13;
.Florists .&#13;
~&amp;Greenhouses :::&#13;
~~ ---&#13;
.:::&#13;
,~&#13;
x&#13;
,I:&#13;
:~ noe&#13;
:-": '021, 7ST.. Sf&#13;
51~ Kl.NOSHA WISCONSIN '1&lt;10&#13;
~:~ PHO E "'.uoo :::~~~:::::::::::":::~·:·:-""?-~~"}"'::·:«..~n~~&#13;
.:'.&#13;
ST_. RACI E&#13;
10%&#13;
tlldmt Diu-Olll1t&#13;
011 all&#13;
POsfl'rs &amp; Frames&#13;
503 Al&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
pregnancies ~ 12&#13;
vee.ks e in&amp;ted r&#13;
117iJ1O&#13;
Medication, Lab T~st&#13;
Doctors fees includ&#13;
Hospital &amp; Roepital&#13;
&amp;tfilia ed clinics.&#13;
(212) TR 1-8803&#13;
2 hours-1 cays&#13;
PIlYSlCIAllS REFERRAL&#13;
We u..w .. UifI, .,., .... If&#13;
.... ,.... ..~ ......&#13;
anger Trackmen Take Third&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
DARRELL BORGER&#13;
Eugene Prince setting school record.&#13;
ule freshman Bob Waters&#13;
aukee won two events but&#13;
ream took third in a&#13;
lar meet with Illinois and&#13;
tern&#13;
ers turned in a 9.9 100 yard&#13;
and ran the 220 in 21.9. He&#13;
ran anchor on Parkside's 440&#13;
relay team which placed second.&#13;
Eugene Prince set a new&#13;
personal record and also a school&#13;
record by leaping 6'6" in the high&#13;
jump. His jump was good for&#13;
third place.&#13;
Jim McFadden placed third in&#13;
the . mile with a time of 4: 20.5.&#13;
etmen _Drop Openner&#13;
Put.side opened its 1971 tennis&#13;
on a losing note, dropping&#13;
borne opener 9--0 to UWee&#13;
at Pershing Park.&#13;
e Sarago, Dan Mieci,&#13;
Mark Haase, Cal&#13;
Dave Herchen and Todd n suffered losses for&#13;
de in singles competition.&#13;
Rangers also lost the three&#13;
matches.&#13;
Parkside gets another shot at&#13;
UWM on April 28. The schedule is&#13;
listed. All home meets are at&#13;
Pershing Park in Racine.&#13;
1971 Tennis Schedule&#13;
April 12 - UW-Milwaukee&#13;
home, 2 p.m. '&#13;
April 16 - Dominican College, home, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
April 23 - Oshkosh Invitational&#13;
( Oshkosh, Milton, Stout,&#13;
Bowling Tournament Sunday&#13;
Parkside's intramural division.&#13;
rtment 1s sponsoring the Sunday, April 25 is the date&#13;
t \II-University bowling of the tournament to be held at&#13;
nt. The tournament Sheridan lanes in Kenosha .&#13;
, on 1st of three divisions: Bowling will begin at 10:00 a.m.&#13;
s handicap, women's Those interested should&#13;
P, and scratch. To be contact Jim Koch, Room 144&#13;
1 to participate in either Kenosha; or Dick Frecka, Room&#13;
handicap divisions a 302 Racine. Other registration&#13;
must bowl in either the places are Sheridan Lanes and&#13;
or Kenosha intramural the Athletic Office.&#13;
or the physical education Registration fee is $1 .25 to&#13;
t1onal league. be paid at the time of&#13;
Bov.ier in any of these registration. This fee will&#13;
s who average 170 or include the cost of trophies&#13;
e, or anyone not in these which will be awarded in all&#13;
s must bowl in the scratch divisions .&#13;
. 'fto~dic/t ~on/eM u)f itft :?ain/4&#13;
Parkside's athletic director&#13;
d Rosandich s~nt last Friday&#13;
~turday 1n Louisiana&#13;
rrtng with both the coaches&#13;
players or the NFL New&#13;
ans Saints&#13;
ch ~b Lawson, who was&#13;
Y 10 Louisiana with the t track team, joined&#13;
dich In discussing the&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
s,1 Red C orpet treatment&#13;
at the&#13;
,BANK OF&#13;
~LMWOOD&#13;
(e~ery l one e se does!)&#13;
broad concepts of ''The&#13;
American Training Pattern",&#13;
which is the title of a book put out&#13;
by Rosandich, Lawson and Paul&#13;
Ward. It deals with the&#13;
development of skill, speed,&#13;
stamina and strength - all of&#13;
which are attributes that&#13;
characterize the successful&#13;
athlete.&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
"Check Our&#13;
Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
John Patten soared . pole vault taki 1_3 feet in the&#13;
P . • ng third arks1de had a . · - Tim 1 . pair of fourth&#13;
( cG1lsky in th&#13;
1:21.1&gt;, and Mike · ~ 660&#13;
440 intermediate h Zug1ch m the&#13;
Illinois won the l!fdJes _(59.0).&#13;
points N meet with 103 . orthweste I second with 50 rn P aced&#13;
Parkside's 30. . fol lowed by&#13;
Included is th ba&#13;
track schedule : e lance of the&#13;
Remainder of Track chedule&#13;
1\1 -men's&#13;
April 17 _ Lo . W · women· · . llls1ana tate I V1tat1onal CM&gt; n- , LSU, Houston,&#13;
~~ane, McNeese, Baton Rouge,&#13;
April 23-24 - Drake Relays ( tW),&#13;
Des Moines, Ia.&#13;
May 1 - Northern Illinois Invitational&#13;
(M), DeKalb, Ill.&#13;
M_ay 4 - Whitewater Invitational&#13;
(M), Whitewater.&#13;
May 8 - LaCrosse Invitational&#13;
(M-W), Lacrosse.&#13;
~fay 11 - Whitewater&#13;
Triangular, Whitewater.&#13;
May 15 - Wisconsin Relays&#13;
Stevens Point. '&#13;
May 22 -&#13;
May 29 -&#13;
June 2-5 - N.A.I.A. 'ationals, BilJings, Mont.&#13;
June 15-19 - N.C.A.A., Seattle&#13;
Wash. '&#13;
Parkside), away, 9 a.m.&#13;
April 24 - UW-Green Bay, home, 9 a .m.&#13;
April Z7 - larquette nh·er- sity, home, 2 p.m.&#13;
April 28 - UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
away, 2 p.m.&#13;
April 30 - Dominican College,&#13;
away, 3:30 p.m.&#13;
May 8 - St. Norbert College, home, 1 p.m.&#13;
May 15-,UW-Green Bay, away,&#13;
12 noon.&#13;
May 21-22 - N.A.I.A. Di trict H&#13;
play-offs at Whitewater.&#13;
'Golfers Organize&#13;
Baseball Club Formed&#13;
b Jim a per&#13;
This year Parkside has formed&#13;
a club baseball team The&#13;
organization is different from a&#13;
varsity sport in that it i not part&#13;
of Parkside's formal a hlet1c&#13;
program. The new team has ecured a&#13;
schedule that include uch&#13;
schools as Dominican College · Norbert and \\' I, among&#13;
others. Some or the more promi. in&#13;
players according to Coach&#13;
"Red" Oberbruner include&#13;
pitchers Joe John on , Rick&#13;
Jackson, Carl Tai ma. Tom&#13;
Jaehne, Tom Pmzger and Jim&#13;
Kobierski Some of these men will play at other po ition wh n&#13;
not on the mound. Other team members who will&#13;
figure in Oberbruner's plans are&#13;
infielders Tom Gedemer . 'ick&#13;
Perrine, Dennis Serpe, Ron Schmitz&#13;
John Pitts and Jim&#13;
Moh;bacher. Dean Karis and&#13;
Tom Elsen are the catchers. Scot Piemeisl, Chuck&#13;
Christiano, Jeff Koleske and Scot&#13;
Nelson will handle outfield&#13;
WEST&#13;
SIDE&#13;
SWEET&#13;
SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97 47&#13;
Sunnyside&#13;
Florists&#13;
· &amp; Greenhouses&#13;
10%&#13;
111d 111 Di 11111&#13;
-011 all&#13;
Po I &amp; I·,·.,&#13;
503 Al ST •• R Cl E&#13;
ABORTIO &#13;
PaleS AprU 11. 1111&#13;
lIy Jim Kojoen&#13;
of the ewscope Staff&#13;
Tille' Touching&#13;
Author' Gwen Davis&#13;
Publisher' Doubleday&#13;
Hell has found a true earthly paradise in&#13;
Southern California; God left for greener&#13;
pastures. and Satan's manifesto of&#13;
hopelessness and boredom fills the gap with&#13;
emptiness.&#13;
Gwen Davis treats us to yet another&#13;
novelistic probe into the desert aridity&#13;
behind the billboard of modern society.&#13;
telling us like it is just as everyone else has,&#13;
poinung out the sexual nexus of life; the&#13;
primal gift of God (if fulfilling) and ice-cold&#13;
prod of Satan (if unfulflllmg); the dialectic&#13;
For Hell's frame of reference Southern&#13;
California style, the author introduces&#13;
Soralee's husband Simon Herford potentate&#13;
of the encounte~ marathon, various and&#13;
sundry (stereotypical) social freaks,&#13;
"Kerouwackian" freaks standing vigil for&#13;
Caryl Chessman. and Lionel. Lionel is a&#13;
pivotal character, he is the ~mp~r~r of a&#13;
chain shoestore kingdom. his life s goal&#13;
merely to get through life, working ~ haT?&#13;
that he has no time for despair. His&#13;
"becoming a multi4mil/ionaire was one of&#13;
the grearjokes o[all rime."&#13;
Lionel was in his and everyone else's view&#13;
a "funny little man, middleaged and beaten,&#13;
stuffed into his skin like an overcooked&#13;
potato .." Saralee refuses to see his ugliness.&#13;
-&#13;
•&#13;
;.::&#13;
-&#13;
~&#13;
rnv I.. love nd canng (touchmg) m&#13;
oppo ilion to sex as a materialistic means.&#13;
It all depend on how you look at it For&#13;
In lance, tf you're middleaged and your&#13;
hu band takes Wednesday off for a round of&#13;
golf wuh the fellas, well then, you JUSlform&#13;
a hule club (acung as a sexual clearinghouse)&#13;
of discreet women whose rallying point is to&#13;
pick up namele studs m out of the way&#13;
restaurant and that sort of relieves the&#13;
b redorn. But" do also yolk you with guilt&#13;
~nd mote empuness. That Satan's real devil.&#13;
The novel IS wntten from an observer&#13;
narrau n pomt of view. Marion, the&#13;
narrOitor, is telling the story of Sorale, who&#13;
was for a time her best friend. Marion is a&#13;
Journalist, femiOlSl, 'yplcally (for a&#13;
journaliSl) '·cynical about nearly&#13;
tverylhillg". She is as igned the task of&#13;
writing an article about a nude encounter&#13;
marathon for which "there was no need for&#13;
me to get emotionally involved. ..Crux: She&#13;
does ge' emo'ionally involved. through' the&#13;
auspices of Saralee anti here own gutdeep&#13;
rage rising uncontrollably from a stomach&#13;
overrun with existential spasms, Exhausted,&#13;
Marion finds herself or at least the raod to&#13;
herself&#13;
she invests in him a beauty that isn't there.&#13;
She pities him and only because women can&#13;
give enought at open a man up, to touch&#13;
"the little boy in men" she sees herself as a&#13;
savior for Lionel. She convinces herself ilia t&#13;
she actually loves him and for a short time&#13;
succeeds.&#13;
Marion invites Saralee to the encounter&#13;
marathon where she discovers, through&#13;
self-analysis and Simon's (a possible&#13;
charlatan) direction. her exact Freudian&#13;
hang-ups, not quite accepting 'he final&#13;
judgement that lionel represents a father&#13;
figure; female oedipus. Soralee is finally&#13;
purged of her pity and flase love for Lion".&#13;
She leaves the marathon ready and willing to&#13;
extract that latent affection of her husband,&#13;
long neglected. who needs it as much as&#13;
Lionel and who is capable of giving if primed&#13;
long enough. Yes sir, everything gonna be&#13;
awright.&#13;
But strong·ann Chance jumps on thE&#13;
stage. As she is driving home to her hubby&#13;
Soralee wraps her car around a tree and&#13;
boom, no more Soralee in an orange ball of&#13;
flame. Marion, who is driving behind her,&#13;
can see the fireball of Soralee's eviction from&#13;
life and ends the novel in a revery about&#13;
~===CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
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$2DO Cill 652-8870 MUST SELL.&#13;
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'69 KoIwolSOIkiWI-SS 650 cc Ex&#13;
Cono, 652·6335 after 4&#13;
'57 Chev. Wagon $350 or best&#13;
o((er 652·0109 ..(tet 6&#13;
'69 Ramb. American $995&#13;
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or 637-8120&#13;
·70 Anlbasgdor call Dennis&#13;
652·5613&#13;
Fender Scudcuter 1450 or best&#13;
offer 639 ·6360&#13;
·62 Rambler 1100 Call 652·9552&#13;
Misc.&#13;
Chance. At the funeral home she wonders why .no&#13;
one is pounding their fists and gutscreammg&#13;
"fuck you fate." "Soralee was dead, and&#13;
dead she couldn't be Saralee. Because she&#13;
was alive, that's what she was about, wa,s&#13;
living so wharever was in that coffin wasn t&#13;
Soral~e." Age old consolation. .'&#13;
1 suppose you could call Soralee tragic, In&#13;
a modern sense. She was moti~ated. by her&#13;
emotions and a few psychological insights.&#13;
Trapped by pit~! she finally tr~!,scended,&#13;
herself, attained peak sensittvuv, ready to&#13;
give herself to her husband, ready to touch&#13;
the little boy, and is cut down before she has&#13;
the chance. Touching is not a particularly great novel;&#13;
it's decent and is well-written only in places.&#13;
The central theme, that of an empty society&#13;
and the hopelessness of its inhabitants, is the&#13;
central theme of too many modern novels&#13;
the story is interesting particularly when the&#13;
author concerns herself with a behind the&#13;
scenes look at the vigil held when Caryl&#13;
Chessman was executed, (and occasionally&#13;
when she describes the encounter&#13;
marathon). The newspapers purported the&#13;
'Chessman vigil to be a noble action on the&#13;
part of hundreds of ~elebrities, Gwen Davis&#13;
'reinterprets it as a circus. Her elUCidations&#13;
concerning sex, love, males and females, the&#13;
repressed rage of modern man and woman&#13;
are contemporary, but far from original. It&#13;
seems as if I've read this novel before, in bits&#13;
and pieces of other novels. Only the names&#13;
have been changed..&#13;
One big advantage of this book is its&#13;
length, a mere 212 pages, short enough to&#13;
read in a few hours. It's nice to read about&#13;
Southern California freaks but it ain't worth&#13;
too much effort. A consistently perceptive&#13;
writer, Gwen Davis isn't. Ultimately,&#13;
Touching leaves you untouched.&#13;
Touching, courtesy of the Book Mart&#13;
622-59th Street, Kenosha, can be purchased&#13;
for $5.95.&#13;
A professional&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
that is safe&#13;
legal &amp; •&#13;
Inexpensive&#13;
can be set up on III&#13;
o~patient basisby QU'&#13;
The Problem&#13;
Referral 5enIa:&#13;
215-722-5360&#13;
?4 hours-7 dlys&#13;
for professionel. cxlflf~&#13;
and caril1ll help.&#13;
GOT THE. DRAFT hanging over&#13;
your head??? Do something about it.&#13;
ECUMENICAL CENTER FOR&#13;
DRAFT COUNSELING 2211 EAST&#13;
KENWOOD BLVD. MILWAUKEE&#13;
Eor appointments phone: (414)&#13;
962-5855 or contact: STEVE&#13;
BANGERT S11JDENT AFFAIRS -&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Fiberglass Repair work&#13;
654-8739&#13;
Any ty~ or work 652-8734&#13;
For Rent&#13;
Offic~ Space - Modern. Carpeced,&#13;
Partitioned, Air Cond, Ideal for&#13;
Acetg., Insurance, or Sales. Good&#13;
proximity 10 ParksKie and Carthage.&#13;
4058 7ch Ave. Call 652-3945 or&#13;
654·7410.&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
o&#13;
It&#13;
,ill&#13;
Minnie the Midnite Maid&#13;
Qualifications for calling:&#13;
P~offessors &amp; Bachelors over 25&#13;
(I'm not cute but I'm efficient)&#13;
C,ll657·5929 r~c:H:A'T:::::::::::::::l&#13;
I N&#13;
ICHEW&#13;
. 40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
::l:&#13;
~&#13;
!&#13;
i&#13;
~~~:"&#13;
SUN. THRU· THURS. ::~~:&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE~~~:&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.Ml&#13;
HAMBURGERSljj:&#13;
~:'&#13;
40( &amp; 24( 1~I&#13;
~ ~::&#13;
fw.. SUPERCHEW ~:~: ...•&#13;
ll(triple decker) r~&#13;
~~: f.::&#13;
m 55(. ~&#13;
~~~. ' ~': ~ ;:::::::::::."~:~~W:?&#13;
L:!!Ai6iii _.- _.- _.- _.-&#13;
-&#13;
CourtE!l&gt;Y Discount ~.&#13;
to Students and "';:;'..!!EFaculty'&#13;
....... I&#13;
(Must Show 1.-0.) 05'&#13;
Fairtrade .... ~i .,&#13;
excepted DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
~~BRAT'i~&#13;
Where It's At!&#13;
DAILY SPECIAL&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4 P.M .&#13;
A Bottle of _,DIE&#13;
A New Kind of&#13;
Akohorai Beverage&#13;
andaBEEFBURGER&#13;
ST~~K99~&#13;
BRAT ~&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
HOUR&#13;
MONDAY thn. FRIDAY&#13;
6 p.m. to 7 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20~&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
I I&#13;
S&#13;
·ty partl"&#13;
Open~UD~gilyat9niA:M. a:&#13;
01l&#13;
12 p.M.&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and HighwaY 50&#13;
Page WSCOPE pril 19, 1971&#13;
b) Jim Koloen&#13;
of th 'e cope Staff&#13;
Title: Tou hing&#13;
uthor· G ·en D vis&#13;
Publisher· D ubleday&#13;
H II h found a true earthly paradise m&#13;
uthern aliforni ; God left for greener&#13;
p stures, nd at n's m nifes10 of&#13;
hopele ness nd boredom fill the gap with&#13;
emptme .&#13;
Gwen D \i treats u to yet another&#13;
n veli ll probe into the desert aridity&#13;
behind the billbo rd of modern iety.&#13;
t llin u It ·e it I JU l a everyone el e ha ,&#13;
p inting ut the se ual ne us of life: the&#13;
primal ift of G {if ful illin nd kc-cold&#13;
pr d o t n If unful 11lin ); the di le ti1.&#13;
For Hell's frame of reference Southern&#13;
C.tlafomia stvle. the author introduces&#13;
Soralee·s husband, Simon Herford potentate&#13;
f the encounter marathon, various and&#13;
sundry (stereotypical) social freaks,&#13;
'·Kerouwac ·ian.. freaks standing vigil for&#13;
C ryl Chessman. and Lionel. Lionel is a&#13;
pivotal character. he is the emperor of a&#13;
chain hoe tore kingdom. his life's goal&#13;
merely to get through life, working ~ har~&#13;
that he ha np time for despair. His&#13;
"becoming a multi-millionaire was one of&#13;
the great jokes of all rime. ·: Lionel was in his a-nd everyone else's view&#13;
a "funny Lillie man, middleaged and beaten,&#13;
stuffed into his skin like an overcooked&#13;
potato. ' Soralee refuses to see his ugliness,&#13;
Vte anve ts in him a beauty that isn't there.&#13;
he pities him and only because women can&#13;
give enought ot open a man up, to · touch&#13;
"the Lillie boy in men" she sees herself as a&#13;
\'ior for Lionel he convinces herself that&#13;
she tu Jly loves rum and for a short time&#13;
ucceed .&#13;
farion invite Soralee to the encounter&#13;
marathon where she discovers, through&#13;
self-analy i and Simon's (a possible&#13;
charlatan) direction, her exact Freudian&#13;
hang-up , not quite ac epting the final&#13;
judgement that Lionel represents a father&#13;
figure : female oedipus. Soralee is finally&#13;
purged of her pity and flase love for Lio11~l.&#13;
he leaves the marathon ready and willing to&#13;
extr.ict that latent affection of her husband,&#13;
lon·g neglected, who needs it as much as&#13;
Lionel and who is capable of giving if primed&#13;
long enough. Yes sir, everything gonna be&#13;
awright.&#13;
But strong-arm Chance jumps on the&#13;
tage. As she is driving home to her hubby&#13;
Soralee wraps her car around a tree and&#13;
boom, no more Soralee in an orange ball of&#13;
flame . 1arion. who is driving behind her,&#13;
can see the fireball of Soralee's eviction from&#13;
life and ends the novel in a revery about&#13;
Chance.&#13;
At the funeral home she wonders why _no&#13;
one is pounding their fists and gutscreammg&#13;
"fuck you fate." "Soralee was dead, and&#13;
dead she couldn't be Sora lee. Because she&#13;
was alive, that's what she was about, wa;&#13;
living so whatever was in that coffin wasn t&#13;
Soral~e. "Age old consolation.&#13;
I suppose you could call Soralee tragic, in&#13;
a modern sense. She was motivated by her&#13;
emotions and' a few psychological insights.&#13;
Trapped by pit~: she fin~ll_y_ tr~scended&#13;
herself, attained peak sens1t1v1ty, ready to&#13;
give herself to her husband, ready to touch&#13;
the little boy, and is cut down before she has&#13;
the chance.&#13;
Touching is not a particularly great novel;&#13;
it's decent and is well-written only in places.&#13;
The central theme, that of an empty society&#13;
and the hopelessness of its inhabitants, is the&#13;
central theme of too many modern novels&#13;
the story is interesting particularly when the&#13;
author concerns herself with a behind the&#13;
scenes look at the vigil held when Caryl&#13;
Chessman was executed, (and occasionally&#13;
when she describes the encounter&#13;
marathon). The newspapers purported the&#13;
'Chessman vigil to be a noble action on the&#13;
part of hundreds of celebrities, Gwen Davis&#13;
'reinterprets it as a circus. Her elucidations&#13;
concerning sex, love, males and females, the&#13;
repressed rage of modern man and woman&#13;
are contemporary, but far from original. It&#13;
seems as if I've read th.is novel before, in bits&#13;
and pieces of other novels. Only the namei&#13;
have been changed.&#13;
One big advantage of th.is book is its&#13;
le·ngth, a mere 212 pages, short enough to&#13;
read in a few hours. It's nice to read about&#13;
Southern California freaks but it ain't worth&#13;
too much effort. A consistently perceptive&#13;
writer, Gwen Davis isn't. Ultimately,&#13;
Touching leaves you untouched.&#13;
Touching, courtesy of the Book Mart&#13;
622-59th Street, Kenosha, can be purchased&#13;
for $5.95.&#13;
A professional ABORTION&#13;
that is safe, legal &amp;&#13;
• • 1nexpens1ve&#13;
can be set up on an&#13;
outpatient basis by calli&#13;
The Problem Preg&#13;
Referral 5enice&#13;
21S-722-5360&#13;
?4 hours-7 days&#13;
for professiontl, confidential&#13;
and caring help.&#13;
~C.8.tmJ.&#13;
I WATCHIS _J&#13;
--............&#13;
-·--- h 1- make a ,liffete11ce .,-. you sl,op1&#13;
10%&#13;
Court~~Y Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Faculty '&#13;
-Ito--&#13;
~,,.. - I&#13;
• t:,:=,·it--&#13;
-· - ~ F ===CLASSIFIEDS====-1&#13;
For Sale&#13;
(Must Show 1.0.)&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
excepted DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
'69 K.wu,l.1 WI S 650 cc Ex&#13;
Cono. 652 6. JS after 4&#13;
'57 Chev. W.gon S350 or best&#13;
off; r 652-0109 After 6&#13;
' 69 R~mb . Amcric~n $995&#13;
652-4215 before 7&#13;
'69 MustJn S 1,800 or best offer&#13;
694-4117&#13;
Fiat wa on Sl50 call Ror&#13;
6 2 230&#13;
'70 AMX S'.?450 or best offer&#13;
65 271 or 65 -4117&#13;
'67 Triumph TR-4 IRS whole or&#13;
for p;,ru 6-3618&#13;
'.? Pu:c.· I J ( so:1 cltup cJII Tom&#13;
654,20H aftrr 4&#13;
WmtC'r COAi size 7 SI0 633 -7576 or 637 1'20&#13;
'70 Ambassador call Dennis&#13;
652-567&#13;
Fender tr d Jstcr S450 or best&#13;
offi r 639-6360&#13;
' 62 R mblcr SIOO CJII 652 -9552&#13;
Stereo Cassette Player and&#13;
Recorder w11h changer Model 377&#13;
S200 Call 652-8870 MUST SELL.&#13;
Honda • 150" cc S'200 694--0325&#13;
RCA Signal Generator S20.00 also&#13;
RC A Vacuum Tube voltmeter&#13;
S20.00 639 202&#13;
Misc.&#13;
GOT THE DRAFT hanging over&#13;
your head??? Do something about it.&#13;
ECUMENICAL CENTER FOR&#13;
DRAFT COUNSELING 2211 EAST&#13;
KENWOOD BLVD. MILWAUKEE&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Fiberglass Repair work&#13;
654-8739&#13;
F.or appointments phone : ( 414)&#13;
962-5855 or contact: STEVE&#13;
BANGERT STUDENT AFFAIRS -&#13;
call KENOSHA&#13;
Any type or work 65'2-87 34&#13;
For Rent&#13;
Office Space - Modern. Carpeted,&#13;
Partiuoned, Air Cond. Ideal for&#13;
Acctg., Insurance, or Sales. Good&#13;
proximit)' to Parkside and Carthage.&#13;
4058 7th Ave . Call 652-3945 or&#13;
654-7410.&#13;
Minnie the Midnite Maid&#13;
Qualifications for calling:&#13;
Proffessors &amp; Bachelors over 25&#13;
(I'm not cute but I'm efficient)&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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              <text>By Bob Mainland&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Racine's New Gallery One&#13;
offers artist's originals at prices&#13;
ranging from .two dollars to&#13;
twelve thousand dollars. It.ahm&#13;
features Emile and Nancy,&#13;
madcap en trepreneurs, .&#13;
providmg the best floor Slio'w&#13;
this side of Benny's Club.&#13;
Nancy says, "Here we&#13;
are-where are your' Emile is&#13;
silent. So come on gang, truck&#13;
on down to New Gallery One&#13;
and rip off some culture!&#13;
New Gallery will feature an&#13;
exhibition by Parkside's Ian&#13;
Fraser, starting April 18.&#13;
--&#13;
By Bob Mainland&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Racine's New Gallery One&#13;
offers artist's originals at prices&#13;
ranging from . two dollars to&#13;
twelve thousand dollars. It al!in&#13;
features Emile and Nancy, madcap entrepreneurs, . providing the best floor slio'w&#13;
this side of Benny's Club.&#13;
Nancy says, "Here we&#13;
are-where are you?" Emile is&#13;
silent. So come on gang, truck&#13;
on down to New Gallery One&#13;
and rip off some culture!&#13;
New Gallery will feature an&#13;
exhibition by Parkside's Ian&#13;
Fraser, starting April 18. &#13;
i&#13;
~2 --:.:.;e~W'&gt;C;;;;lope~-L-=~~ri~~S' 1_97_IERS TO TH E EDITO R&#13;
tWO very close and precise scrutiny&#13;
Eduor&#13;
II&#13;
d! A d I that this happened over of each word .. An I"ntellectual actua ) passe. n not on Y ? And&#13;
I've got a hot lip for thaI )'00'11 never believe ihts weeks ago. do we. game, '0 to speak. If this is the&#13;
you methmg )"U JU I ,m~ht one but that some clever certainly,letting them know any- case, I submit that a dIffIcult&#13;
be rruere red 10 hou ne ver Park ide students have actually thing at all about the c~ndldates crossword puzzle, the answer to&#13;
kn,," wuh new paper eduors] stalled secret campaigns for or issues would be foohsh-theYI which could be published at a&#13;
.~ In nd of nnne who' rull) offices in the first student might just go out and vot~. later date, would better suit this&#13;
... n I' h II eovernment '0"', this IS just ~1aybe even care about what s&#13;
10 ..eep t 1\ quiet now, u ...v- purpose.&#13;
)UU can .onnrm tt I "hi pered bcl\\cen you and me -after all, happening. I I feel I must also comment on&#13;
to me ludol) tholt the student \\C wouldn"t want tu let the So don't spill the beans. the name (The Halloween Party)&#13;
,""trnmenl -onsmuuon (shh0l whole tudent bod) find ollt mean, if you did that-what selected for the Luddite slate of kind of campus newspaper candidates in the upcoming&#13;
editor would you be, anyway? student government election. It&#13;
Secretively yours, is indeed a good joke. As such, I&#13;
Lynn A, Hoff feel it exemplifies the kind of&#13;
government Parkside students&#13;
can expect if the Party is&#13;
elected.&#13;
I may appear to take issue&#13;
with everything the Luddites are&#13;
for, but this is not the case. I&#13;
feel the Luddite policy of&#13;
activism and participation is one&#13;
which all students should&#13;
seriously consider adopting. I&#13;
particularly concur with the&#13;
closing statement of the&#13;
aforementioned Luddite&#13;
column. It was, "It may weB be&#13;
that Luddite has nothing to&#13;
say." Perhaps I'm more ·of a&#13;
than I lhought. 1 e x p e ct&#13;
they'll let me know.&#13;
Jim Nolan&#13;
.;#7001 S...m 8. I&#13;
::H I) HI.109.f.&#13;
~s'H: '10.00 I'~Jl1)"IlIS&#13;
*&#13;
~&#13;
To the Editor.&#13;
The Luddite column in the&#13;
March ::!9 issue of ewscope&#13;
contains. in my opinion, an&#13;
c),.lrcmely novel definition. It&#13;
Slates, "A Luddite is onc who&#13;
feels compelled to act or react."&#13;
It is this definition which&#13;
caused me to write this letter.&#13;
and. I suppose therefore&#13;
qualifies me as a Lud~itc. This&#13;
comes as quite a surprise to me&#13;
as I'm sure it does to Mr.&#13;
\\'ebster. He also does&#13;
definitiuns:&#13;
Ifind it su surprising because&#13;
Idisagree with nearly everything&#13;
I can make sense of in the&#13;
Luddite columns. I recognize as&#13;
the cause for my difficulty in&#13;
underslanding the Luddites my&#13;
own ineptilllde, but then I'm&#13;
hung up on Webster's&#13;
definitions.&#13;
I understand the name&#13;
Luddite to be derivcd from a&#13;
group of English workmen who&#13;
destroyed labor-saving machines&#13;
as a form of protest. In Iiglll of&#13;
this, I find confusing the fact&#13;
that the Luddites publicized as&#13;
the highlIght of their election&#13;
rally a particular kind of&#13;
loudspeaker. Initially, I believed&#13;
thIS seemingly inconsistent&#13;
highlight to be another of the&#13;
LJIllOUS Luddite puns. 1&#13;
c'\pe..:ted :H some point in' the&#13;
rally the machine would be&#13;
smashed lO bits by club wielding&#13;
Luddites. However. this was not&#13;
lhe ~ase. They actually pUI to&#13;
good use a labor saving device.&#13;
I've considered the possibility&#13;
that the Luddite column does&#13;
have meaning. but is written so&#13;
as to reveal it only upon the&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
"Check Our&#13;
Prices Last"&#13;
i~m:=::~~~::'&lt;-:::~:::::~~;:~'::;::;::&gt;;~:J~!~~~f:~:~!~~r~::&#13;
h&#13;
. . The SWIm Ball swim-bra top ::::&#13;
t IS IS~haslhelamou,sl,tolaBali,bra t&#13;
8&#13;
·&#13;
WI hOullooklng like one, ~::&#13;
Front tucklngs ::::&#13;
~&#13;
91 e a natural look ::::&#13;
to the seamless cup ::::&#13;
Hidden underwlring supports ~~;&#13;
and shapes beautifully. ::::&#13;
.' A...a la e in so. cup and push·up styles_ ~t:&#13;
AI er you've sized up your lop, :~~&#13;
choose ellher a hlp hugger, brief Or bikini. ::=:&#13;
Tops and bottoms ::~:&#13;
are sold separalely. ~:~&#13;
In prints for every swim taste. :;:;&#13;
All AnlTon- nylon with nylon tricot lining. :::;&#13;
~~~&#13;
::::&#13;
~~~&#13;
§j&#13;
1\1&#13;
::::&#13;
::::&#13;
(ci:&#13;
~:'&#13;
~~:&#13;
i~; I~&#13;
I&#13;
\\\&#13;
i&#13;
11,&#13;
. \~~&#13;
\ I J'h&#13;
1\ R-K NEWS AGENCY ..~ Free !~,:::=:~:"~,,-J..N_e_;_S:_:_~_:_';h_·_::_&lt;:_~_Z_~_~_~_~i_:_9a_~a_I;_:_e_s _*_~:::='::::::.....1 L~.;.:.~.i.7..4__ "",.....&#13;
$)7 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
There is a lot of bullshit&#13;
nying around these days, and if&#13;
you don't watch out it's liable&#13;
to hit you right between the&#13;
eyes. If you don't believe it ask&#13;
me. The date was April 1 and&#13;
the time was 7:25 p.m. I had&#13;
decided to go out to our&#13;
Student Activities building and&#13;
have a couple beers, play the&#13;
pins and kick out some jams on&#13;
the juke box. Well, I pulled into&#13;
the modulux parking area and&#13;
parked the car at the end of the&#13;
,row that was started in the&#13;
middle of the area.&#13;
I went in, met some friends&#13;
and started rapping with them.&#13;
We rapped for about ten&#13;
minutes and then went over to&#13;
the bar and had a beer.&#13;
Then we went over and&#13;
played the pins. While a friend&#13;
was getting his nips burnt off by&#13;
the machine, I went over and&#13;
flipped a· quarter in the box to&#13;
get things moving a bit.&#13;
All this time as I was blowing&#13;
my wad trying to enjoy myself,&#13;
The Man on the Parks ide patrol&#13;
smacks my windshield with a&#13;
ticket that costs me a fiver. As if&#13;
I don't pay enough to attend&#13;
lhis university. What a bummer.&#13;
All I could say was I-ee. Nothing&#13;
else but I·ee.&#13;
When [ went out to the car to&#13;
leave I saw the ticket wrapped·&#13;
around the wiper blade, As I&#13;
turned my head The Man was&#13;
back. The smirk on his face&#13;
seemed to say, "I got ya, ya&#13;
durn hlpPle."&#13;
I just don't understand how&#13;
he expects us "durn hippies" to&#13;
know where to park when we&#13;
don't see a no parking sign in&#13;
the middle of the ll10dulux&#13;
parking area, and&#13;
already a second row there I:l&#13;
As Idrove off and started.&#13;
to bad all I could tN~~ hOl1lt&#13;
night was I-ee, I've be ~f~&#13;
again, I-ee, '.ee, l.ee en rtpPtij&#13;
Al McGibany .&#13;
Dear Sirs:&#13;
In reply to John K&#13;
Newscope article of Ma~lJtn"&#13;
1971 on the Helpline we ~&#13;
like to clear up \liould&#13;
misunderstandings fOunda ftl,&#13;
the article. Wtt!un&#13;
First of all, the group b ~,_&#13;
the Helpline is not the K ac....,&#13;
Mental Health AssOeiati~n't&#13;
rathel IS Kenosha Drug Abon,&#13;
Incorporated, a group of d&#13;
interested in drug prohl a ul,&#13;
Kenosha. While KDAI'I be;"' •&#13;
conSists of financial suppo~&#13;
. t h nltl4&#13;
In ~rest, t e Helpline itself&#13;
entirely manned and run&#13;
younger volunteers boll&#13;
student and non·stude~t ,&#13;
volunteers do have acce~ t&#13;
some adult resource ad~&#13;
and 0 u tside communu&#13;
resourc~s, but are pnnuri)&#13;
r~spon~lble and use Our&#13;
discretion in talking with lbt&#13;
caller.&#13;
In regard to meeting withIhr&#13;
poltce, we volunteers want&#13;
make .it clear thai whije&#13;
talked with them, we are ID II&#13;
way working for the police bot&#13;
are only seemg them to i_&#13;
our being able to operate frlOly&#13;
Concerning the quole abolt&#13;
runaways, "The law say. m.,&#13;
(Helpline) must call the pi....&#13;
if their son or daughter fa&#13;
away from home." This 15&#13;
entirely true. We may nol&#13;
anything to affaet Ihe cu~o4)&#13;
of anyone under 18, however&#13;
someone does call and is unda&#13;
18 and has or wants to runmy&#13;
from home, we do ..&#13;
automatically call his parte&#13;
First of all, Helpline operates&#13;
a first name only basis,andFU&#13;
the caller's last name onlytflr&#13;
wants to give it. Secondl).&#13;
do not ask for add,...&#13;
telephone numbers and th&#13;
we are there to talk to (aBm,&#13;
not to crossexamine them&#13;
turn them in to their parents.&#13;
Lastly, we would lil.e&#13;
correct an impression tltalDIIJ&#13;
have been conveyed tlut If&#13;
handle only SUIcide ani&#13;
overdose problems. IklpiDr&#13;
exists for you to call and&#13;
about anything you ne&lt;d&#13;
wi th, such 3S relall&#13;
problems, information a&#13;
what's happening in the&#13;
draft questions, legal probiolL&#13;
pregnancy problems, or fl&#13;
talking if you need sam"'"&#13;
talk to. OUI number "'"&#13;
658-4357 or 658.HELP. If&#13;
is easier to remember.&#13;
We appreciate the&#13;
Newscope has sltownus.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Helpline Volunteers&#13;
~...".tCPq ...&#13;
( \ " BOOK,S - NOVELS&#13;
'".,.' 71) S \ ~.:' ensu.ous Woman by "J"&#13;
~,;.I t~ Everything You Always Wanted to&#13;
;,&lt;!!-- I ~~ K b .&#13;
, . ,.~. __~ now a out Se~ by Dr. Reuben r--&lt;2&gt;~ . " . Love Story by Erich Segal&#13;
~'II}:; ~~ lnhenlors by Harold Robins&#13;
_.. , ?"' I French Lieutenant' W • 5 oman&#13;
J .-&#13;
by John Fowles&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
Ball Four by Bouton&#13;
Capsule Colleg&lt;&#13;
Women held at lbe COl&#13;
of Wisconsin.Parksldt&#13;
Thursday, April IS. front' I&#13;
to 3:30 p.m.&#13;
2 ope&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR&#13;
pril 5. I 9 I&#13;
very close and precise scrutiny parking area, and&#13;
already a second row s there IS&#13;
C OOSC e1&#13;
1ii COil. W./&#13;
~::&#13;
~: ,,.. O.llvery&#13;
• • 'Ult AVB./DOWNTOWN&#13;
Phone 654-0744&#13;
that this happened over two&#13;
weeks ago. do we? And&#13;
ertaml) . letung them kn~W any·&#13;
thing at all about the cand~dt~:s or i ·ues would be foolish y&#13;
miclll JU t go out and vot~!&#13;
~1a-ybe even care about what s&#13;
f each word . . An intellectual&#13;
~ame, so to speak If this is_ the&#13;
case, I submit that a difficult&#13;
crossword puzzle, the answer to&#13;
which could be publishe~ at _a&#13;
later date, would better sutt this&#13;
As I drove off and tarted.&#13;
to bad all I could t~ent ho&#13;
night was 1-ee, I've beenk ?f&#13;
again, 1-ee, 1-ee, 1-ee n npPtd&#13;
Al McGibany ·&#13;
purpose. I feel I must also comment on happening. Dear Sirs: don ·1 spill the beans. I&#13;
mean. it you did that-what&#13;
md of campus newspaper&#13;
editor would you be, anyway?&#13;
e .. ·etively yours.&#13;
L) nn A. Hoff&#13;
To the ·ditor.&#13;
The Luddite column in the&#13;
. larch 29 issue of Newscope&#13;
contams. in my opinion. an c,trcmcly novel definition. It&#13;
tate~ .. A Luddite is one who&#13;
feel ~ompelled to act or react."&#13;
It ,~ this definition which&#13;
cau.,ed me to write tht letter.&#13;
and. I uppose therefore&#13;
qualifie me a a Luddite. Thi&#13;
,ome a quite a urpn e to me&#13;
a 1'111 ure it doe~ to 1r.&#13;
\\'cb tcr . lie al o doc&#13;
det111111on ."&#13;
I find it o ·urpr1sing becau e&#13;
I dbagrce w11h near!)- everyth111g&#13;
I can make ense of in the&#13;
tddite columns I recogni1e as&#13;
the au e for my difficulty in&#13;
under tanding the Luddites my&#13;
m,n ineptitude. but then I'm&#13;
hung up on Webster's&#13;
definition . I under tand the name&#13;
Luddite to be derived from a&#13;
group of Engli h workmen who&#13;
de tro)-ed labor-savmg machines&#13;
a a form of prote t. In ltght of&#13;
this. I find confu ing the fact&#13;
that the Luddite pubhdted as&#13;
the highlight of their election&#13;
rally a particular kind of&#13;
loud pcaker. Initially. I believed&#13;
th1 ~cemingly in-:onsi tent&#13;
highlight to be another of the&#13;
fam u u Luddite puns. I&#13;
pected at ome point in · the&#13;
the name (The Halloween Party)&#13;
selected for the Luddite slate of&#13;
candidates in the upcoming&#13;
student government election. It&#13;
is indeed a good joke. As such, I&#13;
feel it exemplifies the kind of&#13;
government Parkside students&#13;
can expect if the Party is&#13;
elected.&#13;
I may appear to take issue&#13;
with everything the Luddites are&#13;
for, but this is not the case. I&#13;
feel the Luddite policy of&#13;
activism and participation is one&#13;
which all students should&#13;
seriously consider adopting. I&#13;
particularly concur with the&#13;
closing statemeAt of the&#13;
aforementioned Luddite&#13;
column. It was. "It may well be&#13;
that Luddite has nothing to&#13;
say." Perhaps I'm more · of a&#13;
than I thought. I e x p e ct&#13;
they'll let me know. ·&#13;
Jim olan&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
There is a lot of bullshit&#13;
flying around these days, and if&#13;
you don't watch out it's liable&#13;
to hit you right between the&#13;
eyes. If you don't believe it ask&#13;
me. The date was April I and&#13;
the time was 7:25 p.m. I had&#13;
decided to go out to our&#13;
Student Activities building and&#13;
have a couple beers. play the&#13;
pins and kick out some jams on&#13;
the juke box. Well, I pulled into&#13;
the modulux parking area and&#13;
parked the car at the end of the&#13;
row that was started in the&#13;
middle of the area . I went in, me t some friends&#13;
and started rapping with them.&#13;
We rapped for about ten&#13;
minutes and then went over to&#13;
the bar and had a beer.&#13;
In reply to John K 1&#13;
ewscope article of Ma;:n·,&#13;
1_971 on the Helpline. we w • ltke to clear up&#13;
misunderstandings found 3 f&#13;
the article. v.,t&#13;
First of all, the group b&#13;
the H~lpline is not the K:n&#13;
Mental Health Associaho&#13;
rather is Kenosha Drug n,&#13;
Incorporated, a group uf d ,&#13;
interested in drug prob! a '&#13;
Kenosha. While KDAI' bms 11&#13;
consists of financial supp 3&#13;
. ·~t&#13;
mt~rest, the Helpline II If&#13;
entirely manned and run&#13;
younger volunteer~&#13;
student and non-stude~t&#13;
volunteers do have a~ ,·&#13;
some adult resource adi&#13;
and outside commun,i&#13;
resources, but are prmu&#13;
r~spon~ible and use our discretion rn talking 11;(h&#13;
caller.&#13;
I~ regard to meeting 11,th&#13;
police, we volunteers \\lnt&#13;
make it clear that while&#13;
talked with them, we are 1&#13;
way working for the poh c b are only seeing them to&#13;
our being able to operate fr&#13;
Concerning the quote 1&#13;
runaways, "The law ms&#13;
(Helpline) must call thc·p&#13;
if their son or daughter&#13;
away from home." Thi u&#13;
entirely true. We ma\ n t&#13;
anything to affact the t&#13;
of anyone under I , how someone does call and 1s&#13;
18 and has or wants to run&#13;
from home, we d&#13;
automatically call hi p 1&#13;
First of all, Helpline opcrat a first name only basi , and&#13;
the caller's last name on!&#13;
wants to give it. Second!)&#13;
ralh the ma-:hine would be&#13;
"m:i~ed to bit by dub wielding&#13;
Luddite However. this was not&#13;
the ca •. The, actually put to&#13;
good u e a labor saving device.&#13;
I've considered the possibility&#13;
that the Luddite column does&#13;
have meaning. but is written so a to reveal it only upon the&#13;
Then we went over and&#13;
played the pins. While a friend&#13;
was getting his nips burnt off by&#13;
the machine, I went over and&#13;
flipped a· quarter in the box to&#13;
get things moving a bit.&#13;
do not ask for addre&#13;
telephone number and tlur&#13;
we are there to talk to&#13;
not to crossexamine th&#13;
turn them in to their parents.&#13;
Lastly, we would l e&#13;
correct an impres ion th1t&#13;
have been conveyed th1t&#13;
han dle only u1cidt&#13;
overdose problems. II&#13;
exists for you to call an&#13;
about anything you need&#13;
with, such as relall&#13;
problems, information&#13;
what's happening in the&#13;
draft questions. legal pr&#13;
pregnancy problems. or ~&#13;
talking if you need om&#13;
talk to. Our numbe1&#13;
658-4357 or 658-HELP. if&#13;
is easier to remember.&#13;
MIKE&#13;
DAVIS&#13;
SPEED&#13;
CITY&#13;
All this time as I was blowing&#13;
my wad trying to enjoy myself,&#13;
The Ma11 on the Parkside patrol&#13;
smacks my windshield with a&#13;
ticket that costs me a fiver. As if&#13;
I don't pay enough to attend&#13;
this university. What a bummer.&#13;
All I could say was 1-ee. othing&#13;
else but 1-ee.&#13;
When I went out to the car to&#13;
leave I saw the ticket wrapped -&#13;
around the wiper blade. As I&#13;
turned my head The Man was back. The smirk on his face&#13;
seemed to say, " I got ya, ya&#13;
durn hippie ."&#13;
"Check Our&#13;
Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
I just don't understand how&#13;
he expects us "durn hippies" to&#13;
kno-:v where to park when we&#13;
don t see a no parking sign in&#13;
the middle of the modulux&#13;
{&#13;
· . I&#13;
' BOO~S - NOVELS&#13;
·' YT). Se w / nsuous oman by "J" ~-iJ-__~~-Everything You Always Wanted to&#13;
~ Know about Sex by Dr. Reuben&#13;
_.,_ , Love Story by Erich Segal&#13;
~ Inheritors by Harold Robins&#13;
French _ Lieutenant's _ W oman&#13;
by John Fowles&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
Ball Four by Bouton&#13;
R-K NEWS AGENCY&#13;
Newspape~s . P~perbacks . Magazines&#13;
5816 Sixth Ave. &amp; Pershing Plaza&#13;
We appreciate the 1&#13;
Newscope has shown u ·&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
~ Capsule Coll&#13;
Women held at The Un&#13;
of Wis consin-Park tdt&#13;
Thursday, April t 5. fiolll 1&#13;
to 3:30 p.m. &#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of the NEWSCOPE Staff&#13;
hi d a storefront with boarded&#13;
Be n and a papered-up door is&#13;
·ndows .. d I WI Harry. DIS IS e pace.&#13;
DulldO\ out my taperecorder and&#13;
I Ir'back in an old chair near the&#13;
"ttle nd told the band this here's&#13;
door a be an interview, so say&#13;
gonn. . II· t&#13;
melhing mte Igen.. .&#13;
SO Bulldog Harry IS considered in more&#13;
mere four quarters to be the&#13;
than;amned' band in Sin City. John&#13;
besl usual spokesman for the group&#13;
s&lt;egl~~'t show up for 45 minutes, so I&#13;
.~~ d the three other Har1.s with the&#13;
pro : end of a microphone, feeling of&#13;
bun r in my hands, able to cut them&#13;
rrr;i1h the subtle, silent black switch&#13;
the mike off, on, smiling, asking&#13;
~ ' f . d Id questions 0 Wlzene rock&#13;
~usicians. that's the right work too,&#13;
musicians. .&#13;
A couple years ago It came to pass&#13;
that the Starboys appeared on the&#13;
no· John Seeger, Phil Clark, Ken&#13;
~d;rpool, Cy Costabile, and later&#13;
Father Meat's own, Frank NlCcolal (or&#13;
vice versa), oozed throught the meat&#13;
inder of losing one band and&#13;
~scending the starry.path. Starboys&#13;
were to begat Bulldog Harry, originally&#13;
composed of Danny Strange (formerly&#13;
of Homegrown Blues), Ken, Frank and&#13;
Cy. Danny split for California in&#13;
January, with John lithely filling the&#13;
void. f call them musicians bec~use,&#13;
for example, FranK has been addIcted&#13;
to keyboards of ·various lenghts and&#13;
lanes since he was seven, getting into&#13;
rock and blues when 14, Cy on drums&#13;
for seven years. The Jist is endless.&#13;
I asked how much of their music is&#13;
original.Ken said about 60%, "lately it&#13;
has been because we haven't been&#13;
playing any clubs, we've just been&#13;
playing, you know, to kids. We don't&#13;
play alot of the horseshit we had to&#13;
playin Chicago."&#13;
What kind of music do you guys&#13;
play? Ken lold· me, Rolling Stones,&#13;
rock and roll, Buddy Holly .. What is&#13;
the music like? "You have to listen to&#13;
it" was Ihe reply.&#13;
You been gettin gigs? Frank said&#13;
"we're playing mostly here. practici.ng.&#13;
Harry Music&#13;
AorU S, 1971&#13;
~en Vanderpool_ Bas~ gUitar, vocaJs Frank Niccolai- Keyboard. 'Vocals&#13;
oho. Seeger_ Lead guitar, rhythm gUitar, vocal. Cy Co.tabile- Drum.&#13;
The i~ea is to do as much original&#13;
matenal as we can."&#13;
What's this about an agent checking&#13;
you over? Frank: "Oh yeah, we might&#13;
get an agent. We've had different&#13;
agents. They're all crooks. But this one&#13;
seems a little more honest ... If he&#13;
takes us I'll like him, if he doem't I'll&#13;
hate him. He'. from Milwaukee anct&#13;
books groups like OX Segal Schwal " ,&#13;
Who writes most of the songs? Who&#13;
does the lyrics, who the music. or is it&#13;
a joint effort or what .. Ken: "It's&#13;
always one person:' Who's that?&#13;
"Either John or I. Actually, a per.on&#13;
writes a song at home and brings it in&#13;
here and we all put OUr own parts into it...&#13;
·What kind of reaction have you&#13;
been getting from audiences? Frank:&#13;
Lately good. It depends on the&#13;
audience." Ken: "In most of the bars&#13;
·we played in Chicago they didn't like&#13;
us. If they hadn't heard the .ong&#13;
before, they didn't like it."&#13;
How many hours a week do you&#13;
practice? Frank: HWe praclice- about&#13;
three hours a day. As much as we can&#13;
while leading nonnal lives." Ken&#13;
"We're trying to get mOre material&#13;
that we like, tcause we're throwmg a&#13;
lot of material out that we don't want&#13;
to do, sort of a changeover in&#13;
progress."&#13;
What about the future for BUlldog&#13;
Harry? Ken: "I'll probably be driVing a&#13;
cab. I can't ever see mx.se1f qUilting,&#13;
but I'm not very optimi ••tii:.about ever&#13;
making it."&#13;
How do you compare Bulldog Harry&#13;
with the Slarboy.? Ken; "Bulldog&#13;
Hany is better:" What do you think&#13;
the reaction is going to be at Parkside?&#13;
Frank: "If a lot of them come WIth&#13;
open minds, we're gonoa have a good&#13;
time." Cy: It depend. on u. too. I&#13;
think the group play. mOre for the&#13;
audience than Starboys, like we're able&#13;
to get it on. We don't dcr al! original&#13;
material. A lot of. people think If a&#13;
group does all DriginaJ mateoal lhat&#13;
the group i. good, but that'. no'&#13;
necessarily true. A group can do all&#13;
upgmal marerut iJnd 9()11 of II IS shu&#13;
The Ihlng th.11 wn rong IoIolthlhe&#13;
St.,""). " tlut we'd pl.y II u nat&#13;
malen.11 and n 1I all I II"~ llul&#13;
good" }tJU're more b.11 need no,,'"&#13;
•Yuh, the reall eood or naJ&#13;
malerl.11 I ept in .11001 "uh popul~r&#13;
songs&#13;
What are rbe wea' pumu uf the&#13;
b.1nd't Chorus Equipment" ran&#13;
"And the Iact Ih.3t e haven't been&#13;
able '0 ge' enough pp" C, ·\le&#13;
haven't learned 10 bullshu the pe pie&#13;
't\no come ro II len to u . '41' n pia&#13;
for the few people '" ho 'orne 10 lutm&#13;
IU u rather dun for those who are&#13;
II1ICr led m ;a 101 ()f things th,t go un&#13;
111 roc mu tc But I heard that 011 tbe&#13;
hJhn Hue Benefn c\tf)une S&#13;
dancmg and (rea me 001" FrJn&#13;
"With U II' aU spom.lneous "-e dun I&#13;
plan our 'Sta~ stilt before ~e pb ...&#13;
FrOin on Ihe 3 tnl "An agrnt&#13;
gtmna be :11 1he \-,:Uf'kcrl 'SO lell the&#13;
t.:ro"d 10 Jump around _henne'r&#13;
say Jump around Chee. durulG the&#13;
brea ., tomp their feel before wr ,&#13;
on:' Ken "Even-bod 'A'h doem'l&#13;
like us should corne there and h r ,&#13;
"e can get oot uf Kon a and 'hey&#13;
won't ha\o't' l~hear us ao)'morc ...&#13;
John Seeger h.d fin.lly rtl'ed .n~&#13;
the four HJrries 100 (hen plac;es ant.!&#13;
played Jelly Roll Gumdrop. by ,he&#13;
Mothers for Ihe (jrlt tunt'. The)&#13;
unpressed me. I hstened Iu lhe fl"lf&#13;
mounted on lhelr Instruments. fUf ..&#13;
two hour prac,,,:e IIde through Hm)&#13;
Jusie, and when I go off I could,,',&#13;
NlIIit to get back on the Hury hur&#13;
Apnl9th.&#13;
I h.ad asked (hem to tame me :I fC\llchar.lClenSCIc&#13;
titles&#13;
Cheryl the Barrel&#13;
~neral Store&#13;
Wilden's SUlle&#13;
Hurgrng Time&#13;
Trying '0 Kick the Do", Do.",&#13;
IUtlroad Song&#13;
Waltz uf the ChIC en.&#13;
She Came 'ow&#13;
Cy said Ihey do moslly humouJU&#13;
SlUff, but Ihe mUSIc IS SfClOUS, J sen&#13;
of humor but no fa '" Build H r&#13;
is for real&#13;
You probably know if you're busted for the first&#13;
time for possession of marihuana the offense is only a&#13;
misdemeanor, and what you'll get is not a judgment of&#13;
lUilty but almost assuredly one year's probation with&#13;
the knowlege .that if you star cleart during that time&#13;
the misdemeanor itself wit be erased from your&#13;
reeord.&#13;
But three things you probably don't know about&#13;
dope and the law. One, if you're convicted for&#13;
"""mon of a dangerous drug with the intent to sell,&#13;
furnish, or transport it you can_get up to five years in a&#13;
ltat. prison, or up to a $5,000 fine, or both.&#13;
You could get this sentence Kenosha's district&#13;
Ittomey, Burton Scott, pointed out, for "furnishing a&#13;
JIY with one marihuana cigarette or one hit of LSD."&#13;
Secondly, if you're convicted either of advising,&#13;
inducing Or encouraging someone to use a dangerous&#13;
drug you. can get up to five years imprisonment, .o~ a 12,500 fme, or both. You could be liable for advlsmg&#13;
101' domg as httle as saying "I know you can buy It&#13;
fromhim; he's got it right now and it's a dime bag; Go&#13;
"''', and .Bet it." If the person buys it, Scott thmks&#13;
YUIIre guIlty of adVising.&#13;
fulcouraging the use could be as little as bringing five&#13;
Of. I1XJOints to a party and passing them around Scott .. d.&#13;
T)tirdIy, what you probably don't know is that if&#13;
)'Ou re convicted of selling a dangerous drug to&#13;
.... one under the age of2f (even if you're under 2J)&#13;
YOU can be iJn{Jrisioned not more than 15 years. For a&#13;
letond conViction of this it's not less than 30 years and&#13;
~t mOre ~~n life·.with no chance of probation. For a&#13;
rd comuchon it's a mandatory life sentence.&#13;
FEATURE FILM SERIES PRESENTS:&#13;
lho..-&#13;
'(lip' -&#13;
....&#13;
.-&#13;
..-..... -..... -&#13;
h.&#13;
THURSDAY, APRIL 8th - 8:00 P.M.&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING - ADM. 15'&#13;
These are some of the penalties you confront when&#13;
you're into dope. Burton SCOII Kenosha's District&#13;
Attorney, told Newscope in an interview. "I want to&#13;
stress this, This is what you face. Ididn't write the laws,&#13;
but this is what you face. Iwant everyone to 6e aware&#13;
of Ihe penalties.'&#13;
Wisconsin statutes concerning dangerous drugs and&#13;
narcotics were revised near the eend of the Stale&#13;
Legislature's last session to reflect the nationwide trend&#13;
to separate marihuana use from the use of other&#13;
dangerous drugs and to provide lesser penalties for it,&#13;
while at the same lime to toughen the penal tie. for&#13;
r&#13;
pUtleDopeOn Dope&#13;
, byMucE~n&#13;
of the NEWSCOPE Staff .~::::::::::::::::;:;:::-::::::;:::::::=:::::::::::=:::::::t*::::::'~:;&lt;l. ~~~.i#i&#13;
But because the new laws ~ere passed when the&#13;
legislature was in a rush to adjourn .they are poorly&#13;
worded and the resulting confuSIon WIll be left to the&#13;
courts to untangle. .&#13;
In fact it was argued by some the legr.lature had&#13;
repealed all narcotic and dangerous drug •• tatutes m&#13;
attempting to renumber them. The Stale Supreme&#13;
Court fmally ruled it had not inlended to do so.&#13;
An example of the poor wordmg IS seen. in .the&#13;
transporting penalties, Scott said. If someone" guIlty&#13;
of transporting a dangerous drug he can be seOlenced&#13;
u to five years imprisonment, or a $5,000 fine, or&#13;
bJ'th. Thi. section is aimed al the pusher, bUI because&#13;
I&#13;
of the wordmg " .ffeClS 'hose who don't push&#13;
ScOIl explained, "We. uke the View an lh o(fl&#13;
that for us 10 Issue a W3rrant agJlOl Iran rial Ion the&#13;
have 10 h.a"·e such a quantity (hal u's n I f, r then 0\lo'T1&#13;
use.&#13;
"I'm nOI sure thai'S whal Slalue g . The SUlulc&#13;
.seems (0 say that if you're caught wuh ont. manhu ..n;l&#13;
cigarelte in your pockel you can be ch 'ltd wllh&#13;
transporlation:' he saJd. To me Iba. does vlolen~e to&#13;
the 'possession' section.&#13;
'" think they intended '0 .. y 'tran porta"on fur&#13;
.. Ie,' but they d,dn't. So I'm pIIt In • PO"" n where I&#13;
have to make the decision ..&#13;
He declared later in the interview. "I Will gIve the&#13;
benefit of the doubt in those ·Ind of HUIlinns I.-&#13;
possession rather than Iransporlalton "&#13;
While for the first orfense of po Mon I iI&#13;
misdemeanor the sentence Will usually be ~ ycar'&#13;
probation withoul court adJudlCall&lt;ln of gulli. Ihe&#13;
second offense IS a felon)' wnh Imprisonment of nul&#13;
more than two ye,us, Or a fine of nol more tn.m&#13;
$1,000.&#13;
But Scott poln,ed out on one hand ,ho t.le I&#13;
saYing there 1.$ no COnvu;:lIon of gudl for the fir t&#13;
offense and thai II dIsappears fr the re ord, hut If&#13;
there is a second offense II IS 4.:00 Ide red 1 gullh&#13;
verdier. He qu Itoned If lhe nrst offense ;,c;tuall~ t&#13;
erased from the record,&#13;
Concerning POSSt'1 Ion iurlf, he ~Id. "llu~ .,muunt&#13;
you hnt 10 posse ion IS hit-rally Jrrele"anl If'l,\t fmd&#13;
fl\'e seeds in a guy's pocket that I~po Ion. You&#13;
don't have 10 have a dime bj1&amp;. or a Wh(lle elgarellt \&#13;
roach is possession. The rhin in a pIpe 1$po to'&#13;
LIBRARY&#13;
MICROFORMS&#13;
W,lrd sell~. like a He .&#13;
It _Icr,m •• ~ ItIItr&#13;
typll ,f .1.1 ... r, ,llIletl"&#13;
typ,. It _t,latIn ,."IlIICtlH&#13;
,f "I'te~ _",,1.1.. It'.&#13;
CH.,.; It .IYII ."c,. D.. 't&#13;
,,,,riNk It, Mil' It •., ,.rlt-&#13;
~IClI. C_ 11I11W.,. AlII III,&#13;
... Yert TillES (.llc, 18511,&#13;
L..... TIMES (llIc, 11151, .~ ,,,, ..w.,.,... AI •• 11M&#13;
•• b, ,tc. T'II. It I. II.,.&#13;
AltIII' 1101•. nil!lin ,.III,"Ph.&#13;
...&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
of the NEWSCOPE Staff&#13;
. d a storefront with boarded . sehin and a papered-up door is 111ndowsHarry. Dis is de place.&#13;
Bulldog k out my taperecorder and&#13;
1 tdback in an old chair near the settle nd told the band this here's&#13;
door a be an interview, so say gonna 1· t ething in tel 1g~n . . . am ulldog Harry 1s considered m more&#13;
B mere four RUarters to be the&#13;
than lamned' band · in Sin City. John&#13;
best usual spokesman for the group 5tegfd~'t show up for 45 minutes, so I&#13;
wo~ d the three other Har~s with the&#13;
pro : end of a microphone, feeling of btun r in my hands, able to cut them&#13;
rrr;ith the subtle, silent ?l_ack swi~ch&#13;
on the mike, off, on, sr~ulmg, askmg Id questions of wizened rock 0 ci·ans ·That's the right work too, rnus1 · rnusicians. . A couple years ago 1t came to pass&#13;
•&#13;
oril S, 1971&#13;
Harry Music&#13;
h t the Starboys appeared on the&#13;
t 3 e· John Seeger, Phil Clark, Ken&#13;
f;d~rpool, Cy Costabile, _and l_ater F ther Meat's own, Frank N1ccola1 ( or \;~e versa), oozed throught the meat&#13;
Ken Vanderpool- Bass guitar, vocals frank Niccolai- Keybo rd, ocals&#13;
John_ Seeger- Lead guitar, rhythm guitar, vocals Cy Co tabile- Drum&#13;
inder of losing one band and&#13;
fscending the starry path. Starboys&#13;
were to begat Bulldog Harry, originally&#13;
~omposed of Danny Strange (formerly of Homegrown Blues), Ken, Frank and&#13;
Cy. Danny split fo_r Califo~nia in&#13;
January, with John htJ:ie.ly fillmg the&#13;
void. I call them mus1c1ans because,&#13;
for example, Fran.I&lt; has been addicted&#13;
to keyboards of various lenghts and&#13;
tones since he was seven, getting into&#13;
rock and blues when 14, Cy on drums&#13;
for seven years. The list is endless.&#13;
The idea is to do as much original material as we can." practice? Frank: "We pr ti e- 1t&#13;
What's th.ree hours a day. As mu h n this about an agent checking you over? Frank: "Oh yeah, we might get an agent. We've had diffe.rent&#13;
agents. They're all crooks. But this one&#13;
seems a little more honest ... If he takes us I'll like him, if he doesn't I'll&#13;
hate him. He's from Milwaukee ancl books groups like OX, Segal Schwa) "&#13;
while leading normal Jive :· en: "We're trying to get m re m3terial that we like, 'cause wr're thro ing a lot of material out that we don't ·ant&#13;
to do, sort of a change ,er in progress."&#13;
What about the future for Build&#13;
Harry? Ken: "I'll prob bly be drhing cab. I can't ever see mtself quillin , but I'm not very optimi .ti-.about e er&#13;
I asked how much of their music is making it."&#13;
original. Ken said about 60%, "lately it&#13;
has been because we haven't been&#13;
playing any clubs, we'~e just bee~&#13;
playing, you know, to kids. y,te don t play alot of the horseshit we had to&#13;
play in Chicago."&#13;
Who writes most of the songs? Who&#13;
does the lyrics, who the music, or is it&#13;
a joint effort or what .. Ken: "It's always one person." Who's that?&#13;
"Either John or I. Actually, a person writes a song at home and brings it in&#13;
here and we all put our own parts into it."&#13;
How do you compare Bulldog Harr) with the Starboys? Ken: "'Build&#13;
Harry is better." V.'hat do you thin&#13;
the reaction is going to be at Par ·s,de?&#13;
Frank: "If a lot of them come 1th&#13;
open minds. we 're gonna have a g&#13;
time." Cy: It depends on u too. I&#13;
think the group plays more for the&#13;
audience than Starb ys, r ·e e·re ble&#13;
to get it on. We don't do all ori ·na1&#13;
material. A lot of. pc p e thin if a group does I original material that&#13;
What kind of music do you guys&#13;
play? Ken told me, Rolling Stones,&#13;
rock and roll, Buddy Holly .. .What is&#13;
the music like? "You have to listen to it" was the reply.&#13;
-What kind of reaction have you&#13;
been getting from audiences? Frank:&#13;
You been gettin gigs? Frank said "we're playing mostly here, practici_ng.&#13;
Lately good. It depends on the audience." Ken: "In most of the bars ·we played in Chicago they didn't like&#13;
us. If they hadn't heard the song before, they didn't like it."&#13;
How the roup i g , ut that' many hours a week do you nece sarily true. A group n do&#13;
You probably know if you're busted for _the first lime for possession of marihuana the offense 1s only a misdemeanor, and what you '11 get is not a judgment of guilty but almost assuredly one year's pr_obation ~ith ihe knowlege Jhat if you stay clean dunng that time the misdemeanor itself will be erased from your record.&#13;
But three things you probably don't know about dope and the law. One, if you're convicted for possession of a dangerous drug with the intent to ~II, furnish, or transport it you can get up to five years m a late prison, or up to a $5,000 fine, or both. , . . You could get this sentenc~, Keno~~a s _d1~tnct Homey, Burton Scott pointed out, for furnishing a&#13;
guy With one marihuan'a cigarette or one hit of ~P-" . Secondly, if you're convicted either of adVIsmg, inducing or encouraging someone to use a dangerous drug you can get up to five years imprisonment, _o! a S2,500 fine , or both. You could be liable for adv1sm_g for doing as little as saying "I know you can buy 1t from him; he's got it right now and it's a dime bag._ Go&#13;
er, and. get it." If the person buys it, Scott thmks&#13;
you re gullty of advising. . . E~cou_raging the use could be as little as bnngmg five or.t Joints to a party and passing them around Scott&#13;
T!tirdly, what you probably don't know is that if You re convicted of selling a dangerous drug to laneone under the age of 21 ( even if you 're under 21) You can be im{'risioned not more than 15 xears. For a ond conviction of this it's not less than 30 years and : 1 more ~han life--with no chance of probation. For a rd con'(Jction it's a mandatory life sentence.&#13;
FEATURE FILM SERIES PRESENTS:&#13;
THURSDAY, APRIL 8th - 8:00 P.M.&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING - ADM. 15e&#13;
These are some of the penalt e you onfront hen&#13;
you 're into dope , Burton Sc tt Ke nosh • Distri t Attorney, told Newscope in an interview. "I ant to stress this. This is what you face. I didn ·1 v.Tite the lav. . but this is what you face. I want everyone to e aware of the penalties.' . Wisconsin statutes concerning dangerous drug and narcotics were revised near the eend of the State Legislature's last session to reflect the nationwide trend to sepa.rate marihuana use from the use .of oth~r dangerous drugs and to provide lesser penaltie . for 1t, while at the same time to toughen tJie pena tie for pushers.&#13;
I&#13;
::···:.:-:,:,,~'):-:-:::~'*'~~-·,; .&#13;
The Dope On Dope&#13;
L18:.w-~:::::::~f:::!:~:t}i[f::£:?rf1~ .... -z:=:::.-:i:·" •• &gt;.-u.·: ~ But because the new laws ~ere passe~ when the Je ·slature was in a rush to adJ~Urn _they are poor! w~rdecl and the resulting confusion will be left to the&#13;
courts to untangle. - L-d In fact it was argued by ome the legi lature '"! repealed all narcotic and dangerous drugs tatute m&#13;
attempting to renumber th~m. The State upreme Court finally ruled it had not intended to do o h An example of the poor ~ordtng I en_ m ! e transporting penalties. Scott said. If meone I gu11td of trans_porting a dangerous drug he can be sentence to five years imprisonment, or a S5.000 me, or bcith. This section is aimed at the pusher. but because&#13;
t LIBRARY&#13;
ICROFOR S&#13;
Weird na . Sounds like a uc.&#13;
It means lcrtf1l111 and o r&#13;
types of minla H re iroductio&#13;
types of mlnlahlre reproductio&#13;
of prlnfld attr als. It's&#13;
cheaper; It sans space. D 't&#13;
nerloek It. Ma y 1f our p rlodlcals&#13;
co e at "IJ· AIH e&#13;
"'" York TIMES (since 1851), London TIMES (Si Cl 1785), d&#13;
•• r IIWIPIPtrS. AIH $0&#13;
heks, etc. To use It Is ouy.&#13;
Ast • II rarian. Then m&#13;
tlttbt llpts. &#13;
April 5, 197'&#13;
How about a ride, Mister?&#13;
b) Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the 'EII'SCOPE Staff&#13;
Thl') i50 the ell)'. Kenosha. Wisconsin Crime is .no&#13;
\.hlf~tenl 10 lhl cit) than an&gt; other us size, but. some Crime&#13;
\.Jl\ be avoided If people know the laws. This IS news. and&#13;
th.n IS where I come rn. I carry a pen.&#13;
Three p.m .. I was working out of kitchen division with a&#13;
bologna sandwich when I gOI the call at my apartment from&#13;
the editor. There had been a story In the city paper that&#13;
'llnlted the Chief Inspector of the police depanrne ..."! about&#13;
hlt~hhlklng. The editor thought that the college community&#13;
llll&amp;hl be some....hat re~onsi6Ie. I got on the story. .&#13;
On the afternoon of the call, I headed down to the police&#13;
tJlIun to get the facrs. The officer at the main desk after&#13;
IIUlllng out ""hat I \Ioilnted. directed ·me "down t~e hall,&#13;
thl: la t door on ) our left:' and said that the c3ptam would&#13;
help me \\hcn I gUl to the offi~e. I found it '.aeanl. nother&#13;
pu!ll,.'e ofh~er ~lId that the captalO ,W3S nOl in. he was on&#13;
'JI,;.JlI m I \loeot ba..:k lO the maIO desk and told the&#13;
plJh 'emJn abuut the empty office "down the hall the last&#13;
iJtJlJf on my left" I II rep!). W3 "try profeSSional. "oh&#13;
... lIy·"&#13;
On m\ \\'a)' out of the poh~e sti.ltion. I ran inlO an old&#13;
Irlend \loh~) hJd been a pulice officer quite awhile. so I&#13;
I pped hI bank "f expcr)cn« and asked him what he&#13;
~ould do II he "'-tre me (rylng to dig up laws about&#13;
hll hh,kmg. lie IU , g3\e a Illtle laugh and told me not to&#13;
II~ ;around the poh..:e (i.lll~lO.but to head O"ier to the city&#13;
JII HUe)' otfi..:C'&#13;
1htc( thin) p.m. I entered (he l,;U) atlorney"s office,&#13;
..oJ luld them ",hy l had come ,I WJS shown Into ',he&#13;
a I (Jot CIl) aIHHnC\' offtl.:c 1 told him (hat I would like&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52no St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUM, THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A.M, TILL MIOMlTE&#13;
RI. a SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
HUXHOLD S&#13;
COUNTRY STORE&#13;
So, Grt'eII Btl), Rd,&#13;
Kmosha&#13;
634-!J716&#13;
COLD BEE&#13;
. . e under a city ordinance or a&#13;
to know if hitchh'ktng d":Cross his desk and grabbed a&#13;
state statute. H~-eache&#13;
book of city ordmances.. the best ordinance he could&#13;
After about fifteen mmutlSted to hitchhiking, -vas a .law&#13;
come up with, that even ~ea n a public sidewalk. Since&#13;
against loitering or loungtng 0 a hitchhiker lying on the&#13;
neither of ,us had ever ~eein the air, we both concluded&#13;
sidewalk, With ~ISth~ll1b.~ was a state statute.&#13;
that the law ~gatnst hltC~d ~~en arrested, thinking maybe&#13;
He asked If 3.oyone a 'ndivid'ual. I said that to J!lY&#13;
my story pertamed to abn, ested yet bu t the police&#13;
knowledge no D,ne had een an ' .&#13;
were giving warmngs. to mind was the one issued&#13;
One such warning that came n Washington Road in&#13;
to Jerry Wielgat one afternoons 0Standing on the curb,&#13;
front of the K;e~osha 'dCa'J~~ry' stood long hair blowmg&#13;
seemingly to solicite a n e, '&#13;
in the wind. f a car finally did pull up, and he&#13;
Afler a hal hour or so, He thought maybe .the gal&gt;.&#13;
saw they were po~ce df~~li~~ was being gapped, ef,Pecially&#13;
between the yout" an u want a ride downtown? asked,&#13;
when they asked, he~ yo ?" No said Jerry, he wasn't&#13;
"hey you want a nde ownto\\tihe alice officer glared at&#13;
going that way hbut trh'k~a~nsome lind of wise/uy. Jerry&#13;
him and aske.d 1m I e an arrest an the gap&#13;
realized a fide downtown was Ie' 0 ened to its&#13;
between law enforcem~nt and the pe~g the ~urb and he&#13;
usual girth an.d Jerry said thathhe 7:eS&#13;
y saw him. All went&#13;
didn't have his thumb out w en&#13;
alright thObu~, he'hw,'SsWIarer~I~~~dhow unfortunate it will be&#13;
R:emem erang • . II . I a now&#13;
for the first arrested hitchhiker, especIaT&amp;' sl~~~ist~/ city&#13;
~~~~::in~Oldh~~ t~ech~~~la~~ mW:~~hoof library's stat~te&#13;
books ~nd' I would find the statute there. I thanked hIm&#13;
and ieft I was on my way back to the police, statIOn. . th&#13;
Whe~ I got there I remembered the on y name m . e&#13;
newspaper story 1 had refered to, so I ~skef~ to {'ice Ch1ei&#13;
Ins ector Trotta. I had not gone to him 1f~t \.e~ause&#13;
th~aht he would be toO busy to see r~e. On. thiS VISit Iwas&#13;
told fie was in a meeting, and why don t I waIted' p 6·) (Continu on ago.&#13;
Irish Author To Visit Parkside&#13;
Irish poet James Liddy,&#13;
currently a faculty member at&#13;
Denison University, will present&#13;
a poetry reading at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday, April 6, in the&#13;
Activities Building at The&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
UPTOWN&#13;
RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~~&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or ba"'luet,&#13;
"0party too sma//.&#13;
Cau 6'4-9123&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS LIKE • • •&#13;
the brands you know&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000Albums&#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;
GARRARD - Turntable~&#13;
G,E. - Raaios &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;
• •&#13;
Wood Road Campus.&#13;
The program is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
Liddy will be at Parkside&#13;
from Monday, April 5, through&#13;
Thursday. During the period, he&#13;
will be guest lecturer in several&#13;
classes and will meet informally&#13;
with groups of students&#13;
interested in poetry.&#13;
He a Iso will provide a&#13;
commentary following a&#13;
screening of the film&#13;
"Finnegan's Wake" at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday, April ·7, in Room&#13;
103 Greenquist Hali at the&#13;
Wood Road Campus. There is a&#13;
nominal admission charge for&#13;
the film which is sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Film Society, a&#13;
student organization.&#13;
Liddy is the author of five&#13;
books of poetry.&#13;
H is poems have been&#13;
reprinted in "The Penguin Book&#13;
of Irish Verse,", "New Poets of&#13;
Ireland" and "Drumbook" and&#13;
have appeared in "The Dolmen&#13;
Misceliany - of Irish Writing,"&#13;
Ca mpus Events&#13;
Tuesday, April 6&#13;
Harpsichord Recital F&#13;
Bedford. 8:00 p.m R· tane" .. OOm10 Greenquist HaiL 3.&#13;
Poetry Reading. James .&#13;
the internationaliy farn Lddy&#13;
ous I,;.&gt;.&#13;
poet 8 :00 prn S .~,&#13;
Activities Building. tUden,&#13;
Wednesday, April 7&#13;
Film. "Finnegan's Wok&#13;
8:00 p i m . Room e."&#13;
Greenquist Holi. Sponsore~03&#13;
the Parkside Film Society Afby&#13;
the film poet lames Ldd teo&#13;
comment. Admission· SO y '111 . cent&#13;
Track. UWP vs Ri '&#13;
Wheaton and Carthage: 11On.&#13;
Thursday, April 8&#13;
Meeting. Stud,&#13;
In ternational Medit /1&#13;
Society. 7:45 p.m. Roo~ 1'1°0&#13;
Racme Campus. 4,&#13;
Feature Fiim. "Bulli!." 8:00&#13;
P·~·. Student ActiViti&#13;
BUlldmg. Admission: 75 cen:,1&#13;
Basebali. UWP vs. White",.&#13;
at Whitewater. in&#13;
Friday, April 9&#13;
Dance. "BUlldog Harry"&#13;
Sponsored by NEWSCOPf&#13;
Student Activities Bid&#13;
Admission: $1.00. Parkside ~&#13;
Wisconsm J.D. required.&#13;
!he New York Times, ''TodIy.'&#13;
The Kilkenny Magazine" !be&#13;
I ri s.h . Press and 'otbtl&#13;
publtcatlOns.&#13;
He has presented readings..&#13;
The San Francisco Pot,,}&#13;
Corner, Lewis and CIaoI&#13;
College, Harpur Coliear&#13;
University Coliege G~...)&#13;
University Coliege Dublin, tbr&#13;
International Poetry Forum &lt;i&#13;
Pittsburgh and the Inm&#13;
Embassy in London.&#13;
Liddy has held faculty poIU&#13;
at San Francisco State Col~&#13;
State Univershy of New York.&#13;
Binghamton, University CoiItF&#13;
Dublin and Lewis and Clark •&#13;
addition to his present poll"&#13;
Denison.&#13;
He received his bachelorsond&#13;
masters degrees from Univerg,&#13;
Coil e g e Dub lin and&#13;
barrister-at-law at Kings Inltl&#13;
Dublin.&#13;
Liddy describes his h.b,u ..&#13;
"convivial, solitary and Ctlm.&#13;
his attitudes as "poll'e,&#13;
apolitical and Baudeiairian."&#13;
A&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
'Tradition of Excellence.&#13;
\~&#13;
For Guarante.ed Service i. Trade-In Villi&#13;
HAiWMOND HORGAN&#13;
•• 142~~~~~~n 1m~~~~~&#13;
I]Bttter OrcaIU Gte Buill, HtuIIlfIOIIIl"Jl&#13;
H H' about a ride, Mister?&#13;
Tiu no&#13;
. . e under a city ordinance or a to know if hitchhiking dam ross his desk and grabbed a tale tatute. H~ reache ac&#13;
book of city ordinances._ the best ordinance he could&#13;
After about fifteen mrnutjs{ d to hitchhiking, -·,as a _law come up with. that even ~ea ~n a public sidewalk. Smee&#13;
against loitering or lounging a hitchhiker lying on the&#13;
neither of us had eveb seen the air we both concluded&#13;
idewalk. with ~is thl_lm ~r in was a state statute.&#13;
that the law ~gainst httc~ftfen arrested, thinking maybe&#13;
He asked 1f anyone a . divid'ual I said that to my&#13;
my story pertained to abn in rrested· yet, but the police&#13;
knowledge no o_ne had een a .&#13;
were giving warn~gs.th e to mind, was the one issue~&#13;
One such warning at cam on Washington Road in&#13;
to Jerry Wielgat one afternoons Standing on the cu:b,&#13;
front of the i&lt;;e!1osha .dca"J~~ry· stood, long hair blowmg&#13;
seemingly to sohclle a n e,&#13;
in the wind. f h a car finally did pull up, and he&#13;
fter a ha! ou~ or so, H thought maybe -the gaP..&#13;
saw they were po~ce dfficji~s~ w!s being gapped, especially&#13;
between the yout .. an po want a ride downtown?' aske~,&#13;
when they asked, _he~you t n?" No said Jerry, he wasn t&#13;
"hey you want a nde own ow the olice officer glared at&#13;
going that way but ~rrks. ans~me Bnd of wise guy. Jerry&#13;
him and aske_d him l e was s an arrest and the gap&#13;
realized a nde downtown wa O le' opened to its&#13;
between law enforcem~nt and h the peog the curb, and he&#13;
u ual girth an~ Jerry said thath e fi:esy saw him. All went&#13;
didn't have his thumb out w en&#13;
alright thobu~ , heth"".ass f~;~1~f~d how unfortunate it will be&#13;
Remcm ermg 1 • · II · I was now f r the first arrested hitchhi~er' esp:ciaThe s1~~:istant city&#13;
~\~~~;;m~o,rh~~ t!echr;rao~ mW.,a s~hool library's stat~te&#13;
book ~nd I would find the statute the:e. I th_anked him&#13;
and left. I was on my way back to the pohce station. . th&#13;
When I got there I remembered the onklyd name uch·ef new a er stor I had refered to, so I ~s e . to 5ee 1&#13;
In ict~r Trotta. I had not gone to him ftr~t b_e~ause I&#13;
thciul!.ht he would be too busy to see i:1e. On_ this v1s1t I was&#13;
told fie was in a meeting, and why dof ~~~~~ on Page 6)&#13;
Campus Events&#13;
~uesday, April 6&#13;
Harpsichord Recital F&#13;
Bedford. 8:00 p.m. R~o ranees Greenquist Hall. rn 103.&#13;
Poetry Reading. James . the internationally fam Liddy&#13;
poet 8:00 m ous[r"&#13;
A t. . . B p. · Stu.1. c IVlhes uilding. uc:m&#13;
Wednesday, April 7&#13;
Film. "Finnegan's W&#13;
8 ·00 akc " · P · m · Room · Greenqui~t H~ll. Sponsore~Ol.&#13;
the Parkside Film Society Afby&#13;
the film poet James Lidd ltr&#13;
comment. Admission: 50 ~o&#13;
Track. DWP vs Ri&#13;
Wheaton and Carthage: n&#13;
Thursday, April 8&#13;
Meeting. Studc&#13;
International Medi[ t Ill&#13;
Soci_ety. 7 :45 p.m. Roo; 1&#13;
1J°&#13;
Racme Campus. · •&#13;
Feature Film. "Bullit."&#13;
p.m. Student Activit&#13;
Building. Admission: 75 ce~~1&#13;
Baseball. uwP vs. Whitev.att&#13;
at Whitewater.&#13;
Friday, April 9&#13;
Dance. "Bulldog Harry "&#13;
Sponsored by EWSCOP&#13;
Stu~e~t Activities Bid&#13;
A~m1ss1?n: $1.00. Park idc&#13;
W1sconsm I.D. required.&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
HUXHOLD S&#13;
COUNTRY STORE Irish Author To Visit Parkside&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A.M. TILL IONITE&#13;
RI. I SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24¢&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55¢&#13;
o. ree11 .Bt1) Rd.&#13;
Ke110 h"&#13;
6J-.+-9 16&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
Irish poet James Liddy ,&#13;
currently a faculty member at&#13;
Deni on Univer ity, will present&#13;
a poetry reading at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday. April 6 , in the&#13;
Activities Building at The&#13;
Univer ity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
UPTOWN&#13;
RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~~&#13;
~&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or ba"'luet,&#13;
no party too small.&#13;
&lt;:al/654-9123&#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 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;
GARRARD - Turntable!&gt;&#13;
G.E. - Raalos &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;
Wood Road Campus.&#13;
The program is free and open&#13;
to the public.&#13;
Liddy will be at Parkside&#13;
from Monday, April S, through&#13;
Thursday. During the period, he&#13;
will be guest lecturer in several&#13;
classes and will meet informally&#13;
with groups of students&#13;
interested in poetry.&#13;
He also will provide a&#13;
commentary . following a&#13;
screening of the . film&#13;
"Finnegan's Wake" at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, April -7 , in Room&#13;
103 Greenquist Hall at the&#13;
Wood Road Campus. There i~ a&#13;
nominal admission charge for&#13;
the film which is sponsored by&#13;
the Parkside Film Society, a&#13;
student organization.&#13;
Liddy is the author of five&#13;
books of poetry.&#13;
His poems have been&#13;
reprinted in "The Penguin Book&#13;
of Irish Verse," "New Poets of&#13;
Ireland" and "Drumbook" and&#13;
have appeared in "The Dolmen&#13;
Miscellany - of Irish Writing,"&#13;
pie Ne"'.' York Times, "Toda&#13;
The Kilkenny Magazine ,,&#13;
Irish Press and 'otbt&#13;
publications.&#13;
He has presented readings&#13;
The San Franci co p 1&#13;
Corner, Lewis and&#13;
College, Harpur Collet&#13;
University College Gal&#13;
Universi~y College Dubli11, lht&#13;
Internat1onal Poetry Fon&#13;
Pittsburgh and the (im&#13;
Embassy in London.&#13;
Liddy has held faculty&#13;
at San Francisco State Col&#13;
State Universtiy of ew Yo&#13;
Binghamton, Universitv Co&#13;
Dublin and Lewis anl Chr&#13;
addition to his present po&#13;
Denison.&#13;
He received his bachelor&#13;
masters degrees from Univtr&#13;
College Dublin a&#13;
barrister-at-law at King&#13;
Dublin.&#13;
Liddy describes his h3b1u&#13;
"convivial, solitary and Celuc&#13;
his attitudes as "poo'&#13;
apolitical and Baudelairian."&#13;
A&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
iTradition of Excellence.&#13;
,J&#13;
For Guarante.ed Service &amp; Trade-in Value&#13;
See Jim Merrick 11~,. Hammond"&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
u 142~~~!~ Ill!~'~~-&#13;
If Better Or,ans are Buil4 Hammond aoiJJ &#13;
b Paul Lomartlre&#13;
y Newscope Staff&#13;
of 1~:lk into the Bill, of Fare&#13;
....0 yoU 't miss the giant com ~ you can dh&#13;
,1/11, outh wall. The assorte c ange,&#13;
J.S (Inthe S ies are part of the early&#13;
'lifo and peo2\ ;ealized that the interior&#13;
·andecor, ahne had premonitions about must av&#13;
11l1f was going to be run.&#13;
tht reslaurant, 'ng to tell Ihe public that&#13;
was try Th" t th OIl' to eat here. IS 15 no e ,., b'g money b'&#13;
~ I t that one goes to for a lte to&#13;
irtstauranarters nickels, and pennies, mg qu ,&#13;
.lIT) lis of Ihem, , ,&#13;
h~has~o the menu, I noticed my ~holce&#13;
A:lerreadlO~'1l of Fare's interpretation of&#13;
kd Ih~ U:e week before at the Big Boy&#13;
I ha R 'ne' a hot turkey sandw.ich, I ._"nnt In acr, 'h'gh th&#13;
P&lt;"""'-~ 'de the prices bem,g 1 er on e&#13;
t/l.1t beSlth quantities are '-also different.&#13;
., Iltffif'F r: offers a Town Crier plate for.3&#13;
Bill 0 a fi The Big Boy has theIr I'wenty' we.&#13;
Josephand the Amazing Techni&#13;
color Dreamcoa t&#13;
Musicby Andrew lloyd Weber&#13;
Lyricsby Tim Rice&#13;
SeeptorRecords&#13;
After listening to this album,&#13;
I came to one simple, but&#13;
dermite conclusion. It stinks.&#13;
In fact that statement&#13;
doe.,'t eve; suffice. This trung&#13;
REAKS. Anyone playing thiS&#13;
mouldbe indicted for pollutIOn&#13;
of the airwaves. Furthermore,&#13;
III)'DDe playing this and actually&#13;
E JOYING it should be&#13;
OIIlIJIitted.&#13;
Upon looking over the liner&#13;
notesto determine who should&#13;
om the blame for this disaster I&#13;
fullyexpected it to be credited&#13;
10 the cdmbined efforts of&#13;
SptkeJones and Howdy Doody.&#13;
I was, therfore, quite surprised&#13;
10 fmd that the writers were&#13;
AndrewWeber and Tim Rice,&#13;
whoalso created a record that,&#13;
m my opinion, was one of the&#13;
UWPCoeds&#13;
In Finals&#13;
Three Parkside coeds, Linda&#13;
o..mbers, Jackie Matson, and&#13;
Jan ,Hermes, are among the&#13;
~~lS in the 12th Annual Miss&#13;
-lJIe Pageant sponsored by&#13;
tire RacineJaY-Cees.&#13;
In the final, which is April&#13;
16,Memorial, the girls will be&#13;
Jldifd in 3 categories: 1)&#13;
b'mng Gown; 2) Swim Suit; 3)&#13;
T,lent-which is the most&#13;
I1Iportant.&#13;
~e Winner will receive a&#13;
",_ scholarship, use of an&#13;
~obil for appearances, and&#13;
f ""'UV WOrth of merchandise&#13;
~~m. RaCine Merchan ts,&#13;
UdlOga mink stole.&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
ALSO&#13;
ICHICkEN DINNERS and&#13;
lAlIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Ill! DI!ltveRY 4'00 P.M. TO 12,OO.P.M.&#13;
ap... 8 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
ClOSed MOndays&#13;
combination plate for a dollar fen. Both consrsi&#13;
of a double decker hamburger. french fries. and&#13;
a salad with either a Big Boy salad, or a Bill of&#13;
Fare cup of cole slaw.&#13;
Chicken at Big Boy is a dollar sixly.five for a&#13;
regular (three pieces) dinner. The menu reads a&#13;
dollar ninty·five at the Bill of Fare (four&#13;
pieces). For the same dollar ninty-tive you&#13;
",:ould spend, at Bill of Fare. you could get five&#13;
pieces of chicken at Big Boy, The other odds&#13;
and ends with the meal balance out at both&#13;
restaurants.&#13;
I ordered a hot turkey sandwich for a dollar&#13;
fifty. Maggie ordered a Town Crier plate. and a&#13;
small Pepsi. At the Bill of Fare a large Pepsi and&#13;
a small one are the same volume, but at&#13;
different prices in different glasses. You can&#13;
confirm this for yourself by pouring a small&#13;
glass into the larger one. I did this in front of&#13;
the waitress once before, and she only smiled&#13;
sweetly and asked us not to make any trouble.&#13;
While we waited for Our meal. we noticed&#13;
that quite a few older people were beginning to&#13;
come in, at the start of the dinner hour. After&#13;
about a half hour of this influx, I checked 10&#13;
see if there was a bus in the parking 101. I&#13;
figured that maybe Shady Lawn East or West&#13;
had sponsored a field trip for their patrons, but&#13;
. saw no such vehicle.&#13;
As Maggie and I 'continued to wait for our&#13;
meal, we talked about the events of the day,&#13;
the day before, the future, and finally began&#13;
discussing the war in Viet Nam. while people&#13;
who bad come in after us, who had ordered&#13;
abou.t the same thing, were in the process of&#13;
eating. I watched my water glass sweat, and&#13;
for Student&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Apr!! .), 1'1 I&#13;
grew impatient&#13;
We got OUr meals and began 10 hi M .. e&#13;
french fries \Ioere cold and ~ 1\ turd The&#13;
cook must have been putttn an ~ t l (&#13;
overtime. because there \\In enough dr \111&#13;
the double decker hamburger '0 er a&#13;
moderate salad,&#13;
I got the most Umm3,1O:lIl\e h I IUr e&#13;
sandwich anyone could Ul1J~1Rr It 01111 It'd of&#13;
a piece of while bread. \Ioilh halve un each SIde&#13;
covered With sikes of ~ hut tur ('\ m.11 ~&#13;
scoop of mashed poraroe • and \.\I\·trt'd \lioub&#13;
gravy. On the Side was J. \tl) "tl.111 ..up of ~ ..,&#13;
cranberry sause, \Iohl\:h I ate qUI,," ~ be u&#13;
the juice was eaung thhlUgh the PJ~r cup I&#13;
didn't expect anYlhmg o\erl~ fan). bUI It&#13;
least a piece of p3rs1&lt;~ would have helped 10&#13;
make me think it 'IA."3:S worth a buc and J half&#13;
The food tasted alright , that's. ut 'all I&#13;
can't get evened about In}lhmg .II the 8dl ".&#13;
Fare. J ordered a hot fudge send ..e and sear bed&#13;
endlessly for the fudge. I ate 3 fe" rap I&#13;
warm fudge wile lookmg. and nnaU~ r allzed I&#13;
was left with 1\100 large Sl..'OOp~of ~t rC2m&#13;
That Was after I did 3 ....01\ wllh the mount;am uf&#13;
whipped cream. It started me" ndenng ••bldl&#13;
is cheaper to serve, \l,hlpped "rtam r hOi&#13;
fudge. It was ju t enough to end the \ I II to tlus&#13;
place.&#13;
When I was pal mg. I nOlh.:ed llul lhe after&#13;
dinner miniS whkh used 10 ~ .....0 I.:ent :t&#13;
piece, were now three cenls. ~f re I..:ould&#13;
a word, Maggie danfied. "the) ·re thr 'ent.111&#13;
over now." I shook m\ he3d and 100 ·td 31 tlu.&#13;
south wall. I'd sv..ear· the ra(;e n lhe qu.;;arter&#13;
snickered at me 3S I left.&#13;
£he artist.&#13;
'othing n~ds 'a be .d&#13;
aboul the album ilself thJOg&#13;
desene to be S3Jd about I( ..\11&#13;
I would like to ....~ '. fo&lt;&#13;
Godsake, don', bu~ It,&#13;
Peace&#13;
Corps&#13;
Here&#13;
Two represtntau\es (rom the&#13;
Peace Corps. Dick C'hn Ilan&#13;
and Paul Y, rill ""II be .t the&#13;
GreenquISI Hall c ""our'" \prll&#13;
7 and from 9 00 '0 4 00 P m&#13;
to ~peak to studenu !nttre led&#13;
In joining the Peac:e Corp&#13;
A film ""II be sho" n on b Ih&#13;
da~s at 1'00 p.m, In r milO&#13;
at Greenquist, The I~O .....11131&#13;
speak to St\eral 10150('&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 •. m. till 11 p .•.&#13;
o&#13;
125&#13;
AM·FM Slereo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
Hue lS .. ,ood "'~y 10 dl'&#13;
CO'ortt ...,tyt lWter lOUl\d&#13;
ti ole Pb)' ~ r('Cord Oft 1M&#13;
Fisher I ~~ Play cbe Un)(&#13;
record on ~nolhcr ma.k,r&#13;
I.utc.n for the dtJfe:rrnc~.&#13;
«pee ••lly In lhe ery law&#13;
.. net cf) h'th f~l,IC:nc~&#13;
A "uht, "m"l)' -..1tII,&#13;
I¥"u And ,he Filber 11$&#13;
IS the: lIu! compldc AMFM&#13;
Slt'reo Ml.Q.K("tnIC.&#13;
'0 ;I '(('oI'.:ito 'I 'net ..&#13;
.......,... a.....&#13;
........ 1(_&#13;
J1IS 6OtI. $I.&#13;
6&gt;1-1801&#13;
".OIAL .IOUO..&#13;
.... Fill 11I001101&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
b t efforts in the last 5 then mercifully forgoltne. But&#13;
:~rs-Jesus Christ Superstar. with the su~cess of Superstar&#13;
' y With those facts, you should Scepter obvlousl~ fefi" thar ~&#13;
. . If uestion. re-release of their lrst wor&#13;
be asking ytohurtse oaul&#13;
q&#13;
d make could sell on their names alone. Anyone a C b d R'&#13;
.superstar would ?bvio,usly have Even thr~~~1 Wew:~1 a~tisfjl:&#13;
enough musical mtell~gence. to W~t~ h;ving rLs early mistake&#13;
know that Dreamcoat IS ternble. ~ tt n there would be&#13;
The:efore? why did they ever n~~~i~g ~hey could do i!Scepter&#13;
put It out. f I can wanted to resurrect H. Once&#13;
The answer, as ar .as b' b . ss reigns over fi '1 t is this: Dreamcoaf again Ig usme .... ", , ,...: ...:0[.', Igure I au, ~ ,.,,' , ,., ':':. ;..-..:',.,:.;:::..', :-,..x't.;. was recorded before Superstar, :={ :o:••"' ,.... • ~~&#13;
and therefore, probably put ;:;; SunnysIde ~;&#13;
Weber and Rice under contract :~:~ ~:;&#13;
with Scepter records. (t was :::: Fl' t ~::&#13;
originally released about 2 years ~:: oris S ;t&#13;
ago torn apart by critics and . :::~ ~&#13;
~ate,.. i&amp; Greenhouses ~&#13;
O ::~:Ronrs - frllit Ballets - 'lib :i:&#13;
~ ~ f&#13;
i!J I ...!~.I&#13;
~~j l::;i~. C~.~~"B,~~R&#13;
WEST&#13;
SIDE&#13;
SWEET&#13;
SHOP&#13;
b Paul Lomartire&#13;
Y Newscope Staff&#13;
of t!:1k into the Bill . of Fare&#13;
you 't miss the giant com&#13;
~t. you ~:an. The assorted change,&#13;
n the so~nnies, are part of t~e ea~ly&#13;
ter, arld P d r realized that the mtenor&#13;
:in de~~~- ~~ve had premonitions about&#13;
tor m was going to be run.&#13;
rite restauran: ·ng to tell the public that&#13;
oe was ryyito eat here. This is not the b·gmone b" 1 . t that one goes to for a 1te_ to&#13;
r~tauran ters nickels, and pennies, lfl)'IOe quar , Ill· rolls of them. . he . the menu, r noticed my ~ho1ce&#13;
a readtn\·u of Fare's interpretat10n of&#13;
d the thle week before at the Big Boy&#13;
I hadR cine· a hot turkey sandwich. I&#13;
rant in a ' · h"gh the side the prices bemg I e~ on&#13;
1 be the quantities are · also d1fferen t.&#13;
itemr'Fare offers a Town Crier plate for _a 0 enty-five 1 · The Big Boy has theu&#13;
Joseph and the Amazing Techni&#13;
color Dreamcoat&#13;
lusic by Andrew Lloyd Weber&#13;
Lrn,s by Tim Rice&#13;
Secptor Records&#13;
Mter listening to this album,&#13;
I ·came to one sim~le but&#13;
definite conclusion. It stznks.&#13;
combination plate for a dollar ten. Both con I t&#13;
of a doub!e decker hamburger. french frie . and&#13;
a salad with either a Big Boy salad, or a Bill of Fare cup of coleslaw.&#13;
Chicken at Big Boy is a dollar sLxty-five for 3 regular (three pieces) dinner. The menu read a&#13;
d?llar ninty-five at the Bill of Fare (four&#13;
pieces). For the same dollar ninty-tive y u&#13;
w:ould spend_ at Bill of Fare, you could get five&#13;
pieces of chicken at Big Boy. The other odd&#13;
and ends with the meal balance out at both restaurants.&#13;
r ordered a hot turkey sandwich for a dollar&#13;
fifty. Maggie ordered a Town Crier plate. and a&#13;
small Pepsi. At the Bill of Fare a large Pepsi and&#13;
a small one are the same volume. but at&#13;
different prices in different glasses. You can&#13;
confirm this for yourself by pouring a mall&#13;
glass into the larger one. I did thi in front of&#13;
the waitress once before, and she only miled&#13;
sweetly and asked us not to make any trouble.&#13;
While we waited for our meal, we noticed&#13;
that quite a few older people were beginning to&#13;
come in, at the start of the dinner hour. After&#13;
about a half hour of this influx, I checked to&#13;
see if there was a bus in the parking lot. I&#13;
figured that maybe Shady Lawn East or West&#13;
had sponsored a field trip for their patrons, but&#13;
saw no such vehicle.&#13;
As Maggie and I ·continued to wait for our&#13;
meal, we talked about the events of the day, the day before, the future, and finally began&#13;
discussing the war in Viet am. while people&#13;
who had come in after us, who had ordered&#13;
abou.t the same thing, were in the process of&#13;
eating. [ watched my water glass sweat. and&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
In fact that statement of the Newscope Staff&#13;
I( n't eve; suffice. This thing&#13;
RFAKS. Anyone playing t_his ,uld be indicted for pollutwn&#13;
of the airwaves. Furthermore,&#13;
vone playing this and actually&#13;
E ·.JOYING it should be&#13;
committed.&#13;
best efforts in the last 5&#13;
years-Jesus Christ Superstar.&#13;
With those facts, you should&#13;
be asking yourself a question.&#13;
Anyone that could make -Superstar would obviously have&#13;
enough musical intelligence to&#13;
know that Dreamcoat is terrible.&#13;
Therefore, why did they ever&#13;
put it out?&#13;
Upon looking over the liner&#13;
notes to determine who should&#13;
e the blame for this disaster I&#13;
folly expected it to be credited&#13;
t the combined efforts of&#13;
pn1 1 IY/1&#13;
Peace&#13;
Corps&#13;
Here&#13;
e Jones and Howdy Doody.&#13;
I v.as, therfore, quite surprised&#13;
t find that the writers were&#13;
Andrew Weber and Tim Rice,&#13;
h also created a record that,&#13;
my opinion, was one of the&#13;
The answer' as far as I can&#13;
figure it out, is this: Dreamcoat&#13;
was recorded before Superstar,&#13;
and therefore, probably put&#13;
Weber and Rice under contract&#13;
with Scepter records. It was&#13;
originally released abou_t _2 years&#13;
ago, torn apart by cnttcs and&#13;
then mercifully forgottne. But&#13;
with the success of Superstar&#13;
Scepter obvious!&gt;: felt that .~ re-relea e of their first wor&#13;
could sell on their name alone.&#13;
Even though Weber and Rice&#13;
were probably well sati ft d&#13;
with having thi early mi ta ·e&#13;
forgotten there v. uld be&#13;
nothing they could do if S.:ep1er&#13;
wanted to re urrect It 011ce&#13;
again big bu ine s reig~~. ?~-~r.&#13;
·=-~-::.... :. •. -........•• , .... ·:.::::·.·:. ··:::·-·-~ .. •.•:&gt;.·.•-:-~&#13;
t Sunnyside f WEST I Florists i SIDE WP Coeds Vole r0&#13;
In Finals&#13;
Three Parkside coeds, Linda&#13;
Chambers, Jackie Matson, and&#13;
hn Hermes, are among the&#13;
fi ists in the 12th Annual Miss&#13;
ne Pageant sponsored by Racine Jay-Cees.&#13;
In the final, which is April , , 1ernorial, the girls will be&#13;
d in 3 categories: 1) E emng Gown; 2) Swim Suit; 3)&#13;
Talent-which is the most&#13;
ortant.&#13;
~ ·&#13;
~&#13;
(b&#13;
f'-t -·&#13;
I&#13;
::l -·&#13;
(j&#13;
~&#13;
::l&#13;
ClCl-&#13;
-·&#13;
~&#13;
f'-t&#13;
(b&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~ ~&#13;
~&#13;
""'-c&#13;
~ ....&#13;
~&#13;
&lt;.-,&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~ -.&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
;!&#13;
....&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
""'-c&#13;
~ ....&#13;
--&#13;
~&#13;
-.&#13;
~ .&#13;
I&#13;
,.&#13;
:a&#13;
..&#13;
-&#13;
:a&#13;
1ft&#13;
8&#13;
8&#13;
0&#13;
u&#13;
C:&#13;
0 .....&#13;
C:&#13;
~&#13;
sJl;e winner will receive a&#13;
(¼ scholarship, use of an&#13;
S~Obil for appearances, and&#13;
r worth of merchandise 1&#13;
tm. Racine Merchants, ding a mink stole. for Student&#13;
VAtEO'S&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
Also&#13;
IClflCKEN DINNERS and&#13;
TALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
~ Del.iVERY 4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 - P.M.&#13;
Oi&gt;eo 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
li&amp;R-~~~.~~~~~~:s 1 SWEET ·-~ :::: I&#13;
- • SHOP I :;:; .. 3021 ~ ·~· • 7!1TH ""~ ST. I&#13;
~~ if KENOSHA WISCONSIN !13140 t :::: .... :[:; PHONE 694~-~--.-... ·,:.;.»~::: , ... ~::•:::: ....... -.,,.._ ..... -......... ::-·... . ..&#13;
3200 60 St.&#13;
6 a •• till 1l p.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97'7&#13;
" &#13;
CIRUNA Formed&#13;
A.".yo!,e interest&#13;
parnctpatmg in any of thed !n&#13;
and/or joining ClRUNAe&#13;
01&gt;0;"&#13;
contact Janet at 633 3 pit",&#13;
Mrs. Porzak at M'836 '"&#13;
ex tension 36R fa am Hau&#13;
. formati r fUr", in ormation. Transportar "rq&#13;
be provided. Ian "'In&#13;
Tuesday&#13;
A free public shoWin&#13;
classic German.langua g of the&#13;
"Kleider machen ge rrhn&#13;
(Clothes Make the Manlleute'&#13;
held at 4 p.m. in R Will be&#13;
Greenquist Hall. OOm IOJ&#13;
Apr~ 5,1971 Pye b&#13;
Thumbs Out&#13;
(C&lt;Jnlinued from Page 4)&#13;
Four tenJ'_m .. Chief lnspector Trona was done with his&#13;
meeung. an I walked Into his office. He was seated at his&#13;
de smox mg :I large cigar _ I felt like a mi.mor league&#13;
ba ball player lr) 109 (0 negonate a major league contract&#13;
with the owner of the baseball team.&#13;
I e plamed to him \\h) I had come. bUI before I had said&#13;
two health' paragraphs. hi fingers were glidmg through his&#13;
lay. book He fuund the statute he "anted pertaining to&#13;
huchhl mg. and a ked his. secretary to duplicate It for me.&#13;
H then a ,led me If I holdan) uther questions.&#13;
I a....ed him If there were, If 8n). certain times of the&#13;
)ur .. hen huchhi ers were most noucable. when the&#13;
problem peaked. He puffed his cigar for a few seconds&#13;
before an wermg, and IJ that hllchluklOg was usually a&#13;
pr blem bum spring, ummer, a fe\\ more puffs, fall and&#13;
wlm r BUI he U1dd\ added, dead wmrer didn't aurae'&#13;
100 roam huchfu er l-I e plained th3t one of the hazards&#13;
of st..n H1 long sld the road waumg for 3 ride, was In the&#13;
(;I 1 thai old people h 3rt conditlons might gel 1010 an&#13;
ld nt It a person w-;a In the road \\3\&#13;
t-: r nun" reasons Ihoped th3t the se...:re.t3rVwould hurry&#13;
up .IU the tUph. that I Iht)ud\t i,l, 3S such 3 good story&#13;
nted 10 dl ,pJtt hl..c the SIn i'le from his cigar. I also&#13;
n Idcd th31 Ihl I 'PI \Ioould not 13 t tOO long on "\1eet&#13;
Ih Pel ,hJO td him ""hen I got the cop)' of the 13WS&#13;
..nd I I&#13;
Ih 1at t: Hilt he p"( me read. "When standing or&#13;
It,u flng In ru~dwa) or high \\0'3) prohibited. (I) '0 person&#13;
all In road..-.)' for th purpo~ of witcHing a ride&#13;
frum the \)~rator of an) -.ehlde other than a public&#13;
pa nstr 'chId (Z) a person shall stand or loiter on any&#13;
r d..-. it) other th n In a fety zone If such act interferes&#13;
\\lIh the la\\ful movement or 1r3ffic:'&#13;
The penalt~ for IhlS offense may be "not less Ihan 52.00&#13;
n r more than 20.00 for Ihe first offense and nol less than&#13;
510.00 nor m re ltun 550.00 for the second or subsequent&#13;
convk:doo within I year."&#13;
ChIef 1lIIpeotor TrOlla had furnished me wilh the story I&#13;
c me for and I ",os sure the law would interest many&#13;
thairskJe "'wyers who would ask what constitutes a&#13;
'·roadway." Istili felt sorry for the first arrested hitchhiker&#13;
",ho ,abed any quest,ons 10 anyone other than Chief&#13;
Inspector Trotta while at the pohce station.&#13;
I caJJed borne. and asked my fnend to give me a ride. I&#13;
was It .... on the curb. waili~ when a police car pulled&#13;
up. Fortuately. they wete waiting for a SlOp light, but I&#13;
wondered II I was up on my Dragnet jargon to case I was&#13;
£I\'en the dnd of informal warning Jerry Wielgat received.&#13;
FOUl forty p.m .• Igot a ride home.&#13;
International Education at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin·&#13;
_Milwaukee on April 17, 1971.&#13;
Some will attend the hearings of&#13;
the Assembly Veteran Affairs&#13;
for S-1801A-314 on April 22,&#13;
1971. S-180/A-314 is the&#13;
Wisconsin bill to make it illegal&#13;
for Wisconsin Men to be drafted&#13;
for undeclared foreign wars.&#13;
Some will observe conferences&#13;
on world affairs at Wingspread&#13;
on May I, 1971.&#13;
-The Council on&#13;
International Relations. an?&#13;
United alions Affairs. IS&#13;
forming on the Parkside&#13;
campuS. The purpose of&#13;
CI R A is the study of&#13;
international affairs and&#13;
responsible participation in&#13;
international relations.&#13;
The following are some of the&#13;
planned activities for CIRUNA.&#13;
Some will altend The&#13;
Governor's Conference on&#13;
Summer Seminar In New York&#13;
have a substantial numb&#13;
college credits in histo er 0(&#13;
social studies, a basic cory and&#13;
pol itic~l science (prf~:rte III&#13;
lOternational relations) abId&#13;
Y&#13;
d&#13;
· , an I&#13;
gra e pomt average of 2 50&#13;
above (between Band C). or&#13;
Des c rip tive booklets&#13;
application blanks are avm:&#13;
from the SOCial Science Di""""&#13;
Office, Room 318, Greenquist&#13;
and must be ,eturned by A&#13;
9.1971. 1"ll&#13;
be transferable to UW-Parkside.&#13;
Participants will live in&#13;
dormi tories of the New York&#13;
University Medical Center,&#13;
within walking distance of the&#13;
U.N. Expenses are based ~~on&#13;
regular UWM summer t~lt~on&#13;
and dormitory costs. AdmiSSIOn&#13;
is open to legal residents of&#13;
Wisconsin who WIll be Jumors or&#13;
seniors by the summer of 1971&#13;
at one of the participating&#13;
institutions. Candidates should&#13;
A unique opportunity to&#13;
spend the summer in ew Xork&#13;
CilY studying Ihe Uruted&#13;
I a i tons through regula.r&#13;
University of Wisconsin·&#13;
Milwaukee "credit courses,&#13;
attendance at U.N. sessions and&#13;
meetings with delegation and&#13;
secretariat personnel is being&#13;
offered to a UW·Parkside&#13;
student under the 6th Wisconsin&#13;
Universities United Nations&#13;
Summer Seminar, June 21 .&#13;
August 14, 1971. The Seminar,&#13;
administered at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin·· Milwaukee, is&#13;
being sponsored for the 6th&#13;
consecutive year by UWM,&#13;
UW-Madison, UW-Green Bay,&#13;
UW-Parkside, and six Wisconsin&#13;
S tate Universities who will&#13;
select a combined total of&#13;
approziamtely twenty&#13;
participants.&#13;
Each student will emoll at&#13;
the UW-Milwaukee, in two&#13;
3-credit courses focusing upon&#13;
the U.N, and international&#13;
~:)fganization, These credits will&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
For Sale Lost &amp; Found&#13;
Blue ski jacket 859.2156&#13;
REWARD&#13;
Wanted&#13;
'69 Volkswagen 12,000 miles.&#13;
$\495 - Call AI, 654-2414&#13;
Stereo Cassette Player and&#13;
Recorder with changer Model 377&#13;
$200 Call 652-8870 MUST SELL.&#13;
'69 Kawasaki WI-5S 650 cc Ex&#13;
Cono. 652-6335 after 4&#13;
'57 Chev. Wagon $350 or besr&#13;
t)ffer 652-0109 after 6&#13;
'69 Ramb. American 5995&#13;
652-4215 before 7&#13;
'69 Mustang Sl,800 or best offer&#13;
694-4117&#13;
Fiat wagon $150 call Ron&#13;
632-8230&#13;
'70 AMX 52450 or best offer&#13;
658-4271 or 658-4117&#13;
'67 Triumph TR-4 IRS whole or&#13;
for parts 886-3618&#13;
2 Piece luggage set cheap call Tom&#13;
654-2074 after 4&#13;
Winter coat size 7 $10 633-7576&#13;
or 637-8120&#13;
'70 Ambassador call Dennis&#13;
652-5673&#13;
Honda 'ISO" cc $200 694-0325&#13;
RCA Signal Generator $20.00 also&#13;
RCA Vacuum Tube voltmeter&#13;
$20.00 639-8202&#13;
Fender Stradcaster $450 or best&#13;
offer 639-6360&#13;
'62 Rambler SlOO Call 652-9552&#13;
Fiberglass Repair work&#13;
654-8739&#13;
Any type or work 652-8734&#13;
For Rent&#13;
Office Space - Modern,Carpnal&#13;
Partitioned, Air Condo Ideal r.&#13;
Acctg., Insurance, or Saks. eoa.I&#13;
proximity to Parkside and Carm.,&#13;
4058 7th Ave. Call 652·394S.&#13;
654-7410.&#13;
Misc.&#13;
Minnie the Midnite Maid&#13;
Qualifications for calling'&#13;
Proffessors &amp; Bachelors Ovtr25&#13;
(1 'm not cute but I'm effiCient&#13;
C,1l657·5929&#13;
GOT THE DRAFT !unai'Iyour&#13;
head??? Do something",OUlI&#13;
ECUMENICAL CENTER FOP.&#13;
DRAFT COUNSELING 22lt EAST&#13;
KENWOOD BLVD. MtLWAUW&#13;
For appointments phone: (414&#13;
962-5855 or conta,t: STEVE&#13;
BANGERT STUDENT AFFAlRSKENOSHA&#13;
gam0u6 In girted&#13;
g&gt;~ w gla/ian PJ'~&#13;
~\"&#13;
liquor Store&#13;
r-;::=='l-:::::=:::=&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA 658-3131&#13;
A NEW 2·RECORD&#13;
SET FROM&#13;
CHICAGO: BEER&#13;
$7.49&#13;
':1.:.:-- -......:-&#13;
...,,;..~ :~~&#13;
~-:~ ... I&#13;
I FRO~&#13;
MUSIC COMPANY&#13;
COLUMBIA AND EPIC&#13;
RECORDS AND TAPES&#13;
~CEP")&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE&#13;
STOP &amp; WATER Your own&#13;
Portable&#13;
Pop Festival&#13;
by19&#13;
Contemporary&#13;
Artists!&#13;
SUPER VALUE$1. 24-7 oz. bot. 12-24 OZ. bot.&#13;
$1.11 $1.39&#13;
plus tax &amp; deposit&#13;
2428 Washin ton Rd., Kenosha&#13;
pg b , "A ope pril 5. 19il&#13;
Thu,nb Out CIRUNA Formec.l A_n_y o _n e in tereste&#13;
part1c1patmg in any of th d 1&#13;
and/or joining CIRUNAe a contact Janet at 633 3 Pie&#13;
Mrs. Porzak at M .. 836 Or&#13;
extension 36R ,. ain -The Council on&#13;
International Relations and&#13;
United , ·ations Affairs is&#13;
forming on the Parkside&#13;
campus. The purpose of&#13;
CIRU, 'A is the study of&#13;
international affairs and&#13;
responsible participation in&#13;
international relations.&#13;
The following are some of the&#13;
planned activities for CIRUNA.&#13;
Some wi 11 attend The&#13;
Governor's Conference on&#13;
International Education at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-&#13;
-Milwaukee on April 17, 1971.&#13;
Some will attend the hearings of&#13;
the Assembly Veteran Affairs&#13;
for S-180/A-314 on April 22,&#13;
1971. S-180/A-314 is the&#13;
Wisconsin bill to make it illegal&#13;
for Wisconsin Men to be drafted&#13;
for undeclared foreign wars.&#13;
Some will observe conferences&#13;
on world affairs at Wingspread&#13;
on May I , 1971.&#13;
· f · ,or fur,1.. m orma !Ion. Transport . "IQ&#13;
be provided. ation ill&#13;
Tuesday&#13;
A free public showi&#13;
classic German-langu ng of&#13;
"Kl ·d age e1 er machen&#13;
(Clothes Make the Man)Le_ute"&#13;
held at 4 p.m. in Ro w,n bt&#13;
Greenquist Hall. om 103&#13;
Summer Seminar In New York&#13;
F ur forty p.m .• I got a ride home.&#13;
!COF&#13;
fME&#13;
A unique opportunity to&#13;
pend the sum_mer in New Xork&#13;
Cit} tudymg the United&#13;
'a i tons through regular&#13;
ni,ersity of WisconsinMilwaukee&#13;
~credit courses,&#13;
attendance at .• '. sessions and&#13;
meetings with delegation and&#13;
ecretariat per!&gt;onnel is being&#13;
offered to a UW-Parkside&#13;
tudent under the 6th Wisconsin&#13;
L'niversities United Nations&#13;
Summer Seminar, June 21 ·&#13;
August 14, 1971. The Seminar.&#13;
administered at the University&#13;
of Wisconsin-· Milwaukee, is&#13;
being sponsored for the 6th&#13;
consecutive year by UWM,&#13;
UW-Madison, UW-Green Bay,&#13;
UW-Parkside, and six Wisconsin&#13;
State Universities who will&#13;
select a combined total of&#13;
approziamtely twenty&#13;
participants.&#13;
Each student will enroll at&#13;
the UW-Milwaukee, in two&#13;
3-credit courses focusing upon&#13;
the U.N. and international&#13;
organization. These credits will&#13;
A NEW 2-RECORD&#13;
SET FROM&#13;
CHICAGO:&#13;
$7.49&#13;
Yourown&#13;
Portable&#13;
Pop Festival&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE&#13;
be transferable to UW-Parkside.&#13;
Participants will live in&#13;
dormitories of the New York&#13;
University Medical Center,&#13;
within walking distance of the&#13;
U.N. Expenses are based ~~on&#13;
regular UWM summer t~1t~on&#13;
and dormitory costs. Adm1ss10n&#13;
is open to legal residents of&#13;
Wisconsin who will be juniors or&#13;
seniors by the summer of 1971&#13;
at one of the participating&#13;
institutions. Candidates should&#13;
have a substantial numb&#13;
college credits in histo er&#13;
social studies, a basic cory&#13;
I. t. al Ur po 1 1c . science (prefer&#13;
mternational relationsJ&#13;
d . , nd a&#13;
gra e pomt average of , 0&#13;
above (between B and q-· or&#13;
Descriptive book.leis&#13;
application b_lanks are 3Yaila&#13;
from tne Social Science D&#13;
Office, Room 318, Gree '&#13;
and must be returned b~&#13;
9, 1971.&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
For Sale&#13;
'69 Volkswagen 12,000 miles.&#13;
$1495 - Call Al, 654-2414&#13;
Stereo Cassette Player and&#13;
Recorder with changer Model 377&#13;
S200 Call 652-8870 MUST SELL.&#13;
'69 Kawasaki WI-SS 650 cc Ex&#13;
Cono. 652-6335 after 4&#13;
'57 Chev. Wagon S350 or best&#13;
&lt;Jffer 652-0109 after 6&#13;
'69 Ramb. American $995&#13;
652-4215 before 7&#13;
'69 Mustang Sl,800 or best offer&#13;
694-4117&#13;
Fiat wagon $150 call Ron&#13;
632-8230&#13;
'70 AMX $2450 or best offer&#13;
658-4271 or 658-4117&#13;
'67 Triumph TR-4 IRS whole or&#13;
for parts 886-3618&#13;
2 Piece luggage set cheap call Tom&#13;
654-207 4 after 4&#13;
Winter coat size 7 $10 633-7576&#13;
or 637-8120&#13;
'7 0 Ambassador call Dennis&#13;
652-5673&#13;
Honda '150" cc $200 694-0325&#13;
RCA Signal Generator S20.00 also&#13;
RCA Vacuum Tube voltmeter&#13;
S20.00 639-8202&#13;
Fender Stradcaster S450 or best&#13;
offer 639-6360&#13;
'62 Rambler SlOO Call 652-9552&#13;
Lost &amp; Found&#13;
Blue ski jacket 859_2356&#13;
REWARD&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Fiberglass Repair work&#13;
654-8739&#13;
Any type or work 652~7 J.4&#13;
For Rent&#13;
Office Space - Modern. Cuptted&#13;
Partitioned, Air Cond. Ideal £«&#13;
Acctg., Insurance, or SalCJ.&#13;
proximity to Parkside and Can&#13;
4058 7th Ave. Call 652-3945 or&#13;
654-7410.&#13;
Misc.&#13;
Minnie the Midnite Maid&#13;
Qualifications for calhng:&#13;
Proffessors &amp; Bachelors om 2S&#13;
(I'm not cute but I'm efficient&#13;
Call 657-5929&#13;
GOT THE DRAFT lungin&#13;
your head??? Do something abom ._&#13;
ECUMENICAL CENTER&#13;
DRAFT COUNSELING 2211 EAST&#13;
KENWOOD BL VD. MILWAUKEE&#13;
For appointments phone: (414&#13;
962-5855 or contact: STEVE&#13;
BANGERT STUDENT AFFAIRS -&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
f7&lt;Mnout&gt; ~ PJ'ined&#13;
if'~ w- #lal«»i PJ'OO&lt;M&#13;
~·--&#13;
2129 BIRCH RD. KENOSHA&#13;
21 FLAVORS&#13;
Dining&#13;
Room&#13;
Bar&#13;
BEER - ''fh POP&#13;
~.&#13;
'&#13;
~2 ==.wit &amp; WATER ,,,;//4///I\\\\~,,--· STOP&#13;
24-7 oz. -bot. 12-24 oz. 1,oc.&#13;
$1.11 $1.39&#13;
plus tax &amp; deposit&#13;
2428 W ashin ton Rd., Kenosha &#13;
Rangers Take Invitational pressure off. he umped&#13;
some'Nhal closer to the tar nd&#13;
cleared It 6"4" IS [ ~OC' 5 be 1&#13;
effort to date&#13;
lie "3n1S to pcorled hi ~ un&#13;
and guild up hI str&lt;ng,h II,&#13;
explamed , "\1) F I J or n, .. I&#13;
to dear CO Perhap ~ the&#13;
season progrt he... n In.: h&#13;
closer to and f n;,lI} .JIlL du.&#13;
height&#13;
par side dominat d 'he (,()&#13;
} ard htgh hurdk wtth I,&#13;
lug, .h, Denm F, 'helm '00&#13;
Dean IUJ 'hoff IJ 1Oi! Ihe .ir I&#13;
three place&#13;
In the J ,Tun I (;, )&#13;
and \Ierrul plJI."N d ~ d&#13;
third respe:l:t1\~h t..Gd \ '"&#13;
only 3 10 of.. coed botlil&#13;
Ihe \l,inlllllt! Un~ 01 5~.Qlurn d&#13;
in b) llllld) GJl uf 8&lt;1 •&#13;
Zugh.:h and De "Ill pb,:t'd~. ~&#13;
in the 600 ~Jrd run 't\ hi h "'OJ&#13;
won b~ Rllo."h U il.1rd.J ,I&#13;
\tarquellt&#13;
Leonard Buill' and I ifill&#13;
ga\'e P Hksh:le ~('ond OInd third&#13;
pla.:e 10 Ih tnple Illp. :and&#13;
they "Cfe J.....In Ih~ I n~Jump&#13;
II the "om,""o' m tl&#13;
Park Ide' J u,h ZlIlUnt&gt;fl n "oJ&#13;
a double 't\lIlner. J.p1Unn~ Ihe&#13;
mile and Ihe O. {.Iur&#13;
WeSlfh.:h gJ\t" P.n de 01 '" "d&#13;
In the half mtle 1.1 t:&#13;
The Ranger ".11 pJrlldp.lIe&#13;
In lhe \\ I n 10 fedtr:ltlon&#13;
Indoor meel al I.Jl.hson&#13;
April 10, Com~UIIOI1 ..,11 be&#13;
bOlh the mt:n''5 Jnd \Ii, lilt&#13;
di\ISlOn ,&#13;
fRay fRadtr;an&#13;
0' ,Ier!"I good&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
Newscope staff&#13;
.rthe with 97~ points,&#13;
rarkSld\ men's division of&#13;
.JPI"~e~ptekside [nvita tional&#13;
U"· ar H' I '... eel held at Case. Ig1.&#13;
[r~~ III finished a distant&#13;
\Wquet~e the six team meet&#13;
.""d In&#13;
~~ 3lh . \&#13;
.,th6 -' m scores were Beloit&#13;
omeN,leathwestern 21, si.&#13;
'9 or ,. 5&#13;
.' 7 and DOITIlmCan .&#13;
'lr~rtDo~inican's first year in&#13;
1M" .. k competitIOn.&#13;
""i"hl teams compeled in the&#13;
E~"s diVIsion with the&#13;
fOmen CI b . . '3ukee Track u cO~lIng&#13;
\b!W lOp with 43 pomls.&#13;
"" on f h 'th 17 • bide placed ourl WI . . "'-&#13;
hr""kside's success in the pole Bob Waters&#13;
It layed a role in'the men's&#13;
"" p The Rangers S&#13;
~~:red the event by taking ports Photos by Borger. JUdy Zimmerman&#13;
die first three places. John . showmg by wmnmg the 60 yard event wilh a jump of 6'3" M k&#13;
hlltO and Tun Martlllson went dash 111 6.5 sec. He has run it in Toepel f N h . ar&#13;
IJ'O",and Keith Merritt 12'0". 6.3 sec. thisyearalso. c1eJred 6~3" ~rt ~es~em also&#13;
Fourth and fifth place were Other i.ndicators tha~ the misses thal~ u~u :ne ad more&#13;
tJienby Marquette vaulters. Rangers will be strong 111 the Dronek a K . ~. '. Larf)&#13;
Jim McFadden turned in a running events were the who h' d ol11ln~~a~. Jumper&#13;
431 mile to win that event for victories by Judd Johnston in manaoe as.. ~n,~ 6,g,.· bn~Uld&#13;
t'Jrk'side.This is a good time for the 880, and Chuck Dettman in miss'.:o th on y . e~o~~&#13;
"&#13;
..door mile which is difficult the 2 mile. McFadden was fiflh Wheln"g ree IInh,es aI 6 I .&#13;
f h h . h 88 you mISs { ree times at to run because 0 t e s arp ,111 teO, and Gary Lance any gl'ven h 'ghl f&#13;
. I d fifth C th' h 2" el you are OUI 0 ,r ParkS/de pace , . ,our In t e. nule, reflectlllg the competi'ion.&#13;
\I;Fadden also captured the the depth of the team. I-on,'cally h' I f h&#13;
I h h'gh' ". s on y a 'er I e l.fXXl yard run. n tel Jump the Rangers event was over Prince decided to&#13;
Bob Waters, Ranger have a good young prospect in take a crack al 6'4" h 'ght&#13;
Freshman f~om Mil.wau~ee E~gene Prince,. freshman from which he failed to c1e;/in ~~ree&#13;
lincoln, contlllued his. fme Milwaukee. Pnnce won the earlier attempts. With lhe&#13;
1m&#13;
R t It II til;011&#13;
PhfJI/t&#13;
C&gt;t)-I ."-1 5 5&#13;
... "_C:".&#13;
...(0 t1A&#13;
STUDENTS&#13;
g. Red Corpc-1 ft'.alm~nl&#13;
0&#13;
•&#13;
BA K Of&#13;
ELf 000&#13;
everyone e dOt I&#13;
270. Lo,h,op ,.,••&#13;
Roclne, II&#13;
Hockey Bea rs Tie Whitewater opened thIrd&#13;
period scoring to take a :!-O&#13;
leJd. With 9:37 lefllO pia} KJri&#13;
Liekoski scored on a powerplay.&#13;
Some two minutes later Rich&#13;
Rosko followed with a hard&#13;
shot to the right corner of lhe&#13;
net. Bill Westerlund capped lhe&#13;
Ranger comeback effort at 5:05&#13;
with a booming slapshot.&#13;
Whitewater. howe\·er. came&#13;
back to score the tying goal&#13;
wilh 45 seconds left 'u pia}.&#13;
The Rangers Ihus had to set tIe&#13;
for their second tie \I'llh&#13;
Whitewater. Earlier in the&#13;
season the teams deadlocked at&#13;
5-5.&#13;
r",,"" M4f/~&#13;
EMIL CERLACH&#13;
/t-r s.:e _&#13;
PaddleballChamps&#13;
left. Whitewaler took a 1-0 lead.&#13;
The second period was&#13;
scoreless with Whitewater&#13;
outshooting the Rangers 6-3.&#13;
Hard and close body checking in&#13;
the period resulted in six&#13;
penalty minutes for Parkside,&#13;
while Whitewater had four.&#13;
The third period found&#13;
Whitewater outshooting the&#13;
RJngers 11-5, but Parkside&#13;
capitalized more frequently on&#13;
the shots and outscored the&#13;
visitors 3-2.&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Ptrkside's hockey team tied&#13;
IbUtwater State 3·3 at Wilson&#13;
PMk in Milwaukee. The Rangers&#13;
Ipp&lt;ared 10 be headed for&#13;
n:IOry but Whitewa ter scored&#13;
tht lying gual with 45 seconds&#13;
llIIIainingin the game.&#13;
The first period was&#13;
dulJ&lt;terized by aggressive play&#13;
luh both teams exhibiting&#13;
Irong defense. The lone goal in&#13;
dle period was scored with 2:31&#13;
The Pa Idt Inu.lmur.d&#13;
paddleball 'h;lmplf..-'lllsfu \l re&#13;
captured b} Jeff. ~r and&#13;
Colleen Joho\on. Jeff ""un lh&#13;
men's, and Collcen Ih "omtningle&#13;
.&#13;
Todd d n 'WJ runnrrup 10&#13;
the men'~ \,.' till ~. 3&#13;
Susan Graf In lht" men"&#13;
The intr.:amural hand.;all&#13;
charnpu. nshlp "'3$ .11 1 d Idtd.&#13;
\\Ilh Tim bum tn nnt'rpng&#13;
\·lctorlOu. and \r~ till'"&#13;
placlOg~..: d&#13;
Or.hl It \&#13;
'l11d)&#13;
[',.,(// B'/I ell&#13;
e&#13;
eoee.o", AV&#13;
..&#13;
rU:~WrII .. ..&#13;
Ol.7·11174'· '.•... ' '&#13;
I S~ S/wwv I&#13;
"BRAT Lifters Place In State /I&#13;
Our three power lifters who&#13;
Iift1luredto the Wisconsin State&#13;
Powe, Ufting Meet this past&#13;
""'end dId well in the field of&#13;
Inenty·nve.&#13;
OuOald Ours, our lightesl&#13;
lfler competed as a&#13;
~therweight (up to 132\4 Ibs.).&#13;
~ad a good showing in&#13;
ry When he set four new&#13;
~I records with a total of&#13;
611' Saturday things were&#13;
trent and he was only&#13;
lucceSSful with his first&#13;
~".. This did plJce him&#13;
I th In a field of eleven. His&#13;
I IVere: bench press 165,&#13;
~t 1&#13;
r&#13;
1s, deadlift 315 for a&#13;
--'0 70S ' I . i: Hernandez lifted as a&#13;
; Th'Yweight (up to 18I&#13;
*&#13;
cant~Sl IS was only his third&#13;
loy Wi hut he had an excellent&#13;
I, 1t~ SIX successful lifts. His&#13;
re: bench press 260,&#13;
Mike Madsen, Ranger center.&#13;
was chosen (0 represent&#13;
Parkside on a basketball tour In&#13;
orthern Europe this summer&#13;
The team also includes players&#13;
from schools that played with&#13;
the Swedish lOuring team this&#13;
past season.&#13;
Gymnastic equipment.&#13;
--&#13;
IS&#13;
available to any Parks Ide&#13;
student on Tuesday evenings&#13;
from 7:30-9:30 al Park High. It&#13;
is an open exercise period and&#13;
instruction will be available If&#13;
desired. Anyone interested&#13;
should contact Warren&#13;
McGillivray at 637-5~60.&#13;
squat 315, deadlift 525, for a&#13;
total of 1100 pounds and a fifth&#13;
place finish. All his lifts were&#13;
new UW·Parkside records but&#13;
. they were quickly broken by&#13;
Joe Gemignani.&#13;
Joe Gemignani is having an&#13;
excellent year lifting. In a&#13;
January meet he tied for third&#13;
while setting four new UWP&#13;
records in the middleweight&#13;
class. Up one weight class now&#13;
he broke the records established&#13;
by Jesse and finished third in&#13;
the state. His lifts were; bench&#13;
press 355, squat 450, deadlift&#13;
525, for a total of 1330.&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
";til&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
.nd •&#13;
STEAK,&#13;
BRAT or&#13;
BEEFBURGER&#13;
.....".&#13;
Neu, Gallery&#13;
One HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday .thru Friday&#13;
7 p.nt. to 8 p.m,&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
A".l1 F. Pert".&#13;
Iooc ....... , " .-4 s.-." Pert"•&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
,,,, BRAT-STOP&#13;
10% StUdent ~&#13;
Discount&#13;
. "" all Posters&#13;
• &amp; Frames&#13;
.. S.&#13;
503 Main St,&#13;
Rllci'lt ........te-I-~ ....H •&#13;
Rangers T a~e Invitational&#13;
BY Jim Casper&#13;
Newscope staff&#13;
ofthe vith 97½ points.&#13;
fir id\ \ men's division of&#13;
ptured, ~ \side Invitational&#13;
LM· /held at Case High.&#13;
111 mee finished a distant&#13;
,11quette the six team meet d 1n&#13;
th 63½· 1 scores were Beloit&#13;
othe( teaith1 western 2 I' St. or . . 5 • . 7 and Domm1can . bt!l ' ' fj t . Thi j· Domi~i~an s irs year m&#13;
k Nmpetttton. . ght teams compete_d m the&#13;
Ei ·s division with the omen Cl b . ·aukee Track u co~mg&#13;
top with 43 pomts.&#13;
t ?;e placed fourth with 17.&#13;
i~ lk ide's success in the pole Bob Waters rar I . ·th , ult played a ro e m e men s&#13;
ry Th e Range r s Sh t Ph b 1 '&#13;
0ate.d the event by taking r 0 r S otos ry Borger&#13;
first three pla_ces. John · showi_ng by :,Vinning the 60 yard&#13;
P11ten and Tim Martinson went dash m 6.5 sec. He has run it in&#13;
r'O" and Keith Merritt I 2'0". 6.3 sec. this year also.&#13;
fllllrth and fifth place were Other i_ndicators that the&#13;
0 by farquette vaulters. Rangers will be strong in the&#13;
Jllll \1cFadden turned in a r~nni_ng events were the&#13;
4 1 mile to win that ev~nt for v1ctones by Judd Johnston in&#13;
1'-1! ,de. This is a ~oo_d t1_m~ for the 880,_ and Chuck Dettman in&#13;
indoor mile which 1s difficult the 2 mtle. McFadden was fifth&#13;
10 run because of the sharp in the . 880, and . Gary Lance&#13;
of Parkside placed fifth. fourth m the 2 mtle, reflecting&#13;
Fadden also captured the the depth of the team.&#13;
1.000 yard run. In the high jump the Rangers&#13;
Bob Waters, Ranger have a good young prospect in&#13;
fre hman from Milwaukee Eugene Prince , freshman from&#13;
oln. continued his fine Milwaukee . Prince won the&#13;
Hockey Bears Tie&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Park 1de's hockey team tied&#13;
1ewater State 3-3 at Wilson&#13;
Pu~ m \lilwaukee. The Range rs ared to be headed for&#13;
IOI'} but Whitewater scored&#13;
t}mg gual with 45 seconds&#13;
ming in the game.&#13;
The first period was&#13;
ra teri,ed by aggressive play&#13;
th both teams exhibiting&#13;
rong defen e. The lone goal in&#13;
period was scored with 2: 31&#13;
left. Whitewater took a 1-0 lead.&#13;
The second period was&#13;
scoreless with Whitewater&#13;
ou tshooting the Rangers 6-3.&#13;
Hard and close body checking in&#13;
the period resulted in six&#13;
penalty minutes for Parkside.&#13;
while Whitewater had four.&#13;
The third period found&#13;
Whitewater outshooting the&#13;
Rangers I 1-5, but Parkside&#13;
capitalized more frequently on&#13;
the shots and outscored the&#13;
visitors 3-2.&#13;
Lifters Place In State&#13;
scjuat 3 I 5, dead lift 525, for a&#13;
total of 1100 pounds and a fifth&#13;
place finish. All his lifts were&#13;
new UW-Parkside records but&#13;
they were quickly broken by&#13;
Joe Gemignani.&#13;
Joe Gemignani is having an&#13;
ex cell en t year Ii fting. In a&#13;
January meet he tied for third&#13;
while setting four new UWP&#13;
records in the middleweight&#13;
class. Up one weight class now&#13;
he broke the records established&#13;
by Jesse and finished third in&#13;
the state. His lifts were: bench&#13;
press 355, squat 450, deadlift&#13;
525 , for a total of 1330.&#13;
Judy Zimm~rman&#13;
event with a jump of 6T'. Luk&#13;
Toepel of . 'orthwe tern I&#13;
cleared 6'3". but he had m re&#13;
mi ses than Eugene. Larr}&#13;
Dronek. a Kominican jumper&#13;
who ha· done 6'6". could&#13;
manage "on!}.. b 'O" bef k&#13;
mis ing three time at b' I ".&#13;
When }OU mi three tam at&#13;
any given height ;-ou are out f&#13;
the competition . .&#13;
!ronically. hortly after the&#13;
event wa over Prince decided to&#13;
take a crack at 6'4". a height&#13;
which he failed to dear in three&#13;
earlier attempts. With the&#13;
Whitewater opened thtrd&#13;
period scoring to take a 2-0&#13;
lead. With 9 37 left to pla} K n&#13;
Lieko ki scored on a p werpla} . Some two minute later Rich&#13;
Rosko followed with a hard&#13;
shot to the right corner of the&#13;
net. Bill We terlund capp•d th&#13;
Ranger comeback effort t : o·&#13;
with a booming lap hot .&#13;
\Vhitewater. h we,er. • m&#13;
back to ·core the t} in.,, o&#13;
with 45 second left to pla~ . The Ranger thu had to ttl&#13;
for their second tie v.1th&#13;
Whitewater. Earlier in th&#13;
season the team dead! ~ ed at&#13;
5-5.&#13;
I s jwttJ,, s hW4, I&#13;
iike fad~n. Ranger enter, wa · cho en to repre nt&#13;
Parkside on a basketball t ur m orthern Europe th1 umm r.&#13;
The team al o in.Jude play r&#13;
from chool that played wJth&#13;
the wedi h tourmg te m th1&#13;
past sea&#13;
~&#13;
on&#13;
Gymna ti.. equipment 1&#13;
available to any Park 1de&#13;
student on Tue da&gt; e\em1 ~&#13;
from 7:30-9 :30 at Park lligh. It&#13;
i · an open e,ercise pen d 1d&#13;
instruction will be 3\31lablc 1f&#13;
desired. n}·one 111tere t d&#13;
should contact \\arren&#13;
McGillivray at 637-5~60.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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              </elementText>
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              </elementText>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Slate of Candidates</text>
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              <text>EE T&#13;
EDIT&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PAAKSIDE APRIL I 1971 VOLUME 3 HutroteER 10&#13;
SLATE&#13;
OF&#13;
CANDIDATES&#13;
President Recording Gary Davis Della Simpson&#13;
Tim Eaker Secretary Jeanette Dremel Tom Taskonis&#13;
David M. Karls David Weber George Fletcher Mark Timpany&#13;
Don Koser Corresponding Tom Garner Ed Toth&#13;
Ian MacTaggart Secretary John Gottfredsen Jack Tucker&#13;
Madeleine Thielen Sutton Kinter III K.enneth R. Konkol Walter Ulbricht&#13;
Vice Jean Koehler Michael Lofton Student Union&#13;
President&#13;
lYn Van Eimeren Senators Dean Loumos Committee&#13;
Ronn Williams Gary Adelsen Dale Martin Greg Barrette&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Mike Mayeshiba Ken Antaramian Tim Daley&#13;
D-ebbie Kemper Walt Breach Tom Meier Jerome Horton&#13;
larry Thielen Christopher Crowe David Scharneck Tom Kreul&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - PARKSIDE APRIL 1 1971&#13;
President&#13;
Tim Eaker&#13;
David M. Karls&#13;
Don Koser&#13;
Ian MacTaggart&#13;
Madeleine Thielen&#13;
Vice&#13;
President&#13;
Lyn Van Eimeren&#13;
Ronn Williams&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
l&gt;ebbie Kemper&#13;
Larry Thielen&#13;
SLATE&#13;
OF&#13;
CANDIDATES&#13;
Recording Gary Davis&#13;
Secretary Jeanette Oremel&#13;
David Weber George Fletcher&#13;
Corresponding Tom Garner&#13;
Secretary John Gottfredsen&#13;
Sutton Kinter Ill K.enneth R. Konkol&#13;
Jean Koehler Michael Lofton&#13;
Senators Dean Loumos&#13;
Gary Adelsen Dale Martin&#13;
Ken Antaramian Mike Mayeshiba&#13;
Walt Breach Tom Meier&#13;
Christopher Crowe David Scharneck&#13;
0&#13;
Della Simpson&#13;
Tom Taskonis&#13;
Mark Timpany&#13;
Ed Toth&#13;
Jack Tucker&#13;
Walter Ulbricht&#13;
Student Union&#13;
Committee&#13;
Greg Barrette&#13;
Tim Daley&#13;
Jerome Horton&#13;
Tom KreuJ &#13;
Roaald (.R.E.) Williams&#13;
I.tform consists of no gimmicks,&#13;
MYp or promises to shake-up this&#13;
~,.ty What we need at Parkside is&#13;
""' .....tani greatness, hut just a little in- IllI":" the student body. If elected Vice-&#13;
~;':t Ihope to initiate programs of&#13;
~ti~ and recreational value to the&#13;
:;ots with the hope that these will inIOI&lt;5tStudenls&#13;
and make them want to&#13;
_.tiClpale. . . ~.uVice-President, I WIU try to give the&#13;
,...teat government power to check the&#13;
adDlinistration in decisions concerning&#13;
one! affecting the student population. We&#13;
the university and without us there&#13;
~ be 00 reason for Parkside to exist.&#13;
l1&gt;e administration must be made to&#13;
resli%ethis and give us power in the&#13;
deciSions that relate to us.&#13;
1will strive diligently to see that campus&#13;
,.curity people are disarmed. These men&#13;
are not trained law enforcement officers&#13;
on&lt;! giving them guns is giving them a&#13;
licft1Se to use them against students.&#13;
Finally Ihope to he able to influence the&#13;
etlDmil~ on the Parkside ~ission to&#13;
dta08e&#13;
the mission from feeding college&#13;
p:adualeS to the industrial community of&#13;
""theastem Wisconsin to giving aU&#13;
_ols a well-rounded education of&#13;
benefitto all areas of endeavor.&#13;
r Jean Koehler&#13;
Door People: .&#13;
1lte lack of an outstanding popular issue&#13;
in this campaign requires that a candidate&#13;
Ile experienced in recogniziog and dealing&#13;
with the obscure problems like those&#13;
created by Parkside's Administrative&#13;
lkIreaucracy. Iam fortunate in having had&#13;
opportunities to participate in and learn&#13;
from a number of political actions&#13;
beginning with Student Government at&#13;
Cue high school. I was active in the&#13;
wrilingandarlfor the spring strike during&#13;
the Cambodia invasion and last fall's&#13;
action where I learned some of the&#13;
methods of the administration while&#13;
participating in the negotiations with the&#13;
Qancellor. ] also work with the Racine&#13;
SWitthboarqin providing free abortion and&#13;
problem pregnancy counseling and&#13;
referral lor the people of the community. I&#13;
lint encoWltered the harsh realities that a&#13;
_nt laces seeking her rights when we&#13;
tried to wear slacks and were threatened&#13;
with expulsion, AU we wanted to be was&#13;
comfortable. Samething happened when I&#13;
tried to enler Parkside before I offically&#13;
~dualed. Parkside said O.K.; Case said&#13;
tbat was a no-no, Even though these vickries&#13;
were small Ilearned a lot about how&#13;
10 deal with Administrative Red Tape.&#13;
These experiences have also helped me&#13;
10 learn to recognize that the needs of the&#13;
studentand the aims of a bureaucracy are&#13;
"'I always tbe same. The UWP student&#13;
body's needs and interests have been&#13;
Ier:Ondary to the administrative goals of&#13;
lC'ademic greatness and efficiency,&#13;
U elected, I hope to serve you with a&#13;
jrOgram of inquiries that will help us to&#13;
rtsoIve the needs of the students and the&#13;
IrObiems created by administrative enta~ents.&#13;
In addition to the duties of&#13;
Vice President L)... \' •• Elmert'8&#13;
An Ul$t1tulJon"Nch 1O""'''~''&#13;
academiC frtoedom in an) 'AI) m be&#13;
reconslructed and c100dy ... Id&gt;&lt;d 10&#13;
lDSUf'e I pI"'OIreSSI\ a'Aare of r&#13;
SOClety&#13;
I f I thaI 1M ludtnl SeNte mus'&#13;
function 0 guo.nhon oflhr otudonl&#13;
","hon the It of 1M ~I Pork do&#13;
odmtOl trollon threol~ 0 luclenl. nchl&#13;
to be tought by on 0"ere ond nl _&#13;
faculty The ne,.I)'·formlng tud nl&#13;
Go\"ernment at P Ide must eslIbi&#13;
some s)sttrn 01 0" r lhe ad&#13;
muustrahon so thai fut~ Inlnnlg&lt;:ments&#13;
agOlnsl tbe udon and loculI not&#13;
occur&#13;
Th~ &lt;h&#13;
lud~nt G&#13;
ibIe opposed au p&#13;
trong. central tudm.t Co\: t"f1t nd&#13;
an erreeuve htuuon for Park&#13;
now M\e a tenuall effectlv on&#13;
sutuuon and I hope 10 0 1lUl(l udmt&#13;
Senate ~m e, b8 ed by 0 COCK'Un&#13;
studonl bod&#13;
CorrespondingSecretarY------t&#13;
1M besl th for 1M poop! ··If. ou don'l&#13;
tnov. - ou can"t act •• Tlm 1 mportant&#13;
1 ,.-ill do my t to el t.h Inform'lton&#13;
th~ peopl~ OS n a I con. so thaI Ih&lt;')&#13;
",-m better sen·~th peopl~ -)ou All I&#13;
can do IS try.&#13;
Vote UTl'O.' L. KUTER 111 for. our&#13;
CORRESPO,:Dl.'G ECRETARYand I&#13;
"ill try.&#13;
"IF Y DO, --T K. '011 YO . 'T&#13;
ACT"&#13;
the office set down by the constitution, I&#13;
will use the facilities of the position to:&#13;
1) Maintain Hason with government and&#13;
student groups on other campuses in an&#13;
effort to keep Parkside informed and&#13;
active in events and actions relevant to the&#13;
students.&#13;
2) To form committees to;&#13;
a) research, report and act on the&#13;
operations and the methods of Student&#13;
Activities.&#13;
b) investigate the contracts and&#13;
operations of the Auxiliary Enterprises.&#13;
such as the bookstore, and the utilization of&#13;
the funds gained from the concessions&#13;
patronized by the students.&#13;
3) Poll the students on their views&#13;
iregarding the quality of education and&#13;
service provided by the school and the&#13;
need for new and improved programs and&#13;
facilities for the students.&#13;
Thank you.&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Larry Thielen&#13;
There is little need for eIa,borate&#13;
statements concerning my conceptIons of&#13;
how student government shoul~ be&#13;
. ed S,'nce Iam seeking the ofhce of organlz . . ed J&#13;
treasurer suffice it to say that, If elect t&#13;
will serve in that capacity to the best of ~&#13;
abilities. I think that my backgrou&#13;
suggests that I have the capabilIties to do&#13;
th~:::'3 member of the Halloween Party&#13;
and fully support its programs and the&#13;
rograms of its presidential, ?1ndid~te.&#13;
~adeleine Thielen. It is crItically l;nrtant&#13;
that, in voting for candid~tes or&#13;
~dent office, considerationhohe gI;~dt~&#13;
choosing those candIdates w ~an&#13;
student government that functions as an&#13;
efficient tool of the student body,&#13;
Debbie Kemper&#13;
when you read a platform you&#13;
I SUi~~ear a lot of specific promiSes&#13;
expec I propose to promote. But&#13;
and programs a student government that&#13;
somehow. 10 't seems to&#13;
sently exists only on paper, I&#13;
~: that this kind of promising can only he&#13;
Sullon L. Kinlu 111&#13;
Policy Statemenl&#13;
The Corresponding Secretary has on~&#13;
hasic requirement to his office - and that&#13;
is, providing 1M necessary lOformation 10&#13;
the people involved and to plenty 01 time&#13;
Cor their consideralion. The Corresponding&#13;
Secretary must get any doeumenl 1M&#13;
Senate needs prInled and dJstnbuted to&#13;
them so that they can hetter ser .... the&#13;
Sludent Body by knowing what's going on&#13;
An uninformed Student Go\'ernment is no&#13;
government at all The COrTeSpondlOg&#13;
Secretary guarantees thaI the tudenl&#13;
Government has the papers It needs and on&#13;
time.&#13;
An uninformed Student Body 1 no&#13;
student body. but lorner te 0&#13;
zombies The CorrespondlOg secretAI')&#13;
must provide any information the tudent&#13;
Government feel lhe Sludent Body should&#13;
know about. The Corresponchng Secreta&lt;)&#13;
provides lhis pnnted material to the&#13;
people so lhat the people can do somethIng&#13;
about it. U it's not on lime - It'S no good&#13;
The Corresponding ecrelar)' 81 0&#13;
provides publicity about upe:ormng t\'enb&#13;
the Studenl Government IS sponsonn If&#13;
this information is inaccurate or latt. it lS&#13;
no good. Il must be on time lor il to he 01&#13;
any use.&#13;
There are part of the responsibihlles of&#13;
the Corresponding Secretary. I)' poliO) ,&#13;
to get the informotion prlOted and&#13;
distributed to lhe concerned peopl~ SO thaI&#13;
they have plenty olllme to slud)' II ond do&#13;
•&#13;
lounded on wishful thinking of possesstOg a&#13;
power not yet material, zed On these&#13;
grounds, I feel J can only Illve you my&#13;
ideas of what Iwould like to see happen to&#13;
our inCant student government and make It&#13;
clear that I'll do all Ican to really make It&#13;
work.&#13;
It seems that at ParksJde the main&#13;
problems confronting the ~tudent bod)&#13;
come baek to apathy and coofusion 01&#13;
who's in power and ....nat JXlW'ers \\e. as&#13;
studenlS, possess_ Therefore, "orlong lor&#13;
the growth of a strong studenl gO\'ernmenl&#13;
should bring about a centralization 01&#13;
student forces that would aUe,'iote most of&#13;
ourdisorganization; and concret~ projeCts&#13;
representative of the shxtenl VOice I,liould&#13;
bring about the realization of IMexteot 01&#13;
student power and should be a big step ,n&#13;
redoclDil apathy.&#13;
This probably all sounds like rhetorical&#13;
bullshit bUI I'm not going to promise&#13;
anyth;ng based on pov.-er as.:)'el untried ..l&#13;
can only establish thaI I'll try 10 make thIS&#13;
power become a reality and bring to&#13;
Parkside students the vOIce they deserve.&#13;
IRecording I&#13;
Secretary&#13;
Oa\id"f'~r&#13;
It IS hard to r rmulate an hrm hllal&#13;
postures for an ofl,ce such os record,&#13;
se&lt;ntary. ",. to k I the mor dllhcull&#13;
v..nen ooe is n.D'lnu~ ~&#13;
I am rumung lor ofhce on the Hal10&#13;
Parly!JekeL Ilully accept the program of&#13;
our pre8ldenllaJ cand,dote, .ladel n&#13;
ThIelen, and the Party's lance 10' nag&#13;
1M People' Peace Treal) Tlus IS the llm~&#13;
for Parkslde to he changed from a place&#13;
where one merel) attends cI to 0&#13;
place where one can become In\'Ohed 1n&#13;
mearungful relationships and achons.&#13;
At i ue, in electing student represen'&#13;
latives, is the selection of candidate \\ ho&#13;
will make the student body 0 Viable part of&#13;
the operallOll of th,s Umvers,ty. I hope thaI&#13;
...-hen you go to tbe polls, you thmk of&#13;
Halloween.&#13;
Ronald ( .R.E.) Williams&#13;
1 platform consists of no gimmicks,&#13;
MyP ~ promises to shake-up this&#13;
tri(kS, . Whal we need at Parkside is&#13;
1111v~:i greatness, but just a little in111)1&#13;
~ the student body. If elected ViceiertS_~~t&#13;
I hope to initiate programs of&#13;
pres! tic' and recreational value to the&#13;
~~~ with the hope that these will in- :;1 students and make them want to&#13;
... rbcipate. . . r- Vice-President, I will try to give the&#13;
A5 nt government power to check the&#13;
sllJ(le jniStration in decisions concerning&#13;
~ affecting the student population. We&#13;
the university and without us there&#13;
~d be no reason for Parkside to exist.&#13;
'J1lt administration must be made to&#13;
real1Ze this and give us power in the&#13;
dedSions that relate to us.&#13;
I will strive diligently to see that campus&#13;
urity people are disarmed. These men&#13;
not trained law enforcement officers&#13;
d giving them guns is giving them a&#13;
license to use them against students.&#13;
Finally, I hope to be able to influence the&#13;
COlllmittee on the Parkside mission to&#13;
change the mission from feeding college&#13;
duates to the industrial community of&#13;
swtheastem Wisconsin to giving all&#13;
5111dents a well-rounded education of&#13;
nefil lo all areas of endeavor.&#13;
r Jean Koehler&#13;
Dear People: . The lack of an outstanding popular _issue&#13;
this campaign requires that a candidate&#13;
experienced in recognizing and dealing&#13;
'liith the obscure problems like those&#13;
created by Parkside's Administrative&#13;
Bureaucracy. I am fortunate in having had&#13;
opportunities to participate in and learn&#13;
from a number of political actions&#13;
· ning with Student Government at&#13;
Case high school. I was active in the&#13;
writing and art for the spring strike during&#13;
Cambodia invasion and last fall's&#13;
action where I learned some of the&#13;
mechods of the administration while&#13;
participating in the negotiations with the&#13;
Oiancellor. I also work with the Racine&#13;
tchboar~ in providing free abortion and&#13;
problem pregnancy counseling and&#13;
referral for the people of the community. I&#13;
6 t encountered the harsh realities thal a&#13;
dent faces seeking her rights when we&#13;
tried to wear slacks and were threatened&#13;
th expulsion. All we wanted to be was&#13;
comfortable. Samething happened when I&#13;
tried lo enter Parkside before I offically&#13;
~•duated. Parkside said O.K.; Case said&#13;
lltat was a no-no. Even though these viclGries&#13;
were small I learned a lot about how&#13;
lo deal with Administrative Red Tape.&#13;
These experiences have also helped me&#13;
lo learn lo recognize that the needs of the&#13;
student and the aims of a bureaucracy are&#13;
not always the same. The UWP student&#13;
's needs and interests have been&#13;
ndary to the administrative goals of&#13;
IIC&amp;demic greatness and efficiency.&#13;
If elected, I hope to serve you with a&#13;
P'Ogram or inquiries that will help us to&#13;
resotve the needs of the students and the&#13;
JrOblem created by administrative entanglements.&#13;
In addition to the duties of&#13;
Vice President&#13;
Corresponding Secretary--------,&#13;
the office set down by the con titution, I&#13;
will use the facilities of the position lo:&#13;
1) Maintain liason with government and&#13;
student groups on other campuses in an&#13;
effort to keep Parkside informed and&#13;
active in events and actions relevant lo the&#13;
students. 2 ) To form committees to;&#13;
a) research, report and act on the&#13;
operations and the methods of tudent&#13;
Activities.&#13;
b) investigate the contract and&#13;
operations of the uxiliary Enterpri ,&#13;
such as the bookstore, and the utilization or&#13;
the funds gained from the con&#13;
patronized by the tudents.&#13;
3) Poll the stud nts on their v1ev.&#13;
jregarding the quality of ed ation nd&#13;
service provid d by the chool and th&#13;
need for new and improved program and&#13;
facilities for the tud nts.&#13;
Thank you.&#13;
Treasurer&#13;
Larr) Thi len&#13;
There is little need for ela,borate&#13;
statements concerning my conception of&#13;
how student government houl~ be . ed Since I am eeking the office of&#13;
orgamz • •r I led 1&#13;
treasurer suffice it to say that, , e ec . will serve in that capacity to the best o~&#13;
abilities. I think that my ~c_kgr&#13;
suggests that I have the capab1htie to do&#13;
th "b ~ cinl ·a member of the HalJoween Part)&#13;
and fully support its program a"? the&#13;
of its presidential candidate,&#13;
programs "ti ally im&#13;
Madeleine Thielen. It is en c f • rtant that, in voting for candida_tes or&#13;
:dent office, consideration be g1:~dt~&#13;
choosing those candidates who ~an ~s an student government that function&#13;
efficient tool of the student body.&#13;
Debbie Kemper e when you read a platform you&#13;
I suppos hear a lot of pecific prom, es expect to I propose to promote. But&#13;
:!~::a:;:sa student gove~m:tm th~!&#13;
resenUy exists only on paper, tl . be&#13;
~e that this kind of promising can onl&gt;&#13;
IRecordi g I&#13;
Secretary &#13;
Gary Davis&#13;
StudentGovernment elections will&#13;
",. nTuesday and Wednesday of next&#13;
liebe!d~incethe only popular issue is&#13;
.,.t. t Rights, and everyone's for that,&#13;
9ude" only hope that the Real Student&#13;
.. c~ candidate will. stand up. A good&#13;
Ri3h candidates running under the&#13;
"~t Rights Banner have pledged to&#13;
9 k closely with the uni~ersity adfOf,&#13;
tration in ~~king solub~ns t~ the&#13;
"'':iem' of "silting and wmnowmg."&#13;
~ logicappears to be a well motivated&#13;
deSiretopresent the students' problems in&#13;
frCl1tof those who possess the power to&#13;
c&lt;l" withthem.&#13;
t canunderstand their positi~n ..I kn,ow&#13;
frOIl1 experience that the administration&#13;
ill workon student problems with great&#13;
~m and effort. The only difficulty is&#13;
that the administration treats the students&#13;
" theproblem. .&#13;
AboUtthree weeks ago, a number of&#13;
Ie from various groups met with the&#13;
:. 'ofStudents and the Cbancellor. The&#13;
administrators gave their personal'&#13;
guaranteethat Luddite, a political student&#13;
group that includes the Halloween Party&#13;
candidates,would be able to use the&#13;
\lliversityfacilities for public showings of&#13;
polit~cally oriented multi-media&#13;
iJ08fams.&#13;
LastThursday night we tried to show a&#13;
W in Racine, "Inside North VietI)am".&#13;
Althoughwe had planned to show two&#13;
lifferent films, we scheduled "Inside&#13;
North Vietnam" on short notice because&#13;
this wouldbe our only chance t9 obtain the&#13;
film, and because the movie's reputation&#13;
'lor fairnessand objectivity made us feel&#13;
that its showing would be worthwhile for&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Sameline Thursday, Racine Unified se""" District called Parkside to object to&#13;
tbeshowing of this "subversive film". The&#13;
administrative wheels ground out an&#13;
acquiescentreply and the office of Student&#13;
Affairsin the form of Tony Totero called&#13;
lateThursdayafternoon to inform us that&#13;
.. couldn't show the fiick at Parkside&#13;
~lf;e our room application form had&#13;
listed the other two films.&#13;
Wecollected our heads to assess the&#13;
iluatilll and discovered that this was no&#13;
liilbt hassle: The administration was&#13;
tearing down our announcements and&#13;
posting cancellation notices. The room we&#13;
.... to use had been locked and the&#13;
Racine ptgs had ~ent in an undercover&#13;
.... d led by prominent oinker, Ron&#13;
Hansen. But more important, the film had&#13;
aTivedfrom Marquette University, and&#13;
OYer 200people had come to see it! We&#13;
dIeckedoot the campus, found the lecture&#13;
ball empty,moved in, and showed the film,&#13;
The ~gs were unable to cope with a crowd&#13;
thatslze,so they sulked around for awhile,&#13;
lhen left for their pen after arranging to&#13;
have the Marquette people stopped and&#13;
harrassed on their way back to&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Rememberthis episode when you hear&#13;
Ibooe whoseek office on the basis of their&#13;
abilityto work with the administration.&#13;
'Ibis is only one incident' others like it&#13;
bavebeengoingon since the place opened.&#13;
Thecandidates of llie Halloween Party&#13;
:ve been working on student problems&#13;
to abouttwoyears. They know better than&#13;
trust the bureaucrats. They know that&#13;
~ faculty has failed to lead itself, let&#13;
no stUdents, in the defense of their&#13;
~Is. They have a platform of action&#13;
f sed on their experience in the con·&#13;
:ence rOOmand on the picket lines. They&#13;
veshownby their actions that there can&#13;
be ·no compromise i th&#13;
Student Rights. The \ e struggle for&#13;
determination and loYal ave proven their&#13;
of continual harrass~ tr over two years&#13;
or will co-opt us. en s - nobody has&#13;
Regarding my own candid&#13;
been fortunate enough t be acy, I have&#13;
for the people since 0 able to work&#13;
Revoluti . 1965. I am a&#13;
~d ~~I~~~~rn~: ~~e::.,~e:;,~el~~~a~i::~~&#13;
Am 'K peop e held in bondage in&#13;
e~l Kan Babylon by whatever "'eans&#13;
required M' .&#13;
at Park~ideY Views rlelgardingthe situation&#13;
are we known b all&#13;
worked .on the Vietnam Moratg;.ium ~~&#13;
~arl Strike, and last fall's Faculty Cri~is I&#13;
~~ r::~~e.no apologies for my action·s&#13;
s stand on my record If mv&#13;
program and actions don't earn ~e som~&#13;
enemies. I will have failed.&#13;
George Fletcher&#13;
The platform which I stand on is not&#13;
supported by the planks of issues, but the&#13;
bodies of students themselves,&#13;
Parkside's student government, to be an&#13;
effective vehicle of the students, will have&#13;
to be aggressive. The elected body will&#13;
have to fight the administration for every&#13;
conceivable benefit for the student.&#13;
Student rights can no longer be a dream,&#13;
but must be converted into practicing fact.&#13;
The student activity building must become&#13;
just that, a building for students, The inflated&#13;
prices charged for food and&#13;
recreation must be brought down to the&#13;
financial level of the students. The idea of&#13;
a co-op book store run by the student body&#13;
should be explored, making possible to&#13;
students a lower cost for books and SUIr&#13;
plies. Responsible evaluation of faculty by&#13;
the combined efforts of students, faculty&#13;
and administrative groups must become a&#13;
part of tradition at Parkside.&#13;
The Parks ide student government&#13;
should always be reading the pulse of the&#13;
student bndy. Working and fighting for the&#13;
ideas of the students it represents.&#13;
In conclusion, I condense my platform in&#13;
two words - STUDENT POWER. These&#13;
two words I pledge to fight for if elected.&#13;
Bank of&#13;
ElIIlwood&#13;
2704 lcrfhrcrp J,.y•.• /focin., Wi,con,in&#13;
Students get red cafpet ser ....ice&#13;
(SO does everyone else!)&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
"&#13;
-&#13;
. ~tarlr. Timpan)&#13;
As candidate for senator. running on the&#13;
Halloween Party ticket, I recogruze that&#13;
Slg~l~C~t change in political and social&#13;
act ivities ultimately springs (rom&#13;
technological change. •&#13;
Th~ people who have the most&#13;
meamngful comment on rny campaign are&#13;
the new physicists, Erwin Schrodmger of&#13;
~e Schrodinger wave equation, stated that&#13;
consciousness i the singular or \lo hich the&#13;
plural is unknown". Here at Par ide. e&#13;
ar~ in a position where the only eonsciousness&#13;
is setr-consctousness The&#13;
Halloween Party bopes to change thai&#13;
~ard was once asked if. by his films.&#13;
he intended to effect a change In Iilrnmaking.&#13;
He replied that he was out to&#13;
change the world. I strongly agree with&#13;
Bertrand Russell that what is needed I a&#13;
change in our imaginative plcture of the&#13;
world, To phrase It McLuhanislically,&#13;
what is needed is a new balance o( the&#13;
senses.&#13;
As a member of the Halloween Part\' I&#13;
accept the need (or radical action_ Ii'IS&#13;
important to note, though, that goal&#13;
directed radical action is generall)'&#13;
meaningless and. unless you operate to&#13;
change total s)"Stems of IOteractloo. your&#13;
actions will easily be co-opted by the&#13;
system. Tloe highest purpose is to ha\'e no&#13;
purpose at all.&#13;
I fully accept and will support the&#13;
programs of Madeleine Thielen.&#13;
Halloween Party candidate (or pres.ldenL&#13;
The Halloween Party is OrgaOlZed around&#13;
the harmonic structures o( the mu ic of&#13;
John Cage. That form of organization I&#13;
our plan (or student government.&#13;
(Ray rRadilJan&#13;
o".1 er 1,,1 ood&#13;
For&#13;
Re en ation&#13;
Phone&#13;
69-i·O-+55&#13;
THOUSA os&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
207 SIXTH SIItEfT&#13;
lACI E, WISCONSIN SUO)&#13;
3200 60lh 51,&#13;
6 O,m, lill 11 p,m, 7 doyo&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
Phono 657 -9H7&#13;
«37 - .2nd Avonuo&#13;
Kono"'o, W"'COfW"l\ 53140&#13;
Frt,{' Ddin"1&#13;
05-+,(1 -'-+&#13;
~&#13;
'W&#13;
\\ 1/&#13;
The BRAT Is&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
DAilY SPECiAl&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.&#13;
A Bo"Je of&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru friday 7 p.1I\. to 8 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
A".II'" F. P...Ie.&#13;
,-1.4 ... F....... " .... s.-Itr P... Ie.&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
1'" BRAT-STOP&#13;
Na...... e-1:..t4 ...............&#13;
STEAK,&#13;
BRAT or&#13;
BEEFBURGER&#13;
Gary Davis&#13;
Student Government elections will&#13;
11i;d nTue day and Wednesday of next&#13;
b ;ince the only popular issue is&#13;
nt Rights, and everyone's for that,&#13;
~ only hope that the Real Student&#13;
r: candidate will stand up. A good&#13;
gigh. candidates running under the&#13;
~t Rights Banner have pledged to&#13;
k closelY with . the uni~ersity adtration&#13;
in seeking solutions to the&#13;
blems of "sifting and winno~ing."&#13;
I'° logic appears to be a well motivated&#13;
~e to present the students' problems in&#13;
frOlll of those who possess the power to&#13;
cope with them.&#13;
1 can understand their positi~n._ I kn_ow&#13;
(rOlll experience that the admm1stratton&#13;
ill work on student problems with great&#13;
coPcern and effort. The only difficulty is&#13;
1 the administration treats the students&#13;
the problem.&#13;
~bout three weeks ago, a nwnber of&#13;
· le from various groups met with the&#13;
Dean of Students and the Chancellor. The&#13;
dministrators gave their personal&#13;
arantee that Luddite, a political student&#13;
group that includes the Halloween Party&#13;
ndidates, would be able to use the&#13;
11111versity facilities for public showings of&#13;
polittcally oriented multi-media&#13;
irogram . La t Thursday night we tried to show a&#13;
in Racine, "Inside orth Vietnam".&#13;
though we had planned to show two&#13;
liJferenl film , we scheduled "Inside&#13;
orlh Vietnam" on short notice because&#13;
would be ow- only chance to obtain the&#13;
film, and because the movie's reputation&#13;
'for fairness and objectivity made us feel&#13;
t its showing would be worthwhile for&#13;
Par ide.&#13;
Someline Thw-sday, Racine Unified&#13;
boo! District called Parkside to object to&#13;
the showing of this "subversive film" . The&#13;
administrative wheels ground out an&#13;
acquiescent reply and the office of Student&#13;
Affairs in the form of Tony Totero called&#13;
late Thursday afternoon to inform us that&#13;
t couldn't show the flick at Parkside&#13;
bttau.se our room application form had&#13;
led the other two films.&#13;
We collected our heads to assess the&#13;
situation and discovered that this was no&#13;
slight hassle: The administration was&#13;
tearing down our announcements and&#13;
ting cancellation notices. The room we&#13;
to use had been locked and the&#13;
Racine pigs had sent in an undercover&#13;
Sflad led by prominent oinker, Ron&#13;
Hansen. But more important, the film had&#13;
lrTiVed from Marquette University, and&#13;
O'itt 200 people had come to see it! We&#13;
ed out the campus, found the lecture&#13;
hall empty, moved in, and showed the film.&#13;
The pigs were unable to cope with a crowd&#13;
that ize, so they sulked around for awhile,&#13;
then left £or their pen after arranging to&#13;
b ve lhe Marquette people stopped and&#13;
arra sed on their way back to&#13;
il ·aukee.&#13;
Remember this episode when you hear&#13;
these who seek office on the basis of their&#13;
ability lo work with the administration.&#13;
is only one incident; others like it&#13;
have been going on since the place opened.&#13;
The candidates of the Halloween Party&#13;
~ve been working on student problems&#13;
lo about two years. They know better than&#13;
rust the bureaucrats. They know that&#13;
faculty has failed to lead itself, let&#13;
alone students, in the defense of their&#13;
~- They have a platform of action&#13;
( on their experience in the conerence&#13;
room and on the picket Hnes. They&#13;
ve hown by their actions that there can&#13;
be no compromise in th&#13;
Student Rights. The e struggle for&#13;
determination and liy.:;:ve proven their&#13;
of continual ha Y over two years rrassments bod or will co-opt us. - no Y ha&#13;
Regarding my own ca did&#13;
been fortunate enough t nbe acy, I have&#13;
for the people s· 0 able to work&#13;
R . mce 1965 I a evolutionary in ev · m a&#13;
and will continue to C::e~~~e I~ the . word&#13;
all the people held . 1 ration of&#13;
ArneriKK 8 b m bondage in&#13;
required. :1 via ylon by ~hateve~ means&#13;
at Parksidi ar:w!;~~~!~ t; ~~ati~n&#13;
worked _on the Vietnam foratorium ~~&#13;
~all Strike, and last fall's Faculty Cri;i I&#13;
!n~ 1::~te no apologie for my action· , s stand on my record U m . progr~m and actions don't earn .:ne om~ enemies, I will have failed.&#13;
George Fletch r&#13;
The platform which I stand on i not&#13;
supported by the planks of i u , but the&#13;
bodies of students themselves.&#13;
Parkside's student government. to be an&#13;
effective vehicle of the student , "';u ha\'e&#13;
to be aggressive. The elected bod will&#13;
have to fight the administration for ·ev r ·&#13;
conceivable benefit for the student.&#13;
Student rights can no longer be a dream,&#13;
but must be converted into practicing fact.&#13;
The student activity building must become&#13;
just that, a building for tud nt . Th inflated&#13;
prices charged for food and&#13;
recreation must be brought down to the&#13;
financial level of the students. The idea of&#13;
a co-op book store run by the tudent y&#13;
should be explored, making pos ible to&#13;
students a lower cost for books and upplies.&#13;
Responsible evaluation of faculty by&#13;
the combined efforts of students, facult •&#13;
and administrative group mu t become a&#13;
part of tradition at Park id .&#13;
The Parkside tudent go\' rnment&#13;
should alway be reading the pul e of the&#13;
student body. Working and fi hting for th&#13;
ideas of the tudents it repr nts.&#13;
In conclusion, I cond n my platform m&#13;
two words - ST DE 'T OWER. Thee&#13;
two words I pledge to fight for if elected.&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 Lalhrap AH,, •aclne, Wi,can,in&#13;
Students eet red carpet seivice&#13;
(So does everyone el e!)&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
00&#13;
WESTS DE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
6 o. • ill&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
P o e 657-97 7&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
DAILY SPECIAL&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.&#13;
A Bottle of&#13;
1nd I&#13;
STEAK,&#13;
BRAT or&#13;
BEEFBURGER&#13;
Alcoholic&#13;
Beverage&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
JI&#13;
Is&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20C&#13;
AHII.We Fw Pert •&#13;
lac'-llat ,,...,_,., • S--lty Pertle•&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
'"' BRAT-STOP ........ , c.... ,:.,.. ••..tu .... ., • &#13;
NEWaCOPE 1lIw .,. AprIL I P_ 7&#13;
J.." TiIdl... I&#13;
'Evolulioo' - not revolution - IS what's&#13;
needed here at Parkstde A successful&#13;
revolution. whether for the best or not. 1$&#13;
an exception to the rule rather than l.h&#13;
common Parkside IS In need of something.&#13;
but 1 do not feel that it is a revolution Our&#13;
campus is "Parkside High SChool", not the&#13;
University of Parkside. 1 believe thai our&#13;
campus, to become a umversrty, should do&#13;
so through the fastest possible evoluucn&#13;
instead of a revoluuon which has too many&#13;
bad connotation connected with It Vnloke&#13;
most revolutions. where. if uccessrul.&#13;
opponents are eliminated and the winners&#13;
take over, the student government, If they&#13;
get the power and authonty that should be&#13;
there, must still deal with the eXlstmg&#13;
administration. so there is not any need to&#13;
alienate ourselves with them.&#13;
Another thing Ifeel strongly about IS the&#13;
Student Union. I think It IS a real shame&#13;
thai the Student Union Isn't really the&#13;
"Student's Union" Lavern Martinez runs&#13;
practically everything and. In my opinion.&#13;
quite orten not in the best interest of the&#13;
students. A student committee should run&#13;
il A cup of beer costs 2S cenls until a&#13;
weekend dance. when more people show&#13;
up, and it becomes 30 cents. Also it is only&#13;
open until ten p.m. on all days except for a&#13;
weekend dance. it would be 10 the better&#13;
interest of the students if it was open later,&#13;
especially on Saturdays. He pracuces. I&#13;
feel. unfair ly against tudent&#13;
organizations in cbtammg the umon for a&#13;
(unction of their own If an erganizauon&#13;
were to have a dance on a Saturday night. I&#13;
think it unfair to thN1Wa dance on the rught&#13;
before. making it hard and sometimes&#13;
impossible for organizations to make a&#13;
prom or ju t to break e\·en. and mo t&#13;
orgamzations are strugghng the wa)' It is.&#13;
These three issues. the evolution of&#13;
Parkside. Marlmez and lhe Union, and&#13;
organizationallroubles. among others. are&#13;
the ones that I would right 10 help; so on&#13;
election day, I hope that you give me the&#13;
chance to do so as senator&#13;
r;;:Kenneth R, Kookol&#13;
d on my past performance:&#13;
IS::~for student rights before it&#13;
I e popular to do so.&#13;
beC"rn te a weekly column called 'Thorn'&#13;
.I::ch I held strong opinions on all&#13;
JI\ rs affecting students.&#13;
matte first to oppose MacKinney's policy&#13;
Iwal~t Grealness and first to call for&#13;
c1.lns nd Harris' resignation in print.&#13;
thiS a .&#13;
, 'ther is with us n?w.. .'~ .,&#13;
N~ posed the indlscrlmmanl fir-ing of&#13;
OIl tant professors and just as firmly&#13;
:::'"~ the non-selective retention of the&#13;
inCornpetanl.&#13;
Iarranged the press (TV) coverage for&#13;
'dent Weaver's first visit here and&#13;
Pre5'theone student to confront him with&#13;
- same dismissals on his arrival.&#13;
U!fconfronted Regent Walker with the&#13;
ridi&lt;:~ousness of the Chanceloors' 'ten&#13;
pllJl\ts. d ti .•• I arranged the stu ent mee ng wnn&#13;
GovernorLucey on his arrival here to&#13;
cisCuss the budget proposal and its affect&#13;
CIl students,&#13;
Ihave interviewed ~ll.pers~ms of implrtance&#13;
in the administration and I&#13;
cootinueto do so.&#13;
U I could do all this by myself, imagine&#13;
what we could do together in a strong&#13;
student government. .&#13;
My Platform: . . .&#13;
Revisionof constltution to make offices&#13;
of Vice President, Treasurer, and&#13;
Secretarieschosen by election within the&#13;
studentsenate. On student evaluation of&#13;
teachers;if 51 per cent of an instructors'&#13;
atudentsjudge him to be incompetantthen&#13;
his contract shall be terminated at the end&#13;
m the present semester and he be allowed&#13;
to serve out his remaining time in another&#13;
rapacity.&#13;
Students and faculty shall each have 50&#13;
r cent of sayan hiring, firing, and&#13;
ntionof prospective faculty members.&#13;
inistration shall have no say.&#13;
Studentswill be voting members on all&#13;
'versity committees.&#13;
All money profits spent on student&#13;
ported activities shall be returned to&#13;
nts by some suitable method.&#13;
Allparking fines shall be enforced and 50&#13;
reent of revenue shall be returned to the&#13;
denls. The other 50 per· cent shall go&#13;
ards enforcement of said fines and&#13;
·ng of persons specifically to enforce&#13;
fines who shall be. independent of&#13;
mpus security and responsible to the&#13;
dent senate.&#13;
Any means to improve the competence&#13;
efficiency of this University shall be&#13;
ilized,&#13;
Thomas C. Garner&#13;
U elected to the senate I will try to&#13;
remove the communication gap between&#13;
the administration and students by&#13;
establIshing listening posts so that the&#13;
students will have someone' to listen and&#13;
act on their grievances.&#13;
2) I will make sure that the students will&#13;
know what is going on around school for&#13;
example how the positions are sel~ted&#13;
such as editors, senators, etc., by way of a&#13;
What's New. bulletin board whi!re&#13;
literature will be posted to inform the&#13;
students.&#13;
3) Strive to make the students'&#13;
evaluation of the instructors have as mush&#13;
importance as the faculty and ad.&#13;
ministration's evaluation.&#13;
4) Try to make the classrooms at&#13;
Greenquist more conducive to learning&#13;
instead of the sterile cubicles that they&#13;
are.&#13;
5) All my actions will be student&#13;
oriented.&#13;
Tom Task_is&#13;
Apathy? - it's a new, incomplete school.&#13;
It must be completed and established&#13;
before significant involvement begins&#13;
The school paper improves but I thmk&#13;
that if we don't have enough political or&#13;
any other type of news around this area.&#13;
we would like to hear "what's happerung"&#13;
at other schools. Now, the Luddite's&#13;
column is being thrown out - irresponsibility&#13;
will out. But at any rate, I believe&#13;
the paper should be subsidized and credits&#13;
MUST be given for working on it.&#13;
Our monies diminish; our patience is&#13;
taxed. Why? - MACHINES! I believe&#13;
lunch counters should beopen 'til buildings&#13;
close and music "piped-in" rather than&#13;
digging in pockets for juke box.&#13;
Our transportation system is gross.&#13;
Construction of a moving sidewalk has&#13;
been suggested.&#13;
The campus security torce must be&#13;
disarmed before we have another Kent&#13;
State type incident!&#13;
Space limits me, but 1 must mention one&#13;
more point. Those students in Madisoo.&#13;
who are there for purposes of negotiating&#13;
for funds for Parkside, are pulling one big&#13;
snow job on the students of Parkside.&#13;
Please ask me about this.&#13;
Remember, the Halloween Party does&#13;
not put its OWII irons in the fire, but those of&#13;
you students. If you want a party looking&#13;
out for YOUR interests and not THEIR'S,&#13;
you WANT the Halloween Party (yoo may&#13;
have seen our clever, satirical posters).&#13;
Tom Meier&#13;
I am running (or student senator&#13;
because Ifeel the need (or programs that&#13;
benefit the students and not drain their&#13;
pocketbooks. I would like to see a student&#13;
co-op bookstore set up to cut costs of books,&#13;
which seem to have skyrocketed.&#13;
Iam for a 'student court to handle cases&#13;
that occur in the university, and this court&#13;
would have power. I believe in complete&#13;
control of student activities, including that&#13;
of the building to be in the hands of a&#13;
student committee, as prescribed by the&#13;
constitution. All money made in the activities'&#13;
building should be put in finds for&#13;
the operation of student activities, so that&#13;
the money comes back to the student.&#13;
I believe there should be controls put on&#13;
the campus police.&#13;
I believe a clear list of functions and&#13;
duties by the police should be established.&#13;
I am for student power. I feel that we, as&#13;
students, should have more to say about&#13;
the way our university is being han?-!ed. I&#13;
feel the administration is slowly cutting off&#13;
channels open to the student and slowing&#13;
down the progress of this university's&#13;
development into becoming a much m?re&#13;
relevant part of the student's l~fe, ~hlC.h&#13;
must be curbed. I believe the umvers1ty IS&#13;
much more than just a place to attend&#13;
class.&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing •&#13;
Della Simpson&#13;
Students don't have much money and&#13;
need to get more in return for their books&#13;
at the end of a semester.&#13;
Cafeteria prices are a liUle higher, too.&#13;
We need better prices because students&#13;
don'l earn much salary. For example,&#13;
what's wrong with coffee for 10 cents or&#13;
sandwiches at 25 cents from a \'ending&#13;
machine.&#13;
Free activities for students as well.&#13;
A&#13;
HAMMOND ORGA&#13;
'Tradition of Excellence.&#13;
./&#13;
/&#13;
r Kl G of ORGA&#13;
r&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Candy&#13;
See Jim Merrick "Mr. Hammond" For Guaranteed SerVice &amp; Trade-in Value&#13;
Out .f Town-Call Collect&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
1.!~~111~C!!!~~&#13;
"If IJftkr Orrruu /&amp;n: Buill, H--.d tftII BuiW'IItJ-a..&#13;
Kenneth R. Konkol&#13;
011 my past performance:&#13;
5 for student rights before it&#13;
1 e p0pular to do so. i,eca~te a weekly column called 'Thorn'&#13;
1 11h ch 1 held strong opinions on all&#13;
jpWl • d ts tters affecting stu en . 1118 s first to oppose MacKinney's policy&#13;
\:tant Greatness a~d fi~st t~ call _for ol_ and Harris' resignation m prmt.&#13;
~ 1 ther is with us n~w.. . • . . • ~1 opp0sed the ind1scnmmant firmg of&#13;
petant professors and just as firmly&#13;
CofTl se the non-selective retention of the&#13;
~po&#13;
u,competant.&#13;
1 arranged the press (TV) coverage for&#13;
president Weaver's first visit here and&#13;
was the one stud~nt to conf~ont ~m with same dismissals on his arrival.&#13;
thfconrronted Regent Walker with the&#13;
ndiculousness of the Chanceloors' 'ten&#13;
. ts' pof a~anged the student meeting with&#13;
c;overnor Lucey on his arrival here to&#13;
discUSS the budget proposal and its affect&#13;
00 students. . . I have interviewed all persons of importance&#13;
in the administration and I&#13;
continue to do so. u I could do all this by myself, imagine&#13;
what we could do together in a strong&#13;
student government.&#13;
My Platrorm:&#13;
Revision of constitution to make offices&#13;
of Vice President, Treasurer, and&#13;
Secretaries chosen by election within the&#13;
tudenl senate. On student evaluation of&#13;
teachers; if 51 per cent of an instructors'&#13;
tudents judge him to be incompetant then&#13;
his contract shall be terminated at the end&#13;
m the present semester and he be allowed&#13;
to serve out his remaining time in another&#13;
capacity.&#13;
Students and faculty shall each have 50&#13;
per cent of say on hiring, firing, and&#13;
retention of prospective faculty members.&#13;
Administration shall have no say.&#13;
tudents will be voting members on all&#13;
umversity committees.&#13;
All money profits spent on student&#13;
ported activities shall be returned to&#13;
dents by some suitable method.&#13;
All parking fines shall be enforced and 50&#13;
r cent of revenue shall be returned to the&#13;
dents. The other 50 per -cent shall go&#13;
ards enforcement of said fines and&#13;
ing of persons specifically to enforce&#13;
fines who shall be independent of&#13;
mpus security and responsible to the&#13;
dent senate.&#13;
Any means to improve the competence&#13;
d efficiency of this University shall be&#13;
tilized.&#13;
Thomas C. Garner&#13;
U elected to the senate I will try to&#13;
remove t~. communication gap between&#13;
the a_d~m1s~ration and students by&#13;
establishing listening posts so that the&#13;
students will have someone' to listen and&#13;
act on their grievances.&#13;
2&gt; I will make sure that the students will&#13;
know what is going on around school, for&#13;
example how the positions are selected&#13;
such as editors, senators, etc ., by way of a&#13;
~hat's ew bulletin board where&#13;
literature will be posted to inform the&#13;
students.&#13;
3) Strive to make the students'&#13;
~valuation of the instructors have as mush&#13;
importance as the faculty and administration•~&#13;
evaluation.&#13;
4) Try to make the classrooms at&#13;
~reenquist more conducive to learning&#13;
mstead of the sterile cubicles that they&#13;
are.&#13;
5) All my actions will be student&#13;
oriented.&#13;
Tom tei r&#13;
I am running for stud nl senator&#13;
because I feel the need for programs that&#13;
benefit the students and not drain their&#13;
pocketbooks. I would like to see a student&#13;
co-op bookstore set up to cut costs of books,&#13;
which seem to have kyrocketed.&#13;
I am for a 'student court lo handle ca es&#13;
that occur in the university. and thi court&#13;
would have power. I believe in complete&#13;
control of student activities, includin that&#13;
of the building to be in the hands of a&#13;
student committee. as pr cribed by the&#13;
constitution. All money made in th activities'&#13;
building should be put in find for&#13;
the operation of student activities, so that&#13;
the money comes back to the tudent.&#13;
I believe there should be control put on&#13;
the campus police. I believe a clear list of functions and&#13;
duties by the police should be establi heel.&#13;
I am for student power. I feel that we , as&#13;
students, should have more to ay about&#13;
the way our university i being han~led. I&#13;
feel the administration is slowly cutting off&#13;
channels open to the student and lowing&#13;
down the progress of this university'&#13;
development into becoming a much more&#13;
relevant part of the student's l~fe, ~hi&lt;:h&#13;
must be curbed. I believe th w11vers1ty 1&#13;
much more than just a place to attend&#13;
class.&#13;
rq-.I,/ 1ldfl //tnw.,u&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Candy&#13;
;z ADULT BOOK STORE&#13;
0&#13;
-.,_ ' u&#13;
UJ :z&#13;
-.I&#13;
UJ 3:&#13;
V') 0&#13;
.,_ tKENOSHA&#13;
&#13;
- BONDAGE DENMARK&#13;
MAGS BOOKS ~&#13;
Al l Parks ,de StuJcnt!.&#13;
Over 21 10"~ QI I&#13;
SEX EDUCATION&#13;
V,&#13;
-,:,&#13;
m&#13;
("'"'\&#13;
--4 -&#13;
&gt; &gt; r0:,&#13;
&#13;
r- 0:,&#13;
rn &gt;&#13;
V') z&#13;
UJ - BOOKS&#13;
GAY&#13;
:::0&#13;
G')&#13;
(.!)&#13;
(.!)&#13;
- 1202-56 ST 652-9051 SECTION ):&gt;&#13;
:z&#13;
c:a TALK OF THE TOWN&#13;
Tom Ta koni&#13;
Apathy? - it's an w, incomple e school.&#13;
It must be completed and e tabh hE'd&#13;
before ignificant involv m nt m&#13;
The chool paper 1mprov but l Uu&#13;
that if we don't have enough pohtical&#13;
any oth r type or nev. · around th" ar&#13;
we would like to hear" ·hat' happem&#13;
at other school . 'ov.:, the Luddite'&#13;
column is being throv.:n out - irr . po •&#13;
sibility will out. But at an) rat , I h&#13;
the paper should ub~1diz d and crE'd1&#13;
1 ST be given for wor ng on it.&#13;
Our monies dimmi ; our pal en&#13;
taxed. Why? - t CHI.· '. I lie,&#13;
lunch counters hould be o n 'til buildmg&#13;
close and music "piped-in" rather lhan&#13;
digging in pockets £or juke box.&#13;
Our transportation ) tern 1&#13;
Construction of a moving sidewal&#13;
been ugge led .&#13;
The campu security force must be&#13;
disarmed before we have another K nl&#13;
Stale type incident!&#13;
Space limits me, but I must men ion one&#13;
more point. Tho students in tad1son.&#13;
who are there for purpo es or n ohating&#13;
for funds for Parksid . are pullin one big&#13;
snow job on the tudents of Par id .&#13;
Please a k me about this.&#13;
Remember, the HaUoween Part: does&#13;
not put its ow• irons in the hre, but th of&#13;
you tud nts. U you v.ant a party I&#13;
out for YO R inter · and not THEIR&#13;
you V A IT the Hallow n Part: (you ma~&#13;
have seen our clever. satirical ~ters .&#13;
· uden a v.ell&#13;
10 ORG&#13;
Tradition of E&#13;
Kl ·G&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
see Jim Merrick "~r. Hammond" For Guaranteed Service &amp; Trade-in Value&#13;
Out of Town-Call Collect&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
STUDIO Ill RACINE .. 1429 Wael.llqtoa Ph-.e Q4.2S63&#13;
"IJ Bt!Uer Or,an., are Built, H"""'"""' will Bu.iW '/lt!M"&#13;
• &#13;
Presidential Candidates&#13;
11m F..kff&#13;
It, III duI) 01 lhe Pre ldenl 10 ellect •&#13;
I bl 10\ roment through sound&#13;
df'rshtp nd to be v r r pon sve to the&#13;
'dt"a and d .res of IhOloe' "hom he&#13;
repr n~ There eXI I! lhe need for&#13;
4"onslrucl!\ c-hange at ark Ide. no one&#13;
llt-nu.' lh • but tbe major I ue bolls down&#13;
10 how ""II It be Implemented 01 the tWO&#13;
lIo It' avenu 0 n work In ide or&#13;
nut ld lh exrstmg tructure - I am in&#13;
la\ or of ("xhsW)lInK the former before&#13;
r orllng to the tauer Further breaking&#13;
Ihat do", n 1 ee tht hntt Student Govern·&#13;
mcnt a umg the pohcies and precedents&#13;
roe tht.· year to come&#13;
E' 'r)one ha talked aboul student&#13;
lmpul on cemmiuees and estabhshmg&#13;
dduional ones, but no one has made a&#13;
rOO\C' to do The lime has come to&#13;
bohsh those ccrnrruttees that are useless&#13;
,lOd establish those thai are needed.&#13;
At thiS lime I would hke to officially&#13;
announce m) resignatton as Coordmallng&#13;
Olr 'tor of the Commillee for United&#13;
" tool'nl Action I ",ould like to see an)'&#13;
nthrr canthdates now 1","01\"00 In an&#13;
or~anllatlon that might prO\'C to create a&#13;
ronO,el or mte ts do the same. I'.'hlle&#13;
cuve In the CommIttee for Cnited Student&#13;
\tU n, I was Involved 10 the "Faculty&#13;
DiSmIssal" problem: the campaign for a&#13;
lronger student senate constitution -&#13;
~hlch proved successful. representing.&#13;
Parkslde in student IOsurance conferences&#13;
.....hlCh rna)' end up saving insured&#13;
tudent $30 each on their policies: and&#13;
InitlatlOg the fact finding mission to&#13;
"ad, on concerning the proposed !Judget&#13;
cuts for the UOlverslty of Wisconsin and&#13;
the proposed merger&#13;
ACTIO,' GETS RESULTS - I HAVE&#13;
BEEN ACTIVE AND I HAVE GOTTO&#13;
HE.. LTS'&#13;
Madeleine Thielen .&#13;
Being a Parkside student is largely an&#13;
experience of frustration. There a.re,many&#13;
factors that work against building a&#13;
unified student body. These same factors&#13;
work to limit the satisfaction that a student&#13;
receives by being a member of Parkside's&#13;
student body.&#13;
There are some obstacles that cannot be&#13;
easily overcome. 'We cannot quickly so~ve&#13;
problems like the fact that the Park~lde&#13;
campus is spread out over two counties.&#13;
The student government can, though, w~rk&#13;
to build student consciousness and bring&#13;
students into involvement with matters&#13;
that concern them as students.&#13;
It is imperative that students have&#13;
control over those elements of the&#13;
niversity that directly affect them.&#13;
Students must manage the use of the&#13;
Student Activities Building. Ilis absurd for&#13;
student groups to pay a fee for the use of&#13;
this facility. Similarly, funds generated by&#13;
students at events like dances and concerts&#13;
and Olrough Ole use of vending&#13;
machines and food services must be&#13;
controlled by students. Students are the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside as much&#13;
as the faculty or administration and should&#13;
assume a corresponding amount of control&#13;
over their lives at the University.&#13;
The student government must be a&#13;
government for the students. It should not&#13;
funclion as an extension of the administration.&#13;
Officers and senators in&#13;
student government must be representatives&#13;
of the students and willing to work&#13;
for the students in the operation of the&#13;
government.&#13;
Ilis possible for the student government&#13;
at Parkside to serve needs of the student&#13;
that are now not being considered. I~sk&#13;
for your support in my candidacy and the&#13;
candidacy of the other members of the&#13;
Halloween Party to that end.&#13;
Don Koser&#13;
To create a student government with tbt&#13;
power to initiate an effective studeut&#13;
voice, the majority and hopelully all of&#13;
Parkside's students must give up the smaD&#13;
amount of their time necessary to mab&#13;
the realization of this longsougbt alle:&#13;
goal possible. To unite the students bebiDd&#13;
the new constitution one main ideamuslbe&#13;
instilled. The student at this lDlivenily&#13;
must be made to realize the studeat&#13;
government is relevent. Before, without.&#13;
effective voice and central organizltioD.&#13;
any student action was without any real&#13;
collective authority. This could chaD&amp;t&#13;
with a majority student government.&#13;
One might ask, how can this be ""&#13;
complished? I propose, both More aad&#13;
after the election, to create one to CDt&#13;
communication between the student ant&#13;
his government. Above all the individualis&#13;
first at the university. His righllo the belli&#13;
education possible cannot be inf~ed&#13;
upon" This can be made possible by&#13;
creating a body lIlat is dedicated tD \be&#13;
individual at Parkside. This will inchxle.&#13;
drive to improve basic conditions.~&#13;
prices, inprovement of the parkilll&#13;
situation would be given priority. Buttbr&#13;
student government must also be an ...&#13;
forming device in which tht! a~erIIf&#13;
student wlll rely upon for informationon&#13;
all action concerning his academic alii&#13;
surrounding student life, whileat the same&#13;
time be an outlet in which to express tus&#13;
opinion .&#13;
Parkside's first Student Senal.&#13;
president must have the time in wh\dlto&#13;
keep on top of all actions concermng \be&#13;
university and be dedicated to that pur'&#13;
pose. '. . to&#13;
I do have the time and lIle del!icabdl&#13;
achieve this end.&#13;
Help push lor a united Parkside.&#13;
SmIth&#13;
EDITOR'S NOTE:&#13;
was elected ,he&#13;
James&#13;
first A History Of ~,~.~.~ntGovernment----1&#13;
Student Government Pres-&#13;
,dent ,n January of 1969.&#13;
'ext 'A'eek Parkslde students will elect a&#13;
ne~ tud nl Go\'ernment to fill a VOidthat&#13;
ha foXl ted for almost two years. It was&#13;
ked to '" nle lIll hlslor)' 01 Student&#13;
Go\{'rnmenl for the benefit or those&#13;
tucknts '\Aha were not here when our last&#13;
go\ emment collapsed. and for those who&#13;
....ere here. but may ha"'e forgotten what&#13;
happened. so lIle)' will reahze lIle&#13;
IJ(nlflcance of the upcoming elections and&#13;
exerCI their nght to ,,'ole&#13;
The story really began when Racine and&#13;
Krnosha ""ere m the Center system. In&#13;
Kt"nosha there" ere numerous clubs and&#13;
actl\'ltles which comprised the hub of the&#13;
lal hfe on campus These clubs were&#13;
fin n d b)' membershIp dues and proHI!&#13;
from their acll\"llIeS, dances. carnivals.&#13;
etC' The role of ludent Government at this&#13;
hme was matn)y social In nature. Seventy-&#13;
(l\'e to 80 per cent of the student body were&#13;
rr hmen each )"ear. SG.A sold membe~hlp5&#13;
.....hlCh were used to finance&#13;
dan and also prOVided money to clubs&#13;
so lh y could develop programs 01 lIlelr&#13;
O\lo"n Due to the rapid turnover of students.&#13;
thl bod)' never really developed any&#13;
govermng ability or power The most&#13;
pre log problem that confronted all 01&#13;
Ih groups was finanCial By lIle time a&#13;
club rented a hall. paid for entertainment&#13;
and refreshments there was litUe or no&#13;
profit left&#13;
The Parkside became a reality. Land&#13;
was purchased and Irvin Wyllie was appointed&#13;
Chancellor. During one of his visits&#13;
to KenQ.'Sha,I approached him and explained&#13;
the problem to him. I asked if&#13;
there was a building on the site which&#13;
could be developed as a student union, so&#13;
that groups could eliminate the high rental&#13;
fees of campus hans, thereby increasing&#13;
lIleir prolil!. He said lIle Wood Road school&#13;
house was being set aside for that purpose.&#13;
The following fall, during freshman&#13;
orientation, Kathy Mauer addressed the&#13;
group and told them lIlal students would be&#13;
required to purchast" a Parkside Student&#13;
Activities pass to use the union. Iprotested&#13;
and a meeting was scheduled to air the&#13;
mailer. Iargued lIlat any student who had&#13;
paId his tuition was entitled to use the&#13;
union, that this was the policy in&#13;
Milwaukee and Madison, and furthermore,&#13;
the union was not for the exclusive&#13;
benefit of anyone particular&#13;
campus organization. This position was&#13;
tentatively accepted and the need for a&#13;
student government to deal with similar&#13;
problems in the future led to another&#13;
meeting.&#13;
The second meeting was held at a house&#13;
on the Parkside site which was to be used&#13;
as lIle Student Ar[airs olliee. Studenl! who&#13;
had been active in S.C.A. at Racine and&#13;
Kenosha, plus any other interested&#13;
students, were invited to the open meeting.&#13;
About 20 or 25 students attended and&#13;
formed the interim government which&#13;
planned to draw up a constitution and hold&#13;
elections by lIle end of the first month of&#13;
the second semester.&#13;
Things were moving along fine, Pat&#13;
Spring was the chairwoman of the Constitution&#13;
Committee and her group drew&#13;
up a constitution that the interim government&#13;
felt was suitable for ratification. The&#13;
Election Committee scheduled the elections&#13;
for February and the other committees&#13;
were progressing at a satisfactory&#13;
rate. .&#13;
The first hint of trouble occurred when&#13;
candidates began to fil&amp; no"mination&#13;
papers. Betty Peterson, who had been&#13;
acting as Recording Secretary for the&#13;
interim government, failed to file. When I&#13;
contacted Belly to find out why she hadn't&#13;
filed she said she was dissatisfied with the&#13;
way Jewel Echelbarger, S.G.A. advisor&#13;
from Student Affairs, censored the&#13;
minutes of the meetings before they were&#13;
published. Betty would not run but&#13;
elections were held as scheduled. In&#13;
re~ospect, the elections were the high&#13;
POint 01 S.G.A. because Irom lIle day it was&#13;
seated until its final collapse less than four&#13;
months later the road was straight down&#13;
hill.&#13;
S.G.A. intended to be lIle governing body&#13;
of the students; it intended to let oUter&#13;
groups deal with the social programs,&#13;
although a committee was .. tabU": ~&#13;
use S.G.A. funds for a limited n";"~GA&#13;
programs. One of the funct,lon~0 Am&#13;
was to ratify club apphcabOOS';'n';'&#13;
organization that wanted to f~~Cti&lt;I1 (0&#13;
campus had to submit its app lea "t.-aS&#13;
S.G.A. and if it was approved the~~1elt'i&#13;
sent to S.L.I.C. (Student Lile and camP"&#13;
Committee, now called cec, lfaeu1'l&#13;
Concerns Committee, composedlif'o._ b\ Ra . 1C8""'"' • members and students). cl b to UIf&#13;
bolll of these groups allowed a ':.. II&#13;
campus facilities to bold mOO "'" II&#13;
solicit members, to hold evt;nts,turf III&#13;
advertise, distribute or sell litera&#13;
campus. ~A b&lt;It&#13;
The first few meetings thatto rati/)'illl&#13;
devoted a great deal 01 tune ..... rdt&#13;
the man¥ applications that "fiCltJOll'&#13;
mitted. It was during these r~ttel""&#13;
that the administration set th~ns .tiC*&#13;
student-adrp.inistrati,ve re~:::'in ~&#13;
have continued to thiS day. eral, 1.,0&#13;
were singled out for harr3SS&#13;
m&#13;
§oCiJliP&#13;
especially - Y.S.A. (Youn~,or an epd'&#13;
Alliance) al\d The CommIttee iglil y A&#13;
Forum. For'-example, the n BIshOP eI&#13;
'1' t' n Daye :..l&lt; came up for rab lCa 10.' 'ved ~'I&#13;
.the Student Allairs ofh" amlQI'S ,,1IiJC&#13;
and cornered a number of sen~s .' \~&#13;
them privately lIlat Y.S.A. w "",tJel1 to&#13;
group (lIlere were only lW~ ~t d ..&#13;
the Kenosha chapter) an ,&#13;
Presidential Candidates&#13;
, 1ad leine Thi len&#13;
Bei a Park ide tudenl is largely an&#13;
e perience of frustration. There a_re_many&#13;
facto that work against bu1lding a&#13;
w,ifi d tudent body. Th e ame factors&#13;
rk to limit the ti faction that a stu_de~t&#13;
r iv by being a member of Parkside s&#13;
tu nt body.&#13;
There are ome ob tacle that cannot be&#13;
a ii o,· rcome. ·, e cannot quickly solve&#13;
probiem Ji e the fact that the Park~ide&#13;
campu i _pread out over two counties.&#13;
Th . tudent O\'ernment can, though, w~rk&#13;
o build tud nt con ciou n and brmg&#13;
tu nt into in\'olvement with matters&#13;
that oncem them as tud nts.&#13;
It L ,m rati\' that tudents have&#13;
control o,· r tho.e elemen of the&#13;
l m,· 1ty that directly affect them.&#13;
tud nts m ·t manage the use of the&#13;
. tudent ct1vilies Building. It i absurd for&#13;
tudent groups to pay a fee for the use of&#13;
thi · facility. imilarly, funds generated by&#13;
. tudent at e\' nts like danc and conr&#13;
and through the u · of vending&#13;
m chin · and food ervic s must be&#13;
trolled bv tud nt Students are the&#13;
niversil\ of Wiscon in-Parkside as much&#13;
a:,· the fa ulty or admini tralion and should&#13;
-·ume a corr ponding amount of control&#13;
o\'er th 1r hve at the niversity.&#13;
Th tud nt government must be a&#13;
~o,· rnment for the tuden . It hould not&#13;
run lion a an extension of the ad•&#13;
mini tration. Officers and senator in&#13;
tud nt go\'ernment mu l be representati,•&#13;
of the students and willing to work&#13;
for the tudents in the operation of the&#13;
overnmenl.&#13;
It i possible for the student government&#13;
at Park ide to serve needs of the ludent&#13;
that are now not being con idered. I .ask&#13;
for your upport in my candidacy and the&#13;
candidacy of the other members of the&#13;
Hallow n Party to that end.&#13;
nd meeting wa held at a hou e&#13;
on th Park ide 1te which wa to be u ed&#13;
. the Student Affairs ofric tudents who&#13;
had been active in .GA at Racine and&#13;
Keno ha, plu any other int ere ted&#13;
students, were invlled lo the open meeting.&#13;
About 20 or 25 students attended and&#13;
formed the interim government which&#13;
planned lo draw up a constitution and hold&#13;
elections by the end of the first month of&#13;
the econd emester.&#13;
Things were moving along fine. Pat&#13;
pring was the chairwoman of the Constitution&#13;
Committee and her group drew&#13;
up a constitution that the interim government&#13;
fell was suitable for ratification. The&#13;
Election Committee scheduled the elections&#13;
for February and the other committees&#13;
were progressing at a satisfactory&#13;
rate. ·&#13;
The first hint of trouble occurred when&#13;
candidates began to file- nomination&#13;
papers. Betty Peterson, who had been&#13;
acting as Recording Secretary for the&#13;
interim government, failed to file. When I&#13;
contacted Betty to find out why she hadn't&#13;
filed he said she was dissatisfied with the&#13;
way Jewel Echelbarger, S.G.A. advisor&#13;
from Student Affairs, censored the&#13;
minutes of the meetings before they were&#13;
published Betty would not run, but&#13;
elections were held as scheduled. In&#13;
re~ospect, the elections were the high&#13;
pomt of .G.A. because from the day it was&#13;
seated until its final collapse less than four&#13;
months later the road was straight down&#13;
hill.&#13;
S.G.A. intended to be the governing body&#13;
of the students; it intended to let other&#13;
groups deal with the social programs,&#13;
Don Koser&#13;
To create a student government with !ht&#13;
power to initiate an effective studen&#13;
voice, the majority and hopefully aU or&#13;
Parkside's students must give up the sm&#13;
amoWlt of their time necessary to make&#13;
the realization of this long sought after&#13;
goal possible. To unite the students behind&#13;
the new constitution one main idea must~&#13;
instilled. The student at this wiiv y&#13;
must be made to realize the studem&#13;
government is relevent. Before, without&#13;
effective voice and central organization&#13;
any student action was without any m&#13;
collective authority. This could change&#13;
with a majority student government&#13;
One might ask, how can this be accomplished?&#13;
I propose, both before and&#13;
after the election, to create one lo ooe&#13;
communication between the student and&#13;
his government. Above all the indi\idual&#13;
first at the university. His right to the&#13;
education possible cannot be infnngtd&#13;
upon. This can be made possible by&#13;
creating a body that is dedicated lo&#13;
individual at Parkside. This will includta&#13;
drive to improve basic conditions. IAw«&#13;
prices, inproveme_nt of . th_e park1&#13;
situation would be given pr1onty. But the&#13;
student government must also be an mforming&#13;
device in which_ tM a~erag&#13;
student will rely upon for mfonna~on&#13;
all action concerning his academic and&#13;
surrounding student life, while at the sam&#13;
time be an outlet in which to ex&#13;
opinion.&#13;
Parkside's first Student en•t'&#13;
president must have the time in &gt;A~lch t&#13;
keep on top of all actions concernmg the&#13;
W1iversity and be dedicated to that pur&#13;
pof~o have the time and the dedicatloo&#13;
achieve this end. . Help push for a united Parkside.&#13;
although a committee was eslabh bed&#13;
use S.G.A. funds for a limit_ed nu~ ~ programs. One of the funct_10n. 0 }.&#13;
was to ratify club apphcauon&#13;
organization that wanted to fu~cti;"&#13;
campus had to submit its apphca 1&#13;
S.G.A. and if it was appro~ed t~r101&#13;
sent to S.L.I.C. (Student Life a&#13;
Committee, now called CCC, of r&#13;
Concerns Committee, com~ catiOII&#13;
members and students). Rati \ b&#13;
both of these groups allowed 8 c,~&#13;
campus facilities to hold '.11ee and&#13;
solicit members, to hold e\efl 't&#13;
advertise, distribute or sell bter•&#13;
campus. . t sGA&#13;
The first few meetings Iha rat&#13;
devoted a great deal of time to&#13;
the many application that "'Jrica&#13;
mitted. It was duri~g these r~t&#13;
that the administration set lhe&#13;
student-administrative relatiota'lll · th' d y Cer have continued to 1 a · rnt.fll&#13;
were singled out for harra&#13;
. y s A cvounl! especially - · · · . for an Alliance) and The Committee ight \'&#13;
Forum. For exampl~, the 8~ B&#13;
came up for ratificatio~. D rri\ed&#13;
the Student Affairs office a ators,&#13;
and cornered a number of se:.a a&#13;
them privately that Y.S.A. _, nl two rn~ ... group (there were O Y d thll if • the Kenosha chapter&gt; an &#13;
Pal 4 ·El'SCOPE Thunda)" April I&#13;
Gan \df'1 ft'&#13;
tern r or Con n&#13;
.tud nt xperr need In the&#13;
'""Iralo tau b) the poor ad&#13;
ml Ifahon of Lhl L:nl\ . II)&#13;
II \ tIlOUgh urne to do ""meUling&#13;
t them&#13;
m mbe!' of '~senate. I WIU work&#13;
bfoltn c:ommunlcallon about .. hat IS&#13;
trig on In lh udmlnlsuauon, with lhe&#13;
r It). wub th ludent aell\ Ih&#13;
I bo 1O'"'lld 10 ""'rk 10&lt; th e ·labhsh·&#13;
mml of (tong tudent rl hts&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
PHONE .... 700&#13;
'1' 'lid f.A1f~ E1"SJOC&#13;
all 7~," 5T&#13;
NOIl'Tli &amp; SOUTtl Stlel'IDAH ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHA -&#13;
FAMOUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
HARCOAl BROllE&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
FINEST QUALITY&#13;
EASTER&#13;
CANDIES&#13;
From ANDREA'S&#13;
• RUSSEL STOVER&#13;
• FANNIE MAY&#13;
• NESTLE'S SOLIO PURE&#13;
CHOCOLATE RABBITS&#13;
STUFFEO ANIMALS&#13;
GENUINE PECTIN-JELL&#13;
JELLY BEANS&#13;
• HALLMARK CARDS&#13;
• FOREIGN LANGUAGE CARD~&#13;
SELF-SERVICE&#13;
Fast Convenient&#13;
Open DallJ&#13;
! a.m. - 9 p.m.&#13;
Sot ftil 6 p.m&#13;
Sun 9 o.m -4 .m&#13;
In Kenosha Since 1911&#13;
finest&#13;
quality&#13;
candies&#13;
Ken AnLaramian&#13;
Park ide's growing pains are many. and&#13;
need plenty of attention. Being a senator of&#13;
'he tudent Govemrnent, problems 01&#13;
gray. iog can be made somewhat easier.&#13;
The ludents here at Parks ide. must unite&#13;
to maintain the high academic standards&#13;
or the Umversity of Wisconsin System.&#13;
I have been deeply involved in the&#13;
Iaculty d.I missa1. campaign for a better&#13;
udent Constitution, I'm presently a&#13;
renewal of Student Insurance and a&#13;
director of the Committee for United&#13;
udern Action which has previously met&#13;
with the Jomt Finance Committee on the&#13;
propo ed budget cuts and UW·WSU&#13;
ystem merger&#13;
lIeel that lhe students here at Parkside&#13;
need to have representation that will&#13;
continually trive for a better University.&#13;
A student government. approaching new&#13;
ideas 10 the right perspective, can benefit&#13;
our. school in the fields of education, and&#13;
SOCialaspects.&#13;
Through my \'aned activities thus far I&#13;
ha\'e shO\lonmy personal involvement in&#13;
Park ide and will continue to do so by your&#13;
support.&#13;
Support&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52no St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUII. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 loll. TILL MIDIlITE&#13;
FRI •• SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
Walt Breach&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
exists for the student. A Student Government&#13;
here must meet the challenge of&#13;
making the administration more conscious&#13;
of, and more responsive to the needs and&#13;
wants of the student body. Positive action&#13;
and cooperation, I believe, will enable a&#13;
determined Senate and a supporting&#13;
student body to accomplish nearly&#13;
anything in the way improvement and&#13;
betterment of every Parkside students'&#13;
situation.&#13;
Isee student control of a student union,&#13;
responsible teacher evaluation programs,&#13;
and the establishment and protection of&#13;
sludent rights as the major tasks which the&#13;
new government will have to tackle. These&#13;
are the goals I have set for S.G.'s first&#13;
year, and if elected, they are what I will&#13;
immediately start pushing for and keep on&#13;
pushing for until they are achieved.&#13;
Information on the Candidate: Junior, 3.&#13;
OGP, Communication Major, Elected to&#13;
and served on Can Com, Newscope Staff, 6&#13;
credits this semester, Endorses Don Koser&#13;
for President.&#13;
Your&#13;
BITCH&#13;
Walter Ulbricht&#13;
Parkside is in a sense an artifi&#13;
cr~ation: Lik~ laws or governments&#13;
1tial&#13;
university IS dynamic co ta tbt&#13;
changing -,b~fore responses.' It"C:~otntly&#13;
lord to slip its feet into concrete 0 . aI·&#13;
the wishes 01 the student. Not only~&#13;
student have the right but also tho&#13;
obligation to himself and his eduC8tioa III&#13;
bitch. Criticism then assumes 8 func~&#13;
role as does a periodic h'&#13;
. examination for the body. P yaltal&#13;
The university must never 8SSWDt&#13;
~piri~~al status ow:herecondemnatiOlW;&#13;
mqumes are considered sacriligious 1bI&#13;
position only losters palern~ ...:&#13;
?ppresslOn. It must constantly .....&#13;
[angling to keep the juices OOWin" ud&#13;
always in a forward direetl&#13;
Academically its hunger lor kn~&#13;
cannot he satiated, but not at the ""-&#13;
of valuable instruction. Educationally,die&#13;
classroom should he the uncensured,Iluid.&#13;
and tUlstructured medium for the a·&#13;
change of that knowledge. Politicallylilt&#13;
untVersIty should not play the unrealiIli&lt;.&#13;
anachronistic neutral for our lima.&#13;
nation, and education demand actionad&#13;
activism.&#13;
Parkside must become a laculty·sIudIol&#13;
forum not an administrative institutila&#13;
The pituitary glands 01 university ...&#13;
ministrations have contracted a sewrt&#13;
case 01 elephantiasis and caused ..&#13;
creation of monoliths comparableiD....&#13;
to industrial corporate boards. OIlstanding&#13;
instructors are exasperated ...&#13;
frustrated in their powerlessness. 'I'M&#13;
dissemination of their knowledge to die&#13;
students is.then consequently diluted wiIIl&#13;
one part nihilism to two parts disinterest.&#13;
Like a phone call during coitus, studlIIl&#13;
laculty contact is interruplA!dby ...&#13;
ministrative interference. Parkside'-&#13;
direct itsell via student·laculty iIliliati,'5&#13;
and demands.&#13;
Candidates&#13;
VAI.EO'$&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657·5191&#13;
W~'RE NOT 'LYI~' WHEN WE SAY&#13;
(0Qd b/{ie~&amp;~a/{e&#13;
the CGegt ~/{ie~dg&#13;
They know you· Ih appreciate you' _ =~du:'t,derstand you; they&#13;
you're not around ~y mISs you when&#13;
are _ and that's .u~h;t S how old friend~&#13;
valued J s ow we feel about a&#13;
really mi~sU:dtomerlike yourself! We've&#13;
. you and hope yo 'Il&#13;
In SOon to say "h II " u stop e 0 and browse.&#13;
uH~iHed&#13;
6207 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
Open 6 Days. a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
C:osed Mondays&#13;
Senatorial&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
0 &amp; SOUTff SHl!l'IDAN !WAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
HARCOAL BROILE&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
FINEST QUALITY&#13;
EASTER&#13;
CANDIES&#13;
to do.ob. your&#13;
Support&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN, THRU THURS.&#13;
l1 A,M, TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI. I SAT, TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
sse&#13;
Candidates&#13;
V altBreach&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
exi ts for the student. A tudent Government&#13;
here must meet the challenge of&#13;
making the administration more conscious&#13;
of, and more responsive to the needs and&#13;
wants of the student body. Positive action&#13;
and coo ration, I believe, will enable a&#13;
d termined enale and a supporting&#13;
tudenl body to accomplish nearly&#13;
anything in the way improvement and&#13;
tterment of every Parkside students'&#13;
ituation. 1 se tud nl control of a student union,&#13;
respon ibl teacher evaluation programs,&#13;
and the establishment and protection of&#13;
tud nt rights as the major tasks which the&#13;
new government will have to tackle. These&#13;
are the goals I have set for S.G.'s first&#13;
year, and if elected, they are what I will&#13;
immediately tart pushing for and keep on&#13;
pushing for until they are achieved.&#13;
Information on the Candidate: Junior, 3.&#13;
OGP, Communication Major, Elected to&#13;
and erved on Con Com, ewscope Staff, 6&#13;
credits thi semester, Endorses Don Koser&#13;
for President.&#13;
BITCH&#13;
Walter Ulbricht&#13;
Parkside is in a sense an artlfi&#13;
creation. Like laws or governm 1&#13;
. . t . ents un1vers1 y 1s dynamic con changing before responses.' It ca Slant&#13;
ford to slip its feet into concrete O °"!' af&#13;
the wishes of the student. Nol only ~IQ"f&#13;
stu?en~ have the right, but al&#13;
ob?thghatc10~1&#13;
_t~ himthself and his educaUoo l&#13;
1 c . n 1c1sm en assumes a funcli&#13;
role as does a periodic h&#13;
examination for the body. P ) 1&#13;
c1&#13;
The university must never a u · ·t I t me ~pm_ ~a s atus "'.here condemnatiom er&#13;
mqumes are considered sacriligious Tha&#13;
position_ only fosters paternalis~&#13;
~~pres_s1on. It must constantly 11\0'i&#13;
Jangling ~o keep the juices flowm"&#13;
always m a forward direct"&#13;
Academically its hunger for know) 1&#13;
cannot be s~tiated, _but not at the ex)lffllt&#13;
of valuable instruction. Educationally tbt&#13;
classroom should be the uncensured, n&#13;
and unstructured medium for the&#13;
ch~nge _of that knowledge. Politically lht&#13;
un1vers1ty should not play the 11nn•11li11;.&#13;
anachronistic neutral for our timfl&#13;
nation, and education demand action 111d&#13;
activism.&#13;
Parkside must become a facultyforum&#13;
not an administrative imliwliall&#13;
The pituitary glands of university administrations&#13;
have contracted a se\'ffl&#13;
case of elephantiasis and caused lilt&#13;
creation of monoliths comparable in&#13;
to industrial corporate boards. Oul&#13;
standing instructors are exasperated ud&#13;
frustrated in their powerlessness. 11lf&#13;
dissemination of their knowledge to tbf&#13;
students is then consequently diluted&#13;
one part nihilism to two parts disin&#13;
Like a phone call during coitus, tudmt&#13;
faculty contact is interrupted ~ administrative&#13;
interference. Park.side m&#13;
direct itself via student-faculty initiati\&#13;
and demands.&#13;
Your Candidates&#13;
VAI..EO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30th Ave. FREE&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Open 6 Days.a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
WP::'RE NOT •L YIN• WHEN WE SA y&#13;
(0Qd bltte"dg atte&#13;
the CBegt bltte"dg&#13;
They know you. the appreciate you' - y underst~nd you; they&#13;
you're not aroun and th~y miss you when&#13;
are - and that's di·~ ~~t s how old friends&#13;
valued s ?W we feel about a&#13;
really mi;~;Jomer like yourself! We've . you and hope you'll t&#13;
in soon to say "hell " s op o and browse.&#13;
~~ule~&#13;
621.17 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
C :osed Mondays &#13;
..... , IIWIICOPE,....,.. AfrtIl IHistorY' (CaaliDued from Pace 2)&#13;
..iotence: occurred at Parkside. senators&#13;
who had voted In '.,,'or of rallfication&#13;
would be held responsible for any&#13;
damages. Fcr tunately these senators&#13;
reported "'hal BIshop had said and when&#13;
lhe dlSCUSSIOl1 session opened we clarified&#13;
\fohat ratiflcahon meant and what&#13;
responslbohtles S G.A had. We decided&#13;
thaI II wasn'l S G A's role 10 leg,slate&#13;
pctrueal OPInions and that we weuld be&#13;
henerrng • long standing unrver ily&#13;
ITachllOn10allow any group 10 present its&#13;
VI ",Ihoul restncuoe Both SGA. and&#13;
L I C ralllled Y A&#13;
Th Comenuee for an Open Forum and&#13;
Ihe underground no paper The Comeuuee&#13;
also w re raubed The)" were&#13;
harr 1 ter The Open Forum was&#13;
th raed wrth v iolahng regula lions&#13;
J oil. Gotllrodun&#13;
The lim ha come for Par Ide students&#13;
10mak lhelr \ OlC heard throughOulth,S&#13;
&lt; m The onl) "'a) thl goal can be&#13;
hie'ed I through a Irong, unlled errorl&#13;
Of Iled Ithln the Park Ide tudenl&#13;
0\ rom nt The inCidents of last&#13;
m I r' facully purge demon Irale the&#13;
ne&lt; ly of ham'll a well o.-ganlzed&#13;
ludenl fo locombalthe lopo,ded power&#13;
monopol) of lhe admlnl lratJon&#13;
The """ rl POOlhon of the 4.000&#13;
tudent enrolled here mUSIbe Co.-recled&#13;
II "I ted 10 the ludenl Sel\8le. I w·ould&#13;
conllnuolly p lor the students voice to&#13;
hard equally w·ith that of the facully&#13;
and admmJ .rallon Il is lJme for the deafmute&#13;
Image. that students at this&#13;
uttl\'f'I"Slt)' now ha\"e. to be transformed&#13;
Inl0 that or • responsible. energetic,&#13;
po",erful student body.&#13;
II elO&lt;:led. I would Implemenl sludenl&#13;
represenlallOn III facully dIsmIssal and&#13;
enluollon In adchhon. I would see that&#13;
tudent representatives would be placed&#13;
on 811unIVersIty commlllees A powerful&#13;
\'Olce concerning the activities of our&#13;
Sludent UNonwould also be hIgh on the list&#13;
of priori lies.&#13;
Another me ure to be undertaken&#13;
'" ould be an Jnve5hgal1on of present book&#13;
. lore policie· With recommendations for&#13;
sethnR up a student co-op for resale of&#13;
book&#13;
For thiS university to de\'elop into a&#13;
\ abl In lItutlon the measures mentioned&#13;
aboH" be&lt;'ome a necessity. My stand on&#13;
the-st'l. ue IS strong and reasonable. Iam&#13;
sklng for nothmg more than rights which&#13;
tut:k"nts at other uOIversities receive&#13;
'" Ithout question U elected, 1 will devote&#13;
my lime and energy to see that these&#13;
rlghts become a reality for our student&#13;
bod)&#13;
Please \·oteon April6 and 7 and consider&#13;
John GOlUredsen lor Student Senale.&#13;
regarding CUlducl of meetings. A three&#13;
part indi&lt;:lmenl was submitted to Dean&#13;
May in Racine by Dave Bishop. Dean May&#13;
called Bill Smith, President of the Open&#13;
Forwn, to answer the charges. After&#13;
hearing Smith's side of the story and doing&#13;
some mvestigation of his own the Dean&#13;
lIismissed lhe flrst two charges and made&#13;
the members of the Open Forum clean the&#13;
room they had used as a punishment for&#13;
the third charge. The case should have&#13;
been closed, bul Bishop wasn't satisfied.&#13;
He re-submitted the same charges to&#13;
S.GA Then, Dean Dearborn called me to&#13;
a private meeting in the Student Affairs&#13;
office. This meeting was attended by the&#13;
Dean. Jewel Echelbarger and myself. The&#13;
Dean slated Ilatly that if S.G.A. did not&#13;
prosecute the Open Forum, the charges&#13;
....-auld be submitted to the Chancellor&#13;
recommending revocation of ratification,&#13;
Dean LoumM&#13;
What I am most afraid of in student&#13;
go\'ernments, and all governments for that&#13;
matter, are elected officials who then&#13;
bee-orne elitistS. Parksides' previous&#13;
existence has been lolallydiclated bya rew&#13;
people in Tallenl Hall. During this lime of&#13;
reorganizing, faculty and students must&#13;
coeperate and produce a structure of&#13;
committees that have real power. For&#13;
students this means lhat Parkside should&#13;
strike out a totally new course of student&#13;
power. Ibelieve the administration should&#13;
administrate and leave policy slatements&#13;
to the co.-rect Facully-Studenl committee.&#13;
In order to implement and carry oul such a&#13;
program we must elect a student government&#13;
thaI will act in a truly democratic&#13;
way. This means that we cannot let the&#13;
executive ttranch assume a power that&#13;
enables them to set policy for student&#13;
government. UnfortWlate1y, [ see a danger&#13;
in some of the candidates for the executive&#13;
branch of wanting this type of power. For&#13;
this reason, I decided to run for the&#13;
senate and try to make il the source of&#13;
policies and the executive branch· the&#13;
administrators of these decisions.&#13;
Originally, !was not a member of any&#13;
party, I have since met and talked with&#13;
most of the candidates and come to a&#13;
decision that Imust support the Halloween&#13;
Party and its candidate for Pres"ident,&#13;
Madeliene Thielen.&#13;
II true democracy exists, Ibelieve one of&#13;
the first institutions which could conceivably&#13;
achieve it is our university. [&#13;
want to help make Parkside a truly&#13;
democratic institution.&#13;
ANNUAL SPRING&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
Good Books at a Good Price&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
BRANDT'S":RACINE SOUNDS&#13;
......... LI K E . .. the brands youklllllJ&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000A1bulll&#13;
and 45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, not ytI1&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark. ~&#13;
Department· Manager, who is a ParkJidl&#13;
,P-.J.e-..... ....-:::==::::,.student and will talk your language,bCJI/lI&#13;
equipment purchases, records andrrtIftI'/&#13;
which would ban the club from flBldioning&#13;
on campus- Icaned a private meeting WIth&#13;
Bill Smith and a few members of S.G:A.&#13;
and we decided that a 30 day suspensIon&#13;
might save the group. even though it was&#13;
double jeopardy. .&#13;
These are a few of the major events&#13;
which eroded student confidence in the&#13;
administration. From here things got&#13;
worse. S.G.A. had no funds, whenever we&#13;
needed money we had to submit a detailed&#13;
budget and then the Dean had 10 approve&#13;
it. If he liked the project we got the money,&#13;
if not he simply refused. He had all the&#13;
power in his fmancial vote. S.G.A. in fad&#13;
was nothing but a puppet for the Dean.&#13;
Two examples will illustrate this.&#13;
The first one occurred when SGA voted&#13;
unarumously to put on a program of three&#13;
movies dealing with. the war. The Dean&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
,&#13;
Dale Martin&#13;
I dig Parkside as il now slands. Parkside&#13;
is a college of promise. The future of&#13;
Parkside, howe,., as one of quality is in&#13;
doubl because of funding. Il would be a&#13;
shame if Parkside is ruined because of an&#13;
error in someones judgeme~t.&#13;
Many other issues should be dealt with&#13;
by the sludenls. Il is my hope that all&#13;
students will participate in this election&#13;
and everything lhat has lo do with&#13;
Parkside, Iwill always remain open to any&#13;
suggestions my fellow students have.&#13;
If elected, I will support those things that&#13;
will provide Parkside sludents with the&#13;
best possible education. I also am in favor&#13;
o( anything that will provide us. the&#13;
students, with more fun. Ifeel more free&#13;
dances would help.&#13;
Recently, the Parkside candy machine&#13;
in Kenosha set an outstanding example of&#13;
philosophy for us to Colow. The machine&#13;
wtexpected.ly gave out free candy and&#13;
money. Parkside should follow the candy&#13;
machine's example and make a larger&#13;
portion of Parkside's dances FREE.&#13;
Chrlltapbererow-e---&#13;
I suppose there are many ........&#13;
apathy. Probably the reason lor&#13;
malignancy at Parkside is u.efflt IlIia&#13;
cyndrome of a group's lack of ~&#13;
in its ability to improve its lot A~~~&#13;
futility. .' -_If&#13;
We've got this chance friends S&#13;
government - if approached . ~&#13;
can give us the confIdence 10 iii=,",·&#13;
feeling of helplessness. Yes Iadi&lt;o IlIia&#13;
gentlemen - our big ehanc~ 10 . lid&#13;
selv.es.of our collective fear of irnrid _.&#13;
Pitch: The approach to goverQ'&#13;
the important thing. •&#13;
If elected. I plan to ap_b&#13;
government with the idea SlladeI&#13;
complishments foremost in mind. of .1(.&#13;
of solution of student problems raU:-&#13;
the creation of an ineffectiv 1bII&#13;
idealistic governing body like ::. ....&#13;
student governments, on the na~&#13;
scale, have become. tioIII&#13;
I am interested in organi'&#13;
committees lo investigate The ~ ..&#13;
Bookslore. lhe Campus Police 0:::&#13;
menl, lhe "Auxiliary Enlerprises"&#13;
minislralors, and last but by no ~&#13;
leasl, the Sludent Activities braneb':"&#13;
Ad~it?istration. Problems in these lit&#13;
- If mdeed they exist, must be ....&#13;
opinion, defined and dealt with.• ID117&#13;
I am an eggman, we are the eumea.1&#13;
think this is a good thing.&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED (I&#13;
"Check Our PricesLtnt"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
New Gat/ery One&#13;
503 Main St,&#13;
Racine&#13;
10% Student Discoulfl&#13;
on all Posters&amp; Frallts&#13;
SONY-Ta ; PANASO pe record~rs, RadiOS,TV &amp; Record players&#13;
KOSS NHIC- RadIO, TV, Recorders, Stereo record pla~&#13;
- eadsets&#13;
KENWOOD - R . MARANT eC~lvers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
AZTEC Zs- Receivers, Speakers, Record playerS&#13;
- peakers ,&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntables&#13;
G,E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
ar A~SO,Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories.~l&#13;
So~theeri sh~ for .Jewelry, Sporting goods and .'''~&#13;
as ern Wisconsin'S lowest prices,&#13;
and -:- and con id&#13;
I •nl t•na te.&#13;
AN UAL SP1RING&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
G d Book at a Good Price&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
which would ban the club from fllll~tioni~&#13;
on campi.i,. I caJJed a private meeting with&#13;
Bill Smith and a few members of S.G:A·&#13;
and we decided that a 30 day suspension&#13;
might save the group, even though it was&#13;
double jeopardy. . These are a few of the maJor events&#13;
which eroded student confidence in the&#13;
administration. From here things got&#13;
worse. S.G.A. had no funds, whenever we&#13;
needed money we had to submit a detailed&#13;
budget and then the Dean had to approve&#13;
it. If he liked the project we got the money,&#13;
if not he simply refused. He had all the&#13;
power in his financial vote. S.G.A. in fact&#13;
was nothing but a puppet for the Dean.&#13;
Two examples will illustrate this.&#13;
The first one occurred when SGA voted&#13;
w,animously to put on a program of three&#13;
movies dealing with. the war. The Dean&#13;
(Continued on Page 8)&#13;
Dale IJartin&#13;
I dig Parkside as it now stands. Parkside&#13;
is a college of promise. The future of&#13;
Parkside, howe,•, as one of quality is in&#13;
doubt because of funding. It would be a&#13;
hame if Parkside is ruined because of an&#13;
error in someones judgement.&#13;
Many other issues should be dealt with&#13;
by the students. It is my hope that all&#13;
students will participate in this election&#13;
and everything that has to do with&#13;
Parkside. I will always remain open to any&#13;
suggestions my fellow students have.&#13;
U elected, I will support those things that&#13;
will provide Parkside students with the&#13;
best possible education. I also am in favor&#13;
of anything that will provide us, the&#13;
students, with more fun. I feel more free&#13;
dances would help.&#13;
Recently, the Parkside candy machine&#13;
in Kenosha set an outstanding example of&#13;
philosophy for us to folow. The machine&#13;
Wlexpectedly gave out free candy and&#13;
money. Parkside should follow the candy&#13;
machine's example and make a larger&#13;
portion of Parkside's dances FREE.&#13;
Christopher Crowe&#13;
I suppose there are many&#13;
apathy. Probably the reaso~ fer&#13;
malignancy at Parkside is u./or&#13;
cyndrome of a group's lack or . in its ability to improve its Jot A~::~&#13;
futility. . lllg ct&#13;
We've got this chance frien~ S&#13;
government - if approached ·&#13;
can give us the confidence to ~~ feeling of helplessness. Yes ladi&#13;
gentlemen - our big chanc~ lo !S&#13;
selves of our collective fear of iin nd D11t&#13;
Pitch: The approach to goven!:~&#13;
the important thing.&#13;
U elected, I plan to approach&#13;
government with the idea 5,&#13;
complishments foremost in mind· ~ •&#13;
of solution _of student problems raUier&#13;
the creation of an ineffective&#13;
idealistic governing body like s:i&#13;
student governments, on Uie&#13;
scale, have become. na&#13;
I am interested in organizt&#13;
committees to investigate The Unh&#13;
Bookstore, the Campus Police&#13;
ment, the "Auxiliary Enterpr· ,&#13;
ministrators, and last but by no&#13;
least! ~e S~dent Activities branch':&#13;
A&amp;:n1i:11stration. Problems in these 1&#13;
- if mdeed they exist, must be&#13;
opinion, defined and dealt with. '&#13;
I am an eggman, we are the eggrn&#13;
think this is a good thing.&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED Cl&#13;
"Check Our Pricts Las1"&#13;
4807 7th AYENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
New Gallery One&#13;
503 Main St.&#13;
Racine&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS&#13;
LIKE ... the brands you 11011&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000AlblJ&#13;
and 45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, not&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, .&#13;
Department Manager, who is a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk your language, both&#13;
--~ equipment purchases, records and&#13;
~~:~S Tape r~corders, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
KOSS ONHIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record playtfS - eadsets&#13;
~~::~o:: Rec~ivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
AZTEC ZS Receivers, Speakers, Record players - peakers&#13;
J.8.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntables&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
a 'i!so, Pateh cords, blank Tapes and accessories. Whilt&#13;
~~th er~, sho~ for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Glfll&#13;
eas ern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS&#13;
51 2 MAIN STREET&#13;
on the west side of Monument Square &#13;
Pagp 8 ~E"SCOPE Thursday, April 1&#13;
I Tim Dalp)&#13;
The Uw-P Situation IS known. A Incampus&#13;
sy tem exists in ",hi~hlhere are&#13;
no dorms or student centers and no&#13;
athletrc Iaetlttes These ph) ICal factors&#13;
bave created a negative attitude toward&#13;
the entire school and toward the student&#13;
b\.:t1\"1hes In the future the physical&#13;
problem '" ill be overcome. But the&#13;
problem of cvercommg the atutudinal&#13;
factors can be dealt wrth no". The&#13;
. ludent Union committee is one step In Lhis&#13;
direeuon becau e the students \\ III no"&#13;
ha\ t an equal \ oiee In review mg polic.ies&#13;
of the tudent acuvmes and In revrewmg&#13;
g O&lt;'rally 1M broad area or student actl\.11l&#13;
poilci' on "'110 IS 10 have&#13;
prlOrlly In u Ing the buildIng ,,,II help&#13;
r I 1M I 'lor auuud 01 the tudents.&#13;
Thfr ha been a regauve attJlude&#13;
10'4 rd tM ludenl acuvtnes buildIng&#13;
aus It I not a true student umon and&#13;
the tudent have had no control Tbis&#13;
nrgah\' at htude also I taken toYo'8~ any&#13;
acllVlll connecled with the buIlding,&#13;
ThPl" ha' been complaInts about beer&#13;
prl . too The tudent umon committee&#13;
though '" 111be the (irst step In erasmg&#13;
th atlltudea&#13;
nee Sept m r 1 ha\'e been work.Jn~.as&#13;
• brilrlfnder at the student acllVitles&#13;
buIld"'. I bel.. ,p thIS g"es me a good&#13;
(,Iosfo·hand VI~Y; of the organization 1 am&#13;
thet't at most achvlhes and I can therefore&#13;
~I"\'e h.... the poliCIes pUI",to ellettare&#13;
.. orklOg&#13;
The students lhemsehres now have a&#13;
ch nceoto help build a part of their o.""n&#13;
campu. A successful student UOion&#13;
committ will help pave the way for the&#13;
da)' when 8 cam~ umon IS ready for the&#13;
students, to run&#13;
Jerome R. Hor.... l&#13;
I leel the Student Go,eroment is • _ I&#13;
and necessary function of OUrSclI~f/1i4&#13;
should have existed long belore now 'Ill&#13;
students spend a great deal of their~&#13;
within th~ walls 01 the school and ~&#13;
have a voice on how It functions,Iw -..&#13;
be a part of this voice. 1111"&#13;
By talking to students and w0rtina&#13;
lunctioning with students at P8Jtsidi, ':&#13;
almost two years, I hope teo and f&#13;
can, represent the student 'body till&#13;
committee member in the S(~&#13;
Government well.&#13;
From working in other organ;",&#13;
and clubs within the school and.., btIIa&#13;
through some 01 my own exper;.....&#13;
have found that students in many . I&#13;
are unknowingly not getting aUIboy:::&#13;
and should from the lunctions and """"&#13;
provided within the school. Iam ......&#13;
lor a co":,mittee knowing I willgain iliooi&#13;
satisfaction In doing all I can toltv, '"&#13;
students the sen Ices and lunclionaa..,&#13;
deserve.&#13;
"Keep on Truckin"&#13;
Greg BarreUe&#13;
In the past the StUdent A&lt;tivtllol&#13;
Building, operated by AWliliaryr.&#13;
terprises has been nm on a Profit~&#13;
basis, The students are being thouptal.&#13;
consumers, I think this is wrong, AuxiIIa,&#13;
Enterprises should operate the S1uIIti&#13;
Activities Building as a senile_&#13;
students,&#13;
The Student Activities BUildingm .&#13;
operated with the students' benelilill....&#13;
and not with the prolil margin aslbe...&#13;
concern.&#13;
U elected, I propose'" in'estigatt ..&#13;
01 the practices AUxiliaryE....,..&#13;
have been conducting in regardsto,*&#13;
services.&#13;
Student Union Committee&#13;
Be Sure To VOTE&#13;
On&#13;
Tuesday, Wednesday&#13;
•&#13;
t A/Iatl' III formed me lbat Studen ..,.Id"&#13;
backed down and the Luddites I"&#13;
a table in the registration I~ ...&#13;
they had seen the Regents&#13;
said no, loI1oftIIllI'"&#13;
Among the students who ,~&#13;
to his office that day was DeJIIII(;IIMII tI&#13;
Despite his presence th"';"' __ ",-&#13;
played the administration~ •• ,&#13;
Eaker formed CUSP and ";&amp;iv.. " _&#13;
registration line With SbeI • .-&#13;
. stitution, They listed Drbim, lie ~~&#13;
advisor, so I went to see t :.&#13;
group was ad hoc and Jus 'd dIo1 ...&#13;
students a choice, He sa: aod ;;;&#13;
known source 01 oncom • ..l&#13;
, ti g office .... r:.JfI University prtn n 'r .,-.;,&#13;
their constitution, T: JliPII" '"&#13;
continued to eliminate coosti~ .•&#13;
committees, NeIther tI/# 4·&#13;
ratified as less th81120 ~&#13;
students who regIsterednoth" ~&#13;
Con-Con finally held: telld" ~&#13;
,ote a lew weeks ago, ':"t&gt;odY~..,&#13;
a majority 01the ~tudr. majoril1 ~&#13;
they decided a sun~d do, U~ ~&#13;
casting ballots wo !be _~&#13;
the vote- did not dra" it did ~ "-&#13;
students, but lorttma&#13;
::&#13;
y&#13;
get a ;,.s1!&#13;
Parkside wIll ~ ~Ihbe¢&#13;
government, hOpe! ~. in, ~ ~&#13;
This is where y";:.t the)'Staod&#13;
candidates and w r¢I'&#13;
VOTE! t gov,rtt A strong studen . __ and.....&#13;
th defiCl.... ~.- overcome ese ·tba strCIII·&#13;
the studentbo~ ~arI&lt;Jid"-&#13;
in the affaiI'S 0&#13;
students could be made aware of what was&#13;
happening and then Jewel Echelbarger&#13;
sent word that il the group dia anythIng&#13;
she didn't like, she would have it vetoed by&#13;
Dean Dearborn. The group became&#13;
disgusted with the situation and gave up.&#13;
Then CorrCon was proposed. Last spring&#13;
an election was held and students were&#13;
selected to draw up a new c&amp;1stitution.&#13;
Hopes were high that the constitution&#13;
would he ratified by Easter and a new&#13;
goverrnnent elected by May 1. By virtue of&#13;
receiving the most votes, Bev Noble, in·&#13;
volved in her first political activity on&#13;
campus, chaired the group. The semester&#13;
ended with no ratification vote. Summer&#13;
passed and the new fall semester was well&#13;
lDlder way with no constitution acceptable&#13;
10 both sides,&#13;
When I taiked to con-con members to&#13;
find out what was happening I was told&#13;
that Dearborn had hecome abusive "'ward&#13;
Bev Novle and accused her 01being a rebel&#13;
rouser and a trouble maker, I approached&#13;
Bev and asked her if this was true and she&#13;
confirmed it.&#13;
When the laculty lirings began the&#13;
situation became ripe lor Con-Con to push&#13;
through its constitution. Student interest&#13;
was at a peak, the need for a student voice&#13;
apparent, and the CorrCon document&#13;
seemed destined lor passage,&#13;
But the administration tried one last&#13;
ditch ellort to block the constitution. Dave&#13;
Krivan, the Chancellor's personal&#13;
assistant, came out of the woodwork to&#13;
alter the document. Working through&#13;
Dennis Cashion and Jim Eaker, under the&#13;
History&#13;
(Continued lrom Page 6)&#13;
"Ioed our budget. He claimed that the&#13;
Regents Rules required us to present both&#13;
Sides of the argument. This was a lie. As a&#13;
matter or lacl the school had just&#13;
presented a program on civil rights which&#13;
Included Father James Groppi, Alderman&#13;
Val Phtlltps and Jesse Jackson, who are&#13;
all Irong civil rights advocates. When we&#13;
confronled Lhe Student Affairs o£Ciceand&#13;
asked to see a copy 01the regents rules, we&#13;
"'ere told that there was no copy available.&#13;
The other incident OCC\DTed when SGA&#13;
planned a year end party at the new&#13;
Parkside site. Beer was to be served and&#13;
51. bands had been lined up '" provide&#13;
conllnuous musIC all day and night. When&#13;
It was learned lbat all the "bands had&#13;
agroed 10 donate their money to the un.&#13;
derground n....."paper. so it could get a&#13;
press. Student Allairs relused to accept&#13;
the contracts and lured two bands 01their&#13;
0'4."&#13;
By late APril Ihad had my fill. SGA was&#13;
a useless, powerless 1001 01 the student&#13;
affairs office. I resigned from the&#13;
presidency and went 10 work lor The&#13;
CommllleP SGA degeneraled to oothing&#13;
the semester limped to a close, When&#13;
the fan semester began in September 01'69&#13;
11 was clear to everyone that SGA was&#13;
dead Around Christmaslime a few&#13;
tUdents trIed 10write a Constitution and&#13;
get 1lratified so another government could&#13;
get started but Bill Niebuhr refused to give&#13;
them rooms to hold meetings so the&#13;
guise of smoothing out the language,&#13;
Krivan tried'" back out th",students Bill 01&#13;
Rights and the standing committee. On the&#13;
fIrst Tuesday of Christmas vacation ConCon&#13;
held a meeting to consider these&#13;
changes. Con-Con accepted some&#13;
recommendations dealing with word&#13;
changes, but maintained that past exP\'rience&#13;
established a definite need for the&#13;
rights and the standing committees.&#13;
Cashion and Eaker argued that we should&#13;
forgive and forget 'and show some trust in&#13;
the administration, Con-Con voted to&#13;
maintain the two key issues and the&#13;
constitution was ready for ratification.&#13;
The vote was scheduled to take place&#13;
during registration.&#13;
As far as showing trust is concerned., the&#13;
lolly of that notion became evident during&#13;
January's final exams. A number of&#13;
organizations had asked for permission to&#13;
set up tables in the registration line to&#13;
solicit membership and distribute&#13;
literature, I was sitting in the lounge at&#13;
Tallant Hall when Mr. Totero Irom Dean&#13;
Dearborn's ollice came down and told&#13;
some memhers of the Luddites that they&#13;
would not be allowed to have a table. When&#13;
they .. ked him why not he said that they&#13;
had been checking the Regents Rules the&#13;
previous day and found that it was not&#13;
permitted. This sounded lamiliar and I&#13;
told the Luddites to ask to see the rules.&#13;
Totero said they were in his office, so we&#13;
went back to his office with him. Somehow&#13;
the Regents Rules became irretrievably&#13;
lost in 24hours. I had to leave for an exam,&#13;
When I got out one of the Luddites inHistory&#13;
&#13;
prt 1&#13;
Student Union Committee&#13;
Jerome R. Horton&#13;
I feel the Student Government i&#13;
and necessary function of our sch~&#13;
should have existed long before now&#13;
students spend a great deal of thei&#13;
within the walls of the school anJ&#13;
have a voice on how it functions. 1&#13;
be a part of this voice.&#13;
By talking to students and workj&#13;
functioning with students at Par ng&#13;
almost two years, I hope too, and 1&#13;
can, represent the student body&#13;
committee member in the St&#13;
Government well.&#13;
From working in other organiu&#13;
and clubs within the school and also&#13;
through some of my own expen&#13;
have found that students in many are unlmowingly not getting all they&#13;
and should from the functions and&#13;
provided within the school. 1 arn&#13;
for a committee knowing I ...,;11 gain&#13;
satisfaction in doing all I can to gi&#13;
students the services and functions&#13;
deserve.&#13;
"Keep on Truckin"&#13;
Greg Barrette&#13;
In the past the Student Acti&#13;
Building, operated by Au.xiliar:,&#13;
terprises has been run on a profit&#13;
basis. The students are being lhougbtGI&#13;
consumers. I think this is wrof'I. Enterprises should operate th&#13;
Activities Building as a sen&#13;
students.&#13;
The Student Activities Building m&#13;
operated with the students' benefit&#13;
and not with the profit margm as the concern.&#13;
If elected, I propose to inv tigate&#13;
of the practices Auxiliary Ent&#13;
have been conducting in regards to&#13;
services.&#13;
Be Sure To VOTE&#13;
On&#13;
Tuesday, Wednesday&#13;
(Cootinued from Page 6)&#13;
tudents could be made aware of what was&#13;
happening and then Jewel Ecbelbarger&#13;
sent word that if the group did" anything&#13;
she didn 't like, she would have it vetoed by&#13;
Dean Dearborn. The group became&#13;
disgusted with the situation and gave up.&#13;
Then Con-Con was proposed. Last spring&#13;
an election was held and students were&#13;
selected to draw up a new c&amp;stitution.&#13;
Hopes were high that the constitution&#13;
would be ratified by Easter and a new&#13;
government elected by May 1. By virtue of&#13;
receiving the most votes, Bev oble, involved&#13;
in her first political activity on&#13;
campus, chaired the group. The semester&#13;
ended with no ratification vote. Summer&#13;
passed and the new fall semester was well&#13;
under way with no constitution acceptable&#13;
to both sides.&#13;
When I talked to con~n members to&#13;
find out what was happening I was told&#13;
that Dearborn had become abusive toward&#13;
Bev ovle and accused her of being a rebel&#13;
rouseF and a trouble maker. I approached&#13;
Bev and asked her if this was true and she&#13;
confirmed it.&#13;
When the faculty firings began the&#13;
situatioo became ripe for Con-Con to push&#13;
through its constitution. Student interest&#13;
was at a peak, the need for a student voice&#13;
apparent, and the Con-Con document&#13;
seemed destined for passage.&#13;
But the administration tried one last&#13;
ditch effort to block the constitution. Dave&#13;
Krivan, the Chancellor's personal&#13;
assistant, came out of the woodwork to&#13;
alter the document. Working through&#13;
Dennis Cashion and Jim Eaker, under the&#13;
guise of smoothing out the language,&#13;
Krivan tried to hack out thEl,students Bill of&#13;
Rights and the standing committee. On the&#13;
first Tuesday of Christmas vacation ConCon&#13;
held a meeting to consider these&#13;
changes. Con-Con accepted some&#13;
recommendations dealing with word&#13;
changes, but maintained that past experience&#13;
established a definite need for the&#13;
rights and the standing committees.&#13;
Cashion and Eaker argued that we should&#13;
forgive and forget ·and show some trust in&#13;
the administration. Con-Con voted to&#13;
maintain the two key issues and the&#13;
constitution was ready for ratification.&#13;
The vote was scheduled to take place&#13;
during registration.&#13;
As far as showing trust is concerned, the&#13;
folly of that notion became evident during&#13;
January's final exams. A number of&#13;
organizations had asked for permission to&#13;
set up tables in the registration line to&#13;
solicit membership and distribu(e&#13;
literature. I was sitting in the lounge at&#13;
Tallant Hall when Mr. Totero from Dean&#13;
Dearborn's office came down and told&#13;
some members of the Luddites that they&#13;
would not be allowed to have a table. When&#13;
they lsked him why not he said that they&#13;
had been checking the Regents Rules the&#13;
previous day and found that it was not&#13;
permitted. This sounded familiar and I&#13;
told the Luddites to ask to see the rules.&#13;
Totero said they were in his office, so we&#13;
went back to his office with him. Somehow&#13;
the Regents Rules became irretrievably&#13;
lost in 24 hours. I had to leave for an exam.&#13;
When I got out one of the Luddites informed&#13;
me that Studen~ AffJll1&#13;
backed down and the Lt!ddites 1 a table in the registration lme. ,_ they had seen the Regents&#13;
said no. folJoWd&#13;
Among the students who&#13;
to his office that day was De~&#13;
Despite his presence '!'~ ...,e&#13;
played the administration~ If&#13;
Eaker for~ed 0,JSP a_nd KriYID&#13;
registration hne wilh Sid ,.&#13;
stitution. They listed DrbiJD. flt&#13;
advisor, so I went to~ t wanted&#13;
group was ad hoc and JUS "d !bf)'&#13;
students a choice. He 581 and&#13;
known source of income bid&#13;
University printing offic~r c . • · The• their conshtut1on. fligbll&#13;
continued to elim!nate ~- committees. Neither 20 per ~&#13;
ratified as Jess 1:1180 red voted.&#13;
students who regtSte notJier rt&#13;
Con-Con finally held; tead"&#13;
vote a few weeks ago. f~&#13;
a majority of the ~tud:' rna;ort. '-&#13;
they decided a sunp do&#13;
casting ballots would !ht&#13;
the vote did not draw ii did&#13;
students, but ~ortu;:1!fi: F' •&#13;
Parkside will !ill with tltl&#13;
government, hopef ~e in&#13;
This is where Y%t the)' staod flJ&#13;
candidates and w&#13;
VOTE! t goverlllll A strong studen . ...-jeS and defiCle, ... overcome these 'th a sironC·&#13;
the student.~';:~&#13;
in the affairs 0 </text>
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              </elementText>
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              </elementText>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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              <text>Lucey's Budget Cuts. What Do They Mean to the Students?</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="89859">
              <text>To the students.&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Gov. Pat Lucey's recent proposal to consolidate&#13;
the state university system under one central&#13;
administration and at the same time cut, by $9.3&#13;
million, the base operating budget for the system was&#13;
.met with unanimous disapproval last Saturday&#13;
morning at a briefing held by ChancellorIrvin Wyllie.&#13;
The briefing, held at Greenquist Hall, was to&#13;
discuss the implications of the proposed merger and&#13;
budget cuts. A report, published by the Department&#13;
of Health, Education andWelfare, was distributed.&#13;
Entitled the HEW report, it contains major criticisms&#13;
of the proposed merger.&#13;
Excerpts include: "We believe that the drive for&#13;
coordination is leading toward large, centralized&#13;
multi-campus systems. The identity, integrity, and&#13;
Ehance to explore new directions at each campus&#13;
must be enhanced now before the opportunity for&#13;
this is hopelessly eroded by growing buremtcracy ...&#13;
The budget cuts, if passed, according to fact. sheets&#13;
According to adminstration sources, Governor&#13;
Patrick Lucey's budget, if .passed as is, would cost&#13;
Parkside approximately $4,312,800 in funds over the&#13;
next biennium.&#13;
The cuts would amount to $521,000 in the base&#13;
budget (pro-rating the Governor's cuts), a $170,000&#13;
cut in enrollment funding if Parks ide is funded at the&#13;
Wisconsin State University level, and a $3,621,800&#13;
cut in decision items (money sought by UW-P above&#13;
last year's budget level). .&#13;
All these figures are tentative and subject to chan~e&#13;
as more information is accumulated. It also,s&#13;
contingent on the decision of the Central&#13;
Administration of the UW to divide up the $9.3&#13;
million cut in the system's base budget. ., •&#13;
AnOther source Sid Walesh of Parkside s Buaget&#13;
Planning, said the Uw is considering three alternative&#13;
to the pro-rationing of the Governor's base budget&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
ro ftD&#13;
Harbor West:&#13;
Kenosha's Old Town?&#13;
See page three&#13;
How the budget will affect the four proposed new&#13;
majors, Computer Science: Indusmal Relations.&#13;
Graphic Arts, and the History of Science and&#13;
Technology, is unclear. While the Governor did not&#13;
fund them, people at Parkside involved with them,&#13;
from the Dean of the College of Letters and Science.&#13;
William Morrowan downward refuse to comment on&#13;
the future implementation of them.&#13;
Ken Herrick, of the library staff, said of the cuts.&#13;
"They would be extremely bad. The students and&#13;
faculty would come out as losers."&#13;
H~ saw the~ affecting. the library in two ways; in&#13;
providing service and buymg books and periodicals&#13;
He ~id it wasn't known at the present time how&#13;
badly jt would restrict the purchasing, but he pomred&#13;
out because Parkside h~s a new library it needs a great&#13;
number of out of pnnt books and back issues of&#13;
periodicals.&#13;
(Continued on Page 21&#13;
To&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
circulated throughout the audience, would grcarlv&#13;
diminish the quality of education at Parksidc. With&#13;
Parkside losing between $4.3 and 4.9 million of the&#13;
proposed cut, it would be capable of providing onlv a&#13;
second class educational facility for an arca that has&#13;
demonstrated its desire for a first class education.&#13;
Various people from the area were givcn the&#13;
opportunity to voice their opinions and a group was&#13;
formed to travel to Madison, April 1 to speak out&#13;
against these feforms.&#13;
Two resolutions that were unamimouslYJ'a sed by&#13;
the audience stated: I.) Such a merger woul be morc&#13;
costly to state taxpayers than the present system. 2.)&#13;
The intent and desire of Southeastern Wisconsin&#13;
citizens was from the beginning to esrabli h a quality&#13;
university whose programs and # missions were&#13;
different from those of a State University Campus.&#13;
3.) State legislation specifically established '/1",&#13;
&lt;Continuedon Page 4)&#13;
Wyllie&#13;
By Kevin McKay&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
To&#13;
other&#13;
cut. It can do so because rhe Icut are not allocated&#13;
specifically in the Governor's budget.&#13;
Alternative one would distribute the cut on the&#13;
basis of the percentage of student credit hours, by&#13;
levels, earned on the various UW campuscs, applying&#13;
the WSU funding level formulas. This would amount&#13;
to 1,125.000 in cuts over the biennium for Parksidc.&#13;
Alternative t 0 would reduce programs. but not&#13;
salaries, across the board by levying a 2 !I, % cut on all&#13;
state funded positions each year of the biennium.&#13;
This would produce a loss of 350,000 for Parkside.&#13;
This is the alternative most favored by Parkside&#13;
because UW·p hasn't yet developed the beaucjacy&#13;
older campus's have. Thus on a comparative ba. i ,&#13;
Parkside would not lose as much as the Madison&#13;
campus.&#13;
Alternative three would take the entire 9.3 million&#13;
(Continued on Page 5)&#13;
Administration&#13;
Lt. Governor Marrin Schreiber came to Parkside&#13;
last Friday to defend Governor Lucey's bud.gel and&#13;
his proposal to merge the University of Wisconsin&#13;
system with the Wisconsin Slate University system.&#13;
He failed. He left with his ears singed unable to&#13;
convincingly refute the pointed and, at times, heated&#13;
attack directed to the Governor's programs by&#13;
members of the Parkside community.&#13;
The young and personable Schreiber undoubted~y&#13;
the heir to the future fortunes of Wisconsin&#13;
Democrats, appeared on campus on a forum&#13;
sponsored by Parkside's Young Dems.&#13;
He was questioned and challenged repeatedly by&#13;
students Jerry Owens Frances J aesche, Mike Holmes&#13;
and John Harbeson of the faculty, and by Walt Shirer&#13;
of Public Information.&#13;
Mrs. j aesche objected to the Governor's contention&#13;
that the goals and philosophies of the two systems are&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
similar, and for that reason they should be merged.&#13;
She argued the Governor's plans would kill the&#13;
University.&#13;
She said, "I beg to differ with you. The two&#13;
systems are not alike. That is the confusion that is&#13;
being fed to the public by the Governor. That there is&#13;
really no difference, and why not put them all under&#13;
one system.&#13;
"But there is considerable difference," she&#13;
emphasized, "I would like to recommend to the&#13;
[Governor that if he wants to save money, a very&#13;
expedient thing to do would be to raise the tuition of&#13;
the State Universities to the same level as students at&#13;
Parkside are paying.&#13;
"Simplistic solutions and generalizations are highly&#13;
dangerous," she stated.&#13;
"If the Governor wished to put them all in one&#13;
(Continued on Page 6).&#13;
To the people&#13;
By Marc Eisen&#13;
Harbor West:&#13;
Kenosha's Old Town?&#13;
See page th~ e&#13;
' UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-PARKSIDE VOLUME 3,, UMBER t MARCH 2', 1971&#13;
Lucey s Budget Cuts: What do they mean?&#13;
t If the _Governor's hu~et proposal i pa ed a i b&#13;
he tegislature, Parkside students can expect the&#13;
tosst _ le closing of the Keno ha- and Racine campu 1&#13;
1?ranes, short_er hours at the Tallent Hall library. a&#13;
Library Learning Center with no hooks in it and no&#13;
staff to run it, fewer student service with more&#13;
students _to use them, no new major , fewer univer it ·&#13;
student Jobs, and the pos ible reduction of exi ting To staff in the library and Student Affari . the students&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
of the·Newscope Staff&#13;
These are some of the possible effect of the&#13;
Governor's budget mentioned as Parkside begins to&#13;
evaluate what the cuts may mean.&#13;
~ha~ th~ full implications will be is not yet known&#13;
but ~nd1cat1ons of it are beginning to be seen.&#13;
The main ope . being that with almost no new&#13;
funds approved by the Governor. Parkside will have&#13;
to_ serve an expected increased enrollment of 1.000&#13;
students with its existing budget cut at a minimum of&#13;
$350,000.&#13;
Gov. Pat Lucey's recent proposal to consolidate&#13;
the state university system under one central&#13;
administration and at the same time cut, by $9.3&#13;
million, the base operating budget for the system was&#13;
met with unanimous disapproval last Saturday&#13;
morning at a briefing held by Chancellor Irvin Wyllie.&#13;
The briefing, held at Greenquist Hall, was to&#13;
discuss the implications of the proposed merger and&#13;
budget cuts. A report, published by the Department&#13;
of Health, Education andWelfare, was distributed.&#13;
Entitled the HEW report, it contains major criticisms&#13;
of the proposed merger.&#13;
Excerpts include: "We believe that the drive for&#13;
coordination is leading toward large, centralized&#13;
multi-campt4.s systems. The identity, integrity, and&#13;
~hance to explore new directions at each campus&#13;
must be enhanced now before the opportunity for&#13;
this is hopelessly eroded by growing bureaucracy ...&#13;
The budget cuts, if passed, accorqing to fact. sheets&#13;
According to adminstration sources, Governor&#13;
Patrick Lucey's budget, if · passed as is, would cost&#13;
Parkside approximately $4,312,800 in funds over the&#13;
next biennium.&#13;
The cuts would amount to $521,000 in the base&#13;
budget (pro-rating the Governor's cuts), a U 70,000&#13;
cut in enrollment funding if Parkside is funded at the&#13;
Wisconsin State University level, and a $3,621,800&#13;
cut in decision items (money sought by UW-P above&#13;
last year's budget level).&#13;
All these figures are tentative and subject to chan~e&#13;
as more information is accumulated. It also 1s&#13;
contingent on the decision of the Central&#13;
Administration of the UW to divide up the 9.3&#13;
million cut in the system's base budget. . ,&#13;
To&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie&#13;
By Kevin McKay&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
To&#13;
other&#13;
Administration&#13;
~ow the bud et -. •ill affect the four propo d n "&#13;
maJors, Computer cience, lndu trial Rel cion .&#13;
Graphic Art . and the H" tor, of ien c nd&#13;
Technol y. i unclear. While the Governor did n t&#13;
fund them. people at Park ide involved -. ith them,&#13;
from the Dean of the Colleg of L tters and ci n .&#13;
\ illiam Morrow on downward refu c to comm nt n&#13;
the future implementation of them.&#13;
Ken Herrick, of the librar caff, said o the&#13;
'The · would be e. tremel • bad. Th tud nt&#13;
faculty would come out a. lo r ... .&#13;
He saw them affecting the librar in two wa,&#13;
providing ervice and bu_ ing book and pni di ;,&#13;
He . id it wa. n't known at the pre nt time h w&#13;
badl · it would re trict the purcha ing. but h p int d&#13;
out becau e Park ide ha a new library it n _ cd r at&#13;
number of out of print book. and back i u&#13;
periodical . (Continued on P 2)&#13;
circulated throughout the udiencc , 11 ould gr atlv&#13;
diminish the quality of educ tion at Park id . \ ith&#13;
Parkside losing between 4.3 and 4.9 million of th&#13;
proposed cut. it would be capable of providin onl •&#13;
second class educational facilit · for n ar th t ha&#13;
demonstrated its desire for a Hr t cla ducation.&#13;
Various people from the are were i en th&#13;
opportunit · to voice their opinion and a group w&#13;
formed to travel to Madi on. April l to pc k out&#13;
against these feform .&#13;
Two re olution th t w r un mimou I db&#13;
the audience tatcd: I.) uch a merger ·oul&#13;
costly to state ta. pa ers than the pr enc • tem. 2.)&#13;
The intent and de ire of o thca tern Wi on n1&#13;
citizens was from the beginn: ,g to c tabli h a quali1&#13;
university whose program and mi ion w r&#13;
different from tho e of a State ·u~i r it mpu .&#13;
3. Stace legislation pe ifically ~. t bli h d Tiu&#13;
(Continued on P 4)&#13;
campu .&#13;
lternative three would t a the cntir&#13;
(Continued on P&#13;
Another source Sid Walesh of Parkside s Budget&#13;
Planning, said the UW is considering three alternative&#13;
to the pro-rationing of the Governor's base budget 1a-------~------------------• by tare Ei en ------------------ - --- ----•&#13;
Lt. overnor artm Sc ei er came to Par st e&#13;
last Friday to defend Governor Lu~ey's hu~get ~d&#13;
his proposal to merge the University of W1sconsm&#13;
system with the Wisconsin State University system.&#13;
He failed. He left with his ears singed unable to&#13;
convincingly refute the pointed and, at times, heated&#13;
attack directed to the Governor's programs by&#13;
members of the Parkside community.&#13;
The young and personable Schreiber undo~hted~y&#13;
the heir to the future fortunes of W1sconsm&#13;
Democrats, appeared on campus on a forum&#13;
sponsored by Parkside's Young Dems.&#13;
He was questioned and challenged repeatedly by&#13;
students Jerry Owens Frances Jaesche, Mike Holmes&#13;
and John Harbeson of the faculty, and by Walt Shirer&#13;
of Public Information.&#13;
Mrs. Jaesche objected to the Governor's contention&#13;
that the oals and hiloso hies of the two s stems are&#13;
similar, and for that reason they should be merged.&#13;
She argued the Governor's plans would kill the&#13;
University.&#13;
She said, ·'I beg to differ with you. The two&#13;
systems are not alike. That is the confu ion that is&#13;
being fed to the public by the Governor. That there is&#13;
really no difference. and why not put them all under&#13;
one system.&#13;
"But there is considerable difference,.. she&#13;
emphasized, "I would like to recommend to the&#13;
!Governor that if he wants to save money, a very&#13;
expedient thing to do would be to raise the tuition of&#13;
the State Universities to the same level as students at&#13;
Parkside are paying.&#13;
''Simplistic solutions and generalizations are high! ·&#13;
dangerous," she stated.&#13;
''If the Governor wished to put them all in one&#13;
&lt;Continued on Page 6)&#13;
To the people&#13;
By , fare Ei en &#13;
Harbor West&#13;
by JOHN KOLOEN&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
All offense aside, why would someone&#13;
ant to go down to an artists gallery?&#13;
~ould Kenosha give it's.artists a chance?&#13;
The occasion has arisen. A number of&#13;
Kenosha's artists have gotten together and&#13;
opened up several galleries (near the site&#13;
o! the new Holiday Inn) hoping to draw&#13;
enough attention to stay open.&#13;
Many new ideas were at first rejected&#13;
simply because people weren't ready to&#13;
accept them. We reject out of confusion&#13;
andonly when we've had the time to think,&#13;
are we ale to accept new ideas. Kenoshan'g&#13;
may not be ready for a place where they&#13;
can go to buy paintings by local talent&#13;
In Search of Identity&#13;
Kenosha where tourists can 5 d an&#13;
afternoon and residents can buy =tingS&#13;
any d"y of the week.&#13;
. Newolcope talked with several artists on&#13;
sixth avenue west of the harbor W&#13;
stopped at each ~hop and listened as" the;&#13;
told us abuutthelr galleries and what they&#13;
want to accomplish.&#13;
John Goray, OWner of GORA Y told&#13;
Newscope:&#13;
"We want to give people a chance to see&#13;
new a~d.fresh art rather than having to go&#13;
to &lt;:h.lcago or Milwaukee and see the&#13;
tradiltonal stuff. We're all different&#13;
!he artist's co-op &lt;New Morning Gau~)&#13;
IS an,o'!tlet for all the younger people who&#13;
aren t mto something else. What we want&#13;
instead of rushing "to chicago for a repring&#13;
of Henri Mattise or out to Topps for a&#13;
reproduction, but the artists are gambling&#13;
that they are.&#13;
Never known as a pacemaker, Kenosha&#13;
stands in the shadow, of Chicago and&#13;
Milwaukee and, at times, even that of&#13;
Racine. We've no reason to develop&#13;
Kenosha's potential because the cities&#13;
around us have already developed their's&#13;
IDd it's always more romantic to go&#13;
lIODleplaceeveryone's heard about rather&#13;
than attending an opening at the Blue&#13;
Mushroom gallery in Kenosha.&#13;
Where's that? Never heard of it before.&#13;
In Chicago, Kenosha is like the Mushroom&#13;
Gallery and how many people tell&#13;
'trangers they're from Kenosha? Most of&#13;
the time we're from Southern Wisconsin,&#13;
ll" just north of Chicago but we're seldom&#13;
from Kenosha.&#13;
The artists want to change this, that's&#13;
Why they're trying to develop an area in&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Ehnwood&#13;
2704 lothrop ..."•. , Rodn., Wiscon.in&#13;
StUdents get-r~d carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone el s e l )&#13;
to do is cover a wide latitude. Like&#13;
Buss&lt;Loraine Buss, Blue Mushroom) has&#13;
her own stuff in her gallery, she's more&#13;
traditional. The Artists'-Gallery is the&#13;
most critical gallery since they have seven&#13;
or eight artists who have won prizes in&#13;
shows and that sort of thing."&#13;
Newscope asked if he thought Kenosha&#13;
would support the galleries. He replied,&#13;
"No, not alone. We have to depend on&#13;
people from out of town. There's very little&#13;
art awarness, or art intelligence, or art&#13;
understanding in Kenosha and it needs it.&#13;
The artists have tried this before in similar&#13;
ways; one gallery here, another over there&#13;
or a show, but it isn't enough. You've got to&#13;
~ professional&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
that is safe&#13;
legal &amp;&#13;
• •&#13;
Inexpensive&#13;
can be set up on an&#13;
outpatient basis by calling&#13;
The Problem Pregnancy&#13;
Referral Service&#13;
215-722-5360&#13;
24 hours-7 days&#13;
for professional, confidential&#13;
and cari"!Lhel'p.&#13;
have it in the community so we took a&#13;
position on it and the artists are afraid of&#13;
this because we don't get any help from&#13;
onyone and if the community won't support,&#13;
won't show any interest. then it'U go&#13;
down the drain as usual and Kenosha will&#13;
have nothing again."&#13;
."I'd like to see a headshop, a crazy bar&#13;
WIth peanuts on the floor, a flower wagon,&#13;
m~ybe a popcorn wagon . . . as many&#13;
things that can fit in so people can spend&#13;
the whole afternoon down here ... sort or&#13;
like Old Town ooIy without the commercialism&#13;
.•.&#13;
We went to the Blue Mushroom where&#13;
Loraine Buss had spent four days&#13;
preparing for her opening.&#13;
Nnnoope Mudl29, 1971 3&#13;
were altractinll more people than they&#13;
expected.&#13;
ewscope visit Mary Hammand at the&#13;
Arusts Gallery and asked if they expecte&lt;l&#13;
to make money 00 their gallenes She&#13;
replied," 0, we're no11rymg to make a 101&#13;
of money on this We sell for len dollars on&#13;
up, though we'd like to make enough to pay&#13;
rent and buy supplies"&#13;
When asked what type of clientele&#13;
visited her shop, she replied, "We've heel&#13;
attracling all kinds _.. people WIth&#13;
guests, [rom out of town and young people&#13;
The Kenosha Symphony League even had&#13;
a coffee here." Thumbing through a&#13;
hardcover tablet she added, "I always ask&#13;
people to sign the register and they've&#13;
ftlled many pages"&#13;
"There are seven artists exhibiting in&#13;
this gallery right oow ... We're nol gOIng&#13;
to exhibit prints or paintings (rom other&#13;
galleries. Initially, we want to exhibit local&#13;
talenL"&#13;
For many people such a place is amy a&#13;
dream - a place where things can happen&#13;
and people can meet and where the day&#13;
can be spent without worrying where to go&#13;
or bow to get there. How many times are&#13;
you hung up for ideas when a guest from&#13;
out of town visits you? Where is there to go&#13;
hesides a buwling alley, a theatre or&#13;
someplace anyone can go to in any city in&#13;
the country. If you want to take someone&#13;
someplace diUeren~ you go oul of town. A&#13;
billboard on highway 32 cJaims that&#13;
Kenosha's greatest attraction is a particular&#13;
local bank.&#13;
According to the shop owners, their&#13;
openings were received very well and they&#13;
DARRELL BORGER&#13;
Local talent is generally written off as&#13;
inferior by many Kenoshans. To make it as&#13;
an artist. musician, actor or writer, c.le&#13;
must leave Kenosha and look for fertile&#13;
ground where his creativity can grow and&#13;
be recognized Kenosha is not a very&#13;
friendly climate for new things so local&#13;
talent moves to New York or O1icago or&#13;
filwaukee where new things are accepted&#13;
and change is almost a trademark.&#13;
C&lt;Jmmunily-conscieace ,..............,18&#13;
and citizens support art shows. galleries,&#13;
and concerts, rather than ignore them&#13;
Think of what Chicago would be lil&lt;e&#13;
without the Art Institute or Rush Street, or&#13;
Old Town, or without the Picasso.&#13;
COME NOW TO OUR ANNUAL BOOK SALE&#13;
COMING SOON - RECORO SALE&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
SPRING IS&#13;
SALE TIME&#13;
Harbor West · In Search of Identity&#13;
by JOHN KOLOEN&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
All offense aside, why would someone&#13;
·ant to go dQwn to an artists gallery?&#13;
;ould Kenosha give it's.artists a chance?&#13;
The occasion has arisen. A number of&#13;
J{enosha's artists have gotten together and&#13;
opened up several galleries (near the site&#13;
of the new Holiday Inn) hoping to draw&#13;
enough attention to stay open.&#13;
Many new ideas were at first rejected&#13;
siJ11ply because people weren't ready to&#13;
accept them. We reject out of confusion&#13;
and only when we've had the time to think,&#13;
are we ale to accept new ideas. Kenoshan's&#13;
may not be ready for a place where they&#13;
can go to buy paintings by local talent&#13;
instead of rushing to Chicago for a repring&#13;
of Henri Mattise or out to Topps for a&#13;
reproduction, but the artists are gambling&#13;
that they are.&#13;
Never known as a pacemaker, Kenosha&#13;
stands in the shadow , of Chicago and&#13;
Milwaukee and, at times, even that of&#13;
Racine. We've no reason to develop&#13;
Kenosha's potential because the cities&#13;
arotmd us have already developed their's&#13;
and it's always more romantic to go&#13;
someplace everyone's heard about rather&#13;
than attending an opening at the Blue&#13;
MUMroom gallery in Kenosha.&#13;
Where's that? Never heard of it before.&#13;
In Chicago, Kenosha is like the Mushroom&#13;
Gallery and how many people tell&#13;
strangers they're from Kenosha? Most of&#13;
the time we're from Southern Wisconsin,&#13;
or just north of Chicago but we're seldom&#13;
from Kenosha.&#13;
The artists want to change this, that's&#13;
why they're trying to develop an area in&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 latltrap Ave., /locin•, Wi1con1in&#13;
Students get-r!?d carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone else!)&#13;
Kenosha where tourists can spend an&#13;
afternoon and residents can buy painting· s any da.y of the week.&#13;
. New~ope talked with several artists on&#13;
sixth avenue west of the harbor. We&#13;
st0PPed at each ~hop and listened as they&#13;
told us about their galleries and what they want to accomplish.&#13;
John Goray' owner of GORA y told Newscope:&#13;
"We want to give people a chance to see&#13;
new ai:id-fresh art rather than having to go&#13;
to ~h_icago or Milwaukee and see the&#13;
traditional stuff. We're all different&#13;
'.fhe artist's c~op (New Morning Gall~i&#13;
is an, 01;1t1et for all the younger people who&#13;
aren t mto something else. What we want&#13;
to do is cover a wide latitude. Like&#13;
Buss(Loraine Buss, Blue Mushroom) has&#13;
her own stuff in her gallery, she's more&#13;
traditional. The Artists'-Gallery is the&#13;
most critical gallery since they have seven&#13;
or eight artists who have won prizes in&#13;
shows and that sort of thing."&#13;
Newscope asked if he thought Kenosha&#13;
would support the galleries. He replied,&#13;
"No, not alone. We have to depend on&#13;
people from out of town. There's very little&#13;
art awarness, or art intelligence, or art&#13;
understanding in Kenosha and it needs it.&#13;
The artists have tried this before in similar&#13;
ways; one gallery here, another over there&#13;
or a show, but it isn't enough. You've got to&#13;
~ 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;
215-722-5360&#13;
24 hours- 7 days&#13;
for professional, confidential&#13;
and caring___help.&#13;
have it in the communit we took a&#13;
position on it and the arti ts are afraid of&#13;
this because we don't get any help from&#13;
onyone and if the communit} won l ~&#13;
port, won't shov. any inter t, then it'll go&#13;
down the drain as u uaJ and Ken a ill&#13;
have nothing again."&#13;
_"I'd like to see a headshop. a crazy bar&#13;
wtth peanuts on the floor, a no ·er wagon,&#13;
m~ybe a popcorn wagon . . . as many&#13;
things that can fit in so people can pend&#13;
the whole afternoon down here . . . sort of&#13;
like Old Town only without the com- mercialism.'•&#13;
We went to the Blue 1ushroom where&#13;
Loraine Buss had pent four day&#13;
preparing for her opening.&#13;
For many people such a place is only a&#13;
dream - a place where things can happen&#13;
and people can meet and ·here the day&#13;
can be spent v.-ithout worrying where to go&#13;
or bow to get there. How many times are&#13;
you bung up for ideas when a guest from&#13;
out of town visits you? Where is there to go&#13;
besides a bowling alley, a theatre or&#13;
someplace anyone can go to in any city in&#13;
the country. If you want to take someone&#13;
somep diffe you g out o&#13;
billboard on highway 32 claims that&#13;
Kenosha's greatest attraction is a particular&#13;
local bank.&#13;
According to the shop owners, their&#13;
openings were received very well and they&#13;
SPRING IS&#13;
SALE TIME&#13;
COME NOW TO OUR ANNUAL BOOK SALE&#13;
COMING SOON - RECORD SALE&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STO E&#13;
Drinks 25c For T1le Ladies&#13;
(l,cd .... '• lhHI&#13;
LIVE MUSIC&#13;
.. _..._, .... a-,,Mea._T...._ ....... OltlNKS l'ltiCE TO AU. UNI FOllMI! 0 aOWl. Ell S &#13;
Administration&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
out of the new student enrollment funds.&#13;
cut ected to amount to $12 million, and distribute ;~! residue among the campuses that have enrollment&#13;
increases.&#13;
This plan is strongly opposed by Parkside, and in&#13;
[urn, strongly suppobrted bbydthe MadiMsiodn~ampus. lldt&#13;
Id absorb any ase u get cut a ision wou&#13;
wou"ve and leave only a negligible sum for the&#13;
rece , Id h h&#13;
campuses that wou ave earned t e enrollment&#13;
funding. ..&#13;
Enrollment fundmg is to be used to supply&#13;
dditional instructors and student services for the&#13;
.a ount of students over the previous year's&#13;
am k id . I enrollment. Par 51 e expects to earn apprOXimate y&#13;
Sl million in enrollment funding over the next&#13;
biennium. Walesh is doubtful that the third&#13;
alternative . will be adopted by the UW central&#13;
admlnIstratlon. "I would guess if the Governor and&#13;
the Joint Finance Committee have any influence,&#13;
they· would say, 'Let's dole the enrollment 'm~y&#13;
out as it is earned.'&gt;'&#13;
Presidenr of the University, John C. Weaver has&#13;
asked for some fleXibility in absorbing the cuts and in&#13;
gtantlng rhe enrollment money. "But 1 think the&#13;
Governor would say that within limits you can have&#13;
it," he continued. "Alternatives one or two would&#13;
probably be used because in both cases the cut is&#13;
being distributed across all campuses, and the&#13;
enrollment funding is being put where the new&#13;
students are going."&#13;
Parks ide is projected to receive a 23.3% increase in&#13;
new students in the 1971.72 school year over the&#13;
preVious year while Madison is projecting a I.2% loss&#13;
in enrollment over the same rime.&#13;
By Mark Timpany&#13;
"Bite y. our longue, get a Cinder In&#13;
your eye When you feel good. ~ u&#13;
feel nothing." Buckmin ter FuIlN, a&#13;
Luddite who lives 10 Carbondale. said&#13;
that. You coold easII} find faull wuh&#13;
the statement. but It doesexpre part&#13;
of Luddite's conceptual found", n It&#13;
is important. In order to mv lve&#13;
people in a typically Luddue manner.&#13;
that people be put in a posiuon of&#13;
being forced (a react. Any srtuauon of&#13;
forced mteracuon quesuons the rules&#13;
of interaction. Forced imeracucn&#13;
(socially) is revcluuonary acnon. A&#13;
Luddite is one who feels compelled to&#13;
a t or react.&#13;
Somebody said. "The only "a} '0&#13;
support a revolution is 10 start your&#13;
own." I don't know who said 'hal bot&#13;
it is a Luddite statement. There IS no&#13;
revolution until everyone tsas&#13;
internalized the revolution. The goal&#13;
of the Luddite revolution IS more&#13;
revolution. We must begin from a&#13;
foundation of individual sanity. Burn a&#13;
dollar bill today. If you are doing&#13;
anything today the way you did II one&#13;
year ago, you're making a senous&#13;
mistake.&#13;
The mare basic the msutuuon you&#13;
attack, the greater response you g~t,&#13;
The women's hberauon movement. 3S&#13;
an attack on the role of women, is an&#13;
attack on some of our most perva ive&#13;
repressive structures. American ~ielY&#13;
assumes continuity of the exrsung&#13;
male-female roles.Women's liberation&#13;
is total revolution. Without it, there IS&#13;
no release from oppression.&#13;
After some contact with concepts&#13;
of the sociology of knowledge, II is&#13;
possible that one discovers that the&#13;
reasons people. believe what they&#13;
believe are more important than wh3~&#13;
people c1l\im (0 objectively believe:.&#13;
"Makes you do what you want It to.&#13;
One should not believe anything one&#13;
reads. Burn the papers you are&#13;
holdingJt may well be that Luddlle ha&#13;
nothing to say.&#13;
Kenosha's Youth Form HELPLlNE-~ _...._.8'~Rl&#13;
By John Koloen&#13;
of the. Newscope Staff&#13;
A phone number not in the phone&#13;
book may save.a man's life. The&#13;
numberis 658-4357 and represents the&#13;
efforts of a group of young Kenoshans&#13;
dedicated enough to sit and wait for&#13;
potential suicides or drug abusers to&#13;
call for help.&#13;
Reasonably enough it is dubbed the&#13;
Helpline. Staffed by Kenosha area&#13;
students and· backed by area civic&#13;
groups, the Kenosha Mental Health&#13;
Association in particular, Its purpose IS&#13;
to lend a willing ear to people who&#13;
haveno one to talk to,&#13;
During February the group held its&#13;
first planning session at which 40&#13;
people met to organize the Helpline.&#13;
Mostwere students, some long-haired,&#13;
the remainder of the group was&#13;
lOunded out by clergymen and adults&#13;
fromthe mental health association.&#13;
One of the first problems to arise&#13;
revolved around the issue of&#13;
community-organization relations.&#13;
Wendy Musich, a Parkside couose,lor&#13;
put it this way: "There was a meetmg&#13;
with me Mrs. Bernacchi (KMHA) and&#13;
the chie'f of police and some of his&#13;
'tafLthe police didn't make a&#13;
statement at that time but now they&#13;
are receptive to having our liason kids&#13;
come down to try -to work things out&#13;
with lhem. And we've set up mar;&#13;
things with the rescue squad. Ther.e s&#13;
goingto be some, kids meeting WIth&#13;
social agencies to ask, how do you&#13;
want these things referred, so the&#13;
agencies don't get a whole bunch of&#13;
referrals out of the blue and have to&#13;
refuse them."&#13;
For several weeks the group met&#13;
with psychiatrists and social workers&#13;
with experience in "hotlin~" work.&#13;
Notably they enlisted the aId of the&#13;
Milwaukee Underground SWitchboard&#13;
whose work in the Milwaukee&#13;
community has been highly success,rul.&#13;
The swit'chboard representatl~es&#13;
discussed legal ramifications of hotlm.e&#13;
work. For example, the grou~ 1S&#13;
responsible to the parents of mll1~r&#13;
callers if a matter of custody IS&#13;
involved,like a runaway.&#13;
The law says they must call the&#13;
parents if their son or daughter ran&#13;
away from home. .&#13;
The switchboard group worked WIth&#13;
the Kenosha group in developll1g the&#13;
technique of answering a phone ,and&#13;
knowing how to handle vanouS&#13;
situations. They were told that many&#13;
caU, will be made by people to test&#13;
them, that many of the calls will be&#13;
practical jokers out to get a laugh.&#13;
At first the group had planned on&#13;
dealing explicitly with drug related&#13;
problems only but almost immediately&#13;
they realized such specialization would&#13;
not be appropriate since the Helpline&#13;
was designed to help people, not a&#13;
certain kind of people.&#13;
It was suggested at one of the&#13;
meetings that the group provide a&#13;
visitation service where volunteers go&#13;
to the home of a caller jf the caller&#13;
destred but again that would be&#13;
inappropriate. If a drug user called and&#13;
a volunteer visited his house and the&#13;
police raided the house for drugs the&#13;
volunteer would be arrested as if the&#13;
drugs were his. Also the point was&#13;
raised that a person may claim the&#13;
volunteer had stolen articles from his&#13;
home while he visited. There have&#13;
been records in other cities where&#13;
callers have charged volunteers with&#13;
crimes ranging from assault to theft:&#13;
But despite the problems whICh&#13;
have arisen, the group in fu.nctioning&#13;
on a limited weekend baSIS. Flyers&#13;
have been disfributed to key locations&#13;
in the community that advertises t~e&#13;
service. Their workshop is located In&#13;
the basement of the Keno~a&#13;
Memorial Hospital. The hospital&#13;
donated the rooms as they too were&#13;
considering the e,tablishmenl of a&#13;
hotline. The Kiwanis Club volunteered&#13;
the funds to pay for the consultants&#13;
that carne from Milwaukee to tram the&#13;
group.&#13;
Expressing the need for the group&#13;
to bridge the generation gap, Mrs.&#13;
Musich said, "The volunteers have, to&#13;
keep afoot in the adult community.&#13;
First of all the resources are there;&#13;
secondly, these people are more than&#13;
willing to come up WIth, the&#13;
funds ...and you can't kick them 111 the&#13;
teeth for tha"" .&#13;
"All the adults I've met With are&#13;
terribly well intentioned .but nobody&#13;
knows what to do about It and, Ican t&#13;
really blame them, I recogmze the&#13;
frustration that they have because here&#13;
they though for Iwo or three years&#13;
that education was the answ.er to d~~g&#13;
abuse to prevent this ternble tJu, ~&#13;
from happening and now t.heXr,&#13;
. to lhe realization that It Isn t commg&#13;
ki "&#13;
wo~ n~~e made a lot of mistakes but&#13;
I dOI~{ think the kids can be an~ry&#13;
wilh them for it. I see ~e ~~lpl~:&#13;
volunteers as really bell1g&#13;
middle.&#13;
They're going to have to keep really&#13;
close touch with the kids, and do&#13;
nothing to {Urn the kids off, but they&#13;
can't reject the adults either. They&#13;
have to be the bridge between gelling&#13;
the kids to the right place in the adult&#13;
community for help."&#13;
With all the problems aside,&#13;
Kenosha has a hotline. It represents a&#13;
big step inaddressing the drug problem&#13;
in Kenosha, It accepts its task without&#13;
apology and with the hope 'hat they&#13;
'can do something to curb drug abuse&#13;
by preventing users from ending up on&#13;
a fourth floor bed.&#13;
Zeta Beta Tau, Parksides first&#13;
national social-service fraternity,&#13;
announces the formation of its first&#13;
pledge cia" of the spring 1971 semester.&#13;
Pledgemaster Dallas Lemmon&#13;
reported that a total of nine students&#13;
have begun the traditional program of&#13;
pledging. During thi, program the men&#13;
will learn the history of ZBT bOlh&#13;
locally and nationally, complele service&#13;
projects to both the fraternity, school.&#13;
and to the communily. They are also&#13;
required to complete a social function.&#13;
Lemmon also added that if there are&#13;
any male student.s who ~i~t be&#13;
interested in becomlOg an aClIve 10 ZBT&#13;
to contact him 3t 658·1179 or to&#13;
contact Presidel1l Jack Tucker 3t&#13;
652·7745.&#13;
it's t e&#13;
real thing&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a,m, till 11 p,m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phano 657 _9747&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
PALEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30th Avo. FREE OEUVERY ":00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
Open 6 Days. a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mond,,;ys&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657·5191&#13;
ANNUAL SPRING&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
WE'RE NOT 'LYIN' WHEN WE SAY&#13;
(0Qd b~iel1.dga~e&#13;
the CGegt b~iel1.dg&#13;
They know you' they understand you; they&#13;
appreciate you' - and they miss you :",hen&#13;
you're not around. That's how old frIend~&#13;
are - and that's just how we lee\f~~~'~e&#13;
valued customer like yourse .,&#13;
really missed you and hope you II stop&#13;
in soon to say "hello" and browse,&#13;
Good Books at a Good Price&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE ~itIe~&#13;
6207 22nd Avonue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Administration&#13;
(Continued from Page I)&#13;
t out of the new studen~ _enrollment funds,&#13;
~~pected to amount to $12 m1ll1on, and distribute&#13;
alter_n~tive will be adopted by the W central&#13;
administration. "I would gues if the Go ·crnor and&#13;
the Joint Finance Committee have nv influ nee.&#13;
the residue among the campuses that have enrollment&#13;
increases.&#13;
This plan is strongly opposed by Parkside, and in&#13;
they · would say, 'Let's dole the enroll~ent · re&#13;
out as it is earned."'&#13;
President of the Univer icy. John C. Weaver ha&#13;
aske~ for some f1exil5ility in absorbing the cut and in&#13;
granting the enrollment monev. "But I think the&#13;
Governor would say that withi~ limit you an have&#13;
it," he continued. "Alternatives one dr two vould&#13;
probably be u ed because in both cas · the cut i&#13;
strongly supported by the Madision campus. It&#13;
cur:id absorb any base budget cut Madision would&#13;
wo 1 ·ve and leave only a negligible sum for the rece , l&#13;
campuses that wou d have earned the enrollment&#13;
funding.&#13;
Enrollment funding is to be used to supply&#13;
additional. instructors and student services for the&#13;
amount of students over the previous year's&#13;
enrollment. Parkside expects to earn approximately&#13;
S1 million in enrollment funding over the next&#13;
biennium. Walesh is doubtful that the third&#13;
being distributed across all campu e . and the&#13;
enrollment funding is being put where the new students are going."&#13;
Parkside is projected to receive a 23.3% increa in&#13;
new students in the 1971-72 school vear ova the&#13;
previous year while Madison is projecti~g a 1.2%10&#13;
m enrollment over the ame time.&#13;
By John Koloen&#13;
of the_Newscope Staff&#13;
A phone number not in the phone&#13;
book may save . a man's life. The&#13;
number is 658-4357 and represents the&#13;
efforts of a group of young Kenoshans&#13;
dedicated enough to sit and wait for&#13;
potential suicides or drug abusers to&#13;
call for help.&#13;
Reasonably enough it is dubbed the&#13;
Helpline. Staffed by Kenosha area&#13;
students and · backed by area civic&#13;
groups, the Kenosha Mental Health&#13;
Association in particular, its purpose is&#13;
to lend a willing ear to people who&#13;
have no one to talk to.&#13;
During February the group held its&#13;
first planning session at which 40&#13;
people met to organize the Helpline.&#13;
Most were students, some long-haired,&#13;
the remainder of the group was&#13;
rounded out by clergymen and adults&#13;
from the mental health association.&#13;
One of the first problems to arise&#13;
revolved around the issue of&#13;
community-organization relations.&#13;
Wendy Musich, a Parkside counselor&#13;
put it this way: "There was a meeting&#13;
with me Mrs. Bernacchi (KMHA) and&#13;
the chief of police and some of his&#13;
staff. .. the police didn't make a&#13;
statement at that time but now they&#13;
are receptive to having our liason kids&#13;
come down to try ·to work things out&#13;
with them And we've set up more&#13;
things with the rescue squad. _Ther~'s&#13;
going to be some · kids meeting with&#13;
social agencies to ask, how do you&#13;
want these things referred, so the&#13;
agencies don't get a whole bunch of&#13;
referrals out of the blue and have to&#13;
refuse them."&#13;
For several weeks the group met&#13;
with psychiatrists and social workers&#13;
with experience in "hotlin~" work.&#13;
them, that many of the calls wiIJ be&#13;
practical jokers out to get a laugh.&#13;
At first the group had planned on&#13;
dealing explicitly with drug related&#13;
problems only but almost immediately&#13;
they realized such specialization would&#13;
not be appropriate since the Helpline&#13;
was designed to help people, not a&#13;
certain kind of people.&#13;
It was suggested at one of the&#13;
meetings that the group provide a&#13;
visitation service where volunteers go&#13;
to the home of a caller jf the caller&#13;
desired but again that would be&#13;
inappropriate. If a drug user called and&#13;
a volunteer visited his house and the&#13;
police raided the house for drugs the&#13;
volunteer would be arrested as if the&#13;
drugs were his. Also the point was&#13;
raised that a person may claim the&#13;
volunteer had stolen articles from his&#13;
home while he visited. There have&#13;
been records in other cities where&#13;
callers have charged volunteers with&#13;
crimes ranging from assault to theft:&#13;
But despite the problems which&#13;
have arisen, the group in functioning&#13;
on a limited weekend basis. Flyers&#13;
have been disfributed to key location&#13;
in the community that advertise the&#13;
service. Their workshop is located in&#13;
the basement of the Keno~a&#13;
Memorial Hospital. The hospital&#13;
donated the rooms as they too were&#13;
considering the establishment of a&#13;
hotline. The Kiwanis Club volunteered&#13;
the funds to pay for the consu!tant&#13;
that canle from Milwaukee to tram the&#13;
group.&#13;
Expressing the need for the group&#13;
to bridge the generation gap, 1r ·&#13;
Musich said, "The volunteer have_ to&#13;
keep afoot in the adult community.&#13;
First of all the resources are there:&#13;
secondly. the e pe pie are m?rc than&#13;
·11ing to come up with_ the&#13;
fu~ds ... and you can't kick them m the&#13;
teeth for that." .&#13;
They're going to have to eep reall)'&#13;
close touch with the kid , nd do&#13;
nothing to turn the kids off. but the ·&#13;
can't reject the adult either. The&#13;
have to be the bridge between getting&#13;
the kids to the right pla e in the adult&#13;
community for help."&#13;
\ i th all the problem a ide.&#13;
Kenosha ha a hotline. It represent a&#13;
big step inaddre ing the drug problem&#13;
in Kenosha. It accept it task\ ithout&#13;
apology and with the hope that they&#13;
can do something to curb drug abu&#13;
by preventing user fr m ending up n&#13;
a fourth floor bed.&#13;
Zeta Beta Tau, Parkside fir t&#13;
national ocial- ervice fraternit '.&#13;
announces the formation of its fir t&#13;
pledge class of the spring 1971 seme ·ter.&#13;
Pledgema ter Dallas Lemmon&#13;
reported that a total of nine tudent&#13;
have begun the traditional program of&#13;
pledging. During thi program the men&#13;
will learn the h1 tory of ZBT both&#13;
locally and nat1onally. complete service&#13;
projects to both the fratemit ·. hoot.&#13;
and to the community. The: are al o required to complete a ial fun t1 n&#13;
Lemmon al o added that 1f there are&#13;
any male tudent who mi~t be&#13;
intere ted in becoming an ctl\e m ZBT&#13;
to contad him at 6" -l I &lt;) or to&#13;
contact Pre ·ident Ja\;k Tue er at&#13;
6 2-774:.&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97 47&#13;
'otably they enlisted the a!d of the&#13;
Milwaukee Underground Switchboard&#13;
whose work in the Milwaukee&#13;
community has been highly success[ul.&#13;
The switchboard representat1~es&#13;
discus ed legal ramifications of hothn_e&#13;
work. For example, the grou~ is&#13;
responsible to the parents of mtn~r&#13;
callers if a matter of custody is&#13;
involved, like a runaway· th&#13;
The law savs they must call e&#13;
"All the adults I've met with are&#13;
terribly well intentioned but nobodr&#13;
knows what to do about ii and_ I can t&#13;
reall blame them. I recognize the&#13;
frusiration that they have because here&#13;
they though for two or three years&#13;
that education was the an w_er to dr~g&#13;
abu e to prevent thi terrible th1, g&#13;
from happening and now t_he_y r,e&#13;
coming to the realization that it I n t&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
ALSO&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
parents if their son or daughter ran&#13;
away from home . . working." f · k but They've made a lot o m1sta e&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS ond&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30th Ave. FREE OELIVERY&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
The switchboard group work~d with&#13;
the Kenosha group in developmg the&#13;
technique of answering a phone _and&#13;
knowing how to handle vanous&#13;
ituations. They were told that many&#13;
calls will be made by people to test&#13;
I don't think the kids can be angry&#13;
with them for it. I see ~e ~elpl~: volunteers as really bemg m KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
middle.&#13;
WE'RE NOT •L YIN* WHEN WE SA y&#13;
(0Qd b!tietldg atte&#13;
tke (gegt bttietldg&#13;
They know you· they understand you; they&#13;
appreciate you' - and they miss you ~hen&#13;
you're not around. That's how old fnends&#13;
are - and that's just how we feel fbou,~:&#13;
valued customer like yourselt.,We 0 really missed you and hope you II st P&#13;
in soon to say "hello" and browse.&#13;
~a&#13;
6207 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53l 40&#13;
ANNUAL SPRING&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
Closed ondays&#13;
Good Books at a Good Price&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE . -&#13;
(Above) Anderson on the parallel&#13;
bars.&#13;
(Below) Coach Ballester with cocaptains&#13;
Doug Anderson and Warren&#13;
McGillivany.&#13;
~.. np! !ltJrch:'1, 1971 7&#13;
Gymnasts place 6th at NAIA&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
... Paced by Doug Anderson, Parkside's ....&#13;
nrst gymnastic team capped a highly&#13;
successful season by placing sixth in&#13;
the National NAIA meet held at&#13;
N a tche toches, Louisiana.Northern&#13;
Louisiana won the meet wuh 154.1&#13;
POInts, followed by Western Illinois&#13;
148, laCrosse 143.5, Eastern Illinois&#13;
139, Eastern Michigan 137 and&#13;
Parkside 131. '&#13;
Anderson Won All American honors&#13;
by placing second in the high bar. He&#13;
defeated Paul Tikenoff, a former&#13;
NCAA All American. Anderson also&#13;
took tenth in all-around. Coach Bill&#13;
Ballester said Doug would have to be&#13;
considered the outstanding freshman&#13;
of the meet if such an award was&#13;
given.&#13;
Pete Hickey turned in a somewhat&#13;
surprising and very respectable 8th&#13;
place finish in the National long horse&#13;
competition.&#13;
Warren McGillivray, a junior, placed&#13;
13th in all-around and II th in free&#13;
exercise. Warren did not have as good&#13;
a day vaulting as he had in the District&#13;
-Senkstein First in State&#13;
Bill Benkstein, Captain of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Wrestling Team for the past three&#13;
years, closed out his collegiate career&#13;
by capturing the Wisconsin State Open&#13;
AAU 167·pound championship. The&#13;
meet, which is open to all amateur&#13;
wrestlers in the State of Wisconsin,&#13;
found over 220 participants registered&#13;
to represent most of the colleges and&#13;
universities in Wisconsin. There were&#13;
~50 several top high school and post·&#13;
college wrestlers present.&#13;
Bill, who is a graduate of Salem&#13;
Central High Schooi, was the&#13;
champion in the 1969 AAU Meet, but&#13;
was runner-up last year. In this year's&#13;
meet, Bill decisioned his first&#13;
opponent, Al Hamner from the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee,&#13;
1·0. In the quarter·finals, Bill pinned&#13;
JlITtSchulz, ljIlaltached, in 3 minutes&#13;
SO seconds. The semi-final rna tch saw&#13;
8B1 matched up against one of the&#13;
finest high school wrestlers In&#13;
WiSConsin Jim Soucie of Milwaukee&#13;
Pulaski; B'm won 5-0. In the finals, Bill&#13;
defeated Bill Bozdichek of Marquette&#13;
University for the Championship 3 to&#13;
I.&#13;
Parkside was represented by one&#13;
other wrestler Jeff Jenkins, in the&#13;
Slate meet. J~ff, a sophmore who&#13;
formerly wrestled for Kenosha&#13;
Bradford was the runner-up as he was&#13;
defeated by Rick Lauringer, one of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin's finest&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
R_II&#13;
- FnlitWets _ Gittl&#13;
PtiONE: 694-6700&#13;
Viand FRANK WEINSTOCK&#13;
3021. 7!5~H ST.&#13;
I(fNOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
....&#13;
wrestlers, 8 to 3. In Jeffs first three&#13;
matches he defeated Joe Dingman of&#13;
the Fox River Valley Wrestling Club in&#13;
a 58 second pin; John Capelli, a&#13;
former Kenosha St. Joe's wrestle!,&#13;
now at Marquette, 11-2; and E!IC&#13;
Opperman from WSU-Stevens POlOt&#13;
20·12.&#13;
The oints gathered by the two-man&#13;
Parksick delegation were good e~ough&#13;
to give Parkside a fourth place m .the&#13;
team title. Teams scoring ~ore.polOts&#13;
than Parks ide w~re Umverslty of&#13;
Wisconsin, Marq~ette! and the&#13;
University .of Wisconsm-MIIwaukee.&#13;
SjWtt6;S~&#13;
The Sailing Club is gelling. r... dy to&#13;
swing into action. Anyone lOt~rested&#13;
should contact Vic Godfrey 1n the&#13;
Athletic Office or ext. 245 for&#13;
up-to-date information.&#13;
Jim Hogan, Ranger guard, was&#13;
selected to the second team of th~&#13;
NAIA District 14 all star squad. ~h&#13;
Slaughter was cited for Honora e&#13;
mention honors.&#13;
A crowd of aboul 200. people&#13;
attended the first annual ParkSide Judo&#13;
clinic. There were 15 black belts&#13;
t at the event held at Bullen Jr. presen&#13;
High in Kenosha.&#13;
14 meet a week earlier y" hen he&#13;
defeated Steve Berger. the man who&#13;
went on to win the National \lAIA&#13;
meet.&#13;
Coach Ballester WJS pleased with&#13;
the results of the meet sayingthat the&#13;
team worked up to Its capablhues. He&#13;
termed the performance a team effort&#13;
"Each boy had to contribute&#13;
effectively in order to atram 3 sixth&#13;
place finish:' He cited Wanen Vogel.&#13;
Dan Boswein, and AI Ennis for their&#13;
efforts.&#13;
Twenty-one schools out of 50 made&#13;
it to the finals. Most of the teams rely&#13;
on upper classmen-Parkstde being an&#13;
exception wi th a squad composed of&#13;
five freshmen and one junior. This. of&#13;
course, makes prospects look bnght&#13;
for nex t year. Coach Ballester&#13;
confidently predicts that the team&#13;
should be in the top three next year.&#13;
He expects to have a good recruiung&#13;
year which should add mor~ depth to&#13;
the squad. lany of the other schools&#13;
have large learns. laCrosse. for&#13;
example, has 17 men.&#13;
Depth is not the only 'hing&#13;
necessary though. This fact was&#13;
brought out by 'onhem Louisiana.&#13;
who operates with a five man team.&#13;
AJI members of that team are&#13;
all-around men which means that the)&#13;
compete in all events.&#13;
While the season is over the ram will&#13;
continue to practice regularly.&#13;
Ballester says, "We work all year and&#13;
preparations are already being made&#13;
for next season:' Some of the boys&#13;
will compete on an individual basis at&#13;
the Pan Am games tryouts which will&#13;
be held in Iowa this May.&#13;
IWhen aSRed about the quality of&#13;
gymnastics in Wisconsin, Ballester&#13;
replied, "While gymnastics is not&#13;
emphasized as much in Wisconsin 3S in&#13;
Illinois, for example. I feel that the&#13;
talent is here but It needs ro be&#13;
developed. "&#13;
Ballester continued, "In Wisconsin.&#13;
gymnastics has not been practiced- year&#13;
Rangers&#13;
Take Third&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of the ewscope Staff&#13;
Parkside Ilnished last in a triangular&#13;
tr ck meet held at UWM's Baker&#13;
Fieldhouse. The host school took the&#13;
meet with 67~ points, with PI3ue\lllle&#13;
second at 43\;. The Rangers tallied 17&#13;
points.&#13;
Keith Merritt won the long jump for&#13;
Parkslde with a leap of ~O'3''i''.Len&#13;
Bullock of the Rangers pla&lt;ed second.&#13;
Bob Waters captured lhe 40 yard&#13;
dash in a time of 4.7. while Eugene&#13;
Prince went 6':!." in the high jump for&#13;
a second place finish.&#13;
Parkside won the 16 lap rela} race&#13;
behind the efforts of Tim IcGll;kj,&#13;
Jim McFadden, Judd JohnslOn, and&#13;
Keith Merritl.&#13;
round b~ the high school wben these&#13;
high -hool btl) 50 come to Par ide&#13;
Ih~) Will pracnce ~e.;u round and \\111&#13;
be able to develop to the be t of Iht'1T&#13;
abrhues."&#13;
'utlng (he preponderance of&#13;
gymnasts. 10 the ·311 1l:J1 meet Ih~1&#13;
came From Hlmors. Ballester"a a cd&#13;
wh this ts so "In 111m'II the~ "or&#13;
year round e'en 10 high \c;h ll, and&#13;
the sport gel much greater publll:lI~&#13;
Despite this, Ballester feels thai J&#13;
top flight team can be devel -ped on&#13;
the strength of WI 11In lalent&#13;
Practice and dedrcsuon 10 the ~)rt I&#13;
what) necessary if a gymna I warn&#13;
to excell at the ollegiate level.&#13;
fRay&#13;
MEN'STUFF&#13;
FROfttKC I&#13;
KAMfRMAN CAnfRY&#13;
~ATCHU&#13;
u-_.,....... _.-&#13;
...- .. _1"- _.-&#13;
--&#13;
" i6la Diri. ......-.....,&#13;
D s.ttiaI&#13;
~ IQ.M.&#13;
..... ... ~&#13;
for&#13;
R esert«t ions&#13;
Phone&#13;
69-f-()~55&#13;
liiDAl&#13;
I£GlSTlY&#13;
THOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
207 StXTH STIfET&#13;
RACINE, WtSCONSIN SH03&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
48/J7 7,h AVENUE&#13;
/SENOSHA WJSCONSIN&#13;
Fast Convenient&#13;
Open Oaily&#13;
9 a.m. - 9 p.m •&#13;
FINEST QUALITY&#13;
EASTER&#13;
CANDIES&#13;
From ANDREA'S&#13;
• RUSSEL STOVER&#13;
• FANNIE MAY&#13;
• NESTLE'SSOLIO PURE&#13;
CHOCOLATE RABBITS&#13;
STUFFED ANIMALS&#13;
GENUINE PECTIN-JELL&#13;
JELLY BEANS&#13;
• HALLMARK CARDS&#13;
• FOREIGN LANGUAGE CARDS&#13;
SELF-SERVICE&#13;
Sat. ',il 6 p.m.-Sun. 9 a.m -4 p.m.&#13;
In Kenosha Since 1911&#13;
finest&#13;
quality&#13;
candies&#13;
10%&#13;
courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Facult Y Cta4.. te C. hp.t-Certifie4 or.-tehcist&#13;
(Must ShOW1.0.) ,-,IV&#13;
~l1g~ /l __ .4_-"~ Fairtrade&#13;
excepled&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Gymnasts place 6th at NAIA&#13;
(Above) Anderson on the parallel&#13;
t,ars.&#13;
, Below) Coach Ballester with cocaptains&#13;
Doug Anderson and Warren&#13;
cGillivany.&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
,. Paced by Doug Anderson. Parkside 's.&#13;
mst gymnastic team capped a highly&#13;
successful season by placing sixth in&#13;
the National NAIA meet held at&#13;
Natchetoches, Louisiana. orthern&#13;
Lo:1isiana won the meet with 154.1&#13;
pomts, fol)owed by Western Illinois&#13;
148, LaCrosse 143.5, Eastern Illinois&#13;
139, Eastern Michigan 137, and&#13;
Parkside 131.&#13;
Anderson won All American honors&#13;
by placing second in the high bar. He&#13;
defeated Paul Tikenoff, a former&#13;
NCAA AU American. Anderson also&#13;
took tenth in all-around. Coach Bill&#13;
Ballester said Doug would have to be&#13;
considered the outstanding freshman&#13;
of the .meet if such an award was given.&#13;
Pete Hickey turned in a somewhat&#13;
surprising and very respectable 8th&#13;
place finish in the National long horse&#13;
competition.&#13;
Warren McGillivray, a junior, placed&#13;
13th in all-around and 11th in free&#13;
exercise. Warren did not have as good&#13;
a day vaulting as he had in the District&#13;
·Benkstein First in State Rangers&#13;
Take Third&#13;
Bill Benkstein, Captain of the&#13;
niversity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Wrestling Team for the past three&#13;
years, closed out his collegiate career&#13;
by capturing the Wisconsin State Open&#13;
AAU 167-pound championship. The&#13;
meet, which is open to all amate_ur&#13;
wrestlers in the State of Wisconsm,&#13;
found over 220 participants registered&#13;
to represent most of the colleges and&#13;
universities in Wisconsin. There were&#13;
also several top high school and postcollege&#13;
wrestlers present.&#13;
Bill, who is a graduate of Salem&#13;
Central High School, was the&#13;
champion in the 1969 AAU Meet, but&#13;
wa runner-up last year. In th!s ye~r's&#13;
meet, Bill decisioned his first&#13;
opponent, Al Hamner from the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee,&#13;
1-0. In the quarter-finals, Bill pinned&#13;
Jim Schulz, qnattached, in 3 minutes&#13;
SO seconds. The semi-final match saw&#13;
Bill matched up against one of t~e&#13;
fine t high school wrestlers m&#13;
Wisconsin Jim Soucie of Milwaukee&#13;
Pulaski; Blll won 5-0. ln the finals, Bill&#13;
defeated Bill Bozdichek of Marquette&#13;
University for the Championship 3 to&#13;
I.&#13;
Parkside was represented by one&#13;
other wrestler Jeff Jenkins, in the&#13;
State meet. J~ff, a sophmore who&#13;
formerly wrestled for Kenosha&#13;
Bradford was the runner-up as he was&#13;
defeated by Rick Lauringer, one of the&#13;
niversity of Wisconsin's finest&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
F1111t111 - Fruit Wets - Gifts&#13;
PHONE: 694-6700&#13;
VI and FRANK WEINSTOCK&#13;
3021•75~H ST.&#13;
- - Kt:NOSHA, WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
wrestlers, 8 to 3. In Jeff first three&#13;
matches he defeated Joe Dingman of&#13;
the Fox River Valley Wrestling Club in&#13;
a 58 second pin; John Capell!, a&#13;
former Kenosha St. Joe' wre tier,&#13;
now at Marquette, 11-2, and E_ri&#13;
Opperman from WS -Steven Pomt&#13;
20-12.&#13;
The points gathered by the two-man&#13;
Parkside delegation were good e~ough&#13;
to give Parkside a fourth place m _the&#13;
team title. Teams scoring more_pomt&#13;
than Parkside were mver ity of&#13;
Wisconsin, Marq~ette_. an? the&#13;
University of Wiscon m- 1ilwaukee.&#13;
s~s~&#13;
The Sailing Club is getting r dy to&#13;
swing into action. Anyone mtere ted&#13;
should contact Vic Godfrey 1n the&#13;
Athletic Office or ext. 245 for&#13;
up-to-date information.&#13;
Jim Hogan, Ranger guard, was&#13;
selected to the second team of th~&#13;
NAIA District 14 all star ~ua_d. ;i'1 Slaughter was cited for onora e&#13;
mention honors.&#13;
A crowd of about 200. pe?ple&#13;
attended the first annual Parkside Judo&#13;
I. . There were 15 black belts c 1111c. t at the event held at Bullen Jr. presen&#13;
High in Kenosha.&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
L3ATCHES&#13;
., ..........&#13;
---~&#13;
ean,,i.e,&#13;
---... ,.__&#13;
- 11 m111 Ari.&#13;
w~-........, D.___,~&#13;
C..-.-k -~ .. Oot,I.&#13;
.... l&gt;e--&#13;
~-'""--- llllOAL&#13;
-=.;..~':'".::- - -- IEG!STlY -- DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Faculty c,ac1uie c.-tocnt-c.ttitie' DiaaNtMcist&#13;
(Must Show 1.0.) ,,,/&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
excepted&#13;
Y~llSdffA&#13;
It '--'r• a 4iHen«JI w..,_ ,.. -.I&#13;
rRay rRadigan ·&#13;
oml /uJ ood&#13;
THOUSA OS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
" heck Our Pri&#13;
480 7th AVE U&#13;
1$E OSHA. l5CO SIN&#13;
,, ,..&#13;
FINEST QUALITY&#13;
EASTER&#13;
CANDIES&#13;
From ANDREA'S&#13;
• RUSSEL STOVER&#13;
• FA IE AY&#13;
• ESTLE'S SOLID PURE&#13;
CHOCOLATE RABBITS&#13;
STUFFED A I ALS&#13;
• GE UI E PECTI -JELL&#13;
JELLY BEA S&#13;
• HALL ARK CARDS&#13;
• FOREIG LA GUAGE CARDS&#13;
SELF-SERVICE&#13;
Fas ... Convenien&#13;
Open Daily&#13;
9 a.m. - 9 p.m.&#13;
Sot 'til 6 p.m. -Sun. 9 o.m.-4 p.&#13;
In Kenosha ince 1911&#13;
~ :,;;~&#13;
24th AVE . d. i 60th ST. can tes &#13;
People's&#13;
Peace Treafy&#13;
b) \Iar~ Timpan)&#13;
The 1\'0'1*' Ib&gt;: Tre:Jl) , a document&#13;
thai de ..eloped out of meeting ~&#13;
\ ietnarn tudent group and (he&#13;
vm faa" a t io n a l rude nt&#13;
\ uuon II I 1I tatement of the&#13;
nditton fur:l peace to Vietnam. The&#13;
P upl' Pea -e 1ftal) Slate50 that the&#13;
penpl ut \m nca ant! the people of&#13;
\ I tnam re ncr en rmes.&#13;
(uurnll • mOl") diverse nauonal&#13;
tlnd \;ouunUnll) group Ch:Hhope to&#13;
un end to the uth 3'Sot A~an .....ar&#13;
lire W HklO to unplcmem the People'&#13;
PaT real)' b) de rmnaun It and&#13;
1°1 vi her au shu'oIi their suppon for&#13;
Ihe p'" on 01 the treaty The&#13;
I , or ,h group re the People's&#13;
( huon Ior Peace and Ju 11I:e 10 '(\I,&#13;
'0' .nd the \1.) D 011«11ve rn&#13;
\\ .. lung.' n 0 The group are&#13;
kill. mUludual gner lu the P 3,e&#13;
ftC .. , and hoping Il) oblain&#13;
r I I all n ul on the treat) oat aU&#13;
lev I of ,m rnmtnt&#13;
Il I lIuend d th I all 01 'he&#13;
41mp Isn In ubtam pubhl.:lt)'.&#13;
ulld 'tandlr1g and pp" or the&#13;
I' lpl I' os I r 3t) Will I,;ulnunale In&#13;
II rna 11:111unall;lll) m \\ ashlOgton. o ( n 1:1) tu t ilt ....hl\oh lune the&#13;
trY rnl1lenl WIll ~ .. ked to ~p.nJ to&#13;
1he )'cvplC" p .....:C' Treaty The rail) to&#13;
\\i1~lInglun \1,111~ conrdmJICd ....ath&#13;
Il~ I r II \om thc l nl1cd lale&#13;
\1 Park ule. the ol\\:crned&#13;
luJ nl (uOIhth1" I IIwohed tn worJi.&#13;
....,th the Pcuplc' P~acc Treal) In&#13;
, nJuth,;llun Wtlh Ihe Ral:loe People'&#13;
I' a, l,nt) Off,,,e The) ha&gt;e been&#13;
m f.:onlad ....Ith the Felh,l\\shlp of&#13;
Re"tJllclhuon, Ihe I\wemenl peakers&#13;
Bureau, and the 1ay D;J} Colle'tl\e&#13;
ti \1,111 be ..:umdtnatlng ai.:lI~llIe:&gt;&#13;
cun"'CfOlng the treat} here at Park Ide.&#13;
The RJl:lIlc·Kcnosha Chapter or&#13;
0.\\ \1,111 hold a general meeting&#13;
I/anh 30. /971 at the I/oly&#13;
GmmwI/loJl /:"gli:J, LutherQII OruTch.&#13;
!IHJO k' Mil treet Qt the (:orller of&#13;
fIIh alld K"':11.' A ~·t"mle&#13;
Gu" peak« w,lI be SU A '&#13;
YlIA . I~durer In English at the&#13;
lInlHrSllY uf WI ·onslll-Parkside irs.&#13;
YUJn WIll dl~us Ihe cuurse he is&#13;
p,e nIl) leaching·.TIIl IMAGE A 'D&#13;
ROll Of \\0\11: I WESTER&#13;
('I\'I LI ZA TI 0&#13;
Ken Herrick&#13;
Students (Continued from Page 1)&#13;
. e to&#13;
H&#13;
k id "We don't know how we can mov&#13;
errrc sa'. . h . we'll have&#13;
the Library Learnmg Center. By t at tune f h&#13;
about 160.000 to 170.000 volumes to move. I tde&#13;
. h d could attempt to 0&#13;
move wa ng t nex t oor you k f&#13;
this sort of thing with a volunteer student wor orce.&#13;
Moving it a half mile this way would be very&#13;
d,fficult." f Id b&#13;
Herrick also pointed out another ef ect wou he&#13;
that many of the students employed part tune 10 t e&#13;
libra" w;'uld have to be released. d .&#13;
f b d l&#13;
ent serVlCes The erfect 0 ,he u get cut on s u&#13;
would be equally severe.&#13;
Dean of tUdents. Allen Dearborn, told Newscope,&#13;
"If we have the Same base budget as last year we&#13;
would thin out our existing services. If our base&#13;
budget , cut. ,hen obviously we'll have to either&#13;
reduce personnel or programs. It.'s as simple a~ that."&#13;
He said that Student Affalls was particularly&#13;
concerned wi,h. a drug abuse program. psychological,&#13;
and vocational counseling, none of which were&#13;
funded in the Governor's budget.&#13;
The drug abuse program would have utilized all&#13;
sources of personnel to discuss the drug problem 10&#13;
an objective and rational way. .&#13;
For psychologIcal counselling. a full·time, clinical&#13;
psychologist was sought. Dearborn saId he thought It&#13;
was not the most desireable situation to utlhze&#13;
community resources for this as had been done in the&#13;
past.&#13;
The Dean was particularly disappointed the&#13;
vocational counselling program was not lunded. He&#13;
said. HAn imponant area we really want to work on is&#13;
vocaitonal coucounselling. The emphasis here was to&#13;
be one of realizing the job market is what it is. We&#13;
wanted people who would start working wit h&#13;
freshmen to help them chose their careers in a&#13;
realistic manner.&#13;
But even with Ihe CU'", the Dean pledged "There&#13;
will be an added emphasis on vocational training&#13;
A&#13;
HAMMOND ORGA&#13;
'Tradition of Excellence"&#13;
Kl TGof ORGA&#13;
1&#13;
John Elmore.&#13;
using existing staff, which may mean we will ha&#13;
deemphasize some of the academic advisin§sin veto&#13;
faculty is beginning to take an interest in it." Cet'"&#13;
Student future employability. will be hun&#13;
another way.An improved student teacher internslu~&#13;
program was not funded.. P&#13;
:;ohn Elmore. the director of admissions who&#13;
doubles as head of the internship program, explained&#13;
that under the program a student interns for a full&#13;
semester at a high school and spends the ent&#13;
semester teaching there. -He is paid $1.760 for ~&#13;
work and is considered an employee of the school&#13;
district.&#13;
He explained the significance of the program.&#13;
"There is a real value in the internship program&#13;
because it is a more ~n~enslve experience thin&#13;
practice teaching. You're in the school every day r~&#13;
the entire semester.&#13;
"It would be unfortunate if the program !lIl',&#13;
funded sufficiently." he continued. HI think it's w&#13;
worth the money. Riglit now it is relatively small.Bot&#13;
there is a trend in the state to go to internship. Fer&#13;
example, in Madision the mathematics educ" ..&#13;
people require that to be certified you have to !"&#13;
through internship.&#13;
"As people start to see that the competition fer&#13;
jobs is much more intense. they're going to try tor&#13;
themselves in the best possible spot. and that would&#13;
be through the internship program."&#13;
Elmore described the implications of the budget..&#13;
the program as "pretty severe."&#13;
The business end of the UniversilY will be hun&#13;
even mote by Lucey's proposed budget cut5than the&#13;
academic and student services end.&#13;
Sid Walesh, of Budget Planning explained. "\I..&#13;
don't get enrollment funding for business purp&lt;l'6&#13;
You get it for instruction, student services1 the Iibr.,.&#13;
and instructional computing. The rest of our n.,.ls&#13;
we have to go in and specifically ask for monel&#13;
decision items. This is where we got shot down."&#13;
News Shorts&#13;
U.S. Civil Service Commission,&#13;
Milwaukee area office, will he in the&#13;
concourse at Greenquist HaU from 9-4,&#13;
Wednesday March 31. Those interested&#13;
are encouraged to stop by and see Mr.&#13;
Russ Hughes.&#13;
The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside will host a second&#13;
Multi·Media Workshop for roreign&#13;
language teachers on Saturday. April&#13;
·3. The. event will begin at 9 a.m. in&#13;
Room 100 at the Racine Campus and&#13;
continue through noon.&#13;
Cycling enthusiast, Hans Nuremberg&#13;
rep?rts that there are competition bikes&#13;
available for use. If interested please&#13;
contact the Office of Athletics or&#13;
Nuremberg.&#13;
~,ond $.&#13;
~ 0",&#13;
~O RANCH ~&#13;
NOftTH , $OU~ SlU!lIlliAti- ROAD .&#13;
- KENOSHA - I·&#13;
FAMOUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
. SANDWICH ES&#13;
~HARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
\r~,,_&#13;
s" Jim M.nlck "Mr. Hlmmond" For Gu~tlnteod Sonic. Ir Trad.-in Vllue&#13;
Out of Town-CIII Collect&#13;
~"f'K 1WIII/~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
//drd"&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
~ 40th AVE&#13;
KENOSHA WIS. Ot.7-1l174&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Candy&#13;
Announcing ...&#13;
OPEN MEETING&#13;
OF CANDIDATES&#13;
oJG FOR&#13;
CANDIDATES RUN""I ...&#13;
RKSIOE&#13;
OFFiCES IN THE pA&#13;
NT" 1.1-&#13;
STUDENT GOVERNME&#13;
L&#13;
ITIC-~/..&#13;
pRESENT THEIR po&#13;
TFORt'!&#13;
VIEWPOINTS AND pLA&#13;
WED., MARCH 31st&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
People's&#13;
Peace Treaty&#13;
- Ken Herrick&#13;
students (Continued from Page 1)&#13;
H . id "We don't know how we can move to&#13;
crn , h . '11 have&#13;
the Libr rv Le rning Center. By t at tune we f h&#13;
b ut 16 1&#13;
,000 to 170.000 volumes to move. I td e&#13;
right nc. c door you could attempt to o&#13;
f thing with a volunteer student work force.&#13;
ornt it h If mile chi way would be very&#13;
d1ffi u t." Id b&#13;
H rri k , I o pointed out another effect _wo~ e&#13;
th. t m nv of the student employed part time m the&#13;
ltbr r ~-~uld have to be released. . "he effc t of the budget cut on tudent services&#13;
• ould b cquall verc.&#13;
D n of tudcnt • llen Dearborn, told ewscope,&#13;
"If •e h. th sam bas budget as last year we&#13;
vould thin out our c ·isting ervices. If our _base&#13;
bud t i cut then ob\'iouslv we 'II have to either • I I h " r du per onn I or programs. It's as simp ea~ t at.&#13;
H id th t • tudcnc Affairs was particularly&#13;
n erncd vith. drug abu e program. psyc~ological,&#13;
and vocati n l oun cling. none of which were&#13;
fund d in the Governor's budget.&#13;
Th drug abu c program would have utilized ~ll&#13;
urc of per onncl co di cu the drug problem m&#13;
• nob' ctiv and rational \\'a\'.&#13;
or p v hol •1c I coun ;lling. a full-t0&#13;
ime, clinical&#13;
p ·cholc :i t w ~ ought. Dearborn said he thought it&#13;
wa n t the mo t de ircable situation to utilize&#13;
ommuntt r or thi a. had been done in the&#13;
pa t.&#13;
The D an wa particularly disappointed the&#13;
voe tional coun 'Clling program was not tunded. He&#13;
aid. "An important area we really want to work on is&#13;
voe itonal coucoun elling. The emphasis here was to&#13;
be one of realizing the job market is what it is. We&#13;
, · need people who would start working wit h&#13;
frc hm n to help them cho e their careers in a&#13;
r ali tic manner."&#13;
But even with the cut,. the Dean pledged "There&#13;
-ill b an added emphasis on vocational training&#13;
John Elmore.&#13;
using existing staff, which may mean we will h f h d . d ave to deemphasize _son:ie o t e aca ~m1c a ~isin§. since the&#13;
faculty is begmnmg to take an interest m it."&#13;
Student future employability - will be hurt .&#13;
another way .An improved student teacher internslu~&#13;
program was not funded.. ~&#13;
John Elmore, the director of admission~ "&#13;
doubles as head of the internship program, explai&#13;
that under the program a student interns for a f&#13;
semester at a high school and spends the em&#13;
semester teaching there. He is paid $1,760 for b&#13;
work and is considered an employee of the sch&#13;
district.&#13;
He explained the significance of the progra&#13;
"There is a real value _in th~ internship progr&#13;
because it is a more ~n~ens1ve experience t&#13;
practice teaching. You 're in the school every day f&#13;
the entire semester.&#13;
"It would be unfortunate if the program ·&#13;
funded sufficiently," he continued. "I think it's&#13;
worth the money. Right now it is relatively small, B&#13;
there is a trend in the state to go to internship. For&#13;
example, in Madision the mathematics educat1&#13;
people require that to be certified you have to&#13;
through internship.&#13;
"As people start to see that the competition f&#13;
jobs is much more intense, they're going to try to&#13;
themselves in the best possible spot, and that wo '&#13;
be through the internship program."&#13;
Elmore described the implications of the budget&#13;
the program as "pretty severe."&#13;
The business end of the. University&#13;
even more by Lucey's proposed budget cuts than&#13;
academic and student services end.&#13;
Sid Walesh, of Budget Planning explained. "'&#13;
don't get enrollment funding for business purpo cs&#13;
You get it for instruction, student services, the libr&#13;
and instructional computing. The rest of our n&#13;
we have to go in and specifically ask for mone&#13;
decision items. This is where we got shot down."&#13;
News Shorts&#13;
r dition of E. ·cellence~&#13;
U.S. Civil Service Commission,&#13;
Milwaukee area office, will be in the&#13;
concourse at Greenquist Hall from 9-4,&#13;
Wednesday March 31. Those interested&#13;
are encouraged to stop by and see Mr.&#13;
Russ Hughes.&#13;
e Jim errict "Mr. Hammond" F r Gu~ranteed Service &amp; Trade-in Value&#13;
Out of Town-Call Collect&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
l !~u~~~ Ill !~c~&#13;
"If Bttlu Or,on.s art Built. Ha.tnJMtt4 tcill Bu.iltl n,,;.••&#13;
The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside will host a second&#13;
Multi-Media Workshop for foreign&#13;
language teachers on Saturday, April&#13;
·3. The. event will begin at 9 a.m. in&#13;
Room 100 at the Racine Campus and&#13;
continue through noon.&#13;
Cycling enthusiast, Hans Nuremberg&#13;
rep?rts that there are competition bikes&#13;
ava1lable for use. If interested please&#13;
contact the Office of Athletics or&#13;
uremberg.&#13;
~ - on-d ~&#13;
. ~ o" ~ 0 RANCH ~&#13;
NORTH &amp; soun, stU!R10Ati ROAD · -&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED . STEAKS .&#13;
•&#13;
Announcing .. ·&#13;
OPEN MEETING&#13;
Of CANDIDATES&#13;
CANDIDATES RUNNING FO&#13;
OFFICES IN THE PARKSIDE&#13;
STUDENT GOVERNMENT&#13;
PRESENT THEIR pQLITICA&#13;
VIEWPOINTS AND pLATFO&#13;
WED., MARCH 31st&#13;
8:00 p.m. &#13;
4, -P'i~ 29, 1971&#13;
Aspin, Steiger Speak&#13;
at Racine Campus&#13;
b) DEAN LO MOS&#13;
althe .... """'" Stall&#13;
On und.y, Mar 28, cengressmen&#13;
Wilham Steiger R·Racine) and Les AspiD&#13;
I D ,WI ) poke.t a public meeting on the&#13;
Racine campu. The congressmen&#13;
dl CU ed problems ranging Crom&#13;
congr lanai reform to Southeast As,a.&#13;
!Jt r the meeting NE.....SCOPE held a&#13;
brl r Intervie-. "Ith the ttglslators&#13;
E\I. OPE, .....h.t are your opln,ons or&#13;
mlhlllry py',ng on cmjo.ns .00 elected&#13;
offlcl.ls"&#13;
.OTEIGER· Irs wrong&#13;
'E ....., OPE, I It btlng stopped' How?&#13;
STF.IGER, ve ,I thml"r. btlng stopped.&#13;
I 11 ,tv.. Ideei ion 01 the civilians in&#13;
the Penlllgon th.t in tructed the Anny to&#13;
underlllk such. mi IOn.Ithtnk tlus is a&#13;
lAo her 8 wrong decl ion ...·as made.&#13;
Th con«pt 01 urit)' which was&#13;
,. loped b)' the Army I one whIch 1 don't&#13;
upport and th efrort ISunderw.y to make&#13;
ur II I corrected and doesn't h.ppen&#13;
In&#13;
PtN, I thInk It very' wrong It's&#13;
Ilwxcusab1 I abs&lt;Mulely no reasoo for&#13;
them to be doing It at .U.&#13;
I thtnk It should be prohjbited.&#13;
The mihtary h no MIn mvolved tn&#13;
tnternal ~nt)· aff.irs I tlunk through&#13;
po tn,I." prohlhlting, It will stop it.&#13;
'IE..... OPE, .....h.t .re your feelinSs&#13;
lbout CBS's cocumenlllry, "The seu,ng of&#13;
the Pentagon" •• nd the CrlltO m of VicePr&#13;
ident Agnew. Melvm LaIrd, and Rep.&#13;
I" Edwlrd Heber (Who caUed It unAmencan.&#13;
unprofessional and iDee·&#13;
curate&gt;.&#13;
'TEICER, Ihaven't seen the progr.m so&#13;
Icln't honesUy say&#13;
'lEW OPE, What do you think .bout&#13;
money spent on puhlic relalions for&#13;
military projtcts'&#13;
£1 ER~ You have to be very carefullo&#13;
dl ttnguish between myriad of public&#13;
relations activities (such as answerirul&#13;
ew Gal/ery One&#13;
503 Main St.&#13;
Racine&#13;
10% Student Discount&#13;
011 till Posters&amp; Frames&#13;
letters .00 recruit inS for armed services)&#13;
These are .U legitimate. So, I am DOtaU&#13;
that afraid of the Pentagon havinS a P.R.&#13;
budget. As long.s you distinguish that.D¥&#13;
operation can go overboar~ . .&#13;
ASPL'I, I think the really disturbing thing&#13;
was when the film showed those people&#13;
(Vice-Pres. Agnew, Laird. Heber) Instead&#13;
of saying let's look at the charges and find&#13;
out what CBS is saying, their immedl.te&#13;
reaction was defensive. 1 think it clearly&#13;
showed where their interests are. That an&#13;
inleHigenl and more rational appr~ch&#13;
would have been one of 'let's see the film,&#13;
lets hold some hearings, lets listen to what&#13;
they're sayinS let's see if there is any&#13;
v.lidity to the CBS film 01' not' inste.d of&#13;
immedi.tely re.cting .gainst it.&#13;
NEWSCOPE, Wh.t are your feelings&#13;
about the Peoples Peace Treaty which has&#13;
been supported by some congressmen .nd&#13;
leaders .nd wh.t effect do you think it&#13;
might h.ve?&#13;
STEICER, Idon't support it. Idon't like&#13;
it. It's .IilUe bit like. cool'essman trying&#13;
tonegoti.te. Peace Treaty with. Foreign&#13;
Power. That isn't in my judgment a&#13;
legitim.te function. It is something hetween&#13;
estabHshed governments.&#13;
ASPIN, I don't know, I know it only&#13;
v.guely. I know there is such. thinS· I&#13;
know some people h.ve supported it. I'm&#13;
not reaUy sure I know what it says entirely.&#13;
[ suppose aU that kind of thing has&#13;
some influence in helping to bring at·&#13;
lentioo to the matter again. Whether this is&#13;
the way to~oor not Idon't know.&#13;
Wyllie (Continued from Page 1)&#13;
University 0/ Wiseonlin - Parkside.&#13;
4.) Anything less than a full-fledged&#13;
UDiversity of WiscoDsiD campus&#13;
would deprive Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin of millions of dollars iD&#13;
ecoDomic benefits, and 5.) That such&#13;
a merger would create a large.&#13;
centralized system under which iD'&#13;
dividual campuses would teDd to lose&#13;
their ideDtity, be less responsive to&#13;
local DeedS, aDd reduce the variety of&#13;
educational choice for studeDts.&#13;
The other resolution specifically&#13;
urged the restoratioD of all mODey&#13;
previously takeD as it is absolutely&#13;
esseDtial for the developmeDt of a Dew&#13;
campus.&#13;
The Governor's proposal brings to&#13;
my mind a lyric by Bob Dylan, "Oh&#13;
Momma. can this really be the end?"&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS&#13;
........ LIKE ... 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;
GARRARD - Turnlables&#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;
by Paul tomartlre&#13;
People seem to subscribe t~ mat~~&#13;
.. stereotypes. For example, !n .&#13;
'Bronxt.if two individuals weanng ~l1k&#13;
'suits dark top-coats, and sportmg&#13;
, . I ft m were bulges under their e arrn,&#13;
overheard talking at a resta~rant&#13;
named Rocco's, someone would either&#13;
be the proud OWDer of a .pound of&#13;
heroin, or the happy partICipant in a&#13;
numbers game.&#13;
I thought about all this as I wentinto&#13;
Rocco's Restaurant in downto~n&#13;
Kenosha. I was glad that. I was m&#13;
Kenosha, and not at Rocco s 10 .N~w&#13;
York because my chances of dmmg&#13;
with ;ocial deviants is a lot smaller.&#13;
Rocto's Restaurant is a nice place,&#13;
with a personality. The d~i1y papers&#13;
from Milwaukee and ChIcago ," are&#13;
usually laying about, there 1S a&#13;
jukebox stocked ~ith a variety of&#13;
music, the place IS small, and the&#13;
prices are cheap.&#13;
For a few dollars you can eat a hot&#13;
meal. Each day features a special for&#13;
about a buck. For example, on a&#13;
Wednesday one could get liver and&#13;
onions, and each day has a different&#13;
soup. .&#13;
They also serve a hamburger for&#13;
cents, french fries for a quarter,&#13;
meatball bombers for forty cents, and&#13;
coffee for a dime. It is all very&#13;
economical. .&#13;
The dinners range from the&#13;
specials of the day, to Italian foods.&#13;
Most of the food that comes out of&#13;
the kitchen of Rocco's is prepared by&#13;
Rocco himself, or another able-bod1ed&#13;
Italian. The menu is not what one&#13;
would call extensive, but there is ..&#13;
ample variety:&#13;
Maggie decided to test Rocco on his&#13;
spagetti dinner, which included bread,&#13;
butter, and a salad. Besides wondering&#13;
if the food was good, she' wondered&#13;
how Italian it would be. just to satisfy&#13;
her curiosity. She has tasted genuine&#13;
Italian food, direct from the core of&#13;
"Little Italy" in downtown New&#13;
*********&#13;
Dave Rattle, with his 188 average,&#13;
leads Parkside's Racine bowling league.&#13;
Others with high averages are Mike&#13;
Jenrelle 169, Walt Muleski 167 and&#13;
Jeff Koleske 160. .'&#13;
- -&#13;
York. Although Italian fOod .&#13;
restaurants IS Italian, It still varie f In&#13;
the original recipes broUght ove s from&#13;
Italy. This happens with any f~d rom&#13;
is natlODahty onentated, and serv ~hat&#13;
the pubhc ODa large scale. The e. to&#13;
h~s to be modifi~ations, an~eJUst&#13;
might say, something is lost . You&#13;
translation. . tn the&#13;
Iordered a bowl of soup and ff&#13;
and spiced it with a meatball b~obee,&#13;
for Italian sake. While we wai~/r,&#13;
replaced a strolling minstrel With ~&#13;
jukebox, and Gordon Lightfoot.&#13;
The atmosphere is fine, tho&#13;
restaurant clean, and the servicegOOd&#13;
It is an efficient place for pe I'&#13;
working downtown to eat, becau~pe&#13;
the limitations of lunch breaks n:;&#13;
clientele range from the warVets'Uv'&#13;
at the Hotel Dayton, to lhe ~&#13;
recruiters, whose office is direct!&#13;
across the street. Y&#13;
The spagetti dinner was very gOOd&#13;
Maggie said, but could have betn&#13;
served a iittle warme.. My chicken&#13;
noodle soup was good. And tho&#13;
meatball bomber excellent. It Was IS&#13;
good or better than any meal eitherof&#13;
us had eaten that was termed ItaliJn.&#13;
. We deCIded that we Hked ROCto'1&#13;
alot. The meal for the two of us....&#13;
filliDg for about two dollars. The&#13;
proportions and quality were gOOd&#13;
and Rocco's is a fine place for studenu&#13;
to eat.&#13;
As we were leaving, Irealiledthai&#13;
KeDosha did have a good thingg0trll&#13;
for the individual or the familythat&#13;
found themselves downtown hungt)'o&#13;
This place had many of the qualitiesof&#13;
my own imaginary. "ideal" restaurant.&#13;
While I was day-dreaming, puttingOIl&#13;
my coat and walking out, I bumpld&#13;
into a man seated at the counter.&#13;
I said excuse me, and the guy&#13;
seemed to stare at us as we walkedOUI&#13;
the door. He was \wearinga darksuit I&#13;
silk tie, a black top-coat, and sported I&#13;
bulge under his left arm, and another&#13;
guy was coming in to join him, Maggtt&#13;
remembering New York commentedu&#13;
to the fact that this fellow "really&#13;
looked shady, he looked like he CVCII&#13;
hated his grandma."&#13;
I just laughed, and told her thai&#13;
stereotypes are bad. Besides,it did"&#13;
really matter if Kenosha's detecllVti&#13;
got a bite to eat while they wert&#13;
downtown. Rocco's is a nice place.&#13;
4437· 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
Newscope&#13;
• •&#13;
EdIW&#13;
N.... FAor&#13;
CopyEdota'&#13;
. Business!llDll'&#13;
AdvertisingJIaDIIII&#13;
Warren Nedry&#13;
Marc Eisen&#13;
John Koloen&#13;
Jim Nolan&#13;
John Leighton&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jim KoloeD, Bill Sorensen, Bill J~&#13;
Darrell Borger, Bob Main1~&#13;
LouD).os, Mike Kurth, Bob .".&#13;
KeD Konkol, Kevin McKaY, J&#13;
Casper, P.ul Lomartire, Sv'" Tall&gt;&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF Grt!&#13;
Narees Soch., Don Marjall, Jo/Il •&#13;
B.rbar. Scott.&#13;
BUSINESS PHONES' 658-4861 Est •&#13;
652~171&#13;
A pin Steiger Speak&#13;
-&#13;
at Racine Campus&#13;
pr ram so&#13;
eu G,dle,,· One&#13;
03 1\f,1in t.&#13;
R11ci11e&#13;
ette. aod recruiting for armed services)&#13;
These are all legitimate. So, I am not all&#13;
that afraid of the Pentagon having a P.R.&#13;
budg t. A long a you distinguish that any&#13;
operation can go overboard. . Pl. ·: I think the really disturbing thing 1,1, ·hen the film showed those people&#13;
(Vice-Pres. Agnew, Laird, Heber) inst~ad&#13;
of )ing let l at the ch~es and !md&#13;
out what CBS · sa~g. their immediate&#13;
reaction defensive. I think it clearly&#13;
wed where their interests are. That an&#13;
in eHigent and more rational appr~ch&#13;
would have been one of 'let's see the film,&#13;
I ho d some hearing . Jets listen to what&#13;
they're saying. let"s see if th~e is any&#13;
validity to the CBS film or not' instead of&#13;
immediately reacting again t it. • \\ PE: , ·hat are your feelings&#13;
about the Peop Peace Treaty which has&#13;
upported by me congressmen and&#13;
aod what effect do you think it&#13;
might have?&#13;
T I R: I don't upport it. I don't like&#13;
it. lt' a little bit like a congre man trying&#13;
to otiate a Peace Treaty with a Foreign&#13;
Po er. That isn't in my judgment a&#13;
I 1timate [unction. It i something bettabli&#13;
hed governments.&#13;
Pl. ·: 1 don't know, I know it only&#13;
v uely. I know there i uch a thing. I&#13;
· some people ha,·e upported it. I'm&#13;
not reall:f ·ure I kno what it says entir&#13;
y. I ppose all that kind of thing has&#13;
some influence in helping to bring attention&#13;
to the matter again. Whether this is&#13;
the v.a,· to goor not I don't know.&#13;
w y llie Continued from Page 1)&#13;
Univer,ity of Wisconsin - Parkside.&#13;
4.) Anything less than a full-fledged&#13;
University of Wisconsin campus&#13;
would deprive Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin of millions of dollars in&#13;
economic benefits, and 5.) That such&#13;
a merger would create a large, centralized system under which individual&#13;
campuses would tend to lose&#13;
their identity, be less responsive to&#13;
local needs, and reduce the variety of&#13;
educational choice for students.&#13;
t11de11t Di. co1111/&#13;
011 ,,II Po.I t &amp; Frame.-&#13;
The other resolution specifically&#13;
urged the restoration of all money&#13;
previously taken as it is absolutely&#13;
essential for the development of a new&#13;
campus.&#13;
The Governor's proposal brings to&#13;
, my mind a lyric by Bob Dylan, "Oh&#13;
Momma, can this really be the end?"&#13;
DT'S-RACINE SOUNDS&#13;
LIKE ... 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;
--...i.equlpment 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 - Recelvers, 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 - Turntable~&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are re, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Southe stern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
by Paul 'Lomartire&#13;
People seem to subscribe t~ ma:i7e&#13;
stereotypes. For example, ~ . . Bronx, if two individuals weanng ~ilk&#13;
·suits dark top-coats, and sporting&#13;
bulg;s under their left arm, were&#13;
overheard talking at a resta~rant&#13;
named Rocco's, someone would either&#13;
be the proud owner of ~ _poun~ of&#13;
he.rain, or the happy participant m a&#13;
numbers game. I thought about all this as I went.&#13;
into Rocco's Restaurant in downto"".n&#13;
Kenosha. I was glad that ,I _was m&#13;
Kenosha, and not at Rocco s m _N~w&#13;
York because my chances of dmmg&#13;
with ;ocial deviants is a lot smaller.&#13;
Rocto's Restaurant is a nice place,&#13;
with a personality. The d~_ily papers&#13;
from Milwaukee and Chicago .. are&#13;
usually laying about, ther~ is a&#13;
jukebox stocked with a vanety of&#13;
music, the place is small, and the&#13;
prices are cheap. For a few dollars you can eat a hot&#13;
meal. Each day features a special for&#13;
about a buck. For example, on a&#13;
Wednesday one could get liver and&#13;
onions, and each day has a different&#13;
soup. · They also serve a hamburger for&#13;
cents, french fries for a quarter,&#13;
meatball bombers for forty cents, and&#13;
coffee for a dime. It is all very&#13;
economical.&#13;
The dinners range from the&#13;
specials of the day, to Italian foods.&#13;
Most of the food that comes out of&#13;
the kitchen of Rocco's is prepared by&#13;
Rocco himself, or another able-bodied&#13;
Italian. The menu is not what one&#13;
would call extensive, but there is&#13;
ample variety: Maggie decided to test Rocco on his&#13;
spagetti dinner, which included bread,&#13;
butter, and a salad. Besides wondering&#13;
if the food was good, she• wondered&#13;
how Italian it would be, just to satisfy&#13;
her curiosity. She has tasted genuine&#13;
Italian food , direct from the core of&#13;
"Little Italy" in downtown New&#13;
*********&#13;
Dave Rattle, with his 188 average ,&#13;
leads Parkside's Racine bowling league.&#13;
Others with high averages are Mike&#13;
Jenrette 169 , Walt Muleski 167, and&#13;
Jeff Koleske 160,&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
York. Although Italian fo .&#13;
restaurants is Italian, it still varieodf in&#13;
the original recipes brought ove s /Ofn&#13;
Italy. This happens with any fo~d rorn&#13;
is nationality orientated, and serv ~hat&#13;
the public on a large scale. The e. to&#13;
h~s to be modifi~ations, anJe Just&#13;
rmght say, something is lost . You&#13;
translation. tn the&#13;
I ordered a bowl of soup and c ff&#13;
and spiced it with a meatball bo O bee,&#13;
for Italian sake. While we wai~d e:,&#13;
replaced a strolling minstrel Wi; ~ jukebox, and Gordon Lightfoot.&#13;
The atmosphere is fine, !ht&#13;
restaurant clean, and the service &amp;OOd&#13;
It is an efficient place for pe ti&#13;
working downtown to eat, becau~p f&#13;
the limitations of lunch breaks Th&#13;
clientele range from the war -Vets ·livi '&#13;
at t~e Hotel Dayton, to the Ar:!'&#13;
recruiters, whose office is direcl across the street. Y&#13;
The spagetti dinner was very gOQd&#13;
Maggie said, but could have bee&#13;
served a little warmer. My chickt n&#13;
noodle soup was good. And the&#13;
meatball bomber excellent. It wa 11 good or better than any meal either of&#13;
us had ea~en that was termed Itah4a. . We decided that we liked R0e1;, 1&#13;
alot. The meal for the two of u. v.&#13;
filling for about two dollars. The&#13;
proportions and quality were good&#13;
and Rocco's is a fine place for students&#13;
to eat.&#13;
As we were leaving, I reali,ed tJu,&#13;
Kenosha did have a good thing goinl&#13;
for the individual or the family that&#13;
fo~nd themselves downtown hungr)&#13;
This place had many of the qualities of&#13;
my own imaginary "ideal" restaurant&#13;
While I was day-dreaming, putting o&#13;
my coat and walking out, I bumped&#13;
into a man seated at the counter.&#13;
I said excuse me, and the gu)&#13;
seemed to stare at us as we walked o&#13;
the door. He was wearing a dark suit, 1&#13;
silk tie, a black top-coat, and sported 1&#13;
bulge under his left arm, and anothtr&#13;
guy was coming in to join him, Maggit&#13;
remembering New York commented 11&#13;
to the fact that this fellow "re&#13;
looked shady, he looked like he c,&#13;
hated his grandma."&#13;
I just laughed, and told her tlul&#13;
stereotypes are bad. Besides, 1t dtdn~&#13;
really matter if Kenosha's detectnes&#13;
got a bite to eat while they wer&#13;
downtown. Rocco's is a nice place.&#13;
Newscape&#13;
Warren Nedry&#13;
Marc Eisen&#13;
JohnKoloen&#13;
Jim Nolan&#13;
John Leighton&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen Bill Sorensen, Bill Ja&#13;
Darrell Bo;ger, Bob MainJand .... -t&#13;
Loumos Mike Kurth, Bob Borwo--&#13;
Ken . K~nkol, Kevin McKay, J&#13;
Casper, Paul Lomartire, Sven Ta&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF GrlJ&#13;
Nare~ Socha, Don Marjala, Johll ·&#13;
Barbara Scott.&#13;
BUSINESS PHONES: 658-4861&#13;
652-4177 &#13;
6 ...... -.. MIrda 2.9, I97J&#13;
Thi arncle deaJs primarily with&#13;
procedures and future constructions.&#13;
Once again I am indebted to Mr.&#13;
G lbranh and the Department of&#13;
Planning and Construction for&#13;
providing the information.&#13;
Th central campus complex is&#13;
unique because of the commu ter&#13;
enrollment. The pedestrian concourse&#13;
which WIll eventually Ionkall buildings&#13;
on campus I de tgned 10 imparl an air&#13;
of informal social and cultural interest&#13;
There are no commitments to&#13;
dehmte locations for future [acilites.&#13;
11\1 . uered development of linked&#13;
building In the complex will enable&#13;
the tudent to travel between buildmgs&#13;
nd cia In a few minute . This&#13;
eonceruraucn wilt 31 be economical&#13;
.....h n 1t come 10 laymg out uulities.&#13;
Procedure for new buudrng begin&#13;
wuh the arcb teet cI se examination&#13;
01 the program. This i then reviewed&#13;
and re-revtewed by the Board of&#13;
Regen' , the HE. 'he Governor and&#13;
the leel tature. Finally the Buildtng&#13;
omrm Ion grant to go ahead&#13;
The guddrug Comnu Ion then&#13;
al.J~(rtl s the bidding of Ih new&#13;
proje 1 fhl lakes about tWO weeks&#13;
nd mformatlon IS nt to all qualified&#13;
.genl;.l&#13;
The general. electrical and&#13;
me h nt\,.al l;OnUal,;lor 3rt given four&#13;
to 1 ",~&lt;k Itl tudy the pi os and&#13;
make their hlHnates while concurTlng&#13;
With their n\l,.n ub·\:ontradors. The&#13;
hoal wcd. llf this period is spent&#13;
ambling alllnform311on.&#13;
110 \\II'nlng blooer are requited to&#13;
p I jJ ten·percent bid ~curity to irS.u'a&#13;
I',; mphclh;e the Regents for final&#13;
appcmal&#13;
lhl. cvntral:(s. Whh:h con 1St of&#13;
the whole plan and speclncalions. are&#13;
Igncd by the Regent , Governor. and&#13;
the Olllr;lctOr. The same day the&#13;
con lr cis are Signed the prime&#13;
Campus&#13;
Events&#13;
Thursday. April I&#13;
M~elmg' Students International Med·&#13;
Italion Soclet~. 8:00 p.m. Room 101&#13;
GreenqulSt H' '.&#13;
SOl..... y. April 3&#13;
Track UW P will compe'e in the W..&#13;
conson A.A.V. Championships in Mil&#13;
waukee.&#13;
There are those oT us, bOlh new and&#13;
old '0 Women's Ub. who are&#13;
struggling with how we feet and act on&#13;
a personal level in different areas of&#13;
the movement. The "Interpersonal"&#13;
R3p group \\ill be sel up for aU who&#13;
W3nl to explore personal issues and&#13;
concern. If you have no' had the&#13;
opporluOIty to rap with other women&#13;
about Women's Lib. or want to&#13;
conunue r3pping come to the first&#13;
meellng. It will be April 5 at&#13;
7:30-'1.30 at 2010 Charles St.. off&#13;
Douglas by You!. Carolyn&#13;
Cole-.:ha,rwoman·-634-2976&#13;
Open Soturdays&#13;
9 A.M. to Noon&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
American&#13;
Stale&#13;
Bank&#13;
FREE CHECK' HG&#13;
ACCOUNTS TO STUDENTS&#13;
AND RETIREES&#13;
.. 8b1k.tIJ lIIftd&#13;
Kea b&#13;
Parkside:&#13;
University on the grow&#13;
B~Ken Konkol&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
building will be twice as Iar&#13;
~ore complex than the others. ge and.&#13;
Also included in this bienniu .&#13;
site development, expected t m IS&#13;
concluded this September. 0 be&#13;
project includes parking for 1000 This&#13;
permanent service road, as tars,&#13;
permanent utility networks an~e ~ ~s&#13;
lighting and landscaping C&#13;
aslO&#13;
$1.132,000. _ . 0,,:&#13;
The Physical Education BUild"&#13;
which will be begun in Ailing&#13;
completed in August 1972 wilnn t'nd&#13;
a three-court gym, Bdane swi c ~dt&#13;
pool, auxiliary gym. handball ~,ng&#13;
locker rooms and faculty offices curts,&#13;
$2,176.000. ' 0.. :&#13;
Target date for the bids On the&#13;
Comm·Arts Building is Jul~ '!h&#13;
estimated completion in Jan&#13;
wt&#13;
1973. Included will be a 500 lIaJy&#13;
lecture hall with additional bal seat&#13;
seating 240. language labs. com ~~n~&#13;
center. classrooms and faculty o'ffi mg&#13;
Cost: $4,220.000. ces,&#13;
Initially an additional classroo&#13;
building had been planned for ~&#13;
biennium but was knocked Out It ,s&#13;
being. resubmitted for the I97I.7';&#13;
biennium. Estimated completion is fo&#13;
January 1973 at a cost of $4.566,ooor&#13;
Projected enrollment gtowth fo;&#13;
UW·P'IS estImated at nearly 1000&#13;
year for the next four years with s'OO&#13;
per year lllcrease after that&#13;
. Tentatively scheduled f~r the 73.75&#13;
blemum IS a camp\1s Union d&#13;
second Greenquist-type lab c1as~n a&#13;
building. room&#13;
For the 75-77 bienium a sec d&#13;
general ~lassr60rn bUidling is propo~&#13;
along. WIth more physical educ.1i&#13;
faCilities. on&#13;
Dormatories will not be construettd&#13;
by the University due to priority f&#13;
costs, rather, we will have to look ~o&#13;
pnvate developers to get the job done.&#13;
Model of the tireenquist-Library learning center complex. (Inset) Kenneth&#13;
Galbraith.&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
pot, I'd like to' ask him on what basis he's going to&#13;
keep students out of Madison. Are you then going to&#13;
have only uppedevel class students going to Madison?&#13;
Is that what the plan is?" she asked.&#13;
Jerry Owens questioned the logic of the Governor&#13;
He explained, "We all agree the University of&#13;
Wisconsin is a very fine school. It has been known as&#13;
a fine school, evidently, because of the teaching&#13;
mstructors at Madison. If this is so,and you're really&#13;
concerned about the quality of education, you're&#13;
getting a good buy. Because they don't get a lot ';f&#13;
money. So if you insist full professors teach every&#13;
class on the MadIson campus, all I can see is increased&#13;
costs for you."&#13;
Mike Holmes, History professor, asked Schreiber,&#13;
"As~u~ng, it . is true as you said, the Lu~ey&#13;
~dmmlstratl0n IS not out to destroy the University. I~&#13;
It also true the Governor stated prior to issueing the&#13;
budget that all governn;lental agencies could carry the&#13;
burden equally?&#13;
'.llf t~ese stat~ments are true, why&#13;
UniverSIty of WIsconsin is the only&#13;
.--_----.,...-....t:.:::.:::.::.::..:~~&#13;
contractors tie up their&#13;
sub.contractors for delivery of raw&#13;
materials and equipment.&#13;
There are three projects scheduled&#13;
for the next biennium-a&#13;
Communications-Arts. building,&#13;
People. organization&#13;
questioned.&#13;
Walt Shirer explained that the budget hurt Parkside&#13;
in other ways besides in the base budget cut, He&#13;
said, "I think in talking about money, you really have&#13;
to talk a great deal more about the $9.3 million&#13;
systemwide cuI. That is not really the major cut we're&#13;
getting. We're losing about $3.6 million in decision&#13;
tiems, which have no connection. with the ba!e&#13;
budget cut."&#13;
Mrs. Jaesche spoke of what the effects of the&#13;
Governor's prorosal would have on area resident.&#13;
"The people 0 this area have paid with tax payer's&#13;
money $2 million. for this University to be here.&#13;
"We bough t this land," she said. We paid even&#13;
more than that because of all the development ,hat&#13;
has gone into the land. It amounts altogether '0&#13;
about $3 million in total.&#13;
"1 would like you to take this message back to the&#13;
Governor from the people in this area. If he is going&#13;
to save $4 million by merging the two systems. he'd&#13;
better send $3 million of that back to us," she&#13;
concluded.&#13;
Schreiber promised to relay to Governor Lucey the&#13;
points raised in the discussion . ;....=~.:.....:..:::..--------;&#13;
Physical Education building, and a&#13;
Heating and Chilling Plant. Plans .for&#13;
the Comm-Arts bunding are now in&#13;
th.e final stages.&#13;
Included 10 the Comm-Arts building&#13;
will be faciilities for a theater,&#13;
audio-visual, and music rooms. This&#13;
is it that the&#13;
governmental&#13;
J,iA ';rt&#13;
~&#13;
~iA'fl, ..~ ~¥' Banquet&#13;
Rooms Available&#13;
famous fa,&#13;
•&#13;
CARL'S"- PIZZA&#13;
I.. FAr Sizes,... - 12'" - I.... - 16"&#13;
A\.SO&#13;
• ailS· S'AGkI'A'I• ("ICKE"&#13;
• GMOCCHI • ....VIOlI • LA SAGMA&#13;
• SEA '000 • SANDWICHIS&#13;
CAllY ·oun - DElIVDY&#13;
"rou liNG ... WI "'NC'"&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
SI. '" A'll.&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52 no St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS•&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI •• SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
that had its base budget cut? he&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES&#13;
S(JJM1flA&#13;
Spetid&#13;
THREE OPTIONS&#13;
CHICAGO to&#13;
LONDON&#13;
THREE DEPARTURES&#13;
I&#13;
'Ugu,I&#13;
June - Ju ~ - ,.,&#13;
$19710.$218 plus '0'&#13;
For Information conloelft:, , _&#13;
• '1'" 0 Ie SIud,enl Aetlv1I&#13;
Tolenl H_oU&#13;
Ev&#13;
p s&#13;
nts&#13;
Open Soturdays&#13;
9 A.M. to Noon&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FREE CHECKI HG&#13;
ACCOUNTS TO STUDENTS&#13;
AND RETIREES&#13;
39%8 8btWII Saft,&#13;
Ke .....&#13;
Parkside:&#13;
University on the grow&#13;
todel of the Greenquist-Library learning center complex.&#13;
Galbraith.&#13;
contra tor tie up their&#13;
ub-contra tor for deli\'ery of raw&#13;
material· nd equipment.&#13;
There are three projects scheduled&#13;
for the next biennium-a&#13;
Communications-Arts . build ing ,&#13;
Physical Education building, and _a&#13;
Heating and Chilling Plant. Plans f?r the Comm-Arts building are now m&#13;
the fi nal stages. Included m the Comm-Arts building&#13;
will be faciilities for a theate~,&#13;
audio-visual, and music rooms. This&#13;
building will be twice as large d. more complex than the others. an&#13;
• Also included in this biennium . site development, expected to ~&#13;
concluded this September. Thi&#13;
project includes parking for J OOo c s . d ar~ permanent service roa , as well '&#13;
permanent utility networks and b ~s I . h . d I d . a IC 1g ting an an scapmg. Co 1.&#13;
$1 ,132,000. s ·&#13;
The Physical Education Build"&#13;
which will_ be begun in April a&#13;
1&#13;
~~&#13;
completed m August 1972 will includ a three-court gym, 8-lane sWimmine&#13;
pool, auxiliary gym, handball court:&#13;
locker rooms and faculty offices. Cost '&#13;
$2,176,000. ·&#13;
Target date for the bids on the&#13;
Comm-Arts Buildin_g is _ July With&#13;
estimated completion m January&#13;
1973. Included will be a 500 seat&#13;
lecture hall with additional balconv&#13;
seating 240. language labs, computi · center, classrooms and faculty office'&#13;
Cost: $4,220,000.&#13;
Initially an additional classroom&#13;
building had been planned for thi&#13;
biennium but was knocked out It is&#13;
being resubmitted for the 1971 -73&#13;
biennium. Estimated completion i for&#13;
January 1973 at a cost of $4,566 000&#13;
Projected enrollment growth' ro;&#13;
UW-P is estimated at nearly 1000 per&#13;
year for the next four years With 50()&#13;
per year increase after that.&#13;
_ T~ntati~ely scheduled for the 73.75&#13;
b1emum 1s a campus Union and a&#13;
second Greenquist-type lab cla sroom building.&#13;
For the 75-77 bienium a second&#13;
general classroom buidling is proposed&#13;
along with more physical education&#13;
facilities.&#13;
Dormato!ies ~ill not be constru ted&#13;
by the Umvers1ty due to priority of&#13;
costs, rather, we will have to look to&#13;
private developers to get the job done.&#13;
organization that had its base budget cut? he Peolf) le questioned. 1 (Continued from Page 1) Walt d h h b d h Shirer explaine t at t e u get urt Parksidt&#13;
po t , I'd like to ask bim on what basis he 's go~ng to in other ways besides in the base budget cut. He&#13;
keep students out of Madison. Are you then gomg to said, "I think in talking about money, you really have&#13;
have only upperlevel class students going to Madison? to talk a great deal more about the $9.3 million&#13;
Is that what the plan is?" she asked. systemwide cut. That is not really the major cut we're&#13;
Jerry Owens questioned the logic o_f the Governor getting. We're losing about $3.6 million in decision&#13;
He explained, ·'We all agree the University of tiems, which have no connection . with the base&#13;
Wisconsin is a very fine school. It has been known as budget cut."&#13;
a fine school, evidently, because of the teaching Mrs. J aesche spoke of what the effects of the&#13;
instructors at Madison. If this is so, and you're really G~vernor's proposal would have _on :irea resident~.&#13;
co ncerned about the quality of education, you'~e "The people of this area _have paid with tax payers&#13;
getting a good buy. Because they don't get a lot of money $2 million for this University to be here.&#13;
mo ney. So if you insist full professors teach every "We bought this land," she said. We paid even&#13;
class on the Madison campus, all I can see is increased more than that because of all the development that&#13;
costs for you. " has gone into the land. It amounts altogether to&#13;
Mike Holmes, History professor, asked Schreiber, about $3 million in total.&#13;
' ' Assuming it is true as you said, the Lu~ey "I would like you to take this message bac~ to ~he&#13;
administration is not out to destroy the University. I~ Governor from the people in this area. If he 1s gm'&#13;
it also true the Governor stated prior to issueing the to save $4 million by merging the two systems;, he'd&#13;
budget that all governmental agencies could carry the better send $3 million of that back to us. sh&#13;
bu rden equally ? concluded. he " If th ese statements are true, why is it that the Schreiber promised to relay to Governor Lucey 1&#13;
University of Wisconsin is the onl_y_g_o_v_e_rn_m_e_n_tal __ p ... o_i_· n_t_s_r __ ai __ ·s_e_d __ i_n..-the~d::is:::c:.:u:.:s::si:.:o.:.:n:.:... _______ 1&#13;
CARL'S/ PIZZA&#13;
111 Feur Sizes 9" · 12H • UH. 16H&#13;
Al,.SO&#13;
• RIIS • SPAG'ffml • CHICKEN&#13;
• GMOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA $AGNA&#13;
• SU FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CAllY-OUTS - DELIVEIY&#13;
HY04J IIHC . .. WE HIHC''&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
SUI 6tll AVE.&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN, THRU THURS,&#13;
11 A,M, TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI, I SAT, TILL 2 A,M,&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
{triple decker)&#13;
sse&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES s(Ultllfllt&#13;
Spui,Q), -THREE OPTIONS&#13;
CHICAGO to&#13;
LONDON&#13;
THREE DEPARTURES&#13;
A gust&#13;
June - July - u&#13;
$197 to $218 plus toX&#13;
. Contoct:&#13;
For lnformot1on . . offic•,&#13;
Student Activ1t1es&#13;
T olent H_oll &#13;
stabilize her life, to express the fact&#13;
that behind the pictures there lurks a&#13;
woman" She asked him for a baby and&#13;
he told her he'd think about It. The&#13;
moment is gone and the next day,&#13;
when he says he'll give her a kid, she&#13;
ignores him. I cannot, for the life of&#13;
me understand why the narrator&#13;
ref~ses to stay with her. He'd have had&#13;
it made. .&#13;
Ultimately this novel is neither&#13;
good nor had, I would ca)I' it.&#13;
competently written but a TIttle t.oo&#13;
superficial. Creezy comes across like&#13;
one of her posters, one dimensional,&#13;
and maybe that's the point, maybe she&#13;
is nothing more than a picture on a&#13;
8 March 29,1971 CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Creezv I a French novel. Winner of&#13;
the 1969 Prix. Goncourst , it was first&#13;
translated IOtO English 10 1970. A&#13;
shan novel (122 pages), it tells the&#13;
story of Creezy, a model whose&#13;
pi ture. can be seen in ~very magazine&#13;
and billboard 10 France' "Creezy&#13;
standing beside a washmg, machine,&#13;
Cre~z.y water skiing in an orange&#13;
bikini. leapmg the- crest of a wave.&#13;
come to the Baharrn , Creezy in an&#13;
evening gOWQ~n g beside a gold&#13;
cigarelle hlnter as tall as herself&#13;
Creezy darning dgainst a background&#13;
of holiday bungalows, come to the&#13;
omoro Islands, Creezy on the&#13;
billboards, Creezy agamst 'he sky,&#13;
in the form of the narrator. She finds&#13;
in him the qualities she lacks. She is&#13;
searching for love. to become intimate&#13;
with another human being, to become&#13;
a human being'~ather than a picture on&#13;
a billboard. But the politician hesitates&#13;
and all is lost, culminating in a leap&#13;
into suicide from her apartment&#13;
window.&#13;
I would have thought that after&#13;
Camus and Sartre the trench would&#13;
have tired of explicit existential&#13;
themes and words such as&#13;
Unothingness" in their novels. Marceau&#13;
o v e ruses both the word '&#13;
U othingness" and the existential&#13;
themes; the concept of time, the&#13;
Fo" Sale&#13;
'69 Kawasaki Wl-5S 650 cc E .&#13;
652-6335 after 4 x {;onu.&#13;
'57 Cbev. Wagon $;350 or b&#13;
652-0109 after 6 est offer&#13;
'69 Ramb. American $995 65&#13;
before 7 2-4215&#13;
'69 Mustang Sl,800 or be&#13;
694-0071 st oO"et&#13;
Fiat wagon U50 call Ron 632-8230&#13;
'70 AMX $2450 or best offer 658&#13;
or 658-4117 -4271&#13;
'67 Triumph TR-4 IRS whole or r&#13;
886-3618 or PUtl&#13;
2 Piece lubbage set cheap c n&#13;
654-2074 after 4 a Totl'l&#13;
Winter coat size 7 $10 633-757&#13;
637 -8120 6 Or&#13;
'70 Ambassa;dor call Dennis 652-5673&#13;
Bow &amp; Quiver Shakespeare 45 lb&#13;
also Garda "300" reel, rod, &amp; tackle b~.S35&#13;
$30 2104-57th street , Kenosha A&#13;
Honda" 150" cc S200 694-0325 pt.8&#13;
RCA Signal Generator $20.00 also RC&#13;
Vacuum Tube voltmeter $20"00 639-8 A&#13;
Fender Stradcaster $450 or be (,202&#13;
639-6360 St 0 er&#13;
'62 Rambler $100&#13;
C,1l 652-9552&#13;
By Jim Koloen&#13;
Title O('t'zv&#13;
uthor: Felt"den MarceElll&#13;
Publisher' The Onon Pre&#13;
billboard. But then why does she kill&#13;
herself? A one-dimensional character&#13;
wouldn't be capable of the dread and&#13;
anguish which is concomitant wijh&#13;
suicide, so she must be morl!'"than her&#13;
picture. She is separat,d from&#13;
humanity by her seeming hollowness,&#13;
and from the reader by the author's&#13;
point of view, observer narration. A&#13;
good example of too many things left&#13;
unsaid.&#13;
barrenness of existence. etc. Major&#13;
themes in this novel, have been major&#13;
themes in too many other novels.&#13;
They lose their effectiveness.&#13;
Personally speaking, I prefer Camus to&#13;
M, Marceau The writing Itself is dry&#13;
and not particularly memorable.&#13;
The novel is abou t Creezy yet we&#13;
don't really intuit her character,she is&#13;
ephemeral. she is of the moment and&#13;
her motives remain unwritten. She is&#13;
shallow, almost a robot, reacting to&#13;
the moment and blind to past and&#13;
future. She drives her car (which she&#13;
calls her home) at top speed in a race&#13;
with life and death. She commits&#13;
suicide in the end because the narrator&#13;
refuses to stay with her. It seems that&#13;
she was grasping onto him in order to&#13;
CreelY twenty feet high, Creezy 10&#13;
banana-yell w Bermuda&lt; ..&#13;
The narr tor. a member f the&#13;
('hamb r of D&lt;P\JlIe , IS looking back&#13;
at the ume Ywtftn he wa reezy'&#13;
lcver , \\ hen he could have saved&#13;
(ret/) but lal!td. so Creezy i...no&#13;
more lie I maTTled. a falher, a&#13;
poltth':lan h'dng In an orderly world&#13;
unul he meet (recl.) at an 31rpOTl.&#13;
boO' then on~ hi life with Creezy&#13;
bel,;lineS the pur&gt;1,uitof lhe moment.&#13;
"In CreClY' llni'fCr~ everything was&#13;
1II1'lmcthate.born on the in tant and&#13;
gone on lhe In lant. We had been&#13;
born, &lt;he and I.she for me, and, even&#13;
more, I f r her. In the airports"&#13;
Life 1 a whulwhtnd affiar for&#13;
CreelY. who Itlempts to find stabihty&#13;
Wanted&#13;
Part~time programmers needed&#13;
computmg center Room 216 Cree . by&#13;
call nqUl$l. W&#13;
658-4861 Ext. 395&#13;
Lost &amp; Found&#13;
Blue ski jacket 859·2356 REWARD&#13;
Misc.&#13;
Fiberglass Repair work CQIl 654-8739&#13;
Any type of work 652-8734&#13;
Minnie the Midnite Maid&#13;
Qualifications for calling:&#13;
Proffessors &amp; Bachelors over 2S&#13;
(I'm not cute but I'm efficient)&#13;
C,1l657-5929&#13;
I_A0'eezy, Courtesy of the Book Mar&#13;
p"2.59rh srreet, Kenosha, can be&#13;
lPurchased for $5.95.&#13;
ABORTION&#13;
pregnancies up to 12&#13;
weeks tenninated from&#13;
$176,00&#13;
Medication, lab Tests&#13;
Doctors fees included&#13;
Hospital &amp; Hospital&#13;
affiliated clinics.&#13;
(212) TR 7-8803&#13;
24 hours~7 days&#13;
PHYSICIANS REF'ERRAL&#13;
We know we cen help ycH.I, eftfl II&#13;
ifs just to t.lk to "someone.&#13;
will get is a record review in a small&#13;
college paper. put that's big business.&#13;
It's happened before and will&#13;
undoubtedly happen again. This album&#13;
is good", very good, and deserves a lot&#13;
more credit than it will ever have a&#13;
chance to achieve.&#13;
Glass Harp was provided courtest ofBidinger&#13;
House of Music, Inc., 626&#13;
56th Street, Kenosha, Wise.&#13;
By Bob Borchard t&#13;
GLASS HARP&#13;
DECCA RECORDS&#13;
It's very depressing to review this&#13;
album.-depressing and probably futile.&#13;
I can say thaI if you buy this album&#13;
you're very likely to enjoy it. This&#13;
record is the result of three Hne&#13;
musicians. three very refreshing&#13;
Will r , a gr up of extremely capable&#13;
technician and a brilliant producer all&#13;
complementing each other. I suppose I&#13;
could even say that personally, I like it&#13;
much more than what a lot of name&#13;
groups are putting ou.t.&#13;
But, damn it, I know that no matter&#13;
what I say, this album is never going to&#13;
,.,H. Musically il has everything, but as&#13;
far as what seHs albums, front money&#13;
and trade publicity, il has absolutely&#13;
nOlhing. It will never be seen, heard,&#13;
or wriuen of, and therefore, never sell.&#13;
A good as it is this or ,for that matter,&#13;
hardly any new group wiH make it in&#13;
recording this year. The market is&#13;
complelely flooded and the sale&#13;
survivors are the established groups.&#13;
Record companies want to back a&#13;
winner, something that's already&#13;
proven to be a saleable product.&#13;
1r00ically that's where the publicity&#13;
money goes. Meanwhile they keep&#13;
I rying long &lt;hots; finding good&#13;
musiCians, recording them and then&#13;
with little or no money spent to make&#13;
lhe pubhc aware of them, ship a few&#13;
copies to record shops where they are&#13;
a sed over and eventually forgotten.&#13;
The whole idea is that if just one or&#13;
two catch on they've made back the&#13;
money spent on the rest.&#13;
Many of those don't deserve to&#13;
make it. This one does.&#13;
Glass Harp is easy to listen to. The&#13;
mild, subdued orchestral background&#13;
sets up the lead voice perfectly&#13;
(unfortunately, I don't know his name&#13;
since they didn't bother to put credits&#13;
on the.jacket). The guitarist is one of&#13;
those rare people who never seems to&#13;
run out of ideas. He runs phrases&#13;
t~gether so ~oothly, never repeating&#13;
hunself, thatIt s sheer pleasure to listen&#13;
to." The melodic patterns, while&#13;
baSIcally nothing new, are colored and&#13;
shaped to achieve a beautiful lyricism,&#13;
a floatmg effect that leads the listener&#13;
along and at the end gently sets you&#13;
back down. If you've ever heard an&#13;
actual glass harp, you'll know what I&#13;
mean.&#13;
Well, I've done what I can. It's a&#13;
shame that the only praise this ~roup&#13;
1/ \\&#13;
The BRAT Is&#13;
Where It Is All&#13;
DAILY SPECIAL&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4 P.M&#13;
..A Bottle of&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
and a.,&#13;
STEAK,'&#13;
iBRAT or&#13;
I!EEFBURGER· J.' I&#13;
H'PPY HOUR&#13;
Monday tbru Friday 7 p..... to 8 po&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20e&#13;
Av.i1.W. For P.rtl.. .&#13;
loelutll.. F...... I" ... SoNrlty P.. I0·&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
,,,, BRAT-STOP&#13;
.......... t C_I;"~" H.......&#13;
e&#13;
tit&#13;
B Jim K I n&#13;
in the f; rm of the narrator. he finds&#13;
in him the qualities she lack . She is&#13;
arching for love, to become mumate&#13;
with nother human being, to become&#13;
a human being·rather than a pi ture on&#13;
a billboard. But the politician hesitates&#13;
nd all i lost. culminating in a leap&#13;
into i'ide from her apartment&#13;
window.&#13;
I would ha,·e thought that after&#13;
Camu and Sartre the French would&#13;
ha\'e tired of explicit existential&#13;
theme and word such as&#13;
··nothmgne " in their novels. 1a~ceau&#13;
o · e r u e b o t h t h e word ... 'othmgne " and the existential&#13;
theme ; the concept of time. the&#13;
barrenn of e. 1 tence, etc. fajor&#13;
theme in thi novel, have been major&#13;
th m in too many other novel .&#13;
They lo e their effectivene ·.&#13;
Per n:illy pea ·ing. I prefer Camu to&#13;
. 1. tarce u The writing itself i dry&#13;
nd not partk larly memorable.&#13;
Th nO\·el i about Creezy yet we&#13;
d n ·1 reallv intuit her chara ·ter. he i&#13;
ephem ra( he i of the moment and&#13;
her motive remain unwritten he is&#13;
hallow almo t a robot. reacting to&#13;
the ment and blind to pa t and&#13;
futu e he drive her car (which he&#13;
calL • e · ome at top peed in a race&#13;
v.ith hfe and death. he commits&#13;
suicide in the end becau e the narrator&#13;
refu - to ta · v.1th her. It seems that&#13;
e \\3 grasping onto him in order to&#13;
The whole idea is that if just one or&#13;
two catch on they've made back the&#13;
money spent on the rest.&#13;
Many of those don't deserve to&#13;
make it. This one does.&#13;
Glass Harp is easy to listen to. The&#13;
mild, subdued orchestral background&#13;
sets up the lead voice perfectly&#13;
(unfortunately, I don't know his name&#13;
since they didn't bother to put credits&#13;
on the.jacket). The guitarist is one of&#13;
those rare people who never seems to&#13;
run out of ideas. He runs phrases&#13;
t~gether so smoothly, never repeating&#13;
himself, thatit's sheer pleasure to listen&#13;
to. The melodic patterns while&#13;
basically nothing new, are col~red and&#13;
shaped_ to achieve a beautiful lyricism,&#13;
a floatmg effect that leads the listener&#13;
along and at the end gently sets you&#13;
back down. If you've ever heard an&#13;
actual glass harp, you'll know what I&#13;
mean.&#13;
Well, I've done what I can. It's a&#13;
shame that the only praise this ~TOUI&gt;&#13;
HAVE A GOOD TIME WITH&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
stabilize her life, to express the fact&#13;
that behind the pictures there lurks a woman. She asked him for a ba~y and&#13;
he told her he'd think about it. The&#13;
moment is gone and the nex_t day'&#13;
when he says he'll give her a kid, she&#13;
ignores him. I cannot, for the life of me understand why the narrator ref~ses to stay with her. He'd have had&#13;
it made. . Ultimately this novel is neither&#13;
good nor bad, I would call"" it.&#13;
competently written but a Tittle t_oo&#13;
superficial. Creezy comes across like&#13;
one of her po~ters, one dimensional,&#13;
and maybe that's the point, maybe she&#13;
is nothing more than a picture on a&#13;
billboard. But then why does she kill&#13;
herself? A one-dimensional character&#13;
wouldn't be capable of the dread and&#13;
anguish which is concomitant wi!h&#13;
suicide, so she must be mont than her&#13;
picture. She is separat,d from&#13;
humanity by her seeming hollowness,&#13;
and from' the reader by the author's&#13;
point of view, observer narration. A&#13;
good example of too many things left&#13;
unsaid.&#13;
Creezy, Courtesy of the Book Mart&#13;
'622-59th street, Kenosha, can be&#13;
Durchased for $5.95.&#13;
will get js a record review in a small&#13;
college paper, but that's big business.&#13;
It's happe n ed before and will&#13;
undoubtedly happen again. This album&#13;
is gooa, very good, and deserves a lot&#13;
more credit than it will ever have a&#13;
chance to achieve.&#13;
Glass Harp was provided courtest of&#13;
Eidinger House of Music, Inc., 626&#13;
56th Street, Kenosha, Wisc.&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
For Sale&#13;
'69 Kawasaki Wl..SS 650 cc E&#13;
652-6335 after 4 x &lt;.:onu.&#13;
'57 Chev. Wagon S350 or b&#13;
652-0109 after 6 est offer&#13;
'69 Ramb . American S995 652&#13;
before 7 -4215&#13;
'69 Mustang Sl,800 or be&#13;
69 4-0071 st o(fcr&#13;
Fiat wagon S150 call Ron 632-8230&#13;
'70 AMX S2450 or best offer 658 or 658-4117 ·4271&#13;
'67 Triumph TR-4 IRS whole or f&#13;
886-3618 or Pana&#13;
2 Piece lubbage set cheap caU To&#13;
65 4-207 4 after 4&#13;
Winter coat size 7 SlO 633_7576 or&#13;
637-8120&#13;
'70 Ambassador call Dennis 652.5673&#13;
Bow &amp; Quiver Shakespeare 45 lb&#13;
also Garcia" 300" reel, rod, &amp; tackle b~xS]5&#13;
S 30 2104-5 7th stre~t, Kenosha A&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 9, March 29, 1971</text>
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              <text>Children's Breakfast Program</text>
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              <text>&#13;
Photographs by Mainland&#13;
JBy&#13;
Robert Mainland&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Five months ago Racine's Revolutionary Youth&#13;
Movement started a Childrens Breakfast Program for&#13;
grade school students, The program is now in its&#13;
twenty-first week and on the day I was there&#13;
eighty· five children consumed twelve pounds of&#13;
. sauSl!.ge, thirteen dozen eggs, seven cans of juice, and&#13;
three gallons of milk.&#13;
Breakfast is served from 6:45 to B A.M. Monday&#13;
thru Friday at the Spanish Center at 1031 Douglas&#13;
Ave., Racine, and is financed completely by&#13;
donations from local citizens, groups and businesses,&#13;
Among the contributors are Piggly Wiggly, A&amp;P, and&#13;
Kappus Bakery. The program is staffed by R YM and&#13;
volunteer members including students from Parkside,&#13;
Dominican, and Carthage Colleges. Local parents also&#13;
help staff the program.&#13;
The program is centered in an area where&#13;
- unemployment is high. Some parents work, but are&#13;
on reduced work loads. It is an area where many&#13;
children wouldn't normally have breakfast RYM&#13;
stresses that this is not a charity or handout program;&#13;
al/ people have the right to a decent life.&#13;
R YM stated the goal of the Breakfast Program is to&#13;
have the parents of these children to take over the&#13;
program themselves. R YM would then start a' similar&#13;
program in another area of the city.&#13;
The Childrens Breakfast Program is patterned after&#13;
a similar one started in Chicago by the Black&#13;
Panthers, and although the program has been a&#13;
-struggle, obtaining donations, recruiting volunteers,&#13;
etc., so far they have managed to overcome these&#13;
problem£ They also feel the children have benefitted&#13;
by generating a spirit of community interaction.&#13;
A t present the program is understaffed and&#13;
volunteers are badly needed to spend time with the&#13;
children. If anyone is interested in more information&#13;
about the Childrens Breakfast Program, call 633-4646&#13;
and ask for Mark or Steve, or truck on down to the&#13;
Spanish Center 1031 Douglas Ave., Racine, between&#13;
7 and B A.M. Monday thru Friday.&#13;
Photographs by Mainland&#13;
By Robert Mainland&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Five months ago Racine's Revolutionary Youth&#13;
Movement started a Childrens Breakfast Program for&#13;
grade school students. The program is now in its&#13;
twenty-first week and on the day I was there&#13;
. eighty-five. children consumed twelve pounds of&#13;
sausf!ge, thirteen dozen eggs, seven cans of juice, and&#13;
three gallons of milk.&#13;
Breakfast is served from 6:45 to 8 A.M. Monday&#13;
thru Friday at the Spanish Center at 1031 Douglas&#13;
Ave., Racine, and is financed completely by&#13;
donations from local citizens, groups and businesses.&#13;
Among the contributors are Piggly Wiggly, A&amp;P, and&#13;
Kappus Bakery. The program is staffed by R YM and&#13;
volunteer members including students from Parkside,&#13;
Dominican, and Carthage Colleges. Local parents also&#13;
help staff the program. The program is centered in an area where&#13;
- unemployment is high. Some parents work, but are&#13;
on reduced work loads. It is an area where many&#13;
children wouldn't normally have breakfast RYM&#13;
stresses that this is not a charity or handout program;&#13;
all people have the right to a decent life.&#13;
RYM stated the goal of the Breakfast Program is to&#13;
have the parents of these children to take over the&#13;
program themselves. R YM would then start a similar&#13;
program in another area of the city.&#13;
The Childrens Breakfast Program is patterned after&#13;
a similar one started in Chicago by the Black&#13;
Panthers, and although the program has been a&#13;
struggle, obtaining donations, recruiting volunteers,&#13;
etc., so far they have managed to overcome these&#13;
problems. They also feel the children have benefitted&#13;
by generating a spirit of community interaction.&#13;
At present the program is understaffed and&#13;
volunteers are badly needed to spend time with the&#13;
children. If anyone is interested in more information&#13;
about the Childrens Breakfast Program, ca/1633-4646&#13;
and ask for Mark or Steve, or truck on down to the&#13;
Spanish Center 1031 Douglas Ave., Racine, between&#13;
7 and 8 A.M. Monday thru Friday. &#13;
By Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newseope Staff&#13;
Governor Patrick. Lucey has told Newscope&#13;
that "The. merger between the University of&#13;
Wisconsin system and the Wisconsin State&#13;
University system is a settled matter. There's&#13;
going ,to" be a merger; there's no two ways&#13;
about rt.&#13;
He said this while paying a surprise visit to&#13;
Parkside last Wednesday afternoon. He&#13;
explained that the purpose of the unexpected&#13;
stop over was to investigate UW -P's future&#13;
construction plans.&#13;
It was the second time in four days the&#13;
Democratic Governor had been in Kenosha. His&#13;
speech before the Local 72 the preceding&#13;
Sunday also was made with a minimum of&#13;
publicity.&#13;
The Governor reiterated the same arguments&#13;
he had made previously in supporting his&#13;
merger proposal.&#13;
He explained, "J will not tolerate the&#13;
wasteful competition and duplication of&#13;
programs that has existed previously between&#13;
the two systems. .&#13;
"I will not sign a budget that provides&#13;
money for the three levels of educational&#13;
bureaucracy, the UW Board of Regents, the&#13;
WSU Board of Regents, and the CCHE," he&#13;
said. "I simply won't do it.&#13;
"Since I won't sign that kind of budget·,&#13;
higher education doesn't have any choice but&#13;
to merge." he declared.&#13;
Lucey said the merger would not be a&#13;
gradual one but would happen all at once, on&#13;
August 3l.&#13;
Reguarding his budget, the Governor&#13;
conceded that the severity of his reductions&#13;
were cutting into many worrhwile state&#13;
programs. He said he had just come from&#13;
Southern Colony for retarded children and had&#13;
been told they could have to. close two wards&#13;
because they won't have enough money.&#13;
He admitted "I have no doubt that it is&#13;
going to be very difficult for higher education&#13;
and welfare to get along with the money&#13;
allocated. "&#13;
He placed the.ultima te blame on the Federal&#13;
govcnmcnt. "It's a matter of national priorities.&#13;
As long as the people of Wisconsin pay $3&#13;
billion every 2 years to the Pentagon we&#13;
sOljlehow· have to get along wich $2 billion for&#13;
all OUf state and local services .. "&#13;
Lucey suggested the effects of the budget&#13;
cuts would not be that severe at UW·p, and&#13;
discounted Chancellor Wyllie's claim that&#13;
preliminary figures indicate that cuts in the&#13;
UW's base budget would cost Parkside the&#13;
equivalent of 30 faculty members.&#13;
Lucey said that the percentage of base cuts&#13;
from UW·p would "depend on what kind of&#13;
politician Chancellor Wyllie is-- because John&#13;
Visits UWP&#13;
Lucey: There's&#13;
no two ways&#13;
about it&#13;
Monda . \torch 22. 19 I .. '"&#13;
"W~'re not gOing (0 ren g on our&#13;
commirrment to build a great UOI\:c.r It here:'&#13;
he empha ized. "Bur it ' goong to be one of a&#13;
tern of 13 four-year campu e ."&#13;
The G verner al rd th at 10 order '0&#13;
reduce costs. "we arc gOlOg [0 mstsr on h 41\1 r&#13;
teaching loads on some campu .• \\ e think on&#13;
this campus. for example, that senior&#13;
professors ought to spend liar 12 h ur a&#13;
week teach 109•.,&#13;
Concerning his individual recommendation&#13;
for items above the Parks ide base budget, the&#13;
Governor pleaded ignorance.&#13;
When asked with refusal of the money for&#13;
the .p Iibrarv to move from T alieni H~II to&#13;
the Librarv Learnmg Center in June of 1972,&#13;
how did he propose It be done, he replied "I&#13;
wasn't aware of that. 01&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie and Governor Lucey.&#13;
Weaver. the president of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin, will be dividing up the par. I think&#13;
John Weaver ought to recognize the growing&#13;
pains of a new campus and make some&#13;
concessions. "&#13;
"Furthermore," the Governor said, "the&#13;
budget cut will not have the adve:se eHect here&#13;
that it will have on the Madison Campus;&#13;
because the Madison campus has stagnated as&#13;
fas as increased enrollment. You will have&#13;
added revenues from your mcrease in&#13;
enrollment. "&#13;
"Youl'll get start up funds." he continued.&#13;
"I'm down here today to review the request for&#13;
S 12 million in new construction.&#13;
Questioned by e"'cope smce W Phd n&#13;
Industrial Mi I nand thar up to now It had&#13;
not been staffed well, and to parllal" remed&#13;
this four new majo",. three of which pert 10 to&#13;
the Mission. were proposed bv p rk ide, why&#13;
then. did the Governor not fund the maj r&#13;
\ asn't this an abviou inconsistencv: to gh l: ~&#13;
Universirv its Mi ion and then not fund the&#13;
programs' that pertain to It.&#13;
The Governore responded. "Arc ) u&#13;
suggesting that we cut out the maj r &gt;"&#13;
He was told ve and hown theD ion Item&#13;
table publi. hed in la t wcck's l ewsc pc.&#13;
He replied. "M) ani, de fcn C I ) au lell m&#13;
where to get the money and I'll b I.d to&#13;
provide ir. . hould I clo c dow n a mental&#13;
hospital to g,ve Park ,de 923.0001"&#13;
Campus&#13;
News&#13;
Briefs&#13;
Wednesday, March :!4&#13;
Open Candidate Meeting Student&#13;
Government candidates Will, speak. to&#13;
anyone interested in attendmg. 8.00&#13;
p.m. Room 103, Gteenquist Hall.&#13;
Meeting Equestrian Club. 5:00 p.m.&#13;
Room 220 Gteenquist Hall.&#13;
Thursday. March 25&#13;
Meeting Luddite. Badger Room in&#13;
Racine Campus. 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Fnda) , March :!6&#13;
Ll GOJ,'ernor talks ~tartin -hrelber&#13;
Wisconsin's Lt. GO\lernor ~111talk on&#13;
the proposed Um\er II) merger and&#13;
the budget eu'. pon ore&lt;! b) 'he&#13;
P.rkside· Young·Oems. :! 30 p.m.&#13;
Room 101. Greenqul I Hall.&#13;
Feature Film "Bonme and CI}de:'&#13;
:00 p.m. ludenl ACUV-Itlh BUildlf:g.&#13;
Admission' 5.75.&#13;
tUlda\. I r h ~7&#13;
TrQck II' P In II.&#13;
Ind.p.nd.n, r II \&#13;
In\-"1I311nat Trae m«1 al&#13;
F,eld H""" 10 00 un&#13;
00,,« . lI.rloc - pon e&lt;!b) tho&#13;
at ,1\ Club q 00·1 00 am,&#13;
Adm' . Ion I 00. Par de d&#13;
II, n 10 10 I&lt;qUlte&lt;!.&#13;
e J&#13;
on In&#13;
at 00&#13;
me a&#13;
THIS FRIDAY, MARCH 26th&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Admission 75(&#13;
A FEATURE FILM SE.lIES PRESENTATION&#13;
By Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Governor Patrick. Lucey has told Newscope&#13;
that "The . merger between the University of&#13;
Wisconsin system and the Wisconsin State&#13;
University system is a settled matter. There's&#13;
going _to,, be a merger; there's no two ways&#13;
about 1t.&#13;
He said this while paying a surprise visit to&#13;
parks ide last Wednesday afternoon. He&#13;
explained t?at the ~urpos_e of the unexpected&#13;
stop over was to mvest1gate UW-P's future&#13;
construction plans.&#13;
It was the second time in four days the&#13;
Democratic Governor had been in Kenosha. His&#13;
speech before the Local . 72 the preceding&#13;
Sunday also was made with a minimum of&#13;
publicity.&#13;
The Governor reiterated the same arguments&#13;
he had made previously in supporting his&#13;
merger proposal.&#13;
He explained, "I will not tolerate the&#13;
wasteful competition and duplication of&#13;
programs that has existed previously between&#13;
the two systems. _&#13;
" I will not sign a budget that provides&#13;
money for the three levels of educational&#13;
bureaucracy, the UW Board of Regents, the&#13;
WSU Board of Regents, and the CCHE," he&#13;
said. "I simply won't do it.&#13;
"Si nce I won't sign that kind of budget·,&#13;
higher education doesn't have any choice but&#13;
to merge," he declared.&#13;
Lucey said the merger would not be a&#13;
gradual one but would happen all at once, on&#13;
August 31.&#13;
Reguarding his budget, the Governor&#13;
conceded that the severity of his reductions&#13;
were cutting into many worthwile state&#13;
programs. He said he had just come from&#13;
outhern Colony for retarded c,hildren and had&#13;
been told they could have to_ close two wards&#13;
because they won't have enough money.&#13;
Visits UWP&#13;
Lucey: There's&#13;
no two ways&#13;
about it&#13;
He admitted "l have no doubt that it is&#13;
going to be very difficult for higher education&#13;
and welfare to get along with the money&#13;
allocated."&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie and Governor Luce).&#13;
He placed the ultimate blame on the Federal&#13;
govenment. " It 's a matter of national priorities.&#13;
As long as the peo ple of Wisconsin pay 3&#13;
billion every 2 years to the Pentagon we&#13;
s0111ehow· have to get along with $2 billion for&#13;
all ou r state and local services .. "&#13;
Lucey suggested the effects of the budget&#13;
c11t would not be that severe at UW-P, and&#13;
discounted Chancellor Wyllie 's claim that&#13;
preliminary figures indicate that cuts in the&#13;
UW' base budget would cost Parkside the&#13;
equivalent of 30 faculty members.&#13;
Lucey said that the percentage of base cuts&#13;
from UW-P would " depend on what kind of&#13;
politician Chancellor Wyllie is--because John&#13;
Weaver, the president o f the ni'vcr itv o f&#13;
Wi con in. will b dividin up th pot. I ;hin ·&#13;
John Weaver ought to recognize th growing&#13;
pains of a new campus and m h om&#13;
concessions."&#13;
"Furthermore." the Governor id. ..th&#13;
budget cut will not have the adve~ e c..fC there&#13;
that it will have on the iad1 on mpu :&#13;
bccau c the Madi on campu ha tagnat d&#13;
fas as increa ed enrollment. You \\ill h vc&#13;
added revenues from •our in&#13;
enrollment ...&#13;
''Youl'll get start up fund:·.'' h ontinu d.&#13;
'Tm dO\\.'n here today co rc\'icw the r qu t for&#13;
12 million in new con tructio n.&#13;
Campus&#13;
News&#13;
Briefs&#13;
Wedne day. farch 24&#13;
Open Candidate leering tudent&#13;
Government cand1~ate will _ peak.~ anyone mterested in attending. .&#13;
p.m. Room 103. Greenqu1 t Hall . Meeting Equestrian Club. 5:00 p.m.&#13;
Room 220 Greenquist Hall;&#13;
Thursday. 1arch _5 .&#13;
Meeting Luddite. Badger Room 111&#13;
Racine Campus. :00 p.m. _..__ ......... .,....,....,......,.,_ ... _.,...._.&#13;
THIS FRIDAY, MARCH 26th&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Admission 75( &#13;
. Monda), "larch 22, 19 I pe Page S&#13;
It. If they don't wan .&#13;
leave. It's that simple t to do It they&#13;
th~ ~hin: ~he suce~ of the band, and&#13;
tha an ,IS a total success. is the fact&#13;
t audiences appreciate a certai&#13;
amount of d' . .. In&#13;
the band Ignlty. and diSCipline on&#13;
f . stand. Ithink people are tired&#13;
o dseelrlg a bunch of kids come out&#13;
an slobber on the stage and 1MiW5&#13;
around, walk off. have a smoke bring&#13;
wme ~ ,&#13;
. • ze out, and ignore an&#13;
~Udlences feelings. Audiences want to&#13;
e entertained. They don't want to see&#13;
the same things they can see at home&#13;
or on television. They want to go out&#13;
and see something different, that's&#13;
why they pay their money. They're&#13;
entitled to the best performance you&#13;
can possibly give, nothing more and&#13;
nothing less. That's all within the&#13;
framework of what t represent&#13;
There's a certain amount of digni~&#13;
and a certain amount of discipline in&#13;
the band that must be maintained in&#13;
order for the band to play rtght.&#13;
From the floor: 00 you think your&#13;
show is visual, to a spectacle I mean?&#13;
. RICH: As a spectator it's no more&#13;
VIsual than watching a guy get hit in&#13;
the mouth, like I saw Clay get hit last&#13;
week. That's visual, too, but I didn't&#13;
go there to see him make faces, I went&#13;
to see him fight. You come to hear my&#13;
band. You come to hear music and not&#13;
be too concerned about visual aspects.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: What kind of reaction&#13;
do you have to Miles Davis, his style&#13;
and his music?&#13;
RICH: My reaction to Miles Davis is&#13;
the greatest respect in the workt. I&#13;
think he's a total genius. I think what&#13;
he's doing at this point is trying to&#13;
break into the underground thing and&#13;
try to get another audience and in my&#13;
opinion he's going at It the wrong way.&#13;
I think he's made tOO definue a&#13;
jump ... he's saying in essence "'m&#13;
going to fo ... ke everythi!l9 I've done&#13;
in the past for you.· As great an Irtlst&#13;
as he is. I don't think he has to pUt&#13;
himself in the posittOn of saYing that&#13;
this IS for a new audience A new&#13;
audience wtll eventually grab onto&#13;
anybody that's dOlOg anything With&#13;
taste. • iles IS certe.nlv head and&#13;
shoulders above most muSICtans as far&#13;
as taste is concerned. I gIVe him Credit&#13;
for stepping out and doing it I don't&#13;
think he did It correctly. I thlOk with&#13;
Bitches Brew he made a definite&#13;
attempt to get into the RollingS~,&#13;
I think a younger audience Will find&#13;
him, I don't think he has to go&#13;
searching.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: What do you think&#13;
the band members think of you'&#13;
RICH: Icouldn't eare less. What the&#13;
hell do I care? I'm not here to Win 8&#13;
popularity contest, My only concern is&#13;
that if the job starts at eight o'clock&#13;
everyone IS here by seven-thirty. They&#13;
get their ass up on the bandstand and&#13;
play the best they can. When they go&#13;
out of here, they can call me every&#13;
kind of mother there is t hat's&#13;
their prohtem, not mine. '&#13;
. You can't expect '0 be loved by&#13;
sixteen people and you can't expect&#13;
be respected by sixteen people, but ,f&#13;
there's three Of four guys that dig It,&#13;
that's good enough. Just like you can't&#13;
please 1100 people in the audience.&#13;
There must have been somebody out&#13;
(Continued on pale 6l&#13;
•••••••••••••••••••• 0;. "."'1 I..L&amp;.JIIJ1Jllil ~'&#13;
B dd R&#13;
" h ' rt rm I&#13;
U y. IC ID concert at Tremper high school.&#13;
Newscope Interview: Buddy Rich&#13;
las' Saturday Buddy Rich and his&#13;
band appeared at Tremper H.$.&#13;
Following his concert Newscope&#13;
reporterBob Borchardt interviewed&#13;
him backstage.Here is the report:&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Who's the greatest&#13;
drummer in the world?&#13;
RICH:What is that meant to be?&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Just a question. Do&#13;
you think you're the best drummer in&#13;
the world? How would you compare&#13;
someonelike Elvin Jones to what you&#13;
do.&#13;
RICH:I don't compare anybody to&#13;
anything. How do you oompare Miles&#13;
to Diz? There's no such thing as the&#13;
greatest, it's what you like. It's what&#13;
you think is good or bad depending on&#13;
what your taste is like.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: How do you explain&#13;
that bands like yours now can play the&#13;
collegecircuit?&#13;
RICH: I don't think it's saying&#13;
something for us. I think it's saying&#13;
something for people in college, deR!&#13;
you? I think they're showing a little&#13;
more taste and a little more&#13;
sophistication. A little more awareness&#13;
of what music is all about. Bands have&#13;
always been successful, bands have&#13;
never left the music scene. The people&#13;
left and now they're finding out that&#13;
maybe they left home a little early.&#13;
You can listen to so much mediocrity&#13;
and then you come back to good&#13;
lhmgs.&#13;
Question from the floor: About the&#13;
guys in the band; do they travel with&#13;
v.ouall the time. no pick-up men,&#13;
nght:'&#13;
RICH: Ah man don't be&#13;
ridiculous. What kind ~f Question is&#13;
that? You want to find musicians to&#13;
COmein and all of a sudden play this&#13;
book? I mean it's a childish Question&#13;
and.yOU.insult my integrity by asking&#13;
me If I p.lck up men. I wouldn't go on&#13;
the .f~cklng road if I had to pick up&#13;
mUSICians,would I?&#13;
NEWSCOPE: What do you think of&#13;
what Don Ellis does? In other words.&#13;
Wheredo you think bands like yours&#13;
are headed?&#13;
EII~ICH: How can I know what Don&#13;
e s .'s dOing? I think he's a great&#13;
xperrmental band but who am I to&#13;
~~ .wh~t's in the future. I think all&#13;
OthSICIS great, some is better than&#13;
f ers. But you can't make that much&#13;
o ~ difference between intellectual&#13;
mu~~, snob appeal, avant garde, rock.&#13;
K&#13;
· ese are labels You know Heinz&#13;
etchup H· '. d"ff ,unts Ketchup. Put both In&#13;
a~ erent bottles and change the label&#13;
N~oUwon't tell the difference.&#13;
tur WS~OPE: What's your personnel&#13;
never like?&#13;
RICH' I . Id Year. . wou sayan average of a&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Are you doinq what&#13;
Woody Herman said he was doing;&#13;
picking up kids out of college and&#13;
giving them a chance.&#13;
RICH: Is that what Wood&#13;
Herman's doing? y&#13;
NEWSCOPE: That's what he said he&#13;
was doing.&#13;
RICH: Whew, it's not very&#13;
ambitious of him, is it?&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Does anybody in the&#13;
band do any arranging?&#13;
RICH: Yeh, one of the rock charts&#13;
we played tonight was written by the&#13;
bass player.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Somebody said that&#13;
the Buddy Rich Band was a well oiled&#13;
machine?&#13;
RiCH: I wouldn't have it any other&#13;
way. You can walk down the bowery&#13;
and see all the slobs you want. I don't&#13;
run a sloppy ship. I don't run a sloppy&#13;
band. They're disciplined ... it's not&#13;
the kind of authority you'd associate&#13;
with the army, but this is a business.&#13;
As far as the precision of the band I&#13;
think that's what's most attract{ve&#13;
about it. The fact that it plays&#13;
together.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Isn't that a&#13;
contradiction having discipline to that&#13;
degree while jazz is considered to be&#13;
free music?&#13;
RICH: When they play their jazz&#13;
solos, they're as free as a bird.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: The ensembles are&#13;
jazz too?&#13;
RICH: Of course, but there's no&#13;
improvising in the arrangement. The&#13;
solo is the improvisation, not the&#13;
arrangement. The man stands up to&#13;
play, he plays within the context of&#13;
the arrangement. He can playas long&#13;
as he wants and what he wants.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: If there's a soli&#13;
passage do you say how it's to be&#13;
done?&#13;
RICH: Oh, soli passage, as written.&#13;
N EWSCOPE: And you say the&#13;
dynamics and the feeling they should&#13;
have?&#13;
RICH: Of course. The whole band&#13;
represents what I think about music ..&#13;
N EWSCOPE: How do you choose&#13;
new men?&#13;
RICH: If a man's leaving he&#13;
recommends someone who can take&#13;
his place and if he works out he's got a&#13;
gig. If not, I send him home.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Does he come on the&#13;
band cold?&#13;
RICH: Sure, how else?&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Do they have to read&#13;
the book?&#13;
RICH: Right down. There are no&#13;
babies in this band. They're all very&#13;
young but they're all men. What they&#13;
do after the job is entirely up to them.&#13;
What they do and where they do it.&#13;
But for the two or four hours that we&#13;
play, I'm in total command.&#13;
They know what I want and they do&#13;
§ little pinrb&#13;
neuer burr anpbobp&#13;
3Jnbicationf nener burt&#13;
anpbobp either&#13;
3Jtf t1)r apple pou gutta&#13;
matrf obt fOf •.••&#13;
!laffbb!&#13;
&lt;l&amp;nfale at tbr bookftore&#13;
Newscope Interview :&#13;
Last Saturday Buddy Rich and his&#13;
t,and appeared at Tremper H.$.&#13;
Following his concert Newscope&#13;
reporrer Bob Borchardt interviewed&#13;
him backstage. Here is the report:&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Who's the greatest&#13;
drummer in the world?&#13;
RICH: What is that meant to be?&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Just a question. Do&#13;
you think you're the best drummer in&#13;
the world? How would you compare&#13;
10meone like Elvin Jones to what you&#13;
do.&#13;
RICH: I don't compare anybody to&#13;
anything. How do you oompare Miles&#13;
to Diz? There's no such thing as the&#13;
greatest, it's what you like. It's what&#13;
you think is good or bad depending on&#13;
what your taste is I ike.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: How do you explain&#13;
that bands like yours now can play the&#13;
college circuit?&#13;
RICH: I don't think it's saying&#13;
something for us. I think it's saying&#13;
something for people in college, defl.'&#13;
you? I think they're showing a little&#13;
more taste and a little more&#13;
sophistication. A little more awareness&#13;
of what music is all about. Bands have&#13;
always been successful, bands have&#13;
never left the music scene. The people&#13;
left and now they're finding out that&#13;
maybe they left home a little early.&#13;
You can listen to so much mediocrity&#13;
and then you come back to good&#13;
things&#13;
0uestion from the floor: About the&#13;
guys in the band; do they travel with&#13;
you all the time ... no pick-up men,&#13;
right?&#13;
RICH : Ah, man, don't be&#13;
r1d1culous. What kind of question is&#13;
that) You want to find musicians to&#13;
come in and all of a sudden play this&#13;
book' I mean it's a childish question&#13;
~nd_vou insult my integrity by asking&#13;
e if I p_ick up men. I wouldn't go on the fucking road if I had to pick up&#13;
mus1c1ans, wou Id 1?&#13;
NEWSCOPE: What do you think of&#13;
:at Don Ellis does? In other words,&#13;
ere do you think bands like yours are headed'&#13;
ellCH: ~ow can I know what Don&#13;
s is doing? I think he's a great&#13;
e~penmental band but who am I to&#13;
say _what's in the future. I think all&#13;
music is 9 . Oth reat, some 1s better than&#13;
01 :s. But you can't make that much&#13;
. difference between intellectual&#13;
rnus~, snob appeal, avant garde, rock.&#13;
·K· t ese are labels You know Heinz&#13;
etchup H · • . d ff • unts Ketchup. Put both tn&#13;
a~ erent bottles and change the label&#13;
N You won't tell the difference.&#13;
t EWSCOPE: What's your personnel Llrnover like'&#13;
Ye~ICH: I would say an average of a&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Are you doinq what&#13;
Buddy Rich&#13;
"'!oo?y Herman said he was doing ·&#13;
p_1c_ktng up kids out of college and&#13;
giving them a chance.&#13;
R IC H : I s that what Woody&#13;
Herman's doing?&#13;
NE~SCOPE: That's what he said he&#13;
was doing.&#13;
RICH: Whew, it's not very&#13;
ambitious of him, is it?&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Does anybody in the&#13;
band do any arranging?&#13;
RICH: Yeh, one of the rock charts&#13;
we played tonight was written by the&#13;
bass player.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Somebody said that&#13;
the Buddy Rich Band was a well oiled&#13;
machine?&#13;
R1CH: I wouldn't have it any other&#13;
way. You can walk down the bowery&#13;
and see all the slobs you want. I don't&#13;
run a sloppy ship. I don't run a sloppy&#13;
band . They're disciplined ... it's not&#13;
the kind of authority you'd associate&#13;
with the army, but this is a business.&#13;
As far as the precision of the band, I&#13;
think that's what's most attractive&#13;
about it. The fact that it plays&#13;
together.&#13;
NEWSCOPE : Isn't that a&#13;
contradiction having discipline to that&#13;
degree while jazz is considered to be&#13;
free music?&#13;
RICH: When they play their jazz&#13;
solos, they're as free as a bird.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: The ensembles are&#13;
jazz too?&#13;
RICH: Of course, but there's no&#13;
improvising in the arrangement. The&#13;
solo is the improvisation, not the&#13;
arrangement. The man stands up to&#13;
play, he plays within the context of&#13;
the arrangement. He can play as long&#13;
as he wants and what he wants:&#13;
NEWSCOPE: If there's a soli&#13;
passage do you say how it's to be&#13;
done?&#13;
RICH: Oh, soli passage, as written.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: And you say the&#13;
dynamics and the feeling they should&#13;
have?&#13;
RICH: Of course. The whole band&#13;
represents what I think about music ..&#13;
NEWSCOPE: How do you choose&#13;
new men?&#13;
RICH: If a man's leaving he&#13;
recommends someone who can take&#13;
his place and if he works out he's got a&#13;
gig. If not, I send him home.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Does he come on the&#13;
band cold'&#13;
RICH: Sure, how else?&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Do they have to read&#13;
the book?&#13;
RICH: Right down. There are no&#13;
babies in this band. They're all very&#13;
young but they're all men. What they&#13;
do after the job is entirely up to them.&#13;
What they do and where they do it.&#13;
But for the two or four hours that we&#13;
play, I'm in total command.&#13;
They know what I want and they do&#13;
~ ADULT BOOK STORE&#13;
0&#13;
- KENOSHA V,&#13;
-0 .....&#13;
\..J&#13;
L.&amp;J z .....&#13;
L.&amp;J 3:&#13;
V) 0 ..... ....&#13;
BONDAGE DENMARK&#13;
MAGS BOOKS ~&#13;
All Parkside StuJcnts&#13;
Over 21 10"~ Off&#13;
SEX EDUCATION&#13;
m&#13;
n&#13;
--4 -):&gt; )&gt; ~&#13;
a,&#13;
~ a,&#13;
r-n )&gt;&#13;
V) z&#13;
(.!)&#13;
~ -(.!)&#13;
CQ -&#13;
BOOKS&#13;
GAY&#13;
1202- 56 ST 652- 9051 SECTION n&#13;
:::::0&#13;
C&gt;&#13;
)&gt;&#13;
-&#13;
z&#13;
TALK OF THE TOWN&#13;
I&#13;
it. If they don't I , . wan o do it eave. It s that simple&#13;
I think the success" of the band nd the ba d · , a n is a total success is h f&#13;
that audiences appreciat; a c:n:~&#13;
amount of dignity and discipli&#13;
~~e ba~stand. I thin people tired&#13;
seemg a bunch of kids come ou and slobber on the stage nd&#13;
around, walk off, have a smo e br. some boo • mg . ze out, and ·gnore an audiences'. feelings. Audiences nt to&#13;
be entertamed. They don't vant to&#13;
the same t ings the can see ho&#13;
or on television. They nt O go ~t&#13;
and see something different. that's&#13;
why they pay their money. The 'r&#13;
entitled to the best performance you&#13;
can possibly give, nothing more and&#13;
noth'"g less. That's all ithin the&#13;
frame~ork of what I represent.&#13;
There s a certain amount of dignity&#13;
and a certain amount of discipline in&#13;
the band that must be maintained in&#13;
order for the band to play right.&#13;
From the floor: Do you thin your&#13;
show is v sual, to a spectacle I mean?&#13;
. RICH: As a spectator it' no more&#13;
visual than watching a gu ge hit in&#13;
the mouth, like I 5a'I Clay get hit las&#13;
week. That's visual, too, but I didn't&#13;
go there to see him make faces I went&#13;
to see him fight. You come to hear my&#13;
band. You come to hear music and not&#13;
be too concerned about visual aspects&#13;
NEWSCOPE: What kind of reaction&#13;
do you have to iles Davis, his style&#13;
and his music?&#13;
RICH: My reaction to iles Davis is&#13;
the greatest respect in the world. I&#13;
think he's a total genius. I thin at&#13;
he's doing at this point is trying to&#13;
~ little pinrb&#13;
neber f)brt an bob&#13;
Jh1bicationf neb r fJurt&#13;
anpbobp eitber&#13;
3Jtf tfJr apple ou gott&#13;
watcb obt for ....&#13;
~affbb !&#13;
®n fttle t tbr bookf tor &#13;
\Ionda\ , \larch ~1, 19~I • eVil&#13;
Martin Place~ Second In National Meet&#13;
A nlm by Emle Pilltlln&#13;
tlYtblMIlE&#13;
QtICkEN&#13;
The Parkside wrestling team led by&#13;
ffeshrnanKen Martin from Coleman,&#13;
w' cnsin made a very commendable&#13;
,;~Cwing at the National NAIA&#13;
If "t1ing Tournament held last week I; Boone, North Carolina. Besides&#13;
\lortin, Coach Jim Koch brought Jeff&#13;
J&#13;
kins Bill Benkstern and Tom en, , .&#13;
Beyer, the Ranger s most c~:mslst~nt&#13;
point scorer, to the meet involving&#13;
restlersfrom ninety-eight teams.&#13;
VI As a team the Ranger's scored&#13;
fourteen points which placed them&#13;
amongthe top twenty finishers at the&#13;
meet and the highest scoring team&#13;
from the state, including all of the&#13;
StageUniversities.&#13;
In the first round rna tches Ken&#13;
Marlin, despite a shoulder seperation&#13;
duee weeks ago, won his first match&#13;
by a 16·6 decision over Mike Doyle of&#13;
West Liberaty. Jeff Jenkins, a&#13;
sophomore at 150 pounds lost his first&#13;
match to Joseph Artiglere of Trenton&#13;
12.5. Bill Benkstein, the Ranger's&#13;
senior captain at 167 won his first&#13;
match by a 6·5 decision over Dave&#13;
Mortin of Millersville College. The&#13;
other first round match saw Freshman&#13;
Tom Beyer drop a 9-2 decision to Tom&#13;
Venbourne of the United States&#13;
International University.&#13;
Second round matches saw Ken&#13;
Martin advance into the quarterfinals&#13;
by defeating a very rugged Dough&#13;
Willer of Easter Michigan 13-6. Willer&#13;
was a member of the US J . 01 . T " unror&#13;
yrnpic earn. Bill Benkstein lost his&#13;
secon:! match to Les Jackson of&#13;
Mayville State 6·2.&#13;
In the quarterfinals Martin faced the&#13;
top-seeded wrestler in his weight class&#13;
Roger Vigil of Adams State. Vigil, a&#13;
snio.r, was runner-up last year and&#13;
earned a 26-0 record entering the&#13;
match. The first three periods ended In&#13;
an 8·8 tie. but in the overtime \tanm&#13;
finally pulled out a victory b}&#13;
outscoring VigilS to 3.&#13;
The semi-finals saw Ken facing Gal')&#13;
Svendson of 51. John's Lniversuy.&#13;
Svendsen boasted a 2 ·1·1 ea n&#13;
record but Martin, in what was&#13;
probably his best match of the&#13;
tournament defeated Svendsen II (0&#13;
7. .&#13;
Entering lite finals Marlin went&#13;
against Craig Skeesick of Central&#13;
Washigton considered by many of the&#13;
coaches at the meet to be one of the&#13;
most outstanding performers at the&#13;
tournament. ursing his yet unhealed&#13;
shoulder which cost him two and a&#13;
half weeks practice, Martin could not&#13;
overcome healty Skeesick. After&#13;
scoring the first points in the match&#13;
Martin failed to keep his opponent m&#13;
control and dropped an ·3 decision.&#13;
Martin's finish as 3. national&#13;
runner-up signals the beginning of&#13;
whay may become an outstanding&#13;
wrestling team. The team is ) oung&#13;
enough to continue next year losing&#13;
only Bill Benkstein (0 graduation and&#13;
Martin should have an excellent&#13;
opportunity of winning the. I&#13;
tournament next year barring 3n)'&#13;
unforeseen injuries,&#13;
An electJ'onlc maglZlne&#13;
01 American pop culture&#13;
willi nashes by:&#13;
Pau K'....,.· Rc:"'-,dP"fO"&#13;
The Ace True -ng Comp,a , ~&#13;
Bn.ce',Joan 8N:l:' Ah""'OeefOl'&#13;
Ron c.,..,. Tuti uplerberg' SNi-&#13;
... ' AI "G Mberv' L.eot*d&#13;
CoNn . MalCOlm X • Pete, •&#13;
Coming April l st, 2nd &amp; 3&lt;d&#13;
Ken Martin,&#13;
Anyone interested in Rugby?&#13;
-Parkside intend to form a Rugby&#13;
team this year. Anyone interesting in&#13;
finding out about it should contact&#13;
Vic Godfrey at ext. ~45 or at the&#13;
Athletic Office on Wood Road as soon&#13;
as possible.&#13;
Patton Sets Track Record&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Jim Patton set a school record in&#13;
ibe pole vault as the Rangers rlaced&#13;
sixth In the Midwest Invitationa track&#13;
meet at North Central College. The&#13;
meet, which saw 9 teams score, was&#13;
won by Stevens Point, with 51 points,&#13;
compared with the Rangers 23.&#13;
Patton set his scl- 01 record by&#13;
vaulting 13 feet, goo';"_nough for a&#13;
thirdplace finish.&#13;
Bob Waters and Eugene Prince also&#13;
c~me up with key performances, with&#13;
Watersfinishing second in the 60 yard&#13;
dash with a time of 6.3 seconds-an&#13;
effon which lied his school record.&#13;
Prince's6' 1-3/4" high jump gave him a&#13;
second,&#13;
Mike Zugich finished fifth in the&#13;
60 yard intermediates with a :07.8&#13;
""'king. Dean Maschoff Parkside's , .&#13;
Harper Defeats Ranger Hockey&#13;
other entrant in the hurdles, stumbled&#13;
over the second hurdle and was out of&#13;
the race.&#13;
Leonard Bullock placed fourth in&#13;
the long jump with a leap of 21 '3W',&#13;
while Keith Merritt's 40 feet In the&#13;
triple jump earned hi.m a fC?urth place&#13;
also. Bill Brown was fifth In the shot&#13;
at 47'4!h. ...&#13;
The sprint medley team of Tim&#13;
McGilsky, Waters, Gary Geboy, and&#13;
Merritt provided Parkside W.lth. lIS fi~al&#13;
points of the evening by finrshrng thrrd&#13;
behind Loyola (111.) and the University&#13;
of Illinois-Circke. The team won the&#13;
second heat, but there were two faster&#13;
times in the first heat. .&#13;
Parkside's next home meet Will be&#13;
against Marquette and. Beloit .3t the&#13;
Case High Fieldhouse In RaCine on&#13;
March 27.&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing -~~-~=-&#13;
El~t It. Fr rr_ cowns&#13;
deliealely tou hed ith embroIdered&#13;
Freoch ros (rtmember&#13;
tbose") eXq,Jlsite, ha made&#13;
French lac --satin rl s··&#13;
Fren&lt;h «_ raldl • Designed&#13;
b)' Llts, these- CO 'nS com In&#13;
all 1.~s: shirt. shortt or ran·&#13;
me, and thf're arp AAme pt'l'~r&#13;
spttLlis&#13;
'r allons are Id al I r th&#13;
bride or OUld mak, a " om&#13;
gilt lor~.r.&#13;
6207 . 22nd Aftn ... Keno.ha&#13;
Phone, 652·2611&#13;
the game was exciting and well played&#13;
but it was Harper's more balanced&#13;
attack that made the difference.&#13;
It is the lack of depth that has hurt&#13;
the Ranger team most this year.&#13;
although for a first year team it has&#13;
been successful.&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
, of the Newscope staff&#13;
ParkSlde dropped a 5-2 decision to&#13;
Harper Junior College at Wilson Park&#13;
',"5~i1waukee before a crowd of about&#13;
o The Rangers had many&#13;
pp,Ortunities to score bu t could not&#13;
capitalize on the chances.&#13;
b Ha~er jumped off to a quick lead&#13;
hUt t e Rangers tied the score at 1-1.&#13;
was Bill Westerland's solo dash from&#13;
~n~ end of the ice to the other tha t&#13;
fIe the count. Harper scored the next&#13;
Ourgoals before the Rangers managed&#13;
~ cols.olalion goal in the last part of&#13;
e thlld period.&#13;
Park 'd '&#13;
L&#13;
· k SI estop scorers Kari Ie ask' ,&#13;
T t&#13;
I, Torn Krinunel and Marc&#13;
Ut e k' ,&#13;
~Io ws I were time after time&#13;
pped at point blank range. Ov~raU,&#13;
HAM 10 ORG&#13;
HUXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY STORE&#13;
SO. Grem Blf)' Rd.&#13;
Kmoshtt&#13;
634-9716&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
ANNUAL SPRING&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
See Jim h'enick "",. H.mmond" For Guarantoed Senice &amp; Trade-In Value&#13;
Good Books at a Good Price Out ot rown-C.II Uollect&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
142~~~~~~n (I) ~~~~~:&#13;
"IJ Beau Or/llJ1lS 4fe Buill, HI'1nIJIIONi ",.u BuiIJ n-"&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE ,&#13;
Martin Place~ Second In National Meet&#13;
The Parkside wrestling team led by&#13;
freshman Ken Martin from Coleman,&#13;
V( onsin made a very commendable&#13;
~~cwing at the National NAIA&#13;
II' estling Tournament held last week . r Boone, North Carolina. Besides&#13;
~Jrtin, Coach Jim Koc~ brought Jeff&#13;
J kins Bill Benkstem and Tom en , , t . Beyer the Ranger s mos consistent&#13;
int· scorer, to the meet involving&#13;
:estlers from ninety-eight teams.&#13;
As a team the Ranger's scored&#13;
fourteen points which placed them&#13;
among the top twenty finishers at the&#13;
meet and the highest scoring team&#13;
from the state, including all of the&#13;
tage Universities.&#13;
In the first round matches Ken&#13;
MJrtin, despite a shoulder seperation&#13;
ihree weeks ago, won his first match&#13;
b\' a 16-6 decision over Mike Doyle of&#13;
West Liberaty. Jeff Jenkins, a&#13;
Sl&gt;phomore at 150 pounds lost his fir,t&#13;
match to Joseph Artiglere of Trenton&#13;
l~-5. Bill Benkstein, the Ranger's&#13;
senior captain at 167 won his first&#13;
match by a 6-5 decision over Dave&#13;
fartin of Millersville College. The&#13;
other first round match saw Freshman&#13;
Tom Beyer drop a 9-2 decision to Tom&#13;
Venbourne of the United States&#13;
1ternational University.&#13;
Second round matches saw Ken&#13;
'.I rtin advance into the quarterfinals&#13;
b)' defeating a very rugged Dough&#13;
l\1ller of Easter Michigan 13-6. Willer&#13;
was a member of the U S J . 01 · T · · unior ymp1c earn. Bill Benkstein lost his&#13;
secon_d match to Les Jackson of&#13;
Mayville State 6-2.&#13;
In the quarterfinals Martin faced the&#13;
top-seeded wrestler in his weight class&#13;
Roger Vigil of Adams State. Vigil, ~&#13;
Ken Martin.&#13;
Patton Sets Track Record&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Jim Patton set a school record in&#13;
t~e pole vault as the Rangers placed S!Xth in the Midwest Jnvitationa track&#13;
meet at North Central College. The&#13;
meet, which saw 9 teams score, was&#13;
won by Stevens Point, with 51 points,&#13;
compared with the Rangers 23.&#13;
Patton set his scJ- ')l record by&#13;
milting 13 feet, goo?,nough for a&#13;
third place finish.&#13;
Bob Waters and Eugene Prince also&#13;
~me up with key performances, with&#13;
Waters finishing second in the 60 yard&#13;
d sh with a time of 6.3 seconds-an&#13;
effort which tied his school record.&#13;
Prin e's 6'1-3/4" high jump gave him a&#13;
cond.&#13;
Mike Zugich finished fifth in the&#13;
60 yard intermediates with a :07 .8&#13;
lockmg. Dean Maschoff, Parkside's&#13;
other entrant in the hurdles. tumbled&#13;
over the second hurdle and was out of&#13;
the race.&#13;
Leonard Bullock placed fourth in&#13;
the long jump with a leap of 2~ '3½".&#13;
while Keith Merritt's 40 feet m the&#13;
triple jump earned hi.m a f~urth place&#13;
also. Bill Brown was fifth m the hot&#13;
at 47'4¼".&#13;
The sprint medley te m of Tim&#13;
McGilsky, Waters. Ga_ry G_eb1'. ' and&#13;
Merritt provided Parkside \\:1th_ 1t fit:31&#13;
points of the evening by fim hmg th~rd&#13;
behind Loyola (111.) and the 111ver~1ty&#13;
of lllinois Circke. The team won the&#13;
second heat, but there were two fa ·ter&#13;
times in the fir t heat. . Parkside 's next home meet will be&#13;
against Marquette and _ Beloit _at the&#13;
Case High Fieldhou e Ill Racme on&#13;
March 27.&#13;
Harper Defeats Ranger Hockey&#13;
By Jim Casper&#13;
of the Newscope staff&#13;
Parkside dropped a 5-2 decision to&#13;
Harper Junior College at Wilson Park&#13;
,s~1ilwaukee before a crowd of about 0.&#13;
The Rangers had many PP_ortunities to score but could not&#13;
capitaliLe on the chances.&#13;
b !1a~er jumped off to a quick lead ,t I e Rangers tied the score at 1-1.&#13;
Was Bill Westerland's solo dash from&#13;
f.ne end of the ice to the other that&#13;
iled the count. Harper scored the next&#13;
our goals before the Rangers managed&#13;
ah col~lation goal in the last part of&#13;
l e lh1rd period.&#13;
1. Parkside's top scorers Kari 1.1ek k" ' T O I. Tom Krimmel and Marc&#13;
Utlewski were time · after time&#13;
st0PPed at point blank range. Overall,&#13;
ANNUAL SPRING&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
the game was exciyng and well pla)ed&#13;
but it was Harper's more balanced&#13;
attack that made the difference.&#13;
It is the lack of depth that ha hurt&#13;
the Ranger team most thi year.&#13;
although for a first year team it ha&#13;
been successful.&#13;
HUXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY STORE&#13;
S 0 • Green B,~} Rd.&#13;
Ke11oshi1&#13;
634-9716&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Good Books at a Good Price&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
nyone mter ted in&#13;
.Park ide intend to form&#13;
team thi year. n_ one intere tin in&#13;
finding out about it h uld&#13;
Vi Godfre at e. t. .. • or&#13;
thleti Offi e on Wood Ro d n&#13;
po ible.&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
H I&#13;
Kl '&#13;
Co ing April 1st, 2nd 3rd&#13;
see Jim t,•enick II r. Ha ond" For Guarant,ed Service &amp; Trade-in Value&#13;
· out of ro n-Call lio11ect&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
1&lt;2~!.~!~~-(I] !~:~!:&#13;
"If Better Or"1ns are Buiu, Hammond ,U Builtl Thena"' &#13;
'e1O.cope Monday. March 22.1971&#13;
General Assistance Complaints Aired&#13;
B) Dean Lowno&#13;
of the ewscope laff&#13;
Th Ra ine Count) Board held an&#13;
open meeting rurday , Marth 13. in&#13;
.....hich complaint "ere heard on the&#13;
Cener'lll A i lance prognm The open&#13;
met u ng wa h ld a a re ult of protests&#13;
by th Emergency Welfare Commiu ee&#13;
In hi openon~ remar'" \b Fell\.&#13;
RO:l charJ,ed. 'diseriminati n . and&#13;
bu of poor people. AI o. that an&#13;
e haIlle of letter. ccnverstanon&#13;
and telephone al had produced&#13;
n thong. nd the E\\ IS hoping this&#13;
pubh meeung will show .the Count)&#13;
B rd lh urgen~y of the Sl(U3t1 n.&#13;
-\ member of the EW • Father Bill&#13;
\I ,llIams, then e plalned that&#13;
unernploy m nt in R:KIOC IS at a&#13;
r n r:Uc· .4 • but the poorer&#13;
II n nd mAcr ell)' h3\C an&#13;
un&lt;nlploylO nl rat&lt; double th.t of th&#13;
entire city- 17%. which are depression&#13;
figures. He then explained that the&#13;
General Assistance program is mo~t&#13;
of len an emergency and temporary aid&#13;
which. along with the applicants&#13;
existing income. help bring his total&#13;
income (0 an adequate standard of&#13;
living.&#13;
crowd, estimated at 450. then&#13;
aired their complaints. An old Black&#13;
man "as first and said. "Alii try to do&#13;
i to treat people by the Golden Rule,&#13;
l've been on Gen. Assis. for 11 years&#13;
and received 35 a month. They&#13;
treated me so nice that they took my&#13;
car away 11 years ago and just&#13;
recently knocked me down to 534_"&#13;
One person wanted to know. "why&#13;
the ~onspicuous absence of Hubert&#13;
Braun.' chairman of the Gen. ASSISt.&#13;
progf3m, He also added th.1 if the&#13;
gO'ternment 3re gomg to pay the bills&#13;
to kill people in Asia. they're going "}&#13;
have to pay the bills to rake care 0&#13;
their own. 1 Refuting the claim that peop e&#13;
come to Wisconsin to take adval~tage&#13;
of the Welfare laws. a man explained,&#13;
"I was recruited by Belle City to con~e&#13;
and work in Racine. When they laid&#13;
me off Gen. Assist. told me to go&#13;
away," I' d th Father Williams then exp arne e&#13;
procedure to apply for. General&#13;
Assistence. He described It. as a&#13;
laborious, and complicated&#13;
run-around. Out of an average of 71&#13;
cases that the EWe handled., the&#13;
average wait before assistance was given&#13;
251&gt; days. ' d Father Murtaugh then' explame&#13;
that "the public has been fed myths&#13;
abo~t people on welfare ... Th~y have&#13;
been told lies about mJustlces of&#13;
people on welfare instead of people&#13;
the welfare board." On&#13;
Mr. Rosa then asked for camille&#13;
fro Mr. Richard LaFave.Cha',r nts&#13;
R&#13;
ine C B' d man acme ounty oar, who said. "The&#13;
County Board know problems e .&#13;
and at the meeting March 18 we I XISl&#13;
to start resolving the problems." lOpe&#13;
Ma y o r Huck commented "I&#13;
commend the work of the EWe' :md&#13;
the people on the committee. The .u&#13;
f R&#13;
' 'II &lt;I Y&#13;
a acme WI exert all tl.le innuence&#13;
we can to help resolve this problem"&#13;
But. he also warned that, "Peo i&#13;
better get involved in local governll1~n~&#13;
or we can forget about everythi 1&#13;
else!" r g&#13;
The meeting ended as it started.&#13;
with a prayer for hope :.llld&#13;
understanding for all people.&#13;
Correctio&#13;
( n rnmg 1J. I ""tel.; 3rtl..:le on Ihe&#13;
nOlda&lt;) of lI&gt;&lt;old Sltrn fo,&#13;
110 rm n of R. tne Fir t lIard lb.&#13;
Stern wa the ao" , of the BlJck&#13;
tudenl n n la t )e3r and In no 't\a~&#13;
Yo nne ted ""th the teJoe,"'ip of&#13;
I t \13)· 'urlc"t \(1 e&#13;
A HEAVY OUNO&#13;
125&#13;
AM·FM Stereo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
Here I.S ,1 load way 10 dis·&#13;
cover whal 'Fisher sound'&#13;
IS like. Phay osrecord on lhe&#13;
Fithef I~~, Play the same&#13;
record on anolher make,&#13;
_..slen ror lhe difl'erence,&#13;
~"Spccialt)' In the very low&#13;
300 ver) high r~ucncies.&#13;
Ai Fi~hu ~;m,,11J()uNiJ&#13;
IH"". And the Fisher 125&#13;
IJ the first complete AM·&#13;
FM Stereo Music Center&#13;
10lool. 3sIrCili ;lSit sounds.&#13;
... ....sH •• '&#13;
F.-,5_1&#13;
D&#13;
40 W,lli 1Il Mua: P.&gt;Wtl&#13;
,'HH • Whk·lUnlt AM •&#13;
"'pt".~~Il\C" FM :1m! FM·&#13;
SWRo wb FET aM ICs ia&#13;
(fflftt-end .tr.t IF "111ft .....&#13;
Sput,l Aulotnalil.; '[urntablt&#13;
W\I. ew Cool.JoI. Aftti.5tat·&#13;
In,. "'uhlm;n"· V\Ul-otr • Two&#13;
Aco':"llc:ltl,..M.lc~td Two·&#13;
Way Sput..n' S,... • Full&#13;
AYd-.. COIMroQWirt. T..- ud&#13;
PtMtfto Fxil"lft.&#13;
.............Or.-&#13;
......... f'K.....&#13;
31/5 6Of/, St.&#13;
65&amp;-1801&#13;
"IDIAL IDOUDII&#13;
Adult Grant Applications Available&#13;
pplicatiOm for an aduh grant&#13;
Ill'en )earl)' b) the Kenosha County&#13;
Branch ...of the American Associal ion of&#13;
nlVer it) Women are nOW&#13;
a\all.ble at ,he Financi.1 Aids Office.&#13;
or Ihe Infonnation office_ The&#13;
elibibilil) requirement~ are:&#13;
:\n} aduh woman residing in&#13;
Kenosha County who has completed&#13;
at least one seme~(er of college. who&#13;
plan to take one or more courses at a&#13;
Io..:al inslltUtion and who has lhe&#13;
objeclI'tes of obtain 109 a bachelor's&#13;
degree or who has a ba~helor's degree&#13;
and 5eeks cerrification in a specialized&#13;
field. Former applicants or recipients&#13;
•&#13;
are eligible. The grants are not&#13;
intended for those taking courses&#13;
solely for enrichment or to obtain a&#13;
master's or doctor's degree.&#13;
The grants are financial assistJnce in&#13;
units of 550.00. with no more than&#13;
four units awarded (Q anyone&#13;
applicant in any given year.&#13;
G ra ntees are selected by the&#13;
Scholarship Commiltee of . the&#13;
Kenosha Branch of the American&#13;
Association of University Women&#13;
through evaluation of completed&#13;
applications. The main criteria are&#13;
need and ~robable -success in achieving&#13;
educational objective'.&#13;
serious and satiric&#13;
no further than feminine chuckles&#13;
through the course of the night. The&#13;
poem was a satiric, tongue.ii1-cheek&#13;
farewell to correspondence course,&#13;
would-be poets. His next poem was&#13;
"Vapor Trails in the Frog Pond",&#13;
which he said was something of a&#13;
parody of Whitman's "I Hear America&#13;
Singing," the theme was anti-war, but&#13;
he said it was not a strong anti-war&#13;
poem.&#13;
His final selection was the seventh&#13;
section of a long poem·entitled "The&#13;
Dead Shall I Raise Incorruptible,"&#13;
Kinnell was almost inspired in his&#13;
reading of this piece and it was the one&#13;
which appealed to me the most.&#13;
After the reading, the spectators&#13;
and witnesses were given the&#13;
opportunity to talk with the poet for&#13;
about 20 minutes, and then he was&#13;
gone .and the machines were plugged&#13;
back tn.&#13;
I think the Fine Arts Committee did&#13;
a good thing by bringing a poet to the&#13;
Activities Building rather than to a&#13;
I~cture hall; drinking beer and listening&#13;
to poetry is a good way to spend a&#13;
night. '&#13;
For the thousands who did not&#13;
attend this reading, I don't think&#13;
you're the better for it. The poet&#13;
presented a good reading; serious and&#13;
satiric, off the cuff and informative.&#13;
Personally speaking I would like to see&#13;
Parkside bring more high caliber poets&#13;
to the Activities Building and a few&#13;
less dollar a tic!.&lt;et dances '&#13;
By Jim Koloen&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Shortly afler last Tuesday night&#13;
the lights in the Activities Building&#13;
were tumed off, the jukebox and&#13;
pinball machines unplugged and a poet&#13;
appeared at the rostrum. Galway&#13;
Kinnell. author of Body Rags, and a&#13;
forthcoming work titled Book of&#13;
Nightmares. dressed in fading brown&#13;
corduroy pants and sport jacket and&#13;
red shirt open at the coUar, stood&#13;
wincing under Lhe glare of two yellow&#13;
spotlights. dimmed posthaste. and&#13;
proceeded to read poetry, The rugged&#13;
looking poet. his face seeming as if it&#13;
were a hardwood carving. with blue&#13;
eyes and thick wrists, read in a quiet,&#13;
low.keyed voice. bespeaking little&#13;
emotion. •&#13;
Perhaps fifty people sat listening to&#13;
the poet read first from Robert Bligh,&#13;
and then from his own worKs,&#13;
prefacing them with informal&#13;
explanations. His reading was not&#13;
dramatic. Speaking in even tones. he&#13;
let the words do their own work,&#13;
unaided by histrionics; the small&#13;
audience was forced to listen closely&#13;
to the words rather than the voice.&#13;
His "Goodbye to Students" raised a&#13;
roar of chuckles from the ladies in the&#13;
audience; audience reaction was to go&#13;
~~ arid ..rO&#13;
~o~RANCH "~&#13;
NORTH &amp; $OUTII Stll!IIIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
(HARCOAL BROILED'&#13;
STEAKS " It•••• ' .'00·'&#13;
ON SALE NOW&#13;
Student Activities Office&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
UW - PARKSIDE&#13;
presents&#13;
in concert&#13;
MONDAY. MAY 10 8:00 P.M.&#13;
RACINE CASE H.S. FIELDHOUSE&#13;
Tickets $5.50 (Sold Dull&#13;
$4.50 Still Avail.&#13;
Procedure of Applic:.Jlion&#13;
I. Complete lhe Application of&#13;
Adult Grant. Typed answers are&#13;
acceptable, but not necessary.&#13;
2. If more space is needed. tXlIltlllllC&#13;
answers on a separate page. US11lg tilt&#13;
appropriate question numher for cal'll&#13;
continuation. Securely f:tSt~1l the&#13;
additional page(s) to the ApplicatIOn&#13;
3. Return the completed applkallol1&#13;
to the Director of Financial Aids 'I&#13;
the school you plan to attend.&#13;
4. Do this 011 or before April 10.&#13;
1971. Winners will be annmltlL"edOil&#13;
or around M,y 18. 1971.&#13;
Credit By Exam&#13;
By Harry A, W.lbruck&#13;
Assoc. Prof. of German&#13;
Credit by Examination? Why should&#13;
I get it? And how? These queslions are&#13;
raised by students again and agam&#13;
Since so litlle is known about it )CIat&#13;
UW-P, and these are questwn&#13;
legitimately asked by our students. let&#13;
me tell you how we have deal! wllh&#13;
the cases who have asked about II '"&#13;
our own discipline.&#13;
Our catalog states on page 9: b&#13;
keeping with its sflidel/t·orh'lIfrd&#13;
approach to educatio//. Parkside offm&#13;
each student the opportunity"&#13;
ulldertake independe//t study Ifl1r&#13;
divisional appf()lIal, a studel/t mO.I' ('onl&#13;
up to]O credits IOwardshisdegrecbl&#13;
examination. The independetH stud&#13;
program is under the direcTion of /h(&#13;
individual divisions and their o[firfI&#13;
19 students are currently lakin~&#13;
German Independent Study, Webegar&#13;
this program two years ago. ~her&#13;
students could prove to us Ihat th~&#13;
either had time conflicts through thtr&#13;
work.schedule, had the equivalent ,j&#13;
other course 'preparations, or had"&#13;
other means of rounding Oul thtl&#13;
credit package. Most passed l~&#13;
required tests which qualified Ihem&#13;
get some credits by examination Tht\'&#13;
were recorded in the divisional offl&lt;."t&#13;
and thei r academic record sent 10 lht&#13;
Director of Admissions. b tl('l'&#13;
If any student has some e&#13;
suggestions, please let us knoWaboU&#13;
l&#13;
it. We feel this progran needs to 'Ie&#13;
known and understood by ever)!&#13;
4437 • 22nd Avenue&#13;
, 53t40&#13;
Kenosha, WisconSIn&#13;
f", 1J&lt;/ivdJ _.;&#13;
654-0774 ,i&#13;
ch 22, l9 l&#13;
General Assistance Complaints Aired&#13;
'Correctio&#13;
125&#13;
A ·FM Stereo&#13;
Muiic Center&#13;
Herc i .i good way to dis·&#13;
co er what ·fisher sound'&#13;
i ,kc. Pl;a) a record on 1hc&#13;
Fi her 125. Pl y the nic&#13;
record on nothcr make.&#13;
1.i ten tor the difference.&#13;
c pccislly in lhc very lo&#13;
nd vel') hiih frequencies.&#13;
A f ishtr simply sounds&#13;
hnttr. And the Fisher 125&#13;
' the first complete AMF&#13;
1 Stereo hisic Center&#13;
10 I :is 1rc;a1 :nit sound .&#13;
S..andHear&#13;
Fllh•r St reol&#13;
40 Wa111 ul M\bi.: p..,-,&#13;
1IH l'l • idt-R n,c A~ a up.-r-lid.:.:1n.: F 1 nJ FM-&#13;
~rro wi b FET ad ICs io&#13;
fmnl-cnJ iJ IF st&amp;&amp;C$ • '4· pccll Au1omati.: Turntable&#13;
wil.h CU&lt; Conuol. Anli-Sbt-&#13;
' ,\1 , ,;.; hu1-01T • T o A c.:s1inlly-M1tched Two-&#13;
\\ ay rn " ystcms • Full , udau Ca.11roh Wilh T.pr and&#13;
"'-of.-.cil,tin.&#13;
Hammond °'1an&#13;
Studiot of Kenotha&#13;
3215 60tl1 St.&#13;
658-1801&#13;
SPECIAL IIOLUDH&#13;
Stll fllf lfCOIDI&#13;
to kill people in Asia. they're going tf&#13;
have to pay the bills to take care o&#13;
their own. . h t ople Refuting the claim t a pe come to Wisconsin to take advantage&#13;
of the Welfare Jaws. a man explained,&#13;
"I was recruited by Belle City to come&#13;
and work in Racine. When they laid&#13;
me off Gen. Assist. told me to go&#13;
away·· · h&#13;
Father Williams then expla111ed t e&#13;
procedure to apply. for . Genera~&#13;
Assistence. He descnbed it . as laborious. and complicated&#13;
run-around. Out of an average of 71&#13;
ca es that the EWC handled, . the&#13;
average wait before assistance was given&#13;
25!-2 days. 1 . d&#13;
Father Murtaugh then · exp ame&#13;
that, "the public has been fed myths&#13;
about people on welfare_. _Th~y have&#13;
been told lies about inJustlces of&#13;
people on welfare instead of people&#13;
the welfare board." on&#13;
Mr. Rosa then asked for comme&#13;
R&#13;
fro . MrC. Richa8&#13;
rd . dlaFave-Chairm:t~ acme ounty oar , who said, "The&#13;
Codunty hBoard ~noMw problems exist an al t e meetmg arch 18 we h&#13;
to start resolving the problems." ope&#13;
Mayor Huck commented .. 1&#13;
commend the work of _the EWC. Jnd&#13;
the people on the committee . The ,ll ..&#13;
of Racine will exert all t)1e inf1uen~&#13;
we can to help resolve tlllS problem ..&#13;
But. he also warned that. "Peo i&#13;
better get involved in local govcrnmfn~&#13;
or we can forget about everythi 1&#13;
else!" rg&#13;
The meeting ended as it start d&#13;
with a prayer for hope and&#13;
understanding for all people .&#13;
Adult Grant Applications Available&#13;
&lt;Ga/teary :JCiwnell:&#13;
B) Jim Koloen&#13;
of th ·e" cope taff or I. fter la · • • a_ night&#13;
the light m the ctiville Building&#13;
were turned off, the jukebo. 3nd&#13;
pinball ma ... hine unplu~ged and 3 poet&#13;
appe red at the ro -trum. Galwa)&#13;
Kinnell, author of Body Rag . and a&#13;
forthcoming work titled Book of&#13;
Nightmares, dre sed m fading brown&#13;
corduroy pant and port jacket and&#13;
red hirt open at the collar. tood&#13;
win ing under the glare of two yellow&#13;
potlight . dimmed posthaste. and&#13;
pr eeded to read poetry. The rugged&#13;
looking poet. hi face eeming a if it&#13;
were a hard,,ood carving. with blue&#13;
eye and thick wrists. read in a quiet.&#13;
low-keyed \'Oice. be peaking little&#13;
emotion. • Perhap fifty people sat listening to&#13;
the poet read fir t from Robert Bligh.&#13;
and then from hi own wor'ks,&#13;
prefacing them with informal&#13;
explanations. His reading , as not&#13;
dramati . Speaking in even tones. he&#13;
let the words do their own work,&#13;
unaided by histrionics; the mall&#13;
audien e was forced to listen closely&#13;
to the words rather than the voice.&#13;
Hi "Goodbye to Students" raised a&#13;
roar of chuckles from the ladies in the&#13;
audience: audience reaction was to go&#13;
UW - PARKSIDE&#13;
presents&#13;
in concert&#13;
MONDAY, MAY 10 8:00 P.M.&#13;
RACINE CASE H S FIELDHOUSE&#13;
Tickets $5,50 (Sold Out}&#13;
$4,50 Still Avail.&#13;
ON SALE NOW&#13;
Srudent Activities Office&#13;
Tallent Holl&#13;
• are eligible. The grants are not&#13;
intended for those taking courses&#13;
~olelv for enrichment or to obtain a&#13;
ma ter' or doctor's degree.&#13;
The grants arc financial assistance in&#13;
unit of 50.00. with no more than&#13;
four unit - awarded to any one&#13;
applicant in any given year.&#13;
Grantee are elected by the&#13;
d10lar hip Committee of . the&#13;
Keno. ha Branch of the Amencan&#13;
,\ ociation of niver ity Women&#13;
th rough evaluation of completed&#13;
application_. The main criteria are&#13;
need and ,probable uccess in achieving&#13;
educational objective.&#13;
serious and satiric&#13;
no further than feminine chuckles&#13;
through the course of the nig_ht. The&#13;
poem was a satiric, tongue-in-cheek&#13;
farewell to correspondence course,&#13;
would-be poets. His next poem was&#13;
·'Vapor Trails in the Frog Pond",&#13;
which he said was something of a&#13;
parody of Whitman's "I Hear America&#13;
Singing," the theme was anti-war, but&#13;
he said it was not a strong anti-war&#13;
poem.&#13;
His final selection was the seventh&#13;
section of a long poem-entitled "The&#13;
Dead Shall I Raise Incorruptible."&#13;
Kinnell was almost inspired in his&#13;
reading of this piece and it was the one&#13;
which appealed to me the most.&#13;
After the reading, the spectators&#13;
and witnesses were given the&#13;
opportunity to talk with the poet for&#13;
about 20 minutes, and then he was gone _and the machines were plugged&#13;
back m.&#13;
I think the Fine Arts Committee did&#13;
a good thing by bringing a poet to the&#13;
_Activities Building rather than to a&#13;
l~cture hall; drinking beer and listening&#13;
to poetry is a good way to spend a night. ·&#13;
For the thousands who did not&#13;
attend this reading, I don't think&#13;
you're the better for it. The poet&#13;
pr~s~nted a good reading; serious and&#13;
satmc, off the cuff and informative.&#13;
Personally speaking I would like to see&#13;
Parkside bring more high caliber poets&#13;
to the Activities Building and a few&#13;
less dollar a ticl&lt;et dances.&#13;
NORTH &amp; SOUTii StU!fUDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
HARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS .&#13;
Procedure of Applh:at1011&#13;
I. Complete the Applicatwn of&#13;
Adult Grant. Typed answers Jre&#13;
acceptable. but not necessary.&#13;
2 . If more space is needed. cont 111n&#13;
answers on a separate page. ming the&#13;
appropriate quest ion nu111be1 for ca :h&#13;
continuation. Securely fasten the&#13;
additional pagc(s) to the Appli~at1 m&#13;
3. Return the completed appli&lt;:a•111&#13;
to the Director of Financial Aid 31&#13;
the school you plan to attend.&#13;
4. Do this on or before ,\pnl 10&#13;
t 971. Winners will be announ(rd 1&#13;
or around May 18.1971.&#13;
Credit By Exam&#13;
By Harry A. Walbruck&#13;
Assoc. Prof. of German&#13;
Credit by Examination'1 \\ln hould&#13;
I get it? And how? These quesit0n e&#13;
raised by students again and ag...&#13;
Since so little is known about it }Ct al&#13;
UW-P, and these are queuon&#13;
legitimately asked by our student . let&#13;
me tell you how we have dealt \l.llh&#13;
the cases who have asked about 11 tn&#13;
our own discipline.&#13;
Our catalog states on page 'l /,i&#13;
keeping with its stude//t-t&gt;rirl/lrd&#13;
approach to education, Park.lid('ofj rs&#13;
each student the oppor111111ty t&#13;
undertake i11depe11de111 study. lwh&#13;
divisional approval, a studc//t //IOI'&#13;
up to 30 credits towards his Jcgret bi&#13;
examination. The i11depe11dc//l SJud&#13;
program is under the directio/1 of I&#13;
individual divisions and their offtC't'i&#13;
19 students are currently tak1&#13;
German Independent Study. We beg&#13;
this program two years ago, \\htn&#13;
students could prove to us that lht)&#13;
either had time conflicts through tht11&#13;
work-schedule had the equivaltnt of&#13;
other course ·preparations. or had n&#13;
other means of rounding out tht&#13;
credit package. Most pa.sed !ht&#13;
required tests which qualified the(!) 1&#13;
get some credits by examination Th· were recorded in the d1v1sional of ict&#13;
and their academic record sent to r&#13;
Director of Admissions. bttlt'&#13;
If any student has some&#13;
suggestions, please let us know 3&#13;
it. We fee l this progran need to&#13;
known and understood by e\er}&#13;
Kenosha,&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654-0774 &#13;
p!&amp;. 4 .",,",,,pe Monday, March 22, 1971&#13;
THE E" \RD&#13;
1he II r ~t 'I acrdic&#13;
pp&lt;r hun he vll) II the ,he .. er"&#13;
f r. a ",hlf uf wh t wa to &lt;orne&#13;
nd m and ome&#13;
PI \I gl hung on m) n '0&#13;
br n ba k Ih furf) mammoth of the&#13;
thr e d,melUlon:tl The Iarmliar&#13;
I hni ue SImple lhe ,e'" of&#13;
1" F II ltturrunated b) a soft&#13;
wlute but not lung like 1111 had ever&#13;
met b) eye before&#13;
'0 PL 01 BUll'''' ,m mmae, an&lt;1&#13;
Jock.) 0,1 ",ere e plo"ed 10 the&#13;
uplill d eye of he vy breathing 01&lt;1&#13;
men ",h ab Ira \lng ",oul&lt;1 h .. e&#13;
mad a beller film&#13;
Ine \lng '" la "lOg "en ",hen&#13;
omp red with oth r prl .. att&#13;
p "lIuon tnto In fr me (at 30 a&#13;
~ra k) l o~ "' komgtud ne\ r been so&#13;
u tie • the film' trQll~ goal wa&#13;
nt'"er rea,hed. falhng ,eral I~&#13;
lOU lookang m reolike :I manual for&#13;
teull1} palnog ab ..urdlty against&#13;
lononhe2 ao 8 ruomng battle co Jom&#13;
that p ,fellow ",ho had to, d hi&#13;
hu,t ke 10 the fo) er&#13;
"'nen one of the )'ounger gJrl began&#13;
to make a":ld·lm'e y,lth an el«trl'&#13;
I mp 1 kne\\ that the e perien..:e. while&#13;
prep red a &gt;ho&lt;king, ould onl) have&#13;
be n tf $Ometlong had short&#13;
, II&#13;
rlf'.if 1iUI/__&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
eo&amp;8 40th AvE&#13;
l&lt;ENOeHA wtS OL7-11174&#13;
fmil BllSkels It&#13;
COl' ages ..',&#13;
Cal1d)····- ./&#13;
Orner specific areas of interest were&#13;
le~l)l30lsm. masturbation, and murder:&#13;
the laSI categorv best describing the&#13;
overall effect of the film on the larger&#13;
pan of mo t audiences.&#13;
The film i not erotic. not lusty.&#13;
and certainly not enjoyable. Frankly&#13;
thl 1 the \ ery worst film 1 have ever&#13;
seen. 01 because il IS something that&#13;
offend, dying moral codes. but&#13;
because there is no depth to it. The&#13;
erouc i presented as something&#13;
two-dimensional. leanng the same&#13;
Insane aflerl3Sle in one's mouth that&#13;
the 1utle lectures on "dirty" sex so&#13;
d, ,urbingl) pla«d in the ba k of&#13;
one', mind at age 12. llti kind of&#13;
mt "bredmg helped to build ,hose&#13;
ugly lillie furies called guild feeling'&#13;
that are so difficult to shake loose for&#13;
so man) young people. Otherwise&#13;
known a hang-ups some humans never&#13;
shake them. and. end up destroying&#13;
then entire sexual hfe_&#13;
Ilnat I will ask then is that if indeed&#13;
there are going 10 be more films like&#13;
thi let them be alive and real,&#13;
IOU hing upon more than just flesh.&#13;
but on the nund a well. Let them add&#13;
to what can be instead of subtract&#13;
from what already is. This film is a&#13;
waste of time and may be hazardous&#13;
to )'our health.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
THOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
By Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Elayne Mattson is. and has been&#13;
art of what the media call J&#13;
~ub-cu1ture. whose values ~ei?art from&#13;
traditional American matenahsm.&#13;
Expenses stemming from her. ~ar,&#13;
like gas and insurance, rent and tult!on&#13;
always seem in the back of her mind&#13;
when she has a last dollar to spend. In&#13;
front of her mind are VISions of pec~n&#13;
pie and Marc's Big Boy Restaurant 10&#13;
Racine.&#13;
I had to find out for myself why&#13;
someone who would let aes.the~lcs&#13;
substitute money as a theme 10 life,&#13;
would take time out every so.often to&#13;
go to Racine and eat peacon pte.&#13;
Ifound out as soon as Iwalk~d into&#13;
the restaurant that it was a melting pot&#13;
of some sort. A group of greasers were&#13;
taking a break from driving around&#13;
tow for a bite to eat. A couple&#13;
"extras" for an Andy War.hol flic,k&#13;
were taking a day off of thw Olgalllc&#13;
diet to devour a chicken, as a cham of&#13;
couples lined the walls in the boothes.&#13;
These couples ranged froill newlyw~ds&#13;
to married individuals on dates With&#13;
families :sprinkled I about the. dining&#13;
rOom, It all seemed quite Aqlencan.&#13;
Maggie began the analizatlQIl as we&#13;
sat down. She pointed out the&#13;
favorable aspects of the service we&#13;
were receiving. She began with the fact&#13;
that all the people wotking at Big Boy _&#13;
dress very neatly. The waitresses all&#13;
wear their hair up, usually in a bUll,&#13;
which is very favorable. They are&#13;
pleasant even when a problem arises,&#13;
and after we had ordered, we found&#13;
that the waitress adds Up the cost of&#13;
the meal at the table, which I thought&#13;
was a good idea for low budget&#13;
customers.&#13;
The last point she made was the fact&#13;
that the cooks, busboys, hostesses and&#13;
waitresses all had different uniforms. I&#13;
asked her what this had to do with&#13;
anything in particular, besides the&#13;
atmosphere. She just said that she&#13;
thought it was a good idea, and they&#13;
dressed so well. It is important to note&#13;
that Maggie is a Virgo, and to a Virgo&#13;
this aspect of Big Boy is a delite&#13;
I ordered .w~~t t~.e menu said was&#13;
'"",our spe.c13hty , fried chicken. The&#13;
sign outside the restaurant said that 't&#13;
was Colonel Sanders', so I conclud I&#13;
d&#13;
tha t Colonel Sanders is a Big Boy el&#13;
was a regular dinner at a doil t&#13;
sixty-five. It included -French fries ar&#13;
salad. rolls. honey and three pieces' o~&#13;
chicken. The pieces were specifically a&#13;
keel. a leg, and a thigh). FOt thirty&#13;
cents more one can get an extra two&#13;
pieces of chicken.&#13;
Maggie said that the creamers were&#13;
left out on the tables, and this isn't&#13;
such a good idea. I agreed with this&#13;
point, after all. s01~eone could put&#13;
LSD or something 111 the cream for&#13;
coffee. That would ruin someone's&#13;
meal, I'm sure.&#13;
As Dean Martin crooned softly&#13;
throughout the, restaurant. we ate and&#13;
enjoyed our meal. Maggie had a Big&#13;
Boy hamburger: which is also one of&#13;
their specialty Items; which she said&#13;
was very good. Again the problem of&#13;
• what can be said about a hamburger&#13;
whether it is one, two, or ten layers. It&#13;
was good.&#13;
We were served promptly. The&#13;
service at Big Boy is very good. But I&#13;
was a bit confused. The chicken dinner&#13;
came on sort of a tray, with the salad&#13;
riding side saddle on the plate in a&#13;
sparate plastic dish. just like 011 the&#13;
airlines. I looked out the window to&#13;
see if the restaurant was taxing down&#13;
the street. Maybe. I thought someone&#13;
did put LSD in the creamers.&#13;
My large Coke came in a paper cup,&#13;
and this seemed very handy, If there&#13;
were a bomb threat, or a fire. the&#13;
customer could stand out in the street&#13;
and sip his beverage, and dispose of&#13;
the cup.&#13;
The waitress came in the middlc or&#13;
the meal and asked il everything was&#13;
alright. I said yes. and sheepishly&#13;
looked around and whispered thaI I&#13;
would like to try a piece of peciJn pIC.&#13;
I don't like to· order dessert in a&#13;
restaurant because I don't look like I&#13;
need it, or can afford it.&#13;
The pecan pie blOughl back&#13;
memories of the Old South, though&#13;
I've never been there, But I thought&#13;
while eating it that no one In the&#13;
North would have, the nerve 10&#13;
construct such a pie ...&#13;
Big Boy proved to be il nice place to&#13;
eat for Maggie and I. Clndnow I rcaliie&#13;
why people travel to Radnc from&#13;
Kenosha just to eat. But more&#13;
important than this, I found out wit}&#13;
Elayne always scronged &lt;Jround for&#13;
ex t fa change' beyond the price of piC&#13;
and coffee. The service is so good. that&#13;
even the sub-culture must tip Ihcir&#13;
headbands and leave a tip,&#13;
207 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACtNE, WISCONSIN 53403&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS&#13;
~ ...... LIKE ... 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;
GARRARD - Turntable~&#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;
Campus Events&#13;
The Parkside Young Democrats&#13;
today announced lhat Lt. Governor&#13;
Martin Schreiber would be appearing&#13;
on campus, Friday March 26, 1971, at&#13;
2:30. The purpose of his appearance&#13;
will be to meet and talk with students&#13;
about Governor Lucev'" nronose9&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
S2nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI •• SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
SS(&#13;
merger of the University of Wisconsm&#13;
and the State University System, The&#13;
discussion is to take place in room 101&#13;
of Greenquist Hall. All conccrned&#13;
students and faculty members Jr~&#13;
urged to attend, and make Ihell&#13;
opinions kn'2,:".ll·••••••••••• ,&#13;
Terry Rose. head of the&#13;
Racine-Kenosha Amerkan 1\'11'&#13;
Liberties Union, will speak on Flr(l&#13;
Amendment freedoms to the Pre·LJv.&#13;
Club on Monday March 29. 7:30,"&#13;
room D I] I (G R). All student'&#13;
concerned with recent infrillgemenl~&#13;
on the rights of free specch ~nd&#13;
demonstration, as well as the n?&#13;
knock" and "prevenlive detention&#13;
laws and their implications are IOvileJ&#13;
to attend. •••••••••• ••••• I&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda is the lat"&#13;
edition to fraternities on campu~&#13;
Their main concern seem~ t~ be ....~&#13;
''"dancing, rapping, dflnkJOg 4&#13;
grdoving, all of which takes ,pla(t' tf\&#13;
Sunday nights at members hou¢&#13;
Included in 'the $53. entrance fee (ptl&#13;
semester) is a jacket and a free bttf&#13;
mug. Those interested should ..:0111&#13;
'"&#13;
Bob Toeppe (639·2567) or 51'"&#13;
Ramig (639·0583).&#13;
Bank of&#13;
ElmWOod&#13;
..·,c.&#13;
Students get ,~d carpet II&#13;
'I (SO does everyone '1st&#13;
THOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
207 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 5340i&#13;
E SOUNDS&#13;
LIKE . . . 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.8.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntable~&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
r ere, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
South astern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS&#13;
512 MI.. I N STREET&#13;
,&gt;n the west side of Monument Square&#13;
RACINE 'S&#13;
GREAT&#13;
DOWNTOW!'\J&#13;
O ISCOU~1 .-, O'.J&lt;- E&#13;
By Paul Lomartire&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Ela} ne ~1attson is, and. has_ tr':&#13;
art of what the media ca&#13;
fub- ulture. whose values ~el?art from&#13;
traditional Amern:an matenahsm.&#13;
Expenses temming from her. ~ar'&#13;
like gas and insurance, rent and tu1t~on&#13;
alway seem in the back of her m111d&#13;
when she ha a last dollar to spend. In&#13;
front of her mind are visions of pec~n&#13;
pie and tare· Big Boy Restaurant 111&#13;
Racine.&#13;
I had to find out for myself w~y&#13;
omeone who would let aes_the~1cs&#13;
-ub titute money as a theme 111 life,&#13;
would take time out every so_often to&#13;
go to Racine and eat peacon pie.&#13;
1 found out a soon as I walked into&#13;
the re ·taurant that it was a melting pot&#13;
of · me ort. group of greasers were&#13;
taking a break from driving around&#13;
tow for a bite to eat. A couple&#13;
"e tra " for an Andy Warhol flick&#13;
w~re taking a day off of their or~anic&#13;
diet to devour a chicken, as a cham of&#13;
couple lined the walls in the boothes.&#13;
These couple ranged from newlyw~ds&#13;
to married individual on dates w1 th&#13;
familie :sf rinkled , about the dining&#13;
room. It al eemed quite Afllerican.&#13;
~taggie began the analizatLun as we&#13;
at down. he pointed out the&#13;
favorable aspect of the service we&#13;
were receiving. She began with the fact&#13;
that all the people working at Big Boy&#13;
dres very neatly. The waitresses all&#13;
wear their hair up, usually in a bun,&#13;
which is very favorable. They are&#13;
pleasant even when a problem arises,&#13;
and after we had ordered, we found&#13;
that the waitre adds up the cost of&#13;
the meal at the table, which I thought&#13;
was a good idea for low budget&#13;
cu tamers.&#13;
The Ia t point she made was the fact&#13;
that the cooks, busboys, hostesses and&#13;
wa1tre ses all had different uniforms. I&#13;
a ked her what this had to do with&#13;
anything in particular. besides the&#13;
atmo phere. She just said that she&#13;
thought it was a good idea, and they&#13;
dre sed so well. It is important to note&#13;
that , 1aggie is a Virgo. and to a Virgo&#13;
Campus Events&#13;
The Parkside Young Democrats&#13;
toda} announced that Lt. Governor&#13;
1artin Schreiber would be appearing&#13;
on campus. Friday March 26, 1971, at&#13;
2:30. The purpose of his appearance&#13;
will be to meet and talk with students&#13;
about Governor Lucev'~ nronosed&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40t.h Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN, THRU THURS,&#13;
11 A,M, TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI, &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
this aspect of Big Boy is a delite.&#13;
I order~d _w~~t t~e menu said was&#13;
·:_our spe_ciahty , fned chicken. The&#13;
sign outside the re!taurant said that ·t&#13;
was Colonel Sanders', so I conclud ~ that Colonel Sand~rs is a Big Boy\&#13;
was a regular dmner at a doll&#13;
sixty-five. It included -french fries ar&#13;
sal~d, rolls. ho~ey and three pieces' 0}&#13;
chicken. The pieces were specifically a&#13;
keel. a leg, and a thigh). For thirt&#13;
cents more one can get an extra tw~&#13;
pieces of chicken.&#13;
Maggie said that the creamers were&#13;
left out on t~e tables, and this isn't&#13;
such a good idea. I agreed with this&#13;
point, after all_ someone could put&#13;
LSD or someth111g 111 the cream for&#13;
coffee. That would ruin someone's&#13;
meal, I'm sure.&#13;
As Dean Martin crooned softlv&#13;
throughout the. restaurant. we ate and&#13;
enjoyed our meal. Maggie had a Big&#13;
Boy hamburger, which is also one of&#13;
their specialty items; which she aid&#13;
was very good. Again the problem of&#13;
what can be said about a hamburger.&#13;
whether it is one, two. or ten layers. It&#13;
was good.&#13;
We were served promptly. The&#13;
service at Big Boy is very good. But I&#13;
was a bit confused. The chicken dinner&#13;
came on sort of a tray, with the salad&#13;
riding side saddle on the plate in a sparate plastic dish, just like on the&#13;
airlines. I looked out the window to&#13;
see if the restaurant was taxing down&#13;
the street. Maybe, I thought omcone&#13;
did put LSD in the creamers.&#13;
My large Coke came in a paper cup,&#13;
and this seemed very handy. If there&#13;
were a bomb threat, or a fire, th&#13;
customer could stand out in the street&#13;
and sip his beverage, and dispose ,r&#13;
the cup.&#13;
The waitress came in the middle of&#13;
the meal and asked il everything \\a&#13;
alright. 1 said yes, and shcepi:,hl}&#13;
looked around and whispered that I&#13;
would like to try a piece of pecan p1&#13;
I don't like to · order des ert in a&#13;
restaurant because I don't look like I&#13;
need it. or can afford it.&#13;
The pecan pie brought ba k&#13;
memories of the Old South, though&#13;
I've never been there. But I tho112'11&#13;
while eating it that 110 one 111 ihc&#13;
North would have . the nerve to&#13;
construct such a pie .&#13;
Big Boy proved to be a nice pla,e t&#13;
eat for Maggie and I, and no\\ I rcal11e&#13;
why people travel to Racine from&#13;
Kenosha just to eat. But more&#13;
important than this, I found out \\h)&#13;
Elayne always scronged around ~ r&#13;
extra change· beyond the price of pt&#13;
and coffee. The service is so good that&#13;
even the sub-culture must tip the•&#13;
headbands and leave a tip.&#13;
merger of the University of W1 scon m&#13;
and the State University System. The&#13;
discussion is to take place in room 101&#13;
of Greenquist Hall. All concerned&#13;
students and faculty member re&#13;
urged to attend, and make then&#13;
opinions kn&lt;_?~.1!· •••••••••••.&#13;
Terry Ro se . head of the&#13;
Racine-Kenosha A mencan c,~ I&#13;
Liberties Union, will speak on Fir l&#13;
Amendment freedoms to the Pr~-La\\&#13;
Club on Monday March 29. 1: 0 1&#13;
room D 111 (GR). All tudent&#13;
concerned with recent infringement&#13;
on the rights of free spec h • nd&#13;
demonstration, as well a\ the 'n ..&#13;
knock" and "preventive detc~ll n laws and their implication are 1n\lttd&#13;
to attend .•••••••••••••••&#13;
Alpha Kappa Lambda 1s the late&#13;
edition to fraternities on camp th&#13;
Their main concern seems to be 11&#13;
" dancing, rapping, drinking a&#13;
grooving, all of which take _pla&#13;
Sunday nights at members hou&#13;
Included in 'the $ 5 3. en t ranee fee (pe&#13;
semester) is a jacket and a free&#13;
mug. Those interested hould 111 t&#13;
Bob Toeppe (639-'.!567) or 1&#13;
Ramig (639-0583 ).&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2104 Lathrop ,Aye., ltocin•, W"' 0 """&#13;
et ser Students get rl!d carp&#13;
(So does everyone 81st 'I &#13;
1'11&lt; I&gt; New&gt;cope MoDday, W... :1a 22, 1971&#13;
A Marine Officer selection team&#13;
\l, HI answer queauons concerning&#13;
M."ne Officer Candidate School&#13;
t arch ~5 ~6 hom 10 to 3 in&#13;
room 209 at Tallent H.II&#13;
[Ray [Ra,.{i9an ~&#13;
OJ')Ofl.1erJul900d&#13;
For&#13;
Resert'ations&#13;
Phone&#13;
694-0455&#13;
.oUT" aM,.IOAM IltOAD NO,"W 01' .,. ...,. UNIl&#13;
KINO.H ..... WIKOHIIN&#13;
't'U' Gallery One&#13;
503 1t1ill st.&#13;
Racine&#13;
10% tudent Dlscount&#13;
011 all Post rs &amp; Frames&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices lAst"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Rich&#13;
(Continued hom pale 5)&#13;
there who said 'ah, man. that's a lot of&#13;
bullshit: But that's their problem&#13;
again. not mine. If you please the most&#13;
people, that's what counts. not the&#13;
terribly avant yarde because where are&#13;
they at?&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Whete are the avant&#13;
garde people. _ .as far as making&#13;
money or ...&#13;
RICH: As far as musicianship.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Haven't they always&#13;
led the way? What did Oiz and Parker&#13;
do in the forties?&#13;
RICH: You call that avant garde?&#13;
NEWSCOPE: For that time it was.&#13;
RICH: Were you around that time?&#13;
Watch it, because you're talking to a&#13;
man that was ... so be careful, fella,&#13;
what you're sayingNEWSCOPE:&#13;
How come that wasn't&#13;
commercially acceptable at that' time?&#13;
RICH: Commercially acceptatJle?&#13;
The only people I know who were&#13;
commercially successful are Guy&#13;
Lombardo, Teresa Brewer and&#13;
Lawrence Welk.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Who would you say is&#13;
avant garde that isn't anywhere?&#13;
RICH: Most of them.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Men like Rashaan&#13;
Roland Kirk?&#13;
RICH: What about them? There's&#13;
nothing about Roland Kir,k ~hat&#13;
impresses me, even though he s blind&#13;
what's that supposed to mean?&#13;
NEWSCOPE: What about someone&#13;
like Jusef Lateef or Sun Ra?&#13;
RICH: I knew him when his name&#13;
was Joseph Latif playing Birdland and&#13;
was looking for gigs playing tenor sax.&#13;
You want to talk sense talk about&#13;
something you know abt1ut because'&#13;
knew these cats long time ago before&#13;
they put on their Indian garb and Afro&#13;
haircuts.&#13;
When you eliminate the element of&#13;
time in jazz and forsake that just to&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
51121 30th Av.,&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657·5191&#13;
.' ~ I&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
FREE DELIVERY 4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P_M.&#13;
Open 6 Days- a Week From 4 p,m,&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
r&#13;
1/&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Menday thru Friday 7 p.... to 8&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
A II F. P...leo&#13;
.WIIIe , " ... S-Itj Pertle.&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
,\\\ BRAT-STOP&#13;
.......e- a:-_ .. Hlil •., •&#13;
and ,&#13;
STEAK,&#13;
BRAT or&#13;
BEEFBURGER&#13;
Is&#13;
p.m.&#13;
play notes in free form, that's not jazz,&#13;
that's practice- It's .not "!USIC.. .I can&#13;
hit a chord on a piano with my elbo~&#13;
and call that avant garde. You won t&#13;
know the difference and I won't know&#13;
the difference. If you hit a bunch of&#13;
notes what is it? Is it musical?&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Maybe to some people&#13;
it is if it's a tonal thing, If It has&#13;
musical tone ...&#13;
RICH: Well, if you can't tell the&#13;
difference between in tune and out of&#13;
tune then everything is right to you ..&#13;
.because you're hip, you're avant&#13;
garde. I don't buy that.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Then you don't think&#13;
Coltrane could play?&#13;
RICH: He could play some. I know&#13;
too many saxaphones that could run&#13;
him out of town.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Who'&#13;
RICH: Stan Gatz, Lester Young,&#13;
Byrd, any of thE\m. Lester Young&#13;
could not only swin'g you out of town&#13;
but he had so much melody in his&#13;
heart that he could make you cry. The&#13;
essence of a great jazz musician is to&#13;
have the ability to cover the full&#13;
spectrum of emotions. Unless you've&#13;
lived that kind of experience, you&#13;
can't play it.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: What would you say&#13;
to people who call you a drum and&#13;
bugle style player?&#13;
RICH: I wouldn't say anything to&#13;
that because I think that when I'm&#13;
with the band I swing pretty good. I&#13;
have no feelings for critics, they're all&#13;
a bunch of stupid assholes anyhOW. If&#13;
they could play they wouldn't write.&#13;
You can't say a guy can't play unless&#13;
you can play better. All critics are full&#13;
of shit. I don't know any good one,&#13;
and the leader of the bunch is Leonard&#13;
Feather.&#13;
Most people, particularly critics,&#13;
don't realize that jazz is a lifetime&#13;
thing. You spend your life perfecting&#13;
the art. Anybody can be a classical&#13;
player because the music they've been&#13;
playing has been played by a thousand&#13;
musicians for the last five- hundred&#13;
years. But when you pl~y jazz you're&#13;
improvising with your body, your&#13;
mind, your soul and your life, if&#13;
you're an honest musician.&#13;
You're away from the people you&#13;
love and you alienate the people you&#13;
love, but you do that so one day,&#13;
when you go back, you can go back&#13;
with your head up. I don't mean to&#13;
romanticise, but it's not Pete Kelly's&#13;
blues ... it's hard work.&#13;
I think a lot of people in music&#13;
today cheat their audiences. You can&#13;
make a lot of hit records and then go&#13;
out in front of an audience and if you&#13;
don't have the facilities, echo&#13;
chambers, and electronics and&#13;
everything all of a sudden it doesn't&#13;
sound the same. And if all you can&#13;
project to an audience is exactly what&#13;
you recorded and not do anything&#13;
other than the recording, yotl're&#13;
cheating your audience. We don't rely&#13;
on our records; we rely on the&#13;
musicianship of the band and the fact&#13;
that we enjoy what we're doing.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: How do you decide&#13;
when a musician is doing something&#13;
honestly?&#13;
RICH: When I see his lips bleed and&#13;
sweat 00 his face.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: You said you don't&#13;
think highly of Coltrane but the rest&#13;
of the jazz world thinks highly of him.&#13;
RICH: Do you know for a fact that&#13;
the rest of the jazz world feels that&#13;
way?&#13;
NEWSCOPE: would say the&#13;
majority.&#13;
RICH: I think it's wrong. I can&#13;
tell when a man is honest If I&#13;
GOuldn't, I shouldn't be a band I~ader.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Do you think the&#13;
Beatles are good musicians?&#13;
RICH: Are you kidding? I know a&#13;
cop on the corner of 42nd street that&#13;
plays a better club than they play&#13;
!lultar and drums. I think they write&#13;
very well but they're half-assed&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
Fl... " - Fruit .... 1ts - Gifts&#13;
Phone: 694&#13;
VI.nd FRANK WEINSTOCK&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
3021- 75TH ST. •&#13;
musicians.&#13;
I was brought up with a I&#13;
h&#13;
. at 01&#13;
w 0 were total geOluses and 91.1",&#13;
relate to what is consid edl&#13;
ca,,'l&#13;
today because I've heard alle;h great&#13;
When I hear a guy play guita e Qreal$&#13;
tell me he's the greatest gU~tand they&#13;
'!.ou:v~ heard and I've hea:d&#13;
ar&#13;
plaYer&#13;
....hristian, I got to think about ~arlev&#13;
I've heard greatness in .t, at.&#13;
form. There's no greatness ~t ~ tr~&#13;
today. Every group you ~Ing up&#13;
identical. In order to play wtIear IS&#13;
play you have to have a lot at IWtalent&#13;
than four-chord rock mu .~e&#13;
I could ask any ydUrta rock m~C_la.rts&#13;
today to come and play with myS~irl&#13;
and I guarantee he would' I'd&#13;
through the first three charts n t 9!t&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Isn't rock' ba&#13;
four chords? Sltally&#13;
RICH: Rock is built on th&#13;
b&#13;
bl - e t'W!l ar ues strain that was arOund be '"&#13;
Lincoln was president. fort&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Do you think&#13;
legitimate? r~&#13;
RICH: Blues is legitimate.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Rock is different 1&#13;
blues? rorn.&#13;
RICH: No it's not.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Obviouslv vou&#13;
playa blues re~ord and a rock r ~&#13;
and tell the difference betwee~&#13;
two. ~&#13;
RICH: Why? . Because the rh&#13;
section plays heavier. YII\!&#13;
NEWSCOPE: No, because It's&#13;
different form. •&#13;
RICH: Don't tell me about lilo!&#13;
man, they're playing the same bl&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Alright, so roc' ""&#13;
different I erent Interpretation . i ' ••&#13;
. RICH: ~ut rock is the blues,man&#13;
IS not a different interpretation, v&#13;
do you mean, man? If the rhyu'l&#13;
section plays different, they pi&#13;
worse.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: But that',&#13;
interpretation of it.&#13;
RICH: Right,that'swhatllu~"d&#13;
You want mediocrity you listen to.&#13;
rock group.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: WhV do vou pia,&#13;
rock tunes in your band?&#13;
RICH: Becausewedoitbetter~&#13;
the rock bands, obviously.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Well, il vou think "&#13;
a bad premise to begin with why do&#13;
you use it?&#13;
RICH: I don't say it', • bad&#13;
premise, I say what they're doi,. I&#13;
bad, it's poor. There's a difference&#13;
NEWSCOPE: The Rolling 5t"'"&#13;
are rock.&#13;
RICH: The Rolling Stones are \..,&#13;
hoods.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Is Jesu' ()yQ&#13;
Superstar a legitimate album?&#13;
RICH: The only legitimate roc&gt;&#13;
bands in my mind would be BIooC&#13;
Sweat and T ears, and Chicago.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Those are jazz","&#13;
groups.&#13;
RIC"': I wouldn't know about&#13;
I just say it's a rock group. The1&#13;
probably better musicians thafl&#13;
average rock band.&#13;
If people would just say I'm~&#13;
out to hear some music toni!llt&#13;
not say I'm going out to see"oct&#13;
. band a blues band or a soul twt , ' I&#13;
maybe there'd be .. bel&#13;
understanding between the aud.ero'&#13;
and the musicians themselves.&#13;
MADISON-Books and&#13;
--I"""&#13;
valued at more than $2.(0) II&#13;
accepted for The Uni,'er)ll~&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Library FrldJ'&#13;
the UW Board of Regents. S I~&#13;
Donors are Lloyd E. rnl&#13;
Franksville, who presented ~iu&lt;d&#13;
on a variety of sUbjeCIS a I&#13;
$1 725' Spencer L. Clope .1&#13;
M~nroe Ave. Racine, who II&#13;
six periodicai volumes in (ht&#13;
valued at $100; and PrO~fSlI'l&#13;
deVries Klein of the VOl&#13;
Illinois, Urbana, 111.,. whOj~;&#13;
issues of The Amen"n 55 tho&#13;
Science from January, 1:'40.&#13;
''"WEST'' SiDE&#13;
SWEET sHO&#13;
3200 60th st,&#13;
1~.,I&#13;
6COLOPSEER&#13;
7&#13;
9711 phon. 65 -&#13;
.,.&#13;
rRay fRarligarz ~&#13;
onJer/ul 9ood&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
Our Pri La, ..&#13;
7 7th AVE UE&#13;
KENOSH • ISCO SIN&#13;
Rich&#13;
(Continued fro pa2e 5)&#13;
there o said 'ah, man, that's a lot of&#13;
bullshit.' But that's their problem&#13;
again, not mine. If yo u please the most&#13;
people, that's what counts, not the&#13;
erriblv a ant garde because where are&#13;
the dt'&#13;
EWSCOPE: here are the avant&#13;
gard pc pie. . .as far as making&#13;
mone or ...&#13;
RICH: As far as mu sicianship.&#13;
EWSCOPE: Haven't they always&#13;
led the vay? hat d id Diz and Parker&#13;
do in the forties?&#13;
RICH: You call that avant garde?&#13;
E SCOPE: For that time it was.&#13;
RICH : ere you around that time?&#13;
atch it , because you 're talking to a&#13;
man that was ... so be careful , fella ,&#13;
at o . ·re saying. NE COPE: Ho come that wasn't&#13;
com IT'• re a y acceptable at that· t ime 1&#13;
RICH : Commercially acceptable?&#13;
Th only people I k now who were&#13;
commercially s ccessful are Guy&#13;
Lombar d o, T e r e sa Brewer and&#13;
L nee el .&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Who would you say is&#13;
nt g rde that isn't anywhere?&#13;
RICH: ost of them.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: en like Rashaan&#13;
Roland Kir ?&#13;
RICH : What about them? There's&#13;
nothing bout Roland Kirk that&#13;
impresses m • even though he's blind&#13;
Nhat's that supposed to mean?&#13;
EWSCOPE: hat about someone&#13;
h e Jusef Lateef or Sun Ra?&#13;
RICH: I kn him hen his name&#13;
was Jo ph Latif playing Birdland and&#13;
as loo ing for gigs playing tenor sax.&#13;
You vant to talk sense talk about&#13;
something you know ab t because I&#13;
kn~ these cats long time ago before&#13;
they put on their Indian garb and Afro&#13;
haircuts.&#13;
When you eliminate t he element of&#13;
time in jazz and forsake that just to&#13;
\ .. , • I I&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
CHICK EH OIHHERS and&#13;
ITALIAH SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
FREE DEl.lVERY 4:00 P.M . TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
Open 6 Days.a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
Where It Is Atl&#13;
.OAIL Y SPECIAl&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.&#13;
A Bottle of&#13;
Ind I&#13;
STEAK,&#13;
BRAT or&#13;
BEEFBURGER&#13;
Alcoholic&#13;
Beverage&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
II&#13;
Is&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to a&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20C&#13;
AYell.We Fw Partlea&#13;
'-cWlat ,,...,.,., -4 S..lty Partlea&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
1"t. BRAT-STOP&#13;
........ c.... ~~ ~ " ...... , •&#13;
p.m.&#13;
play notes in free form. that'_s not jazz,&#13;
that's practice. It's.not ~us1c . . ·:bean&#13;
hit a chord on a piano with my e ov;i&#13;
and call that avant garde. Yo~ wont&#13;
know the difference and I wont know&#13;
the difference. If you hit_ a bunch of&#13;
notes, what is it? Is it musical?&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Maybe to so~e ~eople&#13;
it is if it's a tonal thing, if it has&#13;
musical tone . .. RICH: Well. if you can't tell the&#13;
difference between in tune and out of&#13;
tune then everything is right to you ..&#13;
.because you're hip, you're avant&#13;
garde. I don't buy that.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Then you don't think&#13;
Coltrane could play?&#13;
RICH: He could play some. I know&#13;
too many saxaphones that could run&#13;
him out of town .&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Who?&#13;
RICH: Stan Getz, Lester Young,&#13;
Byrd, any of thd_m . Lester Young&#13;
could not only swing you out of town&#13;
but he had so much melody in his&#13;
heart that he could make you cry. The&#13;
essence of a great jazz musician is to&#13;
have the ability to cover the full&#13;
spectrum of emotions. Unless you've&#13;
lived that kind of experience, you&#13;
can't play it. NEWSCOPE: What would you say&#13;
to people who call you a drum and&#13;
bugle style player?&#13;
RICH: I wouldn't say anything to&#13;
that because I think that when 1 'm&#13;
with the band I swing pretty good . I&#13;
have no feeli ngs for critics, they 're all&#13;
a bunch of stupid assholes anyhow. If&#13;
they could play they wouldn't write.&#13;
You can't say a guy can't play unless&#13;
yo u can play better. All critics are full&#13;
of shit . I don't know any good one,&#13;
and the leader of the bu nch is Leonard&#13;
Feather. Most people, particularly critics,&#13;
don't realize that jazz is a lifetime&#13;
th ing. You spend your life perfecting&#13;
the art. Anybody can be a classical&#13;
player because the music they've been&#13;
playing has been played by a thousand&#13;
musicians for the last five- hundred&#13;
years. But when you pl~y jazz you're&#13;
improvising with your body. your&#13;
mind , your soul and your life, if&#13;
you 're an honest musician.&#13;
You 're away from the people you&#13;
love and you alienate the people you&#13;
love, but you do that so one day,&#13;
when you go back, you can go back&#13;
with your head up. I don't mean to&#13;
romanticise, but it's not Pete Kelly's&#13;
blues . .. it 's hard work.&#13;
I think a lot of people in music&#13;
today cheat their audiences. You can&#13;
make a lot of hit records and then go&#13;
out in front of an audience and if you&#13;
don ' t have the facilities, echo&#13;
chambers, and e I ectronics and&#13;
everything all of a sudden it doesn't&#13;
sound the same. And if all you can&#13;
project to an audience is exactly what&#13;
you recorded and not do anything&#13;
other than th~ recording, yott're&#13;
cheating your -audience. We don't rely&#13;
on our records; we rely on the&#13;
musicianship of the band and the fact&#13;
that we enjoy what we're doing.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: How do you decide&#13;
when a musician is doing something&#13;
honestly?&#13;
RICH: When I see his lips bleed and&#13;
sweat 011 his face.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: You said you don't&#13;
think highly of Coltrane but the rest&#13;
of the jazz world thinks highly of him.&#13;
RICH: Do you know for a fact that&#13;
the rest of the jazz world feels that&#13;
way?&#13;
NEWSCOPE:&#13;
majority. would say the&#13;
RICH: I think it's wrong . I can&#13;
tell "."~en a man is honest. If I&#13;
oouldn t. I shouldn't be a band leader.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Do you think the&#13;
Beatles are good musicians?&#13;
RICH: Are you kidding? I know a&#13;
cop on the corner of 42nd street that&#13;
pl~ys a better club than they play&#13;
9u1tar and drums. I think they write&#13;
very well but they're half-assed&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
AC111111 - Fruit Baslitts _ Gifb&#13;
Phone: 6a4&#13;
VI and FRANK WEINSTOCK&#13;
3021 • 7!5TH ST .&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN !53140 -&#13;
musicians.&#13;
I was brought up with a 1&#13;
h Ot Of w o were total geniuses a d 9Uys&#13;
relate to what is consid~ edl ca '&#13;
today because I've heard all ;h Ill&#13;
When I hear a guy play guita e gr&#13;
tell me he's the greatest gu;t and&#13;
y_ou'.v~ heard and I've hear/J~&#13;
~hnst,an, I got to think about h ley&#13;
I've heard greatness in . 1. at.&#13;
form. There's no greatness ~t ~ tr&#13;
today. Every group you ~•ng&#13;
identical. In order to play whe:; IS&#13;
play you have to have a lot&#13;
talent than four-chord rock mu . ~e&#13;
I could ask any yo-ung rock m~C)aris&#13;
today to come and play with ,ny s~&#13;
md I guarantee he would ,&#13;
through the first three charts. n t&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Isn't rock b . four chords? as,ca&#13;
RICH: Rock is built on th&#13;
bar blues strain that was aroun~ ~ Lincoln was president. ...:for&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Do you think&#13;
legitimate? roe&#13;
RICH: Blues is legitimate.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Rock is different&#13;
blues?&#13;
RICH: No it's not.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Obviously YOU&#13;
play a blues record and a rock r&#13;
and tell the difference betwe n&#13;
two.&#13;
RICH: Why? Because the rh&#13;
section plays heavier. Y&#13;
NEWSCOPE: No, becaus •t's&#13;
different form .&#13;
RICH: Don't tell me about&#13;
man, they're playing the sam b&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Alright, so rod&#13;
different interpretation .&#13;
RICH: But rock is the blues m&#13;
is not a different interpretati~n&#13;
do you mean, manJ II the rh&#13;
section plays different, they&#13;
worse .&#13;
NEWSCOPE: But that's&#13;
interpretation of it.&#13;
RICH: Right, that's what I just&#13;
You want mediocrity you listen •&#13;
rock group.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Why do you&#13;
rock tunes in your band7&#13;
RICH: Because we do it better&#13;
the rock bands, obviously.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Well, if you thi&#13;
a bad premise to begin with wh&#13;
you use it?&#13;
RICH: I don't say it's a&#13;
premise, I say what they're do111g 1&#13;
bad, it's poor. There's a difference&#13;
NEWSCOPE: The Rolling S&#13;
are rock.&#13;
RICH: The Rolling Stones are&#13;
hoods.&#13;
N EWSCOPE: Is Jesus 01&#13;
Superstar a legitimate album7&#13;
RICH: The only legitimate r&#13;
bands in my mind would be 6&#13;
Sweat and Tears, and Chicago.&#13;
NEWSCOPE: Those are jazz&#13;
groups.&#13;
RICH: I wouldn't know about&#13;
I just say it's a rock group .&#13;
probably better musicians than&#13;
average rock band .&#13;
If people would just say I'm&#13;
out to hear some music tonig!:'&#13;
not sav I'm going out to see a · band, a blues band, or a soul&#13;
maybe there'd be a bet&#13;
understanding between the aud&#13;
and the musicians ~&#13;
themselves&#13;
MADISON- Books and ~r&#13;
valued at more than S~ .000&#13;
accepted for The Uniler t)&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Library Fr&#13;
the UW Board of Regents&#13;
Donors are Lloyd E. Franksville who presented&#13;
on a vari;ty of subject \&#13;
$1,725 ; Spencer L Clop(&#13;
Monroe Ave ., Racine, who P.•&#13;
six periodical volume in fche&#13;
valued at $100 ; and ~ro ·&#13;
deVries Klein of the Uni\ r&#13;
Illinois, Urbana , Ill., whoJ~&#13;
issues of The Amencan 5&#13;
Science from January. 19;&#13;
January, 1970. valued 31 -&#13;
WEST SIDf&#13;
SWEET sHOr&#13;
3200 60th St, 7 0 I&#13;
&#13;
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 8, March 22, 1971</text>
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              <text>Chancellor Comments on Merger</text>
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              <text>Volume 3 - Number 7&#13;
H lBA"&#13;
U P, kENO HA C PU&#13;
700 ASHINGTO 0&#13;
By MarcEisen&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie's reaction to GOvernor&#13;
Luce~'s pr~posal to merge the University&#13;
of Wlsconsm system with the Wisconsin&#13;
State University system is one of "some&#13;
eririal skepticism."&#13;
The Chancellor told NEWSCOPE that if&#13;
the Governor's proposed budget for the&#13;
University of Wisconsin is passed as is, the&#13;
,ffects would be "very damaging" to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Chancellor left the impression that&#13;
the budgetary aspects of the Governor's&#13;
address to the state legislature were of&#13;
more vital consequence to Parks ide that the&#13;
proposal for merger.&#13;
The Governor's proposed budget funds&#13;
few of the programs and plans proposed by&#13;
Parkside, He recommends that UWP&#13;
received only $612,100. out of the&#13;
$5,439,400 requested. In addition the base&#13;
budget itself will be cut.&#13;
Among those items not budgeted by the&#13;
Governor are: four new majors, three of&#13;
which pertain to Parkside's industrial&#13;
mission, space rental cost incurred when the&#13;
Racine campus is lost, placement problems,&#13;
and vocational and psychological counseling,&#13;
Lucey's merger proposal would establish&#13;
a single Board of Regents to replace the&#13;
present tW? boards. The board would&#13;
consist of SIX members from the UW Board&#13;
of Regents, the superintendent of public&#13;
tDstructlon, four members from the WSU&#13;
Board of Regents, four citizens appointed&#13;
by Lucey, and the Chairman of the State&#13;
Vocational, Technical and Adult Education&#13;
Board.&#13;
This new board would handle the&#13;
responsibilities of the Coordinating Counsel&#13;
of Htgher Education, which would be&#13;
abolished. The chief function of the CCHE&#13;
has been budget and program review for&#13;
the two systems.&#13;
Lucey feels this single system would&#13;
strea.mline central administration by&#13;
reducmg the number of administrative&#13;
positions. He would have the President of&#13;
UW, John Weaver, develop the plans for&#13;
this new adm inistration.&#13;
He expects a savings of about $4 miUion&#13;
during the biennium if the merger is passed.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie commented, "My&#13;
reaction to the proposal of merger is 'wait&#13;
and see', and one of some initial&#13;
skepticism. Those who have done such&#13;
financial analyses are not at all convinced&#13;
that there will be long run savings in the&#13;
merger. (continlled on Page 4)&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
Comments&#13;
On Merger&#13;
Lucey Defends Budget Cuts&#13;
ByMarcEisen&#13;
of the NewscopeStaff&#13;
GovernorPatrick Lucey doubts Ibe&#13;
cats be recommended for the&#13;
\lnhoersity of Wisconsinbudget will be&#13;
... Oftd by the state legislature.&#13;
In a brief interview before he&#13;
addressed an audience at Kenosha's&#13;
local 72 union han Sunday morning,&#13;
he toldNEWSCOPE"I doubt the cuts&#13;
"ill be restored. But I'm willing to&#13;
negohateon that if we can find the&#13;
money."&#13;
• "I cut pretty deep," he stated,&#13;
'more deeplythan Iwould like to on b:Y worthwhile programs simply&#13;
.... the dollarsaren't there .."&#13;
The Governor, along with Rep.Les&#13;
Aspin, Lt. Governor Martin Shreiber,&#13;
State Treasurer Charles Smith,&#13;
Kenosha and Racine assemblymen,&#13;
George Molinaro, Eugene Dorff,&#13;
Manny Brown, and Michael Ferral, and&#13;
State Senator Joseph Lourigan were at&#13;
Local 72 as participants in the UAW's&#13;
"Know Your Legislator" program.&#13;
In his speech Governor Lucey&#13;
defended the severe budget cuts he&#13;
presented to the Legislature and his&#13;
proposal to merge the University.of&#13;
Wisconsin system of higher education&#13;
with the Wisconsin State University&#13;
system.&#13;
(continued on Page J)&#13;
Govern .. Pa&amp;riek Lucey. I'IloII IIr loll _.&#13;
MlsslOll Committee meeting with Cbancellor.&#13;
,., IIr loll&#13;
'Mission' Deli itiol Elusive&#13;
ByJohn KoloeD&#13;
of the ewscope Scaff&#13;
On wednesday, March 11 the Mission' Committee mel 10 Racine&#13;
with Chancellor Wyllie to discuss their progre in defining Parksrde"&#13;
purpose.. Scattered in the rwo hour discussion were phrase like.&#13;
"Kafkaesque", "Working Class". and "first generation students."&#13;
"Kafkaesque" refers to the committee's task of promoting Parkside as&#13;
a saleable institution.&#13;
The basic purpose of the committee is to present a concise,&#13;
neady-worded package thar can be sold to the state legislature, the&#13;
people of the stare and, most of all, those select individuals who will&#13;
either drop the axe or pave the way for Parkside's institutional future.&#13;
On Feb. 18 Chancellor Wyllie and the di isional chairmen went to&#13;
Madison for a Ten Vear Academic Program Review. At the Review&#13;
Vice-President Percy characterized the proposed document as&#13;
Hsubstantial", a "roral campus document" representing all the&#13;
constituent elements of the campus, and that it "be addressed (0&#13;
persons who might make decisions of league status and levels of&#13;
funding." In short, to be persuasive to laymen.&#13;
(COlOn if on Page 6)&#13;
Volume 3 · Number 7&#13;
By Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie's reaction to Governor&#13;
Luce(s pr~posal to me~ge the University&#13;
of W1sconsm system with the Wisconsin&#13;
State University system is one of "some&#13;
irtitial skepticism."&#13;
The Chancellor told NEWSCOPE that if&#13;
the Governor's proposed budget for the&#13;
University of Wisconsin is passed as is, the&#13;
effects would be "very damaging" to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
The Chancellor left the impression that&#13;
the budgetary aspects of the Governor's&#13;
address to the state legislature were of&#13;
more vital consequence to Parkside that the&#13;
proposal for merger.&#13;
The Governor's proposed budget funds&#13;
few of the programs and plans proposed by&#13;
Parkside. He recommends that UWP&#13;
received only $612,100 . out of the&#13;
SS,439,400 requested. In addition the base&#13;
budget itself will be cut.&#13;
Among those items not budgeted by the&#13;
Governor are: four new majors, three of&#13;
which pertain to Parkside's industrial&#13;
mission, space rental cost incurred when the&#13;
Racine campus is lost, placement problems,&#13;
and vocational and psychological co4nseling.&#13;
Lucey's merger proposal would establish&#13;
a single Board of Regents to replace the&#13;
pres~nt tw? boards. The board would&#13;
consist of sue members from the ' Board&#13;
?f Reg~nts, the superintendent of publt&#13;
mstructton, four members from the \\, C&#13;
B6oard of Regents, four citizen appotnted&#13;
y Lu_cey' and the Chairman of the tate&#13;
Vocational, Technical and Adult Education&#13;
Board.&#13;
This new board would handle the&#13;
respo~sibilities of the Coordinating Coun el&#13;
of Higher Education, which would be&#13;
abolished. The chief function of the CCHE&#13;
has been budget and program review for&#13;
the two systems.&#13;
Lucey feels this single s • tern would&#13;
streamline central administration bv&#13;
reducing the number of admini trath-'&#13;
positions. He would have the Pre ident of&#13;
~, John Weaver, develop the plan for&#13;
this new administration.&#13;
He expects a savings of about 4 million&#13;
during the biennium if the merger is pa d.&#13;
Chancellor WyUie commented ..&#13;
reaction to the proposal of merger 1 'wait&#13;
and see', and one of ome initial&#13;
skepticism. Those who have done uch&#13;
financial analyses are not at all convinced&#13;
that there will be long run saving in the&#13;
merger. (continued on Page 4)&#13;
Lucey Defends Budget Cuts&#13;
By Marc Eisen&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Governor Patrick Lucey doubts the&#13;
cut he recommended for the&#13;
University of Wisconsin budget will be&#13;
restored by the state legislature. In a brief interview before he&#13;
addre sed an audience at Kenosha's&#13;
local 72 union hall Sunday morning,&#13;
he told NEWSC0PE "I doubt the cuts&#13;
1¥111 ~e restored. But I'm willing to&#13;
negotiate on that if we can find the&#13;
money."&#13;
"I cut pretty deep," he stated,&#13;
more deeply than I would like to on&#13;
many worthwhile programs simply&#13;
because the dollars aren't there .. "&#13;
The Governor, along with Rep.Le&#13;
Aspin, Lt. Governor Marttn Shreiber,&#13;
State Treasurer Charles Smith,&#13;
Kenosha and Racine a semblymen,&#13;
George Molinaro, Eugene Dorff,&#13;
Manny Brown, and Michael Ferra!, and&#13;
State Senator Joseph Lourigan were at&#13;
Local 72 as participants in the UA\ '&#13;
"Know Your Legislator" program. In his speech Governor Lu ey&#13;
defended the severe budget cut he&#13;
presented to the Legi lature and hi&#13;
proposal to merge th~ Univer ity _ of&#13;
Wisconsin system of higher education&#13;
with the Wisconsin State Univer ity&#13;
system. ( continued on Page 3)&#13;
Mis ion Commit&#13;
Chancel/or&#13;
Comment&#13;
On Merger&#13;
m tin th&#13;
'Mission' Definition Elusive&#13;
Govern• Patrick Lucey.&#13;
On Wednes.cb , 1arch 11 th&#13;
with Chancellor \\ ·Iii to di u&#13;
purpo .. Scattered in the two&#13;
'Kafkaesque", "\\'or ing Cl " and '' 1r t enc tion tudent ."&#13;
·Kafkaesque" refer to the committee' t le of promotin&#13;
a saleable institution.&#13;
The ba ic purpo of the committee i to pre nt on ,&#13;
neatly-worded package th t can be old to the tate le · lature, th&#13;
people of the tate and, mo t of all. tho le t individual ho lill&#13;
either drop the a. e or pave the •ay for Par ide' in itutional futur .&#13;
On Feb. 18 Chancellor W Ilic nd the divi ional ch irmen went to&#13;
Madi on for a Ten Year Academic Program Re ·ew. At the Re ie&#13;
Vice-President Pere ' characterized the propo ed do ument a&#13;
"substantial", a "total campus document" repre nting all the&#13;
con tituent elements of the campu . and that it · addre d to&#13;
persons who might ma e deci ions of league status and le el of&#13;
funding." In hort, to be per asive to la men.&#13;
(.CXMrlinawed on Pag 6} &#13;
Constitution Ratified&#13;
Last week S2 students out of I&#13;
total exceeding 4.000 took the time to&#13;
ratify the Student Constitution. The&#13;
br •• kdown of vot es is as follows: 434&#13;
voted m favor of the Consuturion 93&#13;
In I, \trIm one vote thai was thrown&#13;
out&#13;
R..:,ne took the honors for student&#13;
parlK;1 lion with I total of 206 votes&#13;
while enoYt2 campus registered 1 I&#13;
t.. and GreenqulSt mad. up the&#13;
d,ff.",,,,, e w ,th 141 vote&#13;
tha. the Consmuucn is&#13;
ofll II) pproved the next step&#13;
I rd the re hutlon of real student&#13;
p.mm.nt is to begin Students&#13;
interested in running for office, should&#13;
pick up petitions .1 the stud.nt&#13;
activities office on any of the&#13;
campuses. The deadline for the&#13;
petitions will probably be sooner than&#13;
you think so if you're int.r.sted in&#13;
making it into the big tunes it would&#13;
be advisable to have your petition&#13;
filled by the end of the wee k.&#13;
Also, there will b. a public debate&#13;
on March 24 at Greenquist Hall in&#13;
room 103 II 7:30 p.m. At this time&#13;
the various candidates will be given the&#13;
opportunity to present their&#13;
platforms.&#13;
The Pub Loses Licence&#13;
by Kn-in McKay&#13;
of dw EWSCOPE S.. "&#13;
The Pub IS no'" a thlOg of the past.&#13;
Th. K.no ha Ctty CouncIl&#13;
unanomou\ly VOted to revoke the&#13;
tI.ern II·.nw on the Pub, 4500 11th&#13;
v., I t Tuesd Y night aft.r 3~&#13;
hours of t. um ny by 7 Wltn. s for&#13;
the rr.nw nd on. for the d.f.nse.&#13;
The revOCItlon was blsed on 139&#13;
calb to the Polic. SIOC. the Pub&#13;
optned la t summer; tlaht conYiclions&#13;
t for belOg open aft.r hours Ind&#13;
, for permitting nunors to 10It.r.&#13;
Oth.r evld.nc. Included a bIB&#13;
rOwn b full of... . some THC.&#13;
and ",me huh p,ck.d up off the noor&#13;
dunna polIce "check" F'b. 20 In&#13;
which S6 persons ".r. bust.d for&#13;
belOg too young.&#13;
Id Pel.r ·.d.... . the pnnclp.J&#13;
complamtanl for the city. testified&#13;
that the Pub was I .•. d.ng.r to&#13;
chlldr.n. H. r.ported seeong p.trons of&#13;
the Pub peltlOg old I.d.es ...lth&#13;
.. bills and on. m.l. palron I.t. at&#13;
nIght actu.lly ••. ",xpoSing hunself&#13;
nd usmg our public sid .... lks as a&#13;
lavatory f.c,lIty" H. testlfi.d a to&#13;
tt,ng on his "old f.shlOn.d porch:&#13;
but thought it sadd.ning to sit th.r.&#13;
(he bves across the street) due 10 the&#13;
"vulprily that went on in the cars ... "&#13;
Part of his consternation involved a&#13;
SIgll on the .ntrance to the Pub thaI&#13;
bopn. "Peac. broth ... and sist.rs ... "&#13;
He testified to witnessing massive&#13;
10llenng outside the Pub on the public&#13;
Sld.... a1k. "they like to come out and&#13;
smoke some."&#13;
Th. h.arlng. fill.d with I.gal&#13;
h.ggllng by the Cily Atty. Mich •• l&#13;
Flsh.r and the Pub's Atty. T.rry Rose.&#13;
.... s It t.nded by inl.r.st.d long hair.d&#13;
youth and off duty p.trolm.n.&#13;
Mrs. Barbara Capozza. own.r of the&#13;
ta\'em license and sole witness for the&#13;
d.f.nse I.stifi.d that she consid.r.d&#13;
lhe Pub more of a restaurant than a&#13;
tavern; that minors can frequent them&#13;
and th~t th.y can run 24 hours. day.&#13;
Sh. Slid that Mr. .d .... ski holl.r.d&#13;
and made a lot of noise and on one&#13;
occasion "d,dn't seem to b. hims.lf."&#13;
Th. 17 to 0 vol. of the council .....&#13;
2~ecipitated by requests from Police&#13;
Ol,.f Robert Bosman and Inspector&#13;
Joeseph Trotta to revoke the&#13;
license.&#13;
,&#13;
LETTERS TO THE ED1TOn&#13;
&amp;J.dJ~&#13;
St. Patrick's&#13;
Day&#13;
all week (we are)&#13;
~!!!EE 1.00OFF&#13;
IRISH BUTTONS&#13;
GREEN CARNATIONS&#13;
SHAMROCKS&#13;
IRISH FLAGS&#13;
on any giant&#13;
Shakey's Pizza with&#13;
this ad, until&#13;
March 31&#13;
Green&#13;
Beer&#13;
Pizza - Chicken&#13;
Mo·Jo Potatoes -Live Music&#13;
Open Daily 4:00 p.m. to 1:00 am&#13;
~ Saturday &amp; Sunday 11:00 a.·m.·&#13;
~ to 1:00 a.m.&#13;
SHAKEY'S H~t~·'Zr~:t.at&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
PIZZA PARLOR &amp;&#13;
11e ublie 'ltouse&#13;
To the editor.&#13;
It is my impression since I came to&#13;
parkside, that there. seems 10 be a g~e~1&#13;
striving for excellence going on. This IS&#13;
fine but how about if we slraighlen&#13;
our;"lves out a little bit first.&#13;
As a student, I am required by most&#13;
instructors, to take tests or hand ~n&#13;
papers on a certain day. at a certain&#13;
time. Fine! How about, the&#13;
instructors'! Where are their rules?&#13;
Why aren't they required 10 hand&#13;
these back. graded within a reasonable&#13;
time?&#13;
To obtain exc.llency. you need&#13;
.fficiency; without it. where Ihe hell&#13;
are we? I take pride in my work on&#13;
pap.rs and arlicl.s. as well as my&#13;
att.mpts at tests. I Iry to be efficienl.&#13;
If I'm not, I and only I will pay Ihe&#13;
price. However, if the instructor takes&#13;
his or her sweet time on grading and&#13;
assignment return. so what? That&#13;
seems to b. the attitude. W.Il. thaI&#13;
.ttitud. affects .veryone. We as&#13;
stud.nls w.il and wonder, while the&#13;
inslructors paychecks keep&#13;
coming--",n time. I wonder how they&#13;
...ould like il if th.y were lold. "I&#13;
hav.n'l gol your paychecks r.ady, I&#13;
was out of lown and didn'l r.ally have&#13;
tim •. " W.ll. d.ar faculty, those grades&#13;
and papers are part of our paycheck.&#13;
They are just as important.&#13;
I have had some excellenl&#13;
instructors both last semester as wellas&#13;
the pr.sent one. I'm nol knocking&#13;
those who may be ill or have&#13;
emergency commitments, but when&#13;
these excuses become everyday&#13;
matl.rs. that's a diff.rent story.&#13;
How about it, let's get it together.&#13;
David Dworak&#13;
To the .ditor,&#13;
Everyone seems to be concerned&#13;
with air pollution and the effecls on&#13;
our health. We are trying to do&#13;
something aboul it. Well my question&#13;
is, '\Y~en is someone going to do&#13;
something about the air pollution in&#13;
the classrooms at Greenquist Hall?"&#13;
Back at the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
~ampuses there is a "no smoking" rulf&#13;
m eff.cls, but at Greenquist there is&#13;
no such rule (and if there is it's nol&#13;
enforced). Ipersonally an affected by&#13;
those Ignoranl people who smoke in a&#13;
closed classroom with 20 or more&#13;
people in it (where the air is close&#13;
anyway). After awhile my eyes&#13;
redden, my throat gets sore, and I get&#13;
a headache. I cannot concentrate on&#13;
what matters are being discussed so I&#13;
get nothing out of the dass. I am not&#13;
paymg over $20 per credit for this. I&#13;
suggest that a uno smoking" ordinance&#13;
be ,enforced at Greenquisl Hall. If it&#13;
IS!1 t, sooner or later I am going to get&#13;
dlSl·urbed enough to slug the&#13;
19noramous that is smoking.&#13;
Norman B. Pietras&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
.&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS,&#13;
11 A.M, TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI, " SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24~&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55~&#13;
To the editor&#13;
I am writing in the ho&#13;
dear what is commOnlpes of !nakina&#13;
amon&amp;. ~any people. II 6.,understOOd&#13;
thepusstIli· system we ha to do With&#13;
Racine. . ve here ~&#13;
It seems to be well kn&#13;
the Racine studenn OWnamo"!&#13;
Greenquist or Kenosha b g0Ulg to&#13;
U.W.-Parksid. 'buses thaYIwray&#13;
of Iho&#13;
the bus b ·'yoU· e us ya moment. it isstill I1lIII&#13;
to catch It by going to th PO"Die&#13;
Main SI. and -" . Toda \COrner or&#13;
was riding the bus to Gt.1n oWev" I&#13;
we sped past a good fri.na&#13;
U&#13;
,,} Illlea&#13;
whQ had missed the bus and 0 mu10&#13;
hail it at the corn.r. wa't'Yi"l&#13;
I don't know if it is 1&#13;
buses to pick up on the: ICyof Iho&#13;
But I do think it couldm~ or nOl.&#13;
pohcy. or praclic. more oft. .11lIde&#13;
sludenls are there II n 'f Iatt . must ,-&#13;
happened before if not man -&#13;
befor.. y tinter&#13;
So, maybe if it Wouldn't be&#13;
much IroubI. Ih. buses could ton&#13;
mom.nl and pick th ... peopl stop a&#13;
only one stop and is nec.s~ up. Ib&#13;
people are lale.&#13;
"'*&#13;
GaryVanK~&#13;
PS-Congratulation, on an ..&#13;
publication (March I 1971) Th:1Ieot&#13;
feature articles were 8reat. ";e Iwt&#13;
the Tallenl Hall library. nW:: to&#13;
.llmes and curt.nt PlIlybo or&#13;
National Lampoon' are ~ IIlII&#13;
non-exlSlenl. I und.rsland thyDl:UtJ&#13;
aboul 3 days to a w •• k. lac&#13;
Hostesses Needed&#13;
Young. ladies who .r. 18 Ita...&#13;
opporlumly for community service .&#13;
the Kenosha Servic.men's Cenler:&#13;
the KYF. In spit. of the slowdowD .&#13;
Ihe lroop commitm.nls in Viet ~&#13;
Kenosha is visited .ach w•• bod by&#13;
150:200 young m.n in miJilaly&#13;
semce. Most of these young men rntd&#13;
then way down to the SenicemeD"&#13;
Center where attractive young ladies&#13;
help Ihem learn more about Ken.&#13;
be good listeners, dane. or play CII4l&#13;
The Servicemen's Cent.r is in need or&#13;
more hostesses to work .t the Celll&lt;l.&#13;
smce a weekend requires as many II&#13;
45 hostesses to staff the three bOIl!&#13;
shifls.&#13;
Young ladies inler.sled in lIus&#13;
community service project shouldcall&#13;
Mrs. Sam Od.lberg at 657·9350 IX&#13;
Mrs. Paul S.bastian at 694·3555 fIX&#13;
more information.&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Volume 3, Number 7 •&#13;
Monday, March 15. 1971&#13;
Warren Nedry EiIIII&#13;
Marc Eisen NewsEillll&#13;
John Koloen Copy EiIIII&#13;
Jim Nolan Business M...-&#13;
John Leighton Advertisinl M...-&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, Bill Sorensen, Bill JItIbI&#13;
Darrell Borger. Bob MainJand, ()oil&#13;
Loumos. Mike Kurth, Bob ~&#13;
Ken Konkol, Kevin McKay. J_&#13;
Casper, Paul Lomartire. Svell Ta1ll&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Narees Socha, Don Marjala, JoIaI Grty&#13;
Published weekly by theNt ~s(l1£&#13;
ORGANIZATION at rhe Unio'''''0&#13;
Wisconsin~ Parkside. 3700 waJlWCl"&#13;
Road, Kenosha. WisconsinEdlare&#13;
the opinion of the EdilorilJi ~&#13;
and are not to be conridtnd&#13;
opinions of the University. its snJtfIL&#13;
[acuity, or administration.&#13;
TELEPHONES: Business 652.-11&#13;
EdiloriaI658--4861 •• xt. 36&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; GreenhoUSes&#13;
1'lMooe: 1!l4~71l1&#13;
~I.nd FRAIl!1lEI~1OCI&#13;
302107bnt ••.&#13;
K.N08"A, WIKOfISI" .t'-&#13;
2 h IS, 19 I&#13;
Constitution Ratified&#13;
mtere 1ed in rurming for office, should&#13;
pi · up petition at the student&#13;
ti "tie office on any of the&#13;
ampu . The deadline for the&#13;
petitions Ytill probably be sooner than&#13;
you thin if you're interested in&#13;
ma it into the big times it would&#13;
be · ble to have your petition&#13;
fiiled by the end of the week.&#13;
l . there will be a public debate&#13;
on far h 24 at Greenquist Hall in&#13;
room 103 at :30 p.m. At this time&#13;
the , riou ndidates v.ill be given the&#13;
opportunity to present their&#13;
platfonn".&#13;
T1he Pub Loses Licence&#13;
but thought it ddening to it there&#13;
(he live r the treet due to the&#13;
' rut rity that went on in the cars . . . "&#13;
P rt of h" con temation involved a&#13;
on the entrance to the Pub that&#13;
be n, "Pea e brothers and isters ... "&#13;
H te tifted to witne ing ma ive&#13;
I. itering out "de the Pub on the public&#13;
de 1 , "they like to come out and&#13;
e me."&#13;
The hearing, filled with legal ha mg b the City Atty. Michael&#13;
Fi er d the Pub's Atty, Terry Rose,&#13;
ttended b&gt; in1ere ted long haired&#13;
th doff duty patrolmen. 1 . Barbara Capozza, oYtner of the&#13;
ta em Ii en nd le witne for the&#13;
defense te tified that she considered&#13;
the Pub more of a re taurant than a&#13;
ta,ern: that minor can frequent them&#13;
and th~t the • can run ~4 hour a day. e d that 1r. • 'edweski hollered&#13;
d m de a lot of noise and on one&#13;
oc · n 'didn't m to be himself."&#13;
The l to O te of the council was&#13;
(&gt;re. ·pitated b · reque t from Police&#13;
Ouet Robert Bosman and In pector&#13;
J_oe ph Trotta to revoke the&#13;
license.&#13;
eddiw.t&#13;
St. Patrick's&#13;
Day&#13;
aU week (we are)&#13;
F~~E 1.00 OFF&#13;
on any giant&#13;
hakey's Pizza with&#13;
IRISH BUTT S&#13;
GREE CAA ATIO s&#13;
SHA ROCKS&#13;
IRISH FL GS&#13;
Green&#13;
Beer&#13;
Pizza - Chicken&#13;
this ad, until&#13;
March 31&#13;
o-Jo Potatoes -Live Music&#13;
Open Daily 4:00 p.m. to 1:00&#13;
~ Saturday &amp; Sunday 11:00 a.m.&#13;
~ to 1:00 a.m.&#13;
S A Highua) 31 at KE 'S ~O;h Str!el, Kenosha&#13;
PIZZA PARLOR &amp;&#13;
ubli ou·e&#13;
,&#13;
LETTERS TO THE EDITon&#13;
To the editor. It is my impression since I came to&#13;
Parkside that there_ seems to be a great&#13;
striving for excellence going on. This is&#13;
fine but how about if we straighten&#13;
our~lves out a little bit first.&#13;
As a student, I am required by most&#13;
instructors, to take tests or hand ~ papers on a certain day, at a certain&#13;
time. Fine! How about the&#13;
instructors? Where are their rules?&#13;
Why aren't they required to hand&#13;
these back, graded within a reasonable&#13;
time?&#13;
To obtain excellency, you need&#13;
efficiency; without it, where the hell&#13;
are we? I take pride in my work on&#13;
papers and articles, as well as my&#13;
attempts at tests. I try to be efficient.&#13;
If I'm not, I and only I will pay the&#13;
price. However, if the instructor takes&#13;
his or her sweet time on grading and&#13;
assignment return, so what? That&#13;
seems to be the attitude. Well, that&#13;
attitude affects everyone. We as&#13;
students wait and wonder, while the&#13;
instructors paychecks keep&#13;
coming---on time. I wonder how they&#13;
would like it if they were told, "I&#13;
haven't got your paychecks ready, I&#13;
was out of town and didn't really have&#13;
time." Well, dear faculty, those grades&#13;
and papers are part of our paycheck.&#13;
They are just as important.&#13;
I have had some excellent&#13;
instructors both last semester as wellas&#13;
the present one. I'm not knocking&#13;
those who may be ill or have&#13;
emergency commitments, but when&#13;
these excuses become everyday&#13;
matters, that's a different story.&#13;
How about it, let's get it together. David Dworak&#13;
To the editor,&#13;
Everyone seems to be concerned&#13;
with air pollution and the effects on&#13;
our health. We are trying to do&#13;
~m~thing a~out it. Well my question&#13;
1s, "w~en 1s someone going to do&#13;
something about the air pollution in&#13;
the classrooms at Greenquist Hall?"&#13;
Back at the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
~puses there is a "no smoking" rule&#13;
in effects, but at Greenquist there is&#13;
no such rule (and if there is, it's not&#13;
enforced). I personally an affected by&#13;
those ignorant people who smoke in a closed classroom with 20 or more&#13;
people in it (where the air is close&#13;
anyway). After awhile my eyes&#13;
redden, my throat gets sore, and I get&#13;
a headache. I carmot concentrate on&#13;
what ma!ters are being discussed so I&#13;
get _nothing out of the class. I am not&#13;
paymg over $~0 per credit for this. I&#13;
suggest that a no smoking" ordinance&#13;
~ , enforced at Greenquist Hall. If it&#13;
is~ t, sooner or later I am going to get&#13;
~1sturbed enough to slug the&#13;
ignoramous that is smoking.&#13;
Norman B. Pietras&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
.&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
1l A,M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI. I SAT. Till 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
{triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
To the edi~qr, I am wntmg in the ho&#13;
clear what is commonlpes of making&#13;
amon&amp;_ ~any people. It ?asunderstOOd&#13;
the 6usSlll&amp;· system we h to do IVith&#13;
Racine. · · ave here in&#13;
It seems to be well kn&#13;
the Racine students own_ among&#13;
Greenquist or Kenosha b gomg to&#13;
U.W.-Parkside buses, tha~ ~ay of the&#13;
the bus b}'.' .a moment, it is stuiou rn· to catch 1t by going to th possib~&#13;
Main St. and ........ Toda e hcorner of&#13;
was riding the bus to Grein ~Wever I&#13;
we sped p~st a good frienau~} ~en&#13;
who had mISsed the bus and nu~&#13;
to hail it, at the corner. was IIYing&#13;
I don t know if it is I'&#13;
buses to pick up on the fi icy of the&#13;
But_ I do think it couitte or not. pohcy, or practice more oft . made&#13;
students are there It en tf late&#13;
happened before i not :uSl ha e&#13;
before. any tune,&#13;
So, maybe if it wouldn't be&#13;
much trouble the buses could too&#13;
moment and pick these peopl stop .a&#13;
only one stop and is necessae u~~ people are late. ry "'ltll&#13;
Gary Van Konin d&#13;
PS-Congratulations on an ex gsv d&#13;
publicatio~ (March I, 197 I). Th~lltnt&#13;
feature articles were great I've th Tll H . · gone . e a ent all library a number .times and current Playbo ci&#13;
Natio7:al Lampoon, are :Yn ~ non-existent. I understand th earl}&#13;
about 3 days to a week. ey Ill&#13;
Hostesses Needed&#13;
Young ladies who are I g have&#13;
opportunity for community service .&#13;
the Kenosha Servicemen's Center at&#13;
the KYF. In spite of the slowdown ·&#13;
the troop commitments in Viet ,&#13;
Kenosha is visited each weekend&#13;
I 50~200 young men in miliury&#13;
sen:'1ce. Most of these young men fmd&#13;
theu way down to the Servicemen's&#13;
Center where attractive young lad&#13;
help them learn more about Kenoslu&#13;
be good ~isteners, dance or play cards:&#13;
The Servicemen's Center is in need of&#13;
n:iore hostesses to work at the Center&#13;
since a weekend requires as many as&#13;
45 hostesses to staff the three Iii&#13;
shifts.&#13;
Young ladies interested in&#13;
community service project should&#13;
_Mrs. Sam Odelberg at 657-9350 or&#13;
Mrs. Paul Sebastian at 694-3555 fix&#13;
more information.&#13;
Newscape&#13;
Volume 3, Number 7&#13;
Monday, March 15, 1971&#13;
Warren Nedry&#13;
Marc Eisen&#13;
JohnKoloen&#13;
Jim Nolan&#13;
John Leighton Advertising.&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, Bill Sorensen, Bill Ja •&#13;
Darrell Borger, Bob Mainland,&#13;
Ken&#13;
Loumos,&#13;
Konkol,&#13;
Mike&#13;
Kevin&#13;
Kurth,&#13;
McKay&#13;
Bob ~&#13;
, J&#13;
Casper, Paul Lomartire, Sven Taffs.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Narees Socha, Don Marjala, John Grl&#13;
Published weekly by the M, II&#13;
ORGANIZATION at the Universm&#13;
Wisconsin- Parkside 3700 1111&#13;
Road, Kenosha, wfsconsin. Edi,&#13;
are the opinion of the Editorial&#13;
and are not to be consider&#13;
opinions of the University, its sn&#13;
faculty, or administration&#13;
TELEPHONES: Busine 6S2 , •.&#13;
Editorial 658-4861, ext.&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
Ranrs - Fnlit WIii - &amp;1111&#13;
Phone: 6fl4-6700&#13;
'ti ind FRANK WEIN~fOCK&#13;
S021 •7!1Tpj II, &#13;
Mucb 15,1971&#13;
AS~~~K~?eaks To Students On Draft, War&#13;
of Ille NeWllcope Staff&#13;
congressmen Les A~~n met with&#13;
dents in the Activities Bldg. on&#13;
~udaYMarch 12. At approx. 12:30&#13;
n began an informal speech&#13;
he cerning two issues which he felt to&#13;
:nc!osestto students: Ihe war an,d Ihe&#13;
draft. .&#13;
Heexplained that the focal point of&#13;
the Vietnamese situation is not a&#13;
·thdrawldale bUI Ihe nature of the&#13;
:thdrawI. As he saw it, the difference&#13;
between the date set by the&#13;
McGovern.Hatfieldproposal of Dec.&#13;
20 1971 (the bill has been&#13;
,~t,oduced) and the date which the&#13;
;residentneeds to fulfill his campaign&#13;
promise,which would be July of 1972&#13;
in order to effect the election is&#13;
negligible.The real issue is just who&#13;
will be withdrawn and what will be the&#13;
functions and duties of those left&#13;
behind.&#13;
He then moved to the draft. He&#13;
thinksthat the real alternatives to the&#13;
present draft are either a reformed&#13;
draft0' a volunteer army. At any rate&#13;
befeelsthe Old System will be junked.&#13;
Heexplained that the chances of the&#13;
draft law, which expires June 30,&#13;
beingabolished are slim indeed. He&#13;
statedthat the most change will center&#13;
on deferments-·they will be dropped.&#13;
At the close of his speech he&#13;
describedwhat he felt to be the three&#13;
paramont issues before the Congress.&#13;
These were revenue sharing, welfare&#13;
reform and some form of national&#13;
health care. He then solicited&#13;
questions from students&#13;
The first question concerned his&#13;
voleon Ihe SST. He stated that he was&#13;
opposed for reasons of ecology and&#13;
economics. "&#13;
Lucey&#13;
(continued from Page 1)&#13;
H. argued the merger made sound&#13;
fISCalsense. "I looked at the budget&#13;
and saw $1.5 million for the&#13;
Coordina ting Council of Higher&#13;
Education (CCHE), $3.5 million for&#13;
!he cent,a1administration of the WSU&#13;
system, and $11.5 million for the&#13;
central administration of the UW&#13;
system.&#13;
"Here's $16 million of central&#13;
administration costs before a single&#13;
studentreceives a single lecture from a&#13;
.ngle professor," he said. "I do not&#13;
lIunkyou can justify three educational&#13;
bureaucracies atop of our 13&#13;
campuses,"&#13;
"I can tell you I will not sign a&#13;
budget bill Ihal provides money for&#13;
the CCHE and the two board of&#13;
.... nts," he declared.&#13;
''We can save at least fOUf Of five&#13;
lIillion dollars in central&#13;
Ilbninistration costs alone by the&#13;
IIItIJer, and we can also eliminate&#13;
",ch costly duplication of programs&#13;
IIId the unseemly competition that&#13;
tllsts between the two systems.H&#13;
The Governor acknowiedged the&#13;
""enty of his cuts has brought him&#13;
criticism. "r don't think there are&#13;
tende,toes we failed to step on in the&#13;
process of pUlling together the&#13;
budget."&#13;
H•. explained that during the :"~"gnhe anticipated a revenue gap&#13;
300 million between budget&#13;
retjuests and money yielded from&#13;
taxes, but after the election he&#13;
When questioned about the S ce&#13;
~~ogra"l' Aspm replied that he favl::ed&#13;
,e ex~ oration of space but not as a&#13;
race WIth the Soviet Union He felt&#13;
.money could be saved by sl~wing the&#13;
tempo of the U.S.-Soviet Space race&#13;
kA~tehseveral more questions he wa~&#13;
~ e ow he landed his seat on The&#13;
rm~d Servtces Committee, He&#13;
explamed that he sent his people to&#13;
the members of the election&#13;
committee to feel out their response&#13;
Photo by Bob Mainland.&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin at UWp,&#13;
to certain government officials that he .&#13;
worked for. He mentioned Robert&#13;
MacNamara as one of these, If he&#13;
received a favorable reaction by&#13;
committee members to his former&#13;
employers, he had those employers&#13;
give that member a cali.&#13;
He also mentioned that the death of&#13;
Mendel Rivers opened the door for his&#13;
appointment. Had Rep. Rivers still&#13;
been in power he felt he would never&#13;
have made it. By way of illumination&#13;
he mentioned that only 2 doves&#13;
discovered that taxes produced Sioo&#13;
million less than expected and that&#13;
budget requests exceeded more than&#13;
$100 million expected.&#13;
He said,"1 was not about to go back&#13;
to the people of Wisconsin with a&#13;
proposal for $500 million in new&#13;
taxes ...&#13;
Lucey said then a thoroudl review&#13;
of the budget began and f,om the&#13;
originai requests of $2,202,000 over&#13;
$280 million were cut. "We have a&#13;
very good budget bureau, and budget&#13;
requests are worked out in close&#13;
cooperation with it and are made just&#13;
about as tight as they can."&#13;
"So when you cut $280 million out&#13;
of the requests you're not just shaVing&#13;
off fat, you're also cutting into the&#13;
lean" he emphasized.&#13;
"You might say," he continued,&#13;
"Well fine but don't cut into&#13;
programs that affect us. Cut into the&#13;
programs we're not concerned ab?ut.&#13;
Don't cut into Welfare and educatIOn.&#13;
cut into something else."&#13;
"The fact is of course, that 2{3 of&#13;
, d' the budget is for education, an you re&#13;
going to have to do something about&#13;
welfare requests because they amount&#13;
to $500 million.&#13;
"So when you take away welfare&#13;
and education there's only a f~w&#13;
hundred million dollars left, whIch&#13;
prOVides the costs of all other state&#13;
service "It was not easy to mak.e&#13;
these cuts," he declared. ','Every. one&#13;
was painful. Every one dlsappomted&#13;
somebody, and when you have $280&#13;
million worth you can be sure yo~&#13;
disappointed just about everybody.&#13;
(Michael Harrington and lumself) were&#13;
on the committee, that the majority of&#13;
members were Southern Democrats&#13;
and that th~iI median age was 59&#13;
The sessoon ended on a Liaht note.&#13;
The last question concerned the resent&#13;
appointment of former represenuuve&#13;
Shadeburg as a presidenual advisor&#13;
Aspin felt that there were I&#13;
significant aspects to this event. The&#13;
first was proof thai "there's still a lot&#13;
of fat in the defense department&#13;
budget" and the second "\1,&#13;
Shadeburg has proved that he ';'pport~&#13;
at least some form of welfare."&#13;
. After the discussion. , E COPE&#13;
interviewed the Congressman.&#13;
Concerning the Lucey budge.&#13;
propo~ Aspin explained, "1 reall)&#13;
haven t had a chance to look at the&#13;
Lucey budget. 1 received a copy tn the&#13;
mail and I JUSl haven't had a chance 10&#13;
!ook. at it. I don't really have any&#13;
influence on the thing at all."&#13;
This prompted the question of his&#13;
relationship with the governor and his&#13;
ability to Influence him. He said thai&#13;
he and the governor were good friends.&#13;
but as far as exerting any influence.&#13;
"It's hard to say, I hav.. n't tned and I&#13;
just don't know." He also felt that h.&#13;
wasn't able to comment on the&#13;
proposed merger of the University&#13;
system.&#13;
On the third parry issue he suggesled&#13;
that McCarthy's. forces are now&#13;
considerably smaller than they "ere tn&#13;
'68.&#13;
The last question covered Welfare&#13;
reform. He supports the 'ixon Plan&#13;
with some alteration, He did not&#13;
elaborate.&#13;
Army Recruiter Here&#13;
An army officer selection learn will&#13;
answer questions about officer&#13;
candidate school on March 1 th, from&#13;
10:00 ·3:00. The tearn woll m lude&#13;
WAC representative and ",,11 be&#13;
located in room :!09 at Tallent Hall&#13;
rRa!j rRadigan ~&#13;
OOcmJ-/.J 9&#13;
For&#13;
Rt's~'alio"s&#13;
Pho"t'&#13;
....~.694-04S'&#13;
SOUf11: IIM-Ql:lDoUl JIlICtoU) MOIITM01 nAft L'"&#13;
XIHOSHA. WI8COHa.t"&#13;
0037 • 22nd A nu.&#13;
kenou"o, Wi1'Ol"l n 53140&#13;
f~o.lk&lt;ry _&#13;
6'4~ 4 -, ___&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
\n~\ &lt;&#13;
t ~ STUDENT ACTIVITY ~t&#13;
BUILDING ONLY&#13;
MALT SPECIAL&#13;
WED.· FRI.&#13;
MARCH 17-19&#13;
AT&#13;
/&#13;
00&#13;
Two chocolate malts for the&#13;
25(&#13;
price of one ---&#13;
... ...-....-- .&#13;
I , I l&#13;
As~i~K~?eaks To Students On Draft, War&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
congressmen Les ~~~n met with&#13;
dents in the Act!Vlhes Bldg. on&#13;
~udaY March 12. At approx. 12:30&#13;
n b~gan an informal speech&#13;
he cerning two issues which he felt to&#13;
:"ctosest to students: the war an.d the&#13;
draft. h h c 1 . He explained t a_t t e. 1oca_ pomt of&#13;
the Vietnamese situation 1s not a&#13;
·thdrawl date but the nature of the&#13;
:~thdrawl. As he saw it, the difference&#13;
between the date set by the&#13;
\lcGovern-Hatfield proposal of Dec.&#13;
2o 1971 (the bill has been&#13;
e~troduced) and the date which the&#13;
~resident needs to fulfill his campaign&#13;
promise, which would be July of 1972&#13;
in order to effect the election is&#13;
negligible. The real issue is just who&#13;
11;11 be withdrawn and what will be the&#13;
functions and duties of those left&#13;
behind.&#13;
He then moved to the draft. He&#13;
thinks that the real alternatives to the&#13;
present draft are either a reformed&#13;
draft or a V(?lunteer army. At any rate&#13;
he feels the Old System will be junked.&#13;
He explained that the chances of the&#13;
draft law, which expires June 30,&#13;
being abolished are slim indeed. He&#13;
tated that the most change will center&#13;
on deferments--they will be dropped.&#13;
At the close of his speech he&#13;
described what he felt to be the three&#13;
paramont issues before the Congress.&#13;
These were revenue sharing, welfare&#13;
reform and some form of national&#13;
health care. He then solicited&#13;
questions from students&#13;
The first question concerned his&#13;
rnte on the SST. He stated that he was&#13;
opposed for reasons of ecology and&#13;
economics."&#13;
Lucey&#13;
(continued from Page 1)&#13;
He argued the merger made sound&#13;
fiscal sense. "I looked at the budget&#13;
and saw $1.5 million for the&#13;
Coordinating Council of Higher&#13;
Education (CCHE), $3.5 million for&#13;
the central administration of the WSU&#13;
ystem, and $11.5 million for the&#13;
central administration of the UW&#13;
sy tern.&#13;
"Here's $16 million of central&#13;
administration costs before a single&#13;
tudent receives a single lecture from a&#13;
gle professor," he said. "I do not&#13;
trunk you can justify three educational&#13;
bureaucracies atop of our 13&#13;
campuses."&#13;
' I can tell you I will not sign a&#13;
budget bill that provides money for&#13;
tilt CCHE and the two board of&#13;
regents," he declared.&#13;
"We can save at least four or five&#13;
million dollars in central&#13;
admini !ration costs alone by the&#13;
merger, and we can also eliminate&#13;
much co tly duplication of programs&#13;
~ the unseemly competition that ' 1 t between the two systems."&#13;
The Governor acknowledged the&#13;
JeVeray of his cuts has brought him&#13;
criticism. "I don't think there are&#13;
tender toes we failed to step on in the&#13;
process of putting together the&#13;
budget."&#13;
He . explained that during the&#13;
1paign he anticipated a revenue gap&#13;
0 300 million between budget&#13;
requests and money yielded from&#13;
\axe , but after the election he&#13;
When ques_tioned about the Space&#13;
f~ogram, As~m replied that he favored _e ex~loration of space but not as a&#13;
race with the Soviet Union. He felt&#13;
money could be saved by slowing the&#13;
tempo of the U.S.-Soviet Space race.&#13;
After several more questions he was&#13;
asked how he landed his seat on The&#13;
Arm~d Services Committee. He&#13;
explamed that he sent his people to&#13;
the !llembers of the election&#13;
committee to feel out their response&#13;
Photo by Bob Main d.&#13;
Congressman Les Aspin at UWP.&#13;
to certain government officials that he&#13;
worked for. He mentioned Robert&#13;
MacNamara as one of these. If he&#13;
received a favorable reaction by&#13;
committee members to his former&#13;
employers, he had those employers&#13;
give that member a call.&#13;
He also mentioned that the death of&#13;
Mendel Rivers opened the door for his&#13;
appointment. Had Rep. Rivers still&#13;
been in power he felt he would never&#13;
have made it. By way of illumination&#13;
he mentioned that only 2 dove&#13;
discovered that taxes produced I 00&#13;
million less than expected and that&#13;
budget requests exceeded more than&#13;
$100 million expected.&#13;
He said,"I was not about to go back&#13;
to the people of Wisconsin with&#13;
proposal for $500 million in new&#13;
taxes."&#13;
Lucey said then a thorough review&#13;
of the budget began and irom the&#13;
original requests of $2,202,000 over&#13;
$280 million were cut. "We have a&#13;
very good budget bureau, and budget&#13;
requests are worked out in close&#13;
cooperatinn with it and are made ju t&#13;
about as tight as they can."&#13;
"So when you cut $280 million out&#13;
of the requests you 're not ju t shaving&#13;
off fat, you're also cutting into the&#13;
lean " he emphasized. "You might say," he continued,&#13;
"Well fine but don't cut into&#13;
programs that affect us .. Cut into the&#13;
programs we're not concerned ab?ut.&#13;
Don't cut into Welfare and education.&#13;
cut into something else."&#13;
"The fact is, of course, that 2/3 .of&#13;
the budget is for education, and you re&#13;
going to have to do omethmg about&#13;
welfare requests because they amount&#13;
to $500 million. "So when you take away welfare&#13;
and education there's only a f~w&#13;
hundred million dollars left, which&#13;
provides the costs of all other tate&#13;
service "It was not easy to make&#13;
these cuts,, he declared. "Every one&#13;
was painf~l. Every one disappointed somebody, and when you have $280&#13;
million worth you can be sure yo~&#13;
disappointed just about everybody.&#13;
The last que ti n CO\Cred&#13;
reform. He upport th 'i. n Pl n&#13;
with ome alteration. He did not&#13;
elaborate.&#13;
Army Recruiter Here&#13;
An arm · officer&#13;
an wer&#13;
Fr&#13;
a , !\CO 531 0&#13;
• .&#13;
. ~&#13;
it's the&#13;
rea thing&#13;
\nl\J \&#13;
'),. ~ STUDE&#13;
&lt;&#13;
T ACT V TY tfet /&#13;
BUILDING 0&#13;
MALT SPEC Al&#13;
T&#13;
7-&#13;
Two chocolate malts for the&#13;
price of one ---&#13;
25( &#13;
March 15, 1971&#13;
'CGotinued "un Paae Il&#13;
"The gains Weuld come more from&#13;
control of prognm development than&#13;
control of unified admilllStration. But&#13;
the ulumate co ts of merger are not&#13;
hkely to gen.rat. huge savmgs for the&#13;
lal e." he said.&#13;
The Chanc.lIor went on to say.&#13;
"The k.y 10 tM whole thmg. as I see&#13;
II. are the budgetary Implications.&#13;
"''hat seem clear is that If the merger&#13;
'SUcceed in \ing money It will be at&#13;
the e pense of presen; funding 1evels&#13;
10 educanon, nd In retauon to u,&#13;
"",'ibl at the expen of educalion&#13;
quahty That I where ""e have to&#13;
foe sour pnncrple concern ••&#13;
"The 10.... nor' b~1 fund none&#13;
,f Ih. new progr m sought for&#13;
In trucHon, tudent servh ..'t. the&#13;
hbr ry. 10 lNCtlOnal computing.&#13;
t tpt 1 0"er for pn",-e In rease an&#13;
e I ImS r~ 10 1nstrucHon and the&#13;
h r&#13;
The Park. de 3dmIOIstration sought&#13;
10 C 1 bit h f ur ne.... majors:&#13;
amputer ..tenct. Indu Hiat&#13;
Re lion. Graph. Art. and the&#13;
Ih tor uf I nee and Tt&lt;hnolog)&#13;
lhot ,,"ould h.. e I 334.000&#13;
G v loor LU&lt;. rc·omm.nded th.~&#13;
not be fund d "'" SOUghlw.r. n.w&#13;
tudent I , tabhshmcnt of a&#13;
IItf Intern tcachm&amp; program. credit&#13;
bv c amU\3t1 n. an I "tant Dean of&#13;
Iud nl. ltd a drug abuse program.&#13;
(i\,,)'.C'rnor Luce&gt; recommended none&#13;
be lund.d&#13;
Th hbrar). once housed ,n Ihe&#13;
ubI I) Learnmg ('.nt.r w uld no' be&#13;
bl' 10 mol&lt; It book to th. new&#13;
bUild"'! be 'au th. moVIng would&#13;
n I be funded under Lu«y's budg.1.&#13;
Ihe L "self wouldb. WIthOUt it&#13;
pi nn.d faclllti.s b ... use the&#13;
~~lQ,OOO \Ought to Implement Lhem is&#13;
I o&lt;&gt;tbudgeted.&#13;
n I,emlzed budg.' as SOUghlby&#13;
P rk ,d. and the ubs.quenl&#13;
rt ommemt:luon of the Regents. the&#13;
('( liE and Ih. Governor is a follows:&#13;
Th. Chancellor' response to the&#13;
Governor' proposed budg.t was. "It&#13;
'ftlll be a ...ery serious blow to the&#13;
development of the campus if the&#13;
luce) budget prevail .&#13;
·'In the farst pla..:e, he 15 proposing&#13;
u ·tlon '" r UW bud er&#13;
DECUIIO J'ft:M: (B.. • .. I~)&#13;
_ '., .' ~ MajorS:&#13;
LamIDI C8J~, Word ProceSI1Illl. Pri;:'pbi Arts Hist. of&#13;
Ccmpule' Sclenoe. 1DCkJIlJi'1 ReI., G C ,&#13;
Scle&gt;c:e and Tec:bDOIotlY - IPrice uerea."&gt;&#13;
mJDENT SERVICES: Dean of&#13;
Intern Teod1ID&amp; Credit by Exam. Grad. CbeCk, Assl&#13;
Studenla Placement, Info Office. PsydJ. eounsel·. DrUll&#13;
Abuae, vocalioDa1 C"""",ullll·&#13;
LIBRARY: . P 'odicals Foreign&#13;
Move to lLC, G&lt;lft. Pub., Maps. MUSIC, en •&#13;
Pub!. OUl-&lt;li·Print,Auto. eire. System, - IPrice Iaer ... es)&#13;
PHYSICAL PLANT: . hillin' V hicle Fuel Power" Ligbt, CUStodial. Healinll-C g, e&#13;
~. " Fleet, Grounda Maintenance&#13;
PROft:cnON" SECURITY:&#13;
TNSmucnONAL COMPUTING:&#13;
Ope!1ltiooa, Systems, Time. Applicatiooa, Consult.&#13;
GRANT MATCHING FUNDS:&#13;
FACILITIES MANAGEMENT AND PLANNING AND CON·&#13;
STRUCTION:&#13;
SPACE RENTAL:&#13;
BUSINESS SERVICES: Purcbaaing, Payroll. per.;onnel. Bursar. Risk Management.&#13;
Centrex. Mail. Duplicating&#13;
ADMiNTSTRATIVE DATA PROCESSING:&#13;
Student Recorda. Library, Financial Aids, Space, Personnel.&#13;
Simulation. Reporting&#13;
F1NA CE PART YEAR POSITIONS:&#13;
PHY. ED.·AmLETICS:&#13;
Aquatics. Women's P.E., Physical 'Therapy&#13;
PUBLICATIONS AND PUBLIC INFORMATION:&#13;
TOTAL&#13;
Regents&#13;
(inCludes added&#13;
fringes and&#13;
Class. Merit) UW·Parkside&#13;
$ 948.400&#13;
279,400&#13;
425.500&#13;
375,000&#13;
100,000&#13;
146,000&#13;
500.000&#13;
437,900&#13;
442.000&#13;
99,400&#13;
$ 879.200&#13;
223,500&#13;
432,300&#13;
1,313,000&#13;
223,000&#13;
255.900&#13;
~&#13;
154,900&#13;
~&#13;
338.200&#13;
324,100&#13;
110.800&#13;
C.C.H.E. Governor&#13;
$ 923.700 •&#13;
15....&#13;
223.500 00-&#13;
432,300 81••&#13;
465,800 465,8110&#13;
206,000 41.000&#13;
255.900 -0.&#13;
~ 00-&#13;
~ 00-&#13;
~ -0.&#13;
338.200 -0.&#13;
324.100 -0.&#13;
110,800 00-&#13;
81,800&#13;
114,700&#13;
$5,439.400&#13;
-0. ~ -0.&#13;
89,800 89.800 00-&#13;
$4.344.700 $3.370.100 $ 612.100&#13;
of S9.3 million. We don" know&#13;
.exactly what rhe shared portion of&#13;
that base budget cut would be at&#13;
Parkside. But what we do know is that&#13;
w. ..pect roughly 1,000 more&#13;
students next year.&#13;
"And it we're cut back in the base,&#13;
it can only lead to less staff. less&#13;
programs, and less support resources&#13;
thot are involved in the base." he said.&#13;
"I think the first thing we would be&#13;
hurt on is the base cut. .. ;' he&#13;
continued. "The second impact would&#13;
be that by putting us on the WSU&#13;
funding formula level lhere would be&#13;
not only further reduction for new&#13;
students, but also for the ones we have&#13;
here already,"&#13;
He was asked then if the WSU&#13;
schools and Parkside would be funded&#13;
on the same levels. "This is exactly&#13;
whar the Go...~rnor has sed in his&#13;
budget whether the merger is&#13;
a.ccomplished or not."&#13;
"The Governor is reaching for&#13;
merger through lhe budget; because&#13;
the funding levels he has proposed for&#13;
all campuses in the UW are the same as&#13;
in the proposed syslem.&#13;
"In other' words, under the&#13;
Governor's proposal, the Madison&#13;
campus, which has a distinctively high&#13;
level of funding. would be at level I.&#13;
Level 2 for undergraduate instruction&#13;
would be funded at exactly the same&#13;
level as institutions in the UWS&#13;
system," he said.&#13;
Wyllie continued, "Here we are at&#13;
an early slage of developmenl with a&#13;
great many legitimate for lhe studenls&#13;
and staff that have not yet been met.&#13;
These specific needs as identified in&#13;
our budget presentation and budget&#13;
have been largely ignored or wiped&#13;
out ..&#13;
The Ch a ncellor concluded b;&#13;
saying, "Until a new campus has been~&#13;
~n business for four full years, Or until&#13;
II reaches a 6 or 7.000 studenl lev.l it&#13;
doesn't have the physical r.sor~&#13;
staff and programs need.d to functi";&#13;
as an established institution.&#13;
"U takes lhat long for a new&#13;
campus to match up to lh. fund"&#13;
formula establi:lhed for lhe syst.m.~&#13;
are a year or two away from this."&#13;
"That is why, in the past, w. have&#13;
asked for and have gotten, from earlier&#13;
administration, some help in the 'start&#13;
up' costs," he stated.&#13;
"If we don't get furth.r h.lp 010"&#13;
these lines, and, in addition, we're&#13;
asked to take cuts in our bue IJlII&#13;
funding formuli, it's going to have •&#13;
very damaging effect," he .mphasiud.&#13;
DANCE&#13;
WOODEN&#13;
ROAD&#13;
Friday, March 19th&#13;
9:00-1:00 a.m.&#13;
adm. $1.00&#13;
ST. PATRICK'S&#13;
DAY SPECIAL&#13;
25¢&#13;
~&#13;
WED., MARCH 17&#13;
~&#13;
Glass of Green Beer &amp;&#13;
Box of popcorn&#13;
Parks ide &amp; Wisconsin '0 required.&#13;
ch 1 , 19 1&#13;
DECI.SIO,' ln:M: (Bien.aial Increase)&#13;
UW-Parkside&#13;
Regents&#13;
(includes added&#13;
fringes and&#13;
Class. Merit) C.C.H.E. Governor&#13;
1D1er. :C tel' Word Processing Price Increase, M~jors:&#13;
~ ~en~. lndustri~ Rel'., Graphic Arts, Hist. of&#13;
Science and Tecl:mology - (Price Increases)&#13;
$ 948,400&#13;
STUDE, i'T RVICES: A t Dean of&#13;
Intern Teaching, credit by Exam, Grad. Check, ~ Drug&#13;
udents, Placement, Info Office, Psych. Coun ·•&#13;
Abuse, Vocational Counseling.&#13;
279,400&#13;
LIBRARl': · p ·odicats Foreign&#13;
ove to LLC, Goft. Pub., Maps, Music, en , 425,500&#13;
Puhl. Out-&lt;i-Print, Auto. Circ. System, - (Price Increases)&#13;
PHY JC L Pl.A! :T: . . ,-:n:- y hicle&#13;
Fuel Power &amp; Light. CUstodial, Heating~w.u=g, e&#13;
Main. &amp; Fleet, Groimds iaintenance&#13;
PROTECTIO .. &amp; ECURITY:&#13;
1,293,700&#13;
195,600&#13;
I:· TRU 110. 'AL CO:\fPUTING:&#13;
Operations, Systems, Time, Applications, Consult.&#13;
GRA.: i'T • TCHI! 'G FUNDS:&#13;
375,000&#13;
100,000&#13;
FACILITIES • IA!' GE. tE, 'T AND PLANNING AND CON- 146,000&#13;
UCTIO. 500,000 ':&#13;
CE RE.i'T L:&#13;
BU I R\'ICES:&#13;
Pu:rdlasing, Pa)TOll, Personnel, Bursar, Risk Management, 437,900&#13;
Centrex, fail, Duplicating&#13;
AD, 11. 'lSTRATI\'E DATA PROCESSIN~:&#13;
tudent Records, Ubrary, Financial Aids, Space, Personnel,&#13;
1mulat1on, Reporting&#13;
FI.· . CE PART YEAR PO ITIOSS:&#13;
PHY. ED.-ATIILETIC :&#13;
442,000&#13;
99,400&#13;
Aquatics, Women· P.E., Physical Therapy&#13;
p BLI 110. · A. 'D PUBLIC I!l.'FOR. IATION:&#13;
81,800&#13;
114,700&#13;
o 9.3 milh n. We don't know&#13;
.e actly what the shared portion of&#13;
that b ,e budget cut would be at&#13;
P r ide. But what we do know i that&#13;
we e pect roughly 1,000 more&#13;
tudent ne. t year. .. nd it we 're cut back in the base,&#13;
it an only lead to le staff, less&#13;
program . and le upport resources&#13;
that are involved in the base." he said.&#13;
"I think the first thing we would be&#13;
hurt on i the base cut. . . ," he&#13;
continued. "The second impact would&#13;
be that by putting us on the WSU&#13;
funding formula level there would be&#13;
not only further reduction for new&#13;
tudent . but also for the ones we have&#13;
here already."&#13;
He was asked then if the WSU&#13;
chools and Parkside would be funded&#13;
on the same levels. "This is exactly&#13;
.&#13;
TOTAL $5,439,400&#13;
budget whether the merger- is&#13;
accomplished or not."&#13;
''The Governor is reaching for&#13;
merger through the budget; because&#13;
the funding levels he has proposed for&#13;
all campuses in the UW are the same as&#13;
in the proposed system.&#13;
"In other · words, under the&#13;
Governor's proposal, the Madison&#13;
campus, which has a distinctively high&#13;
level of funding, would be at level 1.&#13;
Level 2 for undergraduate instruction&#13;
would be funded at exactly the same&#13;
level as institutions in the UWS&#13;
system." he said.&#13;
Wyllie continued, "Here we are at&#13;
an early stage of development with a&#13;
great many legitimate for the students&#13;
and staff that have not yet been met.&#13;
These specific needs as identified in&#13;
our budget presentation and budget&#13;
have been largely ignored or wiped&#13;
out."&#13;
$ 879,200&#13;
223,500&#13;
432,300&#13;
1,313,000&#13;
223,000&#13;
255,900&#13;
-0-&#13;
154,900&#13;
-0-&#13;
338,200&#13;
324,100&#13;
110,800&#13;
-0-&#13;
89,800&#13;
$4,344,700&#13;
$ 923,700&#13;
223,500&#13;
432,300&#13;
465,800&#13;
206,000&#13;
255,900&#13;
-0-&#13;
-0-&#13;
-0-&#13;
338,200&#13;
324,100&#13;
110,800&#13;
-0-&#13;
89,800&#13;
$3,370,100&#13;
• 1s,90o&#13;
89,(0e&#13;
465,800&#13;
41,000&#13;
-().&#13;
-().&#13;
-().&#13;
~&#13;
-().&#13;
$ 612,100&#13;
The Chancellor concluded b&#13;
saying, "Until a new campus has beenin&#13;
business for four full years, or until&#13;
it reaches a 6 or 7,000 student level It&#13;
doesn't have the physical resor~&#13;
staff and programs needed to functio~ as an established institution.&#13;
"It takes that long for a new&#13;
campus to match up to the fund '&#13;
formula establi!!hed for the system. ~ are a year or two away from this."&#13;
"That is why, in the past, we ha\e&#13;
asked for and have gotten, from earlier&#13;
administration, some help in the' tart&#13;
up' costs." he stated.&#13;
"If we don't get further help alo~&#13;
these lines, and, in addition, ~e·re&#13;
asked to take cuts in our base and&#13;
funding formuli, it's going to ha\e a&#13;
very damaging effect," he emphasiztd.&#13;
DANCE ST. PATRICK'S&#13;
WOODEN&#13;
ROAD&#13;
Fr· day, March 19th&#13;
9:00-1:00 a.m.&#13;
adm. $1.00&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wisconsin ID required.&#13;
DAY SPECIAL&#13;
WED., MARCH 17&#13;
• Glass of Green Beer &amp;&#13;
Box of Popcorn&#13;
25¢&#13;
• &#13;
Hal Stern.&#13;
grem who is adviser to the&#13;
("",~';ed Student Cnalition, the film&#13;
"'IY and the Black' Student Union,&#13;
'" leaderof last May's student strike&#13;
III! htlped with Teach-in preparations&#13;
Illbe time.&#13;
Rlprding his campaign Stern said,&#13;
'Wesimply do not have democratic&#13;
I"femment when QUf. elec~ed&#13;
IlP""ntatives take part in settmg&#13;
lofernment policies without&#13;
~Iting their constituents."&#13;
'10 return governmental control to&#13;
lite people in the first ward, [ would&#13;
bold regular ward meetings," he&#13;
.. Ie&lt;!. "These meetings will provide&#13;
• opportunity for people to fmd [ out&#13;
""', bhappening on the City Council,&#13;
bu' also to tell me what things they&#13;
~ Ishould be working for as their&#13;
~tative."&#13;
At the present his campaign centers&#13;
naacl three issues; Housing and&#13;
filii, Labor and Unemployment, and&#13;
HeohbCare.&#13;
lie said many of the houses in the&#13;
6nl ward are being allowed to&#13;
dCleriorate. and that stricter&#13;
lIIorcement of housing codes is&#13;
IIe&lt;Itd to remedy this. He also&#13;
Wbevesthere is serious need for new&#13;
-costhousing in the ward.&#13;
Seem said there should be a tax&#13;
meliOR made between homeowners&#13;
~ .'blentee landlords which means a&#13;
llllllction between' property for "':W use and property for profit.&#13;
reels what is needed is a&#13;
ptOPessivecounty-wide tax structure&#13;
It up so that corporations and&#13;
-ulthy individuals cannot avoid&#13;
~lte FrelCll erope.gowns&#13;
or Ioly lQud,ec1 with embrold-&#13;
~?{refl&lt;h rQSes (relIU!inber&#13;
rr 0 • ex~te. baDd made&#13;
r.";;b. laoe--salln rlbbons--&#13;
bJ L~r""" braI_. Deslgned_&#13;
-U I •lbeae g9wns come lU&#13;
lie ""11k: sblrt, shortle or graii-&#13;
~. aJId ~ tre some petgnor&#13;
l.llIIt liIldt&gt; enaa- ar'ldea1lortlle&#13;
Ilft~ 1IOald-1Ilat&lt;l a "elcame&#13;
~IICI A_ X.RD ....&#13;
• 652·2611&#13;
Marc:b IS. 1971&#13;
Eating In&#13;
Phaying their fair tax share. He said if&#13;
t IS 15 not done soon Ra .&#13;
lose its tax base to the sUbu~~sn would&#13;
Stem said the working man is hurt&#13;
most by inflation and that the only&#13;
way ~e can gurantee himself a decent&#13;
wage IS by the right to strike.&#13;
He emphasized, "It should be made&#13;
clear that wages increases for workers&#13;
~ave ,not been the primary SOurce of&#13;
inflation, From 1960-1970 COrporate&#13;
profits after taxes increased 75% while&#13;
average weekly wages for employees&#13;
went up only 35%."&#13;
Concerning health -care he said&#13;
"Health care in Racine is v~ry good if&#13;
you have the money to pay for it.&#13;
There IS not one public health clinic or&#13;
public hospital 'in the city. Many&#13;
people cannot afford medical&#13;
insurance. In addi tion t simple monthly&#13;
doctor bills can be a tremendous&#13;
burden for old people and families&#13;
with several children."&#13;
"Racine needs a public health clinic&#13;
very biftIly," he stated. "I would&#13;
support or initiate any efforts to&#13;
establish one."&#13;
A Citizens for Stern committee has&#13;
been formed, and is holding a meeting&#13;
Sunday March 21 at Stern's house,&#13;
812 College Avenue. He said anyone&#13;
interested in helping is invited to&#13;
come ..&#13;
by Prof. Kook&#13;
I never do much baking but I have&#13;
found a recipe for a lemon cake which is&#13;
so simple you can '1 go wrong.&#13;
Here's what you need:&#13;
lemon cake mix lemon JeUo&#13;
2/3 cup water ~3 cup vegetable oil&#13;
4 eggs· I tablespoon lemon e. tract&#13;
pinch of salt Ica_ pan&#13;
H ow to prepare'.&#13;
Mix everthing together: put into pan:&#13;
bake at 350 degeees for 30 minutes. Let&#13;
it cool a little before you take it out 0 r&#13;
the cake pan.&#13;
Speaking of after dinner treats, a&#13;
friend from Louisiana gave me lhi&#13;
receipe for home-made coffee brand). It&#13;
tastes great and costs about S~.OO I&#13;
fifth to make. Here's what you need&#13;
I cup of grain alcohol (available at&#13;
liquor store)&#13;
~ cup of while Karo syrup&#13;
~cup honey .&#13;
3 heaping teaspoons instant coffee&#13;
dash of vani lIa&#13;
empty bOIlI. (preferably an empty&#13;
fifth)&#13;
Mix all ingredients together m fiFth&#13;
bottle; add enough water to fill. Shake.&#13;
You mighLexperiment to your tast. For&#13;
example, use brewed coffee instead of&#13;
instant for a richer coffee flavor.&#13;
Serve as an after dinner liquor,&#13;
••••• :Cil.,..&#13;
SPORT NOTES&#13;
Tennis courts will be available at&#13;
Pershing Park on March 15.&#13;
ThOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
eu: Gallery Ont&#13;
503 fain t.&#13;
Racine&#13;
10% tudent Discount&#13;
011 all Posters &amp; Fram&#13;
r,.,A' -"f~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/&amp;-r&#13;
Sia •&#13;
eoee 40-.. AVE.&#13;
KEHOOlHA- Ot.7.1In4&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Gandy&#13;
McDonald\ Guide&#13;
to the care and feeding&#13;
of the st t b y.&#13;
The Hamburger&#13;
To make eating simple, start with&#13;
the basics: A pure beef paille on a&#13;
satisfying bun. Uncomplicated&#13;
and good.&#13;
French Frla&#13;
With sandwiches. or alone Or w th&#13;
f"ends Being hghtwe'ghl as ell&#13;
as crisp and fresh. they're ponable&#13;
Stern Seeks Office&#13;
By DeaD.lAumos&#13;
of the Newscope Staff _&#13;
assistant professor of&#13;
Ib1 SterniJw_p and one of the&#13;
f""rh, a~ore outspoken activists, has.&#13;
Jl1PuJ 'hi candidacy for alderman of ",ed s&#13;
~ " Iirst ward.&#13;
",.,.,&#13;
Coff"&#13;
IIcan keep your eyes open. That s&#13;
pretty lmportant In classes.&#13;
cramming. or slaying up past&#13;
your badllme.&#13;
FU.t 0' Flah&#13;
Tasty white filet. Special sauce.&#13;
A delicious bun.&#13;
Something different to keep the&#13;
stomach from gelling bored.&#13;
Big Mac&#13;
For those with big appetites. Two&#13;
beef patties. lelluce, cheese, a&#13;
special sauce. and a triple decker&#13;
sesame seed bun.&#13;
Hot Appl' Pie&#13;
Lots of apples in a CFlSP,de leate&#13;
crust 11 serves as a cure for&#13;
homesickness Keep one under&#13;
your pI'low for a lale n ght snac&#13;
eoc.CoIe&#13;
Bubbly. Icy Soothes and refrUSOOs&#13;
the hroat. mouth. and m nd&#13;
Cools the tummy&#13;
MUkS"-k ..&#13;
Chocolate. Stra ....'llerry. and 01&#13;
course. your bas&gt;c an a Cool&#13;
smoot • at hOme n aoy body&#13;
MeJJ_ u U.&#13;
52d Street and 40th At'enue&#13;
Sheridan Rd. and 81st&#13;
I . I&#13;
Stern Seeks Office&#13;
By oean.LQumos Eating In&#13;
f the Newscope Staff&#13;
0 -&#13;
5 n assistant professor of&#13;
tbl :t UW-P, and on~ _of the&#13;
f,t,h 's more outspoken activists, haspu~&#13;
his candidacy for alderman of&#13;
~ 's rust ward. ~&#13;
Hal Stern.&#13;
Stern, who is adviser to the&#13;
c med Student Coalition, the film&#13;
,xitly, and the Blad&lt; Student Uni?n,&#13;
leader of last May's student stnke&#13;
helped with Teach-in preparations&#13;
the time.&#13;
Regarding his campaign Stern said,&#13;
·e sunply do not have democratic&#13;
ernmen t when our elected&#13;
eientatives take part in setting&#13;
onrnment policies without&#13;
!ting their constituents."&#13;
"To return governmental control to&#13;
people in the first ward, I would&#13;
regular ward meetings," he&#13;
led. "These meetings will provide&#13;
opportunity for people to find [ out&#13;
tis happening on the City Council,&#13;
t also to tell me what things they&#13;
I should be working for as their&#13;
resentative."&#13;
t the present his campaign centers&#13;
d three issues; Housing and&#13;
T e, labor and Unemployment, and&#13;
Ith Care.&#13;
He id many of the houses in the&#13;
w rd are being allowed to&#13;
teriorate, and that stricter&#13;
r ement of housing codes is&#13;
ed to remedy this. He also&#13;
m there is serious need for new&#13;
,co t housing in the ward .&#13;
tem id there should be a tax&#13;
mbtion made between homeowners . ~ntee landlords, which means a m hon between property for :ai use and property for profit. feels what is needed is a&#13;
e tve county-wide tax structure&#13;
up ? that corporations and&#13;
altby mdividuals cannot avoid&#13;
ihyi~g their fair tax share. He said if&#13;
is _is not done soon Racien w ld&#13;
lose its tax _base to the suburbs. ou&#13;
Stem s~1d the working man is hurt&#13;
most by mflation and that the only&#13;
way ~e can gurantee himself a decent&#13;
wage is by the right to strike.&#13;
He emphasized , "It should be made&#13;
clear that wages increases for workers&#13;
-~ave _not been the primary source of&#13;
mflatlon. From 1960-1970 corporate&#13;
profits after taxes increased 75% while&#13;
average weekly wages for employees went up only 35%."&#13;
Concerning health -care he said&#13;
"Health care in Racine is v~ry good if&#13;
you h~ve the money to pay for it.&#13;
There 1s not one public health clinic or&#13;
public hospital "in the city. Many&#13;
people cannot a fford medical&#13;
insurance. In addition , simple monthly&#13;
doctor bills can be a tremendou&#13;
burden for old people and families&#13;
with several children."&#13;
"Racine needs a public health clinic&#13;
very biftlly ," he stated . " I would&#13;
support or initiate any efforts to&#13;
establish one."&#13;
A Citizens for Stern committee ha been formed , and is holding a meeting&#13;
Sunday March 21 at Stern's house,&#13;
812 College Avenue. He said anyone interested in helping is invited to&#13;
come . ******-***&#13;
SPORT NOTES&#13;
Tennis courts will be available at&#13;
Pershing Park on March 15 .&#13;
The Hamburger&#13;
Ho w to p re p are::&#13;
Mix everthing t ether: put into p n:&#13;
bake at 350 deg e for 30 minut . ~t&#13;
it cool a little before you ta e it ut of&#13;
the cake pan.&#13;
Speaking of fter inner re t , a&#13;
friend from Loui · na&#13;
receipe for home-m de&#13;
ta te gre t and o&#13;
fifth to make. Here· ·h t&#13;
I cup of grain al oh I&#13;
liquor tore&#13;
½ cup of white Karo ) rup&#13;
!. cup honey .&#13;
3 heaping tea poon in t t&#13;
dash of ,-anilla&#13;
empty bottle (prefera ly an empt&#13;
fifth)&#13;
tix all ingredient t ether in fifth&#13;
bottle: add enough ter to fill. e.&#13;
You might.e. periment to ·our t t. F r&#13;
example. use bre ·ed offee inste d of&#13;
instant for a richer coffee fl ,-or.&#13;
Serve a an after dinner liqu r.&#13;
To make eating simple, start th&#13;
the basics: A pure beef pattie on a&#13;
satisfying bun. Uncomplicated&#13;
and good.&#13;
Filet o· Fish&#13;
Tasty white file! Special sauce.&#13;
A delicious bun.&#13;
Something different_to keep the&#13;
stomach from getting bored.&#13;
Coffee&#13;
u&#13;
Tl-1 0 U OS&#13;
OF FL RES&#13;
Big Mac&#13;
For those with big appetttes. Two&#13;
beef patties, lettuce, ~heese, a&#13;
special sauce. and a triple decker&#13;
sesame seed bun.&#13;
52d Street and 0th Ai ru&#13;
Sheridan Rd. and It &#13;
"'6 EWSCOPE MuclIIS,I971&#13;
Campus Events&#13;
Tuesday, March 16&#13;
POt try Lecture. Poet Galway&#13;
Kmnell. 8:00 p.m. Student ACllvities&#13;
Building.&#13;
Wednesday. March 17&#13;
Film. "Viridiana." ponsored by&#13;
Parkside Film Society. :00 p.m.&#13;
Room 103. Gree nquist Hall.&#13;
AdmIssion: S .so&#13;
Friday. larch 19s.&#13;
Dance. "Wooden Road." 9 • 1:00&#13;
P m. St ud e nt Ac rtvir ie s Bldg.&#13;
Admission: SI.OO. Parkside and&#13;
WI on an 1 D. reQuired.&#13;
GvmfUlSflcs 'A IA 'ational Champ1&#13;
n5lup. 'atchuoches. Louisiana.&#13;
lurday, March 20&#13;
Mtt,,,,, Management Science Club.&#13;
Creenqul t Hall, Room 0101.&#13;
rnkk uw·p YS lJW,·.Wwaukee al&#13;
WM&#13;
f/",.kty UW·p YS Johnson's Wax&#13;
u, ~II n Park Indoor Arena.&#13;
hlwaukee.&#13;
Omc." Buddy RIch and his&#13;
O"he "a. ,pon red by the Student&#13;
"v,"e Office. 00 p.m. Keno ha&#13;
Tremper Audlloflum. Adml ion&#13;
3.00 and S~.OO&#13;
,..,tiA ;;It&#13;
~&#13;
F.j,4'"&#13;
. ¥" Banquet&#13;
.~ "., RoomsAvailable&#13;
CARL'$/PIZZA&#13;
I. four Sia.,,,, . 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
A.LSO&#13;
• 'IllS. S'AGHffil • CHlCtclH&#13;
• GHO(CHI ..... VIOL! • LA SAGH •&#13;
• Sf A fOOD. SANOWICHU&#13;
CAIlY·OUn - DElIVElY&#13;
"YOU .,HC _ WE "'HC"&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
5140 't~AV(&#13;
Mission&#13;
(continued from hge1)&#13;
&lt;:IIanOOIor Wyllie explained, ''The&#13;
po .. ib~jty that Green Bay and&#13;
Parl&lt;side might. if I merJel develo~.&#13;
lost their distinctiven.... lose the ...&#13;
advantages in funding and ~me Just&#13;
like Iny ""'001 anywbere IS real. .&#13;
And so one of the Iisks ahead for the&#13;
two DeW campuses would be to&#13;
cItveIop I document. setting fortb the&#13;
unique character of these tw~&#13;
institutjons Ibll would justify the....&#13;
receiving more favored treatment In&#13;
everytbing relaling 10 funding than did&#13;
the &amp;eneral run of institutions."&#13;
If a merserof.the State Uni~ersiti~s&#13;
and the University of WisconSIn&#13;
crystallizes, there is a "p&lt;:,ssibility of&#13;
three distincl leagues bemg formed&#13;
with Madison and Milwaukee in the&#13;
tOP league, with Green B~v and&#13;
possible Parkside. Eau Cla"e and&#13;
Stevens Point in the second league,&#13;
and then the general run of&#13;
instilutions from the other system in a&#13;
tbird league:' Wyllie added, "If w'&#13;
failed 10 make a hard. light case&#13;
documenting our institutional&#13;
uniqueness and distinctiveness, then&#13;
we might end up in the bOllom&#13;
league:'&#13;
Wyllie continued, "We needed to be&#13;
in a beller defensive position in the&#13;
whole matter of institutional&#13;
distinctiveness and it was at that point&#13;
Ihat I had conversations with the&#13;
university committee, the chairmen of&#13;
the divisions, Dean Morrow and others&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-9747&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS&#13;
LIKE ... the brands you know&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000Albums&#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;
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;
. a document that&#13;
about developmg h point of our&#13;
would speak to t e "&#13;
institutional distinctiveness. d . t a&#13;
The tlsk bas mushroome 10 °b&#13;
. T pie serve on t e major proJect. e~ peo d t the&#13;
Missions CommIttee an a&#13;
- '1 was announced that the&#13;
~:~~:n: would have to bThsent t~&#13;
Madison by March 15. e n~x&#13;
scbeduled meeting of the MISSIOn&#13;
C mrnittee is March 17.&#13;
oThe group had written a first draft&#13;
for the document but Cbancellor&#13;
W llie said that "The document. If&#13;
gi~en to a legislator or a state b~d~~t&#13;
analyst or the governor, pr.o a y&#13;
Id not be fully persuasive on&#13;
wou 'ghl.ght specific points that would hi I_al why this campus deserves speci&#13;
consideration as against all o!h~r&#13;
campuses. In other words, what .IS 1t&#13;
Ibal makes us, in all things.&#13;
distinctively different:'&#13;
Tom Reeves suggested that tbe&#13;
document be written by .publIc&#13;
relations people who are profeSSIOnally&#13;
suited to this type of task, because P.&#13;
R. people would be more aware of the&#13;
specific points which would mfluence&#13;
taxpayers and legislators. .&#13;
The unique attributes Parkslde has,&#13;
include the texture of the student&#13;
body, which is mostly working class.&#13;
first generation college ,students, t~e&#13;
athletic programs that ~uected at life&#13;
time involvement In sports as&#13;
recreation, the physical plan of the&#13;
campus (Le. this huge wooded tract of&#13;
land laid out with the intent of&#13;
preserving that land) and the&#13;
in terrelationship of the physlCal&#13;
rn a st e r p Ian and the academic&#13;
program.&#13;
Rita Tallent. tbe Cbancellor's&#13;
Special Assistant, said, ~7he original&#13;
document does a tremendous job of&#13;
showing how we serve our two&#13;
communities. . . and I noticed that&#13;
"there were two pages and part of a&#13;
Ihird devoted to tbat. but tbe scbool&#13;
of modern industry has just one&#13;
paragrapb .... I think tbe pbilosopby&#13;
bebind tbe AST program wbicb is&#13;
quite similar to tbe general en~ineering&#13;
degree at Milwaukee, but With some&#13;
differences; theirs is Applied Science&#13;
and Engineering and ours is Applied&#13;
Science and Tecbnology. I tbink' tbe&#13;
uniqueness of which is considerably&#13;
different from Milwankee. sbould be&#13;
brougbt out:'&#13;
For the remainder of the meeting&#13;
the discussion centered around the&#13;
differences which make Pa .&#13;
distinctive. Reeves SUggested~kIi4e&#13;
greatest distinction Was "the f I !be&#13;
we are here as a four year inst·tICtthall .&#13;
tb t&#13;
. gh" lUI....&#13;
~ IS .. enou . He believed ..&#13;
Madison set us up. cut us 100 thaI&#13;
sold us out and then ha~' iIId&#13;
affrontery to demand we der d !be&#13;
own existence." en OUt&#13;
It seemed that some of the&#13;
bad tbe attitude that the prodl!ltlllbeq&#13;
want to sell was not of i~ct~&#13;
adequate advertisement for the~If II&#13;
analysts and tbe politician. lIdeeI&#13;
others found that a dOcument'wwillie&#13;
according to the way it had ~&#13;
discussed would just as easily ......&#13;
vocational school as a firstIeII •&#13;
university if it concentrated On th~&#13;
tbat tbe two bad in common -.....&#13;
Toward tbe end of tbe ;"eel&#13;
was decided to roll up sloe."U1I n&#13;
produce the document by dividinaIIId&#13;
committee into four smailer tilt&#13;
each responsible for a specificIf...,.,&#13;
tbe document. The firsl grOllpan"&#13;
consider the nature of Ihe ~li1lOald&#13;
and po !itical consideralions.·n:&#13;
second would expand on wha'l Iud&#13;
previously been done On 'Ptcif,&#13;
programs in the original document.~&#13;
third would take up the phYSic~,&#13;
of the campus relating it 10 the0::&#13;
groups; and. the fourth WouldtB,&#13;
work on the mterdisciplinary nalur."&#13;
the academIC program. Th.y thoo&#13;
decided to develop a them. " lhr&#13;
framework of tbe docum.&#13;
hi~lighting the general and ~~&#13;
mISSIOnsby complunenting eachotha&#13;
"Yyllie. stressed tbat Par!uid. 11•&#13;
• opportumty campus" offeringadtit&#13;
educatlOn, lOnovatlOnsin the acadeaic&#13;
program. and tha t the campusallflCll&#13;
a majority of its studenls r,..&#13;
working class backgrounds.&#13;
·There seems to be only on. tJu,.&#13;
rrussmg and tbat ISthe opporlunily£..&#13;
students, IW~o ~e the univerluy'.&#13;
number one chents to participate&#13;
on this I committeel.&#13;
Mission Committee Members&#13;
Sam Fillipone. Chairman&#13;
Peter Martin&#13;
Richard Rosenberg&#13;
Henry Cole&#13;
Gene Gasiorkiewicz&#13;
Alan Shucard&#13;
Emmet Bedford&#13;
Sam Tang&#13;
Thomas Mueller&#13;
Thomas Reeves&#13;
YOUR COMPLETE "ON CAMPUS" BOOK &amp; SUPPLY CENTER&#13;
ANNUAL SPRING&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
Books of interest to everyone, beginning March 19,&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
A HIW KIHD Df ALCDHDUeamUlE&#13;
•&#13;
Pa 6 OPE ch IS, 1971&#13;
Cam pus Events Mission&#13;
( continued fi m Page 1)&#13;
famous lo,&#13;
Ga1 ,ay&#13;
cthities&#13;
CARL'S/ PIZZA&#13;
" fo r Sizes 9• - 12· - u· - 16·&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIIS • SPAGHf'-.TI • CHICKEN&#13;
• G OCCHI • UVIOLI • LA SAGMA&#13;
• SlA FOOD • SAMOWICHU&#13;
CAUY-OUTS - OELIVUY HYOU .INC ••• WE UIHC"'&#13;
6S7-9843 or 658-4922 SUO 4111 AV( .&#13;
ncellor Wyllie explained, "The&#13;
po ibility that Green Bay and&#13;
Par · e might, if a merger deYelo~.&#13;
lo their d" tincti\ene • lose t~eir&#13;
dYantage in funding and be~me JU t&#13;
like any hool anywhere is real . .&#13;
· nd one of the ta ahead for the&#13;
t',\O ne"' campuse would be to&#13;
d \elop a document. setting forth the&#13;
unique c hara ct er of . th~se tw~&#13;
in'ititutions that would JUShfy the_ir&#13;
recehing more fa ored n:eatment ~&#13;
e\er,·thing relating to fundmg than did&#13;
the g neral run of in itution . "&#13;
ff a merger of.the State Uni~ersiti~s&#13;
nd the niver it}- of W1sconsm&#13;
ry tallize there is a "p~ ibility of&#13;
three di tinct league bemg formed&#13;
·with fadi on and 1ilwaukee in the&#13;
top league, with Green B~v and&#13;
po 'ble Par side. Eau Claire and&#13;
teven Point in the second league,&#13;
nd then the general run of&#13;
In titution from the other system in a&#13;
third league." Wyllie added. "If W€&#13;
~ iled to ma ·e a hard, tight case&#13;
documenting our in titutional&#13;
uniquene and di tinctiveness, then&#13;
·e might end up in the bottom&#13;
league."&#13;
Wyllie continued, "We needed to be&#13;
in a better defensive po ition in the&#13;
whole matter of institutional&#13;
di tinctivene and it was at that point&#13;
that I had conversations with the&#13;
univer ity committee. the chairmen of&#13;
the di i ion . Dean forrow and others&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97 47&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS&#13;
LIKE . . . 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;
K'ENWOOD - Receivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
MARANn - Receivers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
AZTEC - Speakers&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C. - Receivers &amp; Radios&#13;
GARRARD - Turntable!.&#13;
G.E. - Radios &amp; Record players&#13;
Also, Patch cords, blank Tapes and accessories. While you&#13;
are ere, shop for Jewelry, Sporting goods and Gifts at&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin's lowest prices.&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS&#13;
512 MAIN STREET&#13;
\&#13;
on the west side of Monument Square&#13;
RACINE 'S&#13;
GREAT&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
01scour-,;1 ,,ou sf&#13;
. a document that&#13;
about developmg · t of our would speak to t~e pol!!&#13;
institutional distinctiveness. d . to a The task has mushroome in h . T eople serve on t e major pro1ect. e':1 P d at the&#13;
Missions Committee and that the&#13;
meeting it was announce t to&#13;
document would hhave 1 ~o b;h:ennext&#13;
Madison by Marc . . . scheduled meeting of the M1ss10n&#13;
c mmittee is March 17. o The group had written a first draft&#13;
for the document but Chancell~r&#13;
W llie said that "The document, if&#13;
giien to a legislator or a state b~d~f t&#13;
analyst or the governor, pr_o a y&#13;
ould not be fully persuasive on&#13;
s;ecific points that would highli~J why this campus deserves spec1&#13;
consideration as againSt all 0 !h~r&#13;
campuses. In other words, what _is it&#13;
that makes us, in all things,&#13;
distinctively different." h&#13;
Tom Reeves suggested that t _e&#13;
document be written by yubhc&#13;
relations people who are professionally&#13;
suited to this type of task, because P.&#13;
R. people would be more aw~re of the&#13;
specific points which would influence&#13;
taxpayers and legislators. .&#13;
The unique attributes Parkside has,&#13;
include the texture of the student&#13;
body, which is mostly working class,&#13;
first generation college ~tudents, t~e&#13;
athletic programs that ~irected at hfe&#13;
time involvement m sports as&#13;
recreation, the physical plan of the&#13;
campus (i.e. this huge wood~d tract of&#13;
land laid out with the intent of&#13;
preserving that land) and !he&#13;
interrelationship of the physical&#13;
master plan and the academic&#13;
program. , Rita Tallent the Chancellors&#13;
Special Assistant,' said, "The original&#13;
document does a tremendous job of&#13;
showing how we serve ~nu two&#13;
communities. . . and I noticed that&#13;
there were two pages and part of a&#13;
third devoted to that, but the school&#13;
of modern industry has just one&#13;
paragraph . .. . I think the philosophy&#13;
behind the AST program which is&#13;
quite similar to the general eniineering&#13;
degree at Milwaukee, but with some&#13;
differences; theirs is Applied Science&#13;
and Engineering and ours_ is Applied&#13;
Science and Technology. I think the&#13;
uniqueness of which is considerably&#13;
different from Milwaukee, should be&#13;
brought out."&#13;
For the remainder of the meeting&#13;
the discussion centered around the&#13;
differences which make p .&#13;
distinctive. Reeves suggested tl~rks1&lt;1e&#13;
greatest distinction was "the fac~t the we are here as a four year insn . that&#13;
that is enough." He belie1 i::•on,&#13;
Madison "set us up, cut us 1~ that&#13;
sold us out and then h ~· llld&#13;
affrontery to demand we det a d own existence." en 0tli&#13;
It seemed that some of the&#13;
had the attitude that the prod mernbcr-i&#13;
want to sell was not of i~ct&#13;
adequate advertisement for the ~If&#13;
analysts and the politicians Ud&amp;t•&#13;
others found that a document 'w ~'hile&#13;
according to the way it had ntt&#13;
discussed would just as easily be&#13;
vocational school as a first ll •&#13;
university if it concentrated on rate&#13;
that the two had in common&#13;
Toward the end of the ~eer was decided to roll up sleeve Ill n&#13;
produ?e the. document by dividin&#13;
comrmttee mto four smaller g&#13;
each responsible for a specific &amp;rOUJl$&#13;
the document. The first grou/:rt Ii&#13;
consider t?~ nature of the clien&#13;
and pohttcal considerations· tele&#13;
second would expand on wha't&#13;
previously been done on spc ·n&#13;
programs in the original document~&#13;
third would take up the physical '&#13;
of the campus relating it to the 0P&#13;
groups; and the fourth would&#13;
work on the !nterdisciplinary nature &lt;i&#13;
the academic program. They&#13;
decided to develop a theme as&#13;
framework of the docume&#13;
hi~ighting the ~eneral and pe&#13;
missions by complimenting each otb&#13;
Wyllie stressed that Parkside LS&#13;
"opportunity campus" offering ad&#13;
education, innovations in the acad&#13;
program, and that the campus attra&#13;
a majority of its student fr&#13;
working class backgrounds.&#13;
There seems to be only one&#13;
missing and that is the opportun ty r&#13;
students, !who ale the univer t)I&#13;
number one clients to partiap&#13;
on this , committee/.&#13;
Mission Committee Members&#13;
Sam Fillipone, Chairman&#13;
Peter Martin&#13;
Richard Rosenberg&#13;
Henry Cole&#13;
Gene Gasiorkiewicz&#13;
Alan Shucard&#13;
Emmet Bedford&#13;
Sam Tang&#13;
Thomas Mueller&#13;
Thomas Reeves&#13;
YOUR COMPLETE "ON CAMPUS" BOOK &amp; SUPPLY CENTER&#13;
ANNUAL SPRING&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
Books of interest to everyone, beginning March 19,&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK .STORE&#13;
A NIW KIND Of AlCDHDUC BIVIRAGI&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
• &#13;
Ell Slaughter and Stan White share Ranger records.&#13;
S~ughterSets Scoring Mark&#13;
By James Casper&#13;
of !be Newscope Staff&#13;
EllS1aught.rset the Parkside career&#13;
IIlliII re&lt;ord with a total of 923&#13;
,... In 39 garnes. H. also holds the&#13;
...-av.lI8" per single season (24.3)&#13;
111969.70.His 1970 season scoring&#13;
,..wu23.4.&#13;
Be Ibo cleared 280 rebounds during&#13;
11100years at Parkside.&#13;
QdIer records held by Eli include:&#13;
.. points in one game (42), fields&#13;
ph in on. game (17), most field&#13;
ph In one season (265), most career&#13;
!lid pis (405), and highest shooting&#13;
pntentage for one season (.s 51 in&#13;
1%9·70).&#13;
Fli is pl.ased to hold the scoring&#13;
1lCOIds, but is quick to point out that&#13;
lIlmduai !Coring is not everything&#13;
boauJe it is the team effort that&#13;
:ounlsthe most.&#13;
Accordingto Eli, "If I score 30&#13;
poults in a game and the team loses&#13;
1m not satisfi.d." He was hoping for a&#13;
.lOO or b.tt.r season and the goal was&#13;
IGI realiud. It cannot be said that&#13;
'to foil.d 10 do his part.&#13;
Alloth.r Rang.r who deserves credit&#13;
for ann. leason is Stan White, the&#13;
lock van.y Je transfer who played&#13;
lorwardopposite Eli.&#13;
f/bite c1.ar.d 267 rebounds while&#13;
1On1lI479points, giving him a season&#13;
""""I mark of 18.4.&#13;
One of Stan's strong points was his&#13;
rebounding (10.3 per game), and that&#13;
includes the 22 rebounds he gatliered&#13;
in against Northland. That&#13;
performance was good for a school&#13;
record.&#13;
Perhaps the most surprising thing&#13;
about Stan's showing is that he played&#13;
very little in 1969·70. He often said&#13;
that if he would get the chance to play&#13;
regularly he could be a top scorer and&#13;
rebounder. This year he got the chance&#13;
and backed up what he said.&#13;
.~ an .r:. ~. 0"&#13;
~o RANCH ~&#13;
1l0RTH .. SllIITtI SH~IllOAN !IOAO&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
HARCOAl BROllE&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
A&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
'Tradition of IJltcellence"&#13;
KING of ORGANS,&#13;
Gymnasts&#13;
To Nationals&#13;
ByJamosCa¥&lt;&#13;
of tbe ewscope Staff&#13;
. Parkside gymnasts, followlOg an&#13;
un~ressive win over Stevens Point in&#13;
which they. scored a season high of&#13;
146.85, WIll compete in the AlA&#13;
cha~pionship at a tch ucches,&#13;
Louisiana March 19·20.&#13;
The enure Ranger team has&#13;
qualified for team honors. Some team&#13;
members wiU also compete for&#13;
individual honors-Doug Anderson 10&#13;
the all. around and high bar, Wanen&#13;
McGiIlivray·alI around, free exercise,&#13;
and long horse; and both Pete Hickey&#13;
and Dan Boswein in the long horse.&#13;
To qualify for the meet. three&#13;
scores over 130 .... re needed.&#13;
When asked about the team's&#13;
chances in the ationals, Coach Bill&#13;
Ballester said, ''My tearn should place&#13;
in the top 10. Best chances for national&#13;
recognition by an individual will he&#13;
Doug Anderson-all around and hial&gt;&#13;
bar, and Wanen McGiIlivny in long&#13;
horse."&#13;
Wrestling Report&#13;
Parkside's Wrestling ream&#13;
participated in the ational meet at&#13;
Appalachian State Urn.ersiry located&#13;
in Boone. orth Carolina t on Much&#13;
U·13.&#13;
Ranger wrestlers appearing in the&#13;
meet were Jeff Jenkins (13·3 season&#13;
mark), Ken Martin (13·1), 10m !kYer&#13;
(10·5), and Bill Benkenstein (11-4-1).&#13;
Results as of March II show Parkside&#13;
with 3 points going into the quarter&#13;
finals, Martin has won '2 matches and&#13;
if he wins the next he has a chance to&#13;
finish in the top 6 in the country .&#13;
Benkstein also won his first match.&#13;
~&#13;
Slaughter I&#13;
'lopn 42&#13;
doen&#13;
lI. 4&#13;
Ptmne 143&#13;
RJc 14&#13;
!acloon S 45&#13;
Van TIOe 3 I&#13;
fechhelm 13&#13;
Dave Woods 10 4&#13;
frndrenl 1 10&#13;
Don Wood 6 1&#13;
IUgenow 9 5&#13;
Wad. I I&#13;
tOlal, 2&#13;
,~.2 \I&#13;
opponenu 931 421 2~5 1253&#13;
Rangers Set Records&#13;
Three Ranger runnen .. t&#13;
records while pUllClpatU1ll In tho&#13;
Illinois Trac Oub In uattonaJ.&#13;
Bob Wal.n set a 001 record In&#13;
the 60 yard dalt1 (6.3sec)&#13;
~lacrng second. Jun M Fadden was a&#13;
record seller in the nule ..,th 4 :27.&#13;
while Sandy Houston did 1 ~ Ie In&#13;
the women's 1000 th a 2 5 J&#13;
cloclanl·&#13;
Other Ranger performanc.. re&#13;
Mike DeWitt. 9,514 to the t nul&lt;,&#13;
and Vic Godfrej • (Ranger ). wllb&#13;
a second place 10 the "'a ten de for&#13;
those 30 and ever, HI nrre "''1S&#13;
4:33.6.&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE aOMaERS&#13;
S021 30"" A ••.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657 ·5191&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
FREE DEUVUY ".00 P.M. TO 1200 PJA&#13;
Open 6 Day-.a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
The ~BRAT",s&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
DAILY SPECW&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.&#13;
A Botti. of&#13;
Ind •&#13;
STEAK,&#13;
BRAT or&#13;
BEEFBURGER&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p..... to 8 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 2Ge&#13;
A.. II '.' .... •&#13;
....... , " ....I .",....&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
,,* IRAT-STOP&#13;
• lIwe.e:-a-.-HI# q.&#13;
l&#13;
i~;~I~I~~~S~~,"., -~&#13;
~~:&#13;
Set . \1r:a ' T d In Value&#13;
~III"""Iek "Mr. Hammond"For GuaranteedSI"lce' rl lOut&#13;
of Town-CIU CIUlef&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN'&#13;
l!~~IIJ-.R.!.~~:-&#13;
-, Bear Or.- _1IU41J.. nd .... B.M rr--&#13;
Ell Slaughter and Stan White share Ranger records.&#13;
Slaughter Sets Scoring Mark&#13;
By James Ca~r&#13;
of the Newscope Staff&#13;
Eli Slaughter set the Parkside career&#13;
g record with a total of 923&#13;
15 in 39 games. He also holds the&#13;
st average per single season (24.3)&#13;
1969-70. His 1970 season scoring&#13;
was 23.4.&#13;
lie also cleared 280 rebounds during&#13;
iwo years at Parkside.&#13;
Other records held by Eli include:&#13;
points in one game (42), fields&#13;
in one game (17), most field&#13;
in one season (26S), most career&#13;
goals (405), and highest shooting&#13;
ntage for one season (.551 in&#13;
9-70).&#13;
Eli i pleased to hold the scoring&#13;
ds, but is quick to point out that&#13;
mdual scoring is not everything&#13;
St it is the team effort that&#13;
ts the most.&#13;
A ording to Eli, "If I score 30&#13;
U in a game and the team loses&#13;
not satisfied." He was hoping for a&#13;
or better season and the goal was&#13;
1ealized. It cannot be said that&#13;
"E" failed to do his part.&#13;
Another Ranger who deserves credit&#13;
a fine season is Stan White, the&#13;
k Valley JC transfer who played&#13;
rd opposite Eli.&#13;
le cleared 267 rebounds while&#13;
479 points, giving him a season&#13;
mark of 18.4.&#13;
One of Stan's strong points was his&#13;
rebounding (10.3 per game), and that&#13;
includes the 22 rebounds he gathered&#13;
in against Northland. Th.at&#13;
performance was good for a school&#13;
record.&#13;
Perhaps the most surprising thing&#13;
about Stan's showing is that he played&#13;
very little in 1969-70. He often said&#13;
that if he would get the chance to play&#13;
regularly he could be a top scorer and&#13;
rebounder. This year he got the chance&#13;
and backed up what he said.&#13;
· ~ an -.r-,.&#13;
~- o" ~0 RANCH ~ ltORTH I SOUTH SH!ftlDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
HARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
A&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
•Tradition of Excellence•&#13;
KING of ORGANS_&#13;
Gymnasts&#13;
To Nationals&#13;
By lame Ca r Of fhe f'loM&amp;.'Y"on,_ ff&#13;
. Par~ide gymn t , i llo&#13;
unpre sive wm o\·er Steven p&#13;
which they_ scored a 0&#13;
146.8S, will compete n the I&#13;
cha~pionship at • atchitoche&#13;
Lou, 1ana March 19--0.&#13;
The entire Ranger team s&#13;
qualified for team honor . me team&#13;
!lle_~bers will al ompete for&#13;
tlldtVJdual honor -Doug n er in&#13;
the ~ll_ around and high bar, arren&#13;
McGillivray-all around, free e er i , and long horse: and both Pete H1 ey&#13;
and Dan Boswein in the long h rse.&#13;
To qualify for the meet, three&#13;
scores over 130 "'ere needed.&#13;
When a ked about the team·&#13;
chances in the ation I , C ch Bill&#13;
Ballester said, • ty team ould p&#13;
- II&#13;
I&#13;
in the top 10. Best chan es for nat nal&#13;
recogI!ition by an individual rill be&#13;
Doug Anderson-all around and h&#13;
bar, and Warren 1cGillivray in long&#13;
horse."&#13;
Wrestling Report Rangers Set Records&#13;
Parkside's Wrestling team&#13;
participated in the 'ational meet t&#13;
Appalachian State Univer 'ty located&#13;
in Boone, orth Carolina, on ar h&#13;
11-13.&#13;
Ranger wrestler appearing tn the&#13;
meet were Jeff Jenkins (13-3 se&#13;
mark), Ken Martin (13-1), Tom Beyer&#13;
(lO-S), and Bill Benken tein (11-4-1 . Results as of March II sho Par · ide&#13;
with 3 point going into the quarter&#13;
finals. Martin has won _ matches and&#13;
if he wins the next he ha a hance to&#13;
finish in the top 6 in the country.&#13;
Benkstein also won hi ftr t mat h.&#13;
VALEO'S PIZZA&#13;
ALSO KITCHE&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657-5191&#13;
FREE OEUVERY ~ 00&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
DAILY SPECIAL&#13;
9 A.M. TO 4 P.M.&#13;
A Bottle of&#13;
aod •&#13;
STEAK,&#13;
BRAT or&#13;
BEEFBURGER&#13;
Alco olic&#13;
Beverage&#13;
HAPPY HO&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p. • to&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20&#13;
Av• I • f• Pert •&#13;
a.ca., F-----tr • S-ltJ '-''-•&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P&#13;
'"' BRAT-STOP&#13;
Naik• .. C:-1-~ ~ " .... ., •&#13;
p.m.&#13;
• &#13;
By Jim Koloen&#13;
T,tle: tt« Bluest Eye&#13;
Author- Tom Morrison&#13;
Publisher' Holt, Ronehart and Winston&#13;
"Quret QS it 'J kept, there WE'rt' no&#13;
marigolds in the fall of 1941. We&#13;
lh(wght, at tht rime. that it MoDS&#13;
because hrolir ,,"s havllIg her father's&#13;
bab} that th. mDngolds did nat gro....&#13;
A Itll/~ t;(ammotion and much ley&#13;
melirncholy ...ould have proved to u&gt;&#13;
thot QUT J«dJ k re not the only ones&#13;
that did not sprout; nobody 's did. or&#13;
.. n the gard.ns fron/lng the Iirke&#13;
shuwed mangolJs that year. But SO&#13;
detply ron emed ...ere w. ,,;th the&#13;
health and JtJfe d.l,v.ry of Pecola's&#13;
bab) we could thlllk of nothlllg but&#13;
our 0"" magic: if " .. planted the&#13;
eed s, and said the right words over&#13;
th m the)' woutd blossom. ana&#13;
everythIng woutd be all right...&#13;
Th Bh,," Ey. i Toni torrison's&#13;
" I n el nd us theme IS childhood,&#13;
"".,ficall) bla k ch,ldhood in Lorain,&#13;
Oh,o. The narr lor I lookong back al&#13;
her childhood, .. hen she ( laudia) wa.&#13;
nmt or ten years old. bout the same&#13;
lunt ,hat Pe ola Breedlove first "ar,ed&#13;
"mlnl tr un," Pecola wa becoming a&#13;
woman; one day she dlsco't'ered she&#13;
"a bleedIng. ared to death that she&#13;
mlghl h.,'e labbed her~lf. unlll&#13;
laudla's mother explatned what&#13;
nuni Iratln' i all about: it means you&#13;
can ha.. a baby, How do you have a&#13;
baby' A man' g lIa I 'e )'ou.&#13;
Po&lt;ola become pregnant by her&#13;
f.th r ( holly Breedlove) who sphts&#13;
n after and ends up eying 10 the&#13;
• unu) workhouse. Pecola fus had&#13;
"ual relations with her father and&#13;
denie It while talking to a fantasy&#13;
chara4::ler,her alter ego. Her life's goal&#13;
1 10 have blue eye, to be a beautiful&#13;
as the whIte. blond haired. blue eyed&#13;
doll. hllie gHls play with. to be&#13;
prelller lhan Shirley Temple. She ha.&#13;
gone down to see Soaphead Church, a&#13;
p udo witchdoelor who~ business&#13;
"was dread," He tells her that she will&#13;
have blue eyes. The following d.y&#13;
Pecol. enters the fanlasy world of&#13;
haVIngblue )e without really having&#13;
them; an alter-ego becomes her only&#13;
friend whom she ask&gt; if she has seen&#13;
anyone with blue eyes than hers. Her&#13;
alter-ego reminds her of having had a&#13;
child. She denies it.&#13;
But the novel is more than a story&#13;
about a girl raped by her father) it is&#13;
about her father. her mother,&#13;
Soaphead Church. three whores.&#13;
Claudia and her sister and about pretty&#13;
lillie white girls: lillie black girls&#13;
learning about sex and whites,learning&#13;
how to hate themselves because&#13;
Tool M«rlson.&#13;
they're black and because adults are so&#13;
much bigger; when you're angry and&#13;
there's no one your own size to strike&#13;
at. you strike at yourself.&#13;
There are no victimizers because&#13;
everyone is a victim. ehoUy is a&#13;
bastard, his father ran off before he&#13;
was born. his mother died before he&#13;
was two and his aunt raised him. His&#13;
aunt dies when he's 14, he runs away&#13;
to Macon where he fmds a man who&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WANTED&#13;
8.Jbysiun W,an~ed either libury or my&#13;
nolT1«', Tues. &amp; Thurs. from 11-3; c,aU&#13;
637·3782 collect.&#13;
\l.'~nted. 50 &amp;~1. ,aquuium or bigger;&#13;
"chup" ull GeolltC' 694~)96.&#13;
W.. nted· Smelt Ri&amp; or Smelt Net: call&#13;
~94-5957 or 63-4·1863.&#13;
Roommau: 'flI-d: h,ave 2, need 3, 3 BR&#13;
low fbt. 28th &amp; Wuh .. Kenosh.oa;Call Oon&#13;
at 65.....1912 lu~ name &amp;" phonf' no,&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
'969 VW Ok. 81, chrome IP. tape player.&#13;
UdlO, 2 new ttrU - call 634-2158 after&#13;
3,00.&#13;
For S~lc:_ 8,anlo, c.ase,_strings, and capo'&#13;
load conduJQn - aU Ten.at 633-8475.&#13;
For Sale: 1970 Ambusodor, Z door HT&#13;
5.100 mIles. 360 CI, 2 Bar Auto, Air,&#13;
power, buckets; caLllXnnis ~t 652-5673 or&#13;
(,1IiR."111&#13;
For Sa~: Tenn" Ruket, Cunlop Fort -&#13;
all Cary Van. 632·7454&#13;
For Sale: 1966 Chey. Malibu, 283 Cu. 4&#13;
sp., buckC'ts, posi-u,act; call Steve at&#13;
658-4056.&#13;
For Sale: 45 Shakespear ''Neledah'' Bow&#13;
Fred Bear, 9 Arrow Bow quiver Shoulder&#13;
quiver, Rack - S 35.00 2104 - 57;h St. Apt.&#13;
8 - Steve.&#13;
ror Sale: Garcia "300" Red, Rod, Tackle&#13;
Box - $30.00 2104 - 57th St. Apt. 8 -&#13;
Steve,&#13;
For Sale: Encyclopedia Britannica 1961&#13;
Year Books to 1964, World Atlas nookcase~&#13;
$300.00 - ca.1l658-3921 ' ,&#13;
For S,ale: Typewriter - Manual- S5~5.00-&#13;
caU 6;&gt;2-7482_&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
. Apt. for rent; 3 students; girls pref.--Call&#13;
65Br3888.&#13;
MISC.&#13;
Hand made: Sweaters, sweater vests,&#13;
afllhans crochetted vests call 652-2324 ..&#13;
he thinks is his father. He is rejected;&#13;
the 'man doesn'l know him. Cholly&#13;
moves up north picking up a woman&#13;
(polly) on the way. They marry and&#13;
the early years are love years, but they&#13;
O1olly is finally mteresteo only&#13;
:::u~hiskey and oblivion; and Polly,&#13;
(Mrs. Breedlove) is concerned only&#13;
with putting everything in Its p~?per&#13;
place inftnitely. An "ideal servant ~e&#13;
is interested only in her employer"s&#13;
family where they call her 'P?,llY .&#13;
Her own family calls her Mrs.&#13;
Breedlove".&#13;
The novel is composed of&#13;
biographical sketches and childhood&#13;
vignettes which create moods and&#13;
characters, reflecting the author's great&#13;
sensitivity and obviating judgements.&#13;
The writing is very well done, ~e&#13;
narrative is evocative and near poetic,&#13;
and the dialogue leaves nothing to be&#13;
desired. The sensitivity of the author&#13;
to her subject is intense; all ch~racters&#13;
are sympa thetic and ultunately&#13;
Pecola's pregnancY' is no more her&#13;
f.ther's fault than her not having been&#13;
born with blue eyes. The children are&#13;
invisible to their parents and are left to&#13;
grow up on their own and, let's face it,&#13;
1941 was just a plain bad year fOl&#13;
marigolds,&#13;
The Bluest Eye is a very ~oop .ftrst&#13;
novel about childhood, a subject many&#13;
novelists focus on as a fIrst vehicle for&#13;
their literary talents. Keep your eye on&#13;
the name Morrison.&#13;
The Bluesr Eye. courtesty of the&#13;
Book Mart, 622 59th Street. Kenosha,&#13;
can be purchased for $5.95.&#13;
Bank of&#13;
EIIllwood&#13;
270" la,hrop A.,.., lad"., Wi,con,ill&#13;
Students get, red carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone else!l&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
After Mafch 19, we must&#13;
turn all remaining textb~~&#13;
to the publishers.&#13;
If you still have boOksto g I&#13;
please do so now. while Ilie&#13;
•&#13;
are still available. ey&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
600KSTORE&#13;
UW-PARKSIDt&#13;
Pru .. ,.&#13;
IN CONCElT&#13;
SA T., MARCH 20&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
Kenosha Trempe, Aud.&#13;
Roserved Seat ~icketl&#13;
$3.00 &amp; $2.00&#13;
Tox Included&#13;
Avoiloble now in Studlot&#13;
Activ'ities Office Talent H.I&#13;
~.TCHlS _ II iiWi". I&#13;
.- u..... _·~ ...- ........ cw-, T __&#13;
.--&#13;
w_·_&#13;
~=....-&#13;
SULT&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount.&#13;
to Students and DOWNTOWNKENOSHA&#13;
Faculty , -Cetdfio4~&#13;
(Must Show 1.0.) er.d••I.Ge-I ....&#13;
V~&amp;gIt&#13;
""' _. d_ -,.-&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
excepted&#13;
inst&#13;
them; n alter-ego become her only&#13;
rr·end ·h m she ks if she has seen&#13;
anyone v.ith blue eye than hers. Her&#13;
ter-eg remind her of having had a&#13;
child. e denie it.&#13;
But the no\·el i more than a story&#13;
bout girl raped by her father. it is&#13;
about her father. her mother,&#13;
Soaphead Oturch. three whores&#13;
audia and her sister and about pretty&#13;
1ttle white girl : little black girls&#13;
earning bout se and whites, learning&#13;
how to hate them elves because&#13;
Toni Morrison.&#13;
they're bl k and becau e adults are so&#13;
much bigger; when you 're angry and&#13;
there' no one your own size to strike&#13;
at, you trike at yourself.&#13;
There are no victimizers because&#13;
everyone i a victim. Cholly is a&#13;
ba lard, hi father ran off before he&#13;
wa born, his mother died before he&#13;
wa two and his aunt raised him. His&#13;
aunt dies when he's 14, he runs away&#13;
to 1acon where he finds a man who&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
WANTED&#13;
&amp;bys tn W ntcd: either library or my&#13;
rm; Tu • &amp; Thurs. from 11-3; call&#13;
637 • 7 2 collect.&#13;
'anted. 50 .al. aquarium or b"igger;&#13;
"chc p" II Ge c 69~-4396.&#13;
.anted: melt R or Smelt ct: call&#13;
• 94.5957 or 634-1 63.&#13;
Roomma~ d: ha 2, need 3, 3 BR&#13;
low t, 2 th &amp; ash., 'cnosha; C.all Don&#13;
t 654-1972 - lenc name · phon~ no,&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
1969 ' D • Bl, chrome gp, t.ape player, r io, 2 nrc, - call 634-2158 after&#13;
:00.&#13;
For S.alc: &amp;ngo, c.a~, 1trings, and c.apo·&#13;
condnion - call Teri at 633-8475.&#13;
For ale: 1970 Ambassodor, 2 door HT.&#13;
5,700 miles, 360 Cl, 2 &amp;r Auto, Air,&#13;
er, buc ca: all Dennis at 652-5673 or (,&lt;; 61 7&#13;
For S le: Tennis Racket, Cunlop Fort - II Gu• Van - 632,7454&#13;
For Sale: 1966 Chev. Malibu, 283 Cu. 4&#13;
sp., buckets, posi-tract; call Steve at&#13;
658-4-056.&#13;
For Sale: 45 Shakespear "Neledah" Bow&#13;
Fred Bear, 9 Arrow Bow quiver, Shoulder&#13;
qwver, Rack - S35.00 2104 - 57th St. Apt. 8 · Steve.&#13;
For Sale: Garcia "300" Reel, Rod, Tackle&#13;
Box · S30.00 2104 - 57th St. Apt. 8 - Steve.&#13;
For Sale: Encyclopedia Britannica 1961,&#13;
Year Books to 1964, World Atlas, &amp;ookcase;&#13;
S300.00 - call 658-3921&#13;
For Sale: Typewriter . Manual - SS5.00 - call 652-7482.&#13;
FOR RENT&#13;
Apt. for rent; 3 students; girls pref.-Cal1&#13;
658,..3888.&#13;
MISC.&#13;
Hand made : Sweaters, sweater vests,&#13;
a~ hans crochetted vests - call 652-2324.&#13;
he thinks is his father. He is rejected;&#13;
the ' man doesn't know him. Cholly&#13;
moves up north picking up a woman&#13;
(Polly) on the way. They marry and&#13;
the early years are love years, but they Cholly is finally interested only&#13;
:u~hiskey and oblivion; and Polly,&#13;
(Mrs. Breedlove) is con~er?ed only&#13;
with putting everylh:ing m its P~?per&#13;
place infinitely. An "ideal servant ~e&#13;
is interested only in her emgloyer,,s&#13;
family where they call her P~,lly · Her own family calls her Mrs.&#13;
Breedlove". f&#13;
The novel is composed 0&#13;
biographical sketches and childhood&#13;
vignettes which create moods and&#13;
characters reflecting the author's great&#13;
sensitivity' and obviating judgements.&#13;
The writing is very well done, t?e&#13;
narrative is evocative and near poetic,&#13;
and the dialogue leaves nothing to be&#13;
desired. The sensitivity of the author&#13;
to her subject is intense; all c~racters&#13;
are sympathetic and ultunately&#13;
Pecola 's pregnancy- is no more her&#13;
father's fault than her not having been&#13;
born with blue eyes. The children are&#13;
invisible to their parents and are left to&#13;
grow up on their own and, let's face it, 1941 was just a plain bad year fm&#13;
marigolds. The Bluest Eye is a very ~ood ,first&#13;
novel about childhood, a subJect many&#13;
novelists focus on as a first vehicle for&#13;
their literary talents. Keep your eye on&#13;
the name Morrison.&#13;
The Bluest Eye, courtesty of the&#13;
Book Mart, 622 59th Street, Kenosha,&#13;
can be purchased for $5. 95.&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 Lothrop Ave., llodne, Wisconsin&#13;
Students get·red carpet serv ice&#13;
(So does everyone else!)&#13;
10%&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
After March 19, we must&#13;
turn all remaining textbo~~&#13;
to the pub I ishers.&#13;
If you still have books to get&#13;
please do so now, while th '&#13;
are still available. ey&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
lJOOK STORE&#13;
UW-PARKSIDt&#13;
presents&#13;
IN CONCERT&#13;
SAT., MARCH 20&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
Kenosha Tremper Aud.&#13;
Reserved Seat Tickets&#13;
$3.00 &amp; $2.00&#13;
Tax Included&#13;
WATCHES lj .....~ ........ lll--. ,...;,.i .. .............&#13;
CWaWt _, .. • TlfM• ... CHIMA&#13;
llllDAL&#13;
UGISTlY&#13;
Courtesy Discount. to Students and DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Faculty . ,._ .,,_,~ (Must Show , . D.) Gracluai·e Ge•o10,11t ..... rtnFairtrade&#13;
4J( y ~" ,e "c).,'; p ~ excepted It do,s ,uh a diffe,e,Ke .. ..,. ,,.&#13;
LIVE MUSIC&#13;
· Now AppqrlnO&#13;
I"'°" Men. allf Tun. ....... NIii DRINKS 'h PRICE ·yo ALL UNIFORMED IOWL£RS </text>
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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 7, March 15, 1971</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="41">
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            <elementTextContainer>
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              </elementText>
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                <text>1971-03-15</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="61794">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="61795">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="38">
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61802">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>McGovern Begins Campaign</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>McGovern Begins Campaign&#13;
By Marc Eisen&#13;
SenatorGeorge McGovern has begun an&#13;
unprecedented presidential campaign by&#13;
entering the Wisconsin Democratic&#13;
presidential primary more than a full&#13;
yearbefore it will be held.&#13;
The South Dakota democrat spoke&#13;
and listened to a group of supporters in&#13;
RacineSunday afternoon to conclude a&#13;
three day campaign swing through the&#13;
state that brought him to six out of the&#13;
ten congressional districts in the state,&#13;
The Senate dove acknowledged it was&#13;
unprecedented for a candidate to&#13;
declare his presidential aspirations so&#13;
early, but said, "I feel these are&#13;
unprecedented times, that the issues&#13;
need to be addressed now, and that the&#13;
kind of campaign I wanted to wage&#13;
requiresa considerable amount of time.&#13;
"I want to do more than simply&#13;
participate in a television blitz in the&#13;
closing weeks of these primary&#13;
elections," the Senator said.&#13;
McGovem emphasized he was in the .&#13;
prtmary to stay and he would not&#13;
withdraw. "My committment to come&#13;
into Wisconsin is definite. There is no&#13;
circumstance I can conceive of arising,&#13;
no combination of competing&#13;
candidates that would cause me to&#13;
changemy decision to make Wisconsin a&#13;
majortesting ground for my views.&#13;
"I consider Wisconsin absolutely&#13;
cnscial to my campaign," he said. The&#13;
Senatos: said too he was committed to&#13;
run 1st. primaries in New Hampshire,&#13;
New York, California, and Oregon.&#13;
McGovernis one of the Senate's more&#13;
,",tspoken opponents to the war, and&#13;
was an unsuccessful candidate for the&#13;
Democratic presidential nomination in&#13;
1965. He became a candidate after the&#13;
usaislnation of Robert Kennedy,and his&#13;
SUpport came mostly from' Kennedy&#13;
followers.&#13;
The Senator began his talk to about&#13;
200 supporters by decrying the&#13;
credibiUtygap that has grown between&#13;
the presidency and the people. "Ithink,&#13;
perhaps, the most shameful and painful&#13;
problemthat we have here in the United&#13;
States today is the credibility gap," he&#13;
reduced level of Amencan ground forces&#13;
indefmitely. It's going 10 fall, and u's&#13;
ridiculous 10 believe Hanoi will release&#13;
American POW's if we maintain support&#13;
troops inde finitely and continue&#13;
bombing."&#13;
McGovern asked the audience "WIt.1&#13;
goes through the minds of the reSl of&#13;
lI¥:world when rJw:yread that this gr.,1&#13;
country has dropped twice 3IS man&#13;
bombs on those tiny little coonmes in&#13;
South East Asia as were dropped on .11&#13;
the connnents of the world In the&#13;
second World War?&#13;
Concerning the President's family&#13;
assistance 'plan, McGovern said, "Lthink&#13;
the plan IS a sound one. But I d n't&#13;
think it is adequat e. I don 'I think you&#13;
can support a family of four on SI600 •&#13;
year. AI the very least I think we ought&#13;
to attach to the President's proposal a&#13;
generous food stamp allowance.&#13;
"If we're going to have the principle&#13;
of a guaranteed inoome then II ought 10&#13;
be on an adequate level:' he said "not&#13;
one that simply perpetuates people In&#13;
poverty."&#13;
When asked about the President's&#13;
plan to reduce welfare, McGovern&#13;
replied, "When the President says we&#13;
must go from welfare to workfare the&#13;
question I want to ask him is 'Whe;e do&#13;
those people who leave welfare gu to gel&#13;
jobs when we already have 6% of our&#13;
work force unemployment?"&#13;
Exploring The World Of E.S.P.&#13;
said.&#13;
"Unfortunately, this is a bipartisan&#13;
gap. It i~ one that wasn't born&#13;
&gt;:este~?ay; It'S been with us too long a&#13;
~ ... he said. tJ-&#13;
~&#13;
N£lISCOP! pho"'''' 8oII1I.i,land&#13;
senator GeorgeMcGove~spe~g at the&#13;
Golden Lantern inRacine Sunday.&#13;
. "Reduc~ to its simplest terms what&#13;
It means IS that millions of citizens in&#13;
this country no longer believe their&#13;
government is telling them the truth "&#13;
he said. '&#13;
"What a shocking thing it is in a free&#13;
society that a few days after the&#13;
By John Koloen&#13;
This is the concluding part of an&#13;
article begun last week in which I ended&#13;
on the verge of a session with Norman&#13;
Slater E.S.P.&#13;
Let it suffice to know that we were&#13;
gathering at a small apartment in&#13;
Kenosha and after emptying the living&#13;
room of all moveable furniture there&#13;
wasn't quite enough room to sit; one&#13;
person had to stand in the doorway&#13;
Exchange Student Returns&#13;
by Marc Ei;'n&#13;
The Parkside student' who was to&#13;
att.nd a black university in North&#13;
Carolrna under the auspices of the&#13;
North·South Student Exchange Program&#13;
has returned to Parkside after spending&#13;
only a week at the schoof.&#13;
David Krausse, cited a variety of&#13;
reasons for his return to UW-P; most&#13;
notably loneliness and the fact he&#13;
cbo&#13;
l&#13;
uldo't make any true friends with&#13;
ack students there.&#13;
His reactions are similar but not as&#13;
strong as those of Ron Williams last&#13;
year~s exchange student. In a letter&#13;
~ubhshed in the January 12, 1971&#13;
EWSCOPE, William's wrote, "My&#13;
expenences at NCCU (North Carolina&#13;
Central University), for the most part,&#13;
were ruled with abuse name calling and&#13;
a constant reminde; that I was a&#13;
-bon-black in a situation where I didn't&#13;
;~ong . and was not wanted. .&#13;
'" nendships were few and meaningless ..&#13;
Williams spent the entire 1970 spring&#13;
SOmesterat NCCU.&#13;
S! The program, sends white college&#13;
..;:tents from the midwest to black&#13;
ba .eges in the south, on an exchange&#13;
usn. However, none of these students&#13;
~ end UW·p because of the lack of&#13;
UWOrmltories, and instead go to&#13;
,Madison.&#13;
'rh. program at Parkside is&#13;
coordinated through the Student Affairs&#13;
Office by Jewel Echelbarger. The&#13;
selection of Krausse as the Parkside&#13;
representative was made jointly by Miss&#13;
Echelbarger and students who had gone&#13;
to NCCU in past semesters.&#13;
Dave Krausse is not bitter about his&#13;
experiences in the program, and wishes,&#13;
in fact, he had stuck it out.&#13;
He said. of his experiences, "I would&#13;
put 50% of the blame for my return on&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, and a good 50% on&#13;
myself. I don't think I received enough&#13;
preparation prior to my leaving. I&#13;
attended a meeting in Madison with&#13;
people involved in the program before I&#13;
left.&#13;
"But the meeting was so informal,"&#13;
he said, "that I couldn't ask the gully&#13;
questions I wanted to. I warned more&#13;
about making a good 'party inpression'&#13;
than abou' gelling good information.&#13;
"Before I left, Miss Echelbarger and I&#13;
decided that I should have an option;&#13;
that if after the fust week of school&#13;
(classes started there a week before&#13;
Parkside's ) if I didn't like the school I&#13;
could come back to Parkside withou t&#13;
missing any classes," he said. .&#13;
"I liked about 40% of my expenences&#13;
and really disliked about 60%," he said.&#13;
"lbe thing is that when you're in a&#13;
strange situation like that you tend 10&#13;
look at all things as. bad. But probablv&#13;
:IContlnu.d on pa.. 6\&#13;
President of the United States&#13;
announced before massive media&#13;
coverage that there were no American&#13;
forces in Laos," McGovern said, "That&#13;
the NBC television network conducted a&#13;
telephone poll and discovered 46'11&gt; of&#13;
the American people said they didn't&#13;
believe the President.&#13;
"I think this is a dangerous oondition&#13;
in. a free society when the leadership has&#13;
nusled us so many times that even when&#13;
they may be telling the truth about half&#13;
of the American people say they don 't&#13;
believe it."&#13;
HIt's to this problem above aU else&#13;
our political leaders must address&#13;
themselves," he stressed ... l have no&#13;
doubt the American people can find&#13;
their, way through the problems that&#13;
face us both in foreign policy and&#13;
domestic policy if we are honest with&#13;
each other."&#13;
"Above all else I pledge thai whatever&#13;
I say in th!s wisconsm campaign;'&#13;
McGovern said, "will be convictions'&#13;
hold deeply."&#13;
He said he has been labelled a one&#13;
issue candidate not· because he is&#13;
uninterested in other issues but becauSO&#13;
he felt the war to be the first order of&#13;
business for a new president.&#13;
The Senator staled "I do not accept&#13;
the view Mr. ixon's formula will end&#13;
the war. I think Vietnamization is a&#13;
formula to continue the war with a&#13;
watching .,d listening as&#13;
talked.&#13;
There were eighteen peOple,.logether&#13;
for the first time, all presumably curious&#13;
enough 10 struggle through a cold&#13;
midnight on short notice in order to see&#13;
Norman do his thing.&#13;
The fact that all these people,&#13;
married couples, unmarried couples,&#13;
slraights~ a wailress, and freaks gOI&#13;
together for the same reason struck me&#13;
ralher presumptively. Geqerally, I&#13;
'Would avoid such messes because. there&#13;
isn"t much I've got to say· 10 a stranger&#13;
when there are a million other things to&#13;
do. Yet we were all together, ready to&#13;
~ndure each other" to see orman.&#13;
Afrer the usual knolling in Ihe&#13;
kitchen when the women talk of little&#13;
boys at home and the men split botUes&#13;
of coke (alcohol and dope were stncUy&#13;
forbidden), we scrunched ourselves into&#13;
a circle in the living room. Everyone&#13;
except for three people on the couch&#13;
struggled for niches where muscles&#13;
wouldn't tighlen and necks wouldn't&#13;
sag.&#13;
onnan 'orman began, "usually at thin like&#13;
this the psychic will lell you about&#13;
!;.S.P. and answer a few que 11 ns for&#13;
flfly dollars. I read that when Jean&#13;
DIxon was in Racine a thousand pe pie&#13;
paid for rickets and all she dod wa talk&#13;
about her books and things. I'm nOI&#13;
saying anything against books and&#13;
things like this bUI I believe Ih. only&#13;
way to talk about E.SP " '0&#13;
demonstrate It. ....&#13;
He continued for st\leral mlOule 10&#13;
this vein and then asked If anyone had&#13;
ever had a psychiC expenence or what&#13;
they chose to caU a psychic expenence&#13;
Faces turned to their n.oghb r and&#13;
eyes shOI 10 the Ooor, anuclpallnl •&#13;
reply, fearful that they had not been&#13;
put on the spot. The room wa Sllenl&#13;
and orman chIded, "This sure I a&#13;
quiet group."&#13;
Then a man near orman saidt nl&#13;
don'l know if this is a psychic&#13;
experience Or what, but omelLmtS&#13;
when I go someplace where I haven',&#13;
be.n I gel the feehns tha' I've been&#13;
{Continued on pace 61&#13;
N_u S1a1er wilII_ 01blo ro.t~""llIalllei o'CbrIoI. --."..&#13;
-&#13;
McGovern Begins Campaign&#13;
By Marc Eisen&#13;
Senator George McGovern has begun an&#13;
unprecedented presidential campaign by&#13;
entering the Wisconsin Democratic&#13;
presidential primary more than a full&#13;
year before it will be held.&#13;
The South Dakota democrat spoke&#13;
and listened to a group of supporters in&#13;
Racine Sunday afternoon to conclude a&#13;
three day campaign swing through the&#13;
state that brought him to six out of the&#13;
ten congressional districts in the sta,te.&#13;
The Senate dove acknowledged it was&#13;
unprecedented for a candidate to&#13;
declare his president(al aspirations so&#13;
early, but said, "I feel these are&#13;
unprecedented times, that the issues&#13;
need to be addressed now, and that the&#13;
kind of campaign I wanted to wage&#13;
requires a considerable amount of time.&#13;
"I want to do more than simply&#13;
participate in a television blitz in the&#13;
closing weeks_ of these primary&#13;
elections," the Senator said.&#13;
McGovern emphasized he was in the ·&#13;
primary to stay and he would not&#13;
withdraw. "My committment to come&#13;
Into Wisconsin is definite. There is no circumstance I can conceive of arising,&#13;
no combination of competing&#13;
candidates that would cause me to&#13;
change my decision to make Wisconsin a&#13;
major testing ground for my views.&#13;
"I consider Wisconsin absolutely&#13;
crucial to my campaign," he said. The&#13;
Senator said too he w s coir.~itted to&#13;
run ht- primaries in New Hampshire,&#13;
New York, California, and Oregon.&#13;
McGovern is one of the Senate's more&#13;
outspoken opponents to the war, and&#13;
was an unsuccessful candidate for the&#13;
Democratic presidential nomination in&#13;
1968. He became a candidate after the&#13;
assassination of Robert Kennedy,and his&#13;
support came mostly from · Kennedy&#13;
followers.&#13;
The Senator began his talk to about&#13;
2 00 supporters by decrying the&#13;
credibility gap that has grown between&#13;
the presidency and the people. "I think,&#13;
perhaps, the most shameful and painful&#13;
problem that we have here in the United&#13;
States today is the credibility gap," he&#13;
said.&#13;
"Unfort~nately, this is a bipartisan&#13;
gap. It ts one that wasn't born&#13;
~este~?ay; it's been with us too long a tune .. he said.&#13;
President of the nited State&#13;
announced before m · e media&#13;
coverage that there v.ere no Amen n&#13;
forces in Laos," 1cGo em said. "Tiut&#13;
the BC television network conducted a&#13;
telephone poll and di ered 46% of&#13;
the American people said the didn't&#13;
believe the Pre ident.&#13;
" I think this · a dangero condition&#13;
in_ a free society when the leader ·p ha&#13;
rrusled u so many time that even when&#13;
they may be telling the truth about half&#13;
of the Ameri an people s.a)'. the ·don't&#13;
believe it."&#13;
"It's to this problem above all el&#13;
our political leader must ddre&#13;
them elves, ' he tre d. "J have no&#13;
d u_bt the American people can find&#13;
their. way through the problem that&#13;
face us both in foreign polic and&#13;
domestic policy if v.e are honest v.ith&#13;
each other."&#13;
"Above all e I pledge that whate er&#13;
I say in thi \ 1 on m campaign, ..&#13;
NEWSCOPE pboliliry Bob Mainland McGovern said. 'will be onviction I&#13;
Senator George McGovern speaking at the hold deeply·.,&#13;
Golden Lantern in Racfue Sunday. He said he ha been labelled a one issue candidate not · because he i&#13;
. "Redu~ to its irnplest terms what uninterested in other i e but be auso&#13;
1t means 1s that millions of citizens in he felt the war to be the first order of&#13;
this country no longer believe their busine for a new pre ident.&#13;
government is telling them the truth " The Senator tated 'l do not cept&#13;
he said. ' the view Mr. 1&#13;
i: on·s formula ·11 end&#13;
"What a shocking thing it is in a free the war. l thin · Vietna.miz.ation is a&#13;
society that a few days after the __ ______:cfo_-'--=mula to con inue the war "th&#13;
By John Koloen&#13;
This is the concluding part of an&#13;
article begun last week in which I ended&#13;
on the verge of a session with orman&#13;
Slater E.S.P.&#13;
Let it suffice to know that we were&#13;
gathering at a small apartment in&#13;
Kenosha and after emptying the living&#13;
room of all moveable furniture there&#13;
wasn't quite enough room to it; one&#13;
person had to stand in the doorway&#13;
watching :ind Ii tening a orman&#13;
talked .&#13;
There were eighteen people,_ t ther&#13;
for the fir t time. all pre mabl curl u&#13;
enough to truggle thtough a cold&#13;
midnight on short noti e in order to see , orrnan do hi thing.&#13;
The fact that all the pe pie,&#13;
married couple • unmarr"ed couple .&#13;
traights~ a waitre • nd fre t&#13;
together for the same rea on tru me&#13;
rat her pre umpt1 el . Generali\', I&#13;
Exchange Student Returns&#13;
would avoid uch me · cause ·th re&#13;
isn't much I've g t to : to a tran r&#13;
when there are a milli n other thin to&#13;
do. Yet we were all together. read to&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
The Parkside student · who was to&#13;
atten? a black university in North&#13;
Carolma under the auspices of the&#13;
North-South Student Exchange Program&#13;
has returned to Parkside after spending&#13;
only a week at the school.&#13;
David Krausse, cited a variety of&#13;
reasons for his return to UW-P; most&#13;
notably loneliness and the fact he&#13;
cbol uldn't make any true friends with&#13;
ack students there.&#13;
His reactions are similar but not as&#13;
lrong as those of Ron Williams last&#13;
Year'_s exchange student. In a letter&#13;
pubbshed in the January 12, I 971&#13;
EW~COPE, William's wrote, "My&#13;
~xpenences at NCCU (North Carolina&#13;
entral University), for the most part,&#13;
were filled with abuse name calling and&#13;
a constant reminde; that I was a&#13;
hon-black in a situation where I didn't&#13;
e~ong and was not wanted. . ·f.nendships were few and meaningless ..&#13;
Williams spent the entire 1970 spring&#13;
semester at NCCU.&#13;
The program, sends white college students from the midwest to black&#13;
b°l~eges in the south on an exchange a:tts. However, none 'of these students&#13;
d end_ ~-P because of the lack of&#13;
1~~mitones, and instead go to v "·Madison.&#13;
The program at Parkside is&#13;
coordinated through the Student Affairs&#13;
Office by Jewel Echelbarger. The&#13;
selection of Krausse as the Park ide&#13;
representative was made jointly by Mi&#13;
Echelbarger and students who had gone&#13;
to NCCU in past semesters.&#13;
Dave Krausse is not bitter about his&#13;
experiences in the program, and wishes,&#13;
in fact, he had stuck it out.&#13;
He said, of his experiences, "I would&#13;
put 50% of the blame for my return on&#13;
Jewel Echelbarger, and a good 50% on&#13;
myself. I don't think I received enough&#13;
preparation prior to my leaving. I&#13;
attended a meeting in Madison with&#13;
people involved in the program before I&#13;
left.&#13;
"But the meeting was so informal,"&#13;
he said, "that I couldn't ask the gutty&#13;
questions I wanted to. I worried more about making a good 'party inpression'&#13;
than about getting good information.&#13;
"Before I left, Miss Echelbarger and I&#13;
decided that I should have an option;&#13;
that if after the first week of school&#13;
( classes started there a week before&#13;
Parkside's ) if I didn't like the school I&#13;
could come back to Parkside without&#13;
missing any classes," he said.&#13;
"I liked about 40% of my experiences&#13;
and really disliked about 60%," he said.&#13;
"The thing is that when you're in a&#13;
strange situation like that you tend lo&#13;
look at all things as bad. But probably&#13;
(Continued on paae 6)&#13;
ndure each other. to e mun.&#13;
After the u uaJ knotting in the&#13;
kitchen when the women ta!· of little&#13;
boy at home and the men split bottle&#13;
of coke {alcohol and d pe were tri ti&#13;
forbidden). we scrunched ourselve ·nto&#13;
a circle in the living room. ·very e ex ept for three pe pie on the couch&#13;
truggled for ni he where mu le&#13;
wouldn't tighten and nee w uldn't&#13;
sag.&#13;
IDSCOPE ,._ IIIJ M&#13;
Nonnu Slalu with one ol b.Js foarty-elglat statues of Christ. &#13;
,;p.:ag~e~2 .. N!!I\IO~~lO~~"~!4~OD~da~Yll,.:!4=:arch~~8,:.1:;97;;1~""""""""""""••••••••••••••••••••• :&#13;
.&#13;
Also while duck is roasting, remove:&#13;
by Prof. Kook • d&#13;
• This IS not a gourmet column. It does the skin from the second orange an :&#13;
:.." deal wuh exotic cuisine. It offers parboil skin (drop it in boiling water for:&#13;
: l§t uon for economical cooking, a few minutes). Scrape out the Inner:&#13;
:esp.dally for mrdents and novice white lining of the boiled skin. Keep the :&#13;
:&lt;ooks. It assumes you are lost in the peel and discard this white. stufr. New:&#13;
:.,,&lt;hen and you pamc when il comes cut skin into very thin stnps and add.&#13;
: '10" 10 cook I subslantial meal. them to the sauce in the roasting pan:&#13;
: When you gel the mon for your shortly before the dock is done. , :&#13;
: n,one) snd do not waste Iny food. you Cut your orange pulp into sectIOns. :&#13;
: Ire cooktngeconomically. This does not Ready to serve: Remove ducklin~ 10:&#13;
: -an you hive to fill up on rice. pliller' garnish with the orange secll°thns.:&#13;
..~ Add t'o the sauce in the pan e :&#13;
: potatoes and noodles. Fat example, remainin ~ cup of vermouth and lemon:&#13;
:here is I recelpe for I lovely roast duck juice. Helt ~ntly (low helt.). stir to:&#13;
: dtnner for four. It costs under S 1.00 per .- II :hud. Whit you need blend ingredients and then pour a sma : amount over the duck. Put remauung :&#13;
:Iduckling Sluce in grlvy boal. :&#13;
: ~ ranges Serve your favorite vegetables with : :2 ,ablespoons lemon Juice this. How 10 prepare some mee:&#13;
;ltlblespoons 0 ur! vegetables will appear soon. :&#13;
: ~cup sweet vermouth P.S. If you are wondering whit to do :&#13;
: sah with the rest of the sweet vermouth, :&#13;
: r 'anB P n With cO'fCt make a mahatlan for you and company:&#13;
: (or use alumJRum foil) to enjoy before dinner. Ijigger Bourbon:&#13;
to ~ oz. vermouth. Dash of Angostura:&#13;
. How 10 beg,n Defrost uuck billers (optional). Mix over rocks but;&#13;
:oyerOlghl ,f bought frozen; wash Ind serve without them and add a cherry' :&#13;
:dry duck with paper towel. Rub :&#13;
:duckhng with sail ,nside and out. Truss; ..&#13;
:(Ih' mean you secure the legs and:&#13;
:.. lOg and close open body cavity: use:&#13;
:Slrtng or small skewers). RoaSl a' 400:&#13;
:degrees for 30 mlOultS. Remove from:&#13;
:pan. Pour off III but about 2:&#13;
: table poonful of pan drtppings. :&#13;
: Add Oour to drtpplOgs lef, 10 the pan:&#13;
:sltr o"er mtd,um hea' (place pan on top:&#13;
; of slove for this) unltl a well.browneeli&#13;
:pa 'e IS formed. Add ju,ce from I:&#13;
:orange plus enou~ wlter to measure;&#13;
: one cupful. Add Iiiis 10 Sluce and cooki&#13;
: un,i1 sauce IS smooth. Now add ~ cup:&#13;
: of vermouth to sauce. Pul duckling bac,"&#13;
: in Ihe pan; baste du k with this sauc':&#13;
: (spoon up Sluce and cover the duc~&#13;
: wi,h the Sluce). Cover pan and roast ire popularity during the past year which&#13;
: oven al 350 degrees for I to I ~ hours: even exceeds the heights of acclaim&#13;
: (WhIle duck roasts. prepare youf. enjoyedl by Rich during the past 30&#13;
:\iegetllbles Ind remember that you have: years while he was winning every major&#13;
:In hour or so before duck is ready). : jazz poil and recording some 25 alb"",,&#13;
!.....•......... ~ r•..,~ ••••••&#13;
~ UW-PARKSIDE SPECIAL ~&#13;
. 10% off on any pizza&#13;
Must bTlng 10 cards&#13;
by Dave Weber and Mark Timpany&#13;
Luddite is an acronym for the League&#13;
for the Unification of DIverse. ~nd&#13;
DiscontinuouS Items of' Th.eoretlcal&#13;
E&#13;
. We've changed since the&#13;
nterpnse. . we&#13;
nineleenth centurysh·T~er~f~r~~:Ycivil&#13;
can be stopped, or 0 . I&#13;
war The surrealist movement IS cl~s~ y&#13;
ali .ed with Marxism and cogDlt~Ve&#13;
p.rchOIOgy. Being a.Luddite at parkside&#13;
Is like operating a kibbutz in the middle,&#13;
of Arabs., shi Th This has been a long ~pace ip, . e&#13;
student is put in the position of asl,d~g&#13;
people who do not exist for facllttleS&#13;
which are his own.' In the .fu!ure. thl}&#13;
will cease to be the case. Is this part 0&#13;
the movie or is this real life?&#13;
Luddite is an accident. It was a jok~.&#13;
It Is a response to the total el~ctromc&#13;
environment. It is a label applted to a&#13;
total, surrealistic, McLu~nes9-ue,.&#13;
existential, cognitive, psycholog1~al,&#13;
communistic, inclusive, lais~z falre,&#13;
anarchistic conspiratorial phtlosophy.&#13;
Luddite is agnostic. Every Luddite (or&#13;
Buddy Rich In Concert&#13;
Drummer Buddy Rich. conceded to&#13;
be the world's greatest drummer, will&#13;
play a one·night engagement on&#13;
Saturday. March 20, in Kenosha's&#13;
Tremper High School Auditorium at 8&#13;
p.m. under sponsorship of The&#13;
Uniyersily of Wisconsin·Parkside&#13;
Sludenl Activities Office.&#13;
The Buddy Rich 1970 Big Band. a 16&#13;
piece aggregation. has enjoyed a wave of&#13;
TUDE TS 0 LV!&#13;
Good Tues - Thurs&#13;
Mar 9-11&#13;
ICE COLD&#13;
BEER&#13;
Frosty 12 01. Mug&#13;
JumboPitcher&#13;
PlZZAHUT&#13;
~~E:::~~",,(:l 2801 30th&#13;
lZZA&#13;
Ave.• Kenosha&#13;
DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
Chicken Snack 99c&#13;
99c&#13;
99c&#13;
.99c&#13;
99c&#13;
99c&#13;
.. 99c&#13;
' ..: ....&#13;
.-' TUESDAY&#13;
"Big Pete" Spec'lal H•• bo .. ~.&#13;
Comb, ... " .. "&#13;
.......IIIlW.. ~~ WEDNESDAY&#13;
Mini·Pizzo Yo", Cho,,~&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
Gli Chicken Snack&#13;
ri:i&#13;
II&#13;
fRIDAY&#13;
lake Perch Plate All ~., Spec!.1&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
"Big Pete" Spec' I H•• bo .... 10 Comb,nll'O"&#13;
SUNDAY&#13;
After Church Special&#13;
Plus OUf Regular Mellu Featuring Our&#13;
FAMOUS PIZZAS ~ •&#13;
:' 0-".5U". !I1lI ~- Ihru Thurs. 11 I.m.· 1 '.m., ,., ... Fr"· t. 11 I.m.• 2 '.m. ~~I\:~ ;.~ ~/r.,!&#13;
............ :&#13;
II ~ ~~~ l:&#13;
with such jazz greats as Dizzy Gillespie,&#13;
Count Basie and Charlie Parker.&#13;
Rich's new band. featuring young&#13;
musicians, recently concluded stands at&#13;
Fillmore West. which drew over 15,000,&#13;
mostly under 30, as well as ~ell-out&#13;
appearances at Fillmore East, the&#13;
Tropicana in Las Vegas, and a command&#13;
performance at the London Palladium&#13;
for Queen Elizabeth. His is easily the&#13;
most popular big band sound going&#13;
among young people who. before Rich,&#13;
were thought to be attuned only to the&#13;
amplified sounds of small groups.&#13;
All seats will be reserved. Tickets are&#13;
52 and 53 and are available at the&#13;
Parkside Student Activities Office on&#13;
the Wood. Road Campus. Gook-Gere&#13;
Company in Racine and Bidingers&#13;
House of Music in Kenosha. Mail orders&#13;
should be sent to the Student Activities&#13;
Office.&#13;
repressed Luddite) should think&#13;
believe unhindered by intimida' and&#13;
coercion. Everyone is either ty~Or&#13;
(Luddite) or a represse/ ylPPi'&#13;
(repressed Luddite). IPpi,&#13;
Work is performing a sub.hum&#13;
monotonous act at a specified tim:~'&#13;
exchange for food, clothing shell ill&#13;
status. Work is obsolete. Work fr and&#13;
necessary. No one will War S not&#13;
Luddite. Luddite will work for n~ fo,&#13;
It is not a big step' from declarinone.&#13;
state of national emergency fo g t&#13;
purposes to creating new myths ~t"t&#13;
the enemy. within by a mo out&#13;
Reichstag fire. Luddite was dem&#13;
responsible for last week's explOSl'not&#13;
th tion' 'f 1 I f on It e na ton s capt a .' n act. WeqUelti&#13;
the bombers' ,ilrtistic effecl. S on&#13;
Sontag notes that effect, not inlen~&#13;
the relevant matter for consideration'=&#13;
analyzUl;g any ~rtistic presentlli&#13;
• Everything we do IS music. on.&#13;
The pun Is the lowest form of hum&#13;
except to a Luddite. The liter or&#13;
industrial, mechanical establishment~te.&#13;
rigid set of cate&amp;ories that gavecomf:':&#13;
to Itterate, tndustrial. mechanical&#13;
peopl~, DISh11St sad people, tit&lt;&#13;
revolutton IS JOY. We are in a&#13;
:literate electric environment. No:~&#13;
need fit into a category to enjoy lif,.&#13;
OUf new enVIronment compel&#13;
commitment, participation. The expe~&#13;
is the man who stays put. I'd ratlt&lt;r&#13;
have my country die for me.&#13;
If you think your're a Luddite&#13;
there's an easy way to find out. Malee;&#13;
poster which expresses an idea of youn,&#13;
On the poster. put the Luddite star and&#13;
write, "Luddite, official". Once y~u've&#13;
come this far, you have accepted many&#13;
of the precepts of Luddite. Place tit&lt;&#13;
poster in a place where it will be&#13;
conspicuous.&#13;
Get Involved&#13;
The Education Advisory Commilltl&#13;
is looking for students who wouldbe&#13;
interested in meeting with and&#13;
interviewing prospective Educatioo&#13;
Division faculty members. This is your&#13;
chance to participate in the faculty&#13;
hiring process. Students who wish to&#13;
. participate should contact:&#13;
James Dean· English&#13;
Wayne Johnson· Philosophy&#13;
Steve Stephens· Physical Education&#13;
Homer Knight· Chemistry&#13;
Donald Piele . Mathemalics&#13;
John Campbell· Geography&#13;
Marilyn Scamman - Education&#13;
William J. Murin· Political Science&#13;
\ · while duck i roasting, remove :&#13;
the ·in from the secon~. orange and :&#13;
parboil skin (drop it m bo1hng wat~r for :&#13;
a few minutes). Scrape out the inner :&#13;
white lining of the boiled skin. Keep the :&#13;
peel and discard this :,vhite_ stuff. New :&#13;
cut kin into very thin stnps and add •&#13;
them to the sauce in the roasting pan :&#13;
shortly before the duck is done. . :&#13;
Cut your orange pulp into se&lt;:ttons. :&#13;
Ready to serve· Remove duckhn~ to :&#13;
platter- g mish with the orange sections. : Add t'o the sauce in the pan the :&#13;
remainin cup of vermouth and le_mon :&#13;
jui e. Heat gently (low hea!), stir to :&#13;
blend ingredients and then pour a ~all :&#13;
amount over the duck. Put remaining :&#13;
uce in gravy boat. . : Serve your favorite vegetables ~th :&#13;
thi How to prepare some mce :&#13;
\.'egetables will appear soon. :&#13;
P.S. If you are wondering what to do :&#13;
with the rest of the weet vermouth, :&#13;
make a mahattan for you and company :&#13;
to enjoy before dinner. l jigger Bourbon :&#13;
to ½ oz. •.ermouth. Dash of Angostura :&#13;
bitter (optional). Mix over rocks but1 · rve without them and add a cherry!&#13;
.... ,11A'1 M5PEAIC&#13;
Gtf~z:J&#13;
b Dave Weber and Mark Timpany&#13;
rJ:ddite is an acronym for ~he League&#13;
f the Unification of Diverse . ~nd&#13;
~~ontinuous Items of dT~eo~et~~;&#13;
Enter rise. We've chang~ sine&#13;
ninet!nth cendturshy.T~erf ;~r~c;:yc;~&#13;
can be stoppe , or O • 1&#13;
war The surrealist movement is cl~s~ y&#13;
ali~ed with Marxism ~nd cogmt~ve&#13;
h logy Being a Luddite at Parkside&#13;
psyc O • • th · ddle&#13;
is like operating a kibbutz m e mi&#13;
of Arabs.· shi ·1·he&#13;
This has been a long ~p_ace P· . student is put in the position of a~~~g people who do not exist for facibti~s&#13;
which are his own. In the fu~ure, this&#13;
will cease to be the case_. Is this part of&#13;
the movie or is this real bfe?&#13;
Luddite is an accident. It was a jok~.&#13;
It is a response to the total el~ctromc&#13;
environment. It is a label apphed to a&#13;
total, surrealistic, McLu~nes9ue,&#13;
existential, cognitive, psrchologi&lt;:al,&#13;
communistic, inclusive, lais~z faire,&#13;
anarchistic conspiratorial philo~ophy.&#13;
Luddite is agnostic. Every Luddite (or&#13;
Buddy· Rich In Concert&#13;
Drummer Buddy Rich, conceded to&#13;
be the world's greatest drwnmer, will&#13;
play a one-night engagement on&#13;
Saturday, Mar h 20, in Kenosha's&#13;
Tremper High School Auditorium at 8&#13;
p.m. under sponsorship of The&#13;
Univer ity of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Student Acti\-itie Office.&#13;
The Buddy Rich 1970 Big Band, a 16&#13;
piece aggregation, has enjoyed a wave of&#13;
popularity during the past year which&#13;
even exceeds the heights of acclaim&#13;
enjoyed by Rich during the past 30&#13;
years while he was winning every major&#13;
10% Off on an pizza&#13;
Mu t bnnsz ID card&#13;
M r 9-11&#13;
ICE COLD&#13;
BEER&#13;
Frosty 12 oz. Mug 1 Qc&#13;
Jumbo Pitcher 5 Qc&#13;
DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS&#13;
Chicken Snack&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
99c&#13;
TUESDAY&#13;
"Big Pete" Special ~:::~.:. 99,&#13;
WEDNESDAY&#13;
Mini-Pizza Yoo, Cho,,. 99,&#13;
THURSDAY&#13;
Chicken Snack . 99,&#13;
FRIDAY&#13;
Lake Perch Plate ::.~.~r 99,&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
"Big Pete" Spec',al H•mbu,vo,&#13;
Col"'bin•hon 99c&#13;
........ 99&lt;&#13;
SUNDAY&#13;
After Church Special&#13;
Plus Our R,gular M,nu F,aturing Our&#13;
FAMOUS PIZZAS&#13;
with such jazz greats as Dizzy Gillespie,&#13;
Count Basie and Charlie Parker.&#13;
Rich's new band, featuring young&#13;
musicians, recently concluded stands at&#13;
Fillmore West, which drew over 15,000, mostly under 30, as well as ~ell-out&#13;
appearances at Fillmore East, the&#13;
Tropicana in Las Vegas, and a command&#13;
performance at the London Palladium&#13;
for Queen Elizabeth. His is easily the&#13;
most popular big band sound going&#13;
among young people who, before Rich,&#13;
were thought to be attuned only to the&#13;
amplified sounds of small groups.&#13;
All seats will be reserved. Tickets are&#13;
$2 and $3 and are available at the&#13;
Parkside Student Activities Office on&#13;
the Wood- Road Campus, Gook-Gere&#13;
Company in Racine and Bidingers&#13;
House of Music in Kenosha. Mail orders&#13;
should be sent to the Student Activities&#13;
Office.&#13;
rep:essed ~uddite) should think&#13;
beheve unhindered by intimidar and&#13;
coercion. Everyone is either a y~ or&#13;
(Luddite) or a repressed y!PPie (re.e_ressed Luddite). 1PPie&#13;
Work is performing a sub-liu&#13;
monotonous act at a specified timma~,&#13;
exchange for food, clothing shelt e II\&#13;
status. Work is obsolete. Work fr and&#13;
necessary. No one will works not&#13;
Luddite. Luddite will work for no for&#13;
I . t b" one&#13;
t 1s no a Jg step from decla . · state of national emergency f;ing a&#13;
purposes to creating new myths :btest&#13;
the enemy within by a mo out&#13;
Reichstag fire. Luddite was dcrn&#13;
responsible for last week's explosio not&#13;
the nation's capital. In fact, we quesf· at&#13;
the bombers' · artistic effect. su'00&#13;
Sontag notes that effect, not intent~&#13;
the rel~vant matter for consideration' .&#13;
11&#13;
analyzmg any artistic present t· 111&#13;
E thi d .. a1on&#13;
very ng we o 1s music. ·&#13;
The pun is the lowest form of hu&#13;
except to a Luddite. The lite:r't&#13;
industrial, mechanical establishment~ e. . "d t f t . h IS l ngi se o ca egones t at gave comr&#13;
l . t t · d . 1ort&#13;
to i era e, m ustnal, mechanical&#13;
people, Distrust · sad people th&#13;
revolution is joy. We are in ~ ~&#13;
literate e~ectric environment. No ~;e&#13;
need fit into a c~tegory to enjoy life.&#13;
Our new envuonment compel&#13;
~ommitment, participation. The exper:&#13;
is the man who stays put. I'd rather&#13;
have my country die for me.&#13;
If you think your're a Luddite&#13;
there's an easy way to find out. Make ~&#13;
poster which expresses an idea of yours.&#13;
On the poster, put the Luddite star and&#13;
write, "Luddite, official". Once y~u've&#13;
come this far, you have accepted many&#13;
of the precepts of Luddite. Place the&#13;
poster in a place where it will be&#13;
conspicuous.&#13;
Get Involved&#13;
The Education Advisory Committee&#13;
is looking for students who would ht&#13;
interested in meeting with and&#13;
interviewing prospective Education&#13;
Division faculty members. This is your&#13;
chance to participate in the faculty&#13;
hiring process. Students who wish to&#13;
participate should contact:&#13;
James Dean· English&#13;
Wayne Johnson . Philosophy&#13;
Steve Stephens - Physical Education&#13;
Homer Knight - Chemistry&#13;
Donald Piele - Mathematics&#13;
John Campbell - Geography&#13;
Marilyn Scamman - Education&#13;
William J. Murin. Political Science &#13;
library learning Cent p&#13;
, er rogresses&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
James Galbraith, the Director of&#13;
Planning and Construction, recently sat&#13;
downwith a NEWSCOPE reporter and&#13;
discussedhisjob and the past and future&#13;
development of Parkside as he foresees&#13;
il.He told NEWSCOPE, "When the&#13;
campus was orig.inal~y selected, a freeze&#13;
waS put on zomng 10 an. area one mile&#13;
around the proposed sight. Working&#13;
with the communities of Somers and&#13;
Kenosha,we indicated to them how we&#13;
would like to see the surrounding'&#13;
oeighborhood.developed for utilization&#13;
of soil, unlities, and topography and&#13;
this coincided with the general plan of&#13;
thecommunity. For instance, south of&#13;
theactivitiesbiulding, we hope to see a&#13;
campus oriented commercial district."&#13;
Concerning the overall scope of the&#13;
programhe said, "In our Master Plan for&#13;
the campus we capitalized on the&#13;
beauty of the natural sight. Parking is&#13;
remote so as not to infringe on this.&#13;
Circulationis one of the first basics we&#13;
workedout and was firmly established&#13;
in theplan endorsed by the Regents.&#13;
"Our building program was first&#13;
submitted as a written specification&#13;
tailored to students and activities. Since&#13;
the program funs on a biennium, getting&#13;
thebuildingtook awhile.&#13;
Explaining the aims of the&#13;
commissionhe added, "It is the concern&#13;
of the building commission tha t we have&#13;
sensiblebuildings that are well designed&#13;
10 meet the needs of an academic&#13;
institution. Our elected officials&#13;
concentrated hard on how to get the&#13;
mostfrom our construction dollar."&#13;
Presently under construction is the&#13;
Ubr~ry. Learning Center. He explained&#13;
~ initial stages of planning, "For the&#13;
Ubrary Learning Center, the first&#13;
sessinnbegan in January of '69. The&#13;
buildingbill was heid up by normal red&#13;
tape and finally approved in late '69.&#13;
But in the meantime some planning&#13;
money waa released and we had the&#13;
architectsworking on the plans."&#13;
He continued, ''The Library Learning&#13;
Center was programmed in 1968 with&#13;
plans for 67-68 biennium but was axed&#13;
for lack of funds. In June of '69 the&#13;
forward planning began again and was&#13;
modtfiedto a projected cost of $6 1/2&#13;
milhonand 15 months completion time.&#13;
Governmental aid and red tape added&#13;
to the difficulties. "The center acheived&#13;
110. I priority for federal funds, ITitle&#13;
One grant from HEW. This meant we&#13;
~ another review agency to contend&#13;
WIthand so another three month delay&#13;
OCCUred, He said&#13;
Construction at library learning center site.&#13;
Action came in nid 1970, "We finally&#13;
got the all clear from the appropriate&#13;
s~ur~es and went ahead with the&#13;
bidding. These bids were opened on&#13;
:~~y 30, 1970. Contracts were awarded&#13;
General Construction&#13;
Nelson Inc. ofWisconsin$3,725,OOO.00&#13;
Plumbing .&#13;
Superior-Kuetemeyer269,440.00&#13;
Electrical Dave Speaker Company613,384.00&#13;
Elevator&#13;
Annor Elevator Co., Inc.IH ,784.00&#13;
Bookshelving&#13;
Estey Corporation79,026.00&#13;
Carpet&#13;
Ed Turnquist Co., Inc. 193,873.00&#13;
$5,830,307.00&#13;
Anticipated planning difficulties were&#13;
minimal, "We weren't held up too much&#13;
since the architect had just finished with&#13;
the final plans in June of 1970 after 16&#13;
months of work-which is par for the&#13;
course.&#13;
Construction finally began in&#13;
September of 1970. Then the rains&#13;
came-and winter, and the com laints&#13;
why couldn't we have bid it t~"e&#13;
months earlier:'&#13;
Future Psrkside students can look&#13;
.forward to improved fadliue:).&#13;
''Completion for the Library Learrung&#13;
Center is scheduled for September&#13;
1972. The Architect is Hellmuth. Obara&#13;
&amp; Kassabaum of S.. Louis. Fmal&#13;
construction cost is esumared Jt&#13;
57,759.583.00.&#13;
This facility provided full library :md&#13;
learning center space, study areas.&#13;
administration ofli c'ts. food service 3":3.&#13;
student affairs rooms and bookstores.&#13;
The central feature of this biutding is&#13;
"Main PlaL"C," a tri·lnel open are (hal&#13;
will serve as the campus ""ub" as other&#13;
facilities are connected to the east and&#13;
west.&#13;
NEXT WEEK:&#13;
Procedures and Future Pianmng&#13;
Congo Les Aspm (D-Wis.) will meet&#13;
informally with students from 1130&#13;
a.m. 10 I p.m. on Friday. M3r~h I:!. 10&#13;
the Parkside SlUdent Acti.t"'s Building&#13;
A HEAVY OU 0&#13;
125&#13;
AM·FMS'.~&#13;
Music:eem.r&#13;
Hen d .;I aood .ay 10cia&#13;
eceer _hat .Fdher lOUDer&#13;
IS like Pl,;ay .. r ord on 1M&#13;
Flwr I~5. P1.y the: I.1n\t&#13;
record on .lnolhtr makC'&#13;
Loren for the ddrer-C'f1C:c.&#13;
'-'Sp«~1I)' In lhe ~cry &amp;ow&#13;
and vet") hlCh rrcqll('nc~&#13;
A' ""lSh~, Jlmp/, IOIlItlb&#13;
}""" And the Fowr 12S&#13;
IS the firsl comptC'IC AM·&#13;
FM Srerec tUSIC (('"leI&#13;
to lou 011 Ircat od 111OtIndt.&#13;
SHand H•• r&#13;
FWMrS .. reol&#13;
I' alllll 0rtiIR&#13;
...... afK_&#13;
3215 6OtI. St.&#13;
6.5&amp;-1301&#13;
SPIOI&amp;L .IOLIIU&#13;
, ... Fan 1100•• '&#13;
BARDEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
(f~,&#13;
~---=-&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN and WOMEN&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
BOOKS - NOVELS&#13;
MON. and Fri.&#13;
9:30 a. rn. to 9:00 p. m.&#13;
TUES. rhru TH R .&#13;
9:30 a. m. to 5:30 p. m.&#13;
SAT. - 9:30 a. rn. to 5:30 p. rn.&#13;
SensuouS Woman by "J n&#13;
Everything You Always Wanled to&#13;
Know about Sex by Dr. Reuben&#13;
Love Story by Erich Segal&#13;
Inheritors by Harold Robins&#13;
French Lieutenant's Woman&#13;
by Jo~ Fowles cShip'r(Jhore&#13;
Slashy print pantop $8. SPORTS&#13;
Ball Four by Bouton&#13;
R.K NEWS AGENCY&#13;
Newspapers' Poperbacks • Magazines&#13;
5816 siXth Ave. &amp; Pershing Ploza&#13;
3&#13;
Library Learning Cent p · er rogresses&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
James Galbraith, the Director of&#13;
Planning and Construction, recently sat&#13;
down with a NEWSCOPE reporter and&#13;
discussed his job and the past and future&#13;
development of Parkside as he foresees&#13;
it.He told NEWSCOPE, "When the&#13;
ampus was orig~nall_y selected, a freeze&#13;
was put on zoning m an area one mile&#13;
around the prop~s~d sight. Working&#13;
with the communities of Somers and&#13;
Kenosha, we indicated to them how we&#13;
would like to see the surrounding ·&#13;
neighborho??. developed for utilization&#13;
of soil, ut1ht1es, and topography and&#13;
this coincided with the general plan of&#13;
the community. For instance, south of&#13;
the activities biulding, we hope to see a&#13;
ampus oriented commercial district."&#13;
Concerning the overall scope of the&#13;
program he said, "In our Master Plan for&#13;
the campus we capitalized on the&#13;
beauty of the natural sight. Parking is&#13;
remote so as not to infringe on this.&#13;
Circulation is one of the first basics we&#13;
worked out and was firmly established&#13;
in the plan endorsed by the Regents.&#13;
125&#13;
AM-FM St reo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
"Our building program was first&#13;
submitted as a written specification&#13;
tailored to students and activities. Since&#13;
the program runs on a biennium, getting&#13;
the building took awhile. Construction at library learning cmter ite.&#13;
Explaining the aims of the&#13;
ommission he added, "It is the concern&#13;
of the building commission that we have&#13;
sensible buildings that are well designed&#13;
to meet the needs of an academic&#13;
institution. Our elected officials&#13;
concentrated hard on how to get the&#13;
most from our construction dollar."&#13;
Presently under construction is the&#13;
Libr~ry. Learning Center. He explained&#13;
the mittal stages of planning "For the&#13;
Library Learning Center ' the first&#13;
session began in January ~f '69. The&#13;
building bill was held up by normal red&#13;
tape and finally approved in late '69.&#13;
But in the meantime some planning&#13;
money was released and we had the&#13;
architects working on the plans."&#13;
He continued, "The Library Learning&#13;
Center was programmed in 1968 with&#13;
plans for 67-68 biennium but was axed&#13;
for lack of funds. In June of '69 the&#13;
forw~rd planning began again and was&#13;
Ri?dtfied to a projected cost of $6 I /2&#13;
lllllhon and 15 months completion time.&#13;
Gover_nmental aid and red tape added&#13;
to the difficulties. "The center acheived&#13;
no. I priority for federal funds, l Title&#13;
One grant from HEW. This meant we&#13;
~d another review agency to contend&#13;
with and so another three month delay occured, He said&#13;
Action came in nid 1970, "We finally&#13;
got the all clear from the appropriate&#13;
s~un~es and went ahead with the&#13;
b1ddmg. These bids were opened on&#13;
July 30, 1970. Contracts were awarded&#13;
to: ·&#13;
General Construction&#13;
Nelson Inc. of Wisconsin$3,725,000.00&#13;
Plumbing&#13;
Superior-Kuetemeyer269 ,440.00&#13;
Electrical Dave Speaker Company6 l 3,3 4.00&#13;
Elevator&#13;
Armor Elevator Co., lnc.15 It ,784.00&#13;
Bookshelving&#13;
Estey Corporation79,026.00&#13;
Carpet&#13;
Ed Turnquist Co., Inc.193,873.00&#13;
$5,830,307.00&#13;
Anticipated planning difficulties were&#13;
minimal, "We weren't held up too mu h&#13;
since the architect had just finished with&#13;
the final plans in June of 1970 after 16&#13;
months of work- which is par for the&#13;
course.&#13;
Construction finally began in&#13;
September of 1970. Then the r in&#13;
came- and winter, and the com 1 int&#13;
/11/anagemenf&#13;
Can Pull You&#13;
Togetl,e,&#13;
BOOKS - NOVELS&#13;
Sensuous Woman by "J"&#13;
Everything You Always Wanted to&#13;
Know about Sex by Dr. Reuben&#13;
Love Story by Erich Segal&#13;
Inheritors by Harold Robins&#13;
French Lieutenant's Woman&#13;
by Jo~ Fowle&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
Ball Four by Bouton&#13;
R-K NEWS AGENCY&#13;
Newspape~s - Paperbacks · Magazines&#13;
5816 Sixth Ave. &amp; Pershing Pima&#13;
Procedure d Future Pl nm&#13;
SPICIAL IICLUDU&#13;
,, .. ,au !lCDllDS&#13;
BARDEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
LAT BT f ASH IONS&#13;
FOR MEN and WOMEN&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
10 . and Fri.&#13;
9:30 a. m. to :00 p. m.&#13;
T E . thru TH R .&#13;
9:30 a. m. to 5: 0 p. m.&#13;
AT. - 9:30 a. m. to - :30 p. m.&#13;
e)hip~hore&#13;
Slashy print pantop $8.&#13;
High-curve collar, arro ing into a shirt cut o pants&#13;
proportions. The print? Bold abs ractions on crisp&#13;
65 % Dacron polyester, 35 cotton. Sizes 30-38 &#13;
.;&#13;
DIAR Y OF A MAD HOUSEWIFE&#13;
cast&#13;
Richard Benjamin Jonathan Balser&#13;
Frank Langella ., George Prager&#13;
Carrie Snodgre Tina Balser&#13;
arne nodgre i young. married,&#13;
middle-class. en laved. neurotic, bored,&#13;
compartmentalized and very female in&#13;
thl\ him he I someone who i looking&#13;
fur wOlcthlO&amp; that will replace ideah m:&#13;
me thing un ported and impetuous so&#13;
'" mal , d' rover her y urh.&#13;
Al1 sh ha already stagnated mro a&#13;
hcu -wrfe who obeys a nondescript&#13;
cliche' ndden hu band that enjoys being&#13;
around b,g "names". Alcohol has&#13;
becorn the buzz nece ry for all of he'&#13;
life uppon sy terns to conunue&#13;
funcuonmg. he finally gets the theme&#13;
underway with an u urped love affail&#13;
with a p udo groory dry look write,&#13;
who e Impression is Lawrence&#13;
lIa"ey·llke.&#13;
fte, a photogrnphically impressi,e&#13;
I 'e scene and an equally well outlined&#13;
affim. she find out her younp, writer&#13;
doesn't really want her as a lo,e,. but&#13;
merely as an ornament on his&#13;
misdlre led Imagmary virility. . .she&#13;
discovers he is a homosexual.&#13;
on fronting him wilh the news she has&#13;
brought. he throws her out, showing&#13;
more of hi blistering neurosis.&#13;
She goes back home to he' lOy&#13;
hu band and ,milarly unbelie'table&#13;
"",Id,en and find lhem all aninute&#13;
agarn. II seem the old boy was out&#13;
get ling a lillie too. His affair turns out&#13;
to be an anticlimax as well, and he&#13;
praISes her for her being so&#13;
understanding. She says she is only&#13;
human. thinking to herself that a great&#13;
insight into life is in her possission, but&#13;
she won't let on to Mr. Machine that she&#13;
tOO had been on the balling boal.&#13;
Suddenly the scene changes. We find&#13;
our Carrie Snodgress-Mary Pickford&#13;
mentally cliff hanging with a&#13;
sensitivity group and everyone is calling&#13;
her a fool for what she had done. So,&#13;
the entire story turns out to be a&#13;
narrative confession. AU I could think&#13;
of was that it was certainly simple to&#13;
call what looks simple ...S.I.M.P.L.E.&#13;
ow. about the acting ...Something&#13;
tells me that our soft-husky voiced&#13;
young academy award nominee is a&#13;
character actor who has played her one&#13;
role. but Iwon't be sure until I've seen&#13;
more of her. She probably is a&#13;
interesting person in real life, but I&#13;
think that I have already met her&#13;
two-dimensionally.&#13;
The gUm's structure was most&#13;
innovative, reminiscent of Fellini's&#13;
earlier works- minimal social comment&#13;
with high character study and&#13;
naturalistic approach. This will remain&#13;
in my mind, one of the better films I've&#13;
seen this year because it left a kind of&#13;
afte,.imp,ession. Yes ...A dynamic film&#13;
even though I suspect we won't be&#13;
seeing mucn of Miss Snodgress around.&#13;
Richard Benjamin was his usual&#13;
reasonable self ...a good actOr.&#13;
No doubt, a couple of Academy&#13;
Awards will drop onto this film, a&#13;
definite competition for our popularity&#13;
laden "Love Story" oscars.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
Bridge Players&#13;
Parkside Open Pairs Invitational&#13;
Duplicate Bridge Tournament&#13;
(A.C.B.L. Supervised)&#13;
TOURNAMENT LIMITED TO&#13;
AREA STUDENTS, FACULTY &amp; STAFF&#13;
Saturday, March 13 -&#13;
2 p.m. starting time at&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
- Parkside Campus.&#13;
Sign up at your respective&#13;
student activity centers&#13;
before Wed., March 10.&#13;
LaFollette's course proposal .&#13;
four major objectives: mclUded&#13;
I. Understanding the . I .&#13;
b t&#13;
re aliO",L'&#13;
e w~en energy, populati ~up&#13;
pollution problems; on, and&#13;
2. Comprehension of chan .&#13;
eco-system which have res r:sd In the&#13;
man's inability or unwill~ e from&#13;
consider the future consequ:&#13;
ngness&#13;
to&#13;
actions. flees of his&#13;
3 .. Realization of the f&#13;
technology and life style e fects of&#13;
. s On 0&#13;
enYI.roilment and development of Ur&#13;
ability to relate man to th the&#13;
eco-system; e eotlIe&#13;
4. Understanding of the magn·t d I U e of·&#13;
the present problem and examination&#13;
the .possible alternative solutions t th°l&#13;
CrISIS. 0 e&#13;
.Ecology, and Its Inherant relation""&#13;
With economics and techn I '''l'&#13;
. . 0 ogy, are&#13;
Im~ortant In a. modern industrial&#13;
society. A course In ecology theref&#13;
fits well within the limitations o~&#13;
Parkside's industrial mission. 0&#13;
~~4~~~~'~$~_~~_·8~~~~.~~~~~.~~-~~~ •&#13;
Ecology Course Proposed&#13;
By LaFollette&#13;
Douglas LaFollette, Assistant&#13;
professor of Chemistry at Parkstde, has&#13;
subrui tted to the Division of SCle'nces a&#13;
proposal for a course entitled "'Ecology:&#13;
The Science of Survival." The three&#13;
credit course, if appro,ed, may be&#13;
taught next fall. . . .&#13;
For some time now, vanous petItI,::ms&#13;
have been circulated by students asking&#13;
for just such a course. No introductory&#13;
ecology courses have been offered at&#13;
Parkside although interest is great.&#13;
Since instructors are willing to teach&#13;
ecology courses, and since student&#13;
interest is high, it is unfortunate that no&#13;
ecology courses are offered. Students&#13;
interested in ecology as a major have&#13;
been forced to transfer to other&#13;
institutions or to major in other fields.&#13;
Dr. LaFollette'S course, if approved,&#13;
might in part offer an alternative&#13;
solution. His course would expose&#13;
students to the fundamentals of&#13;
ecology, or, as LaFollette puts it, "to&#13;
the fundamental population-resourcesenvironment&#13;
dilemma."&#13;
Student Teaching&#13;
Applications Available&#13;
by Keven McKay&#13;
The Parkside Director of Admissions,&#13;
John Elmo,e, is now accepting student&#13;
teaching applications, and internship&#13;
applications. In order to be eligible for&#13;
either program, a student must have a&#13;
minimum of 70 credits and should have&#13;
completed at least 2/3 of their major&#13;
and 2/3 of the education courses and&#13;
the related courses required for teacher&#13;
certification.&#13;
There are a limited number of&#13;
internships available throughout&#13;
Wisconsin and Illinois. The internship&#13;
satisfies .the student teaching&#13;
requirement and is for a full day, one&#13;
full semester. Interns are licenses by the&#13;
Wisconsin State Department of Public&#13;
Instruction and are paid $1,767 per&#13;
semester by their particular school&#13;
district.&#13;
Students not accepted for internship&#13;
would be placed in the student teaching&#13;
program. The student teaching program&#13;
offers more leeway in that a student has&#13;
more contro.l over the location, grade&#13;
level, and time. He is given a choice&#13;
between eight weeks, full days or&#13;
s!Xteen weeks half da s.&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE.&#13;
presents&#13;
IN CONCERT&#13;
BUDDY RICH&#13;
AND HIS BIG BAND&#13;
SA T., MARCH 20&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
Kenosha Tremper Aud.&#13;
Reserved Seat Tickets&#13;
$3.00 &amp; $2.00&#13;
Tax Included&#13;
Available now in Student&#13;
Acti'ities Office Talent Hall&#13;
Student Teaching or Internship i'&#13;
considered the most critical factor in&#13;
teacher preparation and student,&#13;
involved are given eight credits for the&#13;
program which may be in eithe' a public&#13;
or private school.&#13;
Students planning to file applicatiOlll&#13;
are urged to do so now by Elmore.&#13;
Further information is available at&#13;
admissions.&#13;
Constitution&#13;
Vote&#13;
This Week&#13;
\ The referendum lor ratification of the&#13;
Constitution will be held March 10 and 11&#13;
Polling places will be located at the maiO&#13;
entrances of each campus.&#13;
Polling places shall be open from 1:01&#13;
a.m. to 8:00 p.m. both Wednesday, MardI&#13;
10, and Thursday, March 11.&#13;
All UW·Parkside students are eligibielD&#13;
vote in this referendum, upon preseotatilll&#13;
of their current J.D. card.&#13;
This Constitution shall be eoosidlred&#13;
ratified, and is ratified, when approvedbJ&#13;
a simple majority of votes cast. '!be v«a&#13;
shall be by secret ballot.&#13;
~.&#13;
EXqUtsite French ~repe ~&#13;
delicately touched Wlth ettl bef&#13;
-erect French· roses (rernem de&#13;
those?) exquisite, han~ m~~.&#13;
French lace--satin f1b~&#13;
French crepe braid!lIl(. ~~ttle ..&#13;
by Llise, these gowns gran-&#13;
. all lengths: shirt, shortie or igOOr&#13;
nie, and there are some pe&#13;
sptc:- tbe&#13;
Llise creations are ideal ror&#13;
bride or would· make a welcQl'llI!&#13;
gift lor her. K..,ooII'&#13;
6207 • 22ndA"-&#13;
Phone' 652.26.1&#13;
DI RY OF A MAD HOUSEk'IFE&#13;
insight into life i in her po i ion, but&#13;
e w n 't let on to fr. fachine that she&#13;
too had been on the balling boat.&#13;
uddenly the . ene change . We find&#13;
our C3rrie nodgre -. fary Pickford&#13;
mentallr cliff hanging , with a&#13;
n iti it)' gr up 3nd everyone i calling&#13;
h r a fool for what she had done. So,&#13;
the entire tO!)' turn out to be a&#13;
narr tive onfe ion . All I could think&#13;
of " that it wa certainly simple to&#13;
all what loo· imple ... S.I.M.P.L.E .&#13;
• 'ow, bout the acting ... Something&#13;
me that our oft-husky voiced&#13;
young 1.: demy award nominee is a&#13;
h racter actor who ha played her one&#13;
role, but I won't be ure until I've seen&#13;
more of her She probably is a&#13;
intere ting per on m real life, but I&#13;
think that I have already met her&#13;
two-0imen ionally.&#13;
The gilm' structure was most&#13;
innovative, reminiscent of Fellini's&#13;
earlier works- minimal social comment&#13;
ith high character study and&#13;
naturalistic approach. This will remain&#13;
in my mind, one of the better films I've&#13;
seen this year because it left a kind of&#13;
after-impre ion. Yes ... A dynamic film&#13;
even though I suspect we won't be&#13;
eing mu :h of Miss Snodgress around.&#13;
Richard Benjamin was his usual&#13;
reasonable self...a good actor.&#13;
o doubt, a couple of Academy&#13;
Awards will drop onto this film, a&#13;
definite competition for our popularity&#13;
laden "Love Story' oscars.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
Bridge Players&#13;
Parkside Open Pairs Invitational&#13;
Duplicate Bridge Tournament&#13;
(A.C.B.L. Supervised)&#13;
TOURNAMENT LIMITED TO&#13;
AREA STUDENTS, FACULTY &amp; STAFF&#13;
Saturday, March 13&#13;
2 p.m. starting time at&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
- Parkside Campus.&#13;
Sign up at your respective&#13;
student activity centers&#13;
before Wed., March 10.&#13;
I&#13;
,. .. ,.. ... .. _ • .,, A --.. ·-o&#13;
Ecology Course Proposed&#13;
By LaFollette&#13;
Douglas Lafollette, A~sistant&#13;
Professor of Chemistry at Parks!de, has&#13;
submitted to the Division of Sciences a&#13;
proposal for a course entitled "Ecology:&#13;
The Science of Survival." The three&#13;
credit course, if approved, may be&#13;
taught next fall. . . . For some time now, vanous petltl~ms&#13;
have been circulated by students asking&#13;
for just such a course. No introductory&#13;
ecology courses have been offered at&#13;
Parkside although interest is great.&#13;
Since instructors are willing to teach&#13;
ecology courses, and since stud~nt&#13;
interest is high, it is unfortunate that no&#13;
ecology courses are offered. ~tudents&#13;
interested in ecology as a ma1or have&#13;
been forced to transfer to other&#13;
institutions or to major in other fields.&#13;
Dr. LaFollette's course, if approved,&#13;
might in part offer an alternative&#13;
solution. His course would expose&#13;
students to the fundamentals of&#13;
ecology, or, as Lafollette puts it, "to&#13;
the fundamental population-resourcesenvironment&#13;
dilemma."&#13;
LaFollette's course propos 1. four major objectives: a mc]uded&#13;
1. Understanding the 1 . b t re a !JonoL, e ween energy popul r "'up&#13;
pollution problems;' a ion, and&#13;
2. Comprehension of chan e .&#13;
eco-system which have res ft~ tn the&#13;
man's inability or unwiJI~ e from&#13;
consider the future consequ:°gness to&#13;
actions; nces of his&#13;
3. · Realization of the rn&#13;
technology and life style e ects of&#13;
enviro11ment and developmes ton our b·1· n of th a i ity to relate man to th . e&#13;
eco-system; e entire&#13;
4. Understanding of the magn·t d 1 u e of·&#13;
the pres~nt problem and examination&#13;
th~ _possible alternative solutions t tho{&#13;
cns1s. o e&#13;
. Ecology, an_d its inherant relationslu&#13;
with economics and technol P&#13;
. t t . ogy, are&#13;
impor an m a modern indust al . t A · n soc1e y. c~mz:se m ecology therefore&#13;
fits ~e\l . w1thm_ the limitations f&#13;
Parkside s mdustnal mission. 0&#13;
Student Teaching&#13;
Applications Available&#13;
by Keven McKay&#13;
The Parkside Director of Admissions,&#13;
John Elmore, is now accepting student&#13;
teaching applications, and internship&#13;
applications. In order to be eligible for&#13;
either program, a student must have a&#13;
minimum of 70 credits and should have&#13;
completed at least 2/3 of their major&#13;
and 2/3 of the education courses and&#13;
the related courses required for teacher&#13;
certification.&#13;
There are a limited number of&#13;
internships available throughout&#13;
Wisconsin and Illinois. The internship&#13;
satisfies .the student teaching&#13;
requirement and is for a full day, one&#13;
full semester. Interns are licenses by the&#13;
Wisconsin State Department of Public&#13;
Instruction and are paid $1,767 per&#13;
semester by their particular school&#13;
district.&#13;
Students not a_ccepted for internship&#13;
would be placed m the student teaching&#13;
program. The student teaching program&#13;
offers more leeway in that a student has&#13;
more contro_l over the location, grade&#13;
level, and time. He is given a choice&#13;
b_etween eight weeks, full days or&#13;
sixteen weeks half da s.&#13;
presents.&#13;
IN CONCERT&#13;
BUDDY RICH&#13;
AND HIS BIG BAND&#13;
SAT., MARCH 20&#13;
8:00 P.M.&#13;
Kenosha Tremper Aud.&#13;
Reserved Seat Tickets&#13;
$3.00 &amp; $2.00&#13;
T ox Included&#13;
Available now in Student&#13;
Activities Office Talent Holl&#13;
St~dent Teaching or Internship u&#13;
considered the most critical factor in&#13;
teacher preparation and students&#13;
involved _are given eight credits for the&#13;
program which may be in either a pubbc&#13;
or private school.&#13;
Students planning to file applications are urged to do so now by Elmore.&#13;
Further information is available at&#13;
admissions.&#13;
Constitution&#13;
Vote&#13;
This Week&#13;
The referendum for ratification of the&#13;
Constitution will be held March 10 and 11&#13;
• Polling places will be located at the main&#13;
entrances of each campus.&#13;
Polling places shall be open from 9:&#13;
a.m. to 8:00 p.m. both Wednesday, Marcil&#13;
10, and Thursday, March 11.&#13;
All UW-Parkside students are eligible lo&#13;
vote in this referendum, upon presentatir.cl&#13;
of their current I.D. card.&#13;
This Constitution shall be considered&#13;
ratified, and is ratified, when approved by&#13;
a simple majority of votes cast. The rotes&#13;
shall be by secret ballot.&#13;
Ex~isite French ~repe g~&#13;
delicately touched with erobr t,er&#13;
ered French roses (reroelll de&#13;
those?) exquisite, band ma&#13;
Fr enc b lace--satin ribbOns··&#13;
French crepe braidilllt. D~~~ by Llise, these gowns c an·&#13;
all lengths: shirt, sbortie or f gnor&#13;
nie, and there are some pe&#13;
sptc&#13;
Llise creations are ideal for e&#13;
bride or would make a welco!TI&#13;
gift for hP.r. l(enc»"° 6207 ~ 22nd Avenue&#13;
Phone: 652-2681 &#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
I nlUredinto McDonald's Drive-In&#13;
veuth Sheridan Road to see for&#13;
'" ~ why this fried·food wonderland lI1Yj\ecome so well entrenched in the&#13;
bomachsof so many Americans. _&#13;
51 One of the first reasons for their&#13;
ularity at this specific McDonald's&#13;
chise is the high rate of efficiency&#13;
r the e~ployees. People will travel· off&#13;
beatenpath, or to the other side of&#13;
wn if they can depend of fast, clean,&#13;
ndlyservice.It is neglected at many&#13;
ting establishments, reducing the&#13;
useess to the minority of customers&#13;
ho haveabsolutely no time barriers.&#13;
I wasalso impressed when 1learned&#13;
lhat the management stands firmly&#13;
ind their products, If the customer&#13;
eelsthat anything. he buys is not up to&#13;
uff his hamburgers, or whatever, will&#13;
r'aedtss c'&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
The 60's saw the demise of many&#13;
American musical institutions; The&#13;
Lucky Strike Hit Parade, Eddie Fischer,&#13;
Name That Tune, Snooky Lanson and&#13;
Ricky Ricardo. However, I find it&#13;
difficultto believe that the loss of these&#13;
was of any serious consequence to&#13;
musicas an art form. In fact, it makes&#13;
me believe that there still is some justice&#13;
~fl in this world. Unfortunately, the&#13;
60'scame frighteningly close to putting&#13;
In end to something decent and good,&#13;
.In· ·end which would have left this&#13;
country without a musical form&#13;
completelyits own. It almost killed&#13;
Americanjazz.&#13;
But dry your tears America, today&#13;
jazz is alive and well living in your juke&#13;
boxes, night clubs and even at the&#13;
Fill~ores, Just exactly who gets the&#13;
creditfor rushing in with the miracle&#13;
ttru~, I couldn't say. It was, I suppose,&#13;
• snople awakening of the musical&#13;
cultu.e to what it had forgotten. A&#13;
abostfrom the past came back to rattle&#13;
Itsehainsand demand its due credit for&#13;
whatAmericawas listening to.&#13;
~~terviews with the currect rock stars&#13;
~ .. n revealing people like Monk and&#13;
Budas the reasons behind it all. BS&amp;T&#13;
explodedwith a popular sound, b_ut a&#13;
!&lt;lUndadmittedly based on the ideas of&#13;
men like Gil Evans and Maynard&#13;
Furgllson.As the echoes of the Blue&#13;
Cheerand Vanilla Fudge began to fade,&#13;
:: lynclSm of Miles Davis began to be&#13;
ard. Pretty soon the money men&#13;
teed backward and found something&#13;
t could satisfy the newly acquired&#13;
~Il~ctual ta!ltes of a large section of&#13;
l.._ encan people. Jazz was welcomed lIume. .&#13;
However, it wasn't exactly a full&#13;
an aesarewel e e&#13;
ser;ed'dto insure equal proportions&#13;
or ered a fish sandwich t: ~~:te~ sa,ro'~re~~~~rliesM'and ::h~P ~f&#13;
h bii . awe ad a&#13;
am urger, (she ate my french fries b&#13;
contmually distracting me) and a smar;&#13;
Coke. Neither of us could lod e a&#13;
legitunate .complaint about the fO;d or&#13;
the service. Ithought that the grill man&#13;
got a little heavy with the ketch b that was all. up, ut&#13;
Suggestive selling by the employees is&#13;
ver~ mteresting and also effective I&#13;
not1ce~ th,at most individuals come U;to&#13;
the drive-in not knowing exactly what&#13;
the~want, u!11e~s.they are ordering for a&#13;
family. The individual will, for example,&#13;
decide that he wants "a hamburger fries&#13;
and a Coke." The alert employe; will&#13;
then ask "is that a large french&#13;
fries.sir?" or "will that be a large Coke&#13;
, ?" These uut ' rna am: ese quick suggestions may&#13;
result tn the maximum size and those&#13;
pennies, nickels, and dimes 'do add up.&#13;
The few things that bother me about&#13;
the McDonald's chain don't really&#13;
amount to much. One is the obvious ego&#13;
trip they are on when they boldiy state&#13;
that there have been "billions and&#13;
billions" of their hamburgers sold to the&#13;
public. I remind myself that the&#13;
American public isn't always right with&#13;
~ass decisions of any kind. In this&#13;
recovery. For one thing we haven't&#13;
gotten back a lot of our expatriated&#13;
talent that left for Europe where they&#13;
were ap.E.reciated, and probably never&#13;
will. (WhO could blame them for&#13;
staying?) Secondly, during the&#13;
depression of the 60's there were a lot&#13;
of fme things recorded that for the most&#13;
part were left of the shelves. Whiclt&#13;
brin~s me to .the. p.m.nt of this -,yhole&#13;
article. My purpose is or should, be to&#13;
let you know 0'[ good records to listen&#13;
to. So, as far as these forgotten albums&#13;
to, here are a few tQ look for.&#13;
Miles Davis:&#13;
"In a Silent Way"&#13;
"Seven Steps to He(1l1enIt&#13;
"Kind of Blue"&#13;
Terry Gibbs "Explosion" .&#13;
Maynard Furgeson -Any of his&#13;
annual albums, Maynard '61; Maynard&#13;
&lt;62,etc. h "&#13;
Modern Jazz QuaTtet- "Light ouse&#13;
If you're really not up to looking for&#13;
any of these older cuts, there is also a&#13;
fme group of new releases readily&#13;
available: . "s· Les McAnn and Eddie Harns- WISS&#13;
Movement"&#13;
Thad Jones and Mel&#13;
Lewis- "Consummation"&#13;
Tim Buckley-"Starsailor" .&#13;
Charles Uoyd- "Charles Lloyd J1I the&#13;
. Soviet Union OJ ..&#13;
Wayne Marsh-"NE PLUS ULTRA&#13;
Irene Reid-"The World Needs What I&#13;
NeC~;ford Brown-"The Clifford Brown&#13;
Quartet in Paris"&#13;
Phil Woods- "Phil Woods and his&#13;
European Rhythm Machine al the&#13;
Montreax Jazz,Festival"&#13;
. c .ona s a vert ISing IS&#13;
mterestmg as their food. I think tIley'&#13;
kept up a fine tradition of Ippt&gt;ling I&#13;
the family, and the hardhat. Promouo&#13;
thai come to my mmd include&#13;
television ad that states an mdlvidu&#13;
wiU receive a meal, and change from&#13;
dollar.&#13;
The McDonald's people also jumped&#13;
on the patriotic bandwagon awhJ&#13;
back, along with such notable a&#13;
"Reader's Digest", when the) gave '\loa&#13;
stick 'em yourself Old Clones, A lund&#13;
nag to put in your window, ....a th&#13;
reward for eating a meal at 'kDonJld's&#13;
Recently the employee wore lriangl&#13;
hats to mark rhe arrival of cherry shake&#13;
and George Washington's birthday ;n,&#13;
cherry shakes were obviousl&#13;
descendents of that famous tree George&#13;
never chopped down.&#13;
All this just shows rhat the bu ne&#13;
of selling hamburgers In thIS country ,&#13;
booming, as all the dnve-ins stnve fo&#13;
super burgers, the sky is the limit&#13;
Psychology is used on the customer&#13;
even in ordering, coupled with the USlJ&#13;
advertising. Even with these: draw backs&#13;
drive-ins are still the places to get a fas&#13;
bite to eat, although the quality "aries.&#13;
As for McDonald's on South Slterida&#13;
Road, I think back to those f,ee nags&#13;
and tell you thaI the only real choic&#13;
involving their hamburge" and otllt&#13;
goods is that you can ei!her love 'em 0&#13;
v '&#13;
Faculty&#13;
Nominations&#13;
Wanted&#13;
A toral of $2,000 in leaching "' ....ds&#13;
($ 1,000 presented by Srandard Oil&#13;
Company and $ 1,000 by the Johnson&#13;
Foundation) will be made this spring.&#13;
For this, the awards commiuee&#13;
desires student nominal ions with a&#13;
statement of supporting evidence for&#13;
the nomination, not to exceed a page in&#13;
length. The letters of SUppall should&#13;
emphasize teaching effecu",eness and&#13;
success, and how the professor&#13;
contributed to the student's learning&#13;
experience.&#13;
The awards are not meanl to be J&#13;
"popularity contest" based on the&#13;
charisma of instruclOrs.&#13;
ext week nomination forms will be&#13;
available to students in lhe three&#13;
student affairs offIces, In the libra'},&#13;
and in divisional offices. AU&#13;
nominations must be corned in b&#13;
Monday, April 5 at.&#13;
Student AffaIrS offIces m Tallen. full.&#13;
Racine, Kenosha. or in the HumaniUt'S&#13;
Division office. 210 Greenqui IThe&#13;
nomlllallon WIll be ...·aluated&#13;
and tabulated and the award selecllon&#13;
made by a committee of twehe which&#13;
includes six faculty members and &lt;i&#13;
student representh'es. Profe r Herbert&#13;
Kubly is chairman&#13;
HUXHOLO'S&#13;
COUNTRY STORE&#13;
SO. Green Ba) Rd,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
634-9 16&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
MoadI . Nard&gt; " 1'71PeS&#13;
For&#13;
Rtstn:ations&#13;
Phont&#13;
69-HJ455&#13;
{Ray {Radigan;&#13;
OJ)cmkr!ul 9ood&#13;
.., -&#13;
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
............... " ,., ,&#13;
ART and CRAFT&#13;
MART&#13;
5811 6th An, Kenosha&#13;
ART SUPPLIES&#13;
AND HANDICRAFT&#13;
~ SUi&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 ..... till 11 p ••• 7 d.y.&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phon. 657-9747&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
Students let red c.,pel '1lvlce&#13;
(SO does evelyone ehl'.&#13;
Uf'~~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/a-r Sia _&#13;
eoee 409l AVf.&#13;
KlON06HA - Ol.T-lJ174&#13;
Fruit Basket&#13;
Corsage&#13;
Candy&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
-----&#13;
YOUR COMPLETE "ON CAMPUS" BOOK &amp; SUPPLY CENTER&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
COMING SOON&#13;
ANNUAL SPRING&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
walch lor il&#13;
lOc OFF&#13;
On Any Order Of&#13;
BEll'S FRIED&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
with this coupon&#13;
Good Wed., March 3&#13;
Ibru Tues., March 16&#13;
7601 Sheridon Rd.&#13;
........~....,&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
lured into McDonald's Drive-In&#13;
I ven . R d f S uth Shendan oa to see or&#13;
11 why this fried-food wonderland&#13;
m}d become so well entre~ched in the&#13;
tlomachs of so many Americans.&#13;
Jt One of the first reasons for their&#13;
ularity at this specific McDonald's • p ·hise is the high rate of efficiency f~e e~ployees. People will travel- off&#13;
e beaten path, or to the other side of&#13;
own if they can depend of fast, clean,&#13;
·iendly service. It is neglected at many&#13;
1 ting establishments, reducing the&#13;
usmess to the minority of customers&#13;
who have absolutely no time barriers.&#13;
I was also impressed when I learned&#13;
that the management stands firmly&#13;
hind their products: If the customer&#13;
ieel that any~hing he buys is not up to&#13;
uff, his hamburgers, or whatever, will&#13;
r a ed t s s c ·&#13;
by Bob Borchardt&#13;
The 60's saw the demise of many&#13;
American musical institutions; The&#13;
Lucky Strike Hit Parade, Eddie Fischer,&#13;
'ame That Tune, Snooky Lanson and&#13;
Ricky Ricardo. However, I fmd it&#13;
difficult to believe that the loss of these&#13;
wa of any serious consequence to&#13;
music as an art form. In fact, it makes&#13;
me believe that there still is some justice&#13;
left in this world. Unfortunately, the&#13;
60's came frighteningly close to putting&#13;
an end to something decent and good,&#13;
.an· -end which would have left this&#13;
country without a musical form&#13;
completely its own. It almost killed&#13;
American jazz.&#13;
But dry your tears America, today&#13;
Jazz is alive and well living in your juke&#13;
boJte , night clubs and even at the&#13;
Fillmores. Just exactly who gets the&#13;
credit for rushing in with the miracle&#13;
terum, I couldn't say. It was, I suppose,&#13;
a imple awakening of the musical&#13;
cultu,e to what it had forgotten. A&#13;
gho t from the past came back to rattle&#13;
Its chains and demand its due credit for&#13;
what America was listening to.&#13;
Interviews with the currect rock stars&#13;
began revealing people like Monk and&#13;
Btrd a the reasons behind it all. BS&amp;T&#13;
exploded with a popular sound, b_µt a&#13;
nd admittedly based on the ideas of&#13;
men like Gil Evans and Maynard&#13;
furgu on. As the echoes of the Blue&#13;
Oieer ~? Vanilla Fudge began to fade,&#13;
:e lync1 m of Miles Davis began to be&#13;
ard, Pretty soon the money men&#13;
tnced backward and found something&#13;
I could satisfy the newly acquired&#13;
:llectual 4'i39tes of a large section of&#13;
h encan people. Jazz was welcomed&#13;
ome. ·&#13;
~&#13;
However, it wasn't exactly a full&#13;
served t · I o, do ir:isure equal proportions.&#13;
tartar r ere a fish sandwich with no&#13;
n sa.rse, french fries, and a cup of&#13;
co ee. or a nickel. Maggie had a&#13;
ham?urger, (~e ate my french fries b&#13;
~ontmuall)'. distracting me) and a ma~&#13;
o~~- Neither of us could lod e a&#13;
leg1ttma~e complaint about the fo;d or&#13;
the sei:i1ce. I thought that the grill man&#13;
ghot a ltttle heavy with the ketchup but&#13;
t at was all. ·&#13;
Sug~estive selling by the employee i&#13;
ve11: interesting and also effective. I&#13;
notice~ th_at most individual come into&#13;
the dnve-m not knowing exactly what&#13;
the)'. want, u?le~-they are ordering for a&#13;
fam_ily. The md1v1dual will, for example,&#13;
decide that he wants "a hamburger fries&#13;
and a Coke." The alert employe; will&#13;
then ask "is that a large french&#13;
fries,sir?" or "will that be a large Coke&#13;
ma 'am?" These quick suggestions ma):&#13;
result m the maximum size and those&#13;
pennies, nickels, and dimes 'do add up.&#13;
The few things that bother me about&#13;
the McDonald's chain don't really&#13;
amount to much. One is the obviou ego&#13;
trip they are on when they boldly state&#13;
that there have been "billion and&#13;
billions" of their hamburgers old to the&#13;
public. I remind myself that the&#13;
American public isn't always right with&#13;
mass decisions of any kind. In thi&#13;
recovery. For one thing we haven't&#13;
gotten back a lot of our expatriated&#13;
talent that left for Europe where they&#13;
were ap_ereciated, and probably never&#13;
will. lWho could blame them for&#13;
staying?) Secondly , during the&#13;
depression of the 60's there were a lot&#13;
of fine things recorded that for the m t&#13;
part were left of the shelves. Which&#13;
brin~s me to the point of thi 'Yhole&#13;
article. M:y purpose is or should be to&#13;
let you know oi good records to listen&#13;
to. So, as far as these forgotten album&#13;
to, here are a few tq look for.&#13;
Miles Davis:&#13;
"In a Silent Way"&#13;
"Seven Steps to Heaven"&#13;
"Kind of Blue"&#13;
Terry Gibbs"Explosion"&#13;
Maynard Of hi Furge on - Any&#13;
annual albums, Maynard '61 : faynard&#13;
'62, etc. 1 .. Modern Jazz Quartet- "Light ,ou e&#13;
If you're really not up to loo~ng for&#13;
any of these older cut • there I al . 8&#13;
fine group of new releases readily&#13;
available:&#13;
Les McAnn and Eddie Harri "Sw1s&#13;
Movement"&#13;
Thad Jones and Mel&#13;
Lewis- "Consummation"&#13;
Tim Buckley- "Starsailor" . Charles Uoyd- "Charles Lloyd m the&#13;
. Soviet Union" " U.S ULTRA .. Wayne Marsh- 'E PL&#13;
Irene Reid- "The World eed What I&#13;
Ne~~;ford Brown-"The Gifford Brown&#13;
Quartet in Paris"&#13;
Phil Woods- "Phil Wo~s and his&#13;
European Rhythm Machine at the&#13;
Montreax Jazz Festival"&#13;
YOUR COMPLETE "ON CAMPUS" BOOK &amp; SUPPLY CENTER&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
COMING SOON&#13;
ANNUAL SPRING&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
watch for it&#13;
Facu&#13;
omin&#13;
-Want d&#13;
0&#13;
HUXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY STORE&#13;
So. Gre 11 Ba Rd.&#13;
Keno hu&#13;
634--9 16&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
10c OFF&#13;
On Any Order Of&#13;
BELL'S FRIED&#13;
CHICKEN&#13;
is c.oopon&#13;
arch 3&#13;
thru Tues., arch 16&#13;
7601&#13;
A ..&#13;
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
ART and CRAFT&#13;
MART&#13;
11 6th i ..&#13;
5&#13;
ART SUPPLIES&#13;
AND HANDICRAFT&#13;
~&#13;
.&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60 St.&#13;
6 o. . ill 11 p. . 1 cloys&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
P one 657-97 7&#13;
Bank&#13;
Elm&#13;
f&#13;
,,&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses &#13;
things. \ lit a cigarette in defia&#13;
seeming monopoly and befonce.of th4.&#13;
out he had told her that he re 1\ WOnt&#13;
to read the others in the gro:oUld ha..&#13;
if she wanted to know mor/ andthat&#13;
the remainder of her questions :::d ha..&#13;
she could arrange an appoint ....ered&#13;
him. ment 'Oith&#13;
When he had finished he a&#13;
person to estimate the accuraskedeacIl&#13;
disclosures. cy of his&#13;
. Her answer to this quest"&#13;
"About 85%." IOn Was,&#13;
To the next person in the .&#13;
said, "\ see that you are a n~fcle he&#13;
motorcycles. . . you also drink ~t&#13;
fish. \ see that in the near fut ike I&#13;
will have an accident with a mo~reYOll&#13;
much like the one you had abo~tCYcJe&#13;
years ago when you bruised you 1 ITto&#13;
a country road. This time you ~ egOIl&#13;
careful because it is worse 'f e more&#13;
f 1&#13;
'11 ... 1 you·-&#13;
care u you get by this crisis " ..."&#13;
accuracy estimation was, "eighty'.fl' ilk&#13;
ninety per cent:' lVeto&#13;
"Good, I'm starting to tune int&#13;
vibrations." 0 YOUr&#13;
He continued around the r&#13;
telhng each person eight or nine "'fl'&#13;
incidents or characteristics Whi:~~&#13;
they would know. He told them ~&#13;
date and even the time of da&#13;
incidents happened and each y the&#13;
. responded with the same excl':t~'"&#13;
of their amazement. I0OI&#13;
As the readings approached me 1&#13;
began to feel that Norman was indeed&#13;
telling things which, regardlessof what&#13;
I'd like. to believe, were unknowlb~&#13;
except If someone had an insidelinet&#13;
the person's thoughts. 0&#13;
He came to me and rattled off&#13;
disclosures from my past that 1hadto&#13;
thlOk .to remember and had touched&#13;
upon my future bofme movingon to&#13;
the next person. I weakly announced&#13;
that he had been ninety five percent&#13;
correct.&#13;
It seemed a matter of cornman fact&#13;
when he said, to the next in line,"J.&#13;
that someone close to you has diedof&#13;
liver problems and I see someone close&#13;
to you is also suffering from this.....&#13;
When Norman had finished, themao&#13;
being read replied, ''Yes, my fatherdied&#13;
a month ago from a liver allinentII1II&#13;
my mother is in the hospital with tho&#13;
same thing."&#13;
Everything after that wu a&#13;
anti-climax up to and includilll tile&#13;
comment by the last man in the 1lDI,&#13;
"Stop! You're too accurate."&#13;
When he had finished with tho&#13;
readings he looked exhaused andaW4&#13;
for a glass of water.&#13;
It was then a young girl asked,"What&#13;
do you expect as repayment for your&#13;
services?"&#13;
"I only ask that you say a prayerfor&#13;
me ... that's enougll."&#13;
At the end \ was ready lD beIifII&#13;
anything.&#13;
SEWSCOPE Monday. March 8, 1971 (Continued from Page 1) page 6&#13;
there before and that it's all familiar."&#13;
"Yes this is not unusual, as a matter&#13;
of fact it happens to most people about&#13;
twenty times a year. It is defimtely&#13;
linked with E.S.P. but because most&#13;
eople never develop their gifts in this&#13;
~rea they choose to ignore it when this .&#13;
happens. I believe very much th~t&#13;
everyone has a gift in E.S.P. but that It&#13;
has to be cultivated in order to be&#13;
used."· .&#13;
Norman looked up at the circle of&#13;
people waiting for the next questIOn.&#13;
For a'moment no question came but&#13;
then an older woman, dressed as a&#13;
waitress, asked, "Where does this gift&#13;
come from?" ~&#13;
"This gift is god-given. but it must be&#13;
cultivated. You see, man only used&#13;
about ten percent of his mind, but&#13;
through E.S.P. he can use up to eighty&#13;
percent of it. I've been able to develop&#13;
my memory so that all \ have to do is&#13;
close my eyes and think about&#13;
something and the answer shoots across&#13;
a screen like a movie. I can see the&#13;
words. But this ali has to be developed."&#13;
"You said when I came in that my&#13;
aura was light blue. Could you tell m e&#13;
about this," the waitress asked.&#13;
AU faces turned expectantly because&#13;
everyone had been told they had a&#13;
distinct aura.&#13;
H is curious what attracts a person's&#13;
attention. To be told something of&#13;
yourself is undoubtedly more&#13;
interesting than a lecture in Greenquist&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Norman began to explain her aura, "I&#13;
see that there is someone very close to&#13;
you who has had an illness recently in&#13;
the area of the heart; near th~ right&#13;
ventricle.&#13;
As he paused, the woman blurted&#13;
Qut, "That's right, my .... "&#13;
"Don't tell me, you don't say&#13;
anything. When ]'Ou're with a psychic&#13;
never say anything about yourself unless&#13;
you want to hear them tell you what&#13;
you told them. \ don't mean to be rude&#13;
or anything, it's just that I'm the&#13;
psychic ... Iet me teU you.&#13;
"I see:' he continued, "that you .have&#13;
a ring which means a great deal. to&#13;
someone very near to you. She is&#13;
constantly taking it and this sort of&#13;
thing ... \ see that there was a fire in the&#13;
past that did a lot of damage to a&#13;
building owned by someone you know&#13;
well, Isee also that someone was injured&#13;
in the fire."&#13;
He continued reading her while the&#13;
rest of us waited a~iously for our tur-n.&#13;
The waitress interrupted Nonnan several&#13;
times exclaiming "Right, \ was .. ." but&#13;
Norman stopped her short each time of&#13;
teIling her past.&#13;
It seemed as.if he would never fInish&#13;
reading her as he kept on "seeing"&#13;
(Continued from Page n&#13;
90"1 of the campus was indifferent to&#13;
bother me. Nothing hke 'hat happened.&#13;
It's 'he kind of wound' you ger Within.&#13;
The kind of things you couldn't keep&#13;
enduring. There was no one to talk to."&#13;
He is working now with Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger in hope of strengthening&#13;
rhe program so thai the poor&#13;
preparauon and the experiences he fell&#13;
won't happen again.&#13;
.onh Carohna Central Universuy has&#13;
an enrollment about the size of&#13;
Park 'de's. Krausse says 'he chool is a&#13;
vicum of the double tandard 'hat sull&#13;
applies '0 black and white schools in the&#13;
urh ubsequently the school is short&#13;
of funds nd is at a disadvantage in&#13;
h apmg on bla k people for the past&#13;
400 year&#13;
"People who know about the&#13;
program tel! me I really had a head start&#13;
over people who had gone previously,"&#13;
he aid "I broke through the race&#13;
barrier 10 my d rm During the eight&#13;
day' I wa 'here Italked with tudents&#13;
In 'he dorm four nIght&lt; We weren't&#13;
really friends, but at least it was a&#13;
foothold.&#13;
"It's strange, but , found that the&#13;
other three white guys at the sch~ol&#13;
avoided me more than black people did.&#13;
There was one white guy who didn't&#13;
like me because Iwas from the North!&#13;
It makes it really tough. You get&#13;
depressed about things like that:'&#13;
"There was probably 5% who wanted&#13;
me to stay and 5% who didn't. And&#13;
they let me know about it too. For&#13;
example:' he said, "if' sat at a lunch&#13;
table and there were four guys sitting at&#13;
the end of it, the four would get up and&#13;
move to another table. But none of&#13;
these hassles really endangered me in&#13;
any way:' .&#13;
"1 wasn't hassled that much," he said.&#13;
"To be really truthful l wish I had stuck&#13;
it our. Ilearned more in one week than&#13;
Ilearned in the past two years about the&#13;
black man in America.&#13;
"'Bul 10 leave was a foolish decision,"&#13;
he said, ""hink now 1 could have made&#13;
ia. It's funnY bUI I miss it."&#13;
UW PABKSIDE&#13;
FI.tlrl Film Sirles&#13;
PRESENTS:&#13;
.... Z••• TH&#13;
... V....&#13;
•• CH.R.&#13;
Bu.a •••&#13;
tN fRtlIUT LlHMAWS PROOUCT1OflI&#13;
0# fOWARO AlRFS .F..... "B._DF&#13;
VlRa ••••&#13;
"UULF' •&#13;
...~&#13;
ORGE SEGAL' $AHOY DENNIS Ow.- lOr ..u! NICHOLS PRf5eNTED BY WARNER BROS.&#13;
Friday, March 12&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
ACTIVITI ES BUILDIN G&#13;
Admission 1SC'&#13;
1/&#13;
Is&#13;
Where It Is At! BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS&#13;
....... LI K E . •• the brands youknow&#13;
in sound equipment, plus over 3,000Albums&#13;
and 45's at discount prices.&#13;
Stop in and blow your mind, nol yrJJ'&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, rJJ'&#13;
Department Manager, who is a pa,ksl~&#13;
.....-:::::::::::,.student and will talk your language, bOlh,n&#13;
eqUipment purchases, records and moneY·&#13;
~~~:::::J&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30 •&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Btat .. 5_11 .. 800"""'"&#13;
.....&#13;
F.... ck ,,_ « Onl Rift' •&#13;
.. Potofo $al ...&#13;
an"&#13;
Schoono' .. '0"10" GI... of 8 .. ,&#13;
H'PPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday 1 p.m. to 8&#13;
PITCHEI.S $1.00 GLASS 20e&#13;
A".lIoW. ,. P... Io•&#13;
...cl...... '-lif ... SoNrltjP... Io.&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
,,,, BRAT-STOP&#13;
.........e-~__H .......&#13;
p.m.&#13;
p e :-.E\\&#13;
(Continued from Page l )&#13;
.&#13;
really friends, but at least it was a&#13;
foothold.&#13;
"It's trange. but I found that the&#13;
other three white guys at the sch&lt;?ol&#13;
avoided me more than black people did.&#13;
There wa one white guy who didn't&#13;
Ii e me because I was from the North!&#13;
It make it really tough. You get&#13;
depre sed about things like that."&#13;
"There wa probably 5% who wanted&#13;
me to tay and s~ who didn't. And&#13;
they let me know about it too. For&#13;
e ample," he said, "if I sat at a lunch&#13;
table and there were four guys sitting at&#13;
the end of it, the four would get up and&#13;
move to another table. But none of&#13;
the ha le really endangered me in&#13;
ny w y." .&#13;
"I wa n 't ha sled that much," he said.&#13;
"To be re lly truthful I wish I had stuck&#13;
11 out. I learned more in one week than&#13;
I learned in the pa t two years about the&#13;
bl · man in America.&#13;
··sut to leave was a foolish decision,"&#13;
he 1d . ··1 think now I could have made&#13;
it. It' funnv but I mi it."&#13;
UW PARKSIDE&#13;
F ature Film Series&#13;
PRESENTS:&#13;
EILIZaBETH&#13;
.. AYLOR&#13;
RICHIIIAD&#13;
BUNTDN&#13;
H fR UT U!HMAKS PftOOUCTION&#13;
0, fOWARD AJ.Uf'S&#13;
WND&#13;
IIFAIIIID DF&#13;
VIRCINIIII&#13;
WDDLF,&#13;
EORGE SEGAL· SANDY DEN IS ..,..,&#13;
-.-e NIC&gt;tOlS&#13;
Friday, March 12&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUil.DiNG&#13;
Admission 1sc·&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30 .&#13;
$1el5&#13;
rat Of $teak , Beefburger&#13;
on4&#13;
F,.nch F nH ., Onion Rln9a&#13;
Of' Potato Salocl&#13;
anti&#13;
Sch oner w Bottle w Glau of 8",&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
II&#13;
Is&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 8&#13;
PITCHE1tS $1.00 GLASS 20C&#13;
Available Fw PertlH&#13;
lncllHII .. f,._,.lty -4 S-.ity Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
'"'- BRAT-STOP&#13;
......... c ..... ·~~ - " ...... .&#13;
p.m.&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
there before and that it's all familiar."&#13;
"Yes this is not unusual, as a matter&#13;
of fact it happens to most ~eople a~out&#13;
twenty times a year. It is definitely&#13;
linked with E.S.P. but ?ec~use_ mo~t&#13;
people never develop their gifts m th!s&#13;
area they choose to ignore it when this&#13;
happens. I believe very much th~t&#13;
everyone has a gift in E.S.P. but that it&#13;
has tG be cultivated in order to be&#13;
used." . Norman looked up at the circle_ of&#13;
people waiting for the next question.&#13;
For a 'moment no question came but&#13;
then an older woman, dressed. as. a&#13;
waitress, asked, "Where does this gift&#13;
come from?" . "This gift is god-given, but it must be&#13;
cultivated. You see, man only used&#13;
about ten percent of his mind, but&#13;
through E.S.P. he can use up to eighty&#13;
percent of it. I've been able to develop&#13;
my memory so that all I have to do is&#13;
close my eyes and think about&#13;
something and the answer shoots across&#13;
a screen like a movie. I can see the&#13;
words. But this all has to be developed."&#13;
"You said when I came in that my&#13;
aura was light blue. Could you tell m e&#13;
about this," the waitress asked.&#13;
All faces turned expectantly because&#13;
everyone had been told they had a&#13;
distinct aura.&#13;
It is curious what attracts a person's&#13;
attention. To be told something of&#13;
yourself is undoubtedly more&#13;
interesting than a lecture in Greenquist&#13;
Hall.&#13;
Norman began to explain her aura, "I&#13;
see that there is someone very close to&#13;
you who has had an illness recently in&#13;
the area of the heart; near the right&#13;
ventricle.&#13;
As he paused, the woman blurted&#13;
out, "That's right , my .... "&#13;
"Don't tell me, you don't say&#13;
anything. When y,ou 're with a psychic&#13;
never say anything about yourself unless&#13;
you want to hear them tell you what&#13;
you told them. I don't mean to be rude&#13;
or anything, it's just that I'm the&#13;
psychic ... let me tell you.&#13;
"I see," he continued, "that you _have&#13;
a ring which means a great deal to&#13;
someone very near to you. She is&#13;
constantly taking it and this sort of&#13;
thing ... I see that there was a fire in the&#13;
past that did a lot of damage to a&#13;
building owned by someone you know&#13;
well, I see also that someone was injured&#13;
in the fire."&#13;
He continued reading her while the&#13;
rest of us waited anxiously for our turn.&#13;
The waitress interrupted Norman several&#13;
times exclaiming "Right, I was ... " but&#13;
Norman stopped her short each time of&#13;
telling her past.&#13;
It seemed as,if he would never finish&#13;
reading her as he kept on "seeing"&#13;
things. 1 a cigarette in defi&#13;
seeming monopoly and bef~~ce_ of !hi~&#13;
out he had told her that he we It Went&#13;
to read the others in the grou ould have&#13;
if she wanted to know mor/ and that&#13;
the remainder of her question and have&#13;
she could arrange an appoin/ answered&#13;
him. ment With&#13;
When he had finished he a person to estimate the accur sked each&#13;
disclosures. acy of his&#13;
· Her answer to this quest·&#13;
"About 85%." Ion Was,&#13;
To the next person in the . 'd "I h cucle h sa1 , see t at you are a nut e&#13;
motorcycles. . . you also drink ~bout&#13;
fish. I see that in the near fut Ike a&#13;
will have an accident with a mote You&#13;
much like the one you had aboorcycle&#13;
years ago when you bruised ut two&#13;
a country road. This time y6ibr leg on&#13;
careful because it is worse if e more&#13;
careful you'll get by this ~rtsis yo~ are&#13;
accuracy estimation was "eighty. 11 Ha&#13;
ninety per cent." ' · ive to&#13;
"Good, I'm starting to tune int&#13;
vibrations." 0 Your&#13;
He continued around the&#13;
telling each person eight or nine s r~~·&#13;
incidents Or characteristics whicr Cl :c&#13;
they would know. He told them o;y&#13;
date and even the time of da e&#13;
incidents happened and each y the&#13;
· responded with the same excl~~~son&#13;
of their amazement. ions&#13;
As the readings approached me 1&#13;
began to feel that Norman was inde d&#13;
telling things which, regardless of w: 1&#13;
I'd like_ to believe, were unknowab~e&#13;
except 1f someone had an inside line to&#13;
the person's thoughts.&#13;
He came to me and rattled off&#13;
disclosures from my past that I had to&#13;
think to remember and had touched&#13;
upon my future bofore moving on to&#13;
the next person. I weakly announced&#13;
that he had been ninety five percent&#13;
correct.&#13;
It seemed a matter of common fact&#13;
when he said, to the next in line, "I see&#13;
that someone close to you has died of&#13;
liver problems and I see someone close&#13;
to you is also suffering from this ... "&#13;
When Norman had fi11ished, the man&#13;
being read replied, "Yes, my father died a month ago from a liver ailment and&#13;
my mother is in the hospital with the&#13;
same thing."&#13;
Everything after that was an&#13;
anti-climax up to and including tht&#13;
comment by the last man in the line,&#13;
"Stop! You're too accurate."&#13;
When he had finished with the&#13;
readings he looked exhaused and asked&#13;
for a glass of water.&#13;
It was then a young girl asked, "What&#13;
do you expect as repayment for your&#13;
services?"&#13;
"I only ask that you say a prayer (Of&#13;
me ... that's enougp."&#13;
At the end I was ready to beliert&#13;
anything.&#13;
BRANDT'S-RACINE SOUNDS&#13;
LIKE ... 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 yoor&#13;
checkbook. See and talk to Mark, our&#13;
Department Manager, who is a Parkside&#13;
student and will talk your language, both 111&#13;
--~ equipment purchases, records and money.&#13;
~~:~-Tape record~rs,. Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
KOSS SONIC - Radio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record players - Headsets&#13;
~~:~~~D - Rec~ivers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
AZTEC ZS- Receivers, Speakers, Record players - peakers&#13;
J.B.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. While yoO&#13;
are here shop f G'fts a&#13;
s ' or Jewelry Sporting goods and 1&#13;
outheastern Wisconsin's low:st prices.&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS&#13;
S12 MAIN STREET&#13;
on the west side of Monument Square&#13;
RACINE'S&#13;
GREAT&#13;
DOWNTOWN ousE&#13;
DISCOUNT H &#13;
Trackmen Defeat Marquette&#13;
by Jim Cape&lt;&#13;
Winning II of 14 events, the IUnger&#13;
lrackrnen defeated Marquetle 7 -43 10 •&#13;
meet held at Racine C....&#13;
Tim McGilsky and Jim McFadden&#13;
were double winners for Parbide, while.&#13;
Keith Merritt scored 9 points.&#13;
McGilsky picked up victor in 10 the&#13;
880 and 1000, with McF.dden laIun&amp;&#13;
the mile and the two nule. Memll&#13;
scored hu point b Winn the u e&#13;
jump, placlna ...,.,nd 10 the pole vault .t&#13;
12 feet,and thud 10 the 10111jump.&#13;
The MII.... u ee Ttac u n e&#13;
,. Women's InYl~tional .. th J5&#13;
pomts. Parlwde finilhed third, 10t.11In&amp;&#13;
10 points&#13;
Mary uDal 011 the 440. '"'" e 8ev&#13;
Cra...fo&lt;d s thud ,n 60, as as&#13;
M.ureen strich In the&#13;
Fencers, Bowlers&#13;
Park.Dd. bo...lers ..,,11 be compelml&#13;
.... tnSt AlA runner-up UCro and&#13;
other W,teOlIStn college and urmerstue,&#13;
Apnl 3 10 M.dIson for the nabl 10&#13;
represent llus d.SIrict In the . AlA&#13;
clwnp,OlMips III Kansas Cuy In tol. ,&#13;
AU bowl.rs ,"",0 are interested In&#13;
repruonlllli Pa.rlwde should ccetecr&#13;
Coaches Dick Freeka III lUc,ne Or Jun&#13;
Koch in Kenosha. Bowlers should ha ve&#13;
an "erage of 175 POints or beuer Five&#13;
to .!&amp;hl bowlers "",II repre.. nt Parkllde&#13;
Th. final nwnb.r ...,11 depend on the&#13;
nwnb.r of high .. era camed b&#13;
Pa.rde studenll.&#13;
Gymnasts&#13;
Ranger '5' Close Season Win&#13;
Parkside's fencers defeated Big Ten&#13;
champion Ohio State, while the&#13;
'iYffinasts won the Triton Invitanonal.&#13;
The ~nasts, scored 127 points.&#13;
putpointing Triton College, C1uCOlo,&#13;
Marquette, Wheaton, DuPa.ge, and&#13;
Milwaukee Tech. Parkside upped ilS&#13;
record to 13-5 in dual competll1on.&#13;
Ranger gymansts will oompete In the&#13;
AIAJ&gt;jslricl 14 meel March 13·14.&#13;
The fencers edged Ohio State for the&#13;
second time this season 14-13. Keith&#13;
Herbrechtsmeier's flllli victory proved&#13;
to be the winning edge.&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
""ksidedropped its final games on a 1&#13;
_kend road trip,losing to Missouri-St.&#13;
Louis 94-66, and Southern&#13;
lIbnois.Edwardsville95-87.&#13;
Friday night the Rangers were&#13;
IllUlIdlyoutplayed as Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
buill up a 13 point halftime lead and&#13;
continued to extend it in the second&#13;
boiL&#13;
Ell Slaughterand Ken Rick paced the&#13;
Ranger attack with 22 and 19 points&#13;
mpectively.&#13;
The following night at 'Edwardsville,&#13;
lltinois,the Rangers turned in what&#13;
eood&gt; Steve Stevens said was one 'of&#13;
their best efforts, yet still absorbed a&#13;
95-87 loss to SID-Edwardsville.&#13;
Leading 45-44 at half, the Rangers&#13;
began to show the effects of having&#13;
played the previous night. SIU tied the&#13;
score at 75 and then took a three point&#13;
lead, whIch was the result of a disputed&#13;
call and subsequent technical foul called&#13;
on the Rangers.&#13;
Parkside stayed within three points&#13;
until forced to foul in the final minute.&#13;
Slaughter once again paced Ranger&#13;
scoring with 28, willi Stan White addmg&#13;
20, and Mike Madsen 19. WjIite scored&#13;
his 20 points despite !laving a bad ankle&#13;
which he said was, "still very sore."&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th A"e.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SU •• THIIU THUIIS.&#13;
U 1.I1. TILL IO.ITE&#13;
fill. I lAT. TILL I A•••&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
Ranger Hockey Falls Short&#13;
strong wrist shot at 12:29. At 14:03&#13;
George Georgacopulas drew a penalty&#13;
for illegal checking in the offensi.e&#13;
zone. Twenty seconds later Harper&#13;
scored, making it 4-3 Parkside. Harper&#13;
tied the score with only 15 seconds left&#13;
in the first period.&#13;
The second period was all Harper as&#13;
they scored tWIce, taking a 6-4 lead.&#13;
The third period was one of sheer&#13;
frustration for Parkside as they battled&#13;
to get back in the game. Despite the fact&#13;
that the Rangers thoroughly outplayed&#13;
Harper, outshooting them 12-6, they&#13;
were unable to dent the net.&#13;
Several Ranger shots had the goalie&#13;
beat only to end up hitting the post. It&#13;
was 'a scoreless third period, thus leaving&#13;
Parkside on the short end of a 6-4&#13;
count.&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
lluper College defeated the Ranger'&#13;
bocby team 6-4 at the Rolling&#13;
IIadoWl Spo&lt;tsComplex.&#13;
The fint petiod saw each team score&#13;
fIlIIs. Pukside opened the scoring lIt&#13;
2:10of the first period with a 40 foot&#13;
IIop Ibot by Tom Krimmel.&#13;
lluper qUickly tied the score at I-I,&#13;
but at 6:30 of the period Krimmel&#13;
deflected in a slap shot by Marc&#13;
Tutlewskito again give Parkside the&#13;
lad. Thislead was short lived as Harper&#13;
lied the scoreat 8:20.&#13;
BiU Westerland gave Parkside a 3-2&#13;
lad at 11: 10 with a 60 foot slap shot&#13;
alter Krimmel won the face off and&#13;
ill", the puck back to Westedand for&#13;
!he shot.&#13;
TUllewskimade it 4-2 Parkside with a&#13;
THOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
207 SlXTl1 5TIEfT&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSlN 53403&#13;
'r:" I&#13;
VAI..EO'S PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN HAM 10 IDORG ,&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657 -5191&#13;
'Tradition o( E. cellencf'&#13;
KI G ofORG&#13;
FREE DELIVERY ':00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
FERRARO'S&#13;
~" IC ·~Ch· ken Pizza&#13;
\&#13;
s.. Jim Menlek "Mr. HI_1M" Fer G.~rltlhl~ S,"let , TrHI-In VII..&#13;
OlltIt Tln-elll CIUle!&#13;
'Try the Pizza everyon~is talking about"&#13;
CARRY OUTS ONLY&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
THREE MILE ROAD AND ERIE STREET&#13;
PH. 639-5305&#13;
Ranger '5' Close Season&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Parkside dropped its final games on a 1&#13;
,eekend road trip, losing to Missouri-St.&#13;
Louis 94-66, and Southern&#13;
Illinois-Edwardsville 9 5-87.&#13;
Friday night the Rangers were&#13;
soundly outplayed as Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
uUt up a 13 point halftime lead and&#13;
continued to extend it in the second&#13;
half. . Eli Slaughter and Ken Rick paced the&#13;
lunger attack with 22 and 19 points&#13;
respectively.&#13;
The following night at Edwardsville,&#13;
minois, the Rangers t~rned in .what&#13;
Coach Steve Stevens said was one ·of&#13;
their best efforts, yet still absorbed a 95-87 loss to SIU-Edwardsville&#13;
Leading 45-44 at half, th~ Rangers&#13;
began to show the effects of having&#13;
played the previous night. SIU tied the&#13;
score at 7s and then took a three point&#13;
lead, which was the result of a disputed&#13;
call and subsequent technical foul called&#13;
on the Rangers.&#13;
Parkside stayed within three points&#13;
until forced to foul in the final minute.&#13;
Slaughter once again paced Ranger&#13;
scoring with 28, with Stan White addmg&#13;
20, and Mike Madsen 19. W)lite scored&#13;
his 20 points despite ltaving a bad ankle&#13;
which he said was, "still very sore."&#13;
Ranger Hockey Falls Short&#13;
by Jim Casper&#13;
Harper College defeated the Ranger·&#13;
hockey team 6-4 at the Rolling&#13;
Meadows Sports Complex.&#13;
The first period saw each team score&#13;
goals. Parkside opened- the scoring 1tt&#13;
• ·JO of the first p_eriod with a 40 foot&#13;
sap shot by Tom Krimmel. ·&#13;
Harper quickly tied the score at 1-1,&#13;
but at 6:30 of the period Krimmel&#13;
deflected in a slap shot by Marc&#13;
Tutlewski to again give Parkside the&#13;
ad. This lead was short lived as Harper&#13;
tied the score at 8:20.&#13;
Bill Westerland gave Parkside a 3-2&#13;
d at 11: 10 with a 60 foot slap shot&#13;
after Krimmel won the face off and&#13;
ew the puck back to Westerland for&#13;
the shot.&#13;
Tutlewski made it 4-2 Parkside with a&#13;
strong wrist shot at 12:29. At 14:03&#13;
George Georgacopulas drew a penalty&#13;
for illegal checking in the offensive&#13;
zone. Twenty seconds later Harper&#13;
scored, making it 4-3 Parkside. Harper&#13;
tied the score with only 15 second left&#13;
in the first period. The second period was all Harper as&#13;
they scored twice, taking a 6-4 leaa.&#13;
The third period was one of sheer&#13;
frustration for Parkside as they battled&#13;
to get back in the game. Despite the fact&#13;
that the Rangers thoroughly outplayed&#13;
Harper, outshooting them 12-6, they&#13;
were unable to dent the net.&#13;
Several Ranger shots had the goalie&#13;
beat, only to end up hitting the po t: It&#13;
was a scoreless third period, thus leaving&#13;
Parkside on the short end of a 6-4&#13;
count.&#13;
VALEO'$ PIZZA&#13;
ALSO KITCHEN&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30th Ave. FREE DELIVERY 4 :00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
KENOSHA Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
657-5191 Closed Mondays&#13;
FERRARO'S&#13;
Pizza&#13;
, .....&#13;
'Try the Pizza everyon~ is talking about"&#13;
CARRY OUTS ONLY&#13;
SHORECREST SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
THREE MILE ROAD AND ERfE STREET&#13;
PH. 639-5305&#13;
Trac km en Def eat&#13;
b Jim&#13;
Winning 11 of 14 e ent , the Ran r&#13;
trackrnen defeated larquette -43 1n a&#13;
meet held at Racine ase . Tim kG ilsky and Jim&#13;
were double winner for Par&#13;
Keith !erritt ored 9 point .&#13;
McGilsky picked up i tor es&#13;
880 and 1000, v.ith kF den t&#13;
the mile and the t 'O mile. ferritt&#13;
Fencers,&#13;
Gymnasts&#13;
Win&#13;
Parkside's fencers defeated Big Ten&#13;
champion Ohio State, wltl e the&#13;
'n'Jl}nasts won the Tnton lmiUtional.&#13;
The gymnasts, scored I~ . point . putpoinhng Triton College, Chic .&#13;
Marquette, 1:ieaton. DuP , and&#13;
~ilwaukee Tech. Par ide upped t&#13;
record to 13-5 in du I competition .&#13;
Ranger gyman t will compete in the 'AIAJ)istrict 14 meet !arc 13-14. The fencer edged Otuo S te for the&#13;
second time thi ason 14-13. Keith&#13;
Herbrechtsmeier' final vt tory pro d&#13;
to be the winning edge.&#13;
THOUSA OS&#13;
OF FLARES&#13;
207 SIXTH STREfl&#13;
Tr&#13;
arque t&#13;
Bowlers&#13;
CHAT&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
E OS A&#13;
SU • THll T URS,&#13;
U A. , TILL ID TE&#13;
FIii. &amp; SAT, TILL 2 A . .&#13;
HAMBURGE S&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
{triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
'7&#13;
see Jim Menlck" r. Ha ond" For Guar n1eed S ,ice &amp; Tradt- Yalu&#13;
Out of To -ci11 Collect&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
STUDIO II) RACIME .. 1429 lli,h~oa · Pit• e 634,.,ZS6.S&#13;
"IJ BtUer Orp,u areBuill.,. HtunlN&gt;lld will B · 1'u-l" &#13;
-Ne'JR:¥&amp; IS1==-" ............, awn ~&#13;
G.WEISS INC.&#13;
313 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 53q&#13;
637.3200 3&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
Tille: 0/ a Fire on tne Moon&#13;
uthor: orman Mailer&#13;
Publisher: Little, Brown&#13;
Hemingway wa dead the world's&#13;
"greate t 1i"lOg romantic writer was&#13;
dead." dread was 100 and technology&#13;
would fill the gap. Pre ideru Kennedy&#13;
would cay that Amenca must put a man&#13;
on the moon b~ 1970. and Aquarius&#13;
would be there to wnte about it.&#13;
orman (Aquanu ) Mailer has chosen to&#13;
wrue about I subject no less staggering&#13;
than the spa e program. epItomized in&#13;
the night of Apoll II, the landing of&#13;
the fir I men on the moon, marlang an&#13;
end r the begrnnmg of a new era in&#13;
hi tory, te ding u closer to god or the&#13;
dev II, the tan or apocalypse.&#13;
S In ArmIes O/Ihe Nighl Mailer uses&#13;
the external uabject matter (in this case&#13;
the night of polio II) as a point of&#13;
departure from which Aquanus drifts&#13;
r n tom &lt;laphyslCal orbits and&#13;
pS~'chologlcal quasars, politics and&#13;
poetic, baseball and ixon, confronting&#13;
the hzard of technology in us essential&#13;
I ir Though not the Inurnate 9: ruc.::lp3lnt he was in Armies 0/ the&#13;
N"ht, Maller I an observer whose&#13;
• mtere t In the ubject is Intensified by&#13;
the ommccs presence of technology and&#13;
II po .ble emergence as a new (un) hfe&#13;
tyle, He notice that the layout of the&#13;
Hou I n Manned pace Center allows&#13;
no room for such Utlngs as art and was&#13;
done by computer, that the language&#13;
poken there I technologese and&#13;
ttut every technician is expendable,&#13;
that It I a point of p t r d e&#13;
to be 'SO much like the next man that&#13;
ev en when they speak you aren't able to&#13;
tetl who said what because their voices&#13;
are Identlcat' interchangeability. and&#13;
then computerese, the computer&#13;
language where the nuances the&#13;
emotive meanings of words. are st~ained&#13;
through the ..Iter of the binary system.&#13;
Cape Kennedy and Houston, huge&#13;
sterilized complexes in which work the&#13;
most advanced forjftof WASP the&#13;
vmdicators fo the American way ~flife,&#13;
where ev en echoes are up for analysis&#13;
and from which the dream of ages of&#13;
men, the moon, will be conquered or&#13;
unleashed.&#13;
quasius is judge and advocate of&#13;
magic in rhts "history as novel/novel&#13;
history. He presents us with a&#13;
psychology of stronauts and a&#13;
psychology of machines. Machines&#13;
aren't Sl:Ipposedto ~alfunction yet they&#13;
do, vallou, phases of the Apollo II&#13;
flight (and of past flights) incur&#13;
malfunctions, wit( no naswer from the&#13;
engineering section. Aquarius, advocate&#13;
of magic and fallibility presents us with&#13;
an answer. the machine has the will to&#13;
malf~nction, it has a psychology.&#13;
Aquasius cannot speak the language&#13;
of technology, he can grasp bits and&#13;
pleces and th~n f?rmulate questions,&#13;
discover new tmpllcations, draw new&#13;
hypotheses. HIS speculations encompass&#13;
everythong from the fact that physics&#13;
has yet to define what sound waves&#13;
leally are. to the magical connection&#13;
between his wife and the full moon. Ah&#13;
lunacy. AquariUS is being devorced fOl&#13;
the fourth tlllte.&#13;
Have we d~stroyed the mystery of&#13;
the moon or have we extended it; hav(&#13;
we made a pact with the devil or are we&#13;
r.achlng out loward God? How do you&#13;
.Neu. Gallery One&#13;
503 Main St.&#13;
Racine&#13;
·10% Student Discou&#13;
on all Posters &amp; Fra~~&#13;
New Gallery, Two&#13;
5/136 Sixth Ave,&#13;
• . Kenosha&#13;
the stars only to be burned. Smell is&#13;
where he begins and leaves us, the sense&#13;
of smell, the fact that an apple is more&#13;
than the sum of its parts, the fact that&#13;
we can identif): things by smell, that fOI&#13;
a computer to identify an apple it must&#13;
learn to smell; I smell therfore I am&#13;
human. While looking at a vacuum&#13;
packed lunar rock Aquarius feels&#13;
confident that in an eon or two he WIll&#13;
break through the bell jars 01 the smell&#13;
of the lunar rock will break through to&#13;
him, and that it will be man who will&#13;
smell the rock, and the moon, "new&#13;
mistress:' will remain in the realm of&#13;
the dream. He is waiting for the time&#13;
when men who fly in spaceships will&#13;
speak the language of Shakespeal~ once&#13;
again, when men will stop adapting to&#13;
machines.&#13;
The decade began with the suidide of&#13;
Hemtngway and "One might as well&#13;
judge the event from an armchair, for .a&#13;
species of apocalypse was upon us. This&#13;
was, after all, repeat, the year in which a&#13;
couple had fornicated on the stage&#13;
(Che) and we had landed on the moon,&#13;
this was the decade in which we had&#13;
probed through space, and who knew&#13;
which belts of protection had been'&#13;
voided and what precisely they had&#13;
protected.' A beginning 01 an end of an&#13;
era, Aquarius feels as if 1968 is the end&#13;
of the century, and that the dream has&#13;
its analogue in the emptiness and stars&#13;
of space. "AU worship the science of&#13;
smell." \&#13;
0/ a Fire on the Moon is a difficult&#13;
book to deal with in a critical sense.&#13;
First of ali Mailer never writes badly; he&#13;
seems to be sloppy at times, as if he is&#13;
not reflecting on what he is writing but&#13;
just (I hate to say it) reporting what is&#13;
going on around him and his immediate&#13;
reactions. The sloppiness, I think,&#13;
affords us a sense of immediacy which is&#13;
why 0/ a Fire on the Moon is not&#13;
merely a history. His overuse of&#13;
exclamation points is the only&#13;
complaint I have in so far as the writing&#13;
is concerned.&#13;
Secondly, Mailel the writel is also&#13;
Mailel the philosopher, still the&#13;
existentialist of An American Dream&#13;
but mellowed. The existential delemmas&#13;
which technology presents us is his&#13;
sphere and there are no put·ons; this&#13;
book and the hypothese presented ale if&#13;
nothing else quite serious.&#13;
Am I copping out on criticism? I&#13;
haldly think so. Mailel is probably the&#13;
~ost difficult. contemporary writer to&#13;
Judge because he has avioded the&#13;
conventional statdards of writing by&#13;
developing his own genre, history as.&#13;
novel/novel as history. No standards&#13;
have yet been set for this geme and I&#13;
think. it is ridiculous to apply&#13;
conventional standards to it. It is an&#13;
island in the sea and we must swim to it&#13;
before we can walk all over it.&#13;
OF A FIRE ON THE MOON&#13;
COURTESY OF THE BOOK&#13;
MAR T 622 59TH STREET&#13;
KENOSHA, IS AVAILABLE FOR&#13;
$6,95,&#13;
put that in computerese; how do you&#13;
program a computer to smell; what is&#13;
the word for shit in computerese?&#13;
0/ Q Fire on the Moon is not Mailer's&#13;
best work, in Armies 0/ the Night he&#13;
was much closer to his subject, in this,&#13;
his latest work, he early tells us that&#13;
technologese and computerese are&#13;
barriers for anyone but those WASPs&#13;
weaned on computers. He is an alien in&#13;
a windowless world of concrete and&#13;
steel where vast dinensions are measured&#13;
to the miUimeter, where efficiency is&#13;
the watchword and system redundancies&#13;
are a built- in feature, leading us again to&#13;
a psychology of machines. What stlikes&#13;
him is the apparent fact that none of&#13;
the technicians nor astronauts are awed&#13;
by what, they are doing. He feels that&#13;
they must harbor an unspoken dread, he&#13;
feels that they have re pressed and&#13;
sublimated their desires and dreauntil&#13;
they are unable to recognize them for&#13;
what they are.&#13;
IIOIl11tlo $OUTIt stt!1I1lIAII _&#13;
-KE.NOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
. SANDWICHES&#13;
CH-ARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
its •&#13;
real thing&#13;
\ Mailer delves into the minds of the&#13;
astronauts and leaves us unconvinced by&#13;
his portlaits of them. Through the&#13;
appearances and actions· of the ghree&#13;
as tron au t s, Mailer speculates and&#13;
rambles on about then motivations&#13;
which is to say that he puts himself ;,;&#13;
the . astronauts places and caUs his&#13;
feelongs and pelceptions theirs. Thele is&#13;
just too much Mailer in them so much&#13;
.~ that I found myself resisting them:&#13;
Mailer is obviously not in control of&#13;
his subject, he is the humanities man in&#13;
the. ste~ile cir~us of Cape Kennedy,&#13;
taking It. all In and spewing forth&#13;
speculations, a man in a machine world&#13;
spinning. He finds consolation in the&#13;
fact that the maybe enemy technology&#13;
cannot explam what light leally is.&#13;
~ere are still mysteries: ':Ves. we&#13;
nught have to go out into space until&#13;
the mystery of new discovery would&#13;
force us to regard the world once again&#13;
as p~ts, beho~d it as savages who knew&#13;
that lf the uruverse was a lock its key&#13;
was metaphor rather than measure."&#13;
In the end we must still discover who&#13;
we are reaching for, or who is guiding&#13;
us, God or Satan; are we reaching for,&#13;
4437 • 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenos.ho, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Free Delivery a&#13;
654-0774 .,&#13;
"' -. ~ - , ;•........._ ~&#13;
_&#13;
-&#13;
o&#13;
STEAKS _ CHOPS _ CHICKEN - SEAfOO :&#13;
WE CATER TO PARTIE$&#13;
H'h ~I:&#13;
: .g way 32, Kenoaha, I mile N. af Carthoge College, phone ,,)&#13;
.................. - ..... . . .&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
put that in computerese; how do yo~&#13;
program a omputer to smell; what is&#13;
the ord for shit in computerese? . '&#13;
Of a Fire on the ~loon is not ~faller s&#13;
be t work. in Anmes of t~e ~ht ~e wa much closer to his sub1ect, m this,&#13;
his late t work, he early tells us that&#13;
technologese and computerese are&#13;
barrier for anyone but those \\'.AS~s&#13;
weaned on computers. He is an ahen m a windowless world of concrete and&#13;
teel where va t dinensions are measure?&#13;
to the millimeter' where efficiency . is&#13;
the watchword and sy tern redund~c1es&#13;
are a built·in feature, leading us agau:i to&#13;
a p ychology of machines. What strikes&#13;
him i the apparent fact that none of&#13;
the technicians nor astronauts are awed&#13;
by what they are doing. He feels that&#13;
they must harbor an unspoken dread , he&#13;
feel that they have repressed an~&#13;
ublimated their desires and dreauntil&#13;
they are unable to recognize them for&#13;
what they are.&#13;
I Mailer delves into the minds of the&#13;
astronauts and leaves us unconvinced by&#13;
his portraits of them. Through the&#13;
appearances and actions- of the ghree&#13;
astronauts Mailer speculates and&#13;
rambles on' about therr motivations,&#13;
which is to say that he puts himself in&#13;
the astronauts places and calls his&#13;
feelings and perceptions theirs. There is&#13;
just too much Mailer in them, so much&#13;
·so that I found myself resisting them.&#13;
· Mailer is obviously not in control of&#13;
his subject, he is the humanities man in&#13;
the sterile circus of Cape Kennedy,&#13;
taking it all in and spewing forth&#13;
speculations, a man in a machine world&#13;
spinning. He fmds consolation in the&#13;
fact that the maybe enemy technology&#13;
cannot explain what light really is.&#13;
There are still mysteries: ·:Yes, we&#13;
might have to go out into space until&#13;
the mystery of new discovery would&#13;
force us to regard the world once again&#13;
as poets, behold it as savages who knew&#13;
that if the universe was a lock its key&#13;
was metaphor rather than measure."&#13;
In the end we must still discover who&#13;
we are reaching for, or who is guiding&#13;
us, God or Satan; are we reaching for.&#13;
stars only to be burned . Smell is&#13;
th\re he begins and leaves us, ~e sense ~r smell the fact that an appleflS m~r~ than th; sum of its parts, the act a . ·dentify, things by smell, that for&#13;
:~i:~ter to identify an ap~le it rust&#13;
learn to smell; I ~ell theriore am&#13;
While looking at a vacuum human. A · feels acked lunar rock quanus ·u&#13;
~onfident that in an eol_l or two he w1&#13;
b ak through the bell 1ars or the smell&#13;
or the lunar rock will break through ~o&#13;
him and that it will be man who will&#13;
smeil the rock, and the moon, "new . t s " will remain in the realm of&#13;
rrus res . h . the dream. He is waiting for t. e t~e&#13;
when men who fly in spaceships will&#13;
speak the language of Shakespear: once&#13;
again, when men will stop adapting to&#13;
machines. ' 'd' d f The decade began with the sm t e o&#13;
Hemingway and "One might ~s well&#13;
judge the event from an armchatr' for _a&#13;
species of apocalypse was up~n us. -~s&#13;
was, after all, repeat, the year in wh1c a&#13;
couple had fornicated on the stage&#13;
(Che) and we had landed on the moon,&#13;
this was the decade in which we had&#13;
robed through space, and who knew&#13;
thich belts of protection had been ,&#13;
voided and what precisely they had&#13;
protected ." A beginnil_lg or an ~nd of an&#13;
era Aquarius feels as if 1968 is the end&#13;
of the century' and that the dream has&#13;
its analogue in the emptiness and stars&#13;
of space. "All worship the science of&#13;
~mell." . . Of a Fire on the. Moon ~s. a difficult&#13;
book to deal with in a cnttcal sense.&#13;
First of all Mailer never writes ba?lY; ~e&#13;
seems to be sloppy at times, a~ 1f he 1s&#13;
not reflecting on what he is writing b~t&#13;
just (I hate to say_ it) repo~ti~g wh~t 1s&#13;
going on around hun aI_1-d his unmed~ate&#13;
reactions. The sloppiness, I t~~.&#13;
affords us a sense of immediacy which ts&#13;
why Of a Fire on the Moon is not&#13;
merely a history. His overuse of&#13;
exclamation points is the ?'.1-1Y&#13;
complaint I have in so far as the wnting&#13;
is concerned. . . Secondly, Mailer the wnter . 1s also&#13;
Mailer the philosopher, still the&#13;
existentialist of An American Dream&#13;
but mellowed. The existential delelllll_las&#13;
which technology presents us is ~s&#13;
sphere and there are no put-ons; this&#13;
book and the hypothese presented are if&#13;
nothing else quite serious. . . . Am I copping out on cnttc1sm? I&#13;
hardly think so. Mailer is proba~ly the&#13;
most difficult contemporary wnter to&#13;
judge because he has avio~~d the&#13;
conventional statdards of wnting by&#13;
developing his own genre, history as.&#13;
novel/novel as history. No standards&#13;
have yet been set for this genre and I&#13;
think it is ridiculous to apply&#13;
conventional standards to it. It is an&#13;
island in the sea and we must swim to it&#13;
before we can walk all over it.&#13;
OF A FIRE ON THE MOON&#13;
COURTESY OF THE BOOK&#13;
MART 622 59TH STREET,&#13;
KENOSHA, IS AVAILABLE FOR&#13;
G ... WEISS INC.&#13;
313 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACINE. WISCONSIN s3403&#13;
637-3200&#13;
\New (;allery One&#13;
503 Main St.&#13;
Racine&#13;
· iO% Student Discount&#13;
on all Posters &amp; Fra,ni!f&#13;
New Gallery Two&#13;
51136 Sixth Ave.&#13;
•• Kenosha&#13;
~ an ~- ~ - ~v&#13;
~0 RAKOI \&#13;
ltORTH I, $CUTli SM!fttDAN ROAD&#13;
~KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CH-ARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
4437 • 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenos~a, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
$6.95 .&#13;
. ., ................................................................. .-.. ...................................... ...,.;&#13;
.&#13;
. .&#13;
~&#13;
.&#13;
STEAKS CHOPS - CHICKEN -&#13;
WE CATER TO PARTIES&#13;
SEAFOOD . •&#13;
' I&#13;
0451 :&#13;
H. I phon• 65'.. )&#13;
: ighway 32, Kenosha, 1 mile N. of Carthage Col et•, ......... .&#13;
:, ........... ~································~---····················· </text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 6, March 8, 1971</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="61787">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Library Tightens Security</text>
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              <text>Volume 3 • Number 5 Mlrch 1, 1971&#13;
Constitutional&#13;
Referendum&#13;
~Library Tightens Security=====--==w&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
If you have bees in the Tallent Hall&#13;
Library in the past month, you couldn't&#13;
help noticing the girl guarding the exit.&#13;
Her purpose is to prevent theft. Pure&#13;
and simply our main library has lost&#13;
some 20,000 tt~Q1Ssince. it opened, and&#13;
the girls are there to help control this. I&#13;
Maximum Security?&#13;
(PholDs by _ hbeI)&#13;
had a talk with Mr. Philip Burnett, the&#13;
Director of Libraries.&#13;
Burnett said, "This began small and&#13;
informally. There was no money, staff,&#13;
or people in '67. Now the new building&#13;
will have turnstyle control to stop&#13;
things from 'drifting away.'&#13;
"The first big thing we 10$twas a $65&#13;
Rand-McNally Commercial Atlas, it&#13;
I..ted three months. The desk people&#13;
couldn't watch all the time. Things got&#13;
bad when books started disappearing&#13;
from the 'reserved' shelf.&#13;
Our Judy Hamilton figured fifty&#13;
books a month were being lost and il&#13;
was costing 56000 a year. he said. (I got&#13;
another figure of 515.000 from another&#13;
source.) We can't find out how many&#13;
we've lost since we would have 10 count&#13;
them.&#13;
"This is pure theft. either a person&#13;
might have a passionate desire 10 possess&#13;
books or he might be stealing them to&#13;
sell. Then we have the person afflicted&#13;
with irresponsible carelessness who&#13;
might lake a reserved book (0 have an&#13;
advantage over the rest of the class.&#13;
"We chose to hire the girls because&#13;
turnstyles are expensive and we're&#13;
moving anyway. Besides they are&#13;
cheerful, friendly, and nice looking.&#13;
They make people want to show their&#13;
books.&#13;
"Originally counts were made and we&#13;
found the leakage taking place:'&#13;
Burnet t said. "We checked Madison and&#13;
found they had control points around&#13;
the library. In Milwaukee they have 3&#13;
single control at the cntr nee.and we&#13;
found this preferable. The 56000 we&#13;
spend on the girls will just abou t cover&#13;
the cost of loses. but there is also the&#13;
factor of efficiency of service. If we can&#13;
produce 85% of books asked for we'd&#13;
be doing good-60% is our present&#13;
figure. In the beginning the girls were&#13;
checking every page of the notebooks&#13;
people were carrying: now we are less&#13;
stringent. "&#13;
I also spoke with the circulation&#13;
manager, Mike Reid, who is in charge of&#13;
the security, He told me-that the most&#13;
frequent gripe dealt. not wuh secunty.&#13;
bUI fines. People think a dollar. day on&#13;
overdue 3 day rAse rv e book . or 50&#13;
cents an hour on two hour reserves, I a&#13;
lillie stiff.&#13;
The five girls hired for the 'P"&lt;If1c&#13;
purpose .of library security are Mr.&#13;
Theil Prevention Checkpoint&#13;
Mary S. Vena, 1r. Shirley Ann&#13;
Mandernack, Mrs Carol M.&#13;
Levonowich, irs. Jean A Jensen, and&#13;
Mr . Jeanine . iad n, Ana rney have&#13;
caught pe pie Sin e they have started.&#13;
Exploring E.S.P.&#13;
By John Koloen&#13;
This is a story of personal experiences,&#13;
the experiences and reactions of a wide&#13;
range of people all. sharing one common&#13;
bond.Each of them probably had different&#13;
reasons and their attitudes varied from&#13;
hostile skepticism to the desperate&#13;
graspings of the insecure but strangely the&#13;
object of their feelings found its mark in.&#13;
one man: Norman Slater E.S.P.&#13;
Norman lives in a converted garage&#13;
behind a large house on Washington Road&#13;
west of the old North Shore Railroad&#13;
viaduct. It's a well lighted place and on a&#13;
cold night looks very warm ftom the&#13;
outside. One room is made to serve as&#13;
bedroom, living room and kitchen. A small&#13;
bathroom lies on one corner, hidden from&#13;
view by a pair of swinging doors. The&#13;
furniture is as varied as his clients, consisting&#13;
of old painted wagon wheels attached&#13;
to the ceiling, antiquish desks and a&#13;
Collection of records from Marches by&#13;
Sousa to the Band. It is the kind of place a&#13;
collector of out of the way articles would&#13;
spent half a day handing the various objects&#13;
which appeal to his eye in second&#13;
hand stores and antique shops.&#13;
But Norman Slater is no second hand&#13;
man and he'll tell you that if you start&#13;
talking about yourself before he's had the&#13;
chance to tell you. "You've come to me to&#13;
have Yourlife read ... if you want to go to&#13;
SOmeoneelse and pay fifty dollars and tell&#13;
about yourself so they can tell you, fine. I&#13;
'don'f mean to be rude, I just don't want&#13;
you to tell me these things. Let me tell&#13;
you."&#13;
When Ifirst met him we shook hands and&#13;
instead of asking how my health was he&#13;
smiled and said, "Isee your aura is green&#13;
I'll tell you what it means later.' Then h~'turned to my two companions and&#13;
began a conversation about the newspaper&#13;
and our economic situation. They had met&#13;
him earlier and asked me to come along to&#13;
help write an article on Norman. One of&#13;
them was skeptical from the start, the&#13;
other uncertain, and I was anxious to know&#13;
what a green aura meant.&#13;
During the next several hours. Ilist~ed&#13;
as they talked. Their conversation drifted&#13;
from the newspaper to Norman and E.S.P.&#13;
One of my friends made some calls to&#13;
people who had contact with Norman and&#13;
while he was talking I asked Norm~,h,ow&#13;
he had started in E.S.P. He rephed, I ve&#13;
had this gift since Iwas nine years old but&#13;
only since about five years ago ~as Iable&#13;
to cultivate it. My gift is God given and I&#13;
will only use this gift in a fitting manner ..I&#13;
do not charge for my services. I use this&#13;
gift not for money, not for fame, but to h~p&#13;
those in need, the way God would want It.&#13;
When a group invites me as a guest&#13;
speaker I show them E.S.P., de~onstrate&#13;
it, not just talk about It . . . . Mter a&#13;
moment he added, "When Jean Dixon was&#13;
Norman Sialer&#13;
in Racine she talked in front of a thousaod&#13;
people but she never went to the people&#13;
and asked if someone wanted a reading."&#13;
Then my companion handed me the&#13;
phone and after a cordial greeting the&#13;
person on tbe other end spoke of the recent&#13;
California earthquake. .. orman came&#13;
over February eighth and looked very&#13;
upset. He told us of bow he had had a&#13;
dream and forsaw an earthquake and was&#13;
literally shaken out of sleep. Norman said&#13;
he believed the quake would be very very&#13;
soon because he had had earlier&#13;
premonitions of the aCCOUll~but none as&#13;
violent as that last night." The next&#13;
morning at approximately 6:05 one of&#13;
California's worst quakes struck Los&#13;
Angeles. I glanced at my friend and he&#13;
shook his head as if to say it was true,&#13;
whether or not Iwanted to believe it.&#13;
In a skeptical way I said, "Fine, that's&#13;
one point for Norman, but it doesn't make&#13;
him a psychic." Then my other companion&#13;
volunteered this experience with Norman.&#13;
"Norman was at my house and, you know,&#13;
I dared him to play the game where you&#13;
drop a dollar bill between someone's&#13;
(Continued on Page 6)&#13;
Volume 3 . Number 5 March I, 197 I&#13;
Constitutional&#13;
Referendum&#13;
Library Tightens Security======--==-&#13;
by Ken Konkol&#13;
If you have beeR in the Tallent Hall&#13;
Library in the past month, you couldn't&#13;
help noticing the girl guarding the exit.&#13;
Her purpose is to prevent theft. Pure&#13;
and simply oµr main library has lost&#13;
some 20,000 \t~ms since. it opened, and&#13;
the girls are there to help control this. I&#13;
(Pholln by StM Zabel)&#13;
Maximum Security?&#13;
had a talk with Mr. Philip Burnett, the&#13;
Director of Libraries.&#13;
Burnett said, "This began mall and&#13;
informally. There was no money, staff,&#13;
or people in '67. Now the new building&#13;
will have turnstyle control to stop&#13;
things from 'drifting away.'&#13;
"The first big thing wr lo.st was a 65&#13;
Rand-McNally Commercial tlas, it&#13;
Exploring E.S.P.&#13;
By John Koloen&#13;
This is a story of personal experiences,&#13;
the experiences and reactions of a wide&#13;
range of people all. sharing one common&#13;
bond. Each of them probably had different&#13;
reasons and their attitudes varied from&#13;
hostile skepticism to the desperate&#13;
gr~spings of the insecure but strangely the&#13;
ObJect of their feelings found its mark in&#13;
one man: Norman Slater E.S.P.&#13;
N?rman Jives in a converted garage&#13;
behind a large house on Washington Road&#13;
"'.est of the old North Shore Railroad&#13;
Viaduct. It's a well lighted place and on a&#13;
cold_ night looks very warm from the&#13;
outside. One room is made to serve as&#13;
::droom, living room and kitchen. A small&#13;
. throom lies on one corner, hidden from&#13;
vte~ by a pair of swinging doors. The&#13;
f~r~ture is as varied as his clients, consisting&#13;
of old painted wagon wheels attached&#13;
to the ceiling, antiquish desks and a&#13;
collection of records from Marches by&#13;
Sousa to the Band. It is the kind of place a&#13;
collector of out of the way articles would&#13;
~pent half a day handing the various ob-&#13;
:ts which appeal to his eye in second&#13;
nd stores and antique shops.&#13;
But Norman Slater is no second hand&#13;
rnan and he'll tell you that if you start&#13;
~!king about yourself before he's had the&#13;
ha ance to tell you. "You've come to me to&#13;
so ve your life read ... if you want to go to&#13;
rneone else and pay fifty dollars and tell&#13;
about yourself so they can tell you, fine. I&#13;
·don'( mean to be rude, I just don't want&#13;
you to tell me these things. Let me tell&#13;
you."&#13;
When I first met him we shook hands and&#13;
instead of asking how my health was he&#13;
smiled and said, " I see your aura is green&#13;
... I'll tell you what it means later." Then&#13;
he turned to my two companions and&#13;
began a conversation about the newspaper&#13;
and our economic situation. They had met&#13;
him earlier and asked me to come along to&#13;
help write an article on Norman. One of&#13;
them was skeptical from the start, the&#13;
other uncertain, and I was anxious to know&#13;
what a green aura meant.&#13;
During the next several hours I listened&#13;
as they talked. Their conversation drifted&#13;
from the newspaper to Norman and E .S.P .&#13;
One of my friends made some calls to&#13;
people who had contact with Norman and&#13;
while he was talking I asked Norman how&#13;
he had started in E.S.P. He replied, " I've&#13;
had this gift since I was nine years old but&#13;
only since about five years ago was I able&#13;
to cultivate it. My gift is God given and I&#13;
will only use this gift in a fitting manner. I&#13;
do not charge for my services. I use this&#13;
gift not for money, not for fame, but to he~p&#13;
those in need, the way God would want 1t&#13;
When a group invites me as a guest&#13;
speaker I show them E.S .. P ., de~onstrate&#13;
it, not just talk about 1t . . . After a&#13;
moment he added, "When Jean Dixon was&#13;
la ted three months. The de. k pe pie&#13;
couldn't watch all the time. Thing g t&#13;
bad when book tarted disappearing&#13;
from the 'reserved' helf.&#13;
Our Judy Hamilton figured fifty&#13;
book a month were being lo t and it&#13;
was co ting 6000 a year. he said. (I got&#13;
another figure of 15,()()() from another&#13;
ource.) We can't find out how man&#13;
we've lo t . in e we would have to count&#13;
them.&#13;
"Thi i pure theft , either a peron&#13;
might have a pa ionate de ire to po. se~&#13;
book or he might be teahng them 10&#13;
sell. Then we have the per .on affiicted&#13;
\\.ith irre pon ible 1.-arele. ne who&#13;
might take a re erved book to have an&#13;
advantage over the re ·t of the cla. ,&#13;
''We cho e to hire the girl becau. e&#13;
turn tyle are expen ive and we're&#13;
moving anyway. Be ide they are&#13;
cheerful. friend)}'. and ni e looking.&#13;
They make people want to how their&#13;
books.&#13;
"Originally count were made and we&#13;
found the leakage ta ·ing pla e."&#13;
Burnett said. "\\'e checked. tad1. on and&#13;
found they had ontrol p int around&#13;
the library· In • 1ilwaukee the · have a&#13;
in ;: ~ I tr ut !. \,, ... ntr '°e,&#13;
found thi preferable. The 6()()() we&#13;
spend on the girls will ju t about ~over&#13;
the co t of lo e . but there is al. the&#13;
factor of efficiency of o;en·ice. If we can&#13;
produce 5% of book a ked for we'd&#13;
be doing good 60% i our pre nt&#13;
figure. In the beginning the girl were&#13;
checking every page of the notebook&#13;
people were carrying: now we are le.&#13;
stringent."&#13;
I al o spoke with the circulation&#13;
manager, Mike Reid, who i in harge of&#13;
the security, He told me-that the mo t&#13;
orman&#13;
in Racine she talked in front of a thousand&#13;
people but she never went to the people&#13;
and asked if someone wanted a reading."&#13;
Then my companion handed me the&#13;
phone and after a cordial greeting the&#13;
person on the other end spoke of the recent&#13;
California eaTthquake. " ·orman came&#13;
over February eighth and looked very&#13;
upset. He told us of how he had had a dream and forsaw an earthquake and was&#13;
literally shaken out of sleep. Norman said&#13;
he believed the quake would be very very&#13;
soon because he had had earlier&#13;
iremonitions of the account, but ncme a&#13;
purpo&#13;
Th ft Pr '\ nli n point&#13;
P IDs by R A , d)&#13;
later&#13;
.,,;olent a that last night." T ne t&#13;
morning at approxunately 6:05 one of&#13;
California· worst quak stru L&#13;
Angeles. I glanced at my friend and he&#13;
shook his head as if to ay it v.as true,&#13;
whether or not I wanted to believe it.&#13;
In a keptical way I said "Fine, that'&#13;
one point for orman, but it d n't make&#13;
him a psychic." Then my other companion&#13;
volunteered this experience with Norman.&#13;
" orman was at my house and, you knov.,&#13;
I dared him to play the game where you&#13;
drop a dollar bill between someone's&#13;
&lt;Continued on Page 6) &#13;
NEWSCOPE Mond ay, Marth Newsco 1,1tII&#13;
Volume 3, Number 4 'Pe&#13;
Tuesday, February 23 • ,1971&#13;
EDITORIAL BOARD&#13;
Jim Nolan&#13;
Warren Ned;;" : : : : : : .. " . l'ubh...&#13;
Marc Elsen " . . ... ,Ed]&#13;
Jerry Owens . .... : NewsF4.&#13;
John Leighton .A'dBuslnes'M .... Vertisin ~&#13;
EDlTQRIAL STAFF gM"""&#13;
Sven Taffs Jim K I&#13;
M k B· , a oen J h&#13;
ar arnhill , Bill ,On K~&#13;
Jacoby, John Potente DSorenSOn&#13;
H. Post, Mike Kurth' ean I.oum&#13;
Breach, Jerry Socha 'lm Smith~D&#13;
Lomartire , James Ca; en KOnkol""&#13;
Sunball, Kevin M k&#13;
er&#13;
, 80b ~&#13;
Bob Borchardt. . cay, CarolJ""&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Narees Socha Don M . , arjala John&#13;
. Published weeki b ' Gill&#13;
ORGANIZA nON y y the NEWSCOIi&#13;
Wisconsin- Parksid~t ~;~niver'l)&#13;
Road, Kenosha, Wi'sconsinW~&#13;
are the opinion of the Ed" Edit",,",&#13;
and are not to be I(oria!8&lt;ort&#13;
opinions of the UniverstOn~ldered&#13;
faculty, or administratioty&#13;
, Its51_ n.&#13;
TELEPHONES:&#13;
Business 652-4177&#13;
Editorial 658-4861, ext. 36&#13;
Page 2&#13;
Rosa Heads Welfare Committee&#13;
Draft Seminars practices and discrimin.ation. .&#13;
Rates for a family of five, he said, as set&#13;
by the State Department of Social Services&#13;
is $186 a month, while the Racme&#13;
Gene~al Assistance. Department gives&#13;
$140.For a family of nine the State rate is&#13;
$306 and Racine gives $244. In all cases the&#13;
Racine Department of General Assistance&#13;
gives less than what is prescribed by the&#13;
State Social Services Department.&#13;
Rosa went on to say that his request for&#13;
an open public meeting - possibly March&#13;
13 _ seems to be in the making. He explained&#13;
that he had received a letter from&#13;
Richard LaFave, Chairman, Racine&#13;
County Board, which said that he was&#13;
asking the County Board to call a meeting&#13;
and hoped it could be set up soon.&#13;
The EWC, meanwhile, has been aiding&#13;
General Assistance applicants with funds&#13;
obtained by donations.&#13;
When asked what students could do to&#13;
help, Rosa replied, "Advise people of&#13;
meetings, tell people about the problems,&#13;
and let the EWC know of any cases where&#13;
people have been abused. Rosa's office is&#13;
at the Spanish Center, 1031 Douglas&#13;
Avenue in Racine.&#13;
b) Dean Loum05&#13;
The Department of General Assistance&#13;
d. the Racine County Board has been&#13;
criticized by the Emergency Welfare&#13;
Committee for its treatment of General&#13;
Assistance applicants.&#13;
Earlier. the Spanish Center of Racine, in&#13;
a meeting with General AssistanCe&#13;
Chairman Hubert Braun and his staff, had&#13;
tned to dJscuss their grievances, but&#13;
""",h'ed utue cooperation. Then, Felix&#13;
Rosa. acting on his own, called another&#13;
meeting 0/ interested persons and groups.&#13;
Some of those attending were represen&#13;
-&#13;
tab\'es of 'AAcP. Brown Berets, t.es&#13;
Aspm 's o/fice, RYM, and others. At this&#13;
meetIng the Emergency Welfare Commlu.ee&#13;
....'35 formed with Mr. Rosa as&#13;
chairman. The EWCthen drew up a list of demands&#13;
and presented them at a rally held at the&#13;
General Assistance o[fice. Among the&#13;
demands listed were:&#13;
1 We demand that all applicants be&#13;
treated equally without racial and class&#13;
c:hscrimination. Rose explained that there&#13;
had been cases where "Puerto Ricans&#13;
were told to go back to Puerto Rico, and&#13;
were asked why they had come to Racine&#13;
lor help."&#13;
2. Giving up of license plates and titles&#13;
to aU motor vehicles not be required. Rosa&#13;
expl~ined that, "just about everyone who&#13;
applies for help has to give his license&#13;
away."&#13;
3: yJe demand that the guidelines and&#13;
policies of the office of General Assistance&#13;
be revised and changed to adequately&#13;
mee~.!.heemergency needs of low·income&#13;
families. The committee to review and&#13;
change these guidelines should be imme:(hately&#13;
set up and include representatives&#13;
from Black, Spanish-speaking and&#13;
other low-income people. '&#13;
Rosa added that "The guidelines serve&#13;
to harass applicants. In some cases these&#13;
guidelines aren't even followed and applicants&#13;
are subject to very arbitrary&#13;
Sunnyside Florisb&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
Rowers - Frlit .~~ . ..... - ~II&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till II p.m. 7 day.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone: 6194·6700&#13;
VI and fRANK WEINSTOCK&#13;
3021- 75TH,T&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN UljO Phone 657 -97 47&#13;
lOc OFF&#13;
On Any Order Of&#13;
BELL'S FRIED&#13;
CHI,CKEN&#13;
II be 1I0le Ior que lions and&#13;
ion&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood with this coupon&#13;
Good Wed., March 3&#13;
thru Tues., March 9&#13;
7601 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Adl.e,nt to Nlitlon.1 FltOd&#13;
\\\1&#13;
270&lt;11lofhrop ........ 'ocin,. WiJconJin&#13;
Students get red cafpet service&#13;
(SO does everyone e t s e ' )&#13;
HUXHOlD'S&#13;
COUNTRY STORE&#13;
SO. Green Ba)' Rd.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
634-97/6&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
~NOUB:~LNDT'S-RACINE SOUND ROOM&#13;
in sound L ~IND ALL the brands you know&#13;
and 45's eiudl~ment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
a Iscount pr ices&#13;
Sto . .&#13;
checkb~~n a;d blow your mind, not your&#13;
Department ee and talk to Mark, our&#13;
student and ~anager, who is a Parkside&#13;
equipment Will talk your language, both in&#13;
purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY - Tape re PANASONIC _ c:rd~rs, Radios, TV &amp; Record playerS&#13;
KOSS _ Headsetsadlo, TV, Recorders, StereQrecordpl'ytrI&#13;
KENWOOD - Re . MARANTZ _ Re c~lvers, Tuner and Amps&#13;
AZTEC _ Speakecr:lvers, Speakers, Record players&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C - Rec . GERRARD elvers &amp; Radios&#13;
G E R - Turntables&#13;
.. - adios &amp;&#13;
Also, Patch Record players 'Ie&#13;
are here, sho c~rds, blank Tapes and accessories.WIUtts t&#13;
Southeastern W~ or Jewelry, Sporting goods and GI&#13;
Isconsl·n's I . owest ·prlces.&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS&#13;
512 MAIN STREET&#13;
on the west .dSl e of Monument Square&#13;
RACINE'S&#13;
GREAT&#13;
DOWNTOW~",usf&#13;
DiSCOUNT rt"&#13;
Draft Seminars&#13;
page 2 NEWSCOPE Mon .. ay, March l&#13;
•• ewsco .1&#13;
Rosa Heads Welfare Committee&#13;
Volume 3, Number 4 Pe&#13;
Tuesday, February 23, 197\ I&#13;
EDITORIAL BOARD '&#13;
Jim Nolan&#13;
Rosa added that "The guidelines serve&#13;
to ~ar~ss applicants. In some cases these&#13;
~1dehnes aren't .even followed and applicants&#13;
are subJect to very arbitrary&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 Lothrop A••-, ltocine, Wisconsin&#13;
Students ge t r ed ca rpe t se rv ice&#13;
( So does everyon e e lse!)&#13;
HUXHOLD'S&#13;
COUNTRY STORE&#13;
o. Green Bay Rd.&#13;
Ke11osht1&#13;
63-+-9.., 16&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
practices and discrimin_ation. . Rates for a family of five, he said, as set&#13;
by the State Department ?f Social S~rvices&#13;
is $186 a month, while the Racine&#13;
Gene~al Assistance Department gives&#13;
$140. For a family of nine the State rate is&#13;
$306 and Racine gives $244. In all cases the&#13;
Racine Department of General Assistance&#13;
gives less than what is prescribed by the&#13;
State Social Services Department.&#13;
Rosa went on to say that his request for&#13;
an open public meeting - possibly March&#13;
13 - seems to be in the making. He explained&#13;
that he had received a letter from&#13;
Richard LaFave, Chairman, Racine&#13;
County Board, which said that he was&#13;
asking the County Board to call a meeting&#13;
and hoped it could be set up soon. The EWC, meanwhile, has been aiding&#13;
General Assistance applicants with funds&#13;
obtained by donations.&#13;
When asked what students could do to&#13;
help, Rosa replied, "Advise people of&#13;
meetings, tell people about the problems,&#13;
and let the EWC know of any cases where&#13;
people have been abused. Rosa's office is&#13;
at the Spanish Center, 1031 Douglas&#13;
Avenue in Racine.&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97 47&#13;
10c OFF&#13;
On Any Order Of&#13;
BELL'S FRIED&#13;
CHl·CKEN&#13;
with this coupon&#13;
Good Wed., March 3&#13;
thru Tues., March 9&#13;
7601 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Adj1cent lo National Food&#13;
Warren Ned.ry · : : : · · · · · · ... Pub!&#13;
Marc Eisen ...... : · · · · · ...... f:d,&#13;
Jerry Owens . . . · · · · ·: NeWs Ed&#13;
John Leighton .. A. d. Business \1 · · · · verti · ·&#13;
EDITQRlAL STAFF sing \!a&#13;
Sven Taffs Jim K I M ' · 0 oen J ark Barnhill, Bill ' 0hn Ko1&#13;
Jacoby, John Potente D Sorenson&#13;
H. Post, Mike Kurth' ~an Lou;&#13;
Breach, Jerry Socha ' Jun Smith D&#13;
Lomartire James C ' Ken Konkoi&#13;
S b II ' asper B b , un a ' Kevin McKa ' o \lalll!&#13;
Bob Borchardt. Y, Carol J&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Narees Socha Don M . ' ariala Jotu&#13;
· Published week! b ' · C&#13;
O~GANIZATlONyat ~~he EWSCOP[&#13;
Wisconsin- Parkside 37~~ntversity&#13;
Road, Kenosha, Wi'scon . Walhi&#13;
are the opinion of the Jt Edit&#13;
and are not to b 11?rtal&#13;
opinions of the Univ:rsi~onsidered&#13;
faculty' or administrati onY, lls st .&#13;
TELEPHONES:&#13;
Business 652- 4177&#13;
Editorial 658- 4861 , ext. 36&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
Flowers - Fruit D-•... . - ... - Gifts&#13;
Phone: 684-6700&#13;
VI and FRANK WEINSTOCK&#13;
3021 • 75TH ST&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 531'0&#13;
~~UB:~NDT'S-RACINE SOUND ROOM&#13;
in sound L ~IND ALL the brands you know&#13;
and 45,s :iudi~ment, plus over 3,000 Albums&#13;
S . 1scount prices.&#13;
top m and blo . checkbook S w your mind, not your&#13;
Departme~t ee and talk to Mark, our&#13;
student an ~anager, who is a Parkside&#13;
equipmentd will talk your language, both in&#13;
purchases, records and money.&#13;
SONY - Tape record . PANASONIC_ Ra ~rs, Radios, TV &amp; Record players&#13;
KOSS - Headsets dio, TV, Recorders, Stereo record playe~&#13;
KENWOOD - R . MARANTZ R eceiverS, Tuner and Amps&#13;
AZTEC _ Speak:cr:iverS, Speakers, Record players&#13;
J.B.L. - Speakers&#13;
J.V.C - Re . GERRARD ce,;ers &amp; Radios&#13;
G E R -:-- urntables&#13;
· • - ad1os &amp; R Also, Patch cor:cord players ·1e&#13;
are here, shop for S, blank Tapes and accessories, Wh:tts&#13;
Southeastern w· _J~welry, Sporting goods and G&#13;
isconsm s lowest prices.&#13;
BRANDT, S DISTRIBUTORS&#13;
512 MAIN STREET&#13;
on the west side of Monument Square&#13;
RACINE'S&#13;
GREAT&#13;
oowNroWN 0usE&#13;
01scouNT H &#13;
Monday, March 1, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
-&#13;
Porkside's Athletic Engineer&#13;
by KEN KONKOL&#13;
If you are one of those involved with&#13;
athletics on campus, you already know&#13;
Tom Rosandich, If you are not, you might&#13;
be interested in taking a look at VFW&#13;
magazine for February. In looking&#13;
through it to page 24, you will come on an&#13;
article about him. It tells about the man&#13;
far better than I ever would.&#13;
Rosandich, who doesn't look a bit like&#13;
Paul Newman, has been involved in the&#13;
athletic progr~ms of 51 countrtes, but&#13;
came to Parkside to accept the challenge&#13;
of taking nothing and molding it into the'&#13;
finest athletic program in the state.&#13;
It has not been easy. For one thing,&#13;
communication is practically.non-existent&#13;
between staff, faculty and students. For&#13;
another there is poor sports coverage from&#13;
local newspapers. Radio -is something to&#13;
dream about. Part of this trouble stems&#13;
from difficulties of arranging locations for&#13;
home games. .. .&#13;
"Our teams work out in two counties,&#13;
four communities, and at nineteen different&#13;
sites. Some of our teams might be&#13;
up at 5 a.m. working out at Washington&#13;
Park High. Others might be seen at&#13;
midnight at J. I. Case after a basketball&#13;
game - running cross country, and our&#13;
Director of Intramurals would be right out&#13;
there with them.&#13;
"We are probably the only Varsity&#13;
basketball team in the country that has to&#13;
work out' at 10 a.m. Our intramurals are&#13;
probably Ute only ones run at twelve noon.&#13;
Our athletic facilities on the Racine&#13;
campus consist of an eight by ten room.&#13;
"Recently we played Carthage College,&#13;
an away game, one mile from here. Our&#13;
next game was at home. WeplayedatJ. I.&#13;
Case, 20 miles from here. Talk about a&#13;
home court advantage! Parkside owns one&#13;
basketball hoop - it's mounted on the barn&#13;
outside the athletics office.&#13;
"We haven't let the lack of facilities stop&#13;
us though. We are the NAIA Cross Country&#13;
14thDistrict Champiuns. In soccer we beat&#13;
Ohio State. In basketball we've beat every&#13;
school in the Wisconsin _Gateway Conference.&#13;
In Wrestlit}gw y¥'e ~on a major&#13;
tourname~t at ~ilX&gt;n. In Gymnastics we&#13;
~on ~e WiSCOnSinOpen. Our fencing lea&#13;
IS nationally ranked m&#13;
."Our Skiing club ;on the USSA Central&#13;
~IVlSlOr:aCross Country Ski Championship&#13;
10 .Nordi~ Skiing and came in second in the&#13;
~ISCO~SIn Intercollegiate Alpine championships.&#13;
Another of our sport -clubs .&#13;
saIlmg, won the WiSconsin Intercouegia~&#13;
Regatta.&#13;
"All this was done While spending less&#13;
mO,ney on Intercollegiate athletics than&#13;
OhIO State spends on telepbone recruiting&#13;
or LSD spends on golf. Our success is due&#13;
spectators. There will be a pool. mainly (or&#13;
recreational swimming. as well as com.&#13;
petition .&#13;
"Besides the pool, there will be facilities&#13;
for fencing, basketball, "eights. "ork out,&#13;
bandball, tennis, volleyball and badminton.&#13;
There will be roll-away bleachers&#13;
for best utilization of space when not in&#13;
use. We have asked for a syntbeue floor for&#13;
multi-purpose use (or student aetivities.&#13;
There will be the potential for hghhng,&#13;
sound, and auditorium type acoustics&#13;
"We have a plan to allocate 100 acres for&#13;
play fields, intramural and club sports&#13;
Tom Rosandich with Joe Newton, high scboollrack coacb from Elmhurst,&#13;
lIl.&#13;
to dedicated coaches who are prepared to&#13;
meet with the players anyplace -&#13;
anytime.&#13;
"Bids are being made right now for a&#13;
building to be completed by the summer of&#13;
'72. The emphasis is on utilization or space&#13;
~or ~('t1vities rather than DO seating (or&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
If you read the curfent Rolling Stone&#13;
you'll find an interview with the late AI&#13;
Wilson of Canned Heat, and in it he&#13;
reveals a perceptive eye for the&#13;
contemporary blues scetle, and says&#13;
among other things, "Sam Lay is a titan;&#13;
I consider him the first or second best&#13;
drunner I've heard in the blues."&#13;
A few Fridays ago, Parkside students&#13;
were not only able to see Sam Lay&#13;
perform, but Lucille Spann, the widow&#13;
of pianist Otis Spann and a fine singer in&#13;
her Own right, and Bonnie Raitt, a&#13;
young white country blues singer of&#13;
Whom mOre will be heard.&#13;
Lay is probably the best known blues&#13;
drummer around' his reputation having&#13;
been secured by playing with the likes&#13;
of Muddy Waters, Paul Butterfield on&#13;
his early (and best) albums, and on their&#13;
j 0 i n t .album, Farhers and Sons, and&#13;
albums with Waters, Butterfield, Mike&#13;
Bloomfield, "Duck" Dunn, Otis Spann,&#13;
and Buddy Miles. .&#13;
Lay has his own group now, and IS&#13;
currently on tour of colleges in th.e&#13;
state. The band, surprisingly enough, IS&#13;
made up of four longhairs, plus Lay and&#13;
Mrs. S!'ann. Their perfonnance was&#13;
disappOinting.&#13;
While the band plays the standard&#13;
urban blues expected of a Chicago blues&#13;
band it's hard to escape the thought&#13;
that 'Lay employs the longhairs in an&#13;
attempt to establish rapport WIth Ihe&#13;
college audience.&#13;
Only two of the longhairs seemed to&#13;
be of top rate calibre, Garfield Angove,&#13;
Sam Lay Playing the Blues&#13;
programs. We DOW have a :tLX mile running&#13;
trail built (or cross country aDd&#13;
recreational nmning. There are plans (or&#13;
tennis courts and on outdoor running track&#13;
with synthetic surfaces. We envision the&#13;
possiMity of a field house to satisfy the&#13;
tlemand (or space, but we have no plans&#13;
for a tadsurn, per Our &lt;mph I&#13;
toward hfeUm. port&#13;
..w. hold tile lead"""",p for rt clu&#13;
In the late of \\ nsin Ouldoor llrt i&#13;
dCllng a tory 01 our hunt r, In ad&#13;
gun club There are 550, hunt to&#13;
WIsconsin. ·0 oU",r port h thaI kInd of&#13;
parucipauon. On cam",," our gun club ha&#13;
'200 members Our rt club COUI'I&lt;11&#13;
starung a cychng cornpeuuoo&#13;
"OUr Intramural touch football gam&#13;
between Racme and Kenosha \10.. th&#13;
great t attended gam " had yl'l, J I&#13;
the Racine-Ken"""a baskelbell game"&#13;
the most attended ID thaI field&#13;
··Wedon'l ha'eahell 01 a 101 of ple n&#13;
the Lands but th er e are a h kola&#13;
number enrolled There are at I I&#13;
lhousand involved In . ports clut. on&#13;
campus. Fifty per cent of the , luden art.&#13;
Involved in Inlramural . ports clubs one&#13;
way or the other&#13;
"We hold a pos,t,on 01 leade lop ID&#13;
Wisconsin In the area of ~callonal&#13;
ports. Our\loomen's ere count11- team&#13;
the only one In WISCon 10 - and til • '\&#13;
played an tmportant part In devet pment&#13;
of the WtSConSIO Women's tntercoll rete&#13;
Athletic Association program&#13;
"We have been hIghly u Iul with&#13;
coeducational P E. 10 the area or "omen'&#13;
athletics Thi gives us better utilization of&#13;
ume.faciliti aadcoach than II "ould If&#13;
we held parate program for" om n&#13;
"Our staff is ded,cated WlthOUl ex&#13;
ceplion each member leachE'S P E&#13;
coaches a sporl. and I In-.:ohed In In&#13;
tTamwal acuvlues "&#13;
lr Rosandlch. who has been quoted a&#13;
saymg he dldn'l believe 10 holaf'Shjps&#13;
feels that the purpose of athlell I to&#13;
leach a student a III In the area or ~m&#13;
tifellme port "beth... thaI be . kling,&#13;
shooting. gymna tics. or somethmg I&#13;
"Parkslde does nol orrer either a maJOl'&#13;
or minor tn PhYSical Education I fed lhal&#13;
students should develop their kIll "" th Ir&#13;
(NI,"o !e\·eI. Intramural or extramural (Club&#13;
sports) or lnlercolleglale to&#13;
If you would like l() show )'our . uppot"t to&#13;
our athletic program. you will hav~ lh&#13;
opportuDlty. Our Gymnastics team, raled&#13;
the number one new learn In th country, I&#13;
holding a gymna IIcS m I Tueoday.&#13;
March 2nd. at Wasillngton Park HIgh&#13;
School in RaclOe at 730 Why not com on&#13;
down and show your . upport GET I.&#13;
VOLVED.&#13;
vocals and mouth harp. and '-tark Freer.&#13;
a fine bassist who was handi~apptd&#13;
because he wasn't amplified enough&#13;
Angove is a fair harpi " bUI a mellow&#13;
singer-much like early Buuerfield.&#13;
having too Butterfield's mannerism.&#13;
combinalion greaser and Southside&#13;
sharpie.&#13;
I find it hard to believe 'hal Lay&#13;
would bring this band into a black bar&#13;
in Chicago. Supposedly these areas hne&#13;
been off limits for white bluesmen IDee&#13;
around the lime Bunerfield and&#13;
Bloomfield went on 10 better lime .&#13;
Take into consideration too thai B &amp;. 8&#13;
had a measure of skill and toughn.&#13;
this band lacks.&#13;
Overall Ihe band Jus, didn', Jell&#13;
together. It play.d well, but not "i'h&#13;
inspiration. The band lacks anyone who&#13;
can drive Lay lo do beller. and suffers&#13;
for it. Lay didn', display the power h.,&#13;
noted for, excepl when playing two&#13;
Waters' classics. "Walking in the Park:'&#13;
and "Got iy Mojo Working."&#13;
When Mrs. Spann sang the band W3&#13;
tighter, and Lay's drummiligharder. yel&#13;
still 'he band couldn't build the&#13;
momentum that would carry it on.&#13;
................. . ' '" ., . ".&#13;
Th perfomun,e of 'he band pol&#13;
more when II I omp red to 111&#13;
{'harhe tu Iwhue pUI n If I&#13;
eme 'er. I~}' b3nd prub3 I&#13;
te ·hm 3ll~ beller 'h3n lu Iwh I .&#13;
b3nd bui [h2the' b nd h.d th pwel&#13;
and the ,."e tha' led 10 3 g~ ..&#13;
perform.nee It "'a undoobledl 3 hIgh&#13;
POlOt for P.u . Id lhal rainY ;d 1C'IIK&gt;On&#13;
The eventn cndcod when BunOlC'&#13;
R2m did an une peeled sci afler L:J)-&#13;
finished \tl RaHl. a \10 hlle ('Ollnl"&#13;
blue 1O@(r UI ot e YOll. had been&#13;
In hlw3ukeco nn a bill Wllh&#13;
ieg.l· hWIII CI whue blue b.lld \I\lt&#13;
ofCh' 0.)&#13;
e dlo,e to P.,k Ide be 3U'l&lt; ,e&#13;
was a ran of Uh,ltI pann. and ";anted&#13;
lo seC' her perlorrn, he lilt (OUf m&#13;
'hree of them \10 Ippl deha wn~ .&#13;
and "'1'3 an e Iriordm,1rI1 Jotld&#13;
a"ouMK gultarl t&#13;
'h RaIU 1 3 \'CI) ~arp hi k. :I\toilre&#13;
of the IDcongrully \If a} ou"l! "'hIle gill&#13;
IDglOg an old black man' hlue II r&#13;
name i be~omlO 10 be mcoull ncd \&#13;
mu I'" cnl1", . And le I umh)ublcdl)&#13;
g 109 pia e .&#13;
_;--------;.;;~~-L~- Monday: March 1, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page 3&#13;
Parks ide 's Athletic Engineer&#13;
by KEN KONKOL&#13;
If you are one of those involved with&#13;
athletics on campus, you already know&#13;
Tom Rosandich. If you are not, you might&#13;
be interested in taking a look at VFW&#13;
magazine for February. In looking&#13;
through it to page 24, you will come on an&#13;
article about him. It tells about the man&#13;
far better than I ever would.&#13;
Rosandich, who doesn't look a bit like&#13;
Paul Newman, has been involved in the&#13;
athletic programs of 51 countries, but&#13;
came to Parkside to accept the challenge&#13;
of taking nothing and molding it into the&#13;
finest athletic program in the state.&#13;
It has not been easy. For one thing,&#13;
communication is practically .non-existent&#13;
between staff, faculty and · students. For&#13;
another there is poor sports coverage from&#13;
Jocal newspapers. Radio ·is something to&#13;
dream about. Part of this trouble stems&#13;
from difficulties of arranging locations for&#13;
home games. · · ·&#13;
"Our teams work out in two counties,&#13;
four communities, and at nineteen different&#13;
sites. Some of our teams might be&#13;
up at 5 a.m. working out at Washington&#13;
Park High. Others might be seen at&#13;
midnight at J. I. Case after a basketball&#13;
game - running cross country, and our&#13;
Director of Intramurals would be right out&#13;
there with them.&#13;
"We are probably the only Varsity&#13;
basketball team in the country that has to&#13;
work out" at 10 a.m. Our intramurals are&#13;
probably the only ones run at twelve noon.&#13;
Our athletic facilities on the Racine&#13;
campus consist of an eight by ten room.&#13;
tournament at Ripon. In Gymnastics we&#13;
:,von ~e Wisconsin Open. Our fencing team&#13;
1s nationally ranked.&#13;
-"~r Skiing club won the USSA Central&#13;
~1V1s1on Cross Country Ski Championship&#13;
10 _Nordi~ Skiing and came in second in the&#13;
~1sco~sm Intercollegiate Alpine champi~~hips.&#13;
Another of our sport -clu~ in&#13;
sailmg, won the Wisconsin Intercollegiate Regatta.&#13;
"All this ~as done while spending less&#13;
m~ney on mtercollegiate athletics than&#13;
Ohio State spends on telephone recruiting&#13;
or um spends on golf. Our success is due&#13;
"Recently we played Carthage College,&#13;
an away game, one mile from here. Our&#13;
next game was at home. We played at J. I.&#13;
Case, 20 miles from here. Talk about a&#13;
home court advantage! Parkside owns one&#13;
basketball hoop- it's.mounted on the barn&#13;
outside the athletics office.&#13;
Tom Rosandich with Joe Newton, high school track coach from Elmhurst.&#13;
Ill.&#13;
"We haven't let the lack of facilities stop&#13;
us though. We are the NAIA Cross Country&#13;
14th District Champions. In soccer we beat&#13;
Ohio State. In basketball we've beat every&#13;
school in the Wisconsin Gateway Conference.&#13;
In Wrestling. we won a major&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
If you read the current Rolling Stone&#13;
you'll find an interview with the late A1&#13;
Wilson of Canned Heat, and in it he&#13;
reveals a perceptive eye for the&#13;
contemporary blues scene, and says&#13;
among other things, "Sam Lay is a titan;&#13;
I consider him the first or second best&#13;
drunner I've heard in the blues."&#13;
A few Fridays ago , Parkside students&#13;
were not only able to see Sam Lay&#13;
perform, but Lucille Spann, the widow&#13;
of pianist Otis Spann and a fine singer in&#13;
her own right, and Bonnie Raitt, a&#13;
young white country blues singer of&#13;
whom more will be heard.&#13;
Lay is probably the best known blues&#13;
drummer around; his reputation ha~ing&#13;
been secured by playing with the likes&#13;
of Muddy Waters, Paul Butterfield on&#13;
to dedicated coaches who are prepared to&#13;
meet with the players anyplace -&#13;
anytime.&#13;
"Bids are being made right now for a&#13;
building to be completed by the summer of&#13;
'72. The emphasis is on utilization of space&#13;
{or &lt;1ctivities rather than on seating for&#13;
his early (and best) albums, and on their&#13;
joint album, Fathers and Sons, and&#13;
albums with Waters, Butterfield, Mike&#13;
Bloomfield, "Duck" Dunn, Otis Spann,&#13;
and Buddy Miles. . Lay has his own group now, and 1s&#13;
currently on tour of colleges in th_e&#13;
state. The band, surprisingly enough, 1s&#13;
made up of four longhairs, plus Lay and&#13;
Mrs. Sra~n. Their performance was&#13;
disappomtmg. While the band plays the tandard&#13;
urban blues expected of a Chicago blue&#13;
band, it's hard to escape the. th?ught&#13;
that Lay employs the longhair. m an&#13;
attempt to establish rapport with the&#13;
college audience.&#13;
Only two of the longhairs seemed to&#13;
be of top rate calibre, Garfield Angove,&#13;
Sam Lay Playing the Blues&#13;
programs. We now have a :,IX mile runni&#13;
trail built for cro countr) and&#13;
recreational nmning. There are plan for&#13;
tennis courts and on outdoor runnin trac&#13;
with synthetic surfaces. We em:· _ion th&#13;
possibility of a field house to sati fy the&#13;
tlemand for space, but we have no plan&#13;
TT) it on.&#13;
............ . ..................... . &#13;
F.\ F.R ~/'OCFOR MY FATHER&#13;
• I&#13;
Mel-)" Dougla - Father&#13;
_ Cen Hackman - Son&#13;
r&lt;l _ DorOlh) St,ckney - Mother&#13;
_ E t lie Par&gt;Ons - Daughter&#13;
_ Ehzabeth Hubbard - Son's&#13;
out of the son's newly acquired love for ~e&#13;
old man and her insistent hatred for hun.&#13;
The son wins out and stays on, but soon&#13;
decides to take a look at a private and a&#13;
state institution. What follows is a&#13;
masterpiece in flashback. Sound and Sight&#13;
are used in much the same way they were&#13;
used in "Love Story", without excessive&#13;
affectation; although the music score&#13;
seemed inappropriate at times.&#13;
The tour through the institutions cornbines&#13;
close-ups of old folks and flashbacks&#13;
of Mr. Garrison's face amidst this sad&#13;
picture of slow death. This progressive&#13;
collage is even more impressive when the&#13;
renow who is directing the tour comments,&#13;
"The other side of our miracle drugs. - .&#13;
We keep them alive . . . but a grim&#13;
alternative."&#13;
Needless to say, Son Gene decides to&#13;
take the old fellow to the west coast with&#13;
him ... but he just won't go, holding on to&#13;
pride and seH respect as final handholds to&#13;
a slowly deteriorating manhood.&#13;
An argument between son and father&#13;
insues. The son finally releases his wrath&#13;
upon the old man, defining the roles that&#13;
they played throughout their lives - as&#13;
strangers ... not as father and son. In the&#13;
end, the old fellow dies as that stranger, in&#13;
a hospital as alone as he always was.&#13;
The film, as a social commentary, was a&#13;
good example of modern realism in con~&#13;
trast to the cliche-building satire that has&#13;
been accepted almost universally. Both&#13;
forms are of value; one type, the realist&#13;
film, takes extra reflection on the part of&#13;
the viewer.&#13;
t American dllemma i aired (or&#13;
at m rtcan public .• whether or&#13;
not to d an mg parent to an inhtuhon&#13;
tit 1 t him lay on with the second&#13;
ot'r lion A problem that i almost&#13;
xC'lu I\' I) 8 part of that great American&#13;
IM'nt R It. htr,lage thai could very well&#13;
I mC'd senile ,tself&#13;
The lory I a serrcus autobiographical&#13;
tud) b) I1M' renO'o'"ed playwTight -&#13;
Hobert Anderson The dialogue was exIlrnt&#13;
In a cia Ie sense. The hnes were&#13;
h~..able and portrayed the emotions&#13;
th I w.... ,mportant In building the&#13;
charactrnullOO necessar}" In producing a&#13;
trong confl'ct&#13;
II)' far, I1M'mo I effective portrayal was&#13;
lhat of Me",n Oouglas as Tom Carrison.&#13;
Thl" character became so real that this&#13;
r \, wer round h.mseH identifying with&#13;
th n The "old man" was stolid, set in&#13;
his \ltay • and as hardened as any man&#13;
could be al the age of 81, reflecting again&#13;
Ihe reahsl lyle or Robert Anderson.&#13;
Arter Margaret's demise. the daughter&#13;
glDS to question the old fellow's ability to&#13;
ur\'l\'e alone IShe has held a grudge&#13;
agall .. t h,m because he had thrown her out&#13;
of th house for marrying a Jew.) She&#13;
wantrd rtvenge. and anolher conflict grew William Sorensen&#13;
.~"!'~ 1Irif{/~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/f«£&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
~ 40th AVE . '&#13;
I&lt;ENQSHA W1S OL7-15174 .&#13;
Fruit Baskets _" ..&#13;
Corsages ,'.' "&#13;
lj;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!U- d ":,e'&#13;
i _Can y ..&#13;
NEWsCOPE Monday, March 1. lt71&#13;
by MARK TlMPANY .&#13;
There is no original thought. Enghsh&#13;
itself is a mass medium. '" got~ use&#13;
words when 1 talk to you." Everything we&#13;
do is music. . .&#13;
The great schism in LuddIte IS, ?VCL&#13;
Luddite has been granted proVIsIOnal&#13;
operating authority by. the otnce of&#13;
Student AffairS to functIOn as a student&#13;
organization apart from the co~c~rned&#13;
Students Coalition. The prov~slO.nal&#13;
government of Luddite is n.ot at tins nme&#13;
connected with the Luddlte of George&#13;
Metesky. Metesky may be working with&#13;
the Student Goverrunent in Exile (S.G.E.)&#13;
or he may be trying to continue the work&#13;
of "Luddite 1". Luddlte will now be&#13;
operated as a social group which functi.ons&#13;
as a politically oriented art cooperati~e.&#13;
Werlo not consider ourselves to be Luddite&#13;
II and we will not refer to ourselves in that&#13;
w~y. The provisional government of&#13;
Luddite advises caution in dealing with&#13;
Geroge Metesky and his New Luddlte&#13;
Foundation.&#13;
The first Luddite multi-media event (not&#13;
to be confused with those events which&#13;
were illicitly identified as Luddite events&#13;
by Mr. Metesky) will be held in the Racine&#13;
Campus Badger Room on Thursday,&#13;
March 11, at 7:30 p.m. The event will be a&#13;
"Night of Operant Condltioning". Sin~e&#13;
Luddite intends to be a comprehenSlvlst&#13;
organization, we will prove Parkside as an&#13;
organic whole in several media. It is the&#13;
view of Luddite that we must now&#13;
critically evaluate the work of B. F.&#13;
Skinner and its effect on student behavior&#13;
at Parkside. We must determine whether&#13;
to accept the Orgone or the Skinner box.&#13;
Luddite now exists in time and paper,&#13;
world without end. We demand anarchy,&#13;
but anarchy of a different kind.&#13;
When man is overwhelmed by in~&#13;
formation, he resorts to myth. Myth is the&#13;
simultaneous awareness of a complex·&#13;
group of causes and effects. Myth is inclusive,&#13;
involving, and participatory. Join&#13;
us in the mystique, the mysterious and&#13;
mythological world above the clouds of&#13;
Mount Olympus. We do not accept the&#13;
divine rights of kings. We accept only the&#13;
rites of spring. The present day composer&#13;
refuses to die.&#13;
........ ..c""....&#13;
CAREER&#13;
COUNC'UNG&#13;
Career counseling has been av '1 b&#13;
in the Student Affairs office : at~e&#13;
Kenosha Campus for .more than e&#13;
but f&#13;
d&#13;
a year now, ut ew stu ents are aware ofth·&#13;
service, and only a very few have t k IS&#13;
advantage of it. All students are 'm&#13;
a&#13;
. en Vlted&#13;
to make use of the Career Informal'&#13;
Center Monday through Friday f 'On&#13;
8:00 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. rom&#13;
The files with career information are&#13;
open to students for browsing When&#13;
ff&#13;
. ever&#13;
the Student A airs Office is open h .' . 1 ,and t ere IS a vocaticna counselor Willingto&#13;
help students and answer questions h&#13;
day from 8:00 to 12:00. ",c&#13;
The Career Information Center has&#13;
on file descriptions of many jobs'&#13;
pamphlet form for quick reading m&#13;
well as t:vo volu~es of the Directory ~~&#13;
OccupatIOnal Titles, which Coni'&#13;
inf!'lrmation on 22.000 jobs. Th':&#13;
~ublica~ions c~ntain up to date&#13;
information on Job reqUirements a d&#13;
employment opportunities. n&#13;
According to Mrs. Larson tftt&#13;
v.ocational guidanc~ counselOr', the&#13;
liberal arts education is no longer&#13;
completely adequate assurance of&#13;
employment. Counseling may help&#13;
students find practical uses for their&#13;
liberal arts degrees.&#13;
An important aspect of such&#13;
counseling is that it provides up to date&#13;
in formation about special&#13;
opportunities. "Students must stay in&#13;
touch with the economic scene. Toa&#13;
many students are training for jobs&#13;
which will not exist in the near future•&#13;
according to Mrs. Larson. '&#13;
Students who want additional help&#13;
call extension 41 for an 1ppointmetlt&#13;
with Mrs. Larson.&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
We have room in a private homefor up"&#13;
three girls· one garage space· kltchll&#13;
privileges. Inquiries directed to Ik. W&#13;
Mrs~ Hanson. 712427th Ave., Ken .• phone&#13;
658-3888.&#13;
'69 DODGE CHARGER, 383, Buekeh.. lI.&#13;
air. best offer or take over payments.CIII&#13;
654-5365 after 4:00 .&#13;
WANT E D - Swing band wants eo·&#13;
perienced jazz piano player. ContactI).&#13;
Reynolds at ~usic Department.&#13;
WANTEO'TO BUY - ~mm omn&#13;
telescopic lens. Prefer Nikon For FetdIl&#13;
Call 658-3058 after five. Bruce CI1apu!,ll11&#13;
52nd 51.. Kenosha. - SUZUKI 305 - 1 year old. $4lO.00. fIIIII&#13;
694-2263.&#13;
\TIIER&#13;
out of the n' newly acquired love for _the&#13;
old man and her insistent hatred for him.&#13;
The on wins out and stays on, but soon&#13;
decid to take a look at a private and a&#13;
tate in titution. 'What follows is a&#13;
ma terp1ece in fla hback. Sound and Sight&#13;
are used in much the same way they were&#13;
us d in ''Love Story", without excessive&#13;
affectation: although the music score&#13;
. med inappropriate at times.&#13;
Th tour through the institutions comn&#13;
· clo e-ups of old folks and flashbacks&#13;
of Ir. Garrison's face amidst this sad&#13;
picture of slow death. This progressive&#13;
collage i even more impressive when the&#13;
fellow who is directing the tour comments,&#13;
"Th other ide of our miracle drugs . . .&#13;
We keep them alive . . . but a grim&#13;
alternative."&#13;
, "eedless to ay, Son Gene decides to&#13;
take the old fellow to the west coast with&#13;
him ... but he just won't go, holding on to&#13;
pride and self respect as final handholds to&#13;
a lowly deteriorating manhood.&#13;
An argument between son and father&#13;
insues. The son finally releases his wrath&#13;
upon the old man, defining the roles that&#13;
they played throughout their lives - as&#13;
trangers . . . not as father and son. In the&#13;
end, the old fellow dies as that stranger, in&#13;
a hospital as alone as he always was.&#13;
The film, as a social commentary, was a&#13;
good example of modern realism in contrast&#13;
to the cliche-building satire that has&#13;
been accepted almost universally. Both&#13;
forms are of value; one type, the realist&#13;
film, takes extra reflection on the part of&#13;
the viewer.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
by MARK TIMPANY .&#13;
There is no original thought. Engbsh&#13;
itself is a mass medium. "I gotta use&#13;
words when I talk to you." Everything we&#13;
do is music. . . The great schism in Luddite is_ ?ve1.&#13;
Luddite has been granted pro~s1onal&#13;
operating authority by the Office of&#13;
Student Affairs to function as a student&#13;
organization apart from the Co~c~rned&#13;
Students Coalition. The prov~s10_nal&#13;
government of Luddite is n_ot at this time&#13;
connected with the Luddite of. Geor_ge&#13;
Metesky. Metesky may be working with&#13;
the Student Government in Exile (S.G.E.)&#13;
or he may be trying to continue the work&#13;
of "Luddite I". Luddite will now be&#13;
operated as a social group which functi_ons&#13;
as a politically oriented art cooperab~e.&#13;
We do not consider ourselves to be Luddite&#13;
II and we will not refer to ourselves in that&#13;
w~y. The provisional government of&#13;
Luddite advises caution in dealing with&#13;
Geroge Metesky and his New Luddite&#13;
Foundation.&#13;
The first Luddite multi-media event (not&#13;
to be confused with th'ose events which&#13;
were illicitly identified as Luddite events&#13;
by Mr. Metesky) will be held in the Racine&#13;
Campus Badger Room on Thursday,&#13;
March 11, at 7:30 p.m. The event will be a&#13;
"Night of Operant Conditioning". Since&#13;
Luddite intends to be a comprehensivist&#13;
organization, we will prove Parkside as an&#13;
organic whole in several media. It is the&#13;
view of Luddite that we must now&#13;
critically evaluate the work of B. F.&#13;
Skinner and its effect on student behavior&#13;
at Parkside. We must determine whether&#13;
to accept the Orgone or the Skinner box.&#13;
Luddite now exists in time and paper,&#13;
world without end. We demand anarchy,&#13;
but anarchy of a different kind.&#13;
When man is overwhelmed by information,&#13;
he resorts to myth. Myth is the&#13;
simultaneous awareness of a complex&#13;
group of causes and effects. Myth is inclusive,&#13;
involving, and participatory. Join&#13;
us in the mystique, the mysterious and&#13;
mythological world above the clouds of&#13;
Mount Olympus. We do not accept the&#13;
divine rights of kings. We accept only the&#13;
rites of spring. The present day composer&#13;
refuses to die.&#13;
·rtrl' K MiJI/~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
NEW SCOPE Monday, March l, 1971&#13;
CAREER&#13;
COUNCfllNG&#13;
Career counseling has been avail b&#13;
in the Student Affairs office at at~e&#13;
Kenosha Campus for .more than a e&#13;
b " d Year&#13;
now, ut 1ew stu ents are aware oftJi·&#13;
service, and only a very few have t k IS&#13;
advantage of it. All students are m· a_1&#13;
en&#13;
VI ed&#13;
to make use of the Career Information&#13;
Center Monday through Friday f&#13;
8:00 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. rom&#13;
The files with career information&#13;
d f . are&#13;
open to stu ents or browsing when&#13;
ff . ever&#13;
the Student A alfS Office is open d&#13;
there is ·a vocational counselor will;: an u,g to&#13;
help students and answer questions ee h&#13;
day from 8:00 to 12:00.&#13;
The Career Information Center h&#13;
on file descriptions of_ many jobs :&#13;
pamphlet form for quick reading&#13;
well as t~o volu~es of the Directo~ ~~ Occupational Titles, which conta'&#13;
inf?rmation on 22,000 jobs. n,:s&#13;
~ublica~ions c~ntain up to da:&#13;
mformation on Job requirements and&#13;
employment opportunities.&#13;
According to Mrs. Larson tltc&#13;
v_ocational guidanc~ counselor', the&#13;
hberal arts educat10n is no longer&#13;
completely adequate assurance of&#13;
employment. Counseling may help&#13;
students find practical uses for the1r&#13;
liberal arts degrees.&#13;
An important aspect of uh&#13;
counseling is that it provides up to date&#13;
information about special&#13;
opportunities. "Students must stay in&#13;
touch with the economic scene. Too&#13;
many students are training for job&#13;
which will not exist in the near future ~&#13;
according to Mrs. Larson. '&#13;
Students who want additional help&#13;
call extension 42 for an ~ppointment&#13;
with Mrs. Larson.&#13;
,u u n&#13;
CLASSIFIED&#13;
We have room in a private home for up to&#13;
three girls - one garage space - kltdlln&#13;
privileges. Inquiries directed to flt. or&#13;
Mrs; Hanson, 7124 27th Ave., Ken., phone&#13;
658-3888.&#13;
'69 DODGE CHARGER, 383, Bucket sea&#13;
air, best offer or take over payments. Cl&#13;
654-5365 after 4:00.&#13;
WANTED - Swing band wants er&#13;
perienced jazz piano player. Contact I&gt;&#13;
Reynolds at Music Department.&#13;
WANTED 'TO BUY - 35mm Camer•&#13;
telescopic lens. Prefer Nikon For P!n'11&#13;
Call 658-3058 after five. Bruce Chaput, 24&#13;
52nd St., Kenosha.&#13;
SUZUKI 305 - 1 year old. $-450.00, fllOII&#13;
694-2263. &#13;
)\ooday,March I, 1971 NEWSCOPE&#13;
c&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
Jerry Rubin once said that if he were&#13;
on death row and given his right to one&#13;
final meal, he'd order the all-American&#13;
meal; a hamburger, french fries, and a&#13;
Coke.&#13;
This struck me as very interesting&#13;
when Ifirst read this, but I dwelled on&#13;
the statement as-I waited in the doctor's&#13;
office.&#13;
Sitting between a pregnant woman,&#13;
and a man with gout, Ireflected on my&#13;
own eating habits. Those midnight&#13;
feasts at all night truck stops, the early&#13;
lunch at nine in the morning, or the&#13;
Wooden Nickel&#13;
Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young&#13;
There seems to be a lot of excitement&#13;
about the new, live Crosby, Stills, Nash,&#13;
Young double album. However, very&#13;
few people realize that there has been a&#13;
live C,S,N,Y album out for about a year&#13;
and a half. One catch; it's a bootleg&#13;
album. There is one place that might&#13;
have it, Rose's (Chicago on Wabash). It&#13;
matters little where you get it but please&#13;
do. You won't be disappointed. It's the&#13;
best they've done.&#13;
The recording was done at the&#13;
Wooden Nickel and although the mixing&#13;
is screwed up at times, the music is&#13;
outrageous. The best thing about this&#13;
album is the feeling you get listening to&#13;
live, original spontaneity in their music&#13;
and raps. Many live performances fall&#13;
short of expectation because the group&#13;
only duplicates the album. The Band,&#13;
Prinstance, has no rapport with the&#13;
audience. C,S,N &amp; Y not only&#13;
communicate with the audience, but&#13;
have a good time playing ang singing to&#13;
one another.&#13;
As far as the cuts themselves go,&#13;
"Down By the River" takes the prize. If&#13;
your into the way groups open a song,&#13;
this one is guaranteed to melt you all&#13;
Overthe floor.&#13;
The music itself is tremendous!&#13;
Steven Stills shows off on this album.&#13;
Page 5&#13;
snack before bed.&#13;
Well, it had all caught u .&#13;
Those frequent p WIth me.&#13;
replaced I&#13;
Cups of coffee that&#13;
mea s the b&#13;
vegetables and fn:·t f a sence of&#13;
aiet, and here I I rom my erratic&#13;
stomach cramps. was, suffenng from&#13;
haJ~:t~~C~; ~m:P3:asked me where J&#13;
asked as ree meals. He then&#13;
oft ~e what I had consumed and how&#13;
Men. t all looked bad for my stomach&#13;
y answers just made him shake hi~&#13;
head, and make me feel ridiculous&#13;
. The doctor asked me why I had taken&#13;
~t upo~ myself to keep every greasy&#13;
poon In town prospering. Why had I&#13;
~h~sen such a basic diet of all that is&#13;
a for the human body. It was no&#13;
~on?er that Ihad pains rivaling a junkie&#13;
10 Withdrawal.&#13;
He . gave me a month's supply of&#13;
medicines ~o cure my ailment, and some&#13;
sound advice. He also slipped a bland&#13;
diet into my hand, and it was then and&#13;
there that I realized my last meal on&#13;
death row would have to be boiled&#13;
baked or broiled. Maybe a hamburger'&#13;
baked potato and salad. '&#13;
Dallas Taylor also shows what he's got&#13;
on this album. He is really a great&#13;
drummer. 1 Just can't say enough goo&lt;ll&#13;
things about this album. Speaking of&#13;
good things, if you liked "Guenivere"&#13;
on their first album, you'll love it on&#13;
this one. David Crosby and Graham&#13;
Nash seem to fit into a whole different&#13;
thing. The patterns they weave are very&#13;
close to nirvana.&#13;
Shiva's Headband&#13;
"I went up on a mountain, to see&#13;
what I could see. There in the far, far&#13;
distance, ] spotted the back of me. And&#13;
I'm a wave upon the ocean. I'm a little&#13;
ripple on the sea .;" This is just a spasm&#13;
of "RIPPLE", a song by Shiva's&#13;
Headband. Shive's is a band out of&#13;
Austin, Texas that people down there&#13;
are screaming about. They play hard&#13;
country-rock that's almost as fun to&#13;
listen to as a Spiro T. Agnew speech.&#13;
The band is made up of the usual,&#13;
plus an electric violin and a girl singer.&#13;
Armadillo fans, you must dig this. The&#13;
music on this album is all original and&#13;
really put together fine. Shi .. 's will&#13;
never be on American Bandstand, '"Take&#13;
me to the mountains if you please. I&#13;
would gladly trade the cement for the&#13;
trees." Right on!&#13;
SunbaU&#13;
L:!ATcHn II&#13;
u....... _· .........&#13;
____...n- --- _.&#13;
-&#13;
DPA" Arl.&#13;
10'10&#13;
courtesy Discount&#13;
to students and DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Facult Y GrHal" c. hak'.c.mfie4 Oi • 1 p.&#13;
(Must Show 1.0_)ffI/. ~&#13;
Falrtrade ,~t:861fA,&#13;
excepted It _ ....... 4_ -- ,...-,l&#13;
II'DAl _.- I£C1STU -=--- ...~&#13;
YOUR COMPLETE "ON CAMPUS" BOOK" SUPPLY CENTER&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
Special This Week&#13;
Save 20% on&#13;
Parkside Winter Jackets&#13;
'Tradition or E"c"U"nce&#13;
KING of ORGA&#13;
/ (&#13;
s.J. h\elTlek"Mr. HI_II4I" hr O.. rutad Slnlel • TrIl4lt-II VII..&#13;
Giltaf Tan-eIU Calleet&#13;
I walked out of his office. past the&#13;
pregnant lady and the man wnh gOOl&#13;
determined to tum over a new leaf 0;&#13;
cease to exist due to an o\erdose' of&#13;
grease.&#13;
, All t~is is very important to m} ne t&#13;
journalism project. W,th all this behind&#13;
me, and the experience Iha ..'e in eaung&#13;
] have appointed myself gourmet fo;&#13;
this paper. I will leave the high class&#13;
places to Mr. Kubly and the hl... u .ee&#13;
Journal, and review the restaurants most&#13;
frequented by those In my peer group.&#13;
With these qualificanons. I also have&#13;
a partner who graduated from the&#13;
Williamson School of Cookery and was&#13;
an ex-waitress. She will consult me as to&#13;
the finer points of the art. and she will&#13;
eat the spicy things I'm nOI supposed&#13;
to.&#13;
Together taggie and Iwill enter the&#13;
world of knives and forks in order to&#13;
save the reader stomach aches. realizing&#13;
that there are other peoples stomachs at&#13;
stake. AI",,] think Jerry RubIO deserves&#13;
the best hamburger, french Ines and&#13;
Coke if he gels life in Kenosha's County&#13;
Jail.&#13;
gating gn&#13;
The Park.side NewscOpe will.&#13;
beginning with the next issue, in lude a&#13;
short cooking column.&#13;
Andrew McLean, an EnglIsh&#13;
Instructor at Parkside, will wnte me&#13;
column. He is currently in the process&#13;
of compiling a book of recipes and&#13;
men u s which are wnclesom and&#13;
economical. He says, &lt;"Students can eat&#13;
well and cheaply too."&#13;
The column will be generally oriented&#13;
toward non-cookers and other people&#13;
who are for the most part unfamiliar&#13;
with the most economical means to&#13;
purchase and prepare food. It WIll.&#13;
however. contain information and&#13;
techniques of which even skilled&#13;
cookers are often unaware.&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~~&#13;
91a1mn~&#13;
PI4,,";"g a parlJ,&#13;
wtt/J;"g or ba"'1I1t1,&#13;
"0 party /()()stfIaiJ.&#13;
CAli 654-9123&#13;
A&#13;
HAMMO&#13;
For&#13;
Rtstroations&#13;
Phont&#13;
694-0455&#13;
(W)UT'H .MtJIt}DAII IIIlIOoUI ..a«T'M Off "'''1'11. ~".t&#13;
KI.HOSMA. wllCOH.'N&#13;
H37 - 22nd " •• nu.&#13;
Kenosho. Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Frn 0&lt;""" 8) 654~ 74 .-..... _".I'.&#13;
Start $lIVing a little bread eech&#13;
week_&#13;
Next Week&#13;
RACINE SAVI&#13;
ANa LOAN AS$OClA T1OIO&#13;
ao-tlJCM'" OHa&#13;
_ .. C I IAV'IIlIlJII&#13;
...s.-OfIce&#13;
, ... AIM*QTOIl "'-&#13;
ORG&#13;
by Paul Lomartire&#13;
Jerry Rubin once said that if he were&#13;
on death row and given his right to one&#13;
final meal, he'd order the all-American&#13;
meal; a hamburger, french fries, and a&#13;
Coke.&#13;
This struck me as very interesting&#13;
when I first read this, but I dwelled on&#13;
the statement as I waited in the doctor's&#13;
office.&#13;
Sitting between a pregnant woman,&#13;
and a man with gout, I reflected on my&#13;
own eating habits. Those midnight&#13;
feasts at all night truck stops, the early&#13;
lunch at nine in the mornin$, or the&#13;
Wooden Nickel&#13;
Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young&#13;
There seems to be a lot of excitement&#13;
about the new, live Crosby , Stills, Nash,&#13;
Young double album. However, very&#13;
few people realize that there has been a&#13;
live C,S,N,Y album out for about a year&#13;
and a half. One catch; it's a bootleg&#13;
album. There is one place that might&#13;
have it, Rose's (Chicago .on Wabash). It&#13;
matters little where you get it but please&#13;
do. You won't be disappointed. It's the&#13;
best they've done.&#13;
The recording was done at the&#13;
Wooden Nickel and although the mixing&#13;
1s screwed up at times, the music is&#13;
outrageous. The best thing about this&#13;
album is the feeling you get listening to&#13;
live, original spontaneity in their music&#13;
and raps. Many live performances fall&#13;
short of expectation because the group&#13;
only duplicates the album. The Band ,&#13;
frinstance, has no rapport with the&#13;
audience. C,S,N &amp; Y not only&#13;
communicate with the audience, but&#13;
have a good time playing an&lt;.! singing to&#13;
one another.&#13;
As far as the cuts themselves go,&#13;
"Down By the River" takes the prize. If&#13;
yo_ur into the way groups open a song,&#13;
this one is guaranteed to melt you all&#13;
over the floor.&#13;
The music itself is tremendous!&#13;
Steven Stills shows off on this album.&#13;
10%&#13;
Pages&#13;
snack before bed&#13;
Th::1, / had ~ll caught up with me&#13;
replace~equent !cups of coffee thai&#13;
mea s the abse f&#13;
vegetables and f , ·t f . nee o diet and here rut rom my erratic&#13;
sto~ach I was, suffering from&#13;
cramps.&#13;
haJ~:t~~ctor ;imply asked me where I&#13;
asked my ast three meals. He then&#13;
~ten. ~e at1~~~:Jt~~1~~~: s~~~~~; y answers just made him sh k h . .&#13;
head, and make me feel ridiculou: e 1&#13;
. The doctor asked me why I had· taken&#13;
it upo~ myself to keep every grea y&#13;
spoon m town prospering. Why had I&#13;
~hosen ~uch a basic diet of all that is&#13;
ad for the human body. It was no&#13;
~on?er that I had pains rivaling a 1·unkie&#13;
tn withdrawal.&#13;
H~ . gave me a month's supply of&#13;
med1cmes to cure my ailment and&#13;
d d . , ome s&lt;:&gt;un_ a vice. He also slipped a bland&#13;
diet mto my hand , and it was then and&#13;
there that I realized my last meal on&#13;
death row would have to be boiled&#13;
baked or broiled. Maybe a hamburger'&#13;
baked potato and salad. ·&#13;
Dallas Taylor also shows what he's got&#13;
on this album. He is really a great&#13;
drummer. I Just can't say enough go0&lt;1\&#13;
things about this aloum. Speaking of&#13;
good things, if you liked "Guenivere ''&#13;
on their first album, you'll love it on&#13;
this one. David Crosby and Graham&#13;
Nash seem to fit into a whole different&#13;
thing. The patterns they weave are very&#13;
close to nirvana.&#13;
Shiva's Headband&#13;
"I went up on a mountain, to ee&#13;
what I could see. There in the far. far&#13;
distance, I spotted the back of me. And&#13;
I'm a wave upon the ocean. I'm a little&#13;
ripple on the sea ... " This is just a spasm&#13;
of "RIPPLE", a song by hiva 's&#13;
Headband. Shiva's is a band out of&#13;
Austin , Texas that people down there&#13;
are screaming about. They play hard&#13;
country-rock that's almo t as fun to&#13;
listen to as a Spiro T. Agnew peech.&#13;
The band is made up of the u ual.&#13;
plus an electric violin and a girl singer.&#13;
Armadillo fans, you mu t dig thi . The&#13;
music on this album is all original and&#13;
really put together fine. hiva'. will&#13;
never be on American Band tand. "Take&#13;
me to the mountain if you plea e. I&#13;
would gladly trade the cement for the&#13;
trees." Right on!&#13;
Sunball&#13;
L:'!ATCHES I IL--.:::.•~t,..;.;l-'-'-11;._D_i_ff_. -.J&#13;
- -- Wat&lt;MS-.,.._., ., ___ ...,.... D~S.ltilltl&#13;
_- , • - C..-,lett •• ,~,, .. _,.._ ~..,. - . .. De .... "'11&#13;
IIIDAL&#13;
1£CISTU'&#13;
Court~sy Discount&#13;
to Students and DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Facult Y Crl4•-'• C-Oloiist-Cettit.4 ~ telecist&#13;
(Must Show 1.0 .) If//. ~ " P AAAt,e ~&#13;
Falrtrade ,'~oc c:&gt;v,v..11&#13;
excepted It ha _. • a,.,- .,-. ,.. -.I&#13;
YOUR COMPLETE "ON CAMPUS" BOOK &amp; SUPPLY CENTER&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOKSTORE&#13;
Special This Week&#13;
Save 20% on&#13;
Parkside Winter Jackets&#13;
a partner&#13;
William o'l&#13;
e,en&#13;
re.&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE ~~&#13;
#lalian ~&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or baNJutt&#13;
no party too small.&#13;
CAIi 654-9123&#13;
K Gof&#13;
rRay rRadi9an '&#13;
J / ood&#13;
Ii&#13;
.. 437 - 22 d&#13;
e o, o,&#13;
Free De/it ery&#13;
6.5 -0&#13;
scon in 531 0&#13;
saving little b&#13;
N ext Week&#13;
RACINE SAVING&#13;
SN Ji Merri ck " r. Ha on II f:or G arant od sw,ico l Tr dt-ill Ya lu&#13;
Out of Town-Call C1ll1ct&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
1.!~~o 111 ~c!!'!:; "I} Better Orra,u oreB,uk, HtlllUltOltd ..U BwiJ,l n,,,.• &#13;
History Association Formed&#13;
A HI tory AssoCla~on, to be made up of&#13;
but not restricted to history majors. is in&#13;
the prot of being formed at Parkside,&#13;
seeeedrng to 8111 IcGo,"gBl. McGonigal is&#13;
anempung to orgaruze the group and has&#13;
the boding of hIStory professors at&#13;
Park Ide&#13;
IcGomgal the ASSOCIationas a first&#13;
tep In dev loping an Intellectual communIty&#13;
at Park id ' He says, "We don't&#13;
ha,,' • tru lnlellectual community here.&#13;
We don't have .any 8l'OUPSon campus&#13;
de&lt;b ted to the development 01 Ideas,&#13;
.,'&#13;
Y,ou',. a winner-'couse you&#13;
SImply con'f lose with our&#13;
~Jl:citing new "looks" for&#13;
bock·lo9COmpUS" or career. w..". bunting at the seoms&#13;
~llh smart clothes for day·&#13;
tim. and dot.time ... some&#13;
danies, others the very&#13;
newest "in" things, but all&#13;
slated for success. Come in&#13;
and choose yours ... nowl&#13;
6207 - 22nd A.. nu.&#13;
Kenosha, WiKon,in 53140&#13;
Phon., 652·2681&#13;
"Right now," he continued, "it seems&#13;
like students just attend school here, and&#13;
that their aims are solely individual,&#13;
,,"It seems, too," he said, "because of&#13;
divisional strUcture there is no depart·&#13;
mental interests. In other words. if there&#13;
was a history department, there would be&#13;
departmental interests in developing&#13;
through about historical concepts,&#13;
"Instead tbere is divisional interests&#13;
which are too broad to take tbese narrow&#13;
interests into consideration," he said&#13;
McGonigal sees the Association as encouraging&#13;
members to present papers to&#13;
the group, and as bringing speakers on&#13;
campus to IBlk about history. He believes&#13;
the first speakers would be Parkside&#13;
history prolessors speaking on their&#13;
particular subject areas, and then an&#13;
effort would be made to bring in speakers&#13;
rrom outside campuses.&#13;
He forsow, too, the Association helping&#13;
to get its members into graduate school.&#13;
He emphasized, however, that the&#13;
AssOCiationwould not be set up with any&#13;
strict definitions in mind; that the&#13;
members would make the final determination&#13;
or its direction.&#13;
McGonigal pointed out the membership&#13;
would not be restricted to history majors,&#13;
hut open to anyone who wanted to help&#13;
build an intellectual community. He said,&#13;
too, the Association would remain&#13;
politically neutral.&#13;
Anyone who wishes to join the group,&#13;
McGonigal said, should conlBct him (he&#13;
lives at 23Q Ohio Street in Racine), or leave&#13;
their name with a history professor. The&#13;
greatest need of the Association, he said,&#13;
at t he present is members.&#13;
Twenty-three faculty members at The&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside will&#13;
reteive UW Graduate School Awards&#13;
totaling $73,416 in support of summer&#13;
research projects. Ten of the awards are&#13;
for research in science, six for social&#13;
studies, six for humanities and one for&#13;
engineering science.&#13;
Page 6 NEWSCOPE Monday, March 1,ItIJ&#13;
While we called Ilisted several -&#13;
facts about Norman Slater' aPParoot&#13;
vehemently opposed any 10 ' fIrSt, ....&#13;
f&#13;
nts servi rmofpa .. or is services: second, he didn' .YIneru.&#13;
idea of predictions because th tlike !he&#13;
help with people's prohlemsey w,OUldo't&#13;
wants to expose fakes' fourth' thU'1l,he&#13;
all people have E,S,P, butlhat' he bell",..&#13;
never know it because they most\!eoplt&#13;
it.. never dev....,&#13;
By 'ten thirty we had upwards&#13;
people committed to attendin of twenty&#13;
With Norman at my compan~, se&amp;sioD&#13;
ment because as Norman told aPart·&#13;
phone calls all the time and it w ~, "11lOt&#13;
we're interrupted." on t wtw\ d&#13;
We left Norman's at eleve I&#13;
know what a green aura m'::; t wanted10&#13;
more I wanted to see for mY~f ~nd"'OIl&#13;
E.S,P, When we arrived I w bebad&#13;
skeptiCism and decided th t .as set ia&#13;
really a psychic he would beaab~ he w"&#13;
it heyond a douht that evening ~o PlrNt&#13;
mcreased as people began ar »: y dcoJbt&#13;
said, .,Imake mistakes nvmI&#13;
g, and , be&#13;
too." . .. m bUJlllb.&#13;
(Continued Next Week)&#13;
(Continued from Page 1J&#13;
Hngers and they try to catch it. Well, first I&#13;
did it on myself because I can do it and&#13;
then I did it to Norman. Oh, we were- using&#13;
a check instead 'cause I didn't have a&#13;
dollar bill. "Anyway, Norman couldn't catch it and&#13;
I figured his psychic powers, you know,&#13;
would let him know when it dropped. Aller&#13;
a half dozen times we stopped and as he&#13;
gave me the check back he said, 'You lost&#13;
your checkbook recently' and then told me&#13;
I had a broken watch in a box in my&#13;
bedroom, The truth was I had lost it two&#13;
weeks ago and it was about the first time I&#13;
ever lost anything and I did have a broken&#13;
watch in a box in my dresser and I didn't&#13;
even know it until I went to look."&#13;
After several moments during which two&#13;
young girls had entered with the intention&#13;
of seeing Norman, I asked what he wanted&#13;
to do with his gill and he replied, "I just&#13;
want to help people who come to me with&#13;
their personal problems so they can go out&#13;
in the world and use their gifts to help&#13;
others. I believe that a person has to get&#13;
rid of his own problems before he can&#13;
really do anything in life . . . I see a&#13;
problem in you that is blocking you from&#13;
using your potential," he added casually, I&#13;
turned away self-consciously and asked&#13;
what he did for a living, to which he&#13;
replied, "I work in the kitchen at Carthage."&#13;
Then one of my friends asked if he&#13;
would mind if we got a group of people&#13;
together to have him do readings. He&#13;
quickly 'agreed and we sIBrted phoning&#13;
everyone we could think of. The two girls&#13;
who had joined our group agreed to allend&#13;
and Norman said that ne would like sixteen&#13;
or more people if possihle.&#13;
While phoning and paging through the&#13;
phonehook I asked if he could read fUlures&#13;
md he said that he could hut that, "There&#13;
are some had things that I can forsee, If 1&#13;
warn the person they can avoid it, but&#13;
there are some things that can't be stopped,&#13;
Those I never telL" I asked what he&#13;
meant and he replied flatly, "Like death.&#13;
If I see, a tragedy of this kind coming there&#13;
IS nothing I can do, Death is the only thing&#13;
a&#13;
Campus visits by two well.&#13;
contemporary poets and a ser! kn ...&#13;
f&#13;
nes of&#13;
poetry . orums are scheduled b open&#13;
Hnlversity of Wisconsin _ P k Y 'Thr&#13;
spring semester. ar Side rex&#13;
Galway Kinnell, whose latestb&#13;
poems IS tilled "Body Rags" 'Ir'~&#13;
at Parkside on March' I~I speu&#13;
.sponsorship of the Lecture and u~&#13;
Arts Committee and James ."&#13;
whose books include "Blue H Liddy,&#13;
"A L'r f ouse IIId leo Stephen Dedalus" '0&#13;
the campus on April 6, ,WI VU1I&#13;
The Parkside Poetry Forum will bdd&#13;
four monthly open meetings ,II&#13;
p.m. on Sunday afternoon; at'~&#13;
Kenosha Public Museum,&#13;
On Mar, 28, Richard CarringtOl.&#13;
aS~lstant professor of communicatD&#13;
WIll read from the poetry of Archibal4&#13;
Maclelsh and Randall Jarrell,&#13;
On April 25, Carl Lindner, ,saiUI&#13;
professor of English, will tali&#13;
"c (;mcre e .poetry, a new form t" wbdco&#13;
relles partially on graphic presenlatiol.&#13;
Several Parkside students win ....&#13;
thm poems May 23,&#13;
Bridge Players&#13;
Parkside Open Pairs Invitational&#13;
Duplicate Bridge Tournament&#13;
(A.C.B.L. Supervised)&#13;
TOURNAMENT LIMITED TO&#13;
AREA STUDENTS, FACULTY &amp; STAFF&#13;
Saturday, March 13&#13;
2 p.m. starting time at&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Parkside Campus.&#13;
S'Ign up at your respective&#13;
student activity centers&#13;
before Wed., March 10.&#13;
REGISTER NOW&#13;
Student&#13;
Activities&#13;
Bui/ding&#13;
1T1Mdt 3 &amp;&#13;
Entry Fee $1.00&#13;
Double &amp; Single Matches&#13;
PRIZES&#13;
TROPHIES&#13;
AM-FM Transistor Radio&#13;
History Association Formed&#13;
Y_ou'r o winn -r-'couse you&#13;
rmply con' lose with our&#13;
citin n w "looks" for&#13;
" bod•lo-compus" or career.&#13;
W 'r bursting at the seams&#13;
':'ith smart clothes for day-&#13;
,m ond dotetime •.. some&#13;
classics, others the very&#13;
n west "in" things, but all&#13;
slated for success. Come in&#13;
and choose yours ... now!&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53UO&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
" Right now," he continued, "it seems&#13;
like students just attend school here, and&#13;
that their aims are solely individual.&#13;
," It seems, too " be said, "because of&#13;
divi ional tructure there is no departmental&#13;
interests. In other words, if there&#13;
w a hi tory department, there would be&#13;
departmental interests in developing&#13;
through about historical concepts.&#13;
"Instead there is divisional interests&#13;
which are too broad to take these narrow&#13;
inter ts into consideration," he said&#13;
tcGonigal sees the Association as encouraging&#13;
members to present papers to&#13;
the group, and as bringing speakers on&#13;
campu to talk about history. He believes&#13;
the first peakers would be Parkside&#13;
hi tor) profe sors speaking on their&#13;
particular subject areas, and then an&#13;
effort would be made to bring in speakers&#13;
from outside campuses. He forsaw, too, the Association helping&#13;
to get its members into graduate school.&#13;
He emphasized, however, that the&#13;
ociation would not be set up with any&#13;
trict definitions in min(l; that the&#13;
members would make the final determination&#13;
of its direction. 1cGonigal pointed out the membership&#13;
would not be restricted to history majors,&#13;
but open to anyone who wanted to help&#13;
build an intellectual community. He said,&#13;
too , the Association would remain&#13;
politically neutral.&#13;
Anyone who wishes to join the group,&#13;
kGonigal said, should contact him (he&#13;
lives at23Q Ohio Street in Racine), or leave&#13;
their name with a history professor. The&#13;
greatest need of the Association, he said,&#13;
at the present is members.&#13;
Twenty-three faculty members at The&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside will&#13;
reeeive UW Graduate School Awards&#13;
totaling $73,416 in support of summer&#13;
research projects. Ten of the awards are&#13;
for research in science, six for social&#13;
studies, six for humanities and one for&#13;
engineering science .&#13;
Bridge Players&#13;
Parkside Open Pairs Invitational&#13;
Duplicate Bridge Tournament&#13;
(A.C.8.L. Supervised)&#13;
TOURNAMENT LIMITED TO&#13;
AREA STUDENTS, FACULTY &amp; STAFF&#13;
Saturday, March 13&#13;
2 p.m. starting time at&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
- Parkside Campus.&#13;
s· ign up at your respective&#13;
student activity centers&#13;
before Wed., March 10.&#13;
page 6 NEWSCOPE Monday, March 1 , 197)&#13;
(Continued from Page 1)&#13;
fingers and they try to catch it. Well, first I&#13;
did it on myself because I can do it and&#13;
then I did it to Norman. Oh, we were using&#13;
a check instead 'cause I didn't have a&#13;
dollar bill.&#13;
"Anywe.y, Norman couldn't catch it and&#13;
I figured his psychic powers, you know,&#13;
would let him know when it dropped. After&#13;
a half dozen times we stopped and as he&#13;
gave me the check back he said, 'You lost&#13;
your checkbook recently' and then told me&#13;
I had a broken watch in a box in my&#13;
bedroom. The truth was I had lost it two&#13;
weeks ago and it was about the first time I&#13;
ever lost anything and I did have a broken&#13;
watch in a box in my dresser and I didn't&#13;
even know it until I went to look."&#13;
After several moments during which two&#13;
young girls had entered with the intention&#13;
of seeing Norman, I asked what he wanted&#13;
to do with his gift and he replied, "I just&#13;
want to help people who come to me with&#13;
their personal problems so they can go out&#13;
in the world and use their gifts to help&#13;
others. I believe that a person has to get&#13;
rid of his own problems before he can&#13;
really do anything in life . . . I see a&#13;
problem in you that is blocking you from&#13;
using your potential," he added casually. I&#13;
turned away self-consciously and asked&#13;
what he did for a living, to which he&#13;
replied, "I work in the kitchen at Carthage."&#13;
Then one of my friends asked if he&#13;
would mind if we got a group of people&#13;
together to have him do readings. He&#13;
quickly agreed and we started phoning&#13;
everyone we could think of. The two girls&#13;
who had joined our group agreed to attend&#13;
and Norman said that be would like sixteen&#13;
or more people if possible.&#13;
While phoning and paging through the&#13;
phonebook I asked if he could read futures&#13;
md he said that he could but that, "There&#13;
are some bad things that I can forsee. If I&#13;
warn the person they can avoid it, but&#13;
there are some things that can't be stopped.&#13;
Those I never tell." I asked what he&#13;
meant and he replied flatly, "Like death.&#13;
~ I see_ a tragedy of this kind coming there&#13;
1s nothing I can do. Death is the only thing&#13;
While we called I listed se ---.:.,&#13;
facts about Norman Sla~:.al aPllareo1&#13;
vehemently opposed any for · first, 1..&#13;
f h. . m of pa "'&#13;
_or is services; second, he didn• _Yrnen1&#13;
idea of predictions because th t like the&#13;
help with people's problem/Y ;.0uldn·t&#13;
wants to expose fakes· fourth 'h trd, he&#13;
all people have E.S.P. but that' e believ&#13;
never know it because they n most~&#13;
it. . ever deve10p&#13;
By·ten thirty we had upwards&#13;
J:M:Ople committed to attendin of twenty&#13;
with Norman at my compan~ a 5essic.i&#13;
t be ions' a&#13;
men cause as Norman told Pa11.&#13;
phone ~alls all the time and it ~· "I &amp;el&#13;
we're mterrupted." won t Wort if&#13;
We left Norman's at eleven 1&#13;
know what a green aura m~ t wanted 14&#13;
more I wanted to see for mys~f tnd ever,&#13;
E.S.P. When we arrived I he had&#13;
skepticism and decided that w: set · really a psychic he would be abl he&#13;
~t beyond a doubt that evening ~o P~&#13;
mcreased as people began arr· ·. Y d&#13;
said, "I make mistakes t~ng, and ht&#13;
too." · · · rn burn&#13;
(Continued Next Week)&#13;
Campus visits by two wellcontemporary&#13;
poets and a se . knf&#13;
f nes o 0&#13;
po~try . orums _are scheduled b pt&#13;
Umvers1ty of Wisconsin _ Pa k Y Tht&#13;
spring semester. r side t&#13;
Galway Kinnell, whose latest b&#13;
poems is t_itled "Body Rags," wil~&#13;
at Parkside on March 16&#13;
h. f Und,&#13;
,sponsors 1p o the Lecture d&#13;
Arts Committee and James an . F&#13;
whose books include "Blue H Liddy&#13;
"A L.,. f ouse 11e o Stephen Dedalus,, w·n&#13;
the campus on April 6. ' 1&#13;
The Parkside Poetry Forum will h~&#13;
four monthly open meetings all&#13;
p.m. on Sunday afternoon; at at&#13;
Kenosha Public Museum.&#13;
~n Mar. 28, Richard Carrin&#13;
as_sistant professor of commumca~&#13;
will r~ad from the poetry of Archi&#13;
Macle1sh and Randall Jarrell.&#13;
On April 25' Carl Lindner assistw&#13;
professor of English, will ' talk&#13;
"c&lt;;mcrete . poetry," a new form w&#13;
relies partially on graphic presentati&#13;
~everal Parkside students will r then poems May 23.&#13;
REGISTER NOW&#13;
1TlaJuJt3&amp;&#13;
Entry Fee $1.00&#13;
Double &amp; Single Matches&#13;
PRIZES&#13;
TROPHIES&#13;
AM-FM Transistor Radio&#13;
Student&#13;
Activities&#13;
Building &#13;
March 1, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
~&#13;
Rangers Close Strong&#13;
BY JIM CASPER&#13;
k lde played perhaps its finest&#13;
Par Sir the season against strong&#13;
l"'"I°nd defeating the Gateway&#13;
lake :nc: leaders I 18-99.&#13;
c~ferng on 12 of their first 14 shots,&#13;
[t~angers shot .676 en route to a&#13;
~JO halftime lead. The Rangers&#13;
'""sh d with 65% shooting. Lakeland&#13;
~ ~8%- normally good enough to&#13;
Ibut not this time.&#13;
"'~'arkside's p,Qwerful forward&#13;
bination of Eli Slaughter and Stan&#13;
:" accounted for 71 points. Eli had&#13;
II Stan 30. Both played strong defense&#13;
d contributed key rebounds.&#13;
,uIKen Rick turned in another excellent&#13;
"t&gt; in place of the injured Jim Hogan,&#13;
~"'Ofllingup with 18 p(:llnts, coupled WIth&#13;
fine floor game. Nick Perrine and Ed&#13;
~'anTjnealso were in dou~le figures.&#13;
TheRangers ended their home season&#13;
11thanother good performance as they&#13;
"nt over I IO for the third time in a&#13;
row beating Northland 115-80.&#13;
Afler Northland jumped off to a&#13;
'4-15lead the Rangers went to work as&#13;
d.ey ran, pressed, and scored their way&#13;
toacommanding lead of 105-64 before&#13;
the reservesflooded the court.&#13;
SeniorsEli Slaughter and Stan White&#13;
&lt;ombinedfor 59 points, with Slaughter&#13;
I'ttmg 34, White 25. White hit 25&#13;
dtspite sitting out part of the second&#13;
Iulfwith an ankle injury. He also found&#13;
time to clear 22 rebounds - a school&#13;
record.&#13;
Senior guards Nick Perrine and Ken&#13;
Rick were the pressure points in a very&#13;
Kari Kiekoski of Parkside placed&#13;
"'and in overall Nordic skiing and 24th&#13;
IIll of 50 in overall Alpine in a meet&#13;
wtucll included 9 schools. The meet was&#13;
.... by Michigan Tech.&#13;
JudoClub&#13;
1Ietllng lime will be at 9:0o-p.m. an&#13;
llaaday evenings. Cost of membership&#13;
-12.00 per year. There is an additional&#13;
..... of $1.00 for each meet. A meet&#13;
Is ~g scheduled with Carthage in&#13;
earty March.&#13;
Slimg&#13;
The Club has officially adopted the&#13;
name Rag Time Rangers. They are&#13;
ro-sponsoringwith Student Affairs a Ski&#13;
Spree to White Cap in northern&#13;
.'5&lt;onsin on March 12 13 and 14th. , ,&#13;
Equestrian Club has just completed a&#13;
Ill..:cessfulcinic and is making plans for&#13;
J drill team, a horse show and the&#13;
'''ding of a high pain t trophy for the&#13;
I'I1berScoring the most number of&#13;
!:lnts In horse shows this summer.&#13;
Open Soturdays&#13;
9 A,M. to Noon&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FREE CHECKI NG&#13;
~CCOUNrs To STUDENTS&#13;
~ND RETIREES&#13;
I8Zs 8lxtietIa ShftC&#13;
~ .....&#13;
effecti~e press which was partly&#13;
responSIble for breaking the game open.&#13;
Rick also Scored 14 points.&#13;
MIke Madson and Ed VanTine were&#13;
other Rangers in double figures_ with 15&#13;
and 10 respectively.&#13;
!he seni?rs accounted for 80 Ranger&#13;
points despite the fact that high scoring&#13;
guard Jim Hogan was unable to play&#13;
because of injury.&#13;
Martin Suffers&#13;
First Defeat&#13;
Coach Jim Koch and his band of&#13;
wrestlers suffered a severe blow when&#13;
freshman sensation Ken Martin.&#13;
separted a shoulder in a quadrangular&#13;
wrestling match with Northern&#13;
Michigan, UW- Milwaukee and Lake&#13;
Superior State.&#13;
Martin suffered the first defeat of his&#13;
college career at the hands of two time&#13;
All-American Mike Tello of Northern&#13;
Michigan. Tello eked out a 54 decision&#13;
in a match that saw Martin put Tello on&#13;
his back but somehow didn't get credit&#13;
for the feat.&#13;
Martin separated the shoulder in the&#13;
next match. Martin's record is 13 wins&#13;
against just the one loss. Doctors havev&#13;
ordered him to take a two-month lay&#13;
off which would eliminate Martin's&#13;
chances at a national crown which he&#13;
has been aiming for. It also subtracts&#13;
anywhere form three to five team points&#13;
that has been a certainty in all but one&#13;
match so far this year.&#13;
Doug Anderwn .orking oul on the blgb hr.&#13;
Gymnasts Aim For&#13;
Have you ever seen a gymnasu.;&#13;
meet? Parkside's first and only h me&#13;
meet will provide the opportunity&#13;
The "Gymnastics Special' will be&#13;
held March ~ at 7:30 p.m. at Park High&#13;
in Racine. Admission is 50 cent .&#13;
The meet will feature all levels fr m&#13;
junior high to high school and olleg&lt;.&#13;
High Schools of Racine and Kenosha. a&#13;
well as the junior highs of Racine will be&#13;
featured.&#13;
The climax of the evening will be a&#13;
dual meet between Steven POint and&#13;
the Rangers.&#13;
Coach Ballester indicated that ,f 'be&#13;
f ,&#13;
Racine Intramural 5&#13;
Racine Intramural All Stars nipped&#13;
their counterparts from Kenosha 6~-61&#13;
in a prelim to the Parkside- orthland&#13;
game. The game followed a script that&#13;
has become a familiar one whenever&#13;
representatives from the two leagues&#13;
meet - an outcome that is close no&#13;
matter who wins.&#13;
Kenosha jumped off to a quick lead&#13;
that at times seemed to indicate that the&#13;
southsiders would not encOUnler too&#13;
much opposition. At the quarter mark&#13;
Kenosha led 21-13 but Racine began to&#13;
find the combination and the game was&#13;
lied 36 up as the half ended. ei'her&#13;
team was able to get more than a J&#13;
point advantage. Racine won in the last&#13;
seconds.&#13;
Rich DeVOll, former Waukegan Slarter&#13;
led the losers with 23 points while&#13;
Racine had even scoring led by Bill&#13;
Masik's 11. Several players were close (0&#13;
UW_PARKSIDE WEEKEND&#13;
SKI SPREE&#13;
MARCH 12, 13, 14 - WHITECAP MT.&#13;
MONTREAL, WISCONSIN&#13;
TRIP INCLUDES:&#13;
ROUND TRIP TRANSPORTATION,&#13;
LODGING, LIFT TICKETS, FREE SKI&#13;
LESSONS, 2 BREAKFASTS,l DINNER&#13;
AND APRES SKI ACTIVITIES.&#13;
COST OF TRIP:&#13;
$42.00 REGISTERED GUESTS&#13;
537.00 PARKSIDE STUDENT&#13;
$32.50 SKI CLUB MEMBERS&#13;
RESERVATIONS AND ADDITIONAL&#13;
INFORMATION AT THE STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES DFFtCE - TALENT HALL.&#13;
Nip Kenosha&#13;
him as Rick Jackson had nine. Tom&#13;
Hearn nine n tar-. os, J&#13;
Kale ke and len G,b on e1ghl.&#13;
The next contel!ll Oet\loeen Ihe t"o&#13;
leagues will be laler thi month when&#13;
(he league ch3mpIOn mut for Iht&#13;
AII-ParkSJde Ch'Olp,om/up .&#13;
ationai&#13;
Ran n core I 000 three tune I~)&#13;
",11 qUlhf) lor I rail I meer In&#13;
Lou I aana The R "eer have&#13;
c omph d lb. 1"1: ,.. far&#13;
C""d, lie ter Id h e 10&#13;
turnout • see the mn I&#13;
130.00 for lhe thud IIn&gt;&lt;&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUI. THIIU THUIIS.&#13;
11 l.ll, TIll 1l101lTE&#13;
Fill.• SAT.TIll 2 Ul,&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24e&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
SSe&#13;
{jj)ifi in my cld i!Jc/.a("rofiaul,&#13;
.9t /wld&gt; tit ~ Ity /a~..&#13;
ANDREA"S BETA BLEND&#13;
If you're looking for an easy-burning, soft-smoking tobacco WItha&#13;
good pleasant flavor and friendly armoa, ou'v got a "tnn r'&#13;
with 'our Bela Blend_ It's the happy tobacco for day'tn, day~ut&#13;
smoking enjDymenl Try a pouch today. A1soavaLiable tn 8 oz. and&#13;
16 oz. lever-lift tins.&#13;
TOUccoraSTmalll&#13;
&amp;-.01-6011 n ~. WISt S3I4O&#13;
THOUSANDS&#13;
OF FLAIRS&#13;
207 SIXTH sum&#13;
RACINE. WISCONSIN 53403&#13;
l)ll(laY, March 1, 1971 NEWSCOPE Page 7&#13;
~&#13;
Rangers Close Strong&#13;
BY JIM CASPER&#13;
kside played perhap~ its finest&#13;
Par of the season against strong&#13;
ll'11e I nd defeating the Gateway take a ' 8 99 ~ ence leaders 11 · . C~1&#13;
~[ng on I 2 of their first 14 shots, 1 Range rs shot .676 en route to a&#13;
10 halftime lead. The Rangers&#13;
s~ed with 65% shooting. Lakeland&#13;
~t 4 c; - normally good enough to&#13;
but not this time . ~·arkside's p_o werful forwar d&#13;
bination of Eh Slaughter and Stan&#13;
~le accounted for 71 points. Eli had&#13;
; . tan 30. Both played strong defense&#13;
. , ·ontributed key rebounds. · i.~n Rick turned in another excellent&#13;
in place of the injured Jim Hog~n,&#13;
,:ooung up with 18 points, coupled with&#13;
1 .ne floor game. Nick Perrine and Ed&#13;
\' . Tine also were in double figures. The Rangers ended their home season&#13;
·:. another good performance &lt;IS they&#13;
:ent over 110 for the third time in a&#13;
· beating orthland 115-80.&#13;
Afler orthland jumped off to a&#13;
15 lead the Rangers went to work as&#13;
ihe,· ran, pressed, and scored their way&#13;
to i commanding lead of I 05-64 before&#13;
the reserves flooded the court.&#13;
niors Eli Slaughter and Stan White&#13;
combined for 59 points, with Slaughter&#13;
getting 34, White 25. White hit 25&#13;
dcsp11e sitting out part of the second&#13;
lulf v.1th an ankle injury. He also found&#13;
wne to clear 22 rebounds - a school&#13;
re ord.&#13;
nior guards Nick Perrine and Ken · k were the pressure points in a very&#13;
Kari Kiekoski of Parkside placed&#13;
nd in overall Nord ic skiing and 24th&#13;
effecti~e press which was partly&#13;
re_spons1ble for breaking the game open.&#13;
Rick_ also scored 14 points.&#13;
Mike Madson and Ed VanTine were&#13;
other Rangers in double figure . with 15&#13;
and IO respectively.&#13;
!he seni~rs accounted for O Ranger&#13;
points despite the fact that high scoring&#13;
guard Jim Hogan was unable to plav because of injury. ·&#13;
Martin Suffers&#13;
First Def eat&#13;
Coach Jim Koch and his band of&#13;
wrestlers suffered a severe blow when&#13;
freshman sensation Ken Martin ,&#13;
separted a sh_oulder in a quadrangular&#13;
wrestling match with 'orthern&#13;
Michigan, UW- Milwaukee and Lake&#13;
Superior State.&#13;
Martin suffered the first defeat of hi&#13;
college career at the hands of two time&#13;
All-American Mike Tello of orthern&#13;
Michigan. Tello eked out a 5-4 deci ion&#13;
in a match that saw fartin put Tello on&#13;
his back but somehow didn't get credit&#13;
for the feat.&#13;
Martin separated the shoulder in the&#13;
next match. Martin's record 1s 13 win&#13;
against just the one loss. Doctors have\'&#13;
ordered him to take a two-month lay&#13;
off which would eliminate 1artin'&#13;
chances at a national crown which he&#13;
has been aiming for. It also subtracts&#13;
anywhere form three to five team point&#13;
that has been a certainty in all but one&#13;
match so far this year.&#13;
Doug nd ~&#13;
G;'mnasts Ailn ~ r&#13;
we a t·&#13;
featured.&#13;
The lima of II&#13;
dual meet bet e n&#13;
the Ranger .&#13;
Co ~h Balle ter ind1 ted that 1f th&#13;
r.&#13;
I fat i 11&#13;
CHAT&#13;
CHEW&#13;
t of SO in overall Alpine in a meet&#13;
h included 9 schools. The meet was n by 1ichigan Tech.&#13;
r ' Racine Intramural 5 Nip Kenosha 40th Ave.&#13;
&amp; J do Club&#13;
Me ting time will be at 9:00- p.m. on&#13;
onday evenings. Cost of membership&#13;
2.00 per year. There is an additional&#13;
rge of $ 1.00 for each meet. A meet&#13;
being scheduled with Carthage in&#13;
rly larch.&#13;
nng&#13;
The Club has officially adopted the&#13;
c Rag Time Rangers. They are&#13;
pon oring with Student Affairs a Ski&#13;
rce _to White Cap in northern&#13;
nm on March 12, 13, and 14th.&#13;
Equestrian Club has just completed a c ful clinic and is making plans for&#13;
drill leam, a horse show, and the&#13;
'liardtng of a high point trophy for the&#13;
ber coring the most number of&#13;
~ in horse shows this summer.&#13;
Open Soturdays&#13;
9 A.M. to Moon&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FRE E CHECK/ NG&#13;
ACcouNrs To STUDENTS&#13;
ANo RETIREES&#13;
3928 Sixtieth Snttt&#13;
keaoa11a&#13;
Racine Intramural All Star nipped&#13;
their counterpart rom en 2- I&#13;
in a prelim to the Parkside-, orthland&#13;
game. The game followed a dipt that&#13;
has become a familiar one whenever&#13;
representatives from the t~vo league~&#13;
meet - an outcome that 1 close no&#13;
matter who wins.&#13;
Kenosha jumped off to a quick lead&#13;
that at times seemed to indicate that the sou thsiders would not encounter too&#13;
much opposition. At the quarter mar Kenosha Jed 21-13 but Racine began to&#13;
find the combination and the game wa&#13;
tied 36 up as the half ended e her&#13;
team was able to get more than J&#13;
point advantage. Racine won in lhe 13 t&#13;
seconds.&#13;
Rich Devon. former Waukegan tart.er&#13;
led the loser with ~3 point while!&#13;
Racine had even scoring led by 8111&#13;
Masik's 11 . everal player. were do e to&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE WE EK END&#13;
SKI SPREE&#13;
MARCH 12, 13, 14 - WHITECAP MT.&#13;
MONTREAL, WISCONSIN&#13;
TRIP INCLUDES:&#13;
ROUND TRIP TRANSPORTATION,&#13;
LODGING, LIFT TICKETS FREE SKI&#13;
LESSONS, 2 BREAKFASTS, 1 DINNER&#13;
AND APRES SKI ACTIVITIES.&#13;
COST OF TRIP:&#13;
$42.00 REGISTERED GUESTS&#13;
$37.00 PARKSIDE STUDENT&#13;
$32.50 SKI CLUB MEMBERS&#13;
RESERVATION S AND ADDITIONAL&#13;
INFORMATION AT THE STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES OFFICE - TALENT HALL.&#13;
THOUSA OS&#13;
OF FLAIRS&#13;
52 d t.&#13;
KIENOSH.A&#13;
SU • THRU THUR •&#13;
11 A. • ILL ID IT&#13;
FRI. l SAT. TILL 2 A ••&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
{ ri ple dee r)&#13;
55 (&#13;
.&#13;
(Jl J}l f uolt&#13;
.till~ Ill 6 I/;&#13;
ANDREA"S BETA B D&#13;
If you 're looking foe an y-burni ,&#13;
good, pleasant flavor and f riendl) arm&#13;
with our Beta Blend. It' th happy to cco f&#13;
smoking enjoymenl Try a pouch y. l o&#13;
16 oz. lever-lift tins. &#13;
Gu '\&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN OINNERS and&#13;
IULIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
5021 30'" A••.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657·5191&#13;
b rrenne of their live ' BZ. a man w~o&#13;
IS J. penpheral participant o.f 1 e&#13;
lIul id ~ie() vet alien from u tells&#13;
IJrT3 that he ha5"!.een nothing. ~Z ~ds&#13;
up ".allo" mg a bott le ohleepmg pills&#13;
w hile tavmg next to . Iatia in a motel&#13;
room a mile from the desert set where a&#13;
mo'''' has JUS! been compleled. He tells&#13;
her that she "ill be "here he tsone day.&#13;
wakes up the next m~:Hn!ng to find&#13;
Bl dead. Flashing lights bhndmg her an?&#13;
people all over 'he place. Helene, Bl s&#13;
\10 tfe, blames Maria for the death of ~~r&#13;
husband (Helene was balling Marta s&#13;
JOAN DIDION&#13;
ex-husband Carter Lang while Maria said&#13;
her last goodnight to B'l dying). All are&#13;
guilty in Babylon.&#13;
Social relationships are flicked up, a&#13;
nonethic pervades the affluent West of&#13;
movie starlets and low budget directors&#13;
ending in a desert ~ar the set of&#13;
Carter's latest movie. Everybody has a&#13;
complaint. everything is disjointed and&#13;
harmony is a word which is best left&#13;
unspoken. All around her, Maria can see&#13;
the moral carnage, no responsibility,&#13;
and the consequences, well, you reap&#13;
what you sow, forget about it, find&#13;
someone else and do it all over again,&#13;
learn a new position, you know,&#13;
experiment. The author is not writing a&#13;
moral treatise. she is concerned with&#13;
presenting a picture of a young woman&#13;
whose ultimate concern becomes her&#13;
: ...' :--1..;: ~',&#13;
J"1 ~ , i,;.---.:~&#13;
~'"'!1,:~~......&#13;
.\~,~--:&#13;
~:'''6,&#13;
~~&#13;
FREE DEliVERY 4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P,M.&#13;
Open 6 Oays.a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
Page 8&#13;
. h r This novel hild and this may save e -.&#13;
;~ w;itten from the .cold ,s~uld" of h a&#13;
IS n who has "seen nothmg, W 0&#13;
to~~~~~~::~;ef~~~:s~e~~~gt~~~~~~ ~~~&#13;
nblgh d You will find the statement in&#13;
a or te . .&#13;
the gray sould of Mana. .&#13;
Conversations are obligated, the,Y&#13;
have and adhere to' a pa~tern; fM~~a&#13;
consciously fulfils her SIde 0 e&#13;
dialogue while predicting what the other&#13;
will say; I've been ~ere before and '.......&#13;
here now and will be here agam.&#13;
Eventually she tells the others th~! they&#13;
et her sick, "physically SIck, and&#13;
~scapes them by ?eing commr tte.d after&#13;
Bl does himself m. In the hospital she&#13;
makes plans for the future: (I~she WIll&#13;
get her daughter ,"(2) liv~, with Kate&#13;
alone, (3) do some cannmg. . .&#13;
In the beginning of the novel Mana IS&#13;
driving a Corvette on the freeway&#13;
(7,000 miles in one month), she knows&#13;
the road like a riverboat captain knows&#13;
the Mississippi IRiver. She doesn't ~ri~e&#13;
to get anywhere in particular, she IS t~&#13;
harmony with the freeway and that IS&#13;
enough. She leaves the freeway when&#13;
she loses the rhythm of the road, when&#13;
she first thinks about getting an&#13;
abortion. From then on the road is for&#13;
getting from one place to another, and&#13;
the places she goes to lead nowhere,&#13;
harmony is lost.&#13;
"An underground nuclear device was&#13;
detonated where Silver Wells had once&#13;
been, and Maria got up before dawn to&#13;
feel the blast. She felt nothing." And&#13;
that is the point, nothing, nothing,&#13;
nothing, no emotions; no feelings. her&#13;
home is blasted and she feels nothing.&#13;
Anesthetize the emotions, that's the&#13;
answer,&#13;
Joan Didion is clearly a writer of&#13;
talent and her theme, at least in Play It&#13;
As It Lays is as close to home as a&#13;
young woman in America today.&#13;
It is a difficult book to ignore.&#13;
PLA Y IT AS IT LA YS IS&#13;
COURTESY OF THE .BOOK MART&#13;
622 59TH STREET, KENOSHA, AND&#13;
COSTS $5.95.&#13;
\\&#13;
The&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
•&#13;
$·1.15 1111111&#13;
o&#13;
e&#13;
NEWSCOPE MOIIda&#13;
Y.~~&#13;
NEWSCOPE'S&#13;
Classifieds are Fr&#13;
New Gallery On&#13;
503 Main St. e&#13;
Racine&#13;
10% Student D'&#13;
on all Posters&amp;'pOll',&#13;
~ rallttl&#13;
, New Gallery T&#13;
. 5U36 SixthA't&#13;
t Ken00~&#13;
~:~ "'0&#13;
~o RANCH ~~&#13;
NORTH &amp; SOUTl\ SN!IlI~ ..&#13;
-KENOSHA_&#13;
FAMOUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWtCHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROI&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
it's&#13;
real thl&#13;
Brat 01 Steak or 8..........&#13;
an"&#13;
F.... cIIF._ or Onl... RI....&#13;
.. P.tato sO''"'&#13;
.....&#13;
Sch_.r .. ",",... G'•••• f a.o.&#13;
HAPPY HOUR.&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.....to&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20C&#13;
, I..~ A•• II.IlI. F.. p.,.,•• IIC_'" F,..... 'tr ...... '" portte·&#13;
Open Daily' A}A.-12 P.M·&#13;
,,,\ BRAT -STOP&#13;
..........C_I:-W ... H~"&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKE DI ERS and&#13;
JOA DIDION&#13;
e -hu band Carter Lang while Maria said&#13;
her la t goodnight to B·Z dying). All are&#13;
guilty in Babylon.&#13;
ocial relationships are fucked up, a&#13;
noneth1c pervades the affluent West of&#13;
movie tarlets and low budget directors&#13;
ending in a desert ~ar the set of&#13;
arter·s latest movie. Everybody has a&#13;
complaint. everything is disjointed and&#13;
harmony is a word which is best left&#13;
un poken. All around her, Maria can see&#13;
the moral carnage, no responsibility,&#13;
and the consequences, well, you reap&#13;
what you sow, forget about it, find&#13;
omeone else and do it all over again,&#13;
learn a new position, you know,&#13;
experiment. The author is not writing a&#13;
moral treatise, she is concerned with&#13;
presenting a picture of a young woman&#13;
whose ultimate concern becomes her&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
--......&#13;
.,-'~-~ ~- ~&#13;
. ~ !./ - .-~~ --&#13;
I ALIA'tol&#13;
5021&#13;
E&#13;
SAUSAGE&#13;
30th&#13;
OSHA&#13;
Ave.&#13;
BOMBERS&#13;
~&#13;
657-5191&#13;
•&#13;
FREE DalVERY .C :00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
page 8&#13;
hild and this may save her. _This novel&#13;
~~ w;itten from the ,cold .s~uld,, of/&#13;
is who has "seen nothing, w o&#13;
wo~n I her retarded daughter and has&#13;
~;~~~r~s and fantasies of the child s~e&#13;
~~orted. You will fin~ the statement m&#13;
the gray sould of Mana. . Conversations are obligated, the_y&#13;
have and adhere to, a pa~tern; Mana&#13;
consciously fulfils her side of the&#13;
dialogue while predicting what the oth: .11 say. I've been here before anc1 .&#13;
:~re n~w and will be here agam.&#13;
Eventually she tells the other~ th~! they&#13;
et her sick, "physically s~ck, and&#13;
!scapes them by ?eing comm1tte_d after&#13;
BZ does himself m. In the hospital s~e&#13;
makes plans for the future: (I) she will&#13;
get her daughter ,"(2) _ liv~, with Kate&#13;
alone, (3) do some cannmg. . . . In the beginning of the novel Mana 1s&#13;
driving a Corvette on the freeway&#13;
(7,000 miles in one month), s~e knows&#13;
the road like a ri.verboat captam knows&#13;
the Mississippi I River. She doesn't ~ri~e&#13;
to get anywhere in particular, she 1s 1~&#13;
harmony with the freeway and that 1s&#13;
enough. She leaves the freeway when&#13;
she loses the rhythm of the road, when&#13;
she first thinks about getting an&#13;
abortion. From then on the road is for&#13;
getting from one place to another, and&#13;
the places she goes to lead n0\"'1ere,&#13;
harmony is lost.&#13;
"An underground nuclear device was&#13;
detonated where Silver Wells had once&#13;
been and Maria got up before dawn to&#13;
feel the blast. She felt nothing." And&#13;
that is the pvint, nothing, nothing,&#13;
nothing, no emotipns;, no feelings, her&#13;
home is blasted and she feels nothing.&#13;
Anesthetize the emotions, that's the&#13;
answer. Joan Didion is clearly a writer of&#13;
talent and her theme, at least in Play It&#13;
As It Lays is as close to home as a&#13;
young woman in America today.&#13;
It is a difficult book to ignore.&#13;
PLAY IT AS IT LAYS IS&#13;
COURTESY OF THE .BOOK MART&#13;
622 59TH STREET, KENOSHA,. AND&#13;
COSTS $5.95.&#13;
NEWSCOPE Monday h&#13;
' '"altb I&#13;
NEWSCOPE'S&#13;
Classifieds are F&#13;
,,.,&#13;
New Gallery On&#13;
503 Main St. e&#13;
Racine&#13;
10% Student D , on all Posters &amp; zFsco,1111 ra11z i New Gallery 1 , 5036 Sixth Au"&#13;
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