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              <text>W NEWSCOPE&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PARKSIDE FEBRUARY 16, 19 71 VOL. 3 NO. 2&#13;
Con Com &amp; CUSA Work Together o n Constitution&#13;
by Marc Eisen&#13;
Members of both the Constitutional&#13;
Committee (Con Com) and the&#13;
Committee for United Student Action&#13;
(CUSA) met last Thursday afternoon&#13;
and began working on a constitution&#13;
that combined the strong points of both&#13;
groups proposed student government&#13;
constitutions.&#13;
The atmosphere of the meeting was&#13;
businesslike and lacked the&#13;
recriminations that have marked&#13;
previous meetings between the two&#13;
groups.&#13;
A constitution agreeable to both sides&#13;
is expected to be drawn up by Tuesday,&#13;
February 16. The meeting was called for&#13;
after the Campus Concerns Committee&#13;
(CCC) had invalidated the constitutional&#13;
ratification referendum that was held&#13;
during registration on the grounds that&#13;
the ratification article of the Con Com&#13;
constitution called for the referendum&#13;
to be held on February 3, 4, and 5 when&#13;
it was, in fact, held on February 2,3,&#13;
and 4.&#13;
The CCC ruled too that the write-in&#13;
campaign held by CUSA was illegal, and&#13;
that only Con Com could present a&#13;
constitution for student ratification.&#13;
The meeting of the two groups was,&#13;
in fact, a Con Com meeting, and Con&#13;
Com decided early in the proceedings&#13;
not to give CUSA members voting&#13;
privileges.&#13;
Two faculty members, John&#13;
Harbeson, political science, and Carl&#13;
Lindner, English, were present having&#13;
been asked by the groups to attempt to&#13;
bring about a reconciliation.&#13;
Lindner suggested at the onset of the&#13;
CUSA members: Tim Eaker and Dennis Cashion.&#13;
meeting that first the Con Com&#13;
constitution be gone over and the areas&#13;
of agreement found, with areas of&#13;
disagreement to be set aside for future&#13;
debate. He suggested then that the&#13;
CUSA constitution be gone over, and its&#13;
strong points incorporated into the Con&#13;
Com document.&#13;
Con Com made some revisions of its&#13;
constitution on the basis of the&#13;
discussion. Among them were:&#13;
1. Dropping the clause that prefaced&#13;
its student rights sections, "The&#13;
following student rights are subject to&#13;
all rules and regulations of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin, Board of&#13;
R e g e n ts a n d t h e W is c o n sin&#13;
Administrative Code, Chapter UWI.&#13;
Tim Eaker of CUSA pointed out the&#13;
UW-Green Bay student government had&#13;
no such clause in i ts constitution. Dean&#13;
Loumos of Con Com said the clause had&#13;
been included only at the insistence of&#13;
the administration, and moved that it be&#13;
deleted. It passed unanimously.&#13;
2. Said that student files would not&#13;
be made available to unauthorized&#13;
persons except under legal compulsion,&#13;
and not, as previously stated, in cases&#13;
where the safety of person's or property&#13;
is involved.&#13;
3. Dropped on a motion by Tom&#13;
Kruel that "Students will be exempt&#13;
from disciplinary action or dismissal&#13;
except for failure to maintain the&#13;
proper scholastic average of for&#13;
violation of university rules or&#13;
regulations."&#13;
4. On a motion by Tom Kreul gave&#13;
the Vice President a vote only in the&#13;
case of a tie.&#13;
5. Changed "The senate shall protect&#13;
and maintain student right, " to "The&#13;
senate shall protect and maintain&#13;
student rights," on a motion by Larry&#13;
Thielen, and&#13;
Con Com member, Tom Kreul.&#13;
6. Substituted the CUSA amendment&#13;
procedure for the Con Com procedure&#13;
on a motion by Marc Eisen.&#13;
Areas of contention as yet unresolved&#13;
concern impeachment procedure, and a&#13;
clause in the Con Com constitution&#13;
which calls for the constitution to be&#13;
reviewed every four years by the Senate&#13;
and then to be resubmitted as is or&#13;
revised f or student approval.&#13;
Con Com members present at the&#13;
meeting were Tom Kreul, Dean&#13;
Loumos, Larry Thielen, Bev Noble,&#13;
Jerry Socha, and Marc Eisen.&#13;
Members of CUSA at the meeting&#13;
were Tim Eaker, Dennis Cashion, Ken&#13;
Antaramian, and Sutton Kinter. Other&#13;
students present were lan McTaggert&#13;
and Mike Lofton.&#13;
Morrow Reviews Position&#13;
BY KEN&#13;
The office of the Dean of Science is&#13;
perhaps the most abused at this&#13;
University. It has changed hands four&#13;
times within a year and a half. Most&#13;
recently it was vacated by Arthur C.&#13;
MacKinney, who resigned, or rather was&#13;
asked to resign by the Chancellor.&#13;
William Morrow, formerly of the&#13;
Psychology, department, is his&#13;
replacement.&#13;
In outlining the functions of his new&#13;
position the new Dean relied on what he&#13;
had been told by the Chancellor:&#13;
"1) Administering the recruitment of&#13;
faculty&#13;
2 ) A d m i nistra tio n of facu lty&#13;
p e r s o n n e l r e v i e w F o r m u l a te&#13;
r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s c o n c e r n i ng&#13;
continuation, promotions, tenure, pay&#13;
3) Other faculty concerns and various&#13;
problems Assist on finding solutions in&#13;
dealing with individuals or groups"&#13;
In expanding these directives in&#13;
accordance with his own personal&#13;
philosophy he stated: "In dealing with&#13;
points one and two, I see my role as&#13;
pri m a ril y t o faci lita te facu lty&#13;
functioning through the regular&#13;
structure and channels. The Dean, in the&#13;
majority of instances, should support&#13;
the faculty recommendations.&#13;
"As for point three, I see myself in&#13;
the role of a facilitator and&#13;
implementer. In close cooperation with&#13;
the faculty, I will work to find the best&#13;
solution to problems. I will use my&#13;
office for mediation to find and&#13;
implement such solutions."&#13;
However, the Dean did not say he&#13;
considered his office as the last word in&#13;
dealing with anything: " Formally and&#13;
officially I am responsible to the&#13;
KONKOL&#13;
Chancellor just as the Chancellor&#13;
himself is responsible to the President,&#13;
Regents, CCHE, and the legislature."&#13;
'Specifically on the subject of personnel&#13;
recruiting, I expect to follow the&#13;
Division Chairman's recommendations&#13;
in the vast majority of instances. In the&#13;
area of faculty personnel review, I&#13;
expect in most instances to support the&#13;
recommendation of the appropriate&#13;
, divisional faculty body."&#13;
"Personnally, I would favor more&#13;
student input in faculty personnel&#13;
review. In my observation students&#13;
collectively are pretty objective in their&#13;
appraisal of instructors and they are in&#13;
t h e b e st p o s i t i o n t o m a ke&#13;
observations-they're with them every&#13;
day. Officially however, it is generally&#13;
up to the faculty to decide on student&#13;
input."&#13;
"On acceptance of the position of&#13;
Dean I w as relieved of teaching and left [&#13;
the faculty bodies on which I held a&#13;
position. However, by request of the&#13;
members of a Science Division&#13;
Committee on faculty personnel review&#13;
policies which I h ave chaired, I retained&#13;
my post on the committee. In respect to&#13;
teaching, this committee favors strong&#13;
student input through a regularized&#13;
procedure such as questionaires. I f avor&#13;
this personally and so does the faculty,&#13;
but it's up to the faculty to take the&#13;
initiative. No recommendation has yet&#13;
been adopted. I h ope we find mutually&#13;
satisfactory ways for the faculty and&#13;
students to mesh together in such&#13;
matters."&#13;
When asked what the students could&#13;
do to aid in establishing such a structure&#13;
Continued on Page 2&#13;
Acting Dean, William Morrow.&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Editor Resigns&#13;
Bill Rolbiecke, editor in chief of the&#13;
Parkside Newscope, announced his&#13;
resignation Saturday in order to spend&#13;
more time on school, my job and other&#13;
personal commitments."&#13;
Rolbiecke, who has been working with&#13;
the paper almost a year, became news&#13;
editor in March of 1970. At the end of&#13;
the spring term, he was elected co-editor&#13;
in chief with Margie Noer. He became&#13;
sole editor when Margie Noer resigned&#13;
last December.&#13;
To fill the administrative gap caused by&#13;
Rolbiecke's resignation, an editorial&#13;
board has been formed as the policy&#13;
making body of the newspaper.&#13;
Editorial board members include Marc&#13;
Eisen, formerly News Editor; Jim Nolan,&#13;
a senior majoring in business who assumes&#13;
the responsiblities of publisher; Warren&#13;
Nedry, editor in chief; Jerry Owens,&#13;
business manager&#13;
-&#13;
.&#13;
A POLICY STATEMENT&#13;
Beginning today, with the establishment of the Editorial Board&#13;
Newscope begins a new effort at establishing an effective student voice at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Our objectives are these:&#13;
1. To present clear, timely news of interest to Parkside students;&#13;
2. To help facilitate an understanding between the campus and the&#13;
Racine and Kenosha communities;&#13;
3. To present our considered opinions on events of the day, while&#13;
offering to those whose views may differ an opportunity to present their&#13;
case.&#13;
It is not our intent to dwell on the errors and misjudgements of the past&#13;
but rather to offer progressive leadership for the University community.&#13;
Newscope plans to be part of the solution. &#13;
New Judicial&#13;
System for California Students&#13;
Northridge, Calif.-(I.P.)-The new&#13;
system of justice, implemented in all state&#13;
colleges this year, allows more fairness to&#13;
the accused student, according to Dean of&#13;
Students Edmund Peckham of San&#13;
Fernando Valley State College.&#13;
The new rules, issued by the&#13;
Chancellor's Office, fall under Executive&#13;
Order 109, which is "issued pursuant to&#13;
Section 41304, Title 5 of the California&#13;
Administrative Code."&#13;
Thearevised disciplinary procedures, in&#13;
addition to making the college president&#13;
the ultimate authority in al decisions,&#13;
replace the old Student-Faculty Judicial&#13;
Board with three options to a studen&#13;
hearing: 1) a hearing officer, 2) a&#13;
dormitory committee and 3) an&#13;
administrative hearing.-&#13;
The hearing officer is a qualified&#13;
attorney who, according to Dr. Peckham,&#13;
is under no contract (during; his period of&#13;
service. The hearing officer must submit a&#13;
recommendation before a set deadline to&#13;
the college president, who has only three&#13;
working days to act on it.&#13;
Under the new rules, a hearing may be&#13;
scheduled for any feasible time during the&#13;
week to eliminate lengthy waiting for the&#13;
student. Disciplinary actions now will be&#13;
held more rapidly than ever before, Dr&#13;
Peckham said.&#13;
Another important- change in the&#13;
judicial rules is the elaboration of an&#13;
accused studen's rights. The new rules&#13;
state that, " the student charged shall be&#13;
regarded as innocent of the charges&#13;
against him until the contrary is&#13;
established by a preponderance of the&#13;
evidence.&#13;
"The hearing officer shall find a&#13;
student to have committed the acts as to&#13;
which he is charged when the hearing&#13;
officer is persuaded by a preponderance&#13;
of the evidence that the student&#13;
committed said acts."&#13;
And, "in any case in which a student is&#13;
entitled to a hearing, the student may&#13;
instead waive a hearing and accept a&#13;
sanction with respect to discipline and&#13;
decision with respect to eligibility for or&#13;
termination of financial aid, as&#13;
recommended by the Coordinator and&#13;
approved by the President."&#13;
(The new order involves a&#13;
"coordinator" assigned by the president,&#13;
to be in "general charge of the&#13;
administration of these procedures, the&#13;
duties described in these procedures and&#13;
such other duties as the President may&#13;
determine.")&#13;
Also, "The student charged may be&#13;
accompanied by one adviser of his choice,&#13;
who may act on his behalf. If he desires&#13;
that his adviser be an attorney, the&#13;
student charged must give written notice&#13;
of the name and office address of the&#13;
attorney to the Coordinator at least three&#13;
working days before the time set for&#13;
commencement of the hearing."&#13;
San Fernando Valley State College has&#13;
added an advisory board to the President&#13;
that will receive the hearing officer's&#13;
decision before the President does.&#13;
The board, which will consist of both&#13;
student and faculty representatives, will&#13;
review the case and then make a&#13;
recommendation to the president that&#13;
may either be in opposition or in support&#13;
to the original recommendation.&#13;
However, the president sill has the&#13;
authority to lessen, enforce or increase&#13;
the sanction, according to Dr. Peckham.&#13;
He may also return the case to the&#13;
original hearing panel if he deems it&#13;
necessary.&#13;
Environmental Agents:&#13;
Abnormalties&#13;
M1 LWAUKEE-Can environmental&#13;
agents cause ge netic abnormality?&#13;
Two Wisconsin biologists will&#13;
investigate the question in a research&#13;
project funded by an $18,741 National&#13;
Science Foundation Grant accepted&#13;
today (Friday) by The University of&#13;
Wisconsin Regents.&#13;
The researchers are Joseph S.&#13;
Balsano, assistant professor of life&#13;
science at UW-Parkside and director of&#13;
the research project, and Ellen Rasch,&#13;
professor of biology at Marquette&#13;
University.&#13;
They will seek to determine the&#13;
effects of environmental stress on a&#13;
specific genetic abnormality, triplody,&#13;
in which two genetically distinct cells&#13;
occur in the same orga nism.&#13;
The project is formally titled&#13;
"Cytogenetics of the Gynogenetic&#13;
Teleost, Poecilia Formosa." Poecelia&#13;
Formosa is a small fish, native to eastern&#13;
Mexico, which is the wild progenitor of&#13;
the Black Molly familiar to home&#13;
aquarium owners. Its particular&#13;
usefulness in research stems from the&#13;
fact that all genetic hcaracteristics are&#13;
determined by heredity through the&#13;
female line.&#13;
Balsano said that the research team&#13;
suspects that the incidence of the&#13;
abnormality triplody is linked to agents&#13;
in the environment, such as t emperature&#13;
shock, oxygen deprivation or&#13;
population density, which may&#13;
ultimately affect the reproductive&#13;
process.&#13;
The study is a continuation of&#13;
research begun when Balsano was a&#13;
Marquette faculty member, prior to&#13;
coming to Parkside. Initial phases of the&#13;
current study, conducted last summer,&#13;
received support from the Wisconsin&#13;
Alumni Research Foundation.&#13;
Balsano said the research team hopes&#13;
to go to Mexico during the spring recess&#13;
to obtain additional breeding stock.&#13;
Tom Krout of Kenosha and Dale&#13;
Kraemer of Racine are student assistants&#13;
for the Parkside aspect of the project.&#13;
Both are life science majors.&#13;
Law Gr ant&#13;
MI LWAUKEE-Federal Justice&#13;
Department grants of $4,180 to assist&#13;
local law enforcement officers who wish&#13;
to further -their education in&#13;
occupation-related courses were&#13;
accepted today for The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside by the UW £oard&#13;
of Regents.&#13;
The grants supplement funds&#13;
previously awarded Parkside for second&#13;
semester under the Justice Department's&#13;
Law Enforcement Assistance Program&#13;
(LEAP) and bring the total to $5,200.&#13;
LEAP aid is awarded to local law&#13;
enforcement officers in the form of&#13;
tuition grants to take courses related to&#13;
their occupation on a maximum basis of&#13;
$300 per officer. Preference is given to&#13;
full-time "in-service" officers who wish&#13;
to further their education while&#13;
pursuing their careers.&#13;
During first semester, 21 law officers&#13;
from the Kenosha and Racine police&#13;
and sheriff departments and the Zion,&#13;
III., police department participated in&#13;
the program.&#13;
WATCHES REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
•«t«K • AceiiMn&#13;
UltTMhfVn - Lonflin*&#13;
•ulswa • MavMto&#13;
Caravall* - Tim **&#13;
LaCeultr*&#13;
CHINA&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Faculty&#13;
(Must Show I.D.)&#13;
Wxlgwood • Spod* Mlnton - Roy al Wornttar Adam a • Bavarian B*I lark&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Se tting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
VI/&#13;
DIAMOND CONSULTANTS&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
excepted It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
Morrow&#13;
Continued from Page 1&#13;
the Dean replied:&#13;
"I would suggest the students use&#13;
such channels as the following:&#13;
1) Seek to contact the faculty through&#13;
such committees as the University&#13;
committee, which is the Executive&#13;
Committee of the Faculty Senate,&#13;
headed by Professor Orpheus Johnson&#13;
2) Go to the separate Divisions&#13;
through the Chairman&#13;
3) Come to me personally to arrange&#13;
meetings with appropriate faculty&#13;
through my role as mediator and&#13;
faciliatator.&#13;
"In the area of student government I&#13;
personally favor more student&#13;
participation in influe cing the policies&#13;
and procedures the affect them. But, as&#13;
far as my job goes, such areas are out of&#13;
my domain, and I can hold no official&#13;
position even though I m ight favor the&#13;
general principle."&#13;
When asked if he felt that a&#13;
University administration should take a&#13;
stand on matters outside the University&#13;
not directly concerning it (i.e. Laos) he&#13;
said: "While I do have very strong&#13;
personal opinions on such matters, I&#13;
must give you an official 'no comment&#13;
at the present time."&#13;
The Dean outlined his reasons for&#13;
accepting the positions:&#13;
"I was-1) Urged to do so&#13;
2) I saw the need to fill a vacuum to&#13;
enable the administration and faculty to&#13;
function effectively&#13;
3) I felt I could make a useful&#13;
contribution.&#13;
"I am trying to mold the office into&#13;
something other than what it has&#13;
become. I plan on working closely with&#13;
faculty rather than unilaterally above&#13;
them. I work under the assumption that&#13;
most concerns of the faculty,&#13;
individually or collectively, have a&#13;
legitimate basis which the Dean should&#13;
take seriously and work to develop a&#13;
solution.&#13;
"I accepted this appointment on a&#13;
temporary basis from mid January to&#13;
the end of August when I plan on&#13;
returning to teaching. In the meantime&#13;
there is a faculty search and a screen&#13;
committee appointed by the Chancellor&#13;
to search for new candidates."&#13;
In closing, I asked the Dean if he was&#13;
doing anything differently which he&#13;
considered his predecessor had done&#13;
completely wrong, his answer-"No&#13;
-comment."&#13;
From the writer: We can only hope&#13;
that Dean Morrow's policy of "Meshing&#13;
Together" works out better than the&#13;
now defunct "Instant Greatness."&#13;
An opportunity to work in individual&#13;
and group activities with Junior High&#13;
Students at local schools.&#13;
Parkside'students will be working with&#13;
('Giffordd Jr. High Students every&#13;
Thursday from 11:30-l :30.&#13;
If interested, contact Isom Fearn&#13;
during registration or call Student&#13;
Affairs-University Ex. 42.&#13;
An introduction to systematic&#13;
approaches to studying, time scheduling,&#13;
taking examinations, writing term papers,&#13;
etc.&#13;
Individuals interested in participating&#13;
should plan to atten the weekly meetings&#13;
beginning Tuesday, February 23, 3:00&#13;
p.m., Kenosha Campus Conference&#13;
Room.&#13;
•For more information, contact Jewel&#13;
Echelbarger, Student Affairs Office.&#13;
658-4861, Ext. K42 or 637-6744, Ext.&#13;
R?*&#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;
Save a little bread each week and&#13;
your future is up.&#13;
RACINE SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
Downtown Office&#13;
400 WISCONSIN AVENUE&#13;
West Side Office&#13;
5100 WASHINGTON AVENUE&#13;
UALEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave .&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
FREE DELIVERY 4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
KENOSHA - 657-5191 &#13;
JOE&#13;
Or Paranoia &amp; A Feeling of Power&#13;
CAST OF CHARACTERS&#13;
Joe Curran Peter Boyle&#13;
IBill Compton Dennis Patrick&#13;
Frank Russo Pat McDermott&#13;
Melissa Compton Susan Sarandon&#13;
Mary Lou Curran K. Callan&#13;
A well played chess game of&#13;
stereotypes. The characters should be&#13;
particularily easy for Parkside students&#13;
to identify with. JOE...a TV watchin',&#13;
beer drinkin', hard workin', round&#13;
bellied war veteran of a m an who never&#13;
cjuite ^ot out of the habit of shooting&#13;
' Japs' or anything with a monosyllabic&#13;
title.&#13;
Sketch in around this character, a&#13;
New York family with a "problem"&#13;
daughter, who substitutes things to&#13;
inhale and ingest for the plastic life at&#13;
the top...who at the opening of the Film,&#13;
has just swallowed down too much&#13;
methedrine.&#13;
Shade in a pink collared, grey&#13;
herring-bone type, who drinks&#13;
Tangueray because it makes his martinis&#13;
just a little bit sweeter...who becomes&#13;
slightly furious at his daughter's boy&#13;
friend-pusher, and smashes his head&#13;
against the wall.&#13;
After this scene is set, go completely&#13;
berserk. Somehow, the $160 a week&#13;
factory worker surmises that the&#13;
$60,000 a year executive killed the&#13;
dirty no good hippie. Then bordering&#13;
the edge of a d enial of reality, we find&#13;
the two boys learning how to nasty, at,&#13;
what Joe terms an "Orgee" in&#13;
Greenwich Village. All of this time they&#13;
were supposed to have been looking for&#13;
a lost daughter, but instead they take a&#13;
few hacking hits off of a hookah and&#13;
join the Pepsi generation. Oh yea, the&#13;
daughter had found out about her&#13;
father...&#13;
Someone steals wallets, and dope,&#13;
and takes off to the country with Joe&#13;
and his new found friend in hot and&#13;
hairy pursuit. The film ends with the&#13;
same kind of "balls" it began with.&#13;
Several dirty no good hippies are&#13;
murdered.&#13;
Our overly-wealthy father finally,&#13;
after much confusion, ills his own&#13;
daughter...by far the best piece of&#13;
photography, technically that is.&#13;
Another commentary muffled by&#13;
louder sounds of ringing cash registers.&#13;
The slap-stick humor in parts was&#13;
almost worth the price.&#13;
William Sorensen&#13;
Datta Awarded Research Contract&#13;
An initial contract with the Atomic&#13;
Energy Commission has been approved by&#13;
the University of Wisconsin Regents for&#13;
research at UW-Parkside on the effects&#13;
which radiation of foetal animals may&#13;
cause in the adult animal's ability to form&#13;
antibodies — the organism's defense&#13;
against infection.&#13;
The initial contract, for $18,544, is&#13;
renewable on a yearly basis. The project is&#13;
expected to extend over a five-year period.&#13;
S. P. Datta, an associate professor of life&#13;
science at Parkside, is director of the&#13;
project, which is formally titled "Efects of&#13;
X-Irradiation in Utero on Antibody Formation&#13;
in Adult Animals."&#13;
Mice will be used as research animals in&#13;
the project, which may have implications&#13;
for the well-being of larger mammals&#13;
including man.&#13;
The current research project is a part of&#13;
a long-range study by Prof. Datta on the&#13;
effects of environmental stress during&#13;
pregancy on the development of defense&#13;
mechanisms in the offspring.&#13;
The project will seek to determine&#13;
whether the defense mechanism which&#13;
combats infection can be modified if interrupted&#13;
by radiation during the foetal&#13;
stage. The defense mechanism develops&#13;
gradually in the embryo at different rates&#13;
in different species and is related to such&#13;
problems as rejection of organ transplants&#13;
and skin grafts, Datta said.&#13;
Datta, who holds a Ph.D. degree in&#13;
genetics and veterinary science from UWMadison,&#13;
previously did related research&#13;
work at Monsash University Medical&#13;
School in Australia on the effect of a plant&#13;
derivative known to enhance growth of&#13;
cells involved in defense mechanisms on&#13;
Ehrlich ascites carcinoma, a tumor which&#13;
grows in the abdominal cavity of mice.&#13;
YOUNG MEN&#13;
BOYS&#13;
) 100's of BELLS&#13;
207 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 53403&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Volume 3, Number 3&#13;
Tuesday. February 16. 1971&#13;
EDITORIAL BOARD&#13;
Jim Nolan Publisher&#13;
Mare Eisen Editor&#13;
Jerry Owens Business Manager&#13;
John Lay ton Advertising Manager&#13;
EDITORIAL STAFF&#13;
Sven Taffs, Jim Koloen, John Koloen.&#13;
Mark Barnhill. Bill Sorenson, Bill&#13;
Jacoby. John Potente, Dean Loumos,&#13;
D.H. Post, Mike Kurth, Jim Smith, Bob&#13;
Borchardt, Walt Breach, Jerry Soeha.&#13;
Ken Konkol.&#13;
BUSINESS STAFF&#13;
Narees Socha, Don Marjala, John Grey.&#13;
Published weekly by the NEWSCOPE&#13;
ORGANIZATION at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin- Parkside, 3700 Washington&#13;
Road, Kenosha, Wisconsin. Editorials&#13;
are the opinion of the Editorial Board&#13;
and are not to be considered the&#13;
opinions of the University, its students,&#13;
faculty, or administration.&#13;
TELEPHONES:&#13;
Business 652-4177&#13;
Editorial 658-4861, ext. 36&#13;
Parkside Students: to learn more about&#13;
Employability and Occupational Goals&#13;
Interest and Ability relative to Career&#13;
Choice, Sources of Occupationaleducational&#13;
material, attend the&#13;
Career Planning Workshop&#13;
Six weekly sessions beginning Tuesday,&#13;
Febraury 16, 9-11:00 a.m., Kenosha&#13;
Campus Conference Room.&#13;
[Ray [Rachgaas&#13;
Wonderful oocl&#13;
For&#13;
R eservations&#13;
Phone&#13;
&gt; ,694-0455&#13;
SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD NORTH OF STATE LINE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
the&#13;
LEADER&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOO PLAZA/RACINE&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
Flowere - Fruit Baskets - Gifts&#13;
Phone: 649-6700&#13;
Viand FRANK WEINST0CK&#13;
3 0 21 - 75TH ST&#13;
K E N O S H A. WI S C O N S IN 5 3 1 4 0&#13;
Anchorlnn&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish—Shrimp&#13;
Monday-Thursday $1.95 ,&#13;
Friday-Sunday $2.25&#13;
Children $1.10&#13;
PLUS TAX AND BIVIKAOI&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits and gravy&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sat. 5 p.m. - 11 p.m.&#13;
Mon. - Thu'S. 5 p.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
Sun. 12 Noon 9 p.m.&#13;
9006 Sheridan Rd,&#13;
3hone 694-1733&#13;
The BRAT&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS /&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
French pries or Onion Rings&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or Bottle or Glass of Beer&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 8&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity and Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
•vA BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner I—"94 a nd Highway 50&#13;
p.m. &#13;
.The Year's&#13;
ytmL/]&lt;ri/ujs&#13;
PARAMOUNT PIC lURfS PttSENTS&#13;
Ali MacGraw • Ryan O'Neal&#13;
iGPl&#13;
A H OWARD G M INSKY -ARTHUR HILLER Productior&#13;
John Marley &amp; Ray Milland&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
By Paul Lomartire&#13;
Bob hitchhiked to school quite&#13;
regularly, even in cold weather. He didn't&#13;
have a r aft of friends to ask for rides, and&#13;
it seemed to him that many individuals&#13;
were too erratic for his needs.&#13;
By leaving a few hours before his first&#13;
class, Jie could almost be sure to be at&#13;
school early each day. Bob had come to&#13;
learn the best routes around the city by&#13;
second semester, his transportation&#13;
problems seemed solved.&#13;
It was bitter cold on this Monday&#13;
morning. Cars with Parkside parking&#13;
permits zipped past Bob as he stood with&#13;
his thumb out. It always iseemed that the&#13;
drivers didn't see h im because they were&#13;
changing radio stations, or lighting a&#13;
cigarette. He finally got a r ide, making it&#13;
to school in three rides, a little over an&#13;
hour early.&#13;
Once he got to the Washington Road&#13;
campus, he realized that the day would&#13;
be boring becuase he didn't have any&#13;
books for his morning classes. No chance&#13;
to evade boredom and read ahead.&#13;
Parkside has no book co-op, so Bob&#13;
was forced to try to sell his books to the&#13;
campus bookstores. The problem was&#13;
specifically the simple fact that none of&#13;
his books were wanted by the bookstores.&#13;
Either the teachers had decided to use&#13;
different texts, or the editions were&#13;
out-of-date. He was told that his books&#13;
would be bought at wholesaye prices at&#13;
the end of the school semester in the&#13;
spring. This didn't help much in&#13;
February.&#13;
So Bob found himself at the mercy of&#13;
a monopoly. He was building himself a.&#13;
mediocre library, when he could afford&#13;
no library at all. This didn't seem to&#13;
matter to anyone except Bob. The&#13;
bookstore owners weren't complaining,'&#13;
and neither were the regents.&#13;
Bob wasn't very political about affairs&#13;
at Parkside. He was as a fre shman, but he&#13;
came to realize that the battles were too&#13;
big, and took too much time from&#13;
someone who was trying to get a foui&#13;
year college education. He always felt&#13;
that apathy held Parkside together. If all&#13;
the students became concerned at once&#13;
with all the injustices and hypocrisy&#13;
around them, the institution, Parkside,&#13;
would be the first to go.&#13;
The cost of an education at Parkside, •&#13;
including books, food, and transportation&#13;
wasn't that bad. Bob considered it could&#13;
be alot worse. He was glad that the;&#13;
administration had not put in pay toilets.]&#13;
Bob arrived in the lounge in time to see &lt;&#13;
sleepy card games, a few students&#13;
watching cartoons on television, and&#13;
others eating breakfast:. The offspring of&#13;
the affluent section of society were \&#13;
taking a break from the issues of the uay,&#13;
while they fed vending machines nickels,&#13;
dimes, and quarters.&#13;
The juke box was winging along, three&#13;
songs for a quarter. He remembered many&#13;
of the songs from first semester, and also&#13;
remembered the same people from first&#13;
semester playing the same songs.&#13;
The instant coffee machine was doing&#13;
the usual morning business. He got&#13;
himself the usual thirty cent breakfast he&#13;
had become accustomed to . Eating a&#13;
sweet-roll with instant coffee everyday,&#13;
made Bob realize the importance of a&#13;
well balanced breakfast in one's kitchen.&#13;
About noon, after two of his classes.&#13;
Bob smiled for the first time that day.&#13;
Back in the lounge, he noticed the lunch&#13;
line going full tilt. Sandwiches seemed to&#13;
float into pockets, from hand to hand,&#13;
always appearing to evade the cashier at&#13;
the end of the line. Even a hot lunch or&#13;
two found its way to a table, without&#13;
becoming the least bit cold waiting in a&#13;
long line. This was liberation Parkside&#13;
style.&#13;
Bob survived in this educational&#13;
environment only because he kept his&#13;
mind on a transfer. Many things bothered&#13;
him at this school, but he didn't wallow&#13;
in ideals, as he couldn't afford to. He&#13;
found that many Parkside students did,&#13;
but they all had mom and dad down on&#13;
earth grinding out the basics for their&#13;
children who attended college.&#13;
This was all obvious to Bob, but then&#13;
again he felt that Parkside would mature&#13;
in four or five years. Just bear with it, he&#13;
had always been told, it's bound to get&#13;
better.&#13;
After one afternoon class, it was time&#13;
to go home. Bob hitched a ride within&#13;
five blocks of his apartment. He had&#13;
wanted to check the jobs at the student&#13;
employment office, but he had no way to&#13;
get to the northern reaches of the&#13;
campus. The thought of hitchhiking&#13;
chilled him.&#13;
When he finally got home, Bob just sat&#13;
down in his favorite chair and thought.&#13;
He had heard that Chicago was to play&#13;
for the students. This interested him, as&#13;
he didn't have very many chances to see&#13;
big name rock acts. His interest died as he&#13;
thought further, the tickets were priced&#13;
at 4.50 and 5.50.&#13;
He didn't have a s tereo to play albums&#13;
on, and he assumed that whoever was&#13;
putting on the show would throw in a&#13;
free album for those prices. He decided to&#13;
spend five bucks on groceries instead. He&#13;
would pass up a first hand glimpse of the&#13;
underground culture he had read that he&#13;
was part of.&#13;
See Jim Merrick "Mr. Hammond" For Guaranteed Service &amp; Trade—in Value&#13;
Out of Town-Call Collect&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
STUDIO tm RACIMF&#13;
1429 Washington Phone 634-2563&#13;
Better Oreans are Built, Hammond will Build Them"&#13;
Blues&#13;
Coming&#13;
Shsrkfan Rrf.&#13;
Supper Club Ph. 654.1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FL.ORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
with Almofidlne Sauce&#13;
Alto OUR DELICIOUS PRIME RIB&#13;
Friday&#13;
This Friday night at 9:30 p.m. one of&#13;
the country's top blues attractions will&#13;
take the stage of Parkside's Student&#13;
Activities Building for an evening of&#13;
music and dance. Featured will be the&#13;
famed Sam Lay Blues Revival starring&#13;
Sammy Lay and Lucile Spann. The&#13;
setting will be that of a concert nightclub&#13;
with tables for those who just want to&#13;
listen and a d ance floor for those moved&#13;
to dance. Admission will be $1.50 in&#13;
advance and $2.00 at the door, and will&#13;
be limited to Parkside students and an&#13;
accompanying guest.&#13;
For those unfamiliar with The Sam&#13;
Lay Blues Revival, its leader Sammy Lay&#13;
is undoubtedly the best blues drummer in&#13;
the business today and has been for some&#13;
time. His career has included providing&#13;
the beat for such greats as B.B. King, Bob&#13;
Dylan, James Cotton, The Chamber&#13;
Brothers, The Segal Sewall Blues BAnd&#13;
and Herbie Mann. He is probably best&#13;
known for hand selecting Elvin Bishop,&#13;
Mike Bloomfield and Paul Butterfield to&#13;
join him in a group that &lt;eventually&#13;
evolved into the popular Butterfield Blues&#13;
Bandl. As a single musician, he has played&#13;
the Newport Jazz Festival probably more&#13;
than any other drummer playing today.&#13;
Included in his revival show, and&#13;
featured singer is Lucile Spann, widow of.&#13;
the late, great Otis Spann. With the&#13;
showmanship of a Pearl Bailey and the&#13;
wailing voice of Janis Joplin, Lucile leads&#13;
the way for the other featured singer in&#13;
the show, Johnny Twist-an up and&#13;
coming young blues star. Tickets for this&#13;
Student Activities Office sponsored event&#13;
are on sale n ow at the Student Activities&#13;
Office, Tallent Hall.&#13;
Ladies Pant Suits&#13;
Ladies Jump Suits&#13;
Yes, we have all&#13;
new Ladies'&#13;
Hot Pants&#13;
Always Wholesale Prices at&#13;
Nickie fs&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
ACROSS FROM THE DAYTON HOTEL&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
Slnce 1 886&#13;
6058 40th AVE&#13;
KENOSHA WIS. OL7-&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Candy&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24&lt;&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55$ &#13;
Recorded Music:&#13;
Cassettes or Cartridges&#13;
You're a winner—'cause you&#13;
simply can't lose with our&#13;
exciting new "looks" for&#13;
"back-to-campus" or career.&#13;
We're bursting at the seams&#13;
with smart clothes for daytime&#13;
and datetime . . . some&#13;
classics, others the very&#13;
newest "in" things, but all&#13;
slated for success. Come in&#13;
and choose yours . . . now!&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
By Bill Jacoby&#13;
The conversion to cassette sound began&#13;
not long ago. Tape cassettes, a small&#13;
plastic container holding up to 120&#13;
minutes of recorded or prerecorded&#13;
capability, are replacing the role of the&#13;
cartridge tapes. Although the cassette has&#13;
been proven to have a lack of all round&#13;
quality in the past, recent technical&#13;
breakthroughs have improved this quality&#13;
so greatly that it is certain to become the&#13;
favorite recording medium for all but&#13;
pros. Some say of the cassett: "...withing&#13;
the next few years could conceivable give&#13;
the long-playing disc some very lively&#13;
competition."&#13;
In the mov eme nt t o w a rd&#13;
m i n a turization, automation, and&#13;
increased playing time progress in the&#13;
form of transistors, slower playing speeds,&#13;
and thinner tapes have compacted the&#13;
open reel to reel equipment to the&#13;
smallest size possible for its own&#13;
functional purpose. Unfortunately, the&#13;
size of this type of system and necessity&#13;
of threading the tape has exhausted this&#13;
route for the amateur 1 stener.&#13;
The answer to this problem was&#13;
introduced in the form of smaller tape&#13;
SPRING BREAK TO EUROPE&#13;
Mi l wa u k e e to Sp a in&#13;
Apri l 1 0 t hru 18&#13;
$219.00 P L US TAX&#13;
INFO RMATION AND A P P L ICAT I ON BLA N K S&#13;
S T U D E N T AC T IVI TIES OF F I CE -T A L EN T H A LL&#13;
ESPANA SPECIAL&#13;
systems: the four and eight tracx&#13;
cartrid ge playe rs. Desi gned for&#13;
installation in cars cartridge was accepted&#13;
until now as the ultimate in fidelity and&#13;
working simplicity. The stereo cartridge&#13;
plays 80 minutes on the endless loop&#13;
principle at 3 % inches per second.&#13;
Smaller than a paperback the space&#13;
saving cartridge was ideal for storage.&#13;
Anyone familiar with the endless loop&#13;
cartridge knows that it can only run&#13;
forward-a major limitation. This and an&#13;
irritating break in continuity about every&#13;
fifteen minutes while the head shifts to a&#13;
different track caused the breakthrough&#13;
of the cassette.&#13;
A self contained miniature reel to reel&#13;
mechanism, the cassette is ideal. Unlike&#13;
its counterpart the cartridge, cassettes&#13;
may be run in reverse of fast forward&#13;
speed. At a speed of 1 7/8 IPS, the&#13;
cassette always had problems with&#13;
fidelity. The combination of extremely&#13;
narrow tape width and extremely slow&#13;
tape speed appreciably limited the&#13;
system's frequency response, dynamic&#13;
range and signal to noise ratio. Cassettes&#13;
then found their widest application in&#13;
cheap portables, in which fidelity is&#13;
restriced in any case.&#13;
These problems are all in the past.&#13;
Both the equipment and the tape has&#13;
received quality boosts by technological&#13;
advances. Standard ferricoxide tapes have&#13;
been replaced by new high density and&#13;
ultra high density tape (chromium&#13;
replacing iroij as the magnetic element)&#13;
increases the tape sensitivity to reduce&#13;
hiss and other noises functional to the&#13;
tape. Because of these breakthroughs in&#13;
tape construction, cassette tape decks&#13;
that use the Dolby Noise Reduction&#13;
System System will allow the cassette&#13;
sound proper bias and equalization&#13;
adjustment and all round expanded&#13;
dynamic range.&#13;
The cassette has beaten the role of&#13;
cartridges in cars. GM and Chrysler&#13;
developed cassette car stereo for their&#13;
product in '71, and American Motors has&#13;
been considering the1 sWitch for two years.&#13;
Cassettes have appeared as the sound&#13;
medium of today. Consequently, all the&#13;
i n d e p e n d e n t c a r t r i d g e player&#13;
manufacturers have literally dumped their&#13;
elephant on the market through all&#13;
promotional methods available. The most&#13;
notable being the sound clubs. It hasn't&#13;
helped economy to sell a full priced&#13;
cartridge player with six illegally&#13;
r e - r e c o r d ed c a r t r i d g e s . T h e&#13;
non-copyrighted re-recordings being big&#13;
business these days.&#13;
The range of recording equipment&#13;
price wise was always too much for the&#13;
average income student to handle. With&#13;
the advent of cassettes, in the past few&#13;
years, prices on cassette equipment have&#13;
diminished to meet a universal audience. I&#13;
have seen cassette recorders replacing the&#13;
student in important situations where a&#13;
lecutre would be inopportunedly time&#13;
consuming. 30, 60, 90, and 120 minute&#13;
cassettes can record any length lecture.&#13;
Pre-recorded stereo cassettes exist as a&#13;
space saving replacement of the disc.&#13;
Since a cassette can record any disc, a&#13;
small exchange of favorite music with a&#13;
freind will find two satisfied music buffs&#13;
for the gain of the music and the money&#13;
saving transaction.&#13;
In the Ions proverbial run, the cassette&#13;
will save the amateur stereo listener&#13;
money. The constant advances in quality&#13;
will bring about an interesting look to the&#13;
future of cassattes in quadraphonic and&#13;
four track stereo devices. The cassette has&#13;
come.&#13;
Hiroshima&#13;
Mon Amour&#13;
"Hiroshima, Mon Amour", a film by&#13;
French director Alain Resnais, will be&#13;
shown on Wednesday (Feb. 17) at 8&#13;
p.m. in Room 102 Greenquist Hall at&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Wood Road campus. The film is&#13;
sponsored by the Parkside Film Society.&#13;
"Hiroshima, Mon Amour", Resnais'&#13;
first feature film, was released in 1959&#13;
and features Emmanuelle Rive and Eiji&#13;
Okada. It received the Joseph Burstyn&#13;
Award, and was on the "10 best" lists&#13;
of the New York Times, Time, the New&#13;
York Herald Tribune and the National&#13;
Board of Review.&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
r Pool Players&#13;
c&#13;
Eight B all Tournament&#13;
Feb. 27th&#13;
Entry deadline is Feb. 24th.&#13;
Entry fee is only $1.00.&#13;
2 out of 3 games ( HOUSE PAYS) J&#13;
Sign Up At&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Prizes will be:&#13;
Trophies and Pool Cues&#13;
for the first four places.&#13;
c o&#13;
Bridge Players&#13;
Parkside Open P airs I nvitational&#13;
Duplicate Bridge Tournament&#13;
(A.C.B.L. Supervised)&#13;
TOURNAMENT LIMI TED TO&#13;
ARE A ST UD EN TS, F A C U LTY &amp; S T A F F&#13;
Saturday, March 13&#13;
2 p.m. starting time at&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
— P arkside Campus.&#13;
Sign up at your respective&#13;
student activity centers&#13;
before Wed., March 10. &#13;
A s* *&lt;i6&amp;te "*&gt; g&#13;
HKH£R &amp;u(tpi&gt;n:&#13;
ojill ou/t H e/foes F/MD 1HZ&#13;
srxv6u£ cuonrn ir?&#13;
ujill rney&#13;
As* -TUB PmtfUL&#13;
QuEsnofj:&#13;
U)Hj MB OJ£&#13;
n£fte ?&#13;
Large College Enrollment Foreseen&#13;
SUGGESTION BOX EXPOSE&#13;
By Walt and Yossarian&#13;
Students, your fondest prayers have&#13;
been answered. For the first time in more&#13;
than a year, the suggestion box in the&#13;
Kenosha Campus lounge has been opened.&#13;
The box, skillfully and discreetly removed&#13;
from the lounge by the two above-named&#13;
reporters, was opened in the newspaper&#13;
office last Tuesday.&#13;
It was evident that the box had not been&#13;
opened since before the beginning of the&#13;
fall semester last year, probably due to the&#13;
fact that nobody has a key in any of the&#13;
Parkside offices. Therefore, lacking a&#13;
better means, the box was opened by&#13;
removing the hinges. The suggestions&#13;
found therein are highly revealing.&#13;
Most of the suggestions fell into one of&#13;
seven arbitrary classifications. The&#13;
classifications and sample suggestions&#13;
from each are as follows:&#13;
1. The first category consisted chiefly of&#13;
gripes about the box or its location. One&#13;
suggestion, verifiably a year and a half&#13;
old, reads, "Abolish this suggestion box."&#13;
Another says, "Put the ( + ) Box higher,&#13;
cause if I bump my head on it one more&#13;
time, I'm going to rip it off." A third&#13;
suggestion recommends, "P.aise this box&#13;
higher. My friend hits his head on it every&#13;
time."&#13;
2. The second class of suggestions dealt&#13;
with the juke box. The oldest suggestion in&#13;
this class recommended that Melancholy&#13;
Baby be put in the juke box. There were&#13;
three other requests for slightly out-ofdate&#13;
music. There were three requests for&#13;
a free juke box, two dank-you's and a&#13;
pleeze. There was one suggestion which&#13;
read, "Fix that damn juke box. (signed)&#13;
Dick Butkas;" evidently a scare tactic.&#13;
Another less typical recommendation&#13;
says, "Dear Green Box, last week I asked&#13;
you to turn up the volume on the Juke box.&#13;
It seems that your crummy speakers can't&#13;
take it. So turn it down."&#13;
3. The third class of suggestions dealt&#13;
with the need for a dollar bill changer in&#13;
the lounge. None of these were dated, but&#13;
their age can be inferred.&#13;
4. A fourth category could be labeled&#13;
loners. "Have an Alka-Seltzer machine put&#13;
in." "The Dean should get ( + ) in the&#13;
( + )." "Blow it up Baby." "What this&#13;
lounge needs is a bed, a tap and some&#13;
women." On a candy wrapper was written,&#13;
"Help, I'm TRAPPED in the candy&#13;
machine."&#13;
5. The fifth category recommends&#13;
changes in the cafeteria service. One&#13;
suggestion reads, "Lower the prices or&#13;
we'll boycott." This threat makes us&#13;
wonder how long the boycott has been&#13;
going on. Another suggestion says, "Would&#13;
it ever be cool to have napkins."&#13;
6. The fifth group of suggestions might&#13;
laughingly be called 'serious.' These&#13;
suggestions concern themselves with&#13;
everything from squeaky chairs in the&#13;
library to dust on top of lockers.&#13;
7. The final class of suggestions in the&#13;
box are labeled 'miscellaneous uncategorized.'&#13;
A running tally indicates that&#13;
there were two gum wrappers, half a&#13;
Hershey bar, one bent straw, part of a shoe&#13;
heel, a lunch bag complete with wrinkled&#13;
waxed paper, one broken plastic fork, and&#13;
a partridge in a pear tree deposited in the&#13;
suggestion box since it was last opened.&#13;
It is evident from the contents of the&#13;
Kenosha Campus suggestion box that&#13;
concern indeed runs high among the&#13;
students at Parkside. Rest assured that&#13;
theNewscope staff will, from time to time,&#13;
re-open the little green box and attempt to&#13;
effect some of the suggestions herein.&#13;
Columbus, Ohio-(I.P.)-In a n ew report&#13;
on U.S. college and university enrollment&#13;
trends, Dr. Ronald B. Thompson,&#13;
executive dean for student statistical&#13;
services at Ohio State University, foresees&#13;
an approximate 85 per cent increase in&#13;
overall enrollments in the next 12 years.&#13;
Thompson's conclusions are contained&#13;
in a study conducted for the American&#13;
Association of Collegiate Registrars and&#13;
Admission Officers.&#13;
"While currently a little over&#13;
8,000,000 students are attending our&#13;
colleges and universities in the United&#13;
States," Thompson reported, " it is&#13;
estimated that this number will increase&#13;
to almost 14,000,000 by 1982, a rise of&#13;
approximately 85 per cent in the next 12&#13;
years."&#13;
The trends are based upon the number&#13;
of births in the U.S. and the number of&#13;
these people going on to college. A peak&#13;
in college entrance is expected in&#13;
1975-18 years after the peak birth year&#13;
of 1957.&#13;
In the past 19 years the percentage of&#13;
high school graduates going on to colleges&#13;
and universities rose form approximately&#13;
Continued&#13;
43 per cent to 66 per cent, he said.&#13;
Thompson pointed out that although&#13;
the trend has been consistent for 19&#13;
years, the most dramatic shift has&#13;
occurred in the past 10 years.&#13;
"Enrollments in higher education&#13;
institutions in the United States have&#13;
doubled in the past eight years and&#13;
tripled in the past 15 years," he said.&#13;
r&#13;
it's the&#13;
eal thing&#13;
0&#13;
Enjoy&#13;
31 J&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 Lathrop Ay., Racing, Wisconsin&#13;
Stu den ts get red c arpet service&#13;
( S o d o es e v eryo ne else!)&#13;
NORTH &amp; SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
- KENOSHA —&#13;
FAMOUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
UWP STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE&#13;
PRESENTS:&#13;
THE SAMMY LAY&#13;
BLUES REVIVAL&#13;
THIS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19 TH&#13;
9:30 - 12:30 P.M.&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
ADM.: $1.50 IN ADVANCE&#13;
$2.00 AT THE DOOR&#13;
T I C KETS A V A I LA B L E NOW: S T U D E N T A C T I V I T I ES&#13;
O F F I C E - TA LE N T HA L L &#13;
Rangers&#13;
Swamped&#13;
Parkside's trip to Green Bay proved&#13;
futile as the Rangers were whipped&#13;
{11-59. Losing to UW-Green Bay, one of&#13;
the best college teams in the state Was not&#13;
surprising, especially considering that it&#13;
was a road game. The 52 point margin of&#13;
defeat was an unpleasant surprise.&#13;
Parkside earlier had lost 85-79 at home to&#13;
UW-Green Bay in a game that was close&#13;
to the very end.&#13;
Tuesday night was obviously not one&#13;
of the Ranger's better performances&#13;
considering that most of the time their&#13;
loses are by 2 points.&#13;
Down 41-23 at half, things got even&#13;
worse in the second half as Green Bay&#13;
poured through 61 more points while the&#13;
Rangers managed only 36.&#13;
Ray Willis, Green Bay's star player&#13;
form Chicago, led the scoring parade, as&#13;
he often does, by scoring 45 points. Two&#13;
other Green Bay cagers poured in 20&#13;
points.&#13;
For Parkside, it was Stan White who&#13;
topped the scoring with 17 points. Mike&#13;
Ma-dsen and Jim Hogan each added 10.&#13;
Hogan's 10 left him far short of his&#13;
average which is well over 20 points a&#13;
game.&#13;
Perhaps the biggest surprise was Green&#13;
Bay's being able to hold high i scoring; Eli&#13;
Slaughter to 2 points. For Eli that was&#13;
BEAR FACTS&#13;
the lowest total he ever had at Parkside in&#13;
a game in which he was able to play most,&#13;
or all of the way. To hold a player of Eli's&#13;
ability down to 2 points seems like an&#13;
impossible task, but Green Bay did it. No&#13;
doubt they worked on figuring out a way&#13;
to stop him, considering the fact that he&#13;
scored 35 points against them in the first&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Eli said that 2 and sometimes 3 players&#13;
would converge on him every time he sot&#13;
the ball.&#13;
White, who said that the team just&#13;
never could get untracked, was the only&#13;
Ranger to approximate his season' scoring&#13;
average.&#13;
Parkside's season record dropped to&#13;
8-12 with the loss, and it also left the 0-4&#13;
against arch-rival Green Bay in the last&#13;
two seasons,.&#13;
The Rangers have shown the ability to&#13;
bounce back after defeats and there is no&#13;
reason to expect that they cannot do it&#13;
again. Maybe, if this is any consolation, it&#13;
was a relief to lose a game by more than 2&#13;
points.&#13;
By the same token, it would be nice to&#13;
win a game by a wide margin also.&#13;
Actually, any win if good, and hopefully&#13;
there will be a number of them in the last&#13;
6 games.&#13;
The University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
will rank with LaCrosse State&#13;
and Wisconsin as favorites Saturday in&#13;
the Wisconsin and Illinois Intercollegiate&#13;
Ski Association championships at Rib&#13;
Mountain in Wausau.&#13;
The meet is expected to attract&#13;
several hundred individual skiers, as well&#13;
as some 20 college and university teams.&#13;
Competition will be held in slalom,&#13;
giant slalom and downhill.&#13;
Parkside's team will be led by Kari&#13;
Liekoski, who won the Central U.S. Ski&#13;
Association cross country title last&#13;
month in Iola and placed second last&#13;
week in slalom in the Tri-State&#13;
Invitational at Little Switzerland.&#13;
Liekoski, who was a member of" the&#13;
U.S. Army biathlon ski team two years&#13;
ago, placed 12th in the U.S. biathlon&#13;
national championships earlier this&#13;
season in Minneapolis. He is a New York&#13;
native now living in Racine.&#13;
Parkside finished third to LaCrosse&#13;
and Wisconsin in slalom last month in&#13;
the only previous meeting of the schools&#13;
this season.&#13;
SROWN&#13;
NRTIONRL BANK&#13;
Of KKKOMA&#13;
B U C K S G A M E SPECIAL&#13;
MONDAY MARCH 1&#13;
st&#13;
MILWAUKEE'S BATTLING PHILADELPHIA&#13;
BUCKS vs 76'ers&#13;
GAME TICKET AND ROUND TRIP TRANSPORTATION&#13;
ONLY $4.00&#13;
(LIMITED NUMBER AVAILABLE)&#13;
ON S ALE NOW: STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE - TALLENT HALL&#13;
UW-P&#13;
Olympic Program&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
has been selected as the first alternate site&#13;
for this summer's training program for&#13;
United States Olympic hopefuls in the long&#13;
jump, broad jump, triple jump and pole&#13;
vault.&#13;
Parkside athletic director Tom&#13;
Rosandich announced that he has been&#13;
informed of the selection by Bill Bowerman,&#13;
Oregon track coach and chairman of&#13;
the Men's Olympic Track and Field&#13;
Committee. Bowdoin College (Brunswick,&#13;
Maine) will host the training program,&#13;
which is financed by the Olympic Committee,&#13;
during July and August. Duk£ and&#13;
Pennsylvania are second and third&#13;
alternate sites.&#13;
Athletic Scholarships&#13;
MILWAUKEE-The University Board&#13;
of Regents meeting here Friday&#13;
accepted a gift of $5,000 from the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside 200&#13;
Club to support athletic scholarships at&#13;
UW-P.&#13;
The 200 Club is a Kenosha-Racine&#13;
area booster organization for the new&#13;
four-year university. The gift of $5,000,&#13;
the first from the club which was&#13;
formed last year, will be used to defray&#13;
cost of tuition books and supplies at&#13;
the discretion of Athletic Director Tom&#13;
Rosandich.&#13;
Directors of the Parkside 200 Club&#13;
are Alfred S. DeSimone and Richard E.&#13;
Ellison of Kenosha and Robert D. White&#13;
of Racine.&#13;
Banque t&#13;
Rooms Ava ilable&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - 12" - 14" -16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
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CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
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657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
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Archery at The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside will be the subject&#13;
of a feature article in an upcoming issue&#13;
of Archery World, a national magazine.&#13;
The magazine's editor, Glenn Helgeiand&#13;
(center), visited Parkside this week to&#13;
gather information, here from UWP's&#13;
Russ Coiey (left) and student Eugene&#13;
Prince of Milwaukee. Coley coordinates&#13;
the course in Hunter Safety, offered&#13;
each semester at. UWP in conjunction&#13;
with the sta te departm ent of&#13;
conservation and which features sessions&#13;
on bow hunting. Prince is a student in&#13;
the course. Parkside also offers a course&#13;
in archery, and has an active intramural&#13;
club.&#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, 1 DINNER&#13;
AND APRES SKI A CTIVITIES.&#13;
COST OF TRIP:&#13;
$42.00 REGISTERED GUESTS&#13;
$37.00 PARKSIDE STUDENT&#13;
$32.50 SKI CLUB MEMBERS&#13;
RESERVATIONS AND ADDITIONAL&#13;
INFORMATION AT THE STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES OFFICE - TALENT HALL.&#13;
COMING FEB.. 25* h&#13;
8:00 PJVL.GREENQUIST&#13;
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ADULT BO OK STORE&#13;
KENOSHA &#13;
Ping Pong&#13;
Anyone?&#13;
by Jim Koloen&#13;
Title: Islands in the Stream&#13;
Author: Ernest Hemingway&#13;
Publisher: Scribners&#13;
By Dean Loumos&#13;
Through the efforts of one of our&#13;
English teachers, Alan Wallace, the&#13;
Racine Campus may recieve a ping-pong&#13;
table. But, there seems to be an&#13;
administrative problem, no one seems to&#13;
know what to do with it.&#13;
Mr. Wallace's parents said he could&#13;
have the talble as soon as they moved.&#13;
Realizing that his house had no place for&#13;
it, he decided that the Racine Campus&#13;
would be a good place for it. The Racine&#13;
Campus has no indoor recreational&#13;
facilities besides the juke-box and vending&#13;
machines.&#13;
Coach Frecka, who Mr. Wallace first&#13;
contacted said that he was, "Very much&#13;
in favor of the idea." Mr. Wallace and&#13;
Coach Frecka both like the idea of&#13;
haveing it put in the Badger Room, on&#13;
the stage, but official authorization!&#13;
hadn't been obtained.&#13;
It was Mr. Martinez, Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises Program Advisor, who first&#13;
suggested the use of the Badger Room&#13;
stage.&#13;
He then contacted Mr. David Vogt,&#13;
Director of Planning and Construction,&#13;
who was not opposed to the idea, but not&#13;
very cooperative as to suggesting a&#13;
suitable location and told Mr. Wallace to&#13;
check back in a month- and he could&#13;
work something out.&#13;
Time was running out on Mr. Wallace&#13;
so on the week-end his parents moved&#13;
January 31, he took his Volkswagen bus&#13;
to Milwaukee, picked up the table and&#13;
unloaded the table the following Monday&#13;
in the Administration building. It was&#13;
placed on the first floor of the building&#13;
which is surrounded by glass pane&#13;
windows.&#13;
One Tuesday, February 2, Alan&#13;
brought his wife to school to look at the&#13;
table but found that it had been taken&#13;
down. He then sought out Mr. Freehling,&#13;
Building Superintendent, and was told&#13;
that the table hadn't recieved proper&#13;
authorization from Mr. Vogt, and so it&#13;
was "stored."&#13;
Mr. Wallace then explained that the&#13;
students had nothing to do besides play&#13;
cards and wanted it set back up until they&#13;
could find a place for it. Mr. Freehling&#13;
then said that during the winter the glass&#13;
gets very brittle because of the&#13;
temperature. If a student were to slip and&#13;
fall against the glass it w ould break and it&#13;
would cost $130 to replace the pane.&#13;
Realizing that he was getting nowhere,&#13;
Alan decided to go right to the top, but&#13;
as usual the Chan, was not available.&#13;
Mr. Wallace then enlisted the aid of his&#13;
fellow colleague, Mr. Martin and brought&#13;
it to the attention of Dean Dearborn.&#13;
Through him it was learned that&#13;
somewhere within the administration&#13;
there is pressure not to spend any money&#13;
on student recreational facilities. The&#13;
Dean then suggested he contact the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee to get&#13;
further faculty support.&#13;
In the mean time the table stays&#13;
"stored" away in Racine somewhere. Mr.&#13;
Freehling wouldn't tell anybody where he&#13;
"stored" it, not even the janitors. The&#13;
students, well, they're only worth $130&#13;
anyhow.&#13;
Ernest Hemingway was a great writer&#13;
for many reasons, among these reasons&#13;
two stand out as most significant: first, he&#13;
developed an unique and meaningful&#13;
style; second, he could always tell a good&#13;
story. Islands in the Stream, unfortunately,&#13;
is a poor example of his style&#13;
and the story is only good in places.&#13;
This novel (466 pages) is posthumous,&#13;
the manuscript was discovered in a&#13;
Havana bank vault years after the&#13;
author's death, obviously, Big Ern did not&#13;
consider the novel polished enough to be&#13;
published. During the decade preceding&#13;
Hemingway's suicide, in which this novel&#13;
was written, the author often complained&#13;
about dizziness, a cloudy mind and other&#13;
mental as well as physical ailments. The&#13;
myth of Hemingway had taken its toll on&#13;
the man; his numerous concussions suffered&#13;
as a result of airplane crashes, his&#13;
physically active life and his drinking had&#13;
much to do with the despair that led to his&#13;
suicide.&#13;
The protagonist of Islands in the Stream,&#13;
Thomas Hudson, seems to be quite&#13;
autobiographical; he, too, suffers from a&#13;
cloudy mind, a lack of clearheadedness&#13;
and decisiveness, drinking has become a&#13;
means of coping with life. Hudson suffers&#13;
from loneliness and must come to terms&#13;
with his grief over the loss of his three&#13;
sons. Hemingway had to come to terms&#13;
with the fact that he could no longer write&#13;
a novel like The Sun Also Rises.&#13;
The writing is loose, it is not Hemingway&#13;
at his best, it is often needlessly redundant&#13;
and over detailed; even the dialogue is&#13;
often awkward and unreal. One is&#13;
reminded that Hemingway is concerned&#13;
with ritual, that detail and repetition have&#13;
a place in ritual, yet the reader becomes&#13;
bored with the author's constant overdetailing&#13;
of such things as Hudson's&#13;
favorite drink, a frozen daiquiri, and finds&#13;
himself skimming over many narrative&#13;
passages.&#13;
The novel i$ often blatantly sentimentalistic.&#13;
Hudson and his middle-aged&#13;
friends are continuously looking back at&#13;
their pasts, remeniscing on the good times&#13;
and on how mean they were. Needless to&#13;
say the good times will not come again.&#13;
In so far as characterization is concerned,&#13;
this is basically a one character&#13;
novel. Only Tom Hudson is seen&#13;
throughout the novel. He is a middle-aged&#13;
painter of sea scenes. He enjoys an international&#13;
reputation; he is happiest&#13;
when his three young sons visit him on his&#13;
island for five weeks. They die and Tom is&#13;
left alone to cope with his grief.&#13;
The novel is divided into three sections.&#13;
The first and longest is "Bimini"; the&#13;
second is "Cuba", and the third is "At&#13;
Sea". "Bimini" is an introductory section.&#13;
It describes the preparations for and visit&#13;
of Hudson's three loves, his sons. We&#13;
become acquainted with Roger Davis, a&#13;
writer-friend of Hudson's who has been&#13;
nabusing his talent". Both men reminisce&#13;
on the past and in the end Davis takes&#13;
Hudson's advice to go to his Montana&#13;
ranch to write an "honest", straight novel&#13;
if he still can. Exit Roger.&#13;
Carmenvilla&#13;
Carmen Vila will teach a special course&#13;
in music appreciation for 'non-music&#13;
majors which has been added to spring&#13;
semester course offerings at The&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Miss Vila, the Spanish-born pianist who&#13;
is in her third year as artist-in-residence at&#13;
UWP, will teach the one-credit course&#13;
(Music 010) from 11:30 to 12:30 p.m. on&#13;
Fridays in Greenquist Hall Room 103&#13;
beginning February 19.&#13;
Registrations for the course will remain&#13;
open through next week in Tallent Hall,,&#13;
or at the first class. The course will&#13;
include music by Miss Vila and guest&#13;
performers supplemented by recordings&#13;
and films.&#13;
YOUR COMPLETE "ON CAMPUS" BOOK &amp; SU PPLY CENTER&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
SPECIAL THIS WEEKParkside&#13;
Notebook 10% Off&#13;
The second section, "Cuba", begins with&#13;
Hudson talking to his cat, Boise Two of his&#13;
sons have been killed in an automobile&#13;
accident; he is coming to terms with his&#13;
grief. Somewhere along the line Pearl&#13;
Harbor has become a household word and&#13;
Hudson has been enlisted to carry out a&#13;
secret mission for the allies. Again&#13;
Hudson is beseiged by the past. He relives&#13;
the time he balled a princess and is&#13;
reintroduced into reality when word&#13;
reaches him that his oldest son, young&#13;
Tom, has been killed in action by some&#13;
nasty Krauts who shot down his Spitfire.&#13;
He has his chauffeur drive him to the&#13;
Floridita bar where Honest Lil, the sentimental&#13;
whore, accuses him of being a&#13;
"grief hoarder". She breaks down and&#13;
cries when he finally confesses the source&#13;
of his latest grief and by some lucky&#13;
coincidence escapes the tears with his first&#13;
wife. As the chauffeur drives them to&#13;
Hudson's ranch they talk about the old&#13;
times, once in'the bedroom he balls her&#13;
and then tells her that her son is dead.&#13;
They are forever separated. She ends up&#13;
talking to Baoise and he concludes: "Get it&#13;
straight. Your boy you lose. Love you lose.&#13;
Honor has been gone for a long time. Duty&#13;
you do?'&#13;
The third section is about the duty he&#13;
do's. He is captain of a misfit crew on a&#13;
yacht, publicly they are a scientific expedition,&#13;
privately they are out to capture&#13;
some Germans who.survived the sinking&#13;
of a U-boat. He is losing control of his&#13;
faculties, he gets headaches from thinking&#13;
and constantly doubts his own decisions.&#13;
To find the Germans he puts himself in the&#13;
German Commander's place; what would&#13;
I do if I were him. It turns out that the&#13;
German and he are very much alike, the&#13;
empathy is vital and he stays hot on their&#13;
wake.&#13;
As I stated previously, this is not a great&#13;
novel and yet, though it does contain many&#13;
flaws, there are some highlights. The deep&#13;
sea fishing scene in the "Bimini" section is&#13;
worthy of the writer of 'The Old Man and&#13;
the Sea, yea but it do sound very much like&#13;
it. The chase scene in "At Sea" is an&#13;
overall success. It, like the fishing scene,&#13;
is ritualistic and is flawed only by some&#13;
over-detailing of such things as the glass&#13;
which holds his daiquiri. However, and&#13;
this is important, Hemingway builds&#13;
suspense very well and his description of&#13;
what war really is is quite sensitive.&#13;
What are the themes? Well, they run the&#13;
Hemingway gamut; the novel provides us&#13;
with a catalogue of the good and bad&#13;
places, of the good and the bad people, of&#13;
struggling and coming to terms with grief&#13;
and, interestingly, it shows a growing&#13;
awareness of the complexity of l ife, of the&#13;
fact that though the Krauts slaughter&#13;
seven people it doesn't necessarily make&#13;
them bad. I think what really puts this&#13;
novel in perspective thematically, and&#13;
especially in relation to the author, is when&#13;
Tom Hudson thinks, "There is no way for&#13;
you to get what you need and you will&#13;
never have what you want again.'&#13;
Drinking has become the palliative for&#13;
Hudson-Hemingway, but it leads nowhere&#13;
because Hudson-Hemingway has lost that&#13;
one thing which made both live. In the&#13;
novel it is the loss of Hudson's children; in&#13;
Hemmingway it is much more. It encompasses&#13;
the art of writing itself for this&#13;
novel is as much about his art as it is about&#13;
a war.&#13;
Islands in the Stream courtesy of the&#13;
Book Mart, 622 5 9th St., Kenosha.&#13;
New Gallery One&#13;
'503 Main St.&#13;
Racine&#13;
10% Student Discount&#13;
}on all Posters &amp; Frames,&#13;
New Gallery Two&#13;
5036 Sixth Ave.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
CARTHAGE COLLEGE&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
RALPH NADER&#13;
Outspoken Consumer Crusader&#13;
Speaking on&#13;
"Environmental Hazards: Man-Made and&#13;
Man-Remedied"&#13;
Wednesday, February 17&#13;
St. Joseph High 2401 69th St.&#13;
 </text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 3, February 16, 1971</text>
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              <text>Rules Write-In Illegal: CCC Invalidates Constitutional Referendum</text>
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              <text>UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PARKSIDE FEBRUARY 9, 1971 VOL. 3 O. 2&#13;
::&#13;
RULES WRITE-IN ILLEGAL&#13;
The Campus Concerns-Committee&#13;
ecc I'nvalidates Constitutional Referendum&#13;
ICCC)invalidated last week's ratification&#13;
referendum (or a stu~~nt. govern~ent&#13;
constitution on a technicality. It did so&#13;
because the ratification article called for&#13;
thereferendum to be held on February 3,4&#13;
and5, while, in fact, it was publicized and&#13;
held on February 2, 3 and 4.&#13;
The committee ruled, too, ineffect, the&#13;
write-in campaign by the Committee for&#13;
UnitedStudent Action (CUSA) was illegal.&#13;
Neither constitution was then ratified,&#13;
and the ballots will be destroyed uncoonted.&#13;
Reportedly only 760 students&#13;
voted despite the fact that after&#13;
registering all students had to walk past&#13;
the polling place.&#13;
Atthe conclusion of last Friday's special&#13;
meeting, both groups agreed to work&#13;
together in drawing up a new constitution.&#13;
T~eccc ruled first unanimously on a&#13;
motion by Joseph Balsano life science&#13;
that only the Constitution pr;""nted by th;&#13;
elected Constitutional Committee (Con&#13;
Com) could be ratified in the referendum.&#13;
The basis for this ruling was a&#13;
memorandum from last year's eee to the&#13;
student body dated April 24, 1970, that&#13;
stated Con Com would submit the constitution&#13;
for student ratification.&#13;
Then later it voided entire referendum&#13;
on a motion by Balsano (passed&#13;
unanimously) when it discovered the&#13;
discrepancy between the ratification&#13;
article and the actual date of ratification.&#13;
The committee met twice Friday.&#13;
Faculty members present were Eugene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, life science, Joseph&#13;
COIlstitutionmeeting continues in grimness as (left to right) B. Niebuhr, T. Tolero,&#13;
R. Freeka, E. Gasiorkiewicz, G. Perdikaris and J. Balsano contemplate the vanous&#13;
)I'OJlOSals.&#13;
Balsano, life science, Richard Frecka,&#13;
physical education, George Perdikaris,'&#13;
engineering science, John Buenker,&#13;
history, and Allan Schneider, earth&#13;
science. William Niebuhr represented the&#13;
!lolln of Students. Student members have&#13;
yet to be appointed.&#13;
The reaction of Con Com members to the&#13;
decision was one of disgust. Tom Kreul&#13;
said, "It's too nice a day to talk about that&#13;
kind of crap. Remember Wyllie Post and&#13;
support your local Luddite. What the hell&#13;
else is there to say?"&#13;
Dean Loumos said, "The best thing was&#13;
done, but not the right thing. It's not right&#13;
because of the chicanery. by CUSA in its&#13;
write-in campaign. ft was nothing but a&#13;
last minute propaganda barrage that&#13;
attempted to sway the vote."&#13;
WaltBreach commented, "Ithink it was&#13;
• disaster. l would have been happy to&#13;
have seen the votes counted, and one or the&#13;
other constitution chosen. Wbat's happened&#13;
is just one more delay in forming&#13;
student government. ..&#13;
Dennis Cashion, a leader of the Cornmittee&#13;
for' United Student Action, said,&#13;
"Considering the speed in which ~th&#13;
groups wanted a decision, and the abl~lty&#13;
of the committee to get together, I think&#13;
the CCC did a very good job, but I'm&#13;
disappointed the votes weren't counted.&#13;
"I was hoping the CCC would have&#13;
declared one or the other the winner," he&#13;
said. "We're hoping by next Friday we can&#13;
have an entirely new constitution written,&#13;
taking the best points from each one. tI&#13;
Tom Eaker of CUSA could not be&#13;
reached for comment.&#13;
Before any decisions were made by the&#13;
CCC both groups agreed to accept as&#13;
binding the rulings of the committee.&#13;
The special meeting of the cce .was&#13;
called wben the Constitutional GommIttee&#13;
protested the last minute write-In campaign&#13;
by CUSA. They felt it was illegal,&#13;
and questioned the ethics of calling for a&#13;
write-in on the day of the ratification.&#13;
Background Informalion&#13;
The members of Con Com itself were&#13;
elected last May in an aU student vote, and&#13;
charged by the CCC to draw up a constitution&#13;
and to submit it for student&#13;
ratification&#13;
The "Gold" constitution of CUSA was&#13;
the work of Dennis Cashinn, Tim Eaker&#13;
and David Krivan, the former Special&#13;
Assistant to the Chancellor. Krivan, a&#13;
specialist in constitutional law, did the&#13;
actual writing of the constitution.&#13;
The membership of CUSA is unknown.&#13;
Krivan had seen drafts of the Con Com&#13;
constitution and had serious reservations&#13;
about it. He met Cashion and Eker during&#13;
the attempted faculty purge and expressed&#13;
his doubts about it to them. Out of this&#13;
grew the original "Gold" draft.&#13;
Krivan did not offer his help to Con Com.&#13;
Among their objections, according to&#13;
Cashion, are "The. document is highly&#13;
ambiguous. There are a number of items&#13;
in the constitution which have no place in a&#13;
constitution. These are matters for the&#13;
Senate, ooce it is elected, to establish for&#13;
itself.&#13;
"There is no provision for reapportionment,"&#13;
be said. "They have 17&#13;
senators, and it would take a constitutional&#13;
amendment to get any other number. The&#13;
process for a...·nendment requires two--&#13;
thirds of the students to favor it, It's a&#13;
known fact two-thirds of the people don't&#13;
vote - especially in a student body where&#13;
they are notoriously apathetic.&#13;
"That would virtually assure you would&#13;
never have a constitutional amendment,"&#13;
he continued. "They hint at a judicial&#13;
branch, but it doesn't spell it out."&#13;
Cashion went on to say. "I really believe&#13;
Con Com attempted to do a good job. But&#13;
where they failed was not to seek&#13;
professional help. I ttunk a lot of these&#13;
problems could have been solved if the&#13;
language had been clearer, If they had&#13;
gotlen away from their pet peeves, and&#13;
written a constitution instead of&#13;
platitudes."&#13;
Bev Ioble, the president of Con rom,&#13;
commented on what Con Com sees as the&#13;
faults of the "Gold" constitution. "Dean&#13;
Dearborn said last year they were told by&#13;
the Uniyersity lawyer that the Constitution&#13;
bad to be written by a committee that was&#13;
elected for that purpose, and now this year&#13;
a few people get together, elected by no&#13;
one, write a constitution and say they are&#13;
speaking for the students."&#13;
She said later: "Their constitution is too&#13;
vague. It gives 100 much power to the&#13;
president and vice president. They added a&#13;
Student nion Committee after we&#13;
protested their lack or one in their original&#13;
dralt. We felt that students needed say-so&#13;
in what goes on in the activities building.&#13;
"They put in a Student Union Committee&#13;
all r-ight," she said, "but they made no&#13;
mention of its structure or composition&#13;
Whereas w e made sure the student&#13;
representatives were elected:'&#13;
Other members of Con Com quesLioned&#13;
why the Special Assistant to the ChancelIor&#13;
involved himself in writing a student&#13;
government constitution. and saw it as the&#13;
Administration meddling in student af·&#13;
fairs.&#13;
During the special CCC meeting the&#13;
refusal of CUSA to lO{orm the committee&#13;
of its write-in campaign bothered some of&#13;
the members.&#13;
John Buenker, HIstory, asked why the&#13;
CCChadn't been informed previously of It.&#13;
Tim Eaker, Lhemorning spokesman for&#13;
CUSA, said, "We Ielt it was irrelevant to&#13;
burden the committee With the problem of&#13;
what our proeedure was going to be. We&#13;
Continued on Page 8&#13;
Tim Eaken and Dennis Cashion as they made their stand for the "Gold Draft".&#13;
Nader Promises to Draw Record Crowds&#13;
then he bas been a major influence in the something fundamentally wrong when the&#13;
passage of six important federal laws: $200 million to subsidize supenonic mghts&#13;
The National Traffic and Motor Vehicle metes out only $46 million to protect the&#13;
safely Act of 1966, the Wholesome Meat health of the nation. It is a great folly not to&#13;
Act of 1967, the 'Natural Gas Pipeline allocate resources and money to combat&#13;
safely Act of 1968, the Radiation Control pollution of our air, water and soil," he&#13;
for Health and safety Act of 1968, the added.&#13;
Wbnlesome Poultry Products Act of 1968, Nader's accomplishments have best&#13;
and tbe Federal Coal Mine Health and been described by the New York Times&#13;
safely Act of 1969 (containing preventive which stated: "Many others have shared&#13;
measures to combat 'black lung' disease). his dtrnview of corporate America and&#13;
Nader is in the forefront of Americans have expressed their doubts in more detail&#13;
who fear their country is in a "lockstep to and more persuasively. What sets Nader&#13;
doomsday" if the creeping menace of apart is that he has moved beyond social&#13;
pollution isn't abated and reversed during criticism to effective political action."&#13;
the 1970'5. "Pollution is another prime&#13;
natioftal crime," states Nader. "There is&#13;
Ralph&#13;
The appearance of consumer advocate&#13;
and ecology crusader Ralph Nader at&#13;
Carthage College Feb. 17 appears to he&#13;
attracting a standing-room-only crowd in&#13;
the College's Phys-Ed Center, which can.&#13;
accommodate between 5,500 and 6,000&#13;
people. Nader's talk, titled "EnVIronmental&#13;
Hazards: Man-Made and&#13;
Man-Remedied", is being sponsored by&#13;
the Student Activities Board at Carthage.&#13;
Admission to the talk by Nader is $1.50&#13;
per person. Group rates are available upon&#13;
request of 25 or more people at $1 ea~h.&#13;
Advancetickets can he secured by callIng&#13;
or writing to Bill Holzemer, Director of&#13;
Student Activities in the College Center.&#13;
Guest Speaker Nader, a self-appointed&#13;
and unsalaries guardian of the interests of&#13;
.203 million U.S. consumers, gr~duated&#13;
magna cum laude fr0f!l Pr~nceton&#13;
University in t955. He received his LL.B&#13;
degree from the Harvard Law School on&#13;
1958 and was admitted to both the Connecticut&#13;
and Massachuset~s Bar&#13;
Associations. A Nieman FellowshIP Award&#13;
. he was named one of the ten winner, th Y "b "Outstanding Young Men of e ear .y&#13;
the U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce in&#13;
l!16~~lderof a coveted Phi Beta-Kappa key,&#13;
Nader zoomed into the national spotlight&#13;
as a crusader during 1965 when his book,&#13;
"unsafe at Any Speed", captured. the&#13;
imagination of the American public. Since&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN PARKSIDE FEBRUARY 9, 1911 OL. 3 0. 2&#13;
RULES WRITE-IN ILLEGAL&#13;
CCC 1·nvalidates Constitutional Referendum&#13;
The Campus Concerns- Committee&#13;
(CCC) invalidated last week's ratification&#13;
referendum for a student government&#13;
Constitution on a technicality. It did so&#13;
because the ratification article called for&#13;
the referendum to be held on February 3, 4&#13;
and 5, while, in fact, it was publicized and&#13;
beld on February 2, 3 and 4.&#13;
The committee ruled, too, ineffect, the&#13;
write-in campaign by the Committee for&#13;
United Student Action ( CUSA) was illegal.&#13;
Neither constitution was then ratified,&#13;
and the ballots will be destroyed uncounted.&#13;
Reportedly only 760 students&#13;
voted despite the fact that afte.r&#13;
registering all students had to walk past&#13;
the polling place.&#13;
At the conclusion of last Friday's special&#13;
meeting, both groups agreed to work&#13;
together in drawing up a new constitution.&#13;
T~e CCC ruled first unanimously on a&#13;
motion by Joseph Balsano, life science,&#13;
that only the Constitution presented by the&#13;
elected Constitutional Committee (Con&#13;
Com) could be ratified in the referendum.&#13;
The basis for this ruling was a&#13;
memorandum from last year's CCC to the&#13;
student body dated April 24, 1970, that&#13;
stated Con Com would submit the con- stitution for student ratification.&#13;
Then later it voided entire referendum&#13;
on a motion by Balsano (passed&#13;
unanimously) when it discovered the&#13;
discrepancy between the ratification&#13;
article and the actual date of ratification.&#13;
The committee met twice Friday.&#13;
Faculty members present were Eugene&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz, life science, Joseph&#13;
Constitution meeting continues in grimness as (left to right) B. Niebuhr, T. T~ro,&#13;
R. Frecka, E. Gasiorkiewicz, G. Perdikaris and J. Balsano contemplate the vanous&#13;
proposals.&#13;
Balsano, life science, Richard Frecka,&#13;
Jiiysical education, George Perdikaris, ·&#13;
engineering science, John Buenker,&#13;
history, and Allan Schneider, earth&#13;
science. William Niebuhr represented the&#13;
Dean of Students. Student members have&#13;
yet to be appointed.&#13;
The reaction of Con Com members to the&#13;
decision was one of disgust. Tom Kreul&#13;
said, "It's too nice a day to talk about that&#13;
kind of crap. Remember Wyllie Post and&#13;
upport your local Luddite. What the hell&#13;
e e is there to say?"&#13;
Dean Loumos said, "The best thing was&#13;
done, but not the right thing. It's not right&#13;
because of the chicanery. by CUSA in its&#13;
write-in campaign. It was nothing but a&#13;
last minute propaganda barrage that&#13;
attempted to sway the vote."&#13;
Walt Breach commented, " I think it was&#13;
a disaster. I would have been happy to&#13;
have seen the votes counted, and one or the&#13;
other constitution chosen. What's happened&#13;
is just one more delay in forming&#13;
student government "&#13;
Dennis Cashion, a leader of the Committee&#13;
for United Student Action, said,&#13;
"Considering the speed in which ~th&#13;
groups wanted a decision, and the abil_ity&#13;
of the committee to get together, I think&#13;
the CCC did a very good job, but I'm&#13;
disappointed the votes weren't counted.&#13;
"I was hoping the CCC would have&#13;
declared one or the other the winner," he&#13;
said. "We're hoping by next_ Fr!day w~ can&#13;
have an entirely new constitution wntten,&#13;
taking the best points from each one."&#13;
Tom Eaker of CUSA could not be&#13;
reached for comment.&#13;
Before any decisions were made by the&#13;
CCC both groups agreed to a~cept as&#13;
binding the rulings of the committee.&#13;
The special meeting of the CCC _was&#13;
called when the Constitutional _Co~m1ttee&#13;
otested the last minute wnte-m cam-&#13;
~ign by CUSA. They felt it was illegal,&#13;
and questioned the ethics of calling for a&#13;
\\-Tile-in on the day of the ra tirica tion.&#13;
Background Inf rmati n&#13;
The members of Con Com itself v. ere&#13;
elected last tay in an all student vote, a nd&#13;
charged by the CCC to draw up a constitution&#13;
and to submit it for tudent&#13;
ratification.&#13;
The "Gold" constitution of CU A wa&#13;
the work of Dennis Cashion. Tim Eaker&#13;
and David Krivan, the former Special&#13;
Assistant to the Chancellor. Kri\an a&#13;
specialist in constitutiooal lav. . did the&#13;
actual writing of the constitution.&#13;
The membership of CUSA is unkn ·n.&#13;
Krivan had seen drafts of the Con Com&#13;
constitution and had serious reservation&#13;
about it. He met Cashion and Eker during&#13;
the attempted faculty purge and expressed&#13;
his doubts about it to them Out of this&#13;
grew the original "Gold" draft&#13;
Krivan did not offer his help to Con Com.&#13;
Among their objections, according to&#13;
Cashion, are "The document is highly&#13;
ambiguous. There are a number of items&#13;
in the constitution which have no place in a&#13;
constitution. These are matters for the&#13;
Senate, once it is elected, to establish for&#13;
itself.&#13;
"There is no provision for reapportionment,"&#13;
he said. " They have 17&#13;
senators, and it would take a constitutional&#13;
amendment to get any other number. The&#13;
process for amendment requires tw~&#13;
thirds of the students to favor it It' a&#13;
known far.t tw~thirds of the people don't&#13;
vote - especially in a student body where&#13;
they are notoriously apathetic.&#13;
"That would virtually assure you would&#13;
never have a constitutional amendment,"&#13;
he continued. "They hint at a judicial&#13;
branch, but it doesn't spell it out."&#13;
Cashion went on to say, " I really believe&#13;
Con Com attempted to do a good job. But&#13;
where they failed was not to s&#13;
Tim Ea en and Dennis Cashion as they m d their stand for the " Gold Draft".&#13;
Ral h Nader Promises to Draw Record Crowds&#13;
p . dian of the interests of then he bas been a major influence m the some~°:g fundamen_tall V.TO wh the&#13;
The appearance of consumer advocate and un~anes guar umers graduated passage of six important federal law : $200 million to ub 1diz:e upersomc ru h&#13;
and ecology crusader Ralph Nader at 203 million U.~. c;:is from' Princeton The National Traffic and fotor Vehicle mete out only million to protect the&#13;
Carthage College Feb. 17 appears to be m8:gna . c~m S:Su; eceived his LL.B Safety Act of 1966, the Wholesome teat health of the nation. It· a great foll:t not to&#13;
attracting a l,tanding-room-only crowd in Umversity ID 1 · e rrd Law School in Act of 1967, the Natural Gas Pipeline allocate resources and money to combat&#13;
the college's Phys-Ed Center, which can- degree from th~~~ to both the Con- Safety Act of 1968, the Radiation Control pollution oC our air, wa er and soil," he&#13;
accommodate between 5,500 and 6,000 1958 _and was a assachusetts Bar for Health and Safety Act of 1968, the added.&#13;
P~ple. Nader's talk, titled "En- necti~u~ a ndN. M anFellowsbipAward Wholesome Poultry Products Act of 1968, N der's _accomplishm~ts have&#13;
Vlronmental Hazards: Man-Made and ~ciations. A iem ed ne of the ten and the Federal Coal line Health and been described by the . ew Yor Tim&#13;
Man-Remedied" , is being sponsored by winner, h~ wf na~ n ~f the Year" by Safety Act of 1969 (containing preventive ·hich stated: ", 1any others ha e. hared&#13;
lhe Student Activities Board at Carthage. "Outstand~ ~g t&gt;!r of Commerce in measures to combat 'black lung' disease&gt;. his dim view of C?rporate .America an~&#13;
Admission to the talk by Nader is $1.50 the U.S. Jumor m Nader is in the forefront of Americans have expressed thE:_ir doubts m more ~etatl&#13;
per person. Group rates are available upon 1967· ted Phi Beta Kappa key, who fear their country is in a " lockstep to and more persuasively. What sets • a~er&#13;
request or_ 25 or more people at $1 ea~- Holder 0!::i:to the national spotlight doom~a~·· if the creeping menace . of ap_~t. is that he h~s mov~ beyo~ ~tal&#13;
Advance llckets can be secured by calling Nader zoo d · g 1965 when his book, pollution isn't abated and reversed dunng cntictsm lo effective pobllcal action.&#13;
or writing to Bill Holzemer, Director of ~ a crusa~erAnu~peed", captured the the 1970's. " Pollution is another prime&#13;
Student Activities, in the College Center. . Uns~f\ a of u;e American public. Since national crime," states I ader. "There is&#13;
Guest speaker Nader, a self-appointed imagma ,on &#13;
New Judicial&#13;
System for California Students&#13;
or t hr idge , Cahf.~IP.)-The new&#13;
..) tern of JU Ike. impl mentcd 10 an stale&#13;
contge Ihl ) r t allQ\lI' more fairne 10&#13;
the ac u d rudent , a~~ordtn&amp; to Dean of&#13;
. ted nl Edmund Peckham of n&#13;
F.rnando Valle) tare ollege&#13;
The ne'" rule, is-ued b) the&#13;
h.n ellor' Ofti "0 f.1I under Ex«UII\t&#13;
On.Jtf l()tl. \\hh:h I "I -ared pursuant to&#13;
.. '11&gt;n 411 . IIIe S of the Cahforma&#13;
dmlnl tr .II\, ~ ..&#13;
t h' 11'~t; d dr Iphnar) procedure • In&#13;
""dIll &gt;n \0 nukIng the c Uege pre ident&#13;
.he ullU.l t lith rlty In al de~ISJons.&#13;
repl e the old ludent·f.-ult) Judl, .. l&#13;
~»,d ....uh thra opu n to a luden&#13;
I",anng I) h•• rmg offl"r, ~) a&#13;
dOrnHhH) commluee and .3) an&#13;
dnunl .,,.11..(' ht.1lrlOI·&#13;
The he nog Oftl cr I a quahOed&#13;
uHOW who. ~ lIlohnl 10 Dr Pe~kham.&#13;
1 umltt n OOlril ll.dunng; hi peuod ot ,t; I The he;,a'101 olli~er mu I submH a&#13;
f mnltnOahOil bef\lft It t deadline to&#13;
Ihe I pr Ident, '" ho h. nl) thre&lt;&#13;
rklng d;a) to 3et on It.&#13;
oder the OC .... rutt~... hunog rna) be&#13;
'heduled f tan) fn ,ble lin" dunng th&#13;
.... k 10 dumn.alr lengthy \I.'3ll1og for the&#13;
Iud or 01 Iplanar) ~lIon now Will be&#13;
held 10H' rapldl) Ih n ... r befor •• Dr&#13;
Po' ham ld&#13;
nother ImportalU- .;hange in the&#13;
JUdi I' rult I the elaborallon of an&#13;
a-=:1J tJ tuden' fight The ne\lt rule&#13;
tate Ihal "Ihe ludenl ,harged shall be&#13;
regard d .... IOnOl.:ent of the charges&#13;
agam I him un III the contrary IS&#13;
e l.bh .... d by a preponderan« of rhe&#13;
t'\o14.h:n e&#13;
"Th&lt; h 3r1ng om,.r shall find a&#13;
stud 'nl (0 ha\e comnl1ued the ad 3 to&#13;
\lihl"h he I char~ed \Iohen the heating&#13;
officer is persuaded by 3 preponderance&#13;
of the e..idence that the student&#13;
committed said acts:'&#13;
nd, "10 any case 10 which 3 student is&#13;
entitled to a hearing, the student may&#13;
instead waive a hearing and accept a&#13;
sanction with re peer 10 discipline and&#13;
decision with re pect to eligibility for or&#13;
lermlOation of financial aid, as&#13;
r«ommended b) the CoordlOator and&#13;
approved b) the Pre rdent."&#13;
(The new order involves a&#13;
"coordm3tor" a igned b)' Lhe president,&#13;
10 be in "gen.ral charge of the&#13;
ad mini tration of Lhese procedures, the&#13;
ducte$ de ~ribed in these procedures and&#13;
uch ocher duties as the President may&#13;
delemune.·')&#13;
Iso. "Th. studeOl charged may b.&#13;
accompanied by one adviser of his choice.&#13;
",ho may acl on his behalf. If he desires&#13;
thai hi adviser be an attorney, the&#13;
tudent charged mu I give written notice&#13;
of Ihe name and office address of the&#13;
altorne)' 10 the Coordinator at least three&#13;
wor -lng dals before the time set for&#13;
commencement of Lhe hearing."&#13;
n fernando all.) State College has&#13;
added an adviso!) board 10 the President&#13;
that will receive the hearing omcer's&#13;
deciSIon before the President does.&#13;
The board. which will consist of both&#13;
student and faculry representatives, will&#13;
re...le...... the case and then make a&#13;
recommendation to the president thai&#13;
ma) either be in opposition or in support&#13;
to the original recommendation.&#13;
Howe\"er. the president siJl has Lhe&#13;
authority (0 lessen. enforce or increase&#13;
the sanction. according to Dr. Peckham.&#13;
He may also return the case to the&#13;
original hearing panel if he deems il&#13;
necessary .&#13;
Environmental Agents:&#13;
bnormalties&#13;
coming to Parkside. Initial phases of the&#13;
current study. conducted last summer,&#13;
received support from the Wisconsin&#13;
Alunmi Research Foundation.&#13;
Balsano said the research team hopes&#13;
to go to Mexico during the spring recess&#13;
to obtain additional breeding stock.&#13;
Tom Krout of Kenosha and Dale&#13;
Kraemer of Racine are student assistants&#13;
for the Parkside aspect of the project.&#13;
Both are life science majors.&#13;
It L'" \U ...1.l &lt;an en",onmenl31&#13;
nt 4,; U netl", J.bnorma1ity ,&#13;
T\\ 0 \\ lS.cun In bIOlogist will&#13;
1O\esllgate the question 10 3 research&#13;
proJ&lt;" funded b) an S I .741 .allonal&#13;
'Ien,,;e Foundation Grant accepted&#13;
100,) (Friday) by The Unrv.rslly of&#13;
WI 'on In Regent.&#13;
The researcher are Joseph S.&#13;
&amp;110100. a i lant professor of life&#13;
Itnee al UW·Parkside and director of&#13;
the ,.search proJect. and Ellen Rasch.&#13;
profe r of blolog) at Marquell'&#13;
Unwer It)',&#13;
The) Will seek 10 deternune the&#13;
efiect of enlitronmental (ress on 3&#13;
~~lrk genelle: abnormallt). triplody,&#13;
In \lihh..:h tw genetli:aU)' dlsunct cells&#13;
Ui,; ur In the me organi m.&#13;
The pro!," i forma 11) titled&#13;
"C)logen"'," of the Gynog.nellc&#13;
Tel IJ t. Pot~1l13 Formosa:' Poecelia&#13;
Fornlo I" VItali fish, nallve to ea tern&#13;
t 11..0 whl'h IS the wild progenitor of&#13;
the BIa,k lolly famlhar to home&#13;
.lquJuum owners. Its partkular&#13;
u fulne \. m re...earch teOb from the&#13;
....,.. (hal all genetic hcaraclerislics are&#13;
d(h:rmllled b' heredity through the&#13;
female hne&#13;
BalQnl) id that the research leam&#13;
\U p«l that the inddence of the&#13;
ahnOlmahl) ulploJ.) 1 hnked (0 agents&#13;
In tht en ....lronmcnt. such 3S lemperature&#13;
hock, oxygen depravation or&#13;
population den II). which n13}'&#13;
ultlnutel) affe~l the reproductive&#13;
pfl e&#13;
The Iud) 1\ J continuation of&#13;
, an.:h btglln v. hen 831)300 wa 3&#13;
tUlIuclte f;l~uh) member. poor to&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
exceptad&#13;
law Grant&#13;
M I LWAUKEE-F.deral Justice&#13;
Department grants of $4.180 to assist&#13;
local law enforcemenl officers who wish&#13;
to further their education in&#13;
occupation.related courses were&#13;
3ccepted tooay for The Universily of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside by the UW Board&#13;
of Regents.&#13;
The grants supplement funds&#13;
preViously awarded Parkside for second&#13;
seme tee under Lhe Justice Department's&#13;
Law Enforcement Assistance Program&#13;
(LEAP) and bring the IOtal to 55,200 .&#13;
LEAP aid is awarded to local law&#13;
enforcement officers in the form of&#13;
tuition grants to take courses related to&#13;
their occupation on a maximum basis of&#13;
S300 per officer. Preference is given to&#13;
full-time "in-service" officers who wish&#13;
10 further their .education while&#13;
pursuing their careers.&#13;
During first semester. 21 law officers&#13;
from the Kenos!13 and Racine police&#13;
and sheriff departments and the Zion&#13;
11\.. polh::e department participated i~&#13;
the program.&#13;
~ATCHlS _ II&#13;
....... ..-&#13;
u__ ·"-'''''&#13;
..._.- ew._n •• To-&#13;
.......n&#13;
ur..11tDin.&#13;
Watc1Mt - Je-lry&#13;
0'--" s.tt" c..~'eItr:p.fil&#13;
tk'pt .&#13;
Itiltg DtSigflifl'j&#13;
nIDAL&#13;
lEGISTRY&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
MorroW&#13;
ConUnued from Page 1&#13;
the Dean replied:&#13;
"I would suggest the students use&#13;
such channels as the following:&#13;
1) Seek 10 conlact the faculty through&#13;
such committees as the UOlvers~ty&#13;
. t which is the Executive cornmlt ee,&#13;
Commiltee of the Faculty Senate,&#13;
headed by Professor Orpheus Johnson&#13;
1) Go to the separate DIVlSlons&#13;
through the Chairman&#13;
3) Come to me personally 10 arrange&#13;
meetings with appropriate faculty&#13;
through my role as mediator and&#13;
faciliatator.&#13;
"In the area of student government I&#13;
personally favor ":,ore stu~e"nt&#13;
participation in inOue cmg the polICies&#13;
and procedures the affect them: But, as&#13;
far as my job goes, such areas are out ?f&#13;
my domain, and I can hold no officl3l&#13;
position even though I mIght favor the&#13;
general principle."&#13;
When asked if he felt that a&#13;
University administration should. tak~ a&#13;
stand on matters outside the UnIVerSIty&#13;
not directly concerning it (Le. Laos) he&#13;
said: "While I do have very strong&#13;
personal opinions on .SUC? matters, I&#13;
must give you an offiCial no comment&#13;
at the present time."&#13;
The Dean outlined his reasons for&#13;
accepting the positions:&#13;
"I was-I) Urged to do so .&#13;
2) I saw the need to fiil a vacuum to&#13;
enable the administration and faculty to&#13;
function effectively&#13;
3) I felt I could make a useful&#13;
contribution.&#13;
"I am trying to mold the office into&#13;
something other than what it has&#13;
become. I plan on working closely with&#13;
faculty rather than unilaterally above&#13;
them. Iwork under the assumption that&#13;
most concerns of the faculty,&#13;
individually or collectively, have a&#13;
legitimate basis which the Dean should&#13;
take seriously and work to develop a&#13;
solution.&#13;
"I accepted this appointment on a&#13;
temporary basis from mid January to&#13;
the end of August when I plan on&#13;
returning to teaching. In the meantime&#13;
there is a faculty search and a screen&#13;
committee appointed by the Chanceilor&#13;
to search for new candidates."&#13;
In closing, I asked the Dean if he was&#13;
doing anything differently which he&#13;
considered his predecessor had done&#13;
completely wrong, his answer-"No&#13;
·comment."&#13;
From the writer: We can only hope&#13;
thai Dean Morrow's policy of "Meshing&#13;
Together" works out better than the&#13;
now defunct "Instant Greatness."&#13;
An opportunity to work in indiVidUal&#13;
and group acnvines with Junior High&#13;
Students at local schools.&#13;
Parkside students will be working w·th&#13;
(Gifford d Jt. High Students tv;&#13;
Thursday from 11 :30- J :30. l)'&#13;
lf interested, contact Isom Fearn&#13;
during registration or call StUde t&#13;
Affairs-University Ex. 42. n&#13;
An introduction to systemati&#13;
approaches ~o studying; t.ime schedulin;&#13;
taking exammatIons, writing term papers,&#13;
etc.&#13;
Individuals interested in participating&#13;
should plan to atten the weekly me.tings&#13;
beginning Tuesday, February 23, 3:00&#13;
p.m., Kenosha Campus Confe"n"&#13;
Room.&#13;
.For mOre information, contact Jewel&#13;
E.chelbarger, Student Affairs om"&#13;
658:4861, Ext. K42 or 637-6744, Ext:&#13;
R7".&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phane 657 -9747&#13;
Save a little bread each week IIlIl&#13;
.your future is up.&#13;
RACINE SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
DownlQY,/nOffice&#13;
400 WISCONSIN AVENUE&#13;
West Side Offic;e&#13;
5100 WASHINGTONAVENUI&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
657.5191&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Faculty&#13;
(Must Show 1.0.) (iM",. r..-toaK.-Ccrt;I..4Dio_toloa;st&#13;
Y~t:g~ h __ ._ ...... ,......,&#13;
ew Judicial&#13;
S stem for California Students&#13;
of&#13;
o f&#13;
lo&#13;
10%&#13;
nts:&#13;
ide. Initial phase of the&#13;
urr nt tud • nducted la ·t ummer.&#13;
recei ·d .ipp rt from the W1. on m&#13;
lumm R search Founda tion.&#13;
B I no id the research team hopes&#13;
to go to . 1e. ko during the pring rece&#13;
to ohtam additional breeding stock.&#13;
Tom Krout of Keno ha and Dale&#13;
Kraemer of Racine are tudent as istants&#13;
for the Par · ide a pect of the project.&#13;
th are life ience majors.&#13;
Law Grant&#13;
11 LW KEE - Federal Justice&#13;
Department grants of 4.1 0 to assist&#13;
1 I Ja..., enforcement officer who wish&#13;
to further their education in&#13;
oc upation-related course were&#13;
a epted toda · for The niver ity of&#13;
1 ·on in- Par · ide by the Board&#13;
of Regent .&#13;
The grant upplement funds&#13;
prev, u ly a"'arded Park 1de for second&#13;
me ter under the Justice Department's&#13;
La"' ·nforcement istarice Program&#13;
(L P) and bring the total to 5,200.&#13;
LE P atd i awarded to local law&#13;
enfor·ement officers in the form of&#13;
tuition grant to take course related to&#13;
their occupation on a maximum ba is of&#13;
per o ffi er. Preference is given to&#13;
full-time '"in-ser;ice" officer who wi h&#13;
Io further their education while&#13;
pur mng their career .&#13;
During fir t seme ter. 21 law officers&#13;
fr m the Keno !la and Racine police&#13;
and herlff department and the Zion&#13;
Ill.. polke department participated i~&#13;
the program.&#13;
__ w_A_Tc_H_u ___,II u,1i.11t Dlrl.&#13;
- • - W1td1e1 - Jewlry u, __ · .._,.. Dia'""" Setti119&#13;
-·= · ~ C..•plcto R•pau O.,pt. _,_. ltiftg Dui9ft1n11&#13;
~H_I_MA __ _,&#13;
--=--=.-=-&#13;
____ ......... HIDAL&#13;
lECISTRY&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Faculty&#13;
(Must Show I. D.) C:-ad•a e C-010,i,t-Certified Di1111011tolocist&#13;
Ifft:,.~_ t'&gt; PAA..&#13;
F ai rtrade #' ~ Of. C)\,-, v.J,&#13;
excepted It ,_ ,ub a ,iffeNt,~ w6«e )'OIi slto,t&#13;
Morrow&#13;
continued from Page 1&#13;
the Dean replied : "I would suggest the students use&#13;
u h channels as the following:&#13;
I) Seek to contact the faculty ~ou_gh&#13;
uch committees as the Umvers~ty&#13;
committee, which is the Executive&#13;
Committee of the Faculty Senate,&#13;
headed by Professor Orpheus J ?~1:son&#13;
2) Go to the separate D1v1s1ons&#13;
through the Chairman&#13;
3) Come to me personally to arrange&#13;
me el ing with appropriat~ faculty&#13;
through my role as mediator and&#13;
faciliatator. "In the area of student government I&#13;
per onally favor ~ore stu~e_nt&#13;
participation in influe cmg the pohcies&#13;
and procedures the affect them: But, as&#13;
far a my job goes, such areas are out _of&#13;
my domain, and I can h~ld no official&#13;
position even though I might favor the&#13;
general principle."&#13;
V hen a ked if he felt that a&#13;
niver ity administration should_ tak~ a&#13;
tand on matters outside the Umvers1ty&#13;
not directly concerning it (i.e. Laos) he&#13;
said : "While I do have very strong&#13;
per onal opinions on _sue~ matters, I mu t give you an official no comment&#13;
at the present time."&#13;
The Dean outlined his reasons for&#13;
accepting the positions:&#13;
"I was-I) Urged to do so&#13;
2) I saw the need to fill a vacuum to&#13;
enable the administration and faculty to&#13;
function effectively&#13;
3) l felt I could make a useful&#13;
contribution.&#13;
"I am trying to mold the office into&#13;
something other than what it has&#13;
become. I plan on working closely with&#13;
faculty rather than unilaterally above&#13;
them. l work under the assumption that&#13;
most concerns of the faculty ,&#13;
individually or collectively , have a&#13;
legitimate basis which the Dean should&#13;
take eriously and work to develop a&#13;
solution.&#13;
"I accepted this appointment on a&#13;
temporary basis from mid January to&#13;
the end of August when I plan on&#13;
returning to teaching. In the meantime&#13;
there is a faculty search and a screen&#13;
committee appointed by the Chancellor&#13;
to search for new candidates."&#13;
In closing, I asked the Dean if he was&#13;
doing anything differently which he&#13;
considered his predecessor had done&#13;
completely wrong, his answer-"No&#13;
-comment."&#13;
From the writer: We can only hope&#13;
that Dean Morrow's policy of "Meshing&#13;
Together" works out better than the&#13;
now defunct "Instant Greatness."&#13;
VAi.ED'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
An opportunity to work in individ&#13;
and group activities with Junior H:&#13;
Students at local schools.&#13;
Parkside students will be working w·th&#13;
1Gifford d Jr. High Students ev; , Thursday from 11 :30-1 :30. I)&#13;
If interested, contact Isom Fea&#13;
du ring registration or call Stude ~ Affairs-University Ex. 42. n&#13;
An introduction to systemat'&#13;
approaches ~o s~udying,_ t_ime scheduling&#13;
taking exammatlons, wntmg term paper,&#13;
etc.&#13;
Individuals interested in participating&#13;
should plan to atten the weekly meetin&#13;
beginning Tuesday, February 23, 3:00&#13;
p.m., Kenosha Campus Conferen&#13;
Room.&#13;
-For more information, contact JC\licl&#13;
F..chelbarger, Student Affairs Ofhce.&#13;
658:4861, Ext. K42 or 637-6744, Ext.&#13;
R7" .&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 day,&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-9747&#13;
Save a little bread each week and&#13;
your future is up.&#13;
RACINE SAVINGS&#13;
ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
Downiown Office&#13;
400 WISCONSIN AVENUE&#13;
West Side Office&#13;
5100WASHINGTON AVENU!&#13;
. PIZZA&#13;
KIT.CHEN&#13;
. ~ ;...-t ,' ' (&#13;
'·,' --&#13;
FREE OalVERY 4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 p.»,.&#13;
KENOSHA 657-5191 &#13;
_rrUfSClaY'F,brUary 9, 1971&#13;
---- ---._...... NEWSCOPE '-...._.._._--------&#13;
49 Mid-Year Graduates Hear---&#13;
by Sven Taffs&#13;
sun~ evening, January .31, before a.&#13;
.... d oi roughly 300 people, Parkside&#13;
rduateJl40 more students. This grings to&#13;
tbe number of people holding Parkside&#13;
......... .&#13;
Featured guests and speakers for the&#13;
~ included Reverend Roy Phillips,&#13;
deliver$i the invocation, Reverend&#13;
WilliamDennis, who represented the&#13;
Partside Alumni Association, Regent&#13;
G«dm Walkp-fof Racine, Acting. Dean&#13;
William Morrd\V,Chancellor Irvin Wyllie,&#13;
IIIdPresidentJbhnWeaver, who delivered&#13;
lie commencem.entaddress.&#13;
The evening'i·Jeey speaker, President&#13;
Weaver, gave an address entitled, "The&#13;
Crucibleof Involvement or Don't Die on&#13;
Third", wherein he admonished the&#13;
J)4~&#13;
~. aocJ. to:i4 a~ -Jt::.t ~¥- Banquet&#13;
Rooms Available&#13;
III FOllrSizes 9"· '12" _ 1-4" - 16"&#13;
.~(SO-&#13;
• ees , SPAGHETTI. CHICKEN&#13;
• GHOCCHI • RAVIOLI. LA SAGHA&#13;
• SEA fOOD. SANDWICHES&#13;
CARlY.OUTS • DELIVERY&#13;
"You RING ..• WE BRING"&#13;
657·9843 or 6584922&#13;
&gt;&#13;
?Taduates not to be c~ented, but to strive&#13;
In all things to do bet r. He stressed the&#13;
importance of commit ent: "If there is&#13;
any group that worries me even more than&#13;
the small, but too often destructive extremists&#13;
of both right and left, it's the&#13;
great 'silent majority'. '&#13;
"Being silent," he continued, "no one&#13;
knows to what they are committed, of what&#13;
they are aware, by what they are movedif,&#13;
indeed, they are not too timorous or too&#13;
short on vitality to really give their loyalty&#13;
or allegiance to anything.&#13;
"Fearful of participation, apathetic and&#13;
unaroused about taking aim on a better&#13;
future," Weaver said, "This mass of the&#13;
citizenry leans, not pulls, on the oars that&#13;
could move us forward."&#13;
Committment and involvement were the&#13;
qualities stressed by Weaver. He said,&#13;
'HSociety is irretrievably dependent upon&#13;
people having an innate capacity for innovating&#13;
creativity. Hopefully, as citizens&#13;
of today and tomorrow, you will be forever&#13;
searching - searching for new means -&#13;
.searching for new ends."&#13;
He also stressed the need for a personal&#13;
mission in life. " .... faith in a mission.&#13;
Weaver&#13;
generates those electric impulses that&#13;
light men's eyse."&#13;
In his brief statement, Regent Walker&#13;
said that the world needs ideas. Weaver&#13;
expanded on this, saying, "We must aU&#13;
cultivate a respect for innovation - for a&#13;
creative tinkering with the way thiugs&#13;
are."&#13;
The graduates' commitment to society&#13;
.was emphasized by Weaver in his quoting&#13;
of John Gardner: "We're not only in&#13;
trouble as a nation; we're in trouble as a&#13;
species. Man is in trouble, and if you are&#13;
not filled with forboding, yoo don't understand&#13;
your time."&#13;
To the graduates he said, "Are you&#13;
ready - are you, in (act. champing at the&#13;
bit - to take on the action that begins&#13;
tomorrow, with even greater determination&#13;
- greater dedication - greater&#13;
devotion, that you have displayed.. '? ..&#13;
President Weaver used numerous&#13;
examples of athletic strivers and&#13;
achievers to illustrate his points. That&#13;
graduates should become involved was&#13;
stressed by his quoting casey Stengel:&#13;
.. .if you gonna' win in the big leagues,&#13;
you gotta' learn the trade and you gotta'&#13;
really wanna play, otherwise you just stay&#13;
in the cellar."&#13;
Quoting Roundy Coughlin, the inimitable&#13;
Madison oracle, he said, "It don't do no&#13;
goot to cross that goal line if you ain't got&#13;
that leather thing."&#13;
Not to be outdone, the Chancellor, after&#13;
Weaver's speech, told his favorite baseball&#13;
story. The message was for aU of us to&#13;
"hang loose".&#13;
The overall message of President&#13;
Weaver's address seemed to be that life is&#13;
- not a spectator sport. Graduates have,&#13;
according to Weaver, a committment to&#13;
become involved in life, " ... to move the&#13;
world". This was the theme of the commencement&#13;
address.&#13;
Three Graduate With Distinction&#13;
Three members of the mid-year&#13;
graduating class at Parkslde received&#13;
their degrees "with distinction". The three&#13;
are Linda Campeau of Racine, Patricia&#13;
Salituro of Kenosha, and Rosemarie&#13;
Thompson of Kenosha; all received&#13;
bachelor of arts degrees.&#13;
A degree with distinction is awarded to&#13;
those students who, on completion of all&#13;
degree requirements and requirements of&#13;
their major and .major division, have&#13;
maintained an overall grade point average&#13;
of at least 3.25out of a possible 4.0.&#13;
In addition to the 49 January graduates,&#13;
another 17 students who completed work&#13;
for their degrees at the end of the summer&#13;
session in August also were eligible to&#13;
participate in the commencement&#13;
ceremony, which featured the University&#13;
of Wisconsin President John Weaver as the&#13;
principal speaker.&#13;
Five of the 17 also completed their&#13;
studies with distinction. They are Stanley&#13;
Balinsky of Kenosha, who achieved a 3.98&#13;
grade point average, the highest in either&#13;
group, James Dahlquist of Kenosha,&#13;
Patricia Schmale of Kenosha, Kenneth&#13;
Stenzel of Kenosha , and Joan Thornberg or&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Open Saturdays&#13;
9 A.M. to Noon&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FREE CHECKI NG&#13;
ACCOUNTS TO STUDENTS&#13;
AND RETIREES&#13;
S928 Sixt-leth S~t&#13;
KeDoUa&#13;
P~. ]&#13;
[Ray [Radigan ~&#13;
QJ)onkrf ..f good I&#13;
For I&#13;
R esert:a/ions&#13;
Phone&#13;
694.().f.5 .5&#13;
SOUTt4SH."ID4" IIIOAONO,"" 0,- nAn: u, ..&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
R-.n - fnlit"'ets - ,.t..&#13;
r_ 649-6100&#13;
Yhad fll' II: WEI Sloe&#13;
3021· ?5TH ST&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 531.0&#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. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
•&#13;
Save a little bread each week and&#13;
your fortune will be fair.&#13;
RACINE SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
DO....."lown Office&#13;
400WI$CONSIN .AVENUE&#13;
We5.1Side DUlCe&#13;
51OQWASHINGTON AVENUE&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last'&#13;
4807 7,h AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
ruesd•Y, F,bl'uary 9, 1971&#13;
-- NE.VSCOPE&#13;
49 Mid-Year Graduates Hear - ------------&#13;
by Sven Taffs&#13;
Sun~ evening, January 31, before a .&#13;
croud oi roughly 300 people, Parkside&#13;
graduated 40 more students. This grings to&#13;
102 the number of people holding Parkside&#13;
degrees. - Featured ~ests and speakers for the&#13;
evening included Reverend Roy Phillips,&#13;
who delivere.d the invocation, Reverend&#13;
William Deunis, who represented the&#13;
Parkside Alumni Association, Regent&#13;
Gordon Walk:P.r of Racine, Acting Dean&#13;
William Morr~, Chancellor Irvin Wyllie,&#13;
andPresidentJbhn Weaver, who delivered&#13;
the commencement address.&#13;
The evening's '·Jtey speaker, President&#13;
Weaver, gave an ·address entitled, "The&#13;
Crucible of Involv~ment or Don't Die on&#13;
Third", wherein he admonished the&#13;
In Four Sizes 9" - ·12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
ALSO&#13;
• RIBS • SPAGHETTI • CHICKEN&#13;
• GNOCCHI • RAVIOLI • LA SAGNA&#13;
• SEA FOOD • SANDWICHES&#13;
CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
"YOU RING •• • WE BRING"&#13;
657-9843 or 6584922 5140 I.th AV~&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
~aduates not to be c:ented, but to strive m all things to do bet r. He stressed the&#13;
importance of commit ent: "If there is&#13;
any group that worries me even more than&#13;
the small, but too often destructive extremists&#13;
of both right and left, it's the&#13;
great 'silent majority'. '&#13;
"Being silent," he continued, "no one&#13;
knows to what they are committed, of what&#13;
they are aware, by what they are moved -&#13;
if, indeed, they are not too timorous or too&#13;
short on vitality to really give their loyalty&#13;
or allegiance to anything.&#13;
"Fearful of participation, apathetic and&#13;
unaroused about taking aim on a better&#13;
future," Weaver said, "This mass of the&#13;
citizenry leans, not pulls, on the oars that&#13;
could move us forward."&#13;
Committment and involvement were the&#13;
qualities stressed by Weaver. He said,&#13;
'"Society is irretrievably dependent upon&#13;
people having an innate capacity for innovating&#13;
creativity. Hopefully, as citizens&#13;
of today and tomorrow, you will be forever&#13;
searching - searching for new means -&#13;
.searching for new ends. "&#13;
He also stressed the need for a personal&#13;
mission in life. " . . . faith in a mission . ..&#13;
Weaver&#13;
generates th(}Se electric impulses that&#13;
light men's eyse."&#13;
In his brief statement, Regent Walker&#13;
said that the world needs idea . Weaver&#13;
expanded on this, saying, "We mu t all&#13;
cultivate a respect for innovation - for a&#13;
creative tinkering with the way thiag&#13;
are."&#13;
The graduates' commitment to soc1et}&#13;
·was emphasized by \\.'eaver in hi. quoting&#13;
of John Gardner: .. We're not only in&#13;
trouble as a nation : we 're in trouble a a&#13;
species. 1an is in trouble. and if you are&#13;
not filled with forboding, you don't understand&#13;
your time."&#13;
To the graduates he said. " Are you&#13;
ready - are you, in fact, champing at the&#13;
bit - to take on the action that begin&#13;
tomorrow, with even greater determination&#13;
- greater dedication - greater&#13;
devotion, that you have displayed . ?"&#13;
President Weaver used numerous&#13;
examples of athletic strivers and&#13;
achievers to illustrate his points. That&#13;
graduates should become involved was&#13;
stressed by his quoting Casey Stengel:&#13;
" . .. if you gonna' win in the big leagues,&#13;
you gotta' learn the trade and you gotta'&#13;
really wanna play, otheN-ise you just sta&#13;
in the cellar."&#13;
Quoting Roundy Coughlin, the inimitable&#13;
Madison oracle, he said, " It don't do no&#13;
goot to cross that goal line if you ain't got&#13;
that leather thing."&#13;
Not to be outdone, the Chancellor, after&#13;
Weaver's speech, told his favorite baseball&#13;
story. The message was for all of us to&#13;
" hang loose".&#13;
The overall message of President&#13;
Weaver's address seemed to be that life is&#13;
- not a spectator sport. Graduates have,&#13;
according to Weaver, a committment to&#13;
become involved in life, ". . . to move the&#13;
world" . This was the theme of the commencement&#13;
address.&#13;
Three Graduate With Distinction&#13;
Three members of the mid-year&#13;
graduating class at Parkside received&#13;
their degrees "with distinction". The three&#13;
are Linda Campeau of Racine, Patricia&#13;
Salituro of Kenosha, and Rosemarie&#13;
Thompson of Kenosha ; all received&#13;
bachelor of arts degrees.&#13;
A degree with distinction is awarded to&#13;
those students who, on completion of all&#13;
degree requirements and requirements of&#13;
their major and major division, have&#13;
maintained an overall grade point average&#13;
of at least 3.25 out of a possible 4.0.&#13;
In addition to the 49 January graduates,&#13;
another 17 students who completed work&#13;
for their degrees at the end of the summer&#13;
session in August also were eligible to&#13;
participate in the commencement&#13;
ceremony, which featured the University&#13;
of Wisconsin President John Weaver a the&#13;
principal speaker.&#13;
Five of the 17 also completed their studies with distinction. They are tanley&#13;
Balinsky of Kenosha, who achieved a 3.98&#13;
grade point average, the high st in either&#13;
group, James Dahlquist of Keno ha ,&#13;
Patricia Schmale of Kenosha , Kenneth&#13;
Stenzel of Kenosha. and Joan Thornberg of&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
O~n Saturdays&#13;
9 A.M. to Noon&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FREE CHECK/ NG&#13;
ACCOUNTS TO STUDENTS&#13;
AND RETIREES&#13;
3928 SixtWh StTttt&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
1·&#13;
ooJ&#13;
I-or I&#13;
R rt t1tio11&#13;
Pho11&#13;
694-04 5 SOUTH •HUltlDA. ltOA.D NO,nH o, .TAT~ Lf,_.I.&#13;
I&lt;[ OSHA WISCO SI"'&#13;
Sunnyside Florists&#13;
&amp; Greenhouses&#13;
R - "&#13;
021 • 75TH S T&#13;
1(£ O S H A .... ISCO SI N 1, 0&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. TH RU THURS.&#13;
11 A.M. TILL ID ITE&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. Till 2 A . .&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
l&#13;
Save a little bread each week nd&#13;
your fortune will be fair.&#13;
RACINE SAVINGS&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Las('&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN &#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
BIU••&#13;
corning&#13;
Friday&#13;
This Friday night at 9:30 p.m. one of&#13;
the country's top blues attractiOnS will&#13;
take the stage of Parkside's Student&#13;
Activities Building for an e~eOlng of&#13;
. nd dance Featured will be the&#13;
mUStC a . . . famed Sam Lay Blues RevIval starnng&#13;
Sammy LaY and Lucile Spann. The&#13;
seuing will be that of a concert mghtclub&#13;
with tables for those who just want to&#13;
listen and a dance floor for those mov~d&#13;
to dance. Admission will be $1.50 m&#13;
advance and 52.00 at the door, and WIll&#13;
be limited to Parkside students and an&#13;
accompanying guest.&#13;
For those unfamiliar with The Sarro&#13;
Lay Blues Revival, its leader Sammy Lay&#13;
is undoubtedly the best blues drummer in&#13;
the business today and has been for some&#13;
time. His career has included providing&#13;
the beat for such greats as B.B. King, Bob&#13;
Dylan, James Cotton, The Chamber&#13;
Brothers, The Segal Sewall Blues BAnd&#13;
and Herbie Mann. He is probably best&#13;
known for hand selecting Elvin Bishop,&#13;
Mike Bloomfield and Paul Butterfield to&#13;
join him in a group that leventually&#13;
evolved into the popular Butterfield Blues&#13;
Band. As a single mUSician, he has played&#13;
the Newport Jazz Festival probably more&#13;
than any other drummer playing today.&#13;
Included in his revival show, and&#13;
featured singer is Lucile Spann, widow of&#13;
the late, great Otis Spann. With the&#13;
showmanship of a Pearl Bailey and the&#13;
wailing voice of Janis Joplin, Lucile leads&#13;
the way for the other featured singer in&#13;
the show, Johnny Twist-an up and&#13;
coming young blues star. Tickets for this&#13;
Student Activities Office sponsored event&#13;
are on sale now at the Student Activities&#13;
Office, Tallent Hall.&#13;
1:5&#13;
"Check Our PricesLast"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
I fr m the 1 ues of the uay.&#13;
1ule W fed ,ending machme mckels,&#13;
d ,d quarter&#13;
Tbe JU e bo ",ngIng along, three&#13;
f I quaner He remembertd many&#13;
of W from fir t mester, and also&#13;
remembertd lhe same people from firsl&#13;
!ml&lt; ter pta"ng'he same· ng:&gt;,&#13;
T'ht' In tint offee machlOe W3 doin~&#13;
.he u I morning busme . He go'&#13;
h If the ul&gt;I.1 thirty cent breakfast he&#13;
d become 3 ·~Utorned to , Eating a&#13;
,-roU ....,lh 10 tant coffee everyda .&#13;
de Bob reahze the unportance of a&#13;
U batao ed bru 'fa t tn one's kitchen.&#13;
;\bout n n, aher (\A,O of hi classes,&#13;
Bob smiled for the first time that day.&#13;
Ba 10 the lounge, he noticed the lunch&#13;
Iine gOlOg full lilt. S3ndwiches seemed to&#13;
noa. IOta pocket, from hand to hand.&#13;
al.....:.y appearing to evade the cashier at&#13;
the end of the line, Even a hot lunch or&#13;
tWO found its way to a table, without&#13;
be:oming the least bit cold waiting in a&#13;
long line. This was liberation Parkside&#13;
tvle , . Bob sUf\o'i\o"ed in thi educational&#13;
en\irOnment only because he kept his&#13;
mind on a transfer. Many things bothered&#13;
him at this school. but he didn't wallow&#13;
lJ1 ideals, a he couldn't afford to. He&#13;
found that many Parkside students did,&#13;
but they all had mom and dad down on&#13;
earth grinding out the basics for their&#13;
children who attended college.&#13;
This was all obvious to Bob, but then&#13;
again he felt that Parkside would mature&#13;
in four or five years. Just bear with it, he&#13;
had always been told, it's bound to get&#13;
better.&#13;
After one afternoon class, it was time&#13;
to go home. Bob hitched a ride within&#13;
five blocks of his apartment. He had&#13;
wanted to check the jobs at the student&#13;
employment office, but he had no way to&#13;
get to the northern reaches of the&#13;
campus. The thought of hitchhiking&#13;
chilled him.&#13;
When he finally got home, Bob just sat&#13;
down in his favorite chair and thought.&#13;
He had heard that Chicago was to play&#13;
for the slUdctHs. This interested him as&#13;
he didn't have very many chances to 'see&#13;
big name rock acts. His interest died as he&#13;
thought further, the tickets were priced&#13;
at 4.50 and 5.50.&#13;
He didn't have a stereo to play albums&#13;
on, and he assumed that whoever was&#13;
putting on the show would throw in a&#13;
free album for those prices. He decided to&#13;
spend five bucks on groceries instead. He&#13;
would pass up a first hand glimpse of the&#13;
underground culture he had read that he&#13;
was pan of.&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. TRRU TRURS.&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MID.III&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL Z A."&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24e&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker&#13;
Ladies Pant Suits 5S~&#13;
Ladies Jump Suits&#13;
Yes, we have all&#13;
new Ladies'&#13;
Hot Pants&#13;
Always Wholesale Prices at&#13;
n&#13;
rtT/'KJ/~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
6058 40th AVE Nickie's KENOSHA. WlS OL7 ..e174&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
ACROSS FROM THE DAYTON HOTEL&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Candy&#13;
A. ~&#13;
HAMM.oND ORGAl",&#13;
..&#13;
'Tradi\ion of EltceUenee.&#13;
KING of ORGA.NS,&#13;
~:tA&#13;
~&#13;
'if ...~1ltJlIl.1QProlkdior&#13;
John Marley &amp;Ray Milland&#13;
•&#13;
asters&#13;
Supper Club&#13;
...&#13;
1herI•• n ... \l .',,' l"&#13;
See Jim M . .• TlId&#13;
...&#13;
l&#13;
•&#13;
eRick "Mr, Hammond" For Guaranteed Service&#13;
HAMMoND' cORGAN&#13;
STUDIO (I)- RACrNE~&#13;
"I 1429 W••hinl!ton Phone 634-2::7l""&#13;
[J Better Ortmns are Built, Hammond w,U ]l&#13;
FAMOUS FOI ITS PLOI'OUED SMAPP&#13;
wi_ AI_.4 ••• kaca ER&#13;
AI•• OUR DELICIOUS .. lIME RII&#13;
rm d in thi educational&#13;
n tr nm nt only e~au he kept hi&#13;
nund n a tran r. fan} thing bothered&#13;
hun at tht hool, but he didn't wallow&#13;
m 1d I • he ouldn't afford to. He&#13;
Ii und th t many Park ide tudents did,&#13;
but th all h d m m and dad down on&#13;
earth grinding out the ba ics for their&#13;
htldr n Y.ho attended college.&#13;
Tht wa all ob\'iou. to Bob, but then&#13;
gain he felt that Park ide would mature&#13;
n four or five years. Ju t bear with it he&#13;
had alway been told. it's bound to get&#13;
better.&#13;
fter one afternoon class, it was time&#13;
to go home. Bob hitched a ride within&#13;
five block of hi apartment. He had&#13;
wanted to heck the jobs at the student&#13;
employment office. but he had no way to&#13;
e the n rthern reache of the&#13;
campu . The thought of hitchhiking&#13;
hilled him.&#13;
\\ben he finally got home, Bob just sat&#13;
down in hb favorite chair and thought.&#13;
He had heard that Chicago was to play&#13;
for the tudcnt . Thi intere ted him as&#13;
he didn'1 ha\'e very many chances to 'see&#13;
big n me rod; act . Hi interest died as he&#13;
th ught further. the tickets were priced&#13;
t 4.50 and 5.50.&#13;
He didn ·1 have a stereo to play albums&#13;
on. nd he a ·urned that whoever was&#13;
~utting on the show would throw in a&#13;
tree album for those prices. He decided to&#13;
pend five bucks on groceries instead. He&#13;
"' uld pa up a first hand glimpse of the&#13;
undergrou~d culture he had read that he&#13;
"' part ol .&#13;
.&amp;vc~&#13;
JtMz,~ti~ay&#13;
f(l(ML.d~-&#13;
111.ll&#13;
AU Mac6raw • Ryan O'Neal&#13;
asters I040&#13;
Sheridan Id •&#13;
S pper Club Ph. 654-1375&#13;
FA OUS fOR ITS l'LORIOAREO $MAPPER&#13;
wl AlaN41 .. H•c•&#13;
Al .. OUR DELICIOUS PRIME RII&#13;
a1ue•&#13;
coming&#13;
FridaY&#13;
Thi· Friday night at 9:30 P·":· one ?f&#13;
the country"s top blues attractions will&#13;
take the tage of Parkside 's S_tudent . . . Bui·ldi·ng for an evemng of&#13;
ll\'llle · h&#13;
mu ic and dance. Featured will be ~ e ,. med am Lay Blues Revival starnng 4&#13;
.unmy La and Lucile Spartn. The&#13;
tting will be that of a concert nightclub&#13;
with table for those who just want to&#13;
Ii ten and a dance floor for those mov~d&#13;
to dan e. dmission will be $ I.SO ~n&#13;
advance and 2.00 at the door, and will&#13;
be limited to Parkside students and an&#13;
accompanying guest.&#13;
For tho e unfamiliar with The Sarr.&#13;
Lay Blue Revival, its leader Sammy Lay&#13;
i undoubtedly the best blues drummer in&#13;
the bu ine. today and has been for some&#13;
time. Hi career has included providing&#13;
the beat for such greats as B.B. King, Bob&#13;
Dylan, Jame Cotton, The Chamber&#13;
Brothers, The Segal Sewall Blues BAnd&#13;
and Herbie Mann. He is probably best&#13;
known for hand selecting Elvin Bishop,&#13;
. iike Bloomfield and Paul Butterfield to&#13;
join him in a group that ,eventually&#13;
evolved into the popular Butterfield Blues&#13;
Band. As a single musician, he has played&#13;
the ewport Jazz Festival probably more&#13;
than any other drummer playing today.&#13;
Included in his revival show, and&#13;
featured singer is Lucile Spann, widow of&#13;
the late, great Otis Spann. With the&#13;
howmanship of a Pearl Bailey and the&#13;
wailing voice of Janis Joplin, Lucile leads&#13;
the way for the other featured singer in&#13;
the show, Johnny Twist-an up and&#13;
coming young bluf"s star. Tickets for this&#13;
Student Activities Office sponsored event&#13;
are on sale now at the Student Activities&#13;
Office, Tallent Hall.&#13;
ladies Pant Suits&#13;
ladies Jump Suits&#13;
Yes, we have all&#13;
new ladies'&#13;
Hot Pants&#13;
Always Wholesale Prices at&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
4 CROSS FROM THE DAYTON HOTEL&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
''Check Our Prices Wst''&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#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. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.I.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
{triple decker)&#13;
sse&#13;
rtrr ff 1«ril /ln«I&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Candy&#13;
I ~ ' ' - .;,..- l Y•&#13;
See Jim Merrick "Mr. Hammond" For Guaranteed service &amp; frad•'&#13;
HAMMOMJ' 0&#13;
0R0AN&#13;
STUDIO RACINE~&#13;
"I 1429 Washin~on Phone ~34-2~631),..a''&#13;
rJ Better Orl!ans are BuiJt, Hammond wiU }luiJJ &#13;
NEW$COPE&#13;
~ood Lookin' Pants Co.&#13;
I&#13;
JEANS AND PANTS&#13;
ARE WHAT WE SELL&#13;
329 MAIN STREET - RACINE&#13;
5723 6TH AVE. - KENOSHA&#13;
CARTHAGE COLLEGE&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
RALPH NADER&#13;
Outspoken Consumer Crusader&#13;
Speaking on&#13;
"Environmental Hazards: Man-Made and&#13;
Man- Remedied"&#13;
Wednesday, Februat;y 17&#13;
Carthage Fieldhouse 8:00 P.M.&#13;
Tickets $1.50 Available at&#13;
B 13id~nger's(Kenosha), Cook Gere (Racine)&#13;
Y Mall: College Center Office, Carthage College&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
It''_Ad~nclose Check Payable to Carthage College; ond a Stamped,&#13;
ressed Envelope. 331 Ext. 293&#13;
For Reservations, Call 658-2 ,&#13;
Anchorlnn'&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
Monday.Thursday $1.95&#13;
friday-Sunday $2.25&#13;
Child,.,. $1.10&#13;
PLUS 'AX AND IIYnAeI&#13;
LADIESNITE&#13;
Mon. &amp; Tues· 8:3610 10:30&#13;
Buy the first drink. second drink (or tOe&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits and gravy&#13;
. ~&#13;
Ancbor~&#13;
INN ~.,&#13;
SEIlVING: r.t. • SaL S ·11 .....&#13;
a.. ;·nus. S ;.".·1' ;&#13;
__ 12 N.. · ;&#13;
9006 Sheridan .d.&#13;
.h-...,4-1733&#13;
jIf' The University of&#13;
-sWisconsin-Parkside&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
WISCONSIN'S FIRST AND ONLY COLLEGE&#13;
APPEARANCE&#13;
MOND"Y, M"Y 10TH 8:00 P.M&#13;
R .. CINE CASE H.S. FIEL.DHOUSE&#13;
TICKETS $5.50 &amp; $4.50 TAX INCLUDED&#13;
L.IMITED NUMBER NOW .. V .. ,L. ...BL.E STUDENT&#13;
ACTIVITIES OFFICE _ TAL.ENT H"L.L.&#13;
A HEAVY au D&#13;
125&#13;
AM·FM Stereo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
Here 15 a good W:lYto dis&#13;
cover what 'Fisher sound'&#13;
is like PI...) .a record on the&#13;
Fisher 125. Pl..y the same&#13;
record on another make.&#13;
Listen (or rhe dlfftrencc,&#13;
\.~p«i311) In the \e£)' low&#13;
and vef) high Ircqncocie&#13;
.A Fisher simolv sounds&#13;
better. And the Fisher 125&#13;
IS the firC:1 complete AM·&#13;
F 1 Stereo \tUSIC Center&#13;
10 look 3S great ;;ISil sounds&#13;
See and Hear&#13;
Fisher Stereo!&#13;
40 W:Ub of 't1u~ P~'.t:l&#13;
IHt-l _ \\ukR.,n(:C' \" •&#13;
'uJ'tr~k- ...i\~·"'I ,1n.l .. "&#13;
Stereo wnh f-ET ,1nd 'C~,n&#13;
Front-end 3iJ IF \I;tcn ...&#13;
SpeeJ AUlomali~ Turntable&#13;
with Cue' Control. Anll·SL.:1t&#13;
,n~. '\Il!llnl;lllt:" ..hut·tlft • T_('&#13;
. AcC'.:slic3Ily.\hIChe'd Two&#13;
\\'3)" ~PC:3L.C'r~»lem~ _ Full&#13;
Audtu Conlrol .. With T.pt 3nd&#13;
Phono .. 3Clhlj~&#13;
Hammond Organ&#13;
Studios of Kenosha&#13;
321 j 60th Sr.&#13;
658-1 01&#13;
SPECIAL IIlClUDES&#13;
SIOll FREE RECD.RDS&#13;
YOUR COMPLETE "ON CAMPUS" BOOK &amp; SIlPPLY CENTER&#13;
University&#13;
Book Store&#13;
Hours This Week&#13;
Monday thru Thursday&#13;
7:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m.&#13;
Friday: 8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m.&#13;
asters&#13;
Supper Club&#13;
F ..... OUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED StlAPPER&#13;
with ...1•••• lne Sa.ce&#13;
"'1•• OUR DELICIOUS PRI .. E RIB&#13;
lIMO&#13;
SherI".n ....&#13;
Ph. 654-1375&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
IG~&#13;
A HOWARD 6.MINSKY-ARTHUR HILLER Productior&#13;
John Marley &amp; Ray Milland&#13;
!Good Lookin' Pants Co.&#13;
JEANS AND PANTS . ARE WHAT WE SELL&#13;
329 MAIN STREET - RAC.iNE&#13;
5723 6 TH A VE. - KENOSHA&#13;
CARTHAGE COLLEGE&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
RALPH NADER&#13;
Outspoken Consumer Crusader&#13;
Speaking on&#13;
"E . nvuonmental Hazards: Man-Made and&#13;
Man-Remedied"&#13;
Wednesday, Februa{y 17&#13;
Canhage Fieldhouse 8:00 P.M.&#13;
Tickets $1.50 Available at&#13;
B'd· ) 1 znger's (Kenosha), Cook Gere (Racine&#13;
B) M ·1 41 : College Center Office, Carthage College&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
f-Ad~o c/ose Check Payable to Carthage College, and a Stamped,&#13;
ressed E I nve ope. 293&#13;
For Reservations, Call 658-2331, Ext.&#13;
Anchor Inn: H 0 D&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
Monday-Thunday $1•95&#13;
Friday-Sunday $2.25&#13;
Children $1.10&#13;
PlUlfAXANDUYRAOI&#13;
LADIE ~ ITE&#13;
Mon. &amp; Tues-8 :36 to 10 :30&#13;
Buy the first drink, econd drin for 1 c&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits and grny&#13;
125&#13;
A -FM Stereo&#13;
usic Center&#13;
SDVING: Fri. &amp; Sat. s J.m.-11 J.a.&#13;
aoa.-ftvt. s ; .m.-lt , .• .&#13;
S-- 1% N--• ,__.;&#13;
9006 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Ph- ~Y4-1733&#13;
See and Hear&#13;
Fisher Stereo!&#13;
~ Jr The University of ~ Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
PRESENTS&#13;
WISCONSIN'S FIRST AND ONLY COLL EGE&#13;
APPEARANCE&#13;
MONDAY . MAY 10 TH a.oo PM&#13;
RACINE CASE H . S. F IELDHOUSE&#13;
TICKETS $5.50 &amp; $4.50 TAX INCLUDED&#13;
LIMITED NUMB ER N OW AVA ILABLE STUOE T&#13;
Hammond Organ&#13;
Studios of Kenosha&#13;
Jl/5 (,()r/, ·,.&#13;
65 -1 01&#13;
SPECIAL IN CLUDES&#13;
$100 FREE RE CORDS&#13;
l¾tPiitni•UiO:if t·J~&#13;
YOUR COMPL ET:E "ON CAMPUS" BOOK &amp; SliPPLY CENTER&#13;
University&#13;
Book St~re&#13;
Hours This Week&#13;
Monday thru Thursday&#13;
7:30 a.m.-8:30 p.m.&#13;
Friday: 8:00 a.m.-4:30 p.m.&#13;
3sters&#13;
Supper Club&#13;
I040&#13;
riclan Id.&#13;
Ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAP PER&#13;
witfi Al ondine Sauce&#13;
Alao OUR DELICIOUS PRIME RIB &#13;
L' E TIO:-' BOX EXPO E&#13;
8 \\altand\' arian&#13;
tud obi )Ollr fondest prayers have&#13;
n an \I, red For the first ume in more&#13;
than ) r. 1 taon boo in the&#13;
I( ncoha Campus loong ho been opened&#13;
The bo k.llfull} nd dtscreetl remov ed&#13;
Irom th lounge b} the 1"0 abo'e-named&#13;
rt1'OCtee-, w opened in the ne" . paper&#13;
oUtet' la I T\.I ay&#13;
u ..a e' ,c!&lt;'nt that lhe box had not been&#13;
open mee b&lt;ofore the gmnlllg of the&#13;
film tor I t \ r, probabl} due 10 the&#13;
!a \ that nobo&lt;!} ho a k } tn an} of the&#13;
"ark Ide 0110 Therefore, I ckmg a&#13;
uer means, tht" box: '4 opened by&#13;
tt"T'OU\ Ing t~ hu'lg The. ugge lMS&#13;
foon&lt;! Ih r ,n are ru hi) revealmg&#13;
h t 01 the u I. ! II mtc one of&#13;
. en arbltran· cla ,!lcallon The&#13;
e lflr hom and sample . u" . lions&#13;
from h r a 1&lt;&gt;110'"&#13;
1 'l1Ie f"o\ cat g0'1 COIlSI.ted crueny· of&#13;
gtl(K about the box or It location ne&#13;
uggt II n, " r1habh a year and a half&#13;
old , ""boh h th u g lion bcx ..&#13;
nol"'r }, "Put th I ) Bo' Iugher,&#13;
,f I bump my "'ad on 1\ one more&#13;
nm • tm gomg to rip It 01£" A tturd&#13;
\lIlR hon r ommends, "P.al tJus box&#13;
rugh r t} fnend Ms Iu heod on .t .. cry&#13;
tim ••&#13;
2 The ond cl of suggesllllClS dealt&#13;
\\ Ith lhe Juke bo' The oldest sUll8esllon in&#13;
th, cl r ommended thaI lelanchol}'&#13;
Bab} be pul m the Juke box 'l1Iere were&#13;
Ihr oIher reque'ls for hghll) oot-of·&#13;
date mu Ie There \Ioete three requests for&#13;
a frff' Juke box. 1\1,0 dank·)'ou·s and a&#13;
plene There was one suggestion which&#13;
r d. "rl&gt; that damn juke bo&gt; tSlgned)&#13;
DKk BUlka ~.. e\;denUl a scare lactic.&#13;
Anol"'r I typIcal recommendation&#13;
ys, "Dear Green Box, last week I asked&#13;
you to turn up the volwne on the Juke box.&#13;
It cern that your crumm)" speakers can't&#13;
lake 11 0 turn it down"&#13;
3 The thIrd cia or uggestions dealt&#13;
v.llh the need for a dollar bill changer in&#13;
the loonge .. 'one of lhese were dated, but&#13;
thelf ~e can be mferred.&#13;
4 .\ fourth catego'1' could be labeled&#13;
1011 "" tla ean lka elUermachinepul&#13;
In.' "The Dean hoold gel 1+) in the&#13;
e I 'Blo .. it up Baby:' "What this&#13;
lounge need" IS a bed a tap and some&#13;
worn n" On a candy "Tapper was written.&#13;
"tI Ip, 1m TRAPPED in the candy&#13;
madunC' ..&#13;
S The hUh category recommends&#13;
chang to the cafeteria ser\'lce One&#13;
UK&amp; tlon reads, HLQ'olr. er the pnces or&#13;
" 'II bo} colt" Tlus lhreat makes us&#13;
.. onder ho" long lhe boycott has I&gt;«&gt;n&#13;
gomg on Another uggeshon says. "Would&#13;
It ever be cool to have napkins."&#13;
6 The fifth gTOUp 01 suggestions might&#13;
Iaugrungly be called 'serious: These&#13;
ug~e~ hon concern themselves with&#13;
t\frythUl&amp; from squeaky Chairs in the&#13;
hbrary to dusl on lop of lockers.&#13;
7. The £inal class of suggestions in the&#13;
box are labeled 'miscellaneous un·&#13;
categorlZed.' A runmng laIly indicates that&#13;
there \l.ere two gum wrappers, ball a&#13;
H hey bar, one bent straw, paTt of a shoe&#13;
heel, a lunch bag complete WIth "Tinkled&#13;
".,axed paper ~one broken plastic fork. and&#13;
a partridge In a pear tree deposited in the&#13;
UII lion box since it was last opened.&#13;
h 15 e\1dent from the contents of the&#13;
K ncoho Campus suggestion box that&#13;
con m Indeed nDlS hIgh among the&#13;
lUdent at Parkslde. Rest a UTed that&#13;
the ·e.. " opestaffwiIl,!rom time to time,&#13;
r open th htlle green box and attempt to&#13;
effect. orne of the suggestions herein.&#13;
4437· 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha. Wi "cons in 53140&#13;
Fret Delivery&#13;
6'4.Q774&#13;
A S'f~l/~61E ~o&#13;
"~£If £tllle'ltO'!' ~ ._J..&#13;
WILL OtJlI HE/fOIS F/~D '1'11£&#13;
S1'RtlG6I.£ wOfIrl/ 11'"1&#13;
Large College Enrollment Foreseen&#13;
States," Thompson "reported, H it is&#13;
estimated that this number will increase&#13;
to almost 14,000,000 by 1982, a rise of&#13;
approximately 8S per cent in the next 12&#13;
years."&#13;
The trends are based upon the number&#13;
of births in the U.S. and the number of&#13;
these people going on to college. A peak&#13;
in coUege entrance is expected in&#13;
1975--18 years after the peak birth year&#13;
of 1957.&#13;
In the past 19 years the percentage of&#13;
high school graduates going on to colleges&#13;
and universities rose form approximately&#13;
Columbus. Ohlo-{LP.)-In a new report&#13;
on .5. college and university enrollll)ent&#13;
I rend. Dr. Ronald B. Thompson,&#13;
e,e~Uu\"e dean for student statistical&#13;
services at Ohio State niversity, foresees&#13;
an approximate 5 per cent increase in&#13;
o\erall enrollme.llls in the next 1'2 years.&#13;
Thompson's condusions are contained&#13;
in os stud)' conduc1ed for the American&#13;
A od3tion of Collegiate Registrars and&#13;
Admission Officers.&#13;
"While currently a little over&#13;
.OOO.(X)() students are attending our&#13;
colleges and uni\"ersities in the United&#13;
r----------.:...--..::.:c.:......:.:.::::.::::..:.-:.::,&#13;
UWP STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE&#13;
PRESENTS:&#13;
THE SAMMY LAY&#13;
BLUES REVIVAL&#13;
THIS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19TH&#13;
9:30 - 12:30 P.M.&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
ADM.: $1.50 IN ADVANCE&#13;
$2.00 AT THE DOOR&#13;
TICKETS AVAILABLE NOW: STUDENT ACTIVITIES&#13;
OFFICE-TALENT HALL&#13;
....&#13;
•&#13;
WILL "HEy&#13;
A6K 7111 FIITtftJL&#13;
QU£STIO/IJ:&#13;
WilY IIfff Wi&#13;
II~R~?&#13;
Continued&#13;
43 per cent to 66 per cent, he said&#13;
Thompson pointed out thaI&#13;
the trend has been consislenl&#13;
years, the most dramatic sblft&#13;
occurred in the past 10&#13;
"Enrollments in higher e&#13;
institutions in the United States&#13;
doubled in the past eight yean&#13;
tripled in the past 15 yeatS," he said&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 Lcdhrop ....v•.• hdll •• Wi~&#13;
t seIWI"&#13;
Students get red carpe&#13;
lsetl&#13;
(So does everyone e&#13;
-:::::::::-::::&#13;
~ and J'o&#13;
~ ~"&#13;
~o RANCH ~&#13;
NORTH &amp; souTH SHE~toA" flOoIl'&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWiCHES I&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILE&#13;
\. S~&#13;
B&#13;
437 · 22nd Avenue&#13;
,sc:onsin 53140&#13;
Fr D lnery&#13;
65 -0774&#13;
A S'f~t1'1GIE ..,o&#13;
H~N£lt ft1Vc,t1on !&#13;
WILL 01111 HEljOlS FIii{) '11/E&#13;
SrRIIGGLE WCIITN 1r-?&#13;
Large College Enrollment Foreseen&#13;
nited&#13;
States," Thompson reported, " it is&#13;
e timated that this number will increase&#13;
to almost 14.000,000 by 1982, a rise of&#13;
approximately 85 per cent in the next 12&#13;
year . "&#13;
The trends are based upon the number&#13;
of births in the U.S. and the number of&#13;
the e people going on to college . A peak&#13;
in college entrance is expected in&#13;
I 97 5--18 years after the peak birth year&#13;
of 1957.&#13;
In the past 19 years the percentage of&#13;
high school graduates going on to colleges&#13;
and universities rose form approximately&#13;
UWP STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE&#13;
PRESENTS:&#13;
THE SAMMY LAY&#13;
BLUES REVIVAL&#13;
THIS FRIDAY, FE BRUARY 19TH&#13;
9:30 - 12:30 P.M.&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
ADM .: $1.50 IN ADVANCE&#13;
$2 .00 AT THE DOOR&#13;
TICKETS AVAILAB L E NOW: STUDE N T A C TIVIT I E S&#13;
OFFICE-TALEN T H A LL&#13;
LIVE MUSI C&#13;
l\'ff"f Mon, • nd TUH, llowllng Nita DR INKS ½ PRICE TO ALL&#13;
UNIFORMED BOWLERS&#13;
WILL 7Hty&#13;
At;K TIie FATtFtJL&#13;
Q.u£s110AJ:&#13;
w11y IIIE. w~&#13;
NERE?&#13;
Continued&#13;
43 per cent to 66 per cent, he said.&#13;
Thompson pointed out that al&#13;
the trend has been consistent for&#13;
years, the most dramatic shift&#13;
occu rred in the past IO&#13;
"Enrollments in higher edu&#13;
institutions in the United Stat~&#13;
doubled in the past eight year&#13;
tripled in the past 15 years." he said&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 Lathrop Ave., he/no, Wirco•P•&#13;
et se r 1,e Studen t s ge t red carp&#13;
. e1~e1 1&#13;
(So does everyo ne&#13;
~ and J'o ~ ~,. ~0 RANCH ~ oAN~ NORTH &amp; SOUTH SHERI&#13;
- KENOSHA _.,&#13;
FAMOUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILE&#13;
: STEAKS &#13;
Tuesday, February 9. 1971&#13;
NEWSCOPE p ....GIt 1 ----~'BMiEiAiAR.----------..:~~---~&#13;
"- FACTS Gun Club Organized&#13;
~&#13;
HOckey Team Smothers&#13;
Platteville 10-1&#13;
BraVml sulrzero weather, the Parkside&#13;
er hoCkeyclub exploded for ten goals&#13;
~daY ilight in beating WSU-Platteville&#13;
~at the Kenosha lakefront stadium. The&#13;
~ers were thirsting for a victory after&#13;
consecutivelosses to Lewis College of :et, OJ. Tom Krummel and Kart&#13;
(iekoski scored three goals apiece 10&#13;
ming the coveted hat trick, while Bill&#13;
;esterlWld and Rich Roscoe scored two&#13;
goals each to round out the .SCOring. .&#13;
. Plattevilleopened the scormg at 3: 50 of&#13;
the first period hut were never able to&#13;
penetrate the ranger defense from that&#13;
iot 011. Parkside gained their momen- :mwith Bill Westerlund's lying score at&#13;
6:20. Tom Krummelscored at 9:20 of the&#13;
first period and Liekoski rounded the&#13;
scoring of the period.with a scorching slapshotfrom&#13;
the bluebne ..&#13;
Parksidecame out for the second period&#13;
with all guns blazing, WIth Krummel,&#13;
aoscoe andWesterlund scoring ~nthe first&#13;
twominutes. In the next few minutes, the&#13;
Plattevillegoalie made some spectacular&#13;
saves on breakaways by Krummel aod&#13;
Westerlund. The bewildered Platteville&#13;
defense couldn't contain the fired-up&#13;
Rangers for long, however, and Liekoski&#13;
scored his second goal of the night on a&#13;
beautiful pass from Westerlund.&#13;
Westerlund picked up the puck behind his&#13;
own net, stickhandled through tbe Platteville&#13;
defense aod passed to Liekoski,&#13;
waiting all by himself in front of the&#13;
visitors' crease. The second period ended&#13;
8-1, with Roscoe adding his second.&#13;
The third period was shortened because&#13;
of the extreme cold, but the rangers were&#13;
not to be denied, with Krummel and&#13;
Liekoski each scoring their "Hat Trick&#13;
Goal". Krummel put the red light on with a&#13;
hard wrist-shot at 3:20 of the period. At&#13;
6: 30 Liekoski slapped in the rebound of a&#13;
zooming Krummel slapshot which&#13;
bounced off the cross bar.&#13;
The win brought the Rangers' record to&#13;
3-5 and hopefully signified the emergence&#13;
of a good, solid bockey team at Parkside.&#13;
The final organizational meeting was&#13;
beld on Tuesday, January 12. The Constitution&#13;
was read and accepted by the&#13;
membership. The annual election of officers&#13;
was held, their terms running until&#13;
August, 1971. The new officers are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
President, Dave Dworak; Vice&#13;
President-Treasurer, George Breiwa;&#13;
Secterary, Doug Stein.&#13;
Skiers Complete&#13;
member, Sandy Souston, also is a member&#13;
of the NSPS. The instructor was Bob&#13;
Ahonen, a veteran. patrolman from&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
In the course, the patrolmen candidates&#13;
take rigid training in first aid, toboggan&#13;
handling and skiing proficiency. These&#13;
people will be available to go on Parkside&#13;
ski trips and give assistance.&#13;
The Parkside Ski Club is proud to anIlOlUlcethat&#13;
eight of its members recently&#13;
completeda course and passed a test&#13;
makingthem members of the Nalional Ski&#13;
Patrol System. These people are Jerry&#13;
Ruffalo,Mike Pobar, Patti Heller, Gary&#13;
Schildt,Ken Reed, James DeBerge, Dick&#13;
Smolienand Neil Haglov. Another club&#13;
Course&#13;
COMING FEB. 25t h&#13;
8:00 P.M- .GREENQUIST&#13;
LARRY COSTELLO&#13;
HEAD COACH MILW. BUCKS&#13;
A&#13;
~uMOND ORGAN Btu,. .&#13;
f E"cellence&#13;
'Tradition 0&#13;
KING of ORGANS&#13;
The club numbers 20 members now, but&#13;
they would like to see a membership of 100&#13;
in the near future. Faculty as well as&#13;
students are welcome to join. They hope '0&#13;
offer a full program of shooting sports. so&#13;
come on down. Range facilities as well as a&#13;
trap shoot will be announced In the vel")'&#13;
near future.&#13;
For membership contact: Dave&#13;
Dworak, 652-3145, or Russ Coley, Office of&#13;
Athletics&#13;
DANCE&#13;
Spon so red by&#13;
z. B. T.&#13;
Student Activities Bldg.&#13;
(UNION)&#13;
9-1 a.•.&#13;
Saturday, February 13&#13;
Hello, we would&#13;
love to have you&#13;
come in and see&#13;
our Wonderful&#13;
Selection of New&#13;
Fashions for Spring.&#13;
Something for your&#13;
SWEETHEART for&#13;
Valentine's Day.We&#13;
have Jewelry,&#13;
lingerie, and&#13;
Formal Wear.&#13;
6207 22nd A.enue&#13;
Kenosho, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone 652-2681&#13;
If ~\ BUCKS GAME SPECIAL&#13;
~vJ~ MONDAY MARCH jst&#13;
\j\i MILWAUKEE'S BATTLING PHILADELP~IA&#13;
&lt;~..:IJ&gt;'BUCKS VS 76'ers&#13;
iiil..... ~ GAME TICKET AND ROUND TRIP TRANSPORTATION&#13;
ONLY $4.00&#13;
(LIMITED NUMBER AVAILABLE)&#13;
ON SALE NOW: STUDENT ACTIVITIE5 OFFICE - TALLENT HALL&#13;
J I .~'&#13;
5 yice" Trade-in Value&#13;
See Jim Menick "Mr. Hammond" For Guaranteed er&#13;
Out of Town-Call Collect&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
142~~~~lg~n III ~~~6~~;;~ThPm" "If Beller Or~(Jnsare Built, Hammond w' .&#13;
ruesdav, February 9, 1971&#13;
NEWSCOPE PAGC 7&#13;
BEAR&#13;
FACTS&#13;
Hockey Team Smothers&#13;
Platteville 10-1&#13;
Braving sub-zero weather, the P~rkside er hoekey club exploded for ten goals&#13;
rty night in beating WSU-Platteville&#13;
;; at the Kenosha lakefront stadium. The&#13;
kangers were thirsting for a ~ctory after&#13;
consecutive losses to Lewis College of&#13;
J&#13;
twl~et ru. Tom Krummel and Kari&#13;
O 1 ' th l . . Liekoski scored ree goa s apiece m rung the coveted hat trick, while Bill&#13;
;~terlund and Rich Roscoe sc~red two&#13;
als each to round out the scormg.&#13;
~Platteville opened the scoring at 3:50 of&#13;
the first period but were never able to&#13;
netrate the ranger ~efense . from that&#13;
pe int on. Parkside gamed their momen- :rn with Bill Westerlund's tying score at&#13;
S:20. Tom Krummel _scor~ at 9:20 of the&#13;
first period and Liekoski rounded the&#13;
scoring of the period with a scorching slapshot&#13;
from the blueline.&#13;
Parkside came out for the second period&#13;
with all guns blazing, with Krummel,&#13;
RosCOO and Westerlund scoring ~ the first&#13;
two minutes. In the next few mmutes, the&#13;
Platteville 1?:oalie made some spectacular&#13;
saves on breakaways by Krummel and&#13;
Westerlund. The bewildered Platteville&#13;
defense couldn't contain the fired-up&#13;
Rangers for long, however, and Liekoski&#13;
scored his second goal of the night on a beautiful pass from Westerlund. Westerlund picked up the puck behind his&#13;
own net, stickhandled through the Platteville&#13;
defense and passed to Liekoski, waiting all by himself in front of the&#13;
visitors' crease. The second period ended&#13;
8-1, with Roscoe adding his second.&#13;
The third period was shortened because&#13;
of the extreme cold, but the rangers were&#13;
not to be denied, with Krummel and&#13;
Liekoski each scoring their "Hat Trick&#13;
Goal". Krummel put the red light on with a&#13;
hard wrist-shot at 3:20 of the period. At&#13;
6: 30 Liekoski slapped in the rebound of a&#13;
zooming Krummel slapshot which&#13;
bounced off the cross bar.&#13;
The win brought the Rangers' record to&#13;
3-5 and hopefully signified the emergence of a good, solid hockey team at Parkside.&#13;
Skiers Complete Course&#13;
The Parkside Ski Club is proud to announce&#13;
that eight of its members recently&#13;
completed a course and passed a test making them members of the National Ski&#13;
Patrol System. These people are J erry&#13;
Ruffalo, Mike Pobar, Patti Heller, Gary&#13;
Schildt, Ken Reed, J ames DeBerge, Dick&#13;
Smollen and Neil Haglov. Another club&#13;
member, Sandy Souston, also is a member&#13;
of the NSPS. The instructor was Bob&#13;
Ahonen, a veteran patrolman from&#13;
Milwaukee. Iri the course, the patrolmen candidates&#13;
take rigid training in first aid, toboggai,&#13;
handling and skiing proficiency. These&#13;
people will be available to go on Parkside&#13;
ski trips and give assistance.&#13;
f; ~\ BUCKS GAME SPECIA L ~~Jb MONDAY MARCH 1st&#13;
-~ "~~:LB"UCitSLING vs 7"6~·:;·;&#13;
GAME TICKET ANO ROUND TRIP TRANSPORTATION&#13;
ONLY $ 4.0 0&#13;
(LIMITED NUMBER AVAILABLE)&#13;
ON SALE NOW: STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE - TALLENT HALL&#13;
COMING FEB. 25th&#13;
8:00 P.M. .GREEN QUIST&#13;
LARRY COSTELLO&#13;
HEAD COACH MILW. BUCKS&#13;
I ~·&#13;
d Service &amp; Trade-in Value&#13;
See Jim Merrick "Mr. Hammond" for Guarantee&#13;
Out of Town- Call Collect&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
Gun Club Organized&#13;
The final organizational meeting was held on Tuesday, January 12. The Constitution&#13;
was read and accepted by the&#13;
membership. The annual election of officers&#13;
was held, their terms running until&#13;
August, 1971. The new officers are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
President, Dave Dworak; Vice&#13;
President-Treasurer, George Breiwa ;&#13;
Secterary, Doug Stein.&#13;
The club numbers 1.0 membe now, but&#13;
they would like to see a membership ol l&#13;
in the near future. Faculty a " 11 a students are welcome to join. Th · hope to&#13;
offer a full program oC hooting por ,&#13;
come on down. Range facilities a ell a a trap hoot ill be announced m the \'er •&#13;
near future. For membership contact: Dave&#13;
Dworak, 652-8145, or R Coley, mce of&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Drinks 25c For The l~dies&#13;
(bcluding Top Slu,lf)&#13;
LIVE MUSIC&#13;
DANCE&#13;
Sponsored by&#13;
Z. B. T.&#13;
Student Activitie:, Bldg.&#13;
(UNION)&#13;
9-1 a.1'1.&#13;
</text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 3, Issue 2, February 9, 1971</text>
              </elementText>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="61719">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="61720">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
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              <text>Harris and McKinney Resign</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>Harris and McKinney Resigrr;:o'&#13;
Morrow .1.0. Replace Harris By MARC EISEN&#13;
ViCe-Chancellor for Academic A~fairs&#13;
John Harris and Dean Arthur MacKmney&#13;
of the College of Science and Society, the&#13;
two apparent instigators of December's&#13;
bortive faculty purge, have resigned&#13;
~eirpositions, the Board of Regents&#13;
announced last Friday. To replace them&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie told the Regents he has&#13;
appointed William Morrow, Prof. of&#13;
Psychology at Parkside, as the acting&#13;
Dean \0 replace MacKinney, and that the&#13;
Vice-Chancelorship will not be filled on an&#13;
acting basis, but that temporary staff&#13;
adjustments may be made to handle the&#13;
situation until a successor can be named.&#13;
The immediate resignations of the two&#13;
was one of a number of demands made of&#13;
Chancellor Irvin Wyllie hy both the&#13;
University Committee and the Parkside&#13;
Faculty Association. The C~ancellor has&#13;
indicated his willingness to follow the&#13;
faculty's wishes.&#13;
John Harbeson, a member of the&#13;
University Committee and one of the 'Xl on&#13;
the administration's ax list, said of the&#13;
Chancellor's reaction, "I would "describe&#13;
the Chancellor's attitude as being very&#13;
receptive to the recommendation that the&#13;
two resign."&#13;
Because Harris and MacK.ioney are&#13;
tenured members of the faculty they will&#13;
assume pew duties as Director of&#13;
Resource Development and Institutional&#13;
Reporting, and as Director of Institutional&#13;
Studies respectively. Both men were&#13;
unavailable for comment.&#13;
They began their duties as ViceChancellor&#13;
and Dean only this past fall,&#13;
but within a few months of this became the&#13;
centers of controversy. The Dean with the&#13;
giving of a speech that called for Parkside&#13;
attaining "instant greatness", and the&#13;
Vice-Chancellor with this issuing of&#13;
criteria for faculty evaluation.&#13;
In retrospect it is seen that the Dean's&#13;
speech was a portent of the coming purge,&#13;
and the Vice-Chancellor's criteria the&#13;
.basls on which it was attempted. What is&#13;
unclear is the role Chancellor Wyllie had in&#13;
the faculty review process.&#13;
Harbeson, who was as closely involved&#13;
in the crisis as any faculty member was,&#13;
said, "In all honesty I think the Chancellor&#13;
in this whole process was enigmatic at the&#13;
hest. And I'm not. to this day really sure&#13;
just what his role was in all this.&#13;
"t do know he approved some of the&#13;
criteria that were employed. I do know he&#13;
approved the Dean's review process. I&#13;
don't know if he approved in advance all&#13;
the terminations that were made. Really,&#13;
overall, 1just don't know if he really knew&#13;
what they were doing, and if their actions&#13;
were the result of his instructions," he&#13;
said.&#13;
The change in the status of the two is&#13;
seen as an indication of the Chancellor's&#13;
desire to follow the faculty's lead in rectifying&#13;
the controversy over faculty&#13;
personnel reviews, and as part of the&#13;
implementation of the Chancellor's ten&#13;
point policy statement.&#13;
Leon Applebaum, the Chairman of the&#13;
Social Science Division, revealed in an&#13;
impromptu speech at the school rally in&#13;
December, that the ten points themselves&#13;
originated from the University Committee,&#13;
and were accepted by the Chancellor.&#13;
Another indication of the Chancellor's&#13;
willingness to listen to the faculty comes&#13;
from the Parkside Faculty Association&#13;
which told the ewscope it made four&#13;
Volume 3 - Number 1&#13;
[anuary 12, 1971&#13;
Tallent to Replace Krivan&#13;
realized in the establishment of Parkside.&#13;
She received her bachelor's degree at&#13;
the Madison campus. where she was&#13;
elected to Phi Beta Kappa, and taught&#13;
English in the UW Center System both 10&#13;
Wausau and Kenosha.&#13;
After her husband's death, she continued&#13;
her studies, receiving a master's d~ree ~n&#13;
guidance and counseling from Cahforrua&#13;
State College of Los Angeles. prior to&#13;
assuming her initial post at Parkside ".&#13;
Active in a wide range of community&#13;
activities in southeastern Wisconsin, Mrs.&#13;
Tallent was named Kenosha's Woman of&#13;
the Year in 1969.&#13;
ceeded enrollment projections. .&#13;
Mrs. Tallent also has been in~olved. rn&#13;
other key campus activities, including&#13;
service as Parkside's repres~ntative on&#13;
the all·University human r-ights co~·&#13;
mittee and principal campus agent 10&#13;
reporting aspects of ~rogram~ relate~ to&#13;
that committee to vaTlOUSpublic agencies.&#13;
In her new post, Mrs. Tallent will sen:e&#13;
as a representative of the ~hancellor s&#13;
office in special commumty.rel3:ted&#13;
projects and activities and at vaTlOUS&#13;
meetings both on and off campus. She also&#13;
'11 handle a variety of IO-offlce adM&#13;
k'd' ministrative tasks and ac~ as Par S? e s&#13;
liaison with various public and private&#13;
groups. .&#13;
Mrs. Tallent has long-standmg personal&#13;
d professional ties to southeastern&#13;
~isconsin. She came to Kenosha with her&#13;
late husband, Bernard, when he became&#13;
Director of the University.'s ~(&gt;.year&#13;
program in 1948,and shared 10 hl~ efforts&#13;
to obtain the [our-year campus which were&#13;
The appointment of Rita Tallent as&#13;
special assistant to the chancellor and&#13;
coordinator of community services at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside was&#13;
approved Friday by the University Board&#13;
of Regents. The appointment is effectIVe&#13;
Feb. 1.&#13;
Mrs. Tallent replaces David C. Kr~van,&#13;
who had indicated to Chancellor Irvm G.&#13;
Wyllie several.months ago that he planned&#13;
to resign to enter private business .. The&#13;
Regents accepted his resignation Fnday.&#13;
Mrs. Tallent has been director of school&#13;
and campus relations at Parkside since&#13;
September, 1968, and wiu c~ntinue to&#13;
provide direction for that office 10 her new&#13;
post.&#13;
In proposing the appointment, Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie cited the energetic and effective&#13;
manner in which Mrs. Tallent has&#13;
rela ted the Parkside academic program to&#13;
high school and college coun~el?rs,&#13;
teachers and students. Since its begmmngs&#13;
in 1968, Parkside has consistently exNewscope&#13;
Wants Help&#13;
demands of the Chancellor, all of which&#13;
have apparently been mel.&#13;
The demands were'&#13;
1 Because confidence rn the administration&#13;
has eroded. the Dean and&#13;
Vice-Chancellor must immtdialel) resign&#13;
2, Because the University IS in a crucial&#13;
growth period, the Dean and ViceChanceUor&#13;
must be replaced 10 mterrm by&#13;
senior memhers of the faculty sugge ted&#13;
by the Uruversity Committee.&#13;
3. aecruument must be 10 the hancb or&#13;
the divisions with the adrmm trauon&#13;
having review power.&#13;
4. The Dean's Ad Hoc Advisory Com·&#13;
mittee must be abolished.&#13;
Reportedly the seven facully membe&#13;
recommended by the University Cornmittee&#13;
to replace Harris and 1acKIOn )' In&#13;
the interim were James bea, Leon A~&#13;
plebaum, Albert May, Wilham Morrow.&#13;
John Buenker, Herhert Kubly and Eugene&#13;
Gasciorkiewicz..&#13;
The Chancellor told the RegenlS too thaI&#13;
he would soon appoint a screening com.&#13;
mittee to seek a new Dean and ViceChancellor.&#13;
William Morrow&#13;
John S, Harris&#13;
INSIDE ...&#13;
Faculty Interviews&#13;
Book Reviews&#13;
Record Reviews&#13;
Movie Reviews&#13;
Harr:is. and McKinney Resign~/&#13;
Morrow to Replace Harris&#13;
By MARC EISEN&#13;
Vice-Chancellor for Academic A~fairs&#13;
John Harris and Dean Arthur MacKmney&#13;
f the College of Science and Society, the&#13;
~o apparent instigators of Decem_ber's&#13;
abortive faculty purge, have resigned&#13;
their positions, the Board of Regents&#13;
nnounced last Friday. To replace them&#13;
~hancellor Wyllie told the Reg~nts he has&#13;
appointed William Morrow. Prof. of&#13;
Psychology at Parkside, as the acting&#13;
oean to replace MacKinney, and that the&#13;
Vice-Chancelorship will not be filled on an&#13;
acting basis, but that temporary staff&#13;
adjustments may be made to handle the&#13;
situation until a successor can be named.&#13;
The immediate resignations of the two&#13;
was one of a number of demands made of&#13;
Chancellor Irvin Wyllie by both the&#13;
University Committee and the Parkside&#13;
Faculty Association. The Chancellor has&#13;
indicated his willingness to follow the&#13;
faculty's wishes. John Harbeson, a member of the&#13;
University Committee and one of the Zl on&#13;
the administration's ax list, said of the&#13;
Chancellor's reaction, "I would describe&#13;
the Chancellor's attitude as being very&#13;
receptive to the recommendation that the&#13;
two resign."&#13;
Because Harris and MacKinney are tenured members of the faculty they will&#13;
assume pew duties as Director of&#13;
Resource Development and Institutional&#13;
Reporting, and as Director of Institutional&#13;
Studies respectively. Both men were unavailable for comment.&#13;
They began their duties as Vice- ·&#13;
Chancellor and Dean only this past fall,&#13;
but within a few months of this became the&#13;
centers of controversy. The Dean with the&#13;
giving of a speech that called for Parkside&#13;
attaining "instant greatness", and the&#13;
Vice-Chancellor with this issuing of&#13;
criteria for faculty evaluation.&#13;
In retrospect it is seen that the Dean's&#13;
speech was a portent of the coming purge,&#13;
and the Vice-Chancellor's criteria the&#13;
basis on which it was attempted. What is&#13;
unclear is the role Chancellor Wyllie had in&#13;
the faculty review process.&#13;
Harbeson, who was as closely involved&#13;
in the crisis as any faculty member was,&#13;
said, "In all honesty I think the Chancellor&#13;
in this whole process was enigmatic at the&#13;
best. And I'm not to this day really sure&#13;
just what hi role wa in all thi . "I do know he approved ome of the&#13;
criteria that were employed. I do knov.· he&#13;
approved the Dean's revi~ proc ·. I&#13;
don't know if he approved in advance all&#13;
the termination that were made. Really,&#13;
overall, I just don't kn if he really knew&#13;
what they v.-ere doing, and if their actions&#13;
were the result o( his instructions " h&#13;
said. The change in the tat us of the l"- o i&#13;
seen as an indication of the Chane llor·_&#13;
desire to follow the facultv' lead in rec· tifying the controver ·y· O\'er faculty&#13;
personnel reviews. and a part of the&#13;
implementation of the Chancellor' ten&#13;
point policy statement.&#13;
Leon Applebaum, the Chairman of th&#13;
Social Science Divi ion, re\'ealed in an&#13;
impromptu speech at the school ran: in&#13;
December, that the ten points them eh· originated from the niversity Committee,&#13;
and were accepted by the Chan·&#13;
cellor.&#13;
Another indication of the Chancellor'&#13;
willingness to listen to the faculty comes&#13;
from the Parkside Faculty Association&#13;
which told the ·~·scope it made four&#13;
Tanuary 12, 1971&#13;
Tallent to · ·Replace Krivan&#13;
The appointment of Rita Tallent as special assistant to the chancellor and&#13;
coordinator of community services at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside was approved Friday by the University Bo~rd&#13;
of Regents. The appointment is effective&#13;
Feb. 1.&#13;
Mrs. Tallent replaces David C. Kr!van,&#13;
who had indicated to Chancellor Irvm G.&#13;
Wyllie several.months ago that he planned&#13;
to resign to enter private business .. The&#13;
Regents accepted his resignation Friday·&#13;
Mrs. Tallent has been director of school&#13;
and campus relations at Parkside since&#13;
September 1968 and will continue to&#13;
provide dir,ection1&#13;
for that office in her new&#13;
post.&#13;
In proposing the appointme:"t, Chan·&#13;
cellor .Wyllie cited the energetic and effective&#13;
manner in which Mrs. Tallent has&#13;
related the Parkside academic program to&#13;
high school and college coun~el?rs,&#13;
teachers and students. Since its begmmngs&#13;
in 1968, Parkside has consistently ex·&#13;
ceeded enrollment projections: . Mrs. Tallent also has been m~olved_ m other key campus activities, mc_ludmg&#13;
service as Parkside's repres~ntallve on the all-University human rights committee&#13;
and principal campus agent m&#13;
reporting aspects of program~ relate~ to&#13;
that committee to various public a~enc1es.&#13;
In her new post, Mrs. Tallent will ser~e as a representative of the ~hancellor s office in special commumty-related&#13;
projects and activities and at various&#13;
meetings both on and off cam~us ~he also&#13;
·11 handle a variety of m-ofhce ad- wi k .d. ministrative tasks and act as Par s1 e s liaison with various public and private&#13;
groups. . Mrs. Tallent has Jong-standmg personal&#13;
and professional ties to southt:3stern&#13;
Wisconsin. She came to Kenosha with her&#13;
late husbana, Bernard, when he became&#13;
Director of the University_'s ~o-year&#13;
program in 1948, and shared m h1~ efforts&#13;
to obtain the four-year campus which were&#13;
realized in the establLhment of Park id•&#13;
he recei\·ed her bachelor·. degree t&#13;
the • tadi on campu . wh re . h wa&#13;
elected to Phi Beta Kappa, and taug~t&#13;
English in the W Center y tein both m&#13;
Wau au and Kenosha. After her husband's death, he continuf:d&#13;
her studies, receiving a master· d~ree !n&#13;
guidance and coun.eling from Cah_forma&#13;
State College of Los Angeles p~1or to&#13;
assuming her irutial post at Park 1de . Acli'-,e in a wide range of community&#13;
activities in outhea tern Wi con in, . lr ·.&#13;
Tallent was named Kenosha' Woman of&#13;
the Year in 1969.&#13;
Newscope&#13;
W'ants Help&#13;
om·&#13;
INSIDE .&#13;
Faculty Interviews&#13;
Book Reviews&#13;
Record Reviews&#13;
Movie Reviews &#13;
RETROSPECT&#13;
F.DITOR· :\OTE John Harbeson rs an&#13;
\ssistant Prores- or in the polillcal science&#13;
department 10 his fourth year at Parkside.&#13;
He received his bachelor's degree from&#13;
Swarthmore College and his doctorate&#13;
from the Cnn ersuy of Wisconsin-Madison&#13;
He 1!'la member of thr JUnior faculty and a&#13;
member of the Lruver-sity Committee. HIS&#13;
field I African pohll and at the present&#13;
time has a book In the mitral stages or&#13;
publication&#13;
... ... ...&#13;
\\hat (acton influ n tel your choice \0&#13;
ecme i Park iM"!&#13;
I" attracted to Park ide and came for&#13;
a number of very specific reasons. 1&#13;
naturally wanted to be an errech\'e teacher&#13;
nd to be a prcducuve scholar I think both&#13;
can done and be remforclng and must&#13;
tX" I"e'IOfr lOR I con ider Parkside to be a&#13;
pot 01lall) excillng environment In which&#13;
to ("~ag 10 all form of acuvuy. I&#13;
hI) In coming to parkstde. that I would&#13;
ha\:(' a rot to pia)' 10 the building of a new&#13;
In.,lItUI,nn (h,gh&lt;'r I armng I hoped thai&#13;
orne of the thing. that ate very hard to&#13;
(;h nR In 8 I rg 10 utuucn. where there&#13;
are ve t~d mrer ts and encrusted&#13;
tradition .• could be changed much more&#13;
(' slly on a n('\o\ocampus, Here there can be&#13;
upportumtl arrordcd for real Innovation,&#13;
(' IX"rlmt'ntahon. and de,,·clopment of&#13;
IX pI '. educational Idea 10 a relallvely&#13;
Ir and opt'" environment I also was&#13;
;:Iltract d to Parkslde because: it i part of&#13;
lhl' Un"..erslt)" of WlsconslO, which stands'&#13;
for thloR-S I believe In, hke academic&#13;
Ir dl:~m nd a strong role of facuJlies in&#13;
tht' K0\"ernlOg of the IOslltuhon. And&#13;
\\ IsconslO IS a great an ttlution&#13;
\\hal ""as )OUr reaction to l~ firings'!&#13;
I krK"'AthaI the Jltlngs were coming&#13;
The)' "Io(.'r('o'tany surprise to mc. I feel&#13;
'ory· ",rry for some people who. (thought,&#13;
\\:('r caught completely flatfooted by this&#13;
"hole thlOR The nivcrsll)" Committee&#13;
oil) led as slrongly as "e poss,bly could&#13;
and :aid that things were not right. We&#13;
3. kt"das forcefully as we could to have this&#13;
\\ holt- process reconsidered, begun again&#13;
from scratch, and done right. But we&#13;
\\:('ren't hstene&lt;!to. The only thing we were&#13;
abl to achlc,,·e 10 that prOlest was the&#13;
pre~.. release between the University&#13;
CommIttee and the Chancellor that apprared&#13;
earlier 10 New5Cope.So all we ever&#13;
a 'hle\"cd was simply that we expressed&#13;
our \'lCWPOlOt,which was very strongly&#13;
felt, and we turned out to be right. The&#13;
Chancellor responded with his reading of&#13;
the Situation, which differed from ours,&#13;
and thal's how mallers stood on the eve of&#13;
lhe rtrlngs&#13;
110\0,did the firings affect )'ou per-&#13;
...ooall) '!&#13;
I was dJsillusloned because this kind of&#13;
thm&amp; could happen 10 the University of&#13;
WI consin. but I must say that I was not&#13;
d,. enchanted personally. Th&lt;'y chose to&#13;
release me, not because of my teaching,&#13;
not because of my research. but because I&#13;
\\'l~ not rele"'ent to the miSSion,Frankly, I&#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. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
was contemptous of the reasons that Dr.&#13;
Harris gave me for saying I was not&#13;
relevant to the mission. So personally I&#13;
wasn't touched bv it at all. I was bothered&#13;
in an institutional sense becatlSe I was&#13;
distressed, having given more time to ~e&#13;
institution than was really advisable an&#13;
terms of my professional advancement" to&#13;
see this kind of thing happen to the 10-&#13;
stitution with all its necessary bad effects,&#13;
The revi'ew process very badly weakened&#13;
Parkside and set back the progress that all&#13;
or us had been trying to achieve for the&#13;
past three years. So I was distressed in&#13;
that sense. I'm also concerned for the U of&#13;
W because ef the effect that our nounde'rlOg&#13;
last semester might have on the&#13;
well-being or the system as a whole. But&#13;
personally it didn't bother me at all,&#13;
because again, it apparenUy didn't reflect&#13;
on my ability or my achievements. Also, I&#13;
was in my fourth year and had an extra&#13;
year in addition to this year to look for a&#13;
job I was, to be frank, confident that I&#13;
could do a great deal of work in that period&#13;
of lime and lind a good job.&#13;
\\ hat about your future at Parkside in&#13;
light of the recent administrative&#13;
c:hanges!&#13;
That depends on two or three things. I&#13;
am not committed either to stay or to go, If&#13;
the mission continues to be defined in the&#13;
narrow, inappropriate sense as it was&#13;
defined to me when I was terminated, then&#13;
[ have no choice but to look elsewhere. But&#13;
the racuIty has taken the initiative in&#13;
appolOting a committee which will soon be&#13;
at work to review and discuss the application&#13;
of the mission and what it should&#13;
mean in terms or coW"Sesand personnel.&#13;
I'm confident that the committee will&#13;
come forth with an intelligent set of&#13;
recommendations which will enhance&#13;
rather than curtail our committment to&#13;
liberal arts education. Will these faculty&#13;
recommendations be considered? I have&#13;
no reason to believe that they won't be.&#13;
The appointing of this mission committee&#13;
and also the personnel criterion committee&#13;
might be received wen by the administration&#13;
and then again they mighl.not&#13;
be. I just don't know. I almost have to&#13;
hope, trust, work to ensure that they will&#13;
be recei\'ed and acted upon favorably.&#13;
University or Wisconsin-Madison law&#13;
students voted Prof. J. Willard Hurst 3'S&#13;
"Outstanding Professor of 1970,"&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Volume 3 - Number 1&#13;
January 12, 1971&#13;
Bill Rolbiecke&#13;
WarrenNectry&#13;
Jerry Owens&#13;
Marsha Owens&#13;
Marc Eisen&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
. Mark Barnhill&#13;
John }(oloen&#13;
Bill Sorenson&#13;
Bill Jacoby; John Potente&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Production Manager&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Artist, Movie Reviews&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Advisor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, D~n ~?umps. D. H, Post, l?on Marjala,&#13;
Mike Kurth, Jim Smith, Bob Borchardt, Walt Breach,&#13;
Narees Socha, Jerry Socha, Ken Konkol, .&#13;
Sven Tarrs, Diane Haney&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the University o! WiscollSioParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, wtsconsio, 5314~.Mailing a~dr~ss ISParkside s Newscope,&#13;
3700Washington Rd" Kenosha. Busmess and editcrial telephone number is_&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
Nuclear Technology Course&#13;
A new interdisciplinary course titled&#13;
"Social Problems in Nuclear Technology"&#13;
has been added to the timetable for second·&#13;
semester.&#13;
The course will be taught by Bernard I.&#13;
Spinrad, a distinguished scientist ~ho&#13;
presently is senior physicist in the ApplIed&#13;
Physics Division at Argonne Natio~al&#13;
Laboratory. fmmediately before takmg&#13;
the post last August, he was director of the&#13;
Division of Nuclear power and Reactors of&#13;
the International Atomic Energy Agency&#13;
in Vienna.&#13;
The course, which carries two cr~dits for&#13;
Applied Science and Technology, Physics&#13;
or Social Science, will deal with elementary&#13;
principles of nuclear reactors·, applications,&#13;
including power generation and&#13;
propulsion systems, environmental,&#13;
economic, political and ethical considerations.&#13;
Dr. Spinrad had major responsibility for&#13;
invention and design of the Savannah&#13;
River Production Reactors and of the&#13;
Argonaut Reactor, the first designed for&#13;
use as an educational system.&#13;
His professional interests are wideranging&#13;
and include fundamental&#13;
technology of urban planning, design of&#13;
space e?,plorati~n missions usingDlIdsr&#13;
propulsion, ethics of science and,&#13;
ticularly, engineering and fast ~&#13;
reactor concepts.&#13;
Dr. Spinrad received his B.S.,M S iii&#13;
Ph.D. degrees at Yale, where he a'~ old&#13;
post-doctoral research as a Sterlilc&#13;
Fellow in Chemistry,&#13;
New Traffic law&#13;
Two new traffic regulations for lilt&#13;
Umverslty of Wlsconsm-Parkside WOld&#13;
Road Campus were approved Friday iIJ&#13;
. the University Regents.&#13;
The regulations establish a ma,"-&#13;
speed limit of 15miles per hour for.....&#13;
vehicles on all roadways oncampuseltllll&#13;
in areas otherwise posted by signHI&#13;
require all vehicle traffic to cometo I&#13;
complete stop at all marked intersectia&#13;
on campus and at all intersectimsII&#13;
campus roads with ~oun~yor town.&#13;
. ways.&#13;
NEWSCOPE-Page2&#13;
Tuesday, January 19,197i&#13;
3stees&#13;
Supper Club&#13;
1040&#13;
Sheridan It&#13;
Ph. 65401375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
-with Almond.ine Sau.c.&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIME IlIB&#13;
RETROSPECT&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KE1&#13;
NOSHA&#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;
" -. cont mptou of the reasons that Dr.&#13;
Harri gave me for sa)ing I was not&#13;
r levant to the mi ·,ion. o per onaJly I&#13;
" n't touched by it at all. I was bothered&#13;
in an in titutional sen ·e because I was&#13;
di tres ed, ha\•ing gi\'en more ti~e to ~e&#13;
institution than was really advisable m term of my prof es ·ional ad\•ancement,. to&#13;
thi · kind of thing happen to the m-&#13;
·utution, with all its necessary bad effects.&#13;
The r vie · proce \'ery badly weakened&#13;
P r · ide and set back the progress that all&#13;
of u had been trymg to achieve for ~e&#13;
pa t three years. So I was distressed m&#13;
that. nse. I'm al o concerned for the U of&#13;
W becau of the effect that our floun-&#13;
'ring la ·t em~ter might have on the&#13;
11-being of the y tern as a whole. But&#13;
per. Uy it didn't bother ~e. at all,&#13;
caus again, it apparently d1dn t reflect&#13;
on my abilit\" or my achievements. Also, I&#13;
· m mv fourth year and had an extra&#13;
, 0 ar in addition to this year to look for a&#13;
job. I w , to be frank. confident that I&#13;
could do a great deal of work in that period&#13;
of tim and find a good job. \\ h l a ut ) ur future al Parkside in&#13;
ti ht or th recent admini trative&#13;
han '!&#13;
That d pends on two or three things. I&#13;
m not committed ither to stay or to go. If&#13;
th mi· i n continue · to be defined in the&#13;
narrow, inappropriate ense as it was&#13;
defined to me wh n I wa terminated, then&#13;
l have no choic but to loo el ewhere. But&#13;
th f ultv ha taken the initiative in&#13;
ppointing· a committee which will oon be&#13;
at \\Or to review and discuss the application&#13;
of the mi ion and what it should&#13;
mean in term of coun;e - and personnel.&#13;
1 m confid nt that the committee will&#13;
come forth with an intelligent et of&#13;
r mm ndatioru which will enhance&#13;
rather than curtail our committment to&#13;
liberal ar education. Will these faculty&#13;
re(."Ommendations be con idered? I have&#13;
no rea on to believe that thev won't be.&#13;
The appointing of this missio; committee&#13;
and aL o the personnel criterion committee&#13;
might be recei\'ed well by the admini&#13;
tration and then again they might.not&#13;
be. I just don't know. I almost ha\'e to&#13;
ho , tru ·t. wor - to en ·ure that they will&#13;
be received and acted upon favorably.&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
''Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
volume 3 - Number 1&#13;
January 12, 1971&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
Managing Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Production Manager&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Feature Editor_ . Artist, Movie Reviews&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Bill Rolbiecke&#13;
Warren Nedry&#13;
Jerry Owens&#13;
Marsha Owens&#13;
Marc Eisen&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
John Koloen&#13;
Bill Sorenson&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Potente&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Jim Koloen, Dean L?umos, D. H. Post, Don Marj ala,&#13;
Mike Kurth, Jim Smith, Bob Borchardt, WaltBreach,&#13;
Narees Socha, Jerry ~cha, Ken Konkol, ·&#13;
Sven Taffs, Diane Haney&#13;
Published weekly by the studen~ of the U~iversity_ o! Wisconsin.&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin, 5314?- Ma1hng a~dr:5s 1s Parkside s Newscope,&#13;
3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha. Business and editorial telephone number is 653-&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
Nuclear Technology Course&#13;
A new interdisciplinary course titled&#13;
"Social Problems in Nuclear Technology"&#13;
has been added to the timetable for second ·&#13;
semester.&#13;
The course will be taught by Bernard I.&#13;
Spinrad, a distinguished scientist ~ho&#13;
presently is senior physicist in the Applied&#13;
Physics Division at Argonne Nallo?al&#13;
Laboratory. Immediately before takmg&#13;
the post last August, he was director of the&#13;
Division of Nuclear Power and Reactors of&#13;
the International Atomic Energy Agency&#13;
in Vienna . The course, which carries two cre_dits for&#13;
Applied Science and Technology, Physics&#13;
or Social Science, will deal with elementary&#13;
principles of nuclear reactors, applications,&#13;
including power generation and&#13;
propulsion systems, environmental,&#13;
economic, political and ethical considerations.&#13;
&#13;
Dr. Spinrad had major responsibility for&#13;
invention and design of the Savannah&#13;
River Production Reactors and of the&#13;
Argonaut Reactor, the first designed for&#13;
use as an educational system.&#13;
His professional interests are wideranging&#13;
and include fundamental&#13;
technology of urban planning, design of&#13;
space e_xplorati~n missions using nud&#13;
propulsion, ethics of science and&#13;
ticularly, engineering and fast tx'.e&#13;
reactor concepts.&#13;
Dr. Spinrad received his B.S., M.S 1&#13;
Ph.D. degrees at Yale, where he al 0&#13;
post-doctoral research as a Sterl&#13;
Fellow in Chemistry.&#13;
New Traffic Law&#13;
Two new traffic regulations for&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside w&#13;
Road Campus were approved Friday&#13;
the University Regents.&#13;
The regulations establish a ma&#13;
speed limit of 15 miles per hour for miter&#13;
vehicles on all roadways on campus exc&#13;
in areas otherwise posted by sign a&#13;
require all vehicle traffic to come to 1&#13;
complete stop at all marked intersecll&#13;
on campus and at all intersections ci&#13;
campus roads with county or town&#13;
ways.&#13;
NEWSCOPE- Page 2&#13;
Tuesday, January 19, 197i&#13;
asters 1040&#13;
Sheridan ld.&#13;
Supper Club Ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
with Almondine Sau_ce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIME lllB &#13;
January Commencement Set&#13;
University President John C. Weaver. The&#13;
Rev. Roy D. Phillips 0/ the Unitarian&#13;
Universalist church will con&lt;kJct the invocation&#13;
and benediction lor the no cap&#13;
and gown informal ceremony.&#13;
Following the ceremony will he a&#13;
reception in the South concourse. 48&#13;
candidates are scheduled for graduation&#13;
Faculty and administrative staff ar~&#13;
cordially invited to attend.&#13;
Universityof Wisconsin President John&#13;
C.weaver will be the principal speaker at&#13;
mid-year commencement. exercises at&#13;
uw_parkside.&#13;
Fifty candidates lor graduation are to&#13;
receive degrees at the 8 p.m. ceremony&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 31, in the Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
~~~_eve~t will be Weaver's first visit to&#13;
the Parkaide Campus since assuming the&#13;
pres~dency of the University Jan. 1. As&#13;
presIdent-elect, he made a brief stop at&#13;
Parkslde as part of a two-day tour 01 the&#13;
lour degree-granting UW campuses plus&#13;
the two-year campus at West Bend.&#13;
The commencement will be the second&#13;
for the new UW campus. Parkside&#13;
graduated its first 35 students last June&#13;
Parkside's mid-year commencement&#13;
will be infor~~ - without caps and gowns&#13;
and the traditional academic procession.&#13;
The event will be open to the public.&#13;
Twenty-six of the candidates are from&#13;
Kenosha, ~ from Racine, and one each&#13;
from Burlington and Salem.&#13;
Candidates for the bachelor of arts&#13;
degree are:&#13;
Diane M. Balestrieri, 3334 Ruby Ave.,&#13;
Racine; Willie E. Box, 1033 Pearl Sl&#13;
Racine; Linda C. Campeau, 1501 Illinoi~&#13;
St.,.' Racine; Suzanne R. Chernik, 142'h&#13;
Grand Ave., Racine; Jonathan P.&#13;
Christiansen, 1437 Florence Ave., Racine;&#13;
Kathleen Cippola, 7011 26th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; Jerome K, Dombrask 4711&#13;
Sheridan Road, Kenosha; Jeanne Driver,&#13;
1315 Wisconsin Ave., Racine; Ellen M.&#13;
Eklund, 6108Seventh Ave., Kenosha; Fern&#13;
D. Haley, 302 Wind Point School Road,&#13;
Racine; Lester J. Halkowitz, 440 Blue&#13;
River Ave., Raclne. Dcnald L. Harris, 4046&#13;
31st Ave., Kenosha; Beverly Coleman&#13;
Heys, 3535 N. Newman Road, Racine;&#13;
Lillie M. ~ackson, 1318 Grand Ave.,&#13;
Racine; Marjorie Ann Jorgensen, 3532&#13;
Republic Ave., Racine; Ralph N. Kassel,&#13;
7846 33rd Ave., Kenosha; Dolores Kovera,&#13;
3910 Fourt St., Kenosba; Kathleen R.&#13;
Ladousa, 4914 36th Ave., Kenosba; Terry&#13;
LaDousa, 5412 41st Ave., Kenosha; Mary&#13;
S. Langendorf, 5027 24th Ave., Kenosba;&#13;
John H.lPwman, 491121stAve., Kenosba;&#13;
Terry F. Ludeman, 2015 S. Green Bay&#13;
Road, Racine; Susan Might, 815 49th st.,&#13;
Kenosha; Julia Ann Olson, 347 56th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; Alfred Preiss, 6535 Fifth Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; June Reilly, 7550 26th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha; Veronica Rose Roscioli, 5412&#13;
23rd Ave., Kenosha; Joseph Rudolph, 134&#13;
Sheffield Dr., Ra&lt;!ine; Patricia Salituro,&#13;
272225th Ave., Kenosha; Kathryn Skow, 39&#13;
S. Summerset Dr., Racine; Irene Smith,&#13;
7109 23rd Ave., Kenosha; Conrad&#13;
Targonski, St. Francis Friary, Burlington;&#13;
Rosemarie Thompson, 961 Green Bay&#13;
Road, Kenosba; Elizabeth N. Weber, 2307&#13;
Four Mile Road, Racine; and Betty J.&#13;
Yankee, Salem.&#13;
Candidates for the bachelor of science&#13;
degree are:&#13;
Frederick J. Bruch, 2022 57th st.,&#13;
Kenosha; Richard K. Bruno, 4026 60th&#13;
Place, Kenosha; Kenneth Cullen, .6411&#13;
Greenridge Drive, Racine; Keren Meister&#13;
Davis, 4045 18th St., Kenosha; Susan K.&#13;
Griffiths, 1602 43rd St., Kenosha; Brent&#13;
Harrison, 725 Perry Ave., RaclOej&#13;
Lawrence Hartman, 1719 Johnson Ave.,&#13;
Racinej Barbara Jean Kral, 21 S. Green&#13;
Bay Road, Racine; Robert Moebrke, 2004&#13;
45thSt., Kenosha; LouisC. Noto, 210753rd&#13;
St Kenosba' Donald G. Peterson, 41)14&#13;
560, St., Ke~osha; Susan C. Piehl, 7602&#13;
32nd Ave., Kenosha; Stephen W.&#13;
Schneider, 4207Olive St.;Raclne;Bruno A.&#13;
Schrader, 2515 Erie St., Racme; and&#13;
Donald P. Smith, 1916 Deane Blvd.,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Mid-year graduation will take place&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 31, 1971, at 8 p.m. m&#13;
Greenquist Hall Concourse. The mam&#13;
speaker for tbe graduation will be&#13;
NEWSCOPE-Page3&#13;
Tuesday, January 19,1971&#13;
ByGEORGE METESKY&#13;
The question of Luddite's survival and&#13;
ultiJOateform is now. one of critical imparlance.A&#13;
Luddite victory, a victory of&#13;
pleasure over pain, of -truth over&#13;
falsehood, is now at hand, if we dare to&#13;
struggle,dare to win. Luddite is not an&#13;
enemyof the people.&#13;
'!'hI$! forces of counter-insurgency who&#13;
threaten, "It can't. happen here," are&#13;
simply mistaken. Since its inception,&#13;
.Luddite has been 'growing in size and&#13;
strength, and this is before we began&#13;
slwOtingektachrome.&#13;
In this first Luddite column (part seven&#13;
ri a series of (iveY.it is important to set&#13;
l&lt;Irthsome of the precepts tha t were apperentin&#13;
the Luddite confrontation of the&#13;
IiIteenth 01 December of last year.&#13;
Inasmuch as Luddite is primarily nonverbal,any&#13;
verbal description or analysis&#13;
riLuddite, i.e, the Luddite organization, or&#13;
any Luddite will seem at best crude and&#13;
jRlentiollS. It Is for this reason that&#13;
Luddite is only accessible to those who&#13;
havebeen Luddites for some time. Even&#13;
the conceptof being a member of Luddite&#13;
is misleading. Luddite does not exist in&#13;
limeand space. Thus, a Luddite "member"&#13;
has no private but rather only a tribal&#13;
MSentity. There are no solutions to be had&#13;
wilh larger swastikas.&#13;
This column is also an opportunity to&#13;
"""tion the ultimate utility of Luddite.&#13;
LuOIite is not in lavor of providing utility.&#13;
LuOIite will not usurp the power of those&#13;
who wish to engage in such monopolistic&#13;
ICtivities. Luddite is not a common&#13;
carrier.&#13;
When the metaphor of territoriality is in&#13;
vogue, we would be wise to ask for the&#13;
boundariesof Luddite. Like the universe,&#13;
Luddite, while finite, is not definable.&#13;
Some 01 the chief problems in transmitling&#13;
information about Luddite are&#13;
problems with the media themselves.&#13;
Communicationsmedia, assumed to be&#13;
passivepurveyors of information, when&#13;
their large scale effects are analyzed, are&#13;
Ioond to bave a greater effect than their&#13;
","tent. In presenting Luddite concepts,&#13;
the printed page is inadequate, hopelessly&#13;
weriorto the electronic media. It is hoped&#13;
lhat what can be accomplished by a .&#13;
columnof Luddites is equal to that ac-&#13;
_plished by a battalion of regular&#13;
soldiers.McLuhan notes that we seldom&#13;
communicate we often share en·&#13;
vironments. ' .&#13;
It is unfortunate that our educational&#13;
ioItitutions train us only in critical&#13;
evaluation of the obsolescent media. The&#13;
~nt media work us over without our =ous awareness. This works to make&#13;
.... te take on mythic as well as ob-&#13;
"",live Jl'oporlions.&#13;
You wonder how these things begin.&#13;
~ Which seemingly springs quickly&#13;
"WI the background noise often IS =:::in the subconscious yearnings and&#13;
of years past. We have begin to&#13;
l1IlnIeture the primordial feelings from&#13;
~ 2,000years of literacy divorced ua.&#13;
lime is a lime for crossing barriers, :...a~old categories, for probing&#13;
~ ~ be expected tbat any column of&#13;
Ie ISto be a probe as well as an ar- :=-~llInmentary. a mime of events in&#13;
N- k- , ,e,e s&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
ACROS5 FROM THE cAYTON HOTEL&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
$75 Sportcoats $45&#13;
$100 Fur Coats&#13;
(Men's) $57.50&#13;
$35 ladies Jump&#13;
Suits $14.95&#13;
Always Wholesale Prices at&#13;
•&#13;
MEN'S &amp; YOUNG&#13;
MEN'S SHOP&#13;
5720 6th Ave.&#13;
K-enosha&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NORTH l SOUTH SHEI'IDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHA -&#13;
FAMOUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
THE ROCKER!&#13;
- - -&#13;
....&#13;
100-FM!&#13;
Ratine Kenosha Radio!&#13;
- - -&#13;
24 HOURS!&#13;
RIGHT ON!&#13;
January Commencement set NORTIH&#13;
and&#13;
university of Wisconsin President John SOUTH&#13;
C weaver will be the principal s~ker at&#13;
·(I.year commencement exercises at&#13;
1?11 'de UW-Parkst . Fifty candidates for graduation are to&#13;
By GEORGE METESKY&#13;
The question of Luddite's survival and&#13;
ultimate form is now one of critical importance.&#13;
A Luddite victory, a victory of&#13;
pleasure over pain, of truth over&#13;
falsehood, is now at hand, if we dare to&#13;
struggle, dare to win. Luddite is not an&#13;
enemY of the people.&#13;
Th~e forces of counter-insurgency who&#13;
threaten, "It can't happen here," are&#13;
simply mistaken. Since its inception,&#13;
.LUddite has been growing in size and&#13;
strength, and this is before we began&#13;
shooting ektachrome.&#13;
In this first Luddite column (part seven&#13;
&lt;i a series of five) it is important to set&#13;
forth some of the precepts that were apparent&#13;
in the Luddite confrontation of the&#13;
fifteenth of December of last year.&#13;
Inasmuch as Luddite is primarily nonverbal,&#13;
any verbal description or analysis&#13;
of Luddite, i.e. the Luddite organization, or&#13;
any Luddite will seem at best crude and&#13;
iretentious. It js for this reason that&#13;
LUddite is only accessible to those who&#13;
have been Luddites for some time. Even&#13;
the concept of being a member of Luddite&#13;
is misleading. Luddite does not exist in&#13;
lime and space. Thus, a Luddite "member"&#13;
has no private but rather only a tribal&#13;
identity. There are no solutions to be had&#13;
with larger swastikas.&#13;
This column is also an opportunity to&#13;
question the ultimate utility of Luddite.&#13;
LUddite is not in favor of providing utility.&#13;
LUddite will not usurp the power of those&#13;
who wish to engage in such monopolistic&#13;
activities. Luddite is not a common&#13;
carrier.&#13;
When the metaphor of territoriality is in&#13;
vogue, we would be wise to ask for the&#13;
boundaries of Luddite. Like the universe,&#13;
Luddite, while finite, is not definable.&#13;
Some of the chief problems in tranmitting&#13;
information about Luddite are&#13;
JX'Oblems with the media themselves.&#13;
Communications media, assumed to be&#13;
passive purveyors of information, when&#13;
their large scale effects are analyzed, are&#13;
found to have a greater effect than their&#13;
content. In presenting Luddite concepts,&#13;
the printed page is inadequate, hopelessly&#13;
inferior to the electronic media. It is hoped&#13;
that what can be accomplished by a&#13;
column of Luddites is equal to that accomplished&#13;
by a battalion of regular&#13;
soldiers. McLuhan notes that we seldom&#13;
communicate we often share en- \irorunents. '&#13;
rt is unfortunate that our educational&#13;
Institutions train us only in critical&#13;
evaluation of the obsolescent media. The&#13;
&amp;scendent media work us over without our&#13;
COllscious awareness. This works to make&#13;
~~ite take on mythic as well as ob-&#13;
~tive proportions.&#13;
You wonder how these things begin.&#13;
r,at which seemingly springs quickly&#13;
,rorn ~e background noise often is&#13;
::ded m the subconscious yearnings a~d&#13;
ires of years past. .We have begin to&#13;
1tructure the primordial feelings from&#13;
" c~ 2,000 years of literacy divorced us.&#13;
~r lim~ is a time for crossing barrie_rs,&#13;
or erasmg old categories for probing lll'Ound. '&#13;
~~ t~ be expected that any column of&#13;
ti 1 le 15 to be a probe as well as an ar1~.&#13;
e of commentary a mime of events in&#13;
"~ mind. '&#13;
MEN'S &amp; YOUNG&#13;
MEN'S SHOP&#13;
5720 6th Ave.&#13;
K-enosha&#13;
receive degrees at the 8 p.m. ceremony&#13;
SundaY, Jan. 31, in the Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
1.:~e eve?t will be Weaver's first visit to&#13;
th~ ~arkside Campus since assuming the&#13;
pres~dency of the University Jan. 1. As&#13;
pres1d~nt-elect, he made a brief stop at&#13;
Parkside as part of a two-day tour of the&#13;
four degree-granting UW campuses plus&#13;
the two-year campus at West Bencl.&#13;
The commencement will be the second&#13;
for the new UW campus. Parkside&#13;
graduated its first 35 students last June&#13;
_Park~ide's mid-year commencement&#13;
will be mfor~~ - without caps and gowns&#13;
and the traditional academic procession.&#13;
The event ~ill be open to the public.&#13;
Twenty-six of the candidates are from&#13;
Kenosha, 22 from Racine and one each&#13;
from Burlington and Sale~.&#13;
Candidates for the bachelor of arts&#13;
degree are:&#13;
Diane M. Balestrieri, 3334 Ruby Ave.&#13;
Racine; Willie E . Box, 1033 Pearl Sl 1&#13;
Racine; Linda C. Campeau, 1501 Illino~&#13;
St., Racine; Suzanne R. Chernik, 1421,2&#13;
Grand Ave. , Racine; Jonathan P .&#13;
Christiansen, 1437 Florence Ave., Racine;&#13;
Kathleen Cippola, 7011 26th Ave.,&#13;
Kem~ha; Jerome K, Dombrask, 4711&#13;
Sheridan Road, Kenosha ; Jeanne Driver,&#13;
1315 Wisconsin Ave., Racine; Ellen M.&#13;
Eklund, 6108 Seventh Ave., Kenosha ; Fern&#13;
D. Haley, 302 Wind Point School Road,&#13;
Racine; Lester J. Halkowitz, 440 Blue&#13;
River Ave., Racine; DonaldL. Harris, 4046&#13;
31st Ave., Kenosha ; Beverly Coleman&#13;
Heys, 3535 N. Newman Road, Racine;&#13;
Lillie M. .:(ackson, 1318 Grand Ave.,&#13;
Racine; Marjorie Ann Jorgensen, 3532&#13;
Republic Ave. , Racine; Ralph N. Kassel,&#13;
7846 33rd Ave., Kenosha ; Dolores Kovera,&#13;
3910 Fourt St., Kenosha ; Kathleen R.&#13;
Ladousa, 4914 36th Ave. , Kenosha ; Terry&#13;
LaDousa, 5412 41st Ave., Kenosha ; Mary&#13;
S. Langendorf, 5027 24th Ave., Kenosha ;&#13;
John H. L&lt;&gt;wman, 49112lstAve., Kenosha ;&#13;
Terry F. Ludeman, 2015 S. Green Bay&#13;
Road, Racine; Susan Might, 815 49th Sl,&#13;
Kenosha ; Julia Ann Olson, 347 56th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha ; Alfred Preiss, 6535 Fifth Ave. ,&#13;
Kenosha ; June Reilly, 7550 26th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha ; Veronica Rose Roscioli, 5412&#13;
23rd Ave. , Kenosha ; Joseph Rudolph, 134&#13;
Sheffield Dr., Racine ; Patricia Salituro,&#13;
2722 25th Ave., Kenosha ; Kathryn Skow, 39&#13;
S. Summerset Dr., Racine; Irene Smith,&#13;
7109 23rd Ave., Kenosha ; Conrad&#13;
Targonski, St. Francis Friary, Burlington;&#13;
Rosemarie Thompson, 961 Green Bay&#13;
Road, Kenosha ; Elizabeth N. Weber, 2307&#13;
Four Mile Road, Racine; and Betty J.&#13;
Yankee, Salem. Candidates for the bachelor of science&#13;
degree are : Frederick J. Bruch, 2022 57th St.,&#13;
Kenosha ; Richard K. Bruno, 4026 60th&#13;
Place, Kenosha ; Kenneth Cullen, _6411&#13;
Greenridge Drive, Racine ; Keren Meister&#13;
Davis, 4045 18th St. , Kenosha ; Susan K.&#13;
Griffiths, 1602 43rd St., Kenosha ; B~ent&#13;
Harrison, 725 Perry Ave., Racme ;&#13;
Lawrence Hartman, 1719 Johnson Ave.,&#13;
Racine; Barbara Jean Kral, 21 S. Green&#13;
Bay Road, Racine; Robert Moehrke, 2004&#13;
45thSt. , Kenosha ; LouisC. Noto, 2107 53rd&#13;
St Kenosha · Donald G. Peterson, 4014&#13;
S6tb St. , Ke~osha ; Susan C. Piehl, 7602&#13;
32nd Ave., Kenosha ; ~tephen W.&#13;
Schneider, 4207 Olive St. , Racme ;_Bruno A.&#13;
Schrader, 2515 Erie St., Racme; and&#13;
Donald P. Smith, 1916 Deane Blvd. ,&#13;
Racine.&#13;
Mid-year graduation will take pla~e&#13;
Sunday, Jan. 31, 1971, at 8 p.m. ~n&#13;
Greenquist Hall Concours~. The. mam&#13;
speaker for the graduation will be&#13;
$75 Sportcoats $45&#13;
$100 Fur Coats&#13;
(Men's) $57.50&#13;
$35 Ladies Jump&#13;
Suits $14. 95&#13;
Always Wholesale Prices at&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
ACROSS FROM THE DAYTON HOTEL&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
University President John C. Weav r. The&#13;
Rey. Roy_ D. Phillips of the nlt.arian&#13;
Uruversalist church "'ill conduct the invocation&#13;
and benediction for the no cap&#13;
and gown informal cerernonv&#13;
Following the ceremony° · will be a&#13;
reception in the South concOtll"Se.&#13;
candidates are scheduled for gradua tion.&#13;
Faculty and admini trative taff are&#13;
cordially invited to attend.&#13;
i'o'EWSCOPE - Page 3&#13;
Tuesday, January 19, 1971&#13;
ORTH &amp; SOUTI1 SHE~ID ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHA&#13;
FAMOUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED·&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
THE ROCKER!&#13;
- - -&#13;
100-FM!&#13;
Racine Kenosha Radio! - - -&#13;
24 HOURS!&#13;
RIGHT ON! &#13;
This university has, in its few years of existence, experienced more than&#13;
its share of difliculty. We've gone from Ockham's Razor to instant greatness to&#13;
the Parkside mission and have recently endured the Parkside shaft.&#13;
The shaft has been weilded by the administration directed at limes at the&#13;
faculty. at times at the studnets, and at times even at the administration itself.&#13;
The r ult of this has been a lack of communication between all factions of the&#13;
univer ity Arter two years there is no student government, no clearly defined&#13;
faculty review procedures, no organized faculty recruiting procedures, no&#13;
drmmstration-Iaculty exchange, no faculty-student exchange, and no studentdmmistrallon&#13;
exchange. In these areas there exist formal channels of&#13;
commumcation. but these have been effectively obscured, misinterpreted, or&#13;
mi used a to render them ineffective. Recently, steps have been taken to&#13;
remov some of th ob tacles and construct effective, efficient channels. It&#13;
rem 'n! to be n If this is a genuine attempt at reconstruction or another&#13;
v rsron of th Parkside haft.&#13;
It, a time for guarded opumism, but not inaction.&#13;
A uruv r ity 10 its youth has to be strengthened before its benefits can be&#13;
enjoyed It i. time for construction and establishment of this university&#13;
through co-operauon It WIll require administration involvement, faculty involv&#13;
m nt, nd tudent involvement An important initial step is a redefinition&#13;
of OCkham' . razor, instant greatness, the Parks ide mission, and the Parkside&#13;
haft Let'. co-operate and pull it all together.&#13;
The r rgnation of Vice Chancellor Harris and Dean Mac Kinney might&#13;
"ell be tak n a. a step toward academic manhood for Parkside.&#13;
What ha . been learned at Park ide by the 17 firings and the resignations&#13;
f Harri. ·MacK,nney is what can happen to any immature university torn by&#13;
mt rnal aeadermc chaos. Tlu . 'f unchecked, creates almost certain external&#13;
eestrucuo»&#13;
Why not demand the resignation of the Chief Administrator himself?&#13;
nlortunately to command such an act is to call for certain destruction of this&#13;
Univ r Ity&#13;
we have learned that the underlying faculty response, a feeling of downtrodden&#13;
mdlfference, aimed at saving their own necks, is an attitude somewhat&#13;
dI couraging further teaching and research, leaving a bitler taste and not so&#13;
fond memory. We have learned that the University can be the subject of&#13;
ndlcule and degradation locally and even nationally. We lbe students should&#13;
learn that further chaos certainly would crush the already wavering walls of&#13;
Park ide.&#13;
Super construction seems to be the word at Parkside, with its instant&#13;
greatness and Parks ide mission: reconstruction should be the word. Observing&#13;
our mistakes and conscientiously applying the result should build not only a&#13;
brick and mortar niversity but one in which the faculty and the students can&#13;
contmue to operate as efficient creative learners without fear of further unrest.&#13;
Umte students. UnIte faculty, unite administration and fuse together, in&#13;
channels of communication, to build a university which radlales respect and&#13;
Understanding. It can be done. It must be done.&#13;
UWP Receives Federal Grant&#13;
A rederal grant of $18.000 1n support of&#13;
thc College Work-Study Program at the&#13;
University of \\'isconsin·Parkside was&#13;
aCCl'pted frIday by the W Board of&#13;
Regenb&#13;
The grant is for the period Jan. 1, 1971,&#13;
lhrougl1 Dec. 31. 1971&#13;
Jan K. Ocker, UWP's Director of&#13;
Financial Aids and Placement, said the&#13;
grant brings to S40,OOOthe amount of&#13;
federal funds allocated for the work-study&#13;
program at Parkside during the current&#13;
academic year.&#13;
RIlS'OE&#13;
IHOUSTRln&#13;
significant change. I think man&#13;
do.n't realize how significant it is. i,~~}...&#13;
this stage we have to take the C~-l\&#13;
at his word. celb&#13;
There are some points or WyUi '&#13;
point statement that did not come f e. too&#13;
chancellor, but came from the r;-n the&#13;
which the chancellor has accepl&lt;d ~l)&#13;
was no consultation with the c~~&#13;
prior to this. The University Com .Dar&#13;
did not go to the chancellor and sa~~&#13;
want your approval for the raJ W.&#13;
points. We told HIM we were gOing.....&#13;
this." IS. ,an d h id "G e sal, 0 ahead and do' " 10010&#13;
I lbink if you continue to battle thi... ~&#13;
out now and try to tear this place -.&#13;
you're going to he successful. alllrt,&#13;
1think this is not the lime for this Tlia'&#13;
the lime to try to pull this .chool ,;",.~&#13;
and see if we can be successful. '&#13;
REMEMBE.R NOVEMBER&#13;
APPLEBAUM'S DECEMBER SPEACH&#13;
If the administration thinks thi.s ~ampus&#13;
is going to run business as usual It 1S sadly&#13;
mistaken. There has been a tre~endous&#13;
battle on this campus, and 1 think the&#13;
administration has come forth. with. at&#13;
least a first step, to make up for It. Ithink&#13;
it hehooves the faculty, the students, a~d&#13;
the administration to see if we can pull th~s&#13;
campus together again. Beeaus: th~s&#13;
campus cannot continue to ex~st. If this&#13;
ever happens again. Because if It ever&#13;
does this campus will collapse. .&#13;
What we should do nOWis try to bring the&#13;
campus together. I don't think we ~ve&#13;
heard the end of this anyway. But 1 think&#13;
we have to try to bring it together. Ithink It&#13;
is a job for the administration, the faculty,&#13;
and for the students.&#13;
Having been closely involved .with .wh~t&#13;
has been happening at this Urnverslty 10&#13;
the past three years, I think. this is a&#13;
December 9, 1970&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
This is in reference to an article in the&#13;
Dee. 3 1970 issue of NEWSCOPE titled.&#13;
, , II&#13;
"Consider the North-South Program .&#13;
Last year at this time, there was a&#13;
similar article in Parkside's newspaper to&#13;
which'l responded. 1 was 'subsequently&#13;
chosen as Parkside's only repres"entative&#13;
and spent second semester of the school&#13;
year 1969-1970 at North Carolina Central&#13;
University. Itis for this reason that Iwish&#13;
to let my comments be known to others&#13;
who may be interested.&#13;
My experiences at NCCU, for the most&#13;
part, were filled with abuse, name-calling&#13;
and a constant reminder that Iwa:::.a nonblack&#13;
outsider in a situation where I didn't&#13;
belong and was not wanted.&#13;
Friendships were few and meaningless&#13;
and I came away not knowing who my&#13;
friends really were and who I could or&#13;
could not trust. You see, my room was&#13;
broken into twice and Iwas ripped off both&#13;
limes. A third attempt was made on lbe&#13;
last day of the semester, but it was unsuccessful.&#13;
Only my closest associates&#13;
could have known on both occasions that 1&#13;
was exactly "ripe for the picking".&#13;
The few opportunities afforded me fDr&#13;
participating in student oriented functions&#13;
were all but choked off because Iwas nonblack.&#13;
People who may have wanted to be&#13;
friendly toward me avoided lbe issue&#13;
because of outside pressure from the&#13;
majority of other students.&#13;
My advice to anyone considerinj1 the&#13;
North-South program is to forget it!&#13;
Females, however, usually are n0t subjected&#13;
to a hard time and may find·it more&#13;
worthwhile than Idid. Also, studoots there&#13;
were more receptive to a black from&#13;
Parkside attending their institntion and I&#13;
promised that 1 would recbmmend it.&#13;
R. E. Williams&#13;
Do You need the&#13;
Newscope?&#13;
Of COURSE you&#13;
do, to find our what's&#13;
happening around&#13;
our Campus" Because&#13;
we "tell it as it is."&#13;
-&#13;
Editor&#13;
Parkside's Newscope&#13;
We strongly commend Ken K....... ~&#13;
ongoing investigation of the Psycbolao&#13;
Department, an interest we find the IDIlIt&#13;
interesting since he has reportedlyDMI'&#13;
taken a course in Psychology. l1li&#13;
methodologically impeccahle polltae&#13;
procedures have, to .date, borne IDlIIt&#13;
impressive fr\.lils. We !ljkethe almost'"&#13;
lack of response on the part or his ..&#13;
stituency as presumptive evidenceIIIIt&#13;
Psychology, in toto. has earned a WUII&#13;
spot in the hearts. of that great siIlII&#13;
majority of w/lich he is the moStvocdJ&#13;
inarticulate member.&#13;
- To settle any latently lingeringdoubtI.&#13;
we are calling for a peaceful raUyat&#13;
Greenquist Hall, 1 P.M., Tuesday&#13;
January 19, to protest (I) the ret",.&#13;
and probable promotion to tenure,(j die&#13;
Eichmann of Psych 203, and (21 IIle&#13;
department's, at present, overbalarlmd&#13;
research emphasis.&#13;
We will lake the absence of ""&#13;
resounding turnout as an overwheImiC&#13;
gesture of confidence in PsycholaCl"l&#13;
present personnel. In such an eventua!itJ,&#13;
we suggest you direct Thorn's admitted&#13;
ability - born of the "arrogance" ~&#13;
"nearly twenty-two years of expen-&#13;
- to the remediation of such prfSSIIC&#13;
problems as "What's wrong with tbt&#13;
weather?"&#13;
Yours inFreIfl.&#13;
MarkTimpaIIY&#13;
uddi~ Apostolic Prothonatary. theL&#13;
Fa.clion and poilus _.....w&#13;
GeorgeM...,..,&#13;
DavidWe!J«&#13;
La IT)' 1biel/ll&#13;
GerrieSo&lt;""""&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
-&#13;
\&#13;
,~,&#13;
underlying facuJt. r ·ponse, a feeling of down- , is an attitude somewhat&#13;
UWP Receives Federal Grant&#13;
Jan K. Ocker, 1' P's Director of&#13;
Financial Aids and Placement, said the&#13;
grant brings to $40,000 the amount of&#13;
federal funds allocated for the work-study&#13;
program a t Park ide during the current&#13;
academic year&#13;
REMEMBE.R NOVEMBER&#13;
APPLEBAUM'S DECEMBER SPEACH&#13;
If the administration thinks th~s ~ampus&#13;
is going to run business as usual it is sadly&#13;
mistaken. There has been a tre"'.endous&#13;
battle on this campus, and I thi~ the&#13;
administration has come forth_ with. at&#13;
least a first step, to make up for it. I thmk&#13;
it hehooves the faculty, !he students, a~d&#13;
the administration to see if we can pull th~s&#13;
campus together again. B~us~ th~s campus cannot continue to e~st. if this&#13;
ever happens again. Because if it ever&#13;
does this campus will collapse. . What we should do now is try to brmg the&#13;
campus together. I don't think we ~ve&#13;
beard the end of this anyway. But 1 ~ we have to try to bring it together. I think it&#13;
is a job for the administration, the faculty,&#13;
and for the students. Having been closely involved _with. wh~t&#13;
has been happening at this Uruvers1ty m&#13;
the past three years, I think this is a&#13;
December 9, 1970&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
This is in reference to an article in the&#13;
Dec. 3, 1970, issue of NEWSCOPE titled,&#13;
"Consider the North-South Program".&#13;
Last year at this time, there was a&#13;
similar article in Parkside's newspaper to&#13;
which I responded. I was ·subsequently&#13;
chosen as Parkside's only representative&#13;
and spent second semester of the school&#13;
year 1969-1970 at North Carolina Central&#13;
University. It is for this reason that I wish&#13;
to let my comments be known to others&#13;
who may be interested.&#13;
My experiences at NCCU, for the most&#13;
part, were filled with abuse, name-calling&#13;
and a constant reminder that I war. a nonblack&#13;
outsider in a situation where I didn't&#13;
belong and was not wanted.&#13;
Friendships were few and meaningless&#13;
and I came away not knowing who my&#13;
friends really were and who I could or&#13;
could not trust. You see, my room was&#13;
broken into twice and I was ripped off both&#13;
times. A third attempt was made on the&#13;
last day of the semester, but it was unsuccessful.&#13;
Only my closest associates&#13;
could have known on both occasions that I&#13;
was exactly "ripe for the picking".&#13;
The few opportunities afforded me- for&#13;
participating in student oriented functions&#13;
were all but choked off because I was nonblack.&#13;
People who may have wanted to be&#13;
friendly toward me avoided the issue&#13;
because of outside pressure from the&#13;
majority of other students.&#13;
My advice to anyone considerin~ the&#13;
North-South program is to forget it!&#13;
Females, however, usually are njt subjected&#13;
to a hard time and may find-it more&#13;
worthwhile than I did. Also, students there&#13;
were more receptive to a black from&#13;
Parkside attending their instibltion and I&#13;
promised that I would recommend it.&#13;
R. E. Williams&#13;
Do You need the&#13;
Newscope?&#13;
Of COURSE you&#13;
do, to find our what's&#13;
happening around&#13;
significant change. I think man&#13;
don't realize how significant it is i ~-r YoU&#13;
this stage we have to take the Ch 1&#13;
nk a1&#13;
at his word. anceu~&#13;
There are some points of Wyn· ,&#13;
point s_tatement that did not come f~~ ten&#13;
chancellor, but came from the f lnlhe&#13;
which the chancellor has accepted ;cu1~&#13;
was no consultation with the cha here&#13;
prior to this. The University Comnc~~&#13;
did not go to the chancellor and sa rn:ttee&#13;
want your approval for the foliow W&#13;
points. We told HIM we were going ,A&#13;
th. " d h 'd "G "' d 1s. , an e sa1 , o ahead and d .&#13;
I think if you continue to battle this ~"\:'.&#13;
out now and try to tear this place -""11&#13;
you're going to be successful. apart,&#13;
I ll?ink this is not the time for this. This&#13;
the time ~ try to pull this school together&#13;
and see if we can be successful. '&#13;
Editor&#13;
Parkside's Newscope&#13;
We strongly commend Ken Konkol·,&#13;
ongoing investigation of the Psychology&#13;
Department, an interest we find the men&#13;
interesting since he has reportedly never&#13;
taken a course in Psychology. His&#13;
methodologically impeccable polling&#13;
procedures have, to date, borne most&#13;
impressive fruits. We 1¥e the almost tdal&#13;
lack of response on the part of his Clllstituency&#13;
as presumptive evidence that&#13;
Psychology, in toto, has earned a wann&#13;
spot in the hearts_ of that great 1lent&#13;
majority of wpich he is the most vocal!}&#13;
inarticulate member.&#13;
· To settle any latently lingering doubts,&#13;
we are calling for a peaceful rally at&#13;
Greenquist Hall, 1 P.M., Tuesday&#13;
January 19, to protest (1) the retentioo.&#13;
and probable promotion to tenure, of lhe&#13;
Eichmann of Psych 203, and (2) lhe&#13;
department's, at present, overbalanced&#13;
research emphasis.&#13;
We will take the absence of 811)'&#13;
resounding turnout as an overwhelmq&#13;
gesture of confidence in Psychology s&#13;
present personnel. In such an eventualil.,&#13;
we suggest you direct Thorn's admitted&#13;
ability - born of the "arrogance·• 1 " nearly twenty-two years of exper1e~&#13;
- to the remediation of such pr&#13;
problems as "What's wrong with lhe&#13;
weather?'' Yours in Frein&#13;
Mark Timpalll&#13;
Apostolic Prothonatary, the Luddi:e&#13;
Faction and poilus · George Mete&#13;
David Weber&#13;
Larry Thielen&#13;
Gerrie Soren&#13;
our Campusll Because&#13;
we "tell it as it is." &#13;
FACULTY REACTION&#13;
The immediate faculty reaction to the&#13;
resignations. of Vice-Chancellor Harris and&#13;
Dean MacKmney seems to be that it is a&#13;
necessary first step in pulling the&#13;
University hack together, but by itself is&#13;
not seen as being sufficient to heal the&#13;
wounds.&#13;
A junior faculty member who was one of&#13;
the'll to have his contract terminated said,&#13;
Hit removes the most ObVIOUS obstacle&#13;
between the administration and the&#13;
faculty.Never!hele~s, t?cre is a pressing&#13;
question at this POint III regards to the&#13;
relationship between the Chancellor and&#13;
the faculty. There is a large question in the&#13;
area of trust and administrative&#13;
responsibility which has yet to be answered.&#13;
"There are still several Questions that&#13;
the administration has not answered, It&#13;
would be interesting to know what instructions&#13;
were given to Harris and&#13;
MacKinney upon their arrival at this&#13;
campus by Chancellor Wyllie." he said.&#13;
"It would also be interesting to know&#13;
who autonomously Harris and MacKinney&#13;
haveacted throughout the entire situation.&#13;
A nwnber of faculty suspect that what&#13;
Harrisand MacKinney did was in essence&#13;
directed by the Chancellor himself.&#13;
"But their bungling incompetence, '.' he&#13;
continued,"and extreme behavior in this&#13;
matter however does not smack of the&#13;
Chancellor's cleverness and adroitness in&#13;
the handling of delica te rna tters of this&#13;
nature."&#13;
JOMHarbeson of Political Science said,&#13;
"Things will not be undone immediately.&#13;
That the alienation, distrust, and the lack&#13;
c:i confidence in the competence of our&#13;
administralion will continue in a grea t&#13;
amount of faculty for a long while. I think&#13;
it can be repaired, but not overnight.&#13;
"[ think the faculty is simply exhausted&#13;
c:i the whole thing right now," he con~&#13;
linood, "but I think its morale will im- I&#13;
prove knowing the Vice-Chancellor and&#13;
Dean are resigning. But whether it continues&#13;
to improve will depend on whether&#13;
the new acting D~an, .and the new ad~&#13;
rninistrativ~ procedures and leadership&#13;
justifies that faith .."&#13;
Speaking of the faculty role in decision&#13;
making, Harbeson said, "I would say at&#13;
,the pr~sent time it appears that there is&#13;
much more responsiveness on the part of&#13;
the administration to the faculty.&#13;
"But it's too early to tell if it will be a&#13;
longterm phenomenon, and if it will result&#13;
in concrete changes," he said. "It's quite&#13;
possible right now the faculty is being&#13;
listened to because it has been proved&#13;
rightin the immediate circumstances, but&#13;
OIlcethey recede in the background, the&#13;
old relationship may re-emerge.&#13;
"There is no reason to believe the ad~&#13;
ministration trusts any more the junior&#13;
faculty than it did before" he continued.&#13;
"That has never been tak~n hack. By lack&#13;
of trust I mean the basic view the junior&#13;
Flying Club&#13;
Formed&#13;
, ParkSide Flying Club is to become activenext&#13;
term. This Flying Club is for both&#13;
~tudents and faculty. It can be contacted&#13;
thrOUghthe Athletic Office and would like&#13;
th e stude~ts, faculty, and staff to answer&#13;
e follOWingquestions.&#13;
Fl. Do ~ou have ~r are you working on a&#13;
.A.A, pilot or mechanic's license?'&#13;
Yes No&#13;
2. Wouldyou be interested in a Division&#13;
: Aeron.auticsat Parkside, offering a B.S.&#13;
gree In aeronautical management or&#13;
~~er phases of aeronautics? Yes&#13;
F13..Would you be interested in joining a&#13;
thYIngClub at Parkside, probably using&#13;
~ KenOSha Airport? Yes No&#13;
lease mail answers and give your&#13;
~rne, address, and phone number to&#13;
arkside Athletic Office.&#13;
Thanks.&#13;
Foster Hannaford, Jr.&#13;
President Pro tern.&#13;
-&#13;
~cuthltyis simply not qualified in the .&#13;
e admlrustration t View&#13;
role in policy makin ot take. a decisive&#13;
CUrs in Mad' g the k1lld that ocS&#13;
. rson and Milwaukee."&#13;
. peakmg of the senior faculty's roJe in&#13;
James Shea&#13;
the controversey, he said, "The senior&#13;
faculty with a few notable exceptions has&#13;
not stood up as well in this crisis as they&#13;
should have.&#13;
"I think tbey weakened the faith of some&#13;
junior faculty in the wisdom of tenure" he&#13;
said: "It seems tenure makes ~ople&#13;
afraid to speak out, when it should give the&#13;
security and courage to speak up."&#13;
Business&#13;
Contrary to popular belief, there is in~&#13;
deed a business major at Parkside, such as&#13;
it is. Although the discipline has no full&#13;
time staff and virtually no program, the&#13;
major is included in the catalog.&#13;
In an interview with Mr. Keehn,&#13;
Assistant Professor of Economics, it was&#13;
determined that the curriculum as it now&#13;
stands is inadequate to such an extreme&#13;
that a business degree (rom Parkside is&#13;
almost worthless. There is support, both&#13;
from students and staff, for revision of the&#13;
discipline.&#13;
The business program, as it stands, is&#13;
inadequate. Essential courses are Jeft out&#13;
and there is no advanced training&#13;
available. Furthermore, there is no full&#13;
time staff, and only one visiting professor.&#13;
The Parkside program is like that of no&#13;
other major university. Consequent.Jy,&#13;
graduates from other" universities are&#13;
preferred over Parkside graduates in&#13;
industry. Parkside's program must be&#13;
built and revised.&#13;
To build an effective business major at&#13;
Parkside, a full time staIf is needed. It was&#13;
admitted by Mr. Keehn that such a staff is&#13;
often hard to find since qualified in~&#13;
dividuals often prefer business to&#13;
teaching. However, the present staff have&#13;
most of the qualifications to teach some of&#13;
the core courses in the major.&#13;
The central problem however, remains&#13;
the question of revision of ~e major. H?w&#13;
can a more effective curflculum be m·&#13;
stituted, and what changes should be&#13;
made? By investigating what other&#13;
schools offer, this problem could be&#13;
overcome. Evidently, however, this is&#13;
V&#13;
F °G Ad U&#13;
p~ E&#13;
'e&#13;
FABRICS FOR S&#13;
ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
- 658-861&gt; -&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
By MARC ElSE~&#13;
Jam~ Shea. a member of the Cniversity&#13;
Committee,. said, ." think it .....as the right&#13;
ste~. and WIth the appointment of the new&#13;
acting Dean. Parks ide nO\' has the opportunity&#13;
to do what it should have been&#13;
doing all along: building a lop qualil)&#13;
teaching and researching Iacultv ..&#13;
He went on to say, "The Crisis'may turn&#13;
OUllo be a good tlung In tbat tbe faCuII,.·s&#13;
role has now been recognized 10 \I, riting·b\&#13;
the admimstratloo. and the Iacultv noV.'&#13;
~s the opportunity to assess the type of&#13;
Influence it ought to have been asSerting&#13;
all along."&#13;
Asked 1/ there has been a change In the&#13;
P,hilosop!1yof the administration. he said.&#13;
The~e s been a recogrution or reality that&#13;
wasn t there before. but as the views or the&#13;
admjnistration changing, no. I don't think&#13;
so. I think it's up to faculty to protect irs&#13;
own role. If it doesn'l the administration&#13;
will probably take the initiative again"&#13;
Speaking of the University Committee's&#13;
meeting with the Chancellor Shea said&#13;
"The meetings were frank a'nd friendly:&#13;
The committee spoke forcefully about&#13;
what il thought had to be done. The&#13;
~ceUOl' seemed to receive tJus advice&#13;
m the spirit it was given. •&#13;
"The Chancellor did admit freely to us&#13;
that he did make some mislakes," Shea&#13;
said. "I think that's the hasis you can go&#13;
ahead to correct the mistakes. Before you&#13;
do anything about righting a wrong,&#13;
somebody has to acknowledge there has&#13;
been, indeed, mistakes.&#13;
"And the Chancellor," Shea said,&#13;
"acknowledged this, and has taken some&#13;
steps to rectify the sibJtation ..&#13;
aior Offered&#13;
contrary to the Parkside innovative elhic.&#13;
Perhaps a more preferable solution from&#13;
an administrative standpoint wouJd be (0&#13;
allow those professors qualified to teach&#13;
business a greater voice in designing&#13;
requirements for a degree.&#13;
It is ironic that the business diSCiplineis&#13;
so undernourished in this industrial&#13;
society, particularly in a universlly With&#13;
an industrial mission. It would seem that a&#13;
business program at such a university&#13;
would be emphasiz.ed rather than circumscribed.&#13;
Parkside, by improVing lts&#13;
school of business. would belter fulftll its&#13;
mission, could conceivably mcrease Hs&#13;
enrollment, and would be or greater&#13;
service to the student and the community&#13;
NEWSCOPE- PageS&#13;
Tuesday, January 19,1971&#13;
Artist to&#13;
Exhibit Works&#13;
'Il:RPII\, TO OI~PL.\\' \RT&#13;
John Satre :\lurphy a member of Ih,' art&#13;
faculty al the tm\1"r"S11) of \\ isco In&#13;
Park. ide. IS parhclpatmg In OJ two-man&#13;
show 01 Ceramic. and Fiber which \'111&#13;
ccntmue thr~h February at : aul("&#13;
Pacinc College, eaute. II'" h&#13;
1\1urph)' ha '28 \\ork. m the tx)\o\ 10&#13;
eluding two large. tcneware lu Ired Ilocr&#13;
bowls. eight porcelain ....all rdlt ..r with&#13;
rutile stain and gold metalhc he-ire, ("IKht&#13;
metalhc Iu Ired wall relu:r \ulh&#13;
plexigla transitional area, rum 'Small&#13;
World" 00'" Is and one . Ilk recn bann -r&#13;
Allot the cerami uuhze ooth Ih prt:&#13;
moldIng of clay In molds 0( pia. ter and lh.&#13;
application, in many flrln~. of tran~11X'nl&#13;
lustre and metalliC lustre&#13;
The Parkside cerami I ha exhlblt&lt;'d&#13;
widely Ihr0U8houl the nHed tates and&#13;
during December recel\:e&lt;t a merll&#13;
achievement award 10 IhP inVitational&#13;
Craft Commllmenl how '" hlch began a&#13;
Nrc-year tour allhe Rochester (. Itnn.) Arl&#13;
&lt;;enter and an a.....ard In the WiSCO~lO&#13;
Craft Invitallonal NO.3 Travehng ExhIbIt&#13;
at L'Aleher Gallery In Milwaukee.&#13;
YOUNG MElt&#13;
BOYS&#13;
100's of BELLS&#13;
~::!~b207 SIXTH STREET&#13;
RACINE, WISCONSIN 53'03&#13;
leu' ,(d/e'1 Olle&#13;
503 t\!(/ill ',.&#13;
R"cine&#13;
lO% SI:ldml DlSCounl&#13;
011 ,,/I Posll'l &amp; Fran/t·t&#13;
eu' Call1'll &gt;/ U'O&#13;
5036 i.\/h A/I',&#13;
Kmosh"&#13;
FACULTY REACTION s&#13;
.),J nu ry 1 , 1971&#13;
Artist to&#13;
Exhibit Works&#13;
The immediate faculty reaction to the&#13;
resignations of Vice-Chancellor Harris and&#13;
oean MacKinney seems to be that it is a&#13;
necessary first step in pulling the&#13;
university back together, but by itself is&#13;
not seen as being sufficient to heal the&#13;
wounds.&#13;
A junior faculty member who was one of&#13;
the27 to have his contract terminated said,&#13;
"It removes the most obvious obstacle&#13;
between the administration and the&#13;
faculty. Nevertheless, there is a pressing&#13;
question at this point in regards to the&#13;
relationship between the Chancellor and&#13;
the faculty. There is a large question in the&#13;
area of trust and administrative&#13;
responsibility which has yet to be answered.&#13;
&#13;
"There are still several auestions that&#13;
the administration has not auswered. It&#13;
would be interesting to know what instructioJl.S&#13;
were given to Harris and&#13;
MacKinney upon their arrival at this&#13;
campus by Chancellor Wyllie." he said.&#13;
"It would also be interesting to know&#13;
who autonomously Harris and MacKinney&#13;
have acted throughout the entire situation.&#13;
A nwnber of faculty suspect that what&#13;
Harris and MacKinney did was in essence&#13;
directed by the Chancellor himself.&#13;
"But their bungling incompetence," he&#13;
continued, "and extreme behavior in this&#13;
matter however does not smack of the&#13;
Chancellor's cleverness and adroitness in&#13;
the handling of delicate matters of this&#13;
nature.''&#13;
John Harbeson of Political Science said,&#13;
"Things will not be undone immediately.&#13;
That the alienation, distrust, and the lack&#13;
of confidence in the competence of our&#13;
administration will continue in a great&#13;
amount of faculty for a long while. I think&#13;
it can be repaired, but not overnight.&#13;
"I think the faculty is simply exhausted&#13;
of the whole thing right now," he continued,&#13;
"but I think its morale will im- 1&#13;
prove knowing the Vice-Chancellor and&#13;
Dean are resigning. But whether it continues&#13;
to improve will depend on whether&#13;
the new acting Dean, and the new administrative&#13;
procedures and leadership&#13;
justifies that faith .. "&#13;
Speaking of the faculty role in decision&#13;
making, Harbeson said, "I would say at&#13;
, the present time it appears that there is&#13;
much more responsiveness on the part of&#13;
the administration to the faculty.&#13;
"But it's too early to tell if it will be a&#13;
long term phenomenon, and if it will result&#13;
in concrete changes," he said. "It's quite&#13;
possible right now the faculty is being&#13;
listened to because it has been proved&#13;
right in the immediate circumstances, but&#13;
once they recede in the background, the&#13;
old relationship may re-emerge.&#13;
"There is no reason to believe the administration&#13;
trusts any more the junior&#13;
faculty than it did before " he continued.&#13;
"That has never been tak~n back. By lack&#13;
of trust I mean the basic view the junior&#13;
Flying Club&#13;
Formed . Parkside Flying Club is to become active&#13;
next term. This Flying Club is for both&#13;
students and faculty. It can be contacted&#13;
~rough the Athletic Office and would like&#13;
the stude~ts, faculty, and staff to answer e following questions.&#13;
F 1. Do ~ou have or are you working on a&#13;
.A.A. pilot or mechanic's license1&#13;
Yes No&#13;
2- Would you be interested in a Division ! Aeron_autics at Parkside, offering a B.S.&#13;
0fee m aeronautical manageme!}t or&#13;
No er Phases of aeronautics? Yes&#13;
3·. Would you be interested in joining a&#13;
~Ytng Club at Parkside, probably using&#13;
e Kenosha Airport? Yes No&#13;
Please mail answers and give your&#13;
;;irne,_ address, and phone number to&#13;
arkside Athletic Office.&#13;
Thanks.&#13;
Foster Hannaford, Jr.&#13;
President Pro tern.&#13;
faculty is simply not Ii . . of the ad · · . qua fied m the view m1rustration to tak .. role in policy makin f e_ a dec1s1ve&#13;
curs in Madison andgMo ·1the kmd that oc- S k" 1waukee." . pea mg of the senior faculty's role in&#13;
James Shea&#13;
the controversey, he said, "The senior&#13;
faculty with a few notable exceptions has&#13;
not stood up as well in this crisis as they should have.&#13;
"I think they weakened the faith of some&#13;
junior faculty in the wisdom of tenure " he&#13;
said: "It seems tenure makes ~ople&#13;
afraid to speak out, when it should give the&#13;
security and courage to speak up."&#13;
Busin M&#13;
Contrary to popular belief, there is indeed&#13;
a business major at Parkside, such as&#13;
it is. Although the discipline has no full&#13;
time staff and virtually no program, the&#13;
major is included in the catalog.&#13;
In an interview with Mr. Keehn,&#13;
Assistant Professor of Economics, it was&#13;
determined that the curriculum as it now&#13;
stands is inadequate to such an extreme&#13;
that a business degree from Parkside is&#13;
almost worthless. There is support, both&#13;
from students and staff, for revision or the&#13;
discipline. The business program, as it stands, is&#13;
inadequate. Essential courses are left out&#13;
and there is no advanced training&#13;
available. Furthermore, there is no full&#13;
time staff, and only one visiting professor.&#13;
The Parkside program is like that of no other major university. Consequently,&#13;
graduates from other- universities are&#13;
preferred over Parkside graduates in&#13;
industry. Parkside's program must be&#13;
built and revised.&#13;
To build an effective business major at&#13;
Parkside, a full time staff is needed. It w~s&#13;
admitted by Mr. Keehn that such a tarr 1s&#13;
often hard to find since qualified individuals&#13;
often prefer business to&#13;
teaching. However, the present staff have&#13;
most of !he qualifications to teach some of&#13;
the core courses in the major. The central problem however. remain&#13;
the question of revision of ~e major. H~w&#13;
can a more effective curriculum be instituted,&#13;
and what changes should be&#13;
made? By investigating what other&#13;
schools offer, this problem coul~ ~&#13;
overcome. Evidently, however. this 1s&#13;
VO&#13;
FA GU&#13;
&amp;R E&#13;
'c&#13;
FABRICS FOR S&#13;
ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
- 658-861:.! -&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
B~ , J.\R El&#13;
,:'sked if there h~ be n a cha m th&#13;
philosophy or the administratio h id&#13;
"There's been a rec nition of ~hty that&#13;
wasn't there before. but a the \i e". of th&#13;
adm}ni tration changing. no, I don'l thi so. I think it' up to faculty to protect ii!&#13;
~n role. If it doesn't, the dmini. tration&#13;
will probably take the initJati,e ai?ain."&#13;
Speaking of the ni\'ersity Cr,mmittee·&#13;
meeting with the Chancellor Shea said&#13;
"The meetings were frank and Cri ndh :&#13;
The committee spoke forcefull aboot&#13;
what it thought had to be do'i-ie. The&#13;
~ncellor seemed to receive tlus advice m the spirit it was given. •&#13;
"The Chancellor did admit freely lo u&#13;
that he did make some mistakes," hea&#13;
said. "I think that's the basis you can go&#13;
ahead to correct the mistakes. Before ,·ou&#13;
do anything about righting a wrong,&#13;
somebody has to acknowledge there ha&#13;
been, indeed, mistakes.&#13;
"And the Chance11or." hea aid, "acknowledged this, and has taken ome&#13;
steps to rectify the situtati~ ..&#13;
• Offered&#13;
contrary to the Park id innovative ethic.&#13;
Perhaps a more preferable . olution from an administrative standpoint would be to&#13;
allow those professors qualified to t ac-h&#13;
business a greater \'Oice in d igni&#13;
requirements for a d ree.&#13;
It is ironic that the busin&#13;
so undernouri hed in thi indu trial&#13;
society, particularli, in a uni,er.;ily \\ilh&#13;
an industrial mi ion. It \\OUld · em that&#13;
busin program at uch a univ rsity&#13;
would be empha ized rather than circum&#13;
cribed. Parkside, by improvu~ ii!&#13;
school of bu in · , would belt r fulfill i&#13;
mission, could conceivabli, increa i&#13;
enrollment, and would be of RJ' tcr&#13;
service to the tud nt and th communit ·.&#13;
Exploring the&#13;
1 IU HY l I I. Pl.\ Y Jl'r&#13;
YOUNG MEN&#13;
BOYS&#13;
IOO's of BELLS&#13;
World of ESP&#13;
Clairvoyancy• T eletype•Power of prayer&#13;
Spiritual Reincarnation•Ghost Hunting&#13;
(NORMA HAS PREDICTED TE ORLD- l_DE PREOICTIO S FOR 1969)&#13;
"KNOCK ON THE DOOR, ANO THE I ER LIGHT iHICH IS GOD HAS THE A&#13;
N orm Slater 654-2375 &#13;
A look at Indications&#13;
\uthor· Chri l) Brow n&#13;
Publi\he'r·. tein and Oa~. '.Y.&#13;
Bl JI\I KOLOE'&#13;
Chr~t~ Brown ha. wruten a boo that is&#13;
lon~ enough 2h7 pa es to be a novel. and&#13;
It hu \"'0 hard covers and maybe&#13;
mll'da) It will have two soft covers \\'hen&#13;
I IIr. t heard aboul this erippled&#13;
bPt tyll"T, Ithought oh boy, I'd really&#13;
hke to re d a novel written from the point&#13;
01" w of a paraplegIc" ho can 'I talk and&#13;
ho t) pel ",th tu big toe, But alas,&#13;
t'hrl t) Bro1il.-nd not choose to v.rite&#13;
from the v.h ·Idtalr. no. he ....rite outside&#13;
urlt hke \erybnd) el and produces a&#13;
book lhal I, hke everybody el' HIS&#13;
narr tor I obJect".. though at time I got&#13;
tht~ Impr tOO th I th 'arratlon was a&#13;
v~rtl , Impres Ion of the cripple's&#13;
lho"gIll and perceplloo • ho,,~'er, be that&#13;
It rna). lhr n \ell not fir 1 person and&#13;
Viol' ~f.'l gllm of charae-lers that&#13;
Jo nd La"HC·nc."(' (parh utarl) DHL 10&#13;
IIh tid 1.0\ I I perf "ted 1010typE'S 1be&#13;
muthl"l' "nd fath('r ar the In'h count&#13;
I part or 1h., LaIAreo Ian mother and&#13;
futher In S I. It' almost a If the)' ,",cre&#13;
nUt." Irom the me Dutilnt'" The father&#13;
,rth). t~pi all) In. h drlOkinR classorkln~&#13;
m n·former vettran \\Ilh definite&#13;
I rtl line \l 00 hI the mother I the&#13;
.. arm co\\, protecting her herd from the&#13;
hngs and "rro~, or the bull by absorbing&#13;
them bt'1"M"IC \1.lth a 511 ot grimace, per·&#13;
Slitlu n~pn ..&gt;gnant. a "1 lim of the In to&#13;
prt' 'nanc~ ) ndrome, the father saYIr\{&#13;
,I' hI god gl\' n duly to makc Inds&#13;
TIwre are other characters an the book,&#13;
Ih old titer who runs awal to the&#13;
, r It \lohorchouse of Albion ( (nsh pomt of&#13;
'Ie~) to t(et herself Isurprlsel) a hubby&#13;
"hu . J&gt;'."a good English and converts to&#13;
In hi. m, gets baptised IOto' pub life and&#13;
Ullcmplolmcnl and loses a matching set of&#13;
t'410· 10 the lumshack and his wife call&#13;
home The characters outside the ramih&#13;
are IJS{"d as counterpoints to show other&#13;
thtud and degredations of the Irish&#13;
lal Cf'SSpooi An example is that of a&#13;
m,ddl .....dgod hom)' toad "ho lays a&#13;
S('nllmental whore dunng a wake, or&#13;
l'OUr~e the whore is from England and one&#13;
old wrinkle times the lay with his gold&#13;
'Aateh, do lour ovon thing.&#13;
The themes run the lrish gamut: the.&#13;
('nmlty bet".,.een the Catholics and&#13;
Prote tants, the hatred of England,&#13;
Parnell. local politics and interestingly the&#13;
ptlilosophical quesllon of Ireland's role in&#13;
the upcomlOg "A,ar of TY.'0: the men. the&#13;
r hred veterans, are still unsure as to&#13;
"hether they should lighl with England or&#13;
\loIth the Germans. the youth ha\'e decided&#13;
to,)01Oup with the Green and fight with the&#13;
allte.'s If necessar)', a lot of them desert.&#13;
The crappie is an enigma, his last name&#13;
I BrO\\n, he has wet dreams and like most&#13;
(If the olher kids occasionally pisses in his&#13;
pant. He I. entenng puberty and fails to&#13;
ff."{"1gUilt after confessing the great sin of&#13;
Ja klO~ off which is about the only moral&#13;
ISSue Ihl. novel unexamine::». He is subject&#13;
to th' IOdJgnlh~ and snide remarks of&#13;
r\ M' one and anyone lx-causc he is chained&#13;
dn\lon ·'b~ InVisible chams" He spends a&#13;
l'OUplt' of \H~k~ In a children's hospital&#13;
"hert&gt; t'40 nurs&lt;"~ gig~le when the)" see his&#13;
public bu. h and say to themselves he&#13;
u1dn'l In a children's hosp,lal. The&#13;
cnppl I. ObvlOUSl) seOSltiH' to such barbs&#13;
bulthere' nothlOg he can door say. he can&#13;
onl) grunl and so mdulges In mghts of&#13;
fanta~} \Io.lth sexual symbolism. The&#13;
narrator lends to become overpoetic -&#13;
place reg hng m euphony pro,;ng the&#13;
adage that too man)' prelty words in the&#13;
pol poils the page,&#13;
l( there IS a plot or slory In thlS book I&#13;
rnl cd It. the book is concerned with the&#13;
VAl.EO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN OINNERS ond&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p,m,&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave,&#13;
.' Here is your chance to read the literary&#13;
works 01 your lellow students; hot 011 the&#13;
comes Parkside's hterary&#13;
orrset, INDICATIONS, This winter&#13;
magazme, I' ti edition contains 48 pages of short IC on,&#13;
poetry, photographs and o~~~r~&#13;
illustrations. From an aesthetic P&#13;
view this issue is much improved over last&#13;
year's' for one thing it has a plethora.of&#13;
photog'raphic and illustrated ~rtralts&#13;
which serve to balance the magazme&#13;
an~&#13;
afford a visual respite from the sma I&#13;
rint. The photographs were tak~n b~ Art&#13;
bulan David Christensen, David Bmder&#13;
and J~ Rudolph. The story and co~er&#13;
illustrations were created by the 10-&#13;
terpretative freehand ~f Ji~ Madura. ,&#13;
The opening piece IS Diane Lawler s&#13;
poem, "Blues". Itis as fine a poe~ as you&#13;
are likely to find in poetry magazines and&#13;
anthologies anywhere in America. Dia,ne&#13;
has descriptive eyes and bombards us Wlth&#13;
images, piling them on top o~ each other&#13;
until we can feel an impresslOn that en·&#13;
compasses all the senses .. If you read&#13;
"Blues" sensitively you Will hear and&#13;
smell the Chicago adventure and will know&#13;
why when "i was young when i met you&#13;
Id II "BI es"&#13;
now Iam dying of your a age.. u&#13;
alone is worth the rather exorbitant admission&#13;
price ($1.00) to this coUeetion of&#13;
poems and stories.&#13;
Also included in INDICATIONS are&#13;
short poems by Bill Rolbiecki, PatNelson,&#13;
Jerry Socha Walt Breach and Jim&#13;
Hanlon; all deserve your consideration.&#13;
In the short fiction category INDICATIONS&#13;
oilers a generally well&#13;
written variety of stories. "ExPeriment"&#13;
by yours truly is an experiment in point of&#13;
view and characterization. The story&#13;
concerns a schizophrenic whose world you&#13;
see through his eyes, it is a complex story&#13;
which needs a close reading. '&#13;
lev. years preceding WWII and the author&#13;
paints portraits 01 the tatber, mother,&#13;
sister, crippled brother and the old&#13;
alcoholic widow next door. His portraits&#13;
have other faces in the background, cloudy&#13;
faces that become clear for a few&#13;
moments. a few pages, and then recede&#13;
back IOtOthe background, It is obviously a&#13;
book with maturation motif but it really&#13;
isn't utilized firmly because the author is&#13;
continually concerning himself with&#13;
peripheral characters thai the youth&#13;
doesn't even come into contact with.&#13;
Where does this all lead us, well, the last&#13;
hoe of the book says the cripple is meeting&#13;
a nsing sun; either he's found himself as&#13;
the sa)'lng goes or he's decidod to join the&#13;
Japanese. 1 don't know, the crippl.e is ~&#13;
enigma, laybe it is because the cnpple IS&#13;
only an observer, that he is a bwnpon a log&#13;
that no one notices til they sit on him and&#13;
say sorry pal didn'l see ya, chuckle,&#13;
chuckle, that he is an enigma. One&#13;
memorable scene occurs when a young&#13;
bwcom l~ sits doYt'11in the boxcar with&#13;
the cnpple and fondles his sexual parts, he&#13;
gelS horny and she tells him he's like aU&#13;
the rest, bit of irony, a whaL&#13;
More than anything else this is a book of&#13;
sex, earthy sex, £Wlctional dutiful sex. Sex&#13;
i seen through the eyes 01 adolescents,&#13;
through the eyes or lechers and whores and&#13;
Widows and husbands and mothers and&#13;
fathers. The sex theme, which forms a&#13;
core of the boom. along with Irish drinking&#13;
habits, and the Irish way 01 death, is well&#13;
done, but it's oot enougllto make this book&#13;
a novel&#13;
OK, what do it all lack, it lacks a plot, a&#13;
story, a real climax and resolution( instead&#13;
of jusl. snipping 011 olloose ends), it lacks&#13;
c1arily, though the diatogue is well down it&#13;
is sometimes difficult to find out who is&#13;
saying what and to whom. The book is a&#13;
jumble of impressions which reaBy don't&#13;
seem to lead to anyone point, everybody&#13;
goes their 0\\'11 way and cross paths and&#13;
say hello and tell dirty stories and continue&#13;
on lhelr way separately. And maybe that's&#13;
the author's point, that we are all going our&#13;
ovm way and never really get to know each&#13;
other, nor even ourselves, but the lack of a&#13;
clear purpose, 01 delinity and clarity hurts&#13;
more than it could help even this point.&#13;
But I am most disappointed by what&#13;
Brown didn't do lban by what he did do, his&#13;
point of view is everybody's point of viewj&#13;
the author has an unique view of the world&#13;
because he can't talk and walk in real life&#13;
and yet he fails to use it to its full extent,&#13;
the wheelchair view is only one of a&#13;
number of views and anotber novel about&#13;
Dubtin's social tile we don't need,&#13;
If you like enigmas you'll love this&#13;
novel, if you like to see the· drab side of&#13;
Irish life, then this book is £or- you, but if&#13;
)'ou've read Sons and Lovers and Ulysses&#13;
you really don't need this book in your&#13;
library.&#13;
IIThree Girls Within" by Jerry Socha is&#13;
actually a series of vignettes linked by the&#13;
young girl protagonists and by the lact&#13;
that they are not "normal". One girl isn't&#13;
aware of others, another girl knew she was&#13;
a bitch and the third vignette portrays the&#13;
beautilul haretippod Jane who askod lbe&#13;
question" Am I nor~al,?11&#13;
"Fleming for Congress" is Esther&#13;
Burnett's rather sledgehammered story&#13;
.bout a young long hair who attempts to&#13;
destroy the political campaign or&#13;
order Congressman. It relies a la" 'l1li&#13;
pearance-reality theme as a on ~ ....&#13;
carry the story, but illalters ~evl""&#13;
It's not badly written; it just a Uio 'lilt&#13;
it's not worth writing, 5eetns 1htt&#13;
"The Cycle" by David Binder ' .&#13;
-myth and contrasts civilization ~tililta&#13;
simple, mystical life 01 Abr With IIot&#13;
company. Abraxas "hast the axas &amp;ad&#13;
cohabit with the elements" and:" "&#13;
missionary of divine foods a dru orn.,&#13;
when ingested "opens 'u,. dg 'OIucI,&#13;
preception." The author gets ca 00rs ar&#13;
the beauty 01 words, in eUPhony'rtllh&#13;
very easy to do and typical of m~'&#13;
we get the idea, J; bat&#13;
"Willard" by Marc Eisen is the&#13;
a high s~hoo~. student Who, as skty If&#13;
says to hIm, could dis.ppear t~&#13;
and nobndy would notice," "Sorn-;'-;::'"&#13;
mSlde me dOl~~ thiS to' me, trying ~.&#13;
m~, I know It, expresses the invo1 bin&#13;
alienation he is the avatar of. A girl'"&#13;
up to him and tells him he's mys~&#13;
sort of dark figure, nobody knows~&#13;
about him. At the end he gels19....&#13;
leaves. lid&#13;
Undoubtedly, my briel look at&#13;
stones does not do them justice I~&#13;
over-simplified and I may e~ batt&#13;
missod the point. The only "'ay you'D&#13;
know ISto buy INDICATIONSandread':&#13;
stories yourself.&#13;
All in all, a fine production,&#13;
Sunnysial' 'Jlorisls&#13;
&amp;0 Srl'l'n~OUSI'S&#13;
R .. ,,- Fnai1 ....... - ..&#13;
Phone: "9-67l1li&#13;
VI and FRANK WDIIS1lIClt&#13;
3021· 75TH n.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONIIN iJl.a&#13;
/I&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
Brot or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
French FrI •. s or Onion Rings&#13;
or Pototo Salad&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or Bottl,e or Glo •• of Beer&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
Avoilable For Partie.&#13;
Including Froternity and Sorority Partie.&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
"~~BRAT-STOP&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:0Q-1:3.0&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Jim Holoen&#13;
..&#13;
·"0..... .. . . '.&#13;
- - ._..~ .&#13;
~ - . ,&#13;
. ,&#13;
, ' ,&#13;
- '&#13;
3M ,.&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NATlONRLBRNK&#13;
.........&#13;
\ . /' .;'\{- -&#13;
. i~,,';.1&#13;
, ~~,~-&#13;
~/'&#13;
~-'''~&#13;
,~~~,&#13;
FREE DELIVERY 4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Northwe.t Corner 1:"94 and Highway 50 ___&#13;
Is&#13;
7 t&#13;
8 p,"', p.m. 0&#13;
__ sd&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed ondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
f years prec ding ·wwn and the author&#13;
pnmti portrai of the father, mother,&#13;
i ter, crippled brother and the ~Id&#13;
alcoholic idow ne. t door. His portraits&#13;
ha,eother ac in the background, cloudy&#13;
f that become dear for a few&#13;
momen a fe pages and then recede&#13;
c into th bac ground. It i obviously a&#13;
· \\1th maturation motif but it really&#13;
n't utilized f1rmlv because the author is&#13;
continually concerning him elf with&#13;
r1pher I characters q,at the youth&#13;
n't even come into contact with.&#13;
Where thi all lead us, well, the last&#13;
tin or the say · the cripple is meeting&#13;
ns1 un ; either he' found himself as&#13;
th · )in or he' decid d to join the&#13;
J pan . 1 don't no\\ , the crippl_e is ~&#13;
emgm . t ybe it i. because the cripple 1s&#13;
onl o n r, that he is a bwnpon a log&#13;
that no ori notic til they it on him and&#13;
y rry pal didn't ·ee ya, chuckle.&#13;
chuc e, that he 1 an enigma . One&#13;
m morabl _ ne occur· when a young&#13;
bu m I ~ down in the boxcar with&#13;
th cripple nd fondle · hi exual parts. he&#13;
t horn\' nd h tell him he's like all&#13;
th r , bit of ir y, a what.&#13;
! r than anything el. e thi · i a book of&#13;
, arthy . , runcttonal dutiful sex. ex&#13;
i thro h the eyes or adolescents,&#13;
through the ey of lecher· and whores and&#13;
ido\\ nd h b nd and mothers and&#13;
f th r. . The . x theme, which forms a&#13;
cor of th boom. along "ith Irish drinking&#13;
bi , and the lri·h way of death, is well&#13;
done, but it' not enough to make this book&#13;
novel&#13;
K, hat do it all lack, it lacks a plot, a&#13;
tory, a real clima and resolution( instead&#13;
r ju ta nipping off of loose ends&gt;. it Jacks&#13;
clarity, tho h the dialogue is well down it&#13;
metim difficult to find out who is&#13;
saying what and to whom. The book is a&#13;
jumble of impre ions which really don't&#13;
eem to lead to any one point, everybody&#13;
go · their own way and cross paths and&#13;
say hello and tell dirty stories and continue&#13;
their w ; separat ly. And maybe that's&#13;
th author point, that we are all going our&#13;
own way and never really get to know each&#13;
other. nor even ourselves. but the lack of a&#13;
clear purpose, of definity and clarity hurts&#13;
more than it could help even this point.&#13;
But I am most disappointed by what&#13;
Brown didn't do than by what he did do, his&#13;
point of \iev. is everybody's point of view;&#13;
the author has an unique \iew of the world&#13;
because he can't talk and walk in real life&#13;
and yet he fails to use it to its full extent,&#13;
the wh elchair view is only one of a&#13;
number of views and another novel about&#13;
Dublin' social life we don't need.&#13;
If you like enigmas you'll love this&#13;
novel, if you like to see the· drab side of&#13;
Irish life, then this book is for you, but if&#13;
you've read ons and Lovers and Ulysses&#13;
you really don't need this book in your&#13;
library.&#13;
JimHoloen&#13;
3h&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NRTIONRLBANK&#13;
e, IIIOIU&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KI.TCHEN&#13;
FREE DalVERY 4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
KENOSHA 657-5191&#13;
A Look at Indications&#13;
Here is your chance to read the liter~:?&#13;
works of your fellow students; ho~ off e&#13;
offset comes Parkside's . hte~ary . INDICATIONS. This winter&#13;
magazine, t f' ti&#13;
edition contains 48 pages of shor ic on,&#13;
poetry, photographs an_d ~~~;r illustrations. From an aesthetic poi&#13;
view this issue is much improved over last&#13;
year's· for one thing it has a plethora _of&#13;
photog'raphic and illustrated ~rtra1ts&#13;
which serve to balance the magazine and&#13;
afford a visual respite from the small&#13;
print. The photographs were tak~n b~ Art&#13;
Dulan David Christensen, David Binder&#13;
and J~ Rudolph. The story and co~er&#13;
illustrations were created by the mterpretative&#13;
freehand ?f Ji'? Madura. , The opening piece is Diane Lawler s&#13;
poem, "Blues". It is as fine a poe~ as you&#13;
are likely to find in poetry magazmes and&#13;
anthologies anywhere in America. Dia_ne&#13;
has descriptive eyes and bombards us with&#13;
images, piling them on top o~ each other&#13;
until we can feel an impress10n that encompasses&#13;
all the senses. _!f you read&#13;
"Blues" sensitively you will hear and&#13;
smell the Chicago adventure and will know&#13;
why when "i was young when i met you&#13;
now i am dying of your old age." _"Blues"&#13;
alone is worth the rather exorbitant admission&#13;
price ($1.00) to this collection of&#13;
poems and stories.&#13;
Also included in INDICATIONS are&#13;
short poems by Bill Rolbiecki, Pat.Nelson,&#13;
Jerry Socha Walt Breach and Jim&#13;
Hanlon; all deserve your consideration.&#13;
In the short fiction category INDICATIONS&#13;
offers a generally well&#13;
written variety of stories. "Experiment"&#13;
by yours truly is an experiment in point of&#13;
view and characterization. The story&#13;
concerns a schizophrenic whose world you&#13;
see through his eyes, it is a complex story&#13;
which needs a close reading. ·&#13;
"Three Girls Within" by Jerry Socha is&#13;
actually a series of vignettes linked by the&#13;
young girl protagonists and by the fact&#13;
that they are not "normal". One girl isn't&#13;
aware of others, another girl knew she was .&#13;
a bitch and the third vignette portrays the&#13;
beautiful harelipped Jane who asked the&#13;
question "Am I normal?"&#13;
"Fleming for Congress" is Esther&#13;
Burnett's rather sledgehammered story&#13;
about a young long hair who attempts to&#13;
destroy the political campaign r&#13;
order Congressman. It relies O a law&#13;
pearance-reality theme as a on ~e&#13;
carry the story, but it falters ~e\·ice&#13;
It's not badly written; it just a {he&#13;
it's not wor:th writing. seetns Iha&#13;
"The Cycle" by David Bind&#13;
-myth and contrasts civilizatio er -~t&#13;
simple1 mystical life of Ab; "1th&#13;
company. Abraxas "hast the aicas&#13;
cohabit with the elements" and i:\\er&#13;
missionary of divine foods a dru Oln 1&#13;
when ingested "opens 'the d g \l"h&#13;
preccption." The author gets ca ~rs Of&#13;
the beauty of words, in euphony i~-up&#13;
very easy to do and typical of myths 1&#13;
we get the idea. :&#13;
"Willard" by Marc Eisen is the a high school student who as lory Gf&#13;
to h. " uld , som&#13;
says 1m, co disappear to&#13;
and nobody would notice." "Some:&#13;
inside me doing this to me trying t n I kn ·t" ' o&#13;
me, ow 1 , expresses the invol&#13;
alienation he is the avatar of. A gi I u~&#13;
up to him and tells him he's myst!r, co&#13;
sort of dark figure, nobody knows an Olis 1&#13;
about him. At the end he gets up&gt; a leaves.&#13;
U~doubte_dly, my brief look at&#13;
stone~ do~. not do them justice. 1 ha&#13;
over-s1mphf1ed and I may even ha&#13;
missed the point. The only way you'll&#13;
know is to buy INDICATIONS and read"'&#13;
stories yourself.&#13;
All in all, a fine production.&#13;
Sunnyside Jloris~&#13;
~ Sreenhot1ses&#13;
fl111N11 - Frait ... Ill - Citll&#13;
Phone: 649-6700&#13;
YI and FRANK WEINSTOC•&#13;
3021 • 7!1TH ST.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN til"O&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:0Q-l:3.0&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
Fr&amp;nch Fr1e.s or Onion Rin9s&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or 8ottl_e or Glass of B•er&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 8 p.rn.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity and Sor.ority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.-M.&#13;
,~i BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1:...94 and Highway 50 &#13;
Water Pollution Control&#13;
By JOHN KOLOEN out to sea at a depth 0130 feet, discha i&#13;
BILL ROLBJEUKI atrpproXImately 5,975,111,000 gaUo~ ';:;&#13;
ealed water (em n&#13;
I t 01 talk is heard about water Racine the' r uen each year. In&#13;
AUti°onand what we can do to stop it and to 20 leetpel res t&#13;
500 leet oIl shore in 10&#13;
po u h d d 11 th 0 wa er. discharging Iter all t e war 5 an a e proximately 24 "U' apye\~onies&#13;
the most the average citizen per day. Efnuen~l Ion gallons ~feffluent&#13;
1eS~ldOto stop pollution is ~ocarry his beer the lake after th~Str~:t~a~~ which enters&#13;
ca toa garbage can during the fourth of water as it enters th 1 ~rocess. T~e&#13;
~: picnic.Eve~ if every?ne treated ~he fluent. e p ant IS called mlake&#13;
as something ,special, something Several crtterra are considered in the&#13;
trreplaceable and priceless ther~ wouJ.,d treatment process by which the&#13;
suUbe polluting ~Olng on on a dally baSI.S measure their efficiency. One of th~~n~&#13;
eeular as a live dollar walch. And It the amount 01 suspe ded lid as r.. OHNSON . n so s removed 'lAmerican Motors or J Wax (rom thewaler TheR' I . j,sn . acme p ant IS able to&#13;
that paint the !ake brown, no~ any mor~. remove 57 per cent of the suspended solids&#13;
TtIOligh we don t mean to, .eacti 0l!e of us IS fr0t:ll the influent before piping it into the&#13;
ponsiblelor the pollutIOn which !loats lake In Kenosha the I' .&#13;
res . h B' Igure IS apasborecolormgthe&#13;
beac es grey. eca~se proximately the same, which means that&#13;
we have Sewa.geTreatn:ent Plants whl~h for every 13.8 tons of sludge (solid&#13;
disChargetheir water mt~ the lake via mat~rial) removed from the influent 5.8&#13;
'pe1ine we have a contmuous source tons IS still in the water whe't t th P ked ·th t' 't' n I en erg e whichcannot~e chec WI Oll my I l~g a lake.&#13;
mass epidemICof three day constipation. A second criteria, considered to be one of&#13;
The pipe in Kenosha stretches 1,200 feet the most important in terms of lake&#13;
TOBACCONIST grRC£ 19U&#13;
2,401- 60!!! ST K£N~SKA,WI Be. 53140&#13;
pollution. IS the BOD (Blochemical&#13;
Demand). BOD has to do "ith the amount&#13;
of org.ruc matter wtuch enters the lake.&#13;
Since organic material uses oxygen. the&#13;
amount of it pumped into the lake 15 important&#13;
because whatever orgamc mauer&#13;
is added to the lake .. ill use up ox&gt;gen&#13;
which the lake ilseU needs to maintain Its&#13;
ecological balance It I therefore&#13;
necessary to remove as much ci the&#13;
organic matter from the sewage a&#13;
possible in order to Insure a sufficient&#13;
oxygen supply for the lake to survive&#13;
In Kenosha and Racine the plants, "hen&#13;
operating at peak efficienc)", removed&#13;
enough sludge and orgamc matenal to&#13;
make the effluent as clean. If not cleaner.&#13;
than the lake Itself. A i.gnificant c0ntributing&#13;
factor for this lies in the fact that&#13;
neither plant is equipped to remO\:e&#13;
phosphates from the water&#13;
In Racine. for example., only lvlent)' per&#13;
cent of the phosphates are removed Th&#13;
is not due to laulty admInIStration or Incompetent&#13;
handling., but to insuffiCient&#13;
facilities. The staffs cj the two plants are&#13;
extremely conscientious about theIr "ork&#13;
They run their plants with mechanical&#13;
efficiency and try to keep prepared lor any&#13;
emergency. They even use by-produclS 01&#13;
the treatment process (.lethane gas) to&#13;
drive their machinery. But there's a limit&#13;
to how well a plant can operate if it doesn't&#13;
have the equipment to do a good job.&#13;
RecenUya new lederal order demanding&#13;
that phosphates be removed lrom the&#13;
inlluent belore entenng the lake has&#13;
helped to appropriate additional lacililles&#13;
The Kenosha plant is currently coostructing&#13;
$2,830,000 of new facilities that&#13;
are expected to be put into operation by&#13;
1972. These new lacilities will aU"" the&#13;
Kenosha plant to remove as per cent of the&#13;
phosphates nOWbeing pumped Into the&#13;
lake and to impro....e their capacity to&#13;
handle oil and grease. In Racine plans are&#13;
ready to begin construction of a plant&#13;
which is expected to be completed by 1974&#13;
with 80 per cent of the cost coming from&#13;
the federal govenunent.&#13;
Even though the plants in the area are&#13;
not models of effectiveness they are I&#13;
among the best on the lake short'- For&#13;
example, the treatment process In both&#13;
Kenosha and Racine include decontamination&#13;
by chlorine in order to kill all&#13;
disease causing bacteria before it enters&#13;
the lake. This process takes only fifteen&#13;
minutes longer and is done just before the&#13;
water is pumped out, but in IiIwaukee&#13;
there is no chlorination process, the lack of&#13;
which has been speculated to be the cause&#13;
of a recent outbreak 01 typhoid.&#13;
The staffs in Racine and Kenosha claim&#13;
that no industry in the area pollutes the&#13;
lake direcUy, thal, in shor~ they are the&#13;
only consistent polluters. But this need not&#13;
be so. There are plants i.n the country&#13;
which operate at as tugh as 95 per cent&#13;
efficiency. One of these is in Lake Tahoe&#13;
where, because 01 the high degree 01&#13;
community responsibility and a desire to&#13;
, EWSCOPE-P ... 7&#13;
Tuesday, J ...... ry 19, 1971&#13;
preserve their ".ter 5\lPply lor dronk'&#13;
and rOC..... uoe. the I .1go",,,,mtnt ha&#13;
seen to II that·DO! ven th • e p1anl&#13;
pellutes Of COU~ th not to . that&#13;
people at Lake Ta "or hardff .rt'&#13;
more C'OO5C1entlou~.pte The'&gt; are Ibi to&#13;
mamtam a high tandard lmpl~ a&#13;
tbe\ M\:e more furm a\lllabl to&#13;
lth. When Ra "'" ad I planned&#13;
Iaciltues It is e: peeled 10 boost thetr d&#13;
ficlency for remo\ Ing ...-uspendtod to&#13;
81 per cent as compared to the pr n 51&#13;
per cent AI • the) e peet to • bJe 10&#13;
treat torm .. att.1"",hl('hl 00'0' of&#13;
Inadequate lacilItI ,poured dlrecll&gt; Into&#13;
the lake ",thout treatment K ha&#13;
expects to maintain a per nt (Or&#13;
recU\~ In remm:,n pended I&#13;
85 per ~nt in remo\"lng pho6phat and&#13;
per cent err tJ\e 10 malntalnm thfo D&#13;
level&#13;
I hear tell that someone ha. "' erload&#13;
of stock and' selling S cent ba 'Dd lids&#13;
al rock-boHom pnce!' Conts Fun!&#13;
BurfaU&#13;
+ +&#13;
Dol' Jon report lor th "&#13;
" 10 per cent.. '1 down 2' i5&#13;
Merage "eed eamod 51 2S&#13;
Ud p&#13;
r Cl"!'ll&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
I. F.... Saat 9'"..lr U· ..1''"&#13;
AlSO&#13;
.. RII1 .. S'ACttml .. '"ICUM&#13;
.. C"OCCHt .. U'VIOU .. l.A S.AcaHA&#13;
.. stA fOOD .. SANOWI'HU&#13;
CAUYOUTS • OElIVllY&#13;
-YOU aJHC wE "'He'&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
S1.tO "" AV( _&#13;
HAM to&#13;
'Tradition o[ E c:&#13;
Kl,'G of ORG "&#13;
~~~&#13;
'/&#13;
SH Jim Merrick "Mr, H...... nd" For Guar.nteed Service' n.dO-In V.I.o&#13;
OUI of To.lI-C.11 colltct&#13;
HAMMOND ORGAN&#13;
14~~~~n~~n II) ~~~613~~~3&#13;
"Jf B.rtu Organs are Buill, JIammond Kill Budd ThM'"&#13;
ORG&#13;
Water Pollution Control&#13;
By JOHN KOLOEN out to s~ at a depth of 30 feet., discharging&#13;
BILL ROLBIEUKI ~proximately 5,975,111,000 gallons of&#13;
1 t of talk is heard about water&#13;
A t? n and what we can do to stop it and&#13;
PollU tO d fter all the wor s and all the&#13;
ye_l. aonies the most the average citizen&#13;
iesllf to stop pollution is to carry his beer&#13;
can ~ a garbage can during the fourth of&#13;
ca~ icnic. Even if everyone treated the&#13;
Ju &gt; pas something special, something&#13;
lake laceable and priceless there would&#13;
1rrep · d ·1 ba · .&#13;
11 be polluting gomg on on a a1 y sis&#13;
Li regular as a five dollar watch. And it&#13;
·n't American Motors or JOHNSON Wax&#13;
th t paint the lake brown, not any more.&#13;
,; gh we don't mean to, each one of us is&#13;
res~nsible for the pollution which floats&#13;
ashOre coloring the beaches grey. Because . have Sewage Treatment Plants which&#13;
::charge their water int~ the lake via . line we have a continuous source&#13;
~fuch cannot be checked without in~iti~g a&#13;
mass epidemic of three day constipation.&#13;
The pipe in Kenosha stretches 1,200 feet&#13;
ea~d water (effluent) each year In&#13;
~cme the pipe lies 500 feet off shore in 10&#13;
2~ feet of water, discharging a&#13;
proximately 24 million gallons of efflue~&#13;
per day. Effluent is the water which enters&#13;
the lake after the treatment process Th&#13;
water as it enters the plant is calle·d . ~ fluent. m&#13;
Several criteria are considered in the&#13;
treatment process by which the plants&#13;
measure their efficiency. One of them is&#13;
the amount of suspended solids removed&#13;
from the water. The Racine plant is able to&#13;
remove 5~ per cent of the suspended olid ·&#13;
from the influent before piping it into the&#13;
lake._ In Kenosha the figure is approximately&#13;
the same, which means that&#13;
for e~ery 13.8 tons of sludge (solid&#13;
material) removed from the influent 5.8&#13;
tons is still in the water when it enters the&#13;
lake.&#13;
A second criteria, considered to be one of&#13;
the most important in terms of lake&#13;
zz&#13;
6S7-9843 or 6S8-4922 SI&#13;
Se Jim errick ,, r. Ha ond" For Guaranteed Senice I Trad1-1n Val&#13;
Out of To n-0111 Coll ct&#13;
HAMMOND ORGA&#13;
m~T-~~~~.-ml !~~~~~ 3&#13;
"If Bmer Orgam ar~ .Bui/J, llammond ill Build Thr " &#13;
~e,'l, \,,\&#13;
'\~~ ~~\,: 1001'&#13;
~'\\) /0&#13;
~ Courtesy Discount&#13;
to&#13;
Students &amp; Faculty&#13;
(MUST SHOWIDENTIFICATION)&#13;
.. \T II 22"&#13;
fa tottharaet.t'r5&#13;
AJanArkm&#13;
• tarun Balsam&#13;
Richard Benjamin&#13;
Arthur Garfunkel&#13;
Jack Gillord&#13;
Buck Henry&#13;
Bob •.....harl&#13;
Anthony Perlun&#13;
Paula Prenu&#13;
MarlIn been&#13;
John VOIght&#13;
OnonWelles&#13;
Bob Balaban&#13;
usanne Benton&#13;
GUll Revere&#13;
Marcel Daloo&#13;
\ n n&#13;
~olonel .theart&#13;
I lOr Danby&#13;
. h&#13;
lloo:'" , a&#13;
Culonel Korn&#13;
\.)Or tajor&#13;
hapl InTappm n&#13;
ur OU k II&#13;
!lob&#13;
III IIn~erblnder&#13;
eet,.r 10feedl&#13;
Orr&#13;
Dr I' W&#13;
at Iy' Whore&#13;
Old Man&#13;
+ + +&#13;
John Calley&#13;
Mark Ransonholl&#13;
Buck Henry&#13;
Mike Nichols&#13;
Andrew Martin&#13;
John Jordon&#13;
Alan McCabe&#13;
10 malOirapher David Watkm&#13;
am ra Operalor Alan McCabe&#13;
Filmed in Panavision&#13;
Color by Technicolor&#13;
Thai' some calch! (he had to whisUe&gt;.&#13;
~eedless to say, so was the movie.&#13;
Yossarian wa carzy. but not crazy&#13;
enough to want to die He was held by a&#13;
unIVersal Catch. one thaI Mike Nichols and&#13;
Bu k Henry saw go beyond the embatUed&#13;
kif of Y{W 11 and perhaps even into OUT&#13;
pre ot lime&#13;
• Poor Youanan. he was real. he was&#13;
afraid. he was crazy. but most of all he was&#13;
Inherently true to himself. The character&#13;
"as porlrayed to near perlection by Alan&#13;
Arkin. With a madness of a special kind.&#13;
Yossanan was surrounded'by a nearly&#13;
urreal envtronment created by the&#13;
grotesquely satl1'lstic Black Humor of&#13;
Henry and Nichols. Colonel Cathcart&#13;
tMartin Balsam&gt;. the rude flagrant&#13;
commander as true to himself as a used&#13;
car ~1 man selling a lemon. Milo Min·&#13;
derblnder (John Voight) an operator who&#13;
deSIgn a syndic ale as corrupt as the&#13;
enem)"s losclsm. His M&amp;1I1 engulfed&#13;
Yo sarisn in its human dealings;&#13;
de lroY'lng ately (Arthur Garfunkel) his&#13;
}oung friend who was too innocent to&#13;
. Uf\'lve.&#13;
General Dreedle. performed in token by&#13;
Orson Welles, looks at "crazy" Yossarian&#13;
....00 I tanding nude awaiting a contrived&#13;
medal, and says "You are a very weird&#13;
person Yossarian," ... and he was&#13;
Within the General's institution.&#13;
.~~amYossarian's cowardice slands as hIS&#13;
0\\ n herOt m.&#13;
Produced by&#13;
reenplay&#13;
DIrection by&#13;
2nd nil Direction&#13;
.DOWNTOWN&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
N ed Students The new cbairman-ele t - e Univ~rsity 01 Wiscol\sin Facul~yC:f&#13;
,tb.&#13;
chemistry Prof. Margaret I LeonUnciI ~&#13;
to Help Les the Marshfield-Wood Co~nty C~~l:&#13;
The sex. the pain. the confusion, the&#13;
heartbreak were all inevitable ... "War&#13;
makes this so . . The film made it so,&#13;
too. 11115 is why I must give the film my&#13;
highest. recommendation. It was&#13;
technlcall)' superb with the talented and&#13;
lcilllul help 01 David Watlcin and Alan&#13;
McCabe. cinemalographers, It would be&#13;
advisable for those who have read the book&#13;
to be prepared lor somelhing slighUy&#13;
different. The film became an interesting&#13;
extension or the book, making the&#13;
pothellcaUy lunny the grotesquely lunny&#13;
. turning laughter into reflection.&#13;
Tames have changed since the&#13;
copyrighting or "Catch 22" and since the&#13;
well received film "MASH" appeared on&#13;
the screens a new mood bas arisen far&#13;
above the heads or the grey flannel experts&#13;
.... It is made of more human stuff ..&#13;
and ... I think this is good.&#13;
In the end Yossarian escapes through a&#13;
seeming insanity alter he linds that Orr&#13;
tRobert Balaban) has escaped,&#13;
AIter much practice at crash landing his&#13;
plane at sea he has floated to Sweden via&#13;
lileboal. Yossarian tries it too .. , ' the&#13;
final scene reveals Yossarian paddling&#13;
madly toward a momentary freedom. He&#13;
escapes lrom more !ban juslthe confusior&#13;
and lci\ling he also escapes lrom selling&#13;
himseU out. Or shall I say his SELF out.&#13;
One scene that has layed heavily on my&#13;
mind since 1 saw the film is the point&#13;
where ately is speaking to an old man&#13;
(Marcel Dalio) who haunts an Italian&#13;
whore house, In responding 10 the innocenl&#13;
ethnocentric comments that the boy puts&#13;
forth the old man says ... lilt is better to&#13;
live on your feet and die on your knees than&#13;
to live on your kees and die on your feet."&#13;
Amen.&#13;
M I lell the theater I heard comments&#13;
like "That's not entertainment" and "Hell,&#13;
it wasn't even funny." Perhaps those&#13;
viewers have missed the poinl Entertainment&#13;
has ceased to be the name of&#13;
the game, and a special a':Yareness .of&#13;
reality has replaced it. This kind 01 liIm&#13;
can only open eyes . not close them.&#13;
SEE IT,&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
Any Newscope readers who might like to&#13;
recommend a film or make comment or&#13;
criticism concerning this or any other&#13;
article may drop their suggestions off at&#13;
the Newscopy ollice. Thank ydIJ.&#13;
WATCHES .fPAIR DtPT.=t&#13;
Wltellu - .te-lry&#13;
Dilmortd SeHi" ..&#13;
COrllpkh aep.ir&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Desioailt9&#13;
MahY students of Parkside are aware, 1&#13;
am sure tnat several of their fellow&#13;
students' carry out their daily class&#13;
schedules despite serious handica~s they&#13;
possess. One of these students IS L~S&#13;
Barden, who has lost a major part of hIS&#13;
vision.&#13;
This, of course, poses speci&amp;! proble~s&#13;
for Les in carrying out his reading .&#13;
assignments. In overcoming tllis. problem&#13;
Les, has his text books copied onto&#13;
magnetic tape recordings. While the Blind&#13;
Association helps Les WIth the text&#13;
materials they have in stock, many of the&#13;
newer or special texts "and articles ar~n?t&#13;
available to him. For this reason Les IS 10&#13;
need of help and is asking for volunteer&#13;
readers. Les is not too particular 01 the&#13;
reader's voice quality or expressive&#13;
reading ability.&#13;
This semester Les will be needing&#13;
volunteer readers for two. sociology&#13;
courses which he will be taking. Tbose&#13;
students wbo feel that they could belp -&#13;
even for a few hours - please contact Les&#13;
Barden or contact Steve Bangert in the,&#13;
Kenosha Student Allairs Ollice. Room 135,&#13;
telepllone 658-4861 - Extension 42.&#13;
Did You Know - a column of little&#13;
known, but not widely cared about, facts.&#13;
1. Vivian "Sailor Joe" Summons, a&#13;
canadian tattoo artist, had 4,831 tattoos on&#13;
his bOdy. He died in Toronto on D~c.2~,&#13;
1965. age 77. -&#13;
2, All You Flea Fans - The long jump&#13;
record is 13 inches by a Californian Rodent&#13;
Flea. The high jump record is 7 inches.&#13;
3. The greatest alimony ever paid was&#13;
11.550.000 dollars. paid by Reuben H. Heet •&#13;
the U.S. millionaire aircraft manufacturer,&#13;
to his second wafe.&#13;
IF YOU HAVE ANY LITTLE KNOWN&#13;
FACTS ABOUT SOMETHING WE&#13;
SHOULD ALL KNOW ABOUT. SEND&#13;
THEM TO THE NEWSCOPE.&#13;
Mich III &amp; Worlds Records.&#13;
MARGURIITE'S&#13;
ROBES-Regular $15.00,&#13;
Speciol, $10.00.&#13;
Enjoy these cool&#13;
eveni'!9s in cozy&#13;
comfort!&#13;
Short qui Ited; velvet&#13;
toned ribbon d~w~ ~:&#13;
- - _.&#13;
the front, lined with&#13;
sottest nylon&#13;
peach or&#13;
lavender.&#13;
Smoll&#13;
Morgueritte'·s is open·&#13;
9 unti I 9 Mondays and&#13;
. ridays, other weekdays&#13;
, 9 'til 5:30, Sundays&#13;
from 10 a.m. until&#13;
5 p.m.&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
Vl__ .... ·~'- .~.,,-- -_._- e:.-._II •. Ti .... "&#13;
L~...ltr.&#13;
CHINA I&#13;
«i!!'=..:::::.....ItlDAl ....=-*' lECISTlY&#13;
FA.lR TRADE ACCEPTEr.&#13;
CradlYte CemolOllst.tntified Diamollltoloaist&#13;
NEWSCOPE - PageS&#13;
Tuesday. January 19.11111&#13;
tIw&#13;
LEADER&#13;
Moie&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KEIIOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PLUA/lACIIII&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~w&#13;
g/alian ~&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or banquet,&#13;
no party too smalL&#13;
Call 654-9123&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53148&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654-0774 e~&#13;
~. I&#13;
......... ~&#13;
Anchorlnn&#13;
AJryou Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
Monday-thursday SUS&#13;
Friday.Sunday $2.25&#13;
Chlld ....n $1.10&#13;
PlUI TAll AND UWJAII&#13;
LADlESNlTE&#13;
. Mon. &amp; Tues - 8:30 lo 10:30&#13;
Buy the first drink, seconddrink for lie&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits and J'travy&#13;
SERVING: J'r\. • sat. I ,..,U ...&#13;
, aoa;.ft1In. s p.•..I. p."&#13;
.... UN- ..... ;&#13;
9006 Shariden ad.&#13;
PhD'" .. 4-1733&#13;
....&#13;
, the pain, the confu ion, the&#13;
rtb r all m \ itable .. . . War&#13;
m thi • . . . . The film made it o,&#13;
t . Th i hy I mu t give the film my&#13;
h1 h t r ommendation. It wa&#13;
t hm lly _ perb with the talented and&#13;
illful h Ip or Da,·id Watkin and Alan&#13;
I , cinematographers. It would be&#13;
dvi bl for th who ha\'e r ad the book&#13;
to be pr red for omething lightly&#13;
diff nt. The film became an interesting&#13;
. i n the book, making the&#13;
th ticallv funny the grotesquely funny&#13;
.. . turnin·g laughter into reflection.&#13;
Time ha\'e changed since the&#13;
) righhn of "Catch 22" and ince the&#13;
w 11 r h·ed film " lASH" appeared on&#13;
th r a new mood ha arisen far&#13;
bove the heads of the grey flannel experts&#13;
. . • • It i mad of more human stuff . . .&#13;
and • .. I thin this i good.&#13;
In th end Yossarian escapes through a&#13;
ming 1nsanit · after he finds that Orr&#13;
&lt;Robert Bala ban) ha escaped.&#13;
Aft r much practice at crash landing his&#13;
plane at a he has floated to Sweden via&#13;
lifeboat. Yossarian tries it too .. . the&#13;
final ene reveals Yossarian paddling&#13;
madly toward a momentary freedom. He&#13;
escapes Crom more than just the confusior&#13;
and killing he also escapes from selling&#13;
him elf out. Or hall I say his SELF out.&#13;
One cene that has layed heavily on my&#13;
mind ince I saw the film is the point&#13;
h re ·ately is peaking to an old man&#13;
&lt;. tarcel Dalio) who haunts an Italian&#13;
whor hou e. In r ·ponding to the innocent&#13;
ethnocentric comments that the boy puts&#13;
forth the old man savs . .• " It is better to&#13;
live on your feet and die on your knees than&#13;
to live on your kees and die on your feel. "&#13;
Amen.&#13;
As I left the theater I heard comments&#13;
like "That's not entertainment" and " Hell,&#13;
it wasn't even funny." Perhaps those&#13;
viewers have missed the point. Entertainment&#13;
has ceased to be the name of&#13;
the game. and a special a~areness of&#13;
reality ha replaced it. This kind of film&#13;
can only open eyes . . . not close them.&#13;
SEE IT.&#13;
Bill Sorensen&#13;
Any 'ew cope readers who might like to&#13;
recommend a film or make comment or&#13;
critici m concerning this or any other&#13;
art icle may drop their suggestions off at&#13;
the ·ew copy office. Thank yd\J..&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
..... . . CC11ft ....&#13;
u,.....,~ - l..'9n1'•"• ....... . ..., ... cw ........ . 'Ti"'••&#13;
--CHl-'-'- HA-'----'I&#13;
REPAIR DEPT. 7&#13;
Watchs - Jewelry&#13;
Dumond S.ttiRg&#13;
Con,plete a.pair&#13;
Dept. RiRg Designi1111&#13;
C, ')_ ~ \ -£.:'J.:f_.=-- ll~~~~STllY&#13;
'\~'Q..~ ~\..\.. . l 0%&#13;
~~'Q.. 0&#13;
~~ Courtesy Discount&#13;
to&#13;
DW60MD COH5UlTANTS Students &amp; Faculty&#13;
.DOWNTOWN&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
{MUST SHOW IDENTIFICATION)&#13;
FAIR TRAD E ACCEP TEI:&#13;
Cr,dune Gemologist-Certified Dr,montologist&#13;
~C.86-rU&#13;
It .. a,A:e , ,iffe,e1c:e where you sliop!&#13;
Need Students&#13;
to Help Les&#13;
Many students of Parkside a re aware, I&#13;
am sure that several of their fellow&#13;
students ' carry out their ~ily cla ss&#13;
schedules despite serious handica~s they&#13;
possess. One of these students 1s L~&#13;
Barden, who has lost a major part of his&#13;
vision .&#13;
This, of course, poses special proble?1s&#13;
for Les in carrying out his reading&#13;
assignments. In overcoming this_ problem&#13;
Les has his text books copied onto&#13;
magnetic tape recordings. Yt'.hile the Blind&#13;
As ociation helps Les with the text&#13;
materials they have in stock, many of the&#13;
newer or special texts ·and articles ar~ n?t&#13;
available to him. For this reason Les 1s m&#13;
need of help and is asking for volunteer&#13;
readers. Les is not too particular of the&#13;
reader's voice quality or expressive&#13;
reading a bility .&#13;
This semester Les will be needing&#13;
volunteer r eaders for two sociology&#13;
courses which he will be taking. Those&#13;
students who feel that they could help -&#13;
even for a few hours - please contact Les&#13;
Barden or contact Steve Bangert in the&#13;
Kenosha Student Affairs Office, Room 135,&#13;
telephone 658-4861 - Extension 42.&#13;
Did You Know - a column of little&#13;
known, but not widely cared about, facts.&#13;
1. Vivian "Sailor Joe" Summons, a&#13;
Canadian tattoo artist, had 4,831 tattoos on&#13;
his b&lt;&gt;dy. He died in Toronto on Dec. ~ .&#13;
1965, age 77. -&#13;
2. All You Flea Fans - The long jump&#13;
record is 13 inches by a Californian Rodent&#13;
Flea. The high jump record is 7 inches.&#13;
3. The greatest alimony ever paid was&#13;
11,550,000 dollars, paid by Reuben H. Heet,&#13;
the U.S. millionaire aircraft manufacturer,&#13;
to his second wife.&#13;
IF YOU HA VE ANY LITTLE KNOWN&#13;
FACTS ABOUT SOMETHING WE&#13;
SHOULD ALL KNOW ABOUT, SEND&#13;
THEM TO THE NEWSCOPE.&#13;
Mich Ill &amp; Worlds Records.&#13;
MARGURITIE'S&#13;
ROBc S-Regular $15.00,&#13;
Spec ia l, $10.00.&#13;
En joy these cool&#13;
eveni'!gs in cozy&#13;
comfort!&#13;
Short qu ilted; velvet&#13;
toned ribbon d~w~ • - . . . the fr ont, lined with&#13;
sottest ny lon&#13;
pe ach or&#13;
Marguer itte'·s is open ·&#13;
9 until 9 Mondays and&#13;
ridays, other weekdays&#13;
: 9 'ti I 5:30, Sundays&#13;
from 10 a.m. until&#13;
5 p.m.&#13;
6207 • 22nd Avenue .&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
NEWSCOPE- Page 8&#13;
Tuesday, January 19, 1971&#13;
1:he _new ~hairman-elec-;-:--&#13;
Uruvers1ty of Wisconsin Facuit Co f the&#13;
chemistry Prof. Margaret I i.eo llntiJ&#13;
the Marshfield-Wood Co~nt nard r&#13;
r----------Y_ Center&#13;
~&#13;
LEADER ~ DOWNTOWN/ KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PlAZA/ ltACINE&#13;
UPTOWN REST AU RANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~w&#13;
#laliam~&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or banquet,&#13;
no party too small&#13;
Call 654-9123&#13;
4437 • 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 531 40&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
Anchor Inn&#13;
AlfYou Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
Monday-Thursday $1,95&#13;
Friday-Sunday $2,25&#13;
ChlldNn $1.10&#13;
PlUI TU AND IIVIIAII&#13;
LADIESNITE&#13;
Mon. &amp; Tues -8:30 to 10:30&#13;
Buy the first drink, second drink for lk&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits and gravy&#13;
SEllVING: I'd. A Sat. I ,_.,.tt ,_ .. 8on;-flnln. 5 p.m.-ll •·•·&#13;
8aL 1% Nooa·t , .•. ;&#13;
9006 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Phone 694-1733 &#13;
Placement Services Offered&#13;
actions" Th fr tit ese statements were taken&#13;
om. • e summary sheet at Chancellor&#13;
WY,lhe s. Press Conference, Dec. 7 19'70&#13;
which directly contradicts the statement&#13;
reported by the Associated Press dated&#13;
D~. 3 ,~hich quoted Chan. Wyllie as&#13;
saymg, The school will not be influenced&#13;
by students when it comes to dismissing&#13;
teachers:" when Student Government is&#13;
formed It should afford the present Adml!Ustration&#13;
all the credibility it deserves&#13;
This scbool has bee~ ruo under a policy oi lies. for 2 years ano there is no reason to&#13;
believe. l.he present administration will&#13;
ever willingly change its attitude&#13;
,1 rece,ived indication of the seriousness&#13;
"":lth WhICh the Administration purports to&#13;
VIew student commi~ent on Tuesday.&#13;
Dec. 8. We were getting the constitution&#13;
ready for mailing, when it occurred to us&#13;
th~t. we :,-,ere being used by the administration&#13;
to implement its own&#13;
propaganda. The job we faced would have&#13;
taken us at least an 8·hour day, and there&#13;
are payed workers available for these&#13;
duti~s .. Being late,. near 6:00, the only&#13;
adminIstrators left m the building were in&#13;
the Chancellor's office. We knocked on his&#13;
door and Assistant Chancellor Clarence&#13;
"Book Store" Brockman peeked out at us&#13;
through the slightly opened door. I asked&#13;
to see the Chancellor and explained to Mr_&#13;
Wyllie that we felt we should be paid for&#13;
our work. His reply was, "Hey, Brock,&#13;
come here, Ithink we've got a problem." I&#13;
explained the "problem" to Brockman and&#13;
also added that I had been forced to miss a&#13;
class that afternoon, in deference to this&#13;
work. Gathering all of his intellectual&#13;
prowess, Brockman sneered, "Aw, that's&#13;
too had!" and shook his head. At this, we&#13;
qUietly left them with a mountain of paper&#13;
to be mailed. In response to their plight, I&#13;
only shook my head and said, "Aw, that's&#13;
too bad!"&#13;
This little comedy is an .example of how&#13;
serious student efforts and contri6utions&#13;
are recognized by the administration.&#13;
What happened to the Constitution&#13;
Committee and previous student govern·&#13;
ment attempts are probable indications of&#13;
what our new student Government is in&#13;
for. I repeat my warning and urge the&#13;
cooperation of all students, for the only&#13;
way we can have any influence is if we all&#13;
remain active and keep the pressure on&#13;
them.&#13;
The lanagemenl Club in conjunction&#13;
with the Placement Office has ennoceced&#13;
it wi~lbegin. providmg a new service to job&#13;
seeking seniors Plans have been finalized&#13;
to assemble catalogues of one page data&#13;
sheets and distribute them to numerous&#13;
employment agencies throughout the&#13;
Chicago-Milwaukee area&#13;
Recognizing the difficulty oi obtaining&#13;
employment in today's job market, club&#13;
members feel it is wise for the job seeker&#13;
to present his qualifications to as man)'&#13;
employers as possible. This, In fact 15 the&#13;
purpose of the clubs catalogue. It IS fell&#13;
utilization oi the clubs catalogue will&#13;
expose the qualifica tions oi the job seeker&#13;
Whereby Dennis Cashion brought to the&#13;
Committee's attention that Mr. Krenn&#13;
was lea~g the University as of Jan, IS.&#13;
and that hISmotives were solely In lines of&#13;
establishing a good. workable student&#13;
government.&#13;
One of the questions raised was why 1r&#13;
Krevan approached Dennis and Tim in-&#13;
~teau of the Committee. His reply was that&#13;
In student meetings with the Chancellor&#13;
a~t the firings- of the professors, he&#13;
Singled out Dennis aod Tim as two&#13;
students who seemed interested.&#13;
Tom Kreul, a Con-eomm member&#13;
answered that "it is only logical that if&#13;
someone wanted somethi.ng changed in the&#13;
constitution he should talk to the committee&#13;
members. Since you (Mr. Krevan)&#13;
didn't, and you are no\\!presenting us with&#13;
a totally new constitution, we have to&#13;
regard this with suspicion."&#13;
Asked why the Committee hadn't sought&#13;
help from people in the University ex·&#13;
perienced in constitutional law, such as&#13;
PolioScL ProL John Harbeson, Bev Noble,&#13;
Comm. Cbairwoman, replied. "We ",ere&#13;
told that a faculty committee would be&#13;
appointed by the Chancellor to review our&#13;
constitution and to advise us on&#13;
technicalities, but this Committee was&#13;
never appointed."&#13;
Jim Smith, a student present at the&#13;
meeting, seemed to best swn up the&#13;
situation by saying, Hthis is a good&#13;
example of how the administration's&#13;
policies have fostered mistrust among the&#13;
students towards the administration."&#13;
The proposed constitution wasn't even&#13;
voted on, but changes have been made in&#13;
the existing constitution. (The entire&#13;
constitution with the changes underlined is&#13;
printed in this issue, and copies are&#13;
available to read in the libraries, Student&#13;
Activities Building, and Racine and&#13;
Kenosha lounges.)&#13;
The ratification referendum will be held&#13;
during registration for the spring semester&#13;
in the Student Go,emment booth Only&#13;
students enrolled in the Fall semester 19i0&#13;
are eligible to vote.&#13;
Con-Com Report&#13;
ISERMANN&#13;
BROTHERS&#13;
614-616 56th St.&#13;
&lt;Y'Innual $U/JUI;U/I/jf &lt;&amp;leuIUMUX3&#13;
·SALE&#13;
Continues _ SAVE 20 to 30% on&#13;
. h· f&#13;
Two floors of Fine Men '5 Fur",s mgs.&#13;
l_~ ----~&#13;
oecember 10, t9iO •&#13;
As a member of the Constitutional&#13;
C&lt;J!I1mitteeI would like to give my constituencyone&#13;
final report. Having completedthe&#13;
constitution by Sept. t4 we&#13;
p-esentl!d it to Dean Dearborn's office so&#13;
the necessary arrangements could be&#13;
madeto get it printed up and sent out to&#13;
studentsfor ratification.&#13;
Next came a series of rneeunas with&#13;
DeanDearborn, Bill Neihbur, and John&#13;
Hubor.It was during these meetings that&#13;
the administration'S plan of total&#13;
harassment and uncooperation with&#13;
sbldentsbecame evident t9 me. (I only&#13;
suspectedit was so bef'ore.) The constitution&#13;
was subjected to a very close&#13;
scrutinyand nit-picking, as were members&#13;
of the committee. You may also have&#13;
noticedin several areas of the Student's&#13;
Rights section the word "should" where&#13;
manystudents, including members of the&#13;
committee. preferred the word "shall".&#13;
Believingthe constitution to be only a&#13;
formality and placing more im}X&gt;rtance&#13;
upon getting a student government&#13;
ocganizedwe agreed with these word&#13;
changes.Since then the constitution has&#13;
beenchanged ba.ckagain, along with some&#13;
otherchanges.&#13;
Afterthe November 3rd elections, Dean&#13;
Dearborn's attitude changed to a more&#13;
cooperative stance. Politics, obviously,&#13;
plays a big part in the running of our&#13;
lIIiversity. Rumor also bad it that the&#13;
administration had received orders ~from&#13;
Madisontq establish a student Government&#13;
by December.&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee was&#13;
thenappointed by Chancellor Wyllie and&#13;
wernetwith them. At this meeting, 3 of the&#13;
7 committee members showed up, along&#13;
with Deao Dearborn. The faculty members&#13;
had little to say so we bartered with&#13;
tile Deao. We wen~ thl'ough the constitution&#13;
and very cooperatively made&#13;
slightwording changes, which could have&#13;
been donea month earlier. The "meeting"&#13;
adjournedand we were told that we could&#13;
get the constitution printed.&#13;
Following a predictable bureaucratic&#13;
delay tbe constitutions were printed up_&#13;
During this delay. however, the administration&#13;
made a big mistake - the&#13;
ParksidePurge. As a result the Chancellor&#13;
received favorable publicity by saying&#13;
thatStudent Government is being formed&#13;
and that "more formal channels of student&#13;
advisement would be instituted." This&#13;
should be taken as seriously as the&#13;
preceding statement that claimed,&#13;
"student opinion and concern for good&#13;
teaching was considered in the review&#13;
u,.M'-1IriII/~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
~40thAVE&#13;
NOSH" WI$. OL7-11174&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Candy&#13;
Corsages&#13;
Adam and Eve Special&#13;
Boneless Top irloin for 2 S12 9S&#13;
Lobster Tail for 2 S18's&#13;
Included with the above-&#13;
· Bottle of Champagne&#13;
· Lazy Susan&#13;
·Brandy-Ice for Dessert&#13;
° Complete Dinner&#13;
Dean Loumos&#13;
Con-Camm Member&#13;
Final Con·Comm Meeting&#13;
On Tuesday, Dec. 22, the Constitutional&#13;
Committee met with interested students to&#13;
discuss the constitution, its weak points,&#13;
and to hear and make possible changes.&#13;
Also attending was Mr. David Krevan,&#13;
Special Assistant to the Chancellor.&#13;
Mr. Krevan had approached two&#13;
students, Dennis Cashion and Tim Ocker I&#13;
about the constitution and questioned its&#13;
workability. The three of them had drawn&#13;
up a whole new constitution and presented&#13;
it to the Committee as an alternative.&#13;
During the meeting questions were&#13;
raised about Mr. Krevan's motives. Some&#13;
of the members or the Constitutional&#13;
Committee were reluctant to cooperate.&#13;
Dean Loumos called Krevan's sudden&#13;
interest "another Administration trick".&#13;
to a much larger number of employ",&#13;
Lhan would be Ible 00 an mdi\ldUlil&#13;
baSIS InclUSion 10 thr carate&#13;
available to all January, June and A\Ill I&#13;
graduates oi Parksrde. The catalogue I' ,11&#13;
beor-garutedmto.tajorarea of tud, and&#13;
will be accomparued by a W i\. P&#13;
catatogue. Orgaruzed in thIS manner, club&#13;
members feel the catalogue will pr nt to&#13;
employers an attracuv e. easily utilized&#13;
reference oi available talent&#13;
To be Included ,n the catalogue, a _,or&#13;
needs only to p.clt up the nec ry forms&#13;
at the Placement Office on County Trunk&#13;
A. complete aod return them md.ca~ng he&#13;
or she would hke to be Included 10 the&#13;
catalogue Inqulfles from the "nOWl&#13;
firms will be directed to Ir Ocker. Ihe&#13;
Placement Dlreclor, who 1',11then no~f&#13;
the studenl In qu bon.&#13;
A mall fee ma~ be required to CQ'\:eJ"&#13;
binder, poslal and duphca~ng CO!i&#13;
Project committeemen. Jim . ·ol.n. SIU&#13;
luzenski and Tim Leberman polO' out&#13;
that the Uni\·erslt) 1$ m no ....ay COM led&#13;
w,th thIS fee. They also remtnd Sf'nlors&#13;
that registration at the Placement O£rlceIS&#13;
a prerequisite tc mtervie ·ulg.and that Ole&#13;
oomber of registrants bears hea\ II} on the&#13;
decision 01 many campus rec:::nut~ on&#13;
whether or not 10 come to a perUC'ular&#13;
campus The)' also Indicated lht",r&#13;
gratitude to. Ir. Ocker and hi tarc at the&#13;
Placement Office for the-IT a lane to&#13;
malung thl sernee possible.&#13;
The .Ianagemenl Club I a ~t1)&#13;
formed campus organllallon advISed by&#13;
Mr. Roy Cougle.. Iembersbip ISopen to all&#13;
students Interested In a more complet&#13;
understanding of the function and&#13;
responsibilities or management.&#13;
EWSCOPE-Page9&#13;
Tuesday, January 19,1971&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
6d'o&#13;
u- C· . __V.onm&#13;
HipwlY 21 It 1-94&#13;
R1CIIlE&#13;
FII Ruernti' .. CIII&#13;
11&amp;-4411&#13;
Con-Com Report&#13;
oecember 10, 1970&#13;
As a member of the Constitutional&#13;
C mmittee I would like to give my consti~encY&#13;
one final report. Having completed&#13;
the constitution by Sept. 14 we&#13;
presented it to Dean Dearborn's office so&#13;
the necessary arrangements could t)e&#13;
made to get it printed up and sent out to&#13;
·tudents for ratification.&#13;
Next came a series of .meetings with&#13;
oean Dearborn, Bill Neihbur, and John&#13;
Hubor. It was during these meetings that&#13;
the administration's plan of total&#13;
harassment and uncooperation with&#13;
·tudents became evident t9 me. (I only&#13;
·ll'ipected it was _so before.) The contitution&#13;
was subJected to a very close&#13;
scrutiny and nit-picking, as were members&#13;
of the committee. You may also have&#13;
noticed in several areas of the Student's&#13;
Rights section the word "should" where&#13;
many students, including members of the&#13;
committee, preferred the word "shall".&#13;
Believing the constitution to be only a&#13;
formality and placing more importance&#13;
upon getting a student government&#13;
ocganized we agreed with these word&#13;
changes. Since then the constitution has&#13;
been changed back again, along with some&#13;
other changes.&#13;
After the November 3rd elections, Dean&#13;
Dearborn's attitude changed to a more&#13;
cooperative stance. Politics, obviously,&#13;
plays a big part in the running of our&#13;
university. Rumor also had it that the&#13;
administration had received orders from&#13;
fadison to establish a student Government&#13;
by December.&#13;
The Campus Concerns Committee was&#13;
then appointed by Chancellor Wyllie and&#13;
we met with them. At this meeting, 3 of the&#13;
7 committee members showed up, along&#13;
with Dean Dearborn. The faculty members&#13;
had little to say so we bartered with&#13;
the Dean. We went through the contitution&#13;
and very cooperatively made&#13;
light wording changes, which could have&#13;
been done a month earlier. The "meeting"&#13;
adjourned and we were told that we could&#13;
get the constitution printed.&#13;
Following a predictable bureaucratic&#13;
delay the constitutions were printed up.&#13;
During this delay, however, the administration&#13;
made a big mistake - the&#13;
Parkside Purge. As a result the Chancellor&#13;
received favorable publicity by saying&#13;
that Student Government is being formed&#13;
and that "more formal channels of student&#13;
advisement would be instituted." This&#13;
hould be taken as seriously as the&#13;
preceding statement that claimed,&#13;
"stud~n~ opinion and concern for good&#13;
leaching was considered in the review&#13;
rtrr K lid/I/~&#13;
EMIL GERLACH&#13;
/~&#13;
Since 1886&#13;
~-40thAVE&#13;
KENOSHA WIS. 0L7-'5t74&#13;
Fruit Baskets&#13;
Candy&#13;
Corsages&#13;
afctionsth." These statements were taken&#13;
rom e summar h t Wyll" , p Y s ee at Chancellor . ie s. ress Conference, Dec. 7, 1970&#13;
which directly contradicts the statement&#13;
~ported b)'. the Associated Press dated&#13;
~ - 3 ,:,Vhich quoted Chan. Wyllie as saymg, The school will not be influenced&#13;
by students when it comes to dis . . teach " Wh m1ssmg ers. en Student Governme t ·&#13;
fo:n:ied i~ should afford the present" A~~ m1!11strabon all the credibility it deserves&#13;
~1s school has been run under a policy of&#13;
lie~ for 2 years and there is no reason to&#13;
believe_ t_he present administration will&#13;
ever wd_hngly change its attitude.&#13;
_I rece_1ved indication of the seriousness&#13;
"":th which the Administration purports to&#13;
VIew student commit~ent on Tuesday,&#13;
Dec. 8. We were getting the constitution&#13;
ready for mailing, when it occurred to us&#13;
th~t. we ~ere being used by the admm1&#13;
stra hon to implement its own&#13;
propaganda. The job we faced would have&#13;
taken us at least an 8-hour day, and there&#13;
are payed workers available for these&#13;
duti~s._ Being late, near 6:00, the only&#13;
admm1strators left in the building were in&#13;
the Chancellor's office. We knocked on his&#13;
door and Assistant Chancellor Clarence&#13;
"Book Store" Brockman peeked out at us&#13;
through the slightly opened door. I asked&#13;
to see the Chancellor and explained to Mr.&#13;
Wyllie that we felt we should be paid for&#13;
our work. His reply was, "Hey, Brock,&#13;
come here, l think we've got a problem.'' I&#13;
explained the " problem" to Brockman and&#13;
also added that I had been forced to miss a&#13;
class that afternoon, in deference to this&#13;
work. Gathering all of his intellectual&#13;
prowess, Brockman sneered, "Aw, that's&#13;
too bad!" and shook his head. At this, we&#13;
quietly left them with a mountain of paper&#13;
to be mailed. In response to their plight, I&#13;
only shook my head and said, "Aw, that's&#13;
too bad! "&#13;
This little comedy is an example of how&#13;
serious student efforts and contributions&#13;
are recognized by the administration.&#13;
What happened to the Constitution&#13;
Committee and previous student government&#13;
attempts are probable indications of&#13;
what our new student Government is in&#13;
for. I repeat my warning and urge the&#13;
cooperation of all students, for the only&#13;
way we can have any influence is if we all&#13;
remain active and keep the pressure on&#13;
them. DeanLoumos&#13;
Con-Comm Member&#13;
Final Con-Comm Meeting&#13;
On Tuesday, Dec. 22, the Constitutional&#13;
Committee met with interested students to&#13;
discuss the constitution, its weak points,&#13;
and to hear and make possible changes.&#13;
Also attending was Mr. David Krevan,&#13;
Special Assistant to the Chancellor. Mr. Krevan had approached two&#13;
students Dennis Cashion and Tim Ocker,&#13;
about th~ constitution and questioned its&#13;
workability. The three of them had drawn&#13;
up a whole new constitution and pre_sented&#13;
it to the Committee as an alternative.&#13;
During the meeting questions we ·e&#13;
raised about Mr. Krevan's motives. Some&#13;
of the members or the Constitutional&#13;
Committee were reluctant to cooperate.&#13;
Dean Loumos called Krevan's sudden&#13;
interest "another Administration trick' '.&#13;
ISERMANN&#13;
BROTHERS&#13;
614-616 56th St.&#13;
Jinnua/ Janua/1//f ~/eaJtance&#13;
·sALE&#13;
Continues - SAVE 20 to 30% on&#13;
Two Floors of Fine Men's Furnishings!&#13;
~~·-------------&#13;
Placement Services Offered&#13;
·whereby Dennis Ca hion bro ht to th&#13;
Committee·- attention that lr. Kre\•&#13;
_was lea,ing the ni, ·ty as o Ja 15,&#13;
and that hi motiv · v. er !ely in lin of&#13;
establishing a good, :-ork ble . udent&#13;
government.&#13;
One of the questions ra i · hy 1r.&#13;
Krevan approached Denn.u; and T-1m in-&#13;
. leac. vf the Committ _ Ht reply that&#13;
Jn student meetings with the Olan II&#13;
about the firing of the prof&#13;
singled out Denni and Tim&#13;
students who seemed inter ted.&#13;
Tom Kreul, a Con-Comm member,&#13;
an wered that " it i onlv I ical that if&#13;
someone wanted something chan ed -nth&#13;
constitution he hould talk to the committee&#13;
members. Since you (. !r. Kr ·an)&#13;
didn't. and you are no"" prest&gt;nting · i th&#13;
a totally ne\\ con titution, we have to&#13;
regard thi with uspicion."&#13;
Asked why the Committee hadn't . ught&#13;
help from people in the niversitv --&#13;
perienced in con titutional law, uch a&#13;
Poli. Sci. Prof. John Harbeson, Bev • 'obi .&#13;
Comm. Chairwoman, replied. " 'i ·e \I.ere&#13;
told that a faculty committee would be&#13;
appointed by the Chancellor to re\"leW our&#13;
constitution and to advi e u on&#13;
technicalities, but this Committee wa&#13;
never appointed."&#13;
Jim Smith, a student present at the&#13;
meeting, seemed to best um up the&#13;
situation by saying. "this i a good&#13;
example of how the admini tralion'&#13;
policies have fostered mistrust among the&#13;
students towards the administration."&#13;
The proposed constitution w~Ln't e,·en&#13;
voted on, but changes ha\'e been mad in&#13;
the existing con titution. (Th entire&#13;
constitution with the chan underlined i&#13;
printed in thi i ue, and copi re&#13;
available to read in the librari tudent&#13;
Activitie Building, and Racin and&#13;
Kenosha lounge·.)&#13;
The ratification referendum \I.i ll be h d&#13;
during regi tration for the p ·&#13;
in the tudent Go,ernment&#13;
students enrolled in the Fall&#13;
are eligible to \'Ole.&#13;
Adam&#13;
Bon le Top irloin for 2&#13;
Lob t r Tn1l for 2&#13;
H igflway 20 at 1-94&#13;
RACINE&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
S 12 9S&#13;
s1s s&#13;
F r Reserntio s Call&#13;
886-4418 &#13;
Gymnasts Open Season&#13;
Parltside's greatest asset will be its&#13;
dynamic young coach. Bill Ballester. 33.&#13;
who came to UWP Uus laU Irom&#13;
Waukegan. Ill., where hJS high school&#13;
teams were 63-13 over eight years and&#13;
10 re ranked tn the top 10 in UJinois each&#13;
year&#13;
Coaching In the Suburban conference.&#13;
t'Ol\S,d red by many to be the top prep&#13;
gymnastics league in the country,&#13;
Ball I r de, loped lour 8)mnasts who&#13;
WMt on to AII-Amencan honors, including&#13;
one OlympIan&#13;
H has Judged NCAA and AAU champlonshi&#13;
• coached the U team thIS&#13;
summ r in a meet agamsl Bulgana a well&#13;
rdJnating training 01 the US team&#13;
In preparation lor the World Games&#13;
champiOn hip jn Yugoslavia, B.nd&#13;
CUrrMtly Is president or the national high&#13;
hool g)mna ti alation.&#13;
Ball ler's Itrst cempeuuve team al&#13;
'P w,lI I atur lour I"'0mlslllg lreshmen&#13;
and a highl) regarded JUnior coUege&#13;
transler lrom Calilornia&#13;
Th We t C. t junior is Warren&#13;
McGillivray 01 Burbank. who was aUaround.&#13;
ring and long horse champion 01&#13;
the Los Angeles Invitational while a star at&#13;
Pterce Junior College In Los Angeles.&#13;
Others are; Warren Vogel, Wisconsin&#13;
high school ring champ'oo at Homestead&#13;
high In Mequon last year&#13;
Dan Boswem. state finalist in high bar&#13;
and tumbling at Mllwaukee Madison high&#13;
school&#13;
Doug Anderson. Jlltnois slate finalist in&#13;
aII.around at Thornr,dge high in Doltoo.&#13;
III&#13;
AI EM'S, state meet finalist in side horse&#13;
(rom Kenosha Tr-emper.&#13;
Vogel 10 still rings and EMis in side&#13;
horse wl1J be UWP's only specialists. The&#13;
olhers are aU-around men who can perform&#13;
in.n ix events - rings, side horse,&#13;
IuIh bar. peraUeI bars, lree exercise and&#13;
long horse&#13;
Doug Anderson&#13;
An active gymnastics club at UWP ~&#13;
expected to provide a leeder system lor&#13;
the varsity in the luture. .&#13;
Parkside will have no home meets this&#13;
season, but the schedule includes some 01&#13;
the country's lop learns: NCAA contender&#13;
Indiana State, Big Eighl I"'wer Kansas&#13;
State, NCAA small college title contender&#13;
Illinois-Circle Campus, and Eastern&#13;
Illinois&#13;
The schedule:&#13;
Jan. 2 - at Stevens Point, 3 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 30 - at U. 01Chicago, 2 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 5 - Merquette, Chicago at Marquette,&#13;
7 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 6 _ Wisconsin Open, Milwaukee, 10&#13;
Fe:·~· - Illinois Circle Campus, George&#13;
Williams at George Williams, 2 p.rr:t.&#13;
Feb. 19 -Illinois State, SI. Cloud alllhnols&#13;
State, 7 p.m. '11' •&#13;
Feb. 20 - Eastern Illinois, George WI lams&#13;
at Eastern, 2 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 26 - Indiana State, Kansas St.te at&#13;
Indiana State, 7 p.m.&#13;
F3b. 'Z7 - Triton Invitational, Northlake,&#13;
III., 1 p.m. .&#13;
Mar. 12-13 - NAIA District 14, SUJl"rIor.&#13;
. Mar. 19-20-NAIANalionals, NatchItoches,&#13;
La.&#13;
Dan Boswein&#13;
NEWSCOPE - Page 10&#13;
Tuesday, January 19,1971&#13;
--.&#13;
Notes of Interest&#13;
The Racine Branch of the Am .&#13;
Association of University Wornen.......&#13;
announced that applications noware be~&#13;
accepted lor the $400 scholarship ~&#13;
AAUW awards annually to a Ra'&#13;
County girl."'"&#13;
The scholarship award, which is bo..,.&#13;
on academic achievement and flDlDciaI&#13;
need, is awarded each year to alia'&#13;
County girl beginning the first Or ...:::&#13;
semester of her junior year at any&#13;
credited, degree·granting CollegeItuniversity&#13;
the lall after the grant ~&#13;
awarded.&#13;
Deadline lor filing .pplications is Aprjj&#13;
1. The scholarship will be awarded&#13;
AAUW's annual banquet in May. It&#13;
Application blanks may be 0btainod&#13;
from Mrs. W. R. Dollase, 333S Ascot Sl&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53406, the scholantlP&#13;
committee chairman, or from deans or&#13;
student affairs directors at a s.... _.&#13;
"t '~I college or urnversi y.&#13;
Application blanks should berelunlodlo&#13;
Mrs. Dollase along with atranscriptolille&#13;
student's credits lor her college Work Ia&#13;
date.&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 19:&#13;
BASKETBALL - UWP at DoI1linltao&#13;
College.&#13;
Wednesday. Jan. 20:&#13;
STUDY PERIOD - Also Jan. 21.&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 21:&#13;
FACULTY SENATE - UWP F•...,&#13;
Senate will meet at3:30 p.rn. inGreetquiI&#13;
Hall, Room 103.&#13;
Friday, Jan. 22:&#13;
FINAL EXAMS - Through Jan ~.&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 30:&#13;
BASKETBALL - UWP v. Hope CoIJeeeIl&#13;
Holland, Mich. 8 p.m. at Salem Cealnl&#13;
High School.&#13;
FENCING - UWP v. Purdue, UnivtIIiIJ&#13;
01 Indiana and Bowling Green SIaIt&#13;
University al Lafayette, Incl.&#13;
GYMNASTICS - UWP at University II&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Coming SpecialEvent&#13;
Foreign Travel:&#13;
Holiday in Spain - Spring Break, Apd&#13;
lo-I8. Torremolinos (Spanish Rivlenl&#13;
Includes round trip jet Irom Milw••&#13;
lodging in modern new apartments a1aII&#13;
the Mediterranean and use of a rental.&#13;
(lor each group of four). Cost: $219.l1lip.&#13;
tax. Information and application blllD&#13;
available in the Student Affairs orr.... ·d&#13;
campuses, or contact Mr. WiUilm&#13;
Niebuhr, 658-4861, Ext. 225.&#13;
New Semester Brings Improved Tallent&#13;
Tu'" strengths. Weaknesses and Outlook&#13;
(Of" the Upcoming ea5on:&#13;
Steve Norman, 6'1". 175 pounds,&#13;
nlverslty 01 Maryland, on Maryland's&#13;
traveling squad last year as a sophomore,&#13;
should provide solid strength at guard&#13;
when he becomes eligible secane&#13;
semester. Norman and Rick Davis, 6'3",&#13;
170 pounds, University of West Virginia, a&#13;
guard who started for West Virginia's&#13;
freshman last season, and who also will be&#13;
eligible second semester, were teammates&#13;
ff BARDEN'S&#13;
~ DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
i[g' e:.Men's Famous Name&#13;
Shirts • Woman's&#13;
Sportswear, Lingerie,&#13;
Domestic&#13;
Items&#13;
#~ ," ~.&#13;
"O~ O\) ~,.C\\&#13;
at Parkersburg, West Virginia.. high&#13;
school, where Norman made all·state and&#13;
all American. Depth will be a problem&#13;
until second semester; rebounding, a&#13;
weakness !,ast 'year, sliould be improved.&#13;
Slaughter, Hogan, Findreng and Madsen&#13;
should provide gooo scoring punch, with&#13;
Norman helping out in that department&#13;
second semester.&#13;
Ri'ck Davis and Steve Norman will join&#13;
team lor game Feb. 9 againsl University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Green Bay - eligible second&#13;
semester.&#13;
q~~&#13;
5160 6th AVE.&#13;
Student Bowling&#13;
Headquarters&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
46 BrunswicklUll&#13;
STUDENT SUMMER ·EMPLOYMENT&#13;
For next summer's job, check now the SUMMER EMPLOYMENT&#13;
DIRECTORY OF THE UNITED STATES, The&#13;
latest edition is fresh off the press. It has just arrived in the&#13;
• - US516 Library, and we have it on the reference shelf (HF 5382.5&#13;
. Get the 1971). Ninety thousand summer jobs are listed for I97J.&#13;
jump on the competition!&#13;
NEWSCOPE- Page 10&#13;
Tuesday, January 19, 1971&#13;
Gymnasts Open Season Notes of Interest&#13;
The Ra~e Branch of the Arnen&#13;
Association of U~versity Women c&#13;
announced that applications now are be has&#13;
accepted for the $400 scholarship Wh~&#13;
AAUW awards annually to a Ra . County girl. cine&#13;
The scholarship award, Which is ~&#13;
on academic achievement and fin3!1cia)&#13;
need, is awarded each year to a Ra . County girl beginning the first or seco~&#13;
semester of her junior year at apy&#13;
credited, degree-granting college a·&#13;
university the fall after the grant or&#13;
awarded.&#13;
Deadline for filing applications is Ap&#13;
1. The scholarship will be awarded ,&#13;
AAUW's annual banquet in May. at&#13;
Application blanks may be oblai~&#13;
from Mrs. W. R. Dollase, 3335 Ascot&#13;
Racine, Wisconsin 53406, the schola&#13;
committee chairman, or from deans&#13;
Doug Anderson student affairs directors at a stud .... ~ . ·t ..... , college or umvers1 y.&#13;
n ctive gymna tics club at UWP is&#13;
d to provide a feeder system for&#13;
th \ . ity in the future. . Par : de .... m have no home meets this&#13;
but the chedule includes some of&#13;
th ~tr;, top team : , 'CAA contender&#13;
Indiana tale Big Eight power Kansas&#13;
t , · A 'mall college title contender&#13;
Illinoi ·Circle Campu , and Eastern&#13;
Illin · .&#13;
Th hedule&#13;
Jan. 2 - at tevens Point, 3 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 30- at U of Chicago, 2 p.m.&#13;
Feb. s -. larquette, Chicago at 1arquette,&#13;
7 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 6 - Wisconsin Open, Milwaukee, 10&#13;
Feba.~. - Illinois Circle Campus, George&#13;
Williams at George Williams, 2 P·".1·&#13;
Feb. 19 - Illinois State, St. Cloud at Illinois&#13;
State, 7 p.m. w·ir ·ms Feb. 20 - Eastern Illinois, George i ia&#13;
at Eastern, 2 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 26 - Indiana State, Kansas State at&#13;
Indiana State, 7 p.m. F3b. 27 - Triton Invitational, Northlake,&#13;
Ill., 1 p.m. . Mar. 12-13 - NAIA District 14, SuJ?E!nor.&#13;
Mar. 19-20- NAIA Nationals, Natchitoches,&#13;
La.&#13;
Application blanks should be returned to&#13;
Mrs. Dollase along with a transcript or the&#13;
student's credits for her college work to&#13;
date.&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 19:&#13;
BASKETBALL - UWP at Dominic&#13;
·college.&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 20:&#13;
STUDY PERIOD - Also Jan. 21.&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 21:&#13;
FACULTY SENATE - UWP Facu!&#13;
Senate will meet at 3:30 p.m. in GreelVjUISI&#13;
Hall, Room 103.&#13;
Friday, Jan. 22:&#13;
FINAL EXAMS - Through Jan. 30.&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 30:&#13;
BASKETBALL- UWP v. Hope College of&#13;
Holland, Mich. 8 p.m. at Salem Central&#13;
High School.&#13;
FENCING - UWP v. Purdue, Univemty&#13;
of Indiana and Bowling Green State&#13;
University at Lafayette, Ind&#13;
GYMNASTICS - UWP at University of&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Coming Special Event&#13;
Foreign Travel:&#13;
Dan Boswein&#13;
Holiday in Spain - Spring Break, April&#13;
10-18. Torremolinos (Spanish Riviera)&#13;
Includes round trip jet from Milwauket,&#13;
lodging in modern new apartments alQII&#13;
the Mediterranean and use of a rental car&#13;
(for each group of four). Cost: $219.00 plus&#13;
tax. Information and application _blaiis&#13;
available in the Student Affairs Office· all&#13;
campuses, or contact Mr. William&#13;
Niebuhr, 658-4861, Ext. 225.&#13;
New Semester Brings Improved Tallent&#13;
and Outlook when he becomes eligible secona&#13;
a .on: semester. Norman and Rick Davis, 6'3",&#13;
170 pounds, University of West Virginia, a&#13;
guard who started for West Virginia's&#13;
freshman last season, and who also will be&#13;
eligible second semester, were teammates&#13;
BARDEN'S ~ DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
i(g··· e,,. Men's Famous Name&#13;
TREMENDOUS&#13;
SAVINGS!&#13;
Shirts • Woman 1s&#13;
Sportswear, Lingerie,&#13;
Domestic&#13;
Items&#13;
~ ~"" '" ~- "yo~ 0 &lt;) ~~rJ;I&#13;
at Parkersburg, West Virginia, high&#13;
school, where Norman made all-state and&#13;
all American. Depth will be a problem&#13;
until second semester; rebounding, a&#13;
weakness last ·year, sliould be improved.&#13;
Slaughter, Hogan, Findreng and Madsen&#13;
should provide good scoring punch, with&#13;
Norman helping out in that department&#13;
second semester.&#13;
Rick Davis and Steve Norman will join&#13;
team for game Feb. 9 against University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Green Bay - eligible second&#13;
semester.&#13;
Q~~ 5160 6th AVE.&#13;
Student Bowling&#13;
Headquarters&#13;
BOWLING I&#13;
46 Brunswick lall8S&#13;
STUDENT ·suMMER -EMPLOYMENl&#13;
For next summer's job, check now the SUMMER EM·&#13;
PLOYMENT DIRECTORY OF THE UNITED STATES, The&#13;
latest edition Is fresh off the press. It has just arrived in the&#13;
Library, and we hav~ it on the reference shelf (HF 5382-5 u5576&#13;
1971). Ninety thousand summer jobs are listed for 197l. Get the&#13;
jump on the competition! &#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
T;pewri.ter - manual $55.00. 652-7482. 3&#13;
; Boots - Dunham. Size 10'h $15.00. 654-&#13;
6496. 3&#13;
Wig - Short, Brown. $12.00. 652-5977 after&#13;
3&#13;
7p.m,&#13;
;;ooe Coat size 42, light brown $30. 657-&#13;
5992, 3&#13;
SkUs. Hart Javelin 210 em $150. Kneisse&#13;
Ilfd Stars 205 em $140. Hart Camern Giant&#13;
Slalom 190 em $140. Reigble Boots Size 9&#13;
.\110,110. Call ext 395. 3&#13;
Slti Boots, size 8 $10.00; ski pants size 16&#13;
$ll.IIO,886-4008after4p.m. '3&#13;
Slide Rule$12.50. information center. 3&#13;
TyperwrilersandAdders, Gene639-8636./&#13;
Camera - Polaroid 180 $85.00. Information&#13;
center 3&#13;
Nobel 12 Guage Deer Slayer, shot gun&#13;
175,110 or trade for 20 Guage auto, 658-3491. 3&#13;
Book - Want to Buy. The Elizabethean&#13;
W...ld Piclure by Tillyard. 632-7945 after&#13;
5:30p.m. 3&#13;
SkiJacket- Medium $40. Mu((y 532-7700. 3&#13;
PoolQue 18 oz. 694-5823.&#13;
TheTomainePalace "Where Gormets Eat&#13;
For a Real Eal T-ieat". Try our Filet of&#13;
Murcury. Only75 cenls. 3&#13;
For Evenings of fun contact Bill 652-8230.&#13;
Be Descreet!. 3&#13;
GolfBalls - W (lOxlO) 3 for $1.00 or 20 for&#13;
16.110. Jerry 654-8716. from 5 p.m,-7 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday or Thursdays. 3&#13;
Ski Boots - Kollach size 8'h. $35,00. 657-&#13;
6316, 3&#13;
Aquarium 50 Gal. with stand. 657-6602. 3&#13;
Wanted -' Light weigbt bicycle frame.&#13;
Fork incl, 27" mus! have pin type&#13;
sprockel. 657·7683 Steve Monday and&#13;
Wednesday after 9 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday,&#13;
Friday, after 6 p.m. 3&#13;
Wanted- 35 rom. single lens reflex with&#13;
electric eye under $100. Bill 639-1485. 3&#13;
Honda Scrambler "69" 450 cc. 652-5977&#13;
aller 7 p. m. 3&#13;
MUSICAL&#13;
Bass Guitar - Gibson and Eko call Ed 633-&#13;
4648 3&#13;
Bass &amp; Guitar-Eko. Tom 633-7603. 3&#13;
Guitar &amp; Amp- Gibson $150.654-8030. 3&#13;
Violin &amp; two Bows $50.00 or best offer. Bob&#13;
Seitz. 639-5297. 3&#13;
Harmony Stella 12 String Guitar and Case.&#13;
150.00. 633-ClO42. 3&#13;
Knabe Piano. Parlor Grand 6'4".639-0464.&#13;
3&#13;
Guitar - Epithone, Classical. must sell.&#13;
$60.694-6168,. 3&#13;
HELP WANTED&#13;
Male. Mon,-Fri, 11:30 a.m.'1:3O p.m. Spot&#13;
Dnve 10 Apply in Person. 2117-75th street,&#13;
KenOSha. 3&#13;
Peoplelowork on Ads for Newscope - and&#13;
anYlhing else. Will train. 3&#13;
-&#13;
SITUATIONS WANTED&#13;
Will tutor. French and German. Frank&#13;
KUitschen.63!Hl346. 3&#13;
Typing 50 cents per sheet. Paper supplied&#13;
658-2203.12-1,4:30-5:30. 3&#13;
Term papers typed - 40 cents per sheel.&#13;
654-&amp;191. 3&#13;
Typing - all kinds. 633-0304.&#13;
Typing. 652-0418.&#13;
Backbreaking work wanted - call Samson&#13;
652-8791. 3&#13;
WANTED TO BUY&#13;
Pidgeon Hole desk. 654-3447. 3&#13;
Used Viola Standard size. 639-6164. 3&#13;
Gas stove - cheap Rita's mother. 6M3170,&#13;
3&#13;
ANTIQUES - Depression Glass (BP&#13;
green or red) will pay reasonable prices&#13;
652-5133. 3&#13;
ROOMMATES WANTED&#13;
3&#13;
To share furnished house near downtown&#13;
Kenosha. $45 plus utilities. Immediate&#13;
occupancy, 694-0171. 3&#13;
To share 2 bedroom apt. $50.00 per month.&#13;
Heat and electricity and phone. 652-9720.&#13;
Before 10 a.m, or after 4 p.m. occupancy&#13;
Feb. 71.&#13;
Basement apt. 1232 Marquette St. $40 per&#13;
month. contact Ken Konkol at Newscope&#13;
o((ice. 3&#13;
20 Vol. Encyclopedia. Contact Ken Konkol&#13;
at Newscope office. 3&#13;
RIDES NEEDED&#13;
To Denver during semester break. Warren&#13;
652-4177. or 652-5200. 3&#13;
To Hanoi - after war .. Contact Dick Nixon&#13;
or Lyndon Johnson or hoth. 3&#13;
CARS&#13;
vw -68 Auto, Radio. 654-£536.&#13;
Chevelle - 64. $190. 654-2615.&#13;
Ford - 65 Van. Pat 632-1750. Mornings or&#13;
3&#13;
after 5.&#13;
Hornet-I970, $1975. 652-3732.&#13;
Chev.lmpala - "65". isJ, automatic. $6OOj&#13;
658-4861. Ext. 211.&#13;
V&#13;
"65" Tom Lafave 658·3491. Metro an - .&#13;
CamPer, Delivery, service. 3&#13;
b d r&#13;
"65" $325 Tom Leafave. 658- Am assa o· 3&#13;
3491.&#13;
. t "64" $300 G58--8043. 3 PontIac - Tempes .&#13;
I&#13;
"59" $7500 632-£490. Needs Chrys er - .' . 3&#13;
power Steering repaIr.&#13;
. "65" 4 sp. auto, $125 or best pontIac - . 3&#13;
0((er.694-1434.&#13;
T&#13;
"67" 343-4BBL. 4sp. Mags.&#13;
Rebel SS - 3&#13;
694-2407.&#13;
Bee "69" 363-4BBL. Auto Trans. :i,:. Inquire Super America. 370HO~&#13;
St.&#13;
bl "64" wagon, stick $200. 694·&#13;
Ramer- 3&#13;
0714.&#13;
World Affairs Course Offering Finalized&#13;
Plans are 00.... compleh for tI' I~:&#13;
program of the l'TER \TlO' \1.&#13;
COLLEGE " COPE, .. \GE' and Ibe&#13;
course offerings have been finalized The&#13;
program has been divided up mto three&#13;
separate entities, the prmg semester. the&#13;
Summer Sessions. and the Fall Semester&#13;
Full credit courses 10 World AHairs at&#13;
ICC in prihg 1971 include: Afncan&#13;
History. Modern Russian HI hX)' w'lh a&#13;
two week tour in Leningrad included. All&#13;
World Seminar, and Individual Tutona!.&#13;
Camaro - "69" 327 hp. Auto. Trans 6S4~&#13;
8411. afler4:3O. 3&#13;
Chev. - "60". SliD. 1m Shimkus 639-&#13;
6849. 3&#13;
3&#13;
Wanted - Fronl end for '61 Che''Y Call&#13;
634-7800 after 6 p.m, 3&#13;
8-Track car Stereo S45.oo. Buz639-1655. 3&#13;
3 Mags - MIC. 4-6"xI4". $75 or o((er 654-&#13;
8517. 3&#13;
-- Snow Tires - Used. 2 Firestone 6.95x14_&#13;
$15; 2 Firestooe6.95x14. $10. Call Ext. 395.3&#13;
Snow tires - Used. 6.50xt3. $:;. 632-£678&#13;
~~L 3&#13;
2 tires - 825-15. ew: Jerry Gnmes 654-&#13;
2309. 3&#13;
Tires for Ramb. or Ford. Rims Too. 'f!!W.&#13;
652-7553. 3&#13;
Tires: 2-8.25Xl4, SIS; 2-J-7D-14, $70. 694-0714&#13;
or 2516-82 SI. Kenos~a. 3&#13;
Snowtires - studded for Mustang $30. 657-&#13;
5660 after5. 3&#13;
Wanted - G(H;5 Falcon, 1 have engme Ed&#13;
Carey 877-3220. 3&#13;
APARTMENTS FOR RENT&#13;
OR HOUSES FOR SALE&#13;
Wanted i.n nice area for young married&#13;
couple. 1 Bed. furnished or 2 bed. un·&#13;
furnished. Bill 633-0724. 3&#13;
Mobile Home - 2 bedroom partially&#13;
furnished. 10'x55'. 652-0075. $2.500.00. 3&#13;
STEREO EQUIPMENT&#13;
. hjslor') pohli or e . i'&#13;
Danish SOCial or pohu at IIf&#13;
In Ihe summer of 197\ ICC 1'.11 aller&#13;
SUmmrr Tour of rth('rn and I:- a 'I'm&#13;
EurolM' a t....o month portunlt to&#13;
plore life In thE&gt; . an navsan weltar&#13;
states. the socialist countrt or F' n&#13;
Europe. the t: 'R Poland Itomam&#13;
HunRar~ Czecnoslo\'akl3 and tht'" dl' d&#13;
cnv of Berlin A . horter tour I a,alabh:&#13;
for Lhose ....ho " I.h (0 e the highli hf 01&#13;
, 'orthern Europe out .de Copen&#13;
And finally, for those inter 'l'd 10 1 r&#13;
rung about Darush 11ft' "I: offer Ih&#13;
Stamm""... ion i.n Ot-nmark.&#13;
The Fall Semester or .971 1',11 orrer \11&#13;
World minar. a course 10 ~orld&#13;
Re\.'oluuonary .Io,·emen . and thp tn.&#13;
dh idul Stminar. Dam. h tudtes ~dI81\&#13;
an mu-odecucn to Dam. h life and culture&#13;
Dtscessiees about lndJ8 1',11 arrartlled&#13;
m preparation (or an optional lud~ Tour&#13;
0/ India planned for the seven-w k penod&#13;
between Fall and pnng m 1,." The&#13;
Dani mi.nar meludes lOten \ 10&#13;
strUction In lhe Dam language nd I&#13;
talon a Dam h Folkschool I' rt' onll&#13;
Dani h 1S spoken Danl h lan((ual&#13;
courses are available In Lh lhe Fall and&#13;
Spring Semesters and dunng the ummft'&#13;
Session and art open lo all Int~ ted&#13;
students VanaliOIb on these progr.m~.&#13;
mcludmg a (arm sta)'. are descnbed m th&#13;
brochure.&#13;
ICC comblnes lectur . ('mmar and&#13;
d1scussions. field tnps and tXCW".IO \\ lth&#13;
lhe opporluruty or gath('nn~ 'lall~\\lib&#13;
students from Denmark and odwl' fOn"ltul&#13;
countnes. all In an e((orl to .."t"illllplt h Ihr&#13;
desired goals of ICC In"- rnallonal&#13;
knowledge, understandlng .• nd lnrod 'lip&#13;
ICC uses the Informal approa"'h In ord&lt;r 10&#13;
create a more t1mulal1n alm ptwrr&#13;
Interesled students are encouragt."C1 10&#13;
~Tile for further information 10 Ie.&#13;
Henntng enS Aile 68. 2900 H IIcrup,&#13;
Copenhagen, Denmark Or contacl lh&#13;
XEWSCOPE&#13;
and&#13;
tl'd&#13;
that 2.203 students (rom 103 nattar. aN"&#13;
currently enrolled on Ibe 'adiSOO campu&#13;
TRIAD&#13;
10&amp;&#13;
WXFM FM&#13;
8-12 P.M.&#13;
Weekdays&#13;
(IT'S GOOD)&#13;
3&#13;
Are Beillg&#13;
$Ell YOUR BOOK&#13;
The Week of JlIlI, 25-2&lt;)tb (rilllll,)&#13;
3&#13;
3 Jr!"e If'ill BII) Blick ThOle Book, W'bitb&#13;
sed \ ext emolt r.&#13;
Top Prices Paid - Cash&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS&#13;
;;--wri.ter - manual $55.00. 652-7482. 3&#13;
Ski Boots_ Dunham. Size 101/2 $15.00, 654-&#13;
6495- 3&#13;
Wig- Short, Brown. $12.00. 652-5977 after&#13;
7p.m. 3&#13;
suede coat size 42, light brown $30. 657-&#13;
5992. 3&#13;
iis. Hart Javelin 210 cm $150. Kneisse&#13;
Red Stars 205 cm $140. Hart Camero Giant&#13;
Slalom 190 ·cm $140. Reighle Boots Size 9&#13;
.$90.00. Call ext 395. 3&#13;
Ski Boots, size 8 $10.00; ski pants size 16&#13;
$1! oo. 886-4008 after 4 p.m. 3&#13;
Slide Rule $12.50. information center. 3&#13;
ryperwriters and Adders. Gene 639-8636. /&#13;
' Camera - Polaroid 180 $85.00. Information&#13;
center 3&#13;
obel 12 Guage Deer Slayer, shot gun&#13;
$75.00 or trade for 20 Guage auto. 658-3491. 3&#13;
Book - Want to Buy. The Elizabethean&#13;
World Picture by Tillyard. 632-7945 after&#13;
5:30p.m. 3&#13;
Ski Jacket-Medium $40. Muffy 532-7700. 3&#13;
Pool Que 18 oz. 694-5823. 3&#13;
TheTomaine Palace "Where Gormets Eat&#13;
For a Real Eat Treat". Try our Filet of&#13;
Murcury. Only 75 cents. 3&#13;
For Evenings of fun contact Bill 652-8230.&#13;
Be Descreet ! . 3&#13;
Golf Balls - 20 (l0xlO) 3 for $1.00 or 20 for&#13;
$6.00. Jerry 654-8716. from 5 p.m.-7 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday or Thursdays. 3&#13;
ki Boots - Koflach size 8½. $35.00. 657-&#13;
6316. 3&#13;
Aquarium 50 Gal. with stand. 657-6602. 3&#13;
Wanted - Light weight bicycle frame.&#13;
Fork incl. 27" must have pin type&#13;
procket. 657-7683 Steve Monday and&#13;
Wednesday after 9 p.m. Tuesday, Thursday,&#13;
Friday, after6 p.m. 3&#13;
Wanted - 35 mm. single lens reflex with&#13;
electric eye under $100. Bill 639-1485. 3&#13;
Honda Scrambler "69" 450 cc. 652-5977&#13;
after 7 p.m. 3&#13;
MUSICAL&#13;
Bass Guitar - Gibson and Eko call Ed 633-&#13;
4648 3&#13;
Ba &amp; Guitar - Eko. Tom 633-7603. 3&#13;
Guitar &amp; Amp- Gibson $150. 654-8030. 3&#13;
Violin &amp; two Bows $50.00 or best offer. Bob&#13;
Seitz. 639-5297. 3&#13;
Harmony Stella 12 String Guitar and Case.&#13;
$50.oo. 633-0042. 3&#13;
Knabe Piano. Parlor Grand 6'4" . 639-0464.&#13;
3&#13;
Guitar - Epithone, Classical. must sell.&#13;
$60. 694-6168. 3&#13;
HELP WANTE-D&#13;
M3;Ie. '.'1on.-Fri, 11 :30 a .m.-1 :30 p.m. Spot&#13;
Drive in Apply in Person. 2117-75th street,&#13;
Kenosha. 3&#13;
People to work on Ads for Newscope - and&#13;
anything else. Will train. 3&#13;
SITUATIONS WANTED&#13;
Will tutor. French and German. Frank&#13;
Kuitschen. 639-0346. 3&#13;
Typing 50 cents per sheet. Paper ·supplied&#13;
658-2203.12-1,4:30-5:30. 3&#13;
Term papers· typed - 40 cents per sheet.&#13;
654-6491. 3&#13;
World Affairs Course Offering Finalized&#13;
Camaro - " " 327 hp. Auto. Tra&#13;
8411. after-t:30.&#13;
Chev. - "60". $110 . . tark&#13;
6849.&#13;
3&#13;
3&#13;
Wanted - Front end for '61 Che\'y. C 11&#13;
634-7860 after6 p.m. 3&#13;
Typing- all kinds. 633--0304. 3 8-Track carStereoS45 .. Buz63!H65S. 3&#13;
Typing. 652-0418. 3&#13;
Backbreaking work wanted- call Samson&#13;
652-8791. 3&#13;
WANTED TO BUY&#13;
fags - A! IC. 4-6' xH". S.5 or offer. •&#13;
85i7. 3&#13;
Snow tires - Used. 6.S(l."13. $5. 632~&#13;
Pidgeon Hole desk. 654-3447. 3 after 5. 3&#13;
Used Viola Standard size. 639-6164. 3&#13;
Gas stove - cheap Rita's mother. 654-&#13;
3170. 3&#13;
ANTIQUES - Depression Glass (BP&#13;
green or red) will pay reasonable prices&#13;
652-5133. 3&#13;
ROOMMATES WANTED&#13;
To share furnished house near downtown&#13;
Kenosha. $45 plus utilities. Immediate&#13;
occupancy. 694-0171. 3&#13;
To share 2 bedroom apt. $50.00 per month.&#13;
Heat and electricity and phone. 652-9720.&#13;
Before 10 a .m. or after 4 p.m. occupancy&#13;
Feb. 71.&#13;
Basement apt. 1232 Marquette St. $40 per&#13;
month. contact Ken Konkol at ewscope&#13;
office. 3&#13;
20 Vol. Encyclopedia. Contact Ken Konkol&#13;
at Newscope office. 3&#13;
RIDES NEEDED&#13;
2 tires - 825-15. , ·ew: Jerry Grim . 654-&#13;
2309. S&#13;
Tires for Ramb. or Ford. Rims Too . . '&#13;
652-7553. 3&#13;
Tires: 2-8.25X14. $15; 2-J-i0-14, $70. 694--0714&#13;
or 2516-82 St. Kenos~a . 3&#13;
Snowtires - studded for . 1ustang . 657-&#13;
5660 after 5. 3&#13;
Wanted - 60-65 Falcon. I have engin Ed&#13;
Carey 877-3220. 3&#13;
Wanted in nice area for young married&#13;
couple. 1 Bed. furni hed or 2 bed. unfurnished.&#13;
Bill633-0i2-t. 3&#13;
Mobile Home - 2 bedroom partially&#13;
furnished. 10'x55'. 652--0075. 2,500. 3&#13;
3&#13;
106&#13;
WXFMFM&#13;
B-12 P.M.&#13;
Every Thursday, 10:45 a .m. Kenosha to Wanted - Free Stereo mu l ha\'e G rrard&#13;
Sturtevant. Willing to share expenses. 886- turn-table, Fischer tun r-amp, El tro Weekdays&#13;
(IT'S GOOD 2523 after 5 p.m. Sue Kasparek. 3 voice peakers. Will no ccept u ed _______________ .. equipment. Contact Bill Cippola. 3&#13;
To Denver during semester break. Warren&#13;
652-4177. or 652-5200. 3&#13;
To Hanoi . after war .. Contact Dick Nixon&#13;
or Lyndon Johnson or hoth. 3&#13;
CARS&#13;
VW - 68Auto, Radio. 654-6536. 3&#13;
Chevelle - 64. $190. 654-2615. 3&#13;
Ford - 65 Van. Pat 632-1750. Mornings or&#13;
3 after 5.&#13;
Hornet - 1970. $1975. 652-3732. 3&#13;
Chev. Impala - "65" . 283, automatic. $6003&#13;
658-4861. Ext. 211.&#13;
tr V .. 65.. Tom Lafave 658-3491. Me o an - · Camper, Delivery, service. 3&#13;
b dor .. 65 .. $325 Tom Leafave. 658- Am assa · 3&#13;
3491.&#13;
Pontiac -Tempest "64" $300. 658-8043. 3&#13;
1 "59" $75 00 632-6490 .• 'eeds Chrys er - . · · 3&#13;
Power Steering repair.&#13;
. ..65.. 4 sp auto. $125 or be t Pontiac - · · 3&#13;
offer. 694-1434.&#13;
SST "67" 343-4BBL. 4sp. lags. Rebel - 3&#13;
694-2407.&#13;
B .. 69.. 3S3-4BBL. Auto Trans. Super ee A erlca 370HiOth $2·,100. Inquire Super m · .3&#13;
St.&#13;
.. 64 .. wagon stick $200. 694· Rambler - ' 3&#13;
0714.&#13;
$ELL YOUR BOOK&#13;
Th Jr e k oj.J 111 .... -... &lt;Jib (l·iu ,I)&#13;
Jt' lJ''i/1811 B1 Tho Boo II bi l&#13;
,. B ,,,,, . d xi m Jer.&#13;
Top Prices Paid - Cash&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE &#13;
Whose Southern Strategy?&#13;
Taken SImply. the apporntmenl 01 John&#13;
Connall~ Secrelary or the Treasury is&#13;
an mpl 01 the "Soulllem Strateg)'" as&#13;
... bod b~ Ke\ln PllIlllp" Conally is a&#13;
ron 1*\ all\ ~mocrat ..rho represents&#13;
th ue bl polillcal advantages ollered&#13;
b) III tat 01 Tex Moreover, he is&#13;
L~ndon Johnson' proteg and L)'lldon is&#13;
th r ,t ader of the conservati\'e faction&#13;
.,r OemocUtlC politi Ob\1ously a deal&#13;
Im,l r to III tram Thurmond courtship&#13;
lik I)' Is Conally a pos illle V'C.,.&#13;
Pr Id nllal eandidate lor the&#13;
R Ii n' The pro t I tntrtgumg&#13;
ould n out k n hlleral receIVe lIle '72&#13;
£'&gt;tom r lie nomlOahon lhere i a deftrutt&#13;
.btlil) III I L B J may bolt hi part)'&#13;
dId hI ror to Ntxon Thl, 01&#13;
COO ... oold gwe J hnson 8 direct hne to&#13;
III \\hlt H • nd Irom a much safer&#13;
'III '" Ol Il&#13;
125&#13;
AM-FM Stereo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
Ileft' 'v. Itl d"&#13;
1,;1 .. 1,1 I I hI; !lund'&#13;
ll"~1'1..1) Ih,'I..lnt ,'n the&#13;
he 1_ '"1.1) lh~ .J1lI\..'&#13;
t rtl un nul her nuke&#13;
*l I th lhtrcr~nl,;C'.&#13;
Ih l th-: \l:r\ 1010'&#13;
t\'nhh111lt:rKIC&#13;
A I ,,/1(", '1m I \tJlUuh&#13;
", 'no lhe- II her 125&#13;
Ill.: III I \:t1mpkh.' \ \1&#13;
l l:f ',l 1u I (coh,:,&#13;
It ,l. ., grl,.·,II.1 II tlnnd ...&#13;
See and Hear&#13;
Fisher Stereo'&#13;
M a:t' \,.&#13;
f I \1 n.1 I \1&#13;
.: 1111 II I ,n,1 Ie In&#13;
, nl-tnd .... II "'oJCC" • 4&#13;
hi \&gt;11 m2lh. T'HnlOlblc&#13;
w h l (nlful \nlt'Loll&#13;
\ I I 'lil ,II _ I"",&#13;
h ,11 111y\I,ul,;hrJ T....o&#13;
\\ 01) ... ;Il..('r .....'u·m .. _ Full&#13;
\ (olnr ""llh T.re' :In'"&#13;
P '11 I XI ""&#13;
Hammond Organ&#13;
StudIOS of Kenosha&#13;
Ill; 1&gt;1/,11\/&#13;
1&gt;511IiWI&#13;
position (health wrise} than that he would&#13;
have sbould he consider running himself&#13;
las hIS brolher Sam Houston Johnson has&#13;
s~ested).&#13;
There is also an aspect to Conally's&#13;
appointment which seems 01 Iittle, but at&#13;
least some significance, In light 01 Mr.&#13;
Nixon's admitted conversion to Keynesian&#13;
Economics. and the nature of government&#13;
spending during the Johnson Admmistration&#13;
(50 billion dollar deficit), the&#13;
move can be seen as ixon's act of&#13;
..tokenism" to Democratic criticism of his&#13;
economic policies. Alter all, Cortnally IS a&#13;
Democrat, albeit Southern and conservative.&#13;
but -more important&#13;
representative 01 lIle "good old days"&#13;
under I.BJ. Illlle economy does improve&#13;
Nixon can extole Conally's role to conservalive&#13;
Oemocrats. oller him the V,P.&#13;
job and lurther his standing in lIle con·&#13;
servative Democratic opinion. On the&#13;
olher hand, il the economy does not&#13;
rebound. he can diplomatically admit that&#13;
the problem was bigger than bolll parties&#13;
and lhereby attempl 10 quiet liberal&#13;
Democratic criticism.&#13;
There is, however, a fly that may loom in&#13;
lIle proverbial ~inlment. That fly is Ed·&#13;
mWld Muskie, At the moment Muskie&#13;
enjo)'s a pr-ecarious position in the&#13;
Democratic Party. He represents both a&#13;
part of Lheconservative Johnson faction of&#13;
the party, primarily because of his&#13;
position on the last ticket, and a part of the&#13;
liberal lachon associated with liberal New&#13;
England pohlics represenled best by Ted&#13;
Kennedy His ability 10 please both sides&#13;
rna)' pave lIle .. a) lor a presidential nod in&#13;
1972 Should HE choose John Connally lor&#13;
V.P. as Kennedy chose Johnsoo. in 1960,&#13;
thereby reconciling the factions of his&#13;
party. Richard 'lxon could be in big&#13;
trouble. The simplicity of the "Southern&#13;
Stralegy" may be severely disrupted by&#13;
northern Democratic utilization of the&#13;
same lheme.&#13;
FORUM&#13;
Let me make an initial assumption -&#13;
Parkside is a physical structure. It can be&#13;
visualized; the symbol for which it stands&#13;
can be felt. The attitudes it generates&#13;
verge on the provincial, the obscure, the&#13;
absurd&#13;
Isolated between lwo lunch·bucket&#13;
towns is an institution which creates instant&#13;
greatness to ensure its status' emphasizes&#13;
creativity and originality ~ith a&#13;
curriclJlum designed to mass produce&#13;
programmed machines; and which&#13;
stresses the values and standards that&#13;
exemplify its depravity.&#13;
Parkside, to be sure, was conceived in a&#13;
drunken nightmare by the greatest intellects&#13;
~vailable - in the 13th century.&#13;
These wily old men have assumed that&#13;
what w,\s good enough for lIlem is good&#13;
enough for all,&#13;
Dennis Cashion&#13;
Save a little bread each week and&#13;
your fortune will be fair.&#13;
RACINE SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOaATION&#13;
Oownjown Office&#13;
400 WISCONSIN AVENUE&#13;
West Side Office&#13;
5100 WASHINGTON AVENUE&#13;
furlller ahead of most of hi&#13;
contemporary rock, Slylelisti~!leers ill&#13;
.potpourri of musical tastes ~, it iI.&#13;
purist jazz to Sha-Na.Na b~tr~tng IrOQ,&#13;
genius of Zappa, ' retain Iltt&#13;
A lew highlights, , ,&#13;
"Would you go all the w&#13;
U,S,A,)" - pure Reuhen and:;; ?or Iltt&#13;
predictable lyrics, e ets With&#13;
In "Rudy Wants' to Buy Ye&#13;
Zappa. b~tows a very large s~~ Drink"&#13;
musicians muon-very artist] t to the&#13;
produced, c and "oil&#13;
"Transylvania Boogie" is an&#13;
Zappa's distinctive style il itc"xamJlit"&#13;
that he has a distinctive ~tyle at".:hbe Slid&#13;
good song, but not great. ' It q.&#13;
II"Twenty SmaU Cigars" w , asthe ......&#13;
song on the album, It would still be -~,&#13;
the price. w&lt;Wth&#13;
The purpose of this article w&#13;
talk of a particular album but as notto&#13;
talk of a particular man It rath.,. 10&#13;
misWlderstood, misinterpr~ted e l8 vel}&#13;
derrated. Think about that whe~ and ....&#13;
to "Chunga's Revenge," YlMl -&#13;
BY Bob Borchardt&#13;
Chunga's Revenge- Frank Zappa&#13;
It's been said that Frank Zappa lulfills a&#13;
social purpose; a sort of musical Lenny&#13;
Bruce, Many people undoubtedly feel that&#13;
if they were to order a Zappa album from&#13;
the Record-oC.the-month club, it would&#13;
arrive in a plain brown wrapper along with&#13;
an order blank for PLAYBOY magazine, II&#13;
we are to be completely honest about it,&#13;
we'd have to admit that lor aU you poeple&#13;
who like to sit around and snicker at his&#13;
lyriCS, Zappa's latest album, "Chunla'S&#13;
Revenge" won't disappoint you.&#13;
But keeping with this same honest&#13;
policy, we would also have to point out a&#13;
few things that may surprise all you obsenily&#13;
fans, When lIle 1970 Down Beat&#13;
Readers Poll came. out last month, Frank&#13;
zappa;&#13;
1. Was named Pop musician of the year.&#13;
2, Ranked among the top five in both&#13;
arranging and composing.&#13;
3, Had 3 albums among the top ten.&#13;
4, Was well up in the guitar listings,&#13;
5. Led the Mothers of Invention to a&#13;
ranking in the top rock category.&#13;
Maybe they know something you don't.&#13;
Maybe lIley know what to listen to,&#13;
Believe it or not, some people actually&#13;
listen to Zappa's music. They take his&#13;
satire for what it is; a condemnation of&#13;
tasteless, mindless, musical trash and&#13;
then take his music for what it is: a successful&#13;
attempt at creating just plain&#13;
beautiful sounds,&#13;
Zappa, above all else, is a serious&#13;
musician. Anyone that can write an entire&#13;
movie score at age 18, doesn't spend all his&#13;
time sitting around thinking up ribald&#13;
limericks and it certainly wasn't limericks&#13;
lIlat Zubin Metha, conductor 01 the L, A.&#13;
Symphony orchestra, had in mind when he&#13;
praised him as "one of the greatest&#13;
musical geniuses of our time."&#13;
With this in mind, listen to "Chunga's&#13;
Revenge." Don't try to convince yourself&#13;
that it's just a comedy album. Zappa has&#13;
never been a comedian. For once listen to&#13;
him as he intended. Listen to his guitar&#13;
work on "Road Ladies". Surprise yourself&#13;
with the artistry on "20 Small Cigars."&#13;
You can't help but appreciate it. Although&#13;
as ~ ~hol~, "Revenge" isn't as great an&#13;
arhstic triumph as his first three albums&#13;
it still contains innovations which ar~ eBank&#13;
of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 Lathrop A¥ •. ; .'odne. Wi,e.nlt.&#13;
Students get red carpet servict&#13;
(SO does everyone else')&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHO&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 day.&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-9747&#13;
[Ray [Radigan ~&#13;
OJ)onk!J 900J&#13;
For&#13;
ReservatiollS&#13;
Phone&#13;
694-0455&#13;
NOW SERVING&#13;
TACOS • ENCHILADAS·. TAMALES&#13;
COMPLETE MENU Of • • •&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARRY OUT&#13;
"Mexican'fOOfl ;s fun food&#13;
so Ta~o Kings are fun p'ade~';&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11&#13;
6829 39th Avenue&#13;
HAT 1ME SIGN OF 1ME CACTUS"&#13;
Phone 6SH7lT&#13;
Whose Southern Strategy?&#13;
111&#13;
A&#13;
25&#13;
-FM Stereo&#13;
usic Center&#13;
H mmond Organ&#13;
Studios of Kenosha&#13;
1 / 1 f&gt;(Jr/1 ·,.&#13;
b58 I OJ&#13;
FORUM&#13;
Let me make an initial assumption -&#13;
P_ar . ide is a phy ical tructure. It can be&#13;
v1. ualized; the ymbol for which it stands&#13;
can be felt. The attitude it generates&#13;
verge on the pro,·incial. the obscure, the&#13;
ab ·urd.&#13;
I olated between two lunch-bucket&#13;
town. i an in titut1on which creates intant&#13;
greatnes. to ensure its tatus· empha&#13;
izes creativity and originality ;ith a&#13;
curricylum designed to mass produce&#13;
programmed machines; and which&#13;
tr the values and standards that&#13;
e. emplify its depra\;tv.&#13;
Park ide, to be ure, ·was conceh·ed in a&#13;
drunken nightmare by the greatest intell&#13;
cts ~vailable - in the 13th century.&#13;
Th · \\1ly old men have as urned that&#13;
what • good enough for them is good&#13;
enough for all.&#13;
Dennis Cashion&#13;
Save a little bread each week and&#13;
your fortune will be fair.&#13;
RACINE SAVINGS&#13;
ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
Downtown Office&#13;
400 WISCONSIN AVENUE&#13;
West Side Office&#13;
5100 WASHINGTON AVENUE&#13;
1,c.&#13;
BY Bob Borchardt&#13;
Chunga's Rev~nge-Frank Zapp~&#13;
It's been said that Frank Zappa fulfills a&#13;
social purpose; a sort of musical Lenny&#13;
Bruce. Many people undoubtedly feel that&#13;
if they were to order a Zappa album from&#13;
the Record-of-th~month club, it would&#13;
arrive in a plain brown wrapper along with&#13;
an order blank for PLAYBOY magazine. If&#13;
we are to be completely honest about it,&#13;
we'd have to admit that for all you poeple&#13;
who like to sit around and snicker at his&#13;
lyrics, Zappa's latest album, "Chunta's&#13;
Revenge" won't disappoint you.&#13;
But keeping with this same honest&#13;
policy, we would also have to point out a&#13;
few things that may surprise all you obsenity&#13;
fans. When the 1970 Down Beat&#13;
Readers Poll came out last month, Frank&#13;
Zappa;&#13;
1. Was named Pop musician of the year.&#13;
2. Ranked among the top five in both&#13;
arranging and composing.&#13;
3. Had 3 albums among the top ten.&#13;
4. Was well up in the guitar listings.&#13;
5. Led the Mothers of Invention to a&#13;
ranking in the top rock category.&#13;
faybe they know something you don't.&#13;
Maybe they know what to listen to.&#13;
Believe it or not, some people actually&#13;
listen to Zappa's music. They take his&#13;
satire for what it is; a condemnation of&#13;
tasteless, mindless, musical trash and&#13;
then take his music for what it is: a successful&#13;
attempt at creating just plain&#13;
beautiful sounds.&#13;
Zappa, above all else, is a serious&#13;
musician. Anyone that can write an entire&#13;
movie score at age 18, doesn't spend all his&#13;
time sitting around thinking up ribald&#13;
limericks and it certainly wasn't limericks&#13;
that Zubin Metha, conductor of the L. A.&#13;
Symphony orchestra, had in mind when he&#13;
praised him as "one of the greatest&#13;
musical geniuses of our time."&#13;
further ahead of most of his&#13;
contemporary rock. Stylelisrcan!&gt;e~rs&#13;
potpourri of musical tastes I r, It is a&#13;
purist jazz to Sha-Na-Na b~t r~?ing frotn&#13;
genius of Zappa. ' a retain the&#13;
A few highlights ...&#13;
"Would you go all the w&#13;
U.S.A.)" - pure Reuben and~ &lt;for the&#13;
predictable lyrics. . e Jets v.i&#13;
In "Rudy Wants to Buy y&#13;
Zappa bestows a very largeezha DriJt,. . . ' . s aft lo&#13;
mus1c1ans uruon-very artist" the&#13;
produced. IC and v.&#13;
"Transylvania Boogie" is an Zappa's distinctive style if it cexarnp1e0f&#13;
that he has a distinctive ~tyle at~ be&#13;
good song, but not great. · It a&#13;
If "Twenty Small Cigars" wa t&#13;
song o~ the album, it would stills behe On!)&#13;
the price. v.&#13;
The purpose of this article w talk of a particular album but as not to&#13;
talk f . , rather&#13;
o a particular man H . to . d · elS\&#13;
m1sun erstood, misinterpreted ery&#13;
derrated. Think about that whe~ aoo_&#13;
to "Chunga's Revenge." YOU h&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
270-4 Lot/,rop AYe., lto&lt;ine, Wi,cont/n&#13;
Students get red carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone else'}&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHO&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-9747&#13;
rR.ay rR.adt·gan ~&#13;
With this in mind, listen to "Chunga's @ onder/ul 9 ooJ&#13;
Revenge." Don't try to convince yourself&#13;
that it's just a comedy album. Zappa has&#13;
never been a comedian. For once listen to&#13;
him as he intended. Listen to his guitar&#13;
work on "Road Ladies". Surprise yourself&#13;
with the artistry on "20 Small Cigars."&#13;
You can't help but appreciate it. Although&#13;
as ~ "."hol~, "Revenge" isn't as great an artistic triumph as his first three albums&#13;
it still contains innovations which ar~ •&#13;
.,.._ ____________ ,,,&#13;
NOW SERVING&#13;
TACOS • ENCHILADAS . • TAMALES&#13;
COMPLETE MENU OF&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARR-Y OUT&#13;
,, Mexican food is fun food&#13;
so Taco Kings are fun pla;e;,;&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11&#13;
6829 39th Avenue&#13;
•Ar THE SIGN OF THE CACTUS"&#13;
Phone 6S4-S'117&#13;
• • • </text>
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              <text>Intramurals Started on Both Campuses</text>
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              <text>i&#13;
THE&#13;
r BEAR&#13;
Volume 2 — Number 12&#13;
December 14, 1970 FACTS&#13;
Intramurals Started&#13;
On Both Campuses&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
By MARC HAARBAUER&#13;
The Parkside intramural league standings&#13;
remained about the same after the&#13;
night of December 8. The team of Tom&#13;
Bain, Tim Alfredson and Phil Limbach&#13;
remained in first place with a 23-5 record.&#13;
In second place, 4% game off the pace, is&#13;
the team of Marc Haarbauer, Dave&#13;
Semrad and Gregg Hansen, with an 18V2-&#13;
914 record. Both teams had bad nights, but&#13;
managed to still win two games and series&#13;
from t heir opponents.&#13;
The hottest team of the night was the&#13;
team of Tom Gascoigne, Gene Schnuckel&#13;
and Ed St. Peter. The team had high game&#13;
(634) and high series (1768). (These&#13;
figures include handicap.)&#13;
The best male bowler of the night was&#13;
Tim Alfredson, who had a 583 series with a&#13;
high game of 232. Alfredson also has high&#13;
average in the league — a 191 average.&#13;
The best female bowler Tuesday night&#13;
was Sandy Schmauss. She had a 348 series&#13;
with a 148 high game. Sandy also has the&#13;
girls high average — a 110 average.&#13;
TABLE TENNIS&#13;
Sixteen students signed up to play in the&#13;
Parkside intramural table tennis tournament.&#13;
This is a rather unique tournament&#13;
where an individual signs up to&#13;
play in the tournament and then the IM&#13;
Director pairs the contestants off.&#13;
The contestants then can make&#13;
arrangements to play their opponent when&#13;
they have some free time. The winner will&#13;
eventually advance to the championship.&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
Intramural Basketball is in full swing at&#13;
the Kenosha Campus. Eight teams&#13;
comprise the league, which plays one night&#13;
a week at one of the local junior high&#13;
schools. Games are at 8:00 and at 9:00.&#13;
Teams still interested in joining the&#13;
league may be able to enter, depending on&#13;
the number of late entries. Contact Coach&#13;
Jim Koch, Roorn 144. The evenings to be&#13;
used for IM Basketball are as follows:&#13;
1st week - Monday, Dec. 7: Lance&#13;
2nd week - Wednesday, Dec. 16: Lance&#13;
3rd week - Tuesday, Jan. 5: Bullen&#13;
4th week - Tuesday, Jan. 12: Washington&#13;
5th week - Wednesday, Feb. 10: Lance&#13;
6th week - Monday, Feb. 15: Lance&#13;
7th week - Monday, Feb. 22: Lincoln&#13;
8th week - Monday, Mar. 1: Lance&#13;
9th week - Monday, Mar. 8: Lance&#13;
10th week - Monday, Mar. 15: Lance&#13;
11th week - Monday, Mar. 22: Lance&#13;
12th week - Monday, Mar. 29: Lance&#13;
Spotlight&#13;
On&#13;
Judy&#13;
Zimmerman&#13;
Eli Slaughter, left, and Stan White, right, are two of Parkside's leading scorers.&#13;
Stan was the leading scorer (28 points) in the Michigan game.&#13;
Competition Tougher&#13;
By WALT SHIRER&#13;
MARQUETTE, MICH - Parkside&#13;
stepped up a notch in competition but gave&#13;
a good account of itself before bowing to&#13;
powerful Northern Michigan 101-85&#13;
Tuesday night.&#13;
A cold spell to start the second half was&#13;
more than Parkside could afford against&#13;
the team whose only loss in four starts has&#13;
been to Tennessee and whose schedule&#13;
includes such major university powers as&#13;
Utah and Illinois.&#13;
Northern broke a 39-39 deadlock late in&#13;
die first half and spurted to a 45-39 lead at&#13;
intermission. The winners came out of the&#13;
dressing rooms red hot and quickly&#13;
jnounted an 18 point bulge, 75-57, m idway&#13;
through the final stanza while UWP was&#13;
having trouble finding the range. Northern's&#13;
hot streak resulted in a sizzling 51&#13;
per cent shooting mark for the game, while&#13;
the Rangers' frigid spell left them at 40 per&#13;
cent.&#13;
Parkside didn't fold, however, and led&#13;
by Stan White and Mike Madsen, the&#13;
Rangers whittled the lead down to 10, 01-&#13;
81, with three minutes to play, but it was&#13;
too late.&#13;
White, continuing his fine play, led both&#13;
teams with 28 points, including 18 in the&#13;
second half, and had 10 rebounds. Madsen,&#13;
enjoying his finest night by far, garnered&#13;
19 points and pulled in 11 rebounds.&#13;
Northern handcuffed normally highscoring&#13;
Jim Hogan and Eli Slaughter.&#13;
They got only four between them the&#13;
second half and finished the night with 13&#13;
and 8, respectively. Eli couldn't buy a&#13;
basket, hitting just 3 of 16 shots.&#13;
The L egs of a 5' 4" Blue-Eyed Blonde&#13;
Athletes portray many different images,&#13;
wit very few are the image of a lovely, 5'4"&#13;
Mue eyed blond.&#13;
Judy Zimmerman, an 18 year old freshman&#13;
from West Allis Hale, does much to&#13;
s atter one's image of an athlete. But an&#13;
athlete she is, and a good one.&#13;
Judy has just finished her first year of&#13;
1 com petition in cross country in admirable&#13;
fashion. She has defeated all&#13;
comers in the area and has done very well&#13;
against national competition,&#13;
bhe admits to being a half-miler and&#13;
ter running 1.5 miles and 2 miles all fall&#13;
ne should feel like sprinting the half mile&#13;
urmg the winter and spring track&#13;
seasons.&#13;
®ef?&#13;
re coming to Parkside, Judy had&#13;
ann »u ed quite a reputation for herself&#13;
&lt;mu the Milwaukee Track Club. She has&#13;
a Wisconsin state champion in the 440&#13;
880 as well as capturing the state XC&#13;
utle this past fal^&#13;
L Edition to her state honors she has&#13;
active on the national level. In 1969&#13;
placed third in the 440 at the Junior&#13;
ympic championships in San Diego. Just&#13;
Past summer, Judy placed third in the&#13;
the Junior Nationals in "Bowling&#13;
had t&#13;
n&#13;
'&#13;
Kentuc&#13;
ty- Earlier in the spring she&#13;
Mid tile runner&#13;
"&#13;
uP spot in the Golden&#13;
est championships in Chicago.&#13;
Mn« ° K**™ ago her relay team from the&#13;
Zwaukee Track Club won the spring&#13;
ey relay at the world famous Drake&#13;
wa* ai' Par&#13;
^&#13;
s&#13;
^&#13;
e teammate, Mary Libal,&#13;
Perh 3 member °T t hat team,&#13;
beine S her greatest honor was in&#13;
StatE ^ccted to represent the United&#13;
at the Cultural Olympics held in&#13;
conjunction with the 1968 Olympics in&#13;
Mexico City.&#13;
It was here that she received her biggest&#13;
thrill in athletics. This came when she&#13;
viewed the opening ceremonies and was&#13;
thrilled to watch the United States&#13;
Olympic team parade into the Olympic&#13;
Stadium.&#13;
Perhaps her highest aim for the immediate&#13;
future came from watching the&#13;
magnificent spectacle of the Games; that&#13;
of being an Olympian herself.&#13;
Other ambitions include being a coach&#13;
and teacher of cross country and track.&#13;
Through this vocation she would like the&#13;
opportuntiy to work with inner-core&#13;
youngsters.&#13;
If she could imitate anyone she would&#13;
like to approach the examples that her&#13;
gymnastics coach, Jim Farkas, has taught&#13;
her. Mr. Farkas is the coach of the&#13;
Milwaukee Turners.&#13;
Besides her track back-ground, Judy&#13;
was captain of her high school gymnastics&#13;
team as well as being a member of the&#13;
varsity cheerleading squad.&#13;
On top of all this, somehow, someplace,&#13;
she found time to compile a 3.8 academic&#13;
grade. It just seems that some people have&#13;
it!&#13;
Lee Palmer, high-leaping 6'4 forward,&#13;
led Northern with 20 points and a gamehigh&#13;
15 rebounds., as the winners&#13;
dominated the boards 61-46.&#13;
With his outburst, white has passed&#13;
Slaughter and is second to Hogan in the&#13;
Ranger scoring derby. After four games,&#13;
Hogan has 96 points (a 24 average!, White&#13;
81 (20), Slaughter 69 ( 17), Madsen 37 (9),&#13;
captain Ken Rick 26 ( 7), Mike Jackson 17&#13;
(4), and Nick Perrine 15 (4). White is the&#13;
leading rebounder, followed by Madsen.&#13;
Parkside will host undefeated UW-Green&#13;
Bay Saturday night at Kenosha St. Joseph&#13;
High School (8 p.m.). The Phoenix of UWGB&#13;
are one of the strongest teams in the&#13;
state and feature Ray Willis, an all-NAIA&#13;
District 14 first team choice last season&#13;
and better than ever this campaign. The&#13;
6'5 Willis is averaging close to 30 points a&#13;
game, and hit 30 in Green Bay's latest&#13;
triumph, a convincing 94-77 rout of always&#13;
formidable St. Norbert's.&#13;
Green Bay defeated its arch rival,&#13;
Parkside, twice last season, but only by&#13;
one point here, so an upset Saturday is a&#13;
possibility.&#13;
UW-Parkside (85)&#13;
fg ft pf&#13;
Hogan 5 3 1&#13;
Perrine 10 0&#13;
Rick 260&#13;
Slaughter 3 2 2&#13;
White 11 6 4&#13;
Madsen 7 5 4&#13;
Jackson 2 1 2&#13;
Totals 31 23 13&#13;
Northern Michigan (101)&#13;
fg ft pf&#13;
Conklin 2 0 0&#13;
Friday 8 3 1&#13;
Griffin 9 0 3&#13;
Duehning 4 0 4&#13;
Vaneklasen 5 0 3&#13;
Barber 604&#13;
Inkola 4 2 4&#13;
Palmer 8 4 2&#13;
Totals 46 9 21&#13;
Fencers Defeat&#13;
Two Big 10'ers&#13;
Coach Loren Hein was more than satisfied&#13;
with the results of the Fencing competition&#13;
during Sportsfest weekend.&#13;
Beating the University of Wisconsin 17-3&#13;
and the University of M innesota 24-3 is an&#13;
accomplishment in itself, but to add icing&#13;
to the cake, Freshmen had a big hand in&#13;
the victory.&#13;
For example, in epee against Madison,&#13;
frosh Bob Westby in his collegiate debut,&#13;
had a 3-0 record. Veterans John Hanzalik&#13;
and Bruce Bosman came through with two&#13;
and one records.&#13;
Another frosh, John Tank, gave one of&#13;
the finest exhibitions in the foil class to&#13;
defeat Big 10 champion Neal Cohen.&#13;
Cohen was leading 4-0 be fore Tank began&#13;
his magnificent comeback to win the bout&#13;
5-4.&#13;
Kim Nelson, another promising freshman,&#13;
had a 4-1 r ecord for the day and a&#13;
perfect record against Minnesota. Another&#13;
yearling, Rich Moffett, finished with a 3&#13;
and 3 record.&#13;
For the veterans, Keith Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
was 5-1 in foil, Pete&#13;
Schemanske 5-1, and John Zanotti 4-2 in&#13;
sabre.&#13;
Bob Westby and Captain Bruce Bosman&#13;
were 3-0 in epee. &#13;
Ranger Basketballers Have&#13;
Rough Schedule Ahead&#13;
will have a&#13;
he Christmas&#13;
Parkside besketbailer&#13;
heavy schedule during&#13;
holidays&#13;
They will begin the period with a eight&#13;
team tournament at QuanUco, Virginia.&#13;
They will be in action next at home when&#13;
thes take on the Cougars of Southern&#13;
Illinois at Edwardsvilie&#13;
After a short break for Christmas, the&#13;
Hangers will head west where they will&#13;
play in the Corn Palace tournament in&#13;
Mitchell, South Dakota.&#13;
December 17 th e Ranger* will ooen the&#13;
&lt;*ianl&#13;
j* all&#13;
The «&#13;
wtraic&#13;
Maru&#13;
York&#13;
® tour&#13;
New Y&#13;
will ope&#13;
&gt;ent by squaring off&#13;
ork State of Old Westbury&#13;
of that game will meet the&#13;
he North Carolina AlrT vs.&#13;
ege of Poughkeepsie. New&#13;
Other teams in the tournament are&#13;
Alderson-Boarddus College o FfojW.&#13;
West Virginia. Groves City Coege.&#13;
Pennsylvania. Findlay CoUege of Ohio ana&#13;
^^W^rSurnament is a four&#13;
teamaffanr hosted by Dakota Wesleyan, a&#13;
TaTfcidTldll open on Januar&gt; ^ ^&#13;
Wisconsin State UnivertitrLaCr^ss&#13;
while the host Tigers will be meeting&#13;
Northwestern College of Orange City,&#13;
l0Tbe finals mil be P&#13;
u&#13;
^™ N&#13;
^J&#13;
e&#13;
?£i&#13;
Eve. The Rangers will begin the 1971&#13;
season by hosting Milton (January' 6&gt;&#13;
Lake he ad University of Ontario on the 9th&#13;
and Northeastern Illinois on the 12th.&#13;
Cross Country MVP, Coach, Team&#13;
s- ' '&#13;
WHITEWATER — Four freshmen and a&#13;
junior waged a close race for the MVP of&#13;
the 1170 cross country District 14 balloting&#13;
by the District coaches Jim Drews, the&#13;
Handout from LaCrosse. was the clear&#13;
MVP choice but the other four were very&#13;
cloae, Rick Lund of Parkside finished&#13;
fourth in the balloting&#13;
The same was true for the Coach of the&#13;
Year honor, as five coaches were all in the&#13;
running with Bob Ftskum of Whitewater&#13;
the winner Only three votes separated the&#13;
I&#13;
w p&#13;
IS the top team&#13;
rtween Carthage&#13;
icr-up honors as&#13;
edge Parkside&#13;
rornpetition this&#13;
sec&#13;
mei&#13;
the&#13;
rec&lt;&#13;
McGhe&#13;
i shed m&#13;
i 25 30 clocking for this&#13;
ormance and was the&#13;
in his first season at&#13;
&gt;, a freshman at Car&#13;
:ond to Drews as he&#13;
ing over five miles and&#13;
was third In the CCTW meet Schnepf of&#13;
Whitewater was third as he had a 26:33&#13;
mark for his best time as he won eight&#13;
meets Russell of Plattevilk rounded out&#13;
the top five as he won seven meets and had&#13;
a third place finish with his best time at&#13;
r iskum wj given the nod as Coach of&#13;
the Year for his guidance of a young team&#13;
that climbed from fifth to second in the&#13;
WSUC meet and posted a much improvea&#13;
9-3-1 record after falling to 4-10-1 just a&#13;
year ago.&#13;
Tom Vail, the Platteville coach, was&#13;
rnd. while Jon Swift, the Carthage&#13;
tor was third. Warren Kinzel of River&#13;
Falls was fourth while Vic Godfrey of UWParkside&#13;
was fifth. Only three votes&#13;
separated Vail. Swift and Kinzel&#13;
Platteville was a solid pick as Team of&#13;
Year as the Pioneers posted a 12-1&#13;
rd for the season, won the WSUC&#13;
t. was second in the Whitewater Invitational&#13;
meet, third in the Pioneer Invitational,&#13;
and finished in the top 15 teams&#13;
in the NAIA finals.&#13;
Carthage, with a dual meet record of 28&#13;
straight wins, was second with a 7-0 dual&#13;
meet, was second in the CCTW. finished&#13;
sixth in the Platteville Invitational, and&#13;
second in the District Invitational meet&#13;
and also was in the top 15 of the NAIA&#13;
finals&#13;
Parkside was 4-1 in dual meets, finished&#13;
third in the Whitewater Invitational, and&#13;
won the District Invitational meet.&#13;
Whitewater finished fourth in the team&#13;
balloting with a 9-3-1 record while&#13;
LaCrosse finished a close fifth with a 7-3&#13;
dual meet record and third in the WSUC&#13;
meet while getting fourth in a large 12-&#13;
team meet during the season.&#13;
Spotlight on Doug&#13;
the&#13;
; , ' , , r h n c k n e t t m a n , P a r k s i d e ' s t w o r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s o n&#13;
NAIA leading the pack against&#13;
WHITEWATER - Two repeat performers&#13;
and an outstanding poup of&#13;
freshmen runners paeed the NAIA District&#13;
14 All-Star squad for the 1970 season. Th&#13;
team, consisting of 10 runner^ was&#13;
selected by the vote of the District&#13;
C°RidTLund and Chuck Dettman, two&#13;
Parkside freshmen from Marinette, were&#13;
the District 14&#13;
named to the top 10 for their outs&#13;
yearling record.&#13;
A1 Russell, a junior from Plattev&#13;
the top runner for the Pioneers this seasr&#13;
was selected for the second straight veT&#13;
along with Mark Delaney, a junior'&#13;
Whitewater and the Warhawks&#13;
two runner this season.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
Dec. 17-19: Rangers at Quantico,&#13;
Virginia, for Quantico Tournament.&#13;
.&#13;
Dec 23: Southern IllinoisEdwardsville,&#13;
8:00, St. Joseph's,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Dec. 30-31: Corn Palace Tournament,&#13;
Mitchell, South Dakota,&#13;
. WSU-LaCrosse, Dakota Wesleyan,&#13;
Northwestern College.&#13;
Jan. 6: Milton College (Home) 8:00,&#13;
Union Grove High School.&#13;
Jan. 9: Lakehead University&#13;
(Ontario), Home, 8:00, Case High&#13;
School.&#13;
Jan. 12: Northeastern Illinois&#13;
(Home), 8:00, St. Joseph's.&#13;
FENCING&#13;
Jan. 8: University of Missouri,&#13;
Kansas City, Milwaukee Tech.&#13;
(Home), John Bullen Junior High.&#13;
Jan. 16: Air Force Academy,, UWMadison&#13;
and Ohio State at&#13;
Madison.&#13;
WRESTLING&#13;
Dec. 17: UW-Milwaukee at&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Dec. 29-30: Midlands Tournament&#13;
at LaGrange, Illinois.&#13;
Jan. 9: Beloit College (Home), John&#13;
Bullen Junior High.&#13;
GYMNASTICS&#13;
Jan. 9: Wisconsin State U-Stevens&#13;
Point, 3:00&#13;
TRACK&#13;
Jan. 2: Indiana State at Terre&#13;
Haute.&#13;
Seven freshmen, the largest group ev&#13;
selected to an NAIA District 14 team, wer»&#13;
voted as top performers, along viith&#13;
sophomore. Heading the freshman grout)&#13;
was Jim Drews, the LaCrosse top ru nner&#13;
who had eight wins and a fourth place&#13;
finish in nine meets.&#13;
Carthage, always a dominate force in&#13;
cross country, paced two first year men or,&#13;
the squad — Mark Reisweber and Jo?&#13;
McGhee. McGhee finished third in the&#13;
CCTW meet after winning three dual&#13;
meets, getting three second place finishes&#13;
also for the unbeated Redmen. Reisweber&#13;
was fifth in the CCTW meet as he won four&#13;
dual meets and was second in two others&#13;
Rounding out the team were: Joe&#13;
Schnepf, a freshman from Whitewater and&#13;
the Hawks' top runner; Gary Yanke, a&#13;
freshman from Platteville and the&#13;
Pioneers' second man; Chuck Dettman. a&#13;
freshman from UW-Parkside who had four&#13;
wins and a third place in five meets; R ick&#13;
Lund, another freshman from UWParkside&#13;
who had three wins and a pair 0!&#13;
second place finishes; and sophomore Pa:&#13;
Stemper of Platteville, with a second an d&#13;
five thirds for the Pioneers.&#13;
There were seven runners on the&#13;
Honorable Mention list. They were: Can&#13;
Sumner, a freshman from River Falls;&#13;
John Stodola, a sophomore from Superior;&#13;
Doug Brefezynski, a freshman from&#13;
Oshkosh; Harry Pennington, a sophomore&#13;
from Carthage; John Carlson, a freshmaa&#13;
from LaCrosse; John Wilke, a sophomore&#13;
from Lakeland; and Bill Fojtik, a fre shman&#13;
from Eau Claire.&#13;
In all, there were 26 r unners from t he&#13;
District teams nominated for the AlhSttf&#13;
team. Drews was the only runner p:cW&#13;
on every ballot as the number one runner&#13;
Coaches did not vote for their own r unners&#13;
in the balloting.&#13;
Word Is Out! Here It Is!&#13;
Doug Anderson: Co-Captain&#13;
5' 10" — ISO lbs., Frosh&#13;
Doug comes to Parkside from&#13;
nation's hotbed of high school gymnastics&#13;
- Illinois. His home is in South Holland,&#13;
Illinois, a southern suburb of Chicago,&#13;
where he was graduated from Thornridge&#13;
High School.&#13;
Doug was captain of his high school&#13;
team and won many individual honors. An&#13;
all-around man, Doug works side horse,&#13;
free exercise, high bar, rings, parallel&#13;
bars, and vaulting. His strongest event is&#13;
high bar, where he must be considered for&#13;
national honors. Doug's goal in gymnastics&#13;
is to represent the United States in&#13;
international competition.&#13;
Doug's major fields are Biological&#13;
Science and Music. His music background&#13;
is equally as impressive as his gymnastics,&#13;
having been awarded All-State&#13;
honors as a baritone vocalist. His other&#13;
areas of interest are sailing and snow&#13;
SKnng.&#13;
By C. ROBERT PAUL, JR.&#13;
Director of Public Information&#13;
The Sports Year 1970 was NOT a vintage&#13;
year for the United States in amateur&#13;
sports in the Olympic Games, internationally&#13;
speaking.&#13;
Two developments worth mentioning&#13;
are: The success of the young basketball&#13;
team which won 10 out of 13 as the U.S.&#13;
Olympic Training Squad toured eastern&#13;
Europe after three weeks of practice in&#13;
Colorado. Tom McMillen, currently a&#13;
freshman at the University of Maryland,&#13;
showed that he may be a strong candidate&#13;
for both the 1971 USA Pan-American Team&#13;
and the 1972 Olympic Team.&#13;
The comeback of the USA in ice hockey.&#13;
Relegated to Group B after a disastrous&#13;
1969 tournament, a revamped USA&#13;
National team swept to victory, and&#13;
qualified for the 1972 Olympic Games. At&#13;
the present time, this augmented National&#13;
team actually an Olympic training squad,&#13;
is in the midst of a backbreaking 51-game&#13;
training schedule prior to the Group A ice&#13;
hockey championships in Switzerland.&#13;
f wor&#13;
Jd wrestling championships at&#13;
Ectaonton, Alberta, the USA continued to&#13;
hold its own in world wrestling by placing&#13;
second to the Soviet Union in the free-style&#13;
competition as Wayne Wells became" a&#13;
gold medalist in the 163-pound&#13;
Our other three medal wj&#13;
nn&#13;
R&#13;
Olympic veteran Larry Kristo ,&#13;
medal, 220 pounds; 1968 Olympi c&#13;
Bobby Douglas, bronze, 149.5 poun&#13;
Mike Young, bronze, 136.5 poun d&#13;
Team Sports&#13;
In the team sports of soccer, ft ^&#13;
and volleyball (men's and women . y&#13;
f u t u r e o f t h e U S A c o u l d pre tt* *&#13;
determined by the Pan-Amen ^ (&#13;
So far as soccer is concerned ^&#13;
the "Olympic" team invol ^&#13;
preliminary qualifying g a)s0 if&#13;
Olympic competition in 197 , ,R 0*&#13;
same team will represem. ^ a&#13;
Pan-American Games. It h ,n e;:i&#13;
time since the USA has don&#13;
competition. _ in&#13;
Much depends on suce* -* ,mei''-&#13;
American Games for the 5 v&#13;
° tic***&#13;
(men's and women's) an ^ at C*J&#13;
team. It is mandatory toat ty of c&lt;&#13;
if they expect to play at Mun ]d n-,entile&#13;
volleyball teams won bom ^&#13;
at Winnipeg in 1967 an&#13;
„ jg f0r thebr&#13;
'&#13;
team edged out host Can won b&gt;&#13;
medal - the first medal * ^&#13;
USA in international "&#13;
e&#13;
petition. &#13;
Spotlight on Big "E ff&#13;
One of the most exciting basketball&#13;
players in Wisconsin collegiate circles is a&#13;
6'3" senior from M arshall High School in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Eli Slaughter, or the "E" as Ranger fans&#13;
call him , has been a big gun since his&#13;
basketball debut at Parkside.&#13;
Slaughter is one of the junior college&#13;
transfers that has made Parkside&#13;
basketball fortune s go.&#13;
' After a so-so career at Marshall, Eli&#13;
me a sudden star at Wright J.C. He&#13;
became the team's leading scorer both&#13;
years and was named to the second team&#13;
J.C. All-American cage squad.&#13;
Slaughter took right off last year with a&#13;
24 point average. In the squad's first three&#13;
games this year he has had 32 and 27 points&#13;
plus a two pointer when he was ejected&#13;
from a game in its early stages for&#13;
fighting.&#13;
Eli is a great scorer with a soft, fadeaway&#13;
jumper that usually hits the target if&#13;
he is in the 10-20 foot range.&#13;
Rangers P ost First Victory&#13;
star T scu&#13;
^&#13;
e resulting in the loss of a&#13;
North r " and 3 *&#13;
ate raUy Purdue&#13;
Park • ,&#13;
tral wer&#13;
e overcome by UWvjp.J&#13;
® in Posting their first season&#13;
W'ory 74-68 Friday, Dec. 4.&#13;
runni!,&#13;
r op enin§ the game with a flurry and&#13;
cold TP&#13;
?&#13;
strong ha&#13;
lt-time lead of 43-29,&#13;
mt0 f)iQ half pumping almost turned&#13;
iwo as ^ardue closed the gap to&#13;
remaSg ^ leSS than a minute&#13;
deijT ,,&#13;
minut&#13;
es gone, a "misunS!aUit&#13;
»&#13;
ng&#13;
' between Parkside's Eli&#13;
r and 7"toot Craig Salik of Purdue&#13;
^st of Year&#13;
°1 its b ^t&#13;
S X°lleybaH ^l&#13;
ub Played some&#13;
i0sing in snH^&#13;
e^&#13;
baH °t the year before&#13;
IJle Volievh n ^ th to place second in&#13;
,/&#13;
ournament won by UWThe&#13;
Rana during the Sportsfest.&#13;
^anient h opene&lt;&#13;
l the four-team&#13;
16-i4. K io&#13;
SCraP&#13;
ing P&#13;
ast UW-Green&#13;
f ^ ^d' rounH 30(1 then b&#13;
°wing 7-15.&#13;
;&#13;
rnished tb?o °PPonent, Milwaukee,&#13;
their tlr&#13;
an&#13;
.f&#13;
ers ^ opportunity to&#13;
,"e 15-u B,ucu 10 capture the third&#13;
cm,&#13;
?&#13;
siti&#13;
°n, losino&#13;
e?Be furnished little opM&#13;
?&#13;
e Parksirim ' 154 and 15&#13;
-8- At this S Waukee w?s&#13;
Sn,&#13;
reCOrd was 7&#13;
"&#13;
2&#13;
' and&#13;
fr.team wiiS ymg Green BayIf&#13;
&#13;
w,&#13;
ks&#13;
'de woul.&#13;
d Win two games, then&#13;
&gt;'t the cae tbe winner, but this&#13;
sw? parties &lt;1 3S Mi&#13;
lwaukee won all&#13;
^ death. 108 the tournament into&#13;
one gam"1® factor&gt; the play-off&#13;
C,?*- coidp&#13;
nStead 0f best two out&#13;
Mii^s was th! k gers Sot a 2-1 lead&#13;
they could do and&#13;
rofnped to a 15-8 win.&#13;
resulted in Slaughter's ejection with only&#13;
two points scored by the Ranger ace.&#13;
Stan White took over the rebounding&#13;
reins for Parkside, leading both teams&#13;
with 12 pick offs. It was White, in the&#13;
second half, who battled Purdue back from&#13;
a rush that brought the score to 56-52.&#13;
Hitting on jumpers and drives and&#13;
counting a few chairty tosses, White hit&#13;
seven straight to give the Rangers some&#13;
breathing room. -&#13;
Purdue, not giving in easily, drilled on&#13;
and with 2:45 remaining, trailed only 67-63.&#13;
White again clicked a jumper to make it&#13;
69-63. P urdue out-gunned the Rangers 5-1&#13;
to tighten the score with forty seconds&#13;
remaining at 70-68.&#13;
A missed bonus situation by Purdue cost&#13;
them a chance at a tie and with only 30&#13;
seconds remaining a similar opportunity&#13;
was missed by Parkside's Ken Rick.&#13;
Another bonus play was converted with&#13;
just a few seconds remaining by Rick to&#13;
put the game away.&#13;
Parkside hit 43 per cent for the evening&#13;
after a hot 50 per cent first half. Purdue&#13;
shot a respectable 48 per cent for the night.&#13;
Jim Hogan topped all scorers for Parkside&#13;
with 26 points, followed by White with 24.&#13;
Parkside — 74&#13;
White 7 ld44 4&#13;
Slaughter J 2&#13;
Jackson !!"? =&#13;
Madsen 3 0-&#13;
Hogan I 2-5 3 Perrme 3 2*&#13;
Rick 2 4&#13;
"&#13;
7 2&#13;
Purdue NC — 68&#13;
ssu ; s »&#13;
r 3&#13;
Swanson o 2 3 4&#13;
Haynes 2 Xl 4&#13;
Salik 2 ^ ;&#13;
Janzaruk 2 __&#13;
Parkside 43 2&#13;
q&#13;
Purdue NC 29 39 - 68&#13;
Ski R angers: Plans Include&#13;
Winter Carnival E vents&#13;
The Ski Rangers are in the preliminary&#13;
stages of planning a "Winter Carnival"&#13;
series of events. The events are scheduled&#13;
tentatively from February 17-20.&#13;
Planning committees are working on a&#13;
theme, name and schedule of events.&#13;
According to Ski Ranger President Jim&#13;
DeBerge, events that are being discussed&#13;
are: Ice Carving, Ski Racing, Cross&#13;
Country Skiing, Sled Racing, Broomball&#13;
Tournaments for men and women, Snow&#13;
Shoe Races, Hockey and a drop by sky&#13;
divers.&#13;
Held in conjunction with this snow spree&#13;
would be a breakfast, dances, basketball&#13;
New Advisor&#13;
For Girls&#13;
"I was born and raised in North Dakota,&#13;
and I'm proud of it!" she says with a&#13;
smile. Doreen Kristjanson is the new.&#13;
advisor for Parkside's Cheerleaders and&#13;
Rangerettes. She is a 1969 graduate of the&#13;
University of North Dakota and is in her&#13;
second year of teaching home economics&#13;
at Racine Park High School.&#13;
Doreen was a cheerleader all four years&#13;
at Grand Forks Central High School in&#13;
Grand Forks, North Dakota. At the&#13;
University of North Dakota she was a&#13;
member of Phi Upsilon Omicron, an&#13;
honorary home economics fraternity. Last&#13;
August she traveled to Mexico with a&#13;
friend and went to Yucatan. She also is the&#13;
advisor to Parkside's Pom-Pom girls.&#13;
Though one can easily see she has little&#13;
spare time, she usually spends it sewing,&#13;
swimming, crocheting or bowling. She&#13;
says her favorites are men and parties.&#13;
Her first impression of Parkside was&#13;
that she was disappointed to see that it was&#13;
so hard to get kids involved here&#13;
At the next half time of a basketball&#13;
game, look for the record player. The&#13;
young lady standing there with the long,&#13;
light brown hair and blue eyes is Doreen.&#13;
Editor's Note: Due to the background of&#13;
some of our coaching staff, I was asked to&#13;
say that "North Dakota is the second best&#13;
state in the country, next to South&#13;
Dakota'..&#13;
game, and the crowning of a Snow Queen.&#13;
This type of event will take much&#13;
planning and the cooperation of students&#13;
and faculty alike. Especially important&#13;
will be the participation of all clubs on&#13;
campus.&#13;
Each event will have a chairman and&#13;
committee that is responsible for the&#13;
promotion of the event.&#13;
More will be published in the next issue&#13;
of Newscope.&#13;
Miss Kristjanson&#13;
Godrey Speaks&#13;
Cross Country Coach Vic Godfrey spoke&#13;
at Proviso West's cross country banquet&#13;
last Friday night. Proviso West is located&#13;
in Hillside, Illinois, and has long been&#13;
famous for the quality of its distance&#13;
runners.&#13;
This Friday, Godfrey will be speaking in&#13;
Toledo, Ohio, at the banquet honoring the&#13;
Ohio State Cross Country Champions,&#13;
DeVilbiss High School of Toledo.&#13;
Spotlight on Jeff Jenkins&#13;
Jeff Jenkins has Coach Koch smiling&#13;
when he goes out to meet his opponents in a&#13;
wrestling match.&#13;
Jeff is a sophomore from Bradford High&#13;
School who, according to Koch, may just&#13;
be coming of age. Jeff had an unimpressive&#13;
4-4 r ecord last year, but he did&#13;
win a match at the NAIA National Tournament.&#13;
&#13;
Koch is quick to point out that this is a&#13;
new season and Jeff Jenkins has assertedhimself&#13;
as a mainstay on the team. "Jeff is&#13;
probably the most exciting wrestler to&#13;
watch on the team due to his unorthodox&#13;
style and his variety of moves. He moves&#13;
like butter on a hot knife."&#13;
In Jeff's first two matches, he lived up to&#13;
his coach's kind remarks by decisioning&#13;
his opponents 21-11 and 14-6. During the&#13;
remainder of the season, the 150-pounder's&#13;
courage will be put to the test many times.&#13;
At this weight class, the opponents usually&#13;
seem to have about their best wrestler&#13;
also.&#13;
Ranger Wrestlers to Meet U W-M&#13;
In what could prove to be a very interesting&#13;
afternoon of wrestling, the&#13;
Parkside wrestlers meet the UWMilwaukee&#13;
wrestling team on Thursday,&#13;
December 17, at 1:30. The match, which&#13;
was originally scheduled for Parkside,&#13;
JOGGING&#13;
L&#13;
Faculty or Staff members and&#13;
their spouses who are interested in a&#13;
morning jobbing program should&#13;
contact Vic Godfrey at the Office of&#13;
Athletics, Ext. 245, this week.&#13;
was rescheduled for Milwaukee to coincide&#13;
with their winter homecoming activities.&#13;
Between the Mat Maids and the newly&#13;
organized Mat Rats, which is a male group&#13;
of wrestling boosters, the Rangers may&#13;
well feel that they are wrestling in front of&#13;
a home crowd anyway.&#13;
The line-up for the UW-Milwaukee&#13;
match should be as follows: 188 Hugh&#13;
Gately, 126 Steve Lamont, 134 Ken Martin,&#13;
142 Gary Vincent, 150 Jeff Jenkins, 158&#13;
Tony Kolnik, 167 Bill Benkstein, 177 Tom*&#13;
Beyer, 190 Paul Paricka, and heavyweight&#13;
Mark Barnhill.&#13;
Parkside has never defeated Milwaukee&#13;
in wrestling. &#13;
A Wrestling Spectacular&#13;
Parkside wrestling fans were treated to&#13;
a full afternoon of wrestling during the&#13;
second annual Sportsfest.&#13;
Excitement was not lacking as the&#13;
Rangers handled Michigan Tech with east&#13;
and went down to the last match before&#13;
bowing to the Pointers from WSU-Stevens&#13;
Point.&#13;
Parkside gave up 10 points to each team&#13;
before the match was hardly under way.&#13;
First of a ll they lost 126 pounder, Steve&#13;
Lamont, when the junior transfer from&#13;
Richland Center couldn't make the weight&#13;
limit. To further dim Ranger chances,&#13;
sophomore rookie Gene Fix dislocated his&#13;
elbow in the early seconds of his first&#13;
match.&#13;
Michigan Tech only managed 13 points&#13;
against 29 for the Rangers so the 10 point&#13;
handicap didn't affect the outcome, but the&#13;
Stevens Point match was a different story.&#13;
Parkside lost a 23-17 decision when&#13;
Parkside's lightweight heavyweight Mark&#13;
Barnhill lost in a valiant effort to overtake&#13;
the Pointers in the finale. A Parkside win&#13;
would have given the Rangers both victories.&#13;
&#13;
At one time the Rangers were leading&#13;
the Point 17-3 before the forfeits came into&#13;
view.&#13;
Freshman Ken Martin (134) from&#13;
Colman, Wisconsin, led all Rangers in&#13;
scoring with two pins. He pinned Tech&#13;
captain Greg Hauser with only 45 seconds&#13;
remaining and Martin behind. His second&#13;
victim was Point's Dale Hedkiewicz.&#13;
Another frosh, Hugh Gately of Kenosha&#13;
Tremper, made his collegiate debut a&#13;
successful one with a pin over Frank&#13;
Oliver of Tech and a 8-2 decision over&#13;
Kevin Campbell in the 118 pound class.&#13;
Jeff Jenkins, a 150 pound soph from&#13;
Bradford, ran up large scores in winning&#13;
his two matches. Jenkins racked up 21&#13;
points to John Lindsay's (Tech) 11 and&#13;
then in one of the final matches he&#13;
decisioned Eric Opperman 14-6.&#13;
After Gene Fox was injured in his bout,&#13;
142 pounder Bill Tabbert subbed for Fox in&#13;
the 158 pound class but the weight differential&#13;
was too great and he succumbed&#13;
with 1:30 gone in the match.&#13;
After handing Stevens Point's Russ&#13;
Bentley 12-2,167 pounder and captain Bill&#13;
Benkstein pinned a tough Mitch Vogeli in&#13;
7:35. Benkstein was the Rangers' leading&#13;
wrestler last year.&#13;
Another freshman, Tom Beyer of&#13;
Dodgeville, Wisconsin, showed the mat&#13;
fans some exciting wrestling by outpointing&#13;
Jim Wittig (SP) 15-12 and then&#13;
coming back with a spectacular pan t hat&#13;
was the result of a hip toss. A surprised&#13;
Tom Hanstreet was shown a new move&#13;
when he took mat burns on his back with&#13;
4:30 gone in the match.&#13;
Ex-heavyweight Paul Paricka split for&#13;
the afternoon by winning a hard fought 4-2&#13;
decision over Loren Williams of Tech and&#13;
losing by a pin to Point's Jim Notstad in&#13;
6:40.&#13;
A little and inexperienced Mark Barnhill&#13;
made his debut as a heavyweight an exciting&#13;
if not winning one. Barnhill at 190&#13;
gave up 95 pounds to David Tarbell of Tech&#13;
and went down to a 6-2 defeat. Dave&#13;
Garber, a good heavyweight from Point,&#13;
put Barnhill down for the count in 4:10.&#13;
+ -f + T&#13;
Michigan Tech, a wrestling team that&#13;
Parkside defeated during Sportsfest, went&#13;
over to Carthage the next day and won the&#13;
Carthage Quadrangle.&#13;
Michigan Tech scored 90 points to 70 for&#13;
Carthage. North Park was third with 42,&#13;
and Aurora last with 31.&#13;
Sophomore Jeff Jenkins is shown rolling into a predicament on&#13;
the Pointers. Jenkins decisioned Opperman 14-6. Eric Oppemani&#13;
Freshman Ken Martin is shown pinning the Michigan Tech captain, Greg Hauser.&#13;
This was one of two pins Martin pulled off during the afternoon.&#13;
Freshman Tom Beyer has a pinning combination on Jim Witlig of WSU-Stevens&#13;
Point. Beyer missed the pin, but went on to a wild 15-12 decision.&#13;
Rangers C ome Back&#13;
To W in Over Swedes&#13;
Capt. Bill Benkstein riding Russ Bentley of WSU-Stevens Point. Benkstein went on&#13;
to win 12-2.&#13;
Heavyweight Mark Barnhill is shown trying to tear nff tho j&#13;
Tarbell, the Michigan Tech heavyweight. Tarbell weighed in at 2fts •« r °U® David&#13;
Tarbell emerged the winner 6-2. ^ ,n at 285 to Chill's 190.&#13;
By JOHN ANDERSON&#13;
Journal-Times Staff&#13;
A barrage of late baskets provided UWParkside&#13;
with a thrilling come-frombehmd&#13;
victory over , the touring Swedish&#13;
National team 85-80 in the Case High gym&#13;
Saturday night.&#13;
The taller Swedes spotted the Rangers&#13;
the lead for the first 13 mintues and then&#13;
took over on torrid shooting by 6'8 Jorgen&#13;
Hansson to lead by 8 at half time. Parkside&#13;
regained the lead with five minutes&#13;
remaining and held on to gain the win&#13;
The teams played under International&#13;
rules which differ from those used by U.S.&#13;
teams. No free throws are shot on fouls&#13;
unless the person fouled is in the act of&#13;
shooting then two shots are awarded.&#13;
In the final three minutes of the game,&#13;
all fouls give the team fouled the option of&#13;
hlnnL -^'T ?&#13;
W° °&#13;
r taki&#13;
"8 ba&#13;
" i&gt;&gt;-&#13;
bounds. The decision must come from the&#13;
team captain and not the bench.&#13;
Another interesting variation results&#13;
^ 6?u basket 1116 officials do not&#13;
handle the ball and the scoring team may&#13;
no touch the ba ll. Te chnical fo ulsare&#13;
cajted a they touch the ball even by ac-&#13;
^ Substitutes e&#13;
"'er the game only on a&#13;
buzzer, but notify the scorer's table by&#13;
making a rolling motion with their hands&#13;
then in they go. With all the changes in the&#13;
rules, some thirty of them, the officials&#13;
controlled the game with a minimum of&#13;
argument from the benches.&#13;
The Swedes displayed a brand of ball&#13;
sound in fundamentals and their shooting&#13;
*2E"l.&#13;
ln&#13;
J&#13;
he M touch they display&#13;
S nH' hirt* driVG ^ baU at the basket&#13;
' using a higher arc than most American&#13;
teams. Only under the boards do they give&#13;
ground. As their coach Arne Jansson&#13;
explained, In Europe any body contact is&#13;
rewarded with a foul call, forcing th eir&#13;
teams to give ground inside, especially on&#13;
rebounds.&#13;
Parkside opened the game with a flu^&#13;
and quickly ran up a 12-6 lead, Stan White&#13;
and Eli Slaughter providing the pwc •&#13;
Jorgen Hansson and Anders Grenl1&#13;
!?&#13;
provided the early scoring efforts for&#13;
Swedes&#13;
Opening the final half the Swedes gaineji&#13;
a 10 point lead on a jumper by H J° •&#13;
Parkside started cutting into the&#13;
scoring two to each shot by the Nationals,&#13;
and narrowed the gap to 54-58 w&#13;
minutes left. Slaughter and Jim ** B&#13;
combined from the lane to narrow tn B&#13;
to 64-63. Hansson and Bo Liindrn&#13;
returned the fire to gain the edge ot&#13;
Slaughter scored on a steal by &amp; 'e&#13;
who was all over the floor badger11ob&#13;
taller Swedes, and the score rea&#13;
With 5:30 remaining Slaughter hit fr&#13;
line to make it 73-73 Pa rkside. but&#13;
Per-Olof Levert nailed a tip-_ t&#13;
Parkside regained the lead on a jw&#13;
by Hogan. White and Slaughter eac one&#13;
a 79-74 Parkside lead. Rannelid par* 6&#13;
for the Swedes to cut the lead by&#13;
White and Slaughter sandwiched a ^&#13;
Rannelid to maintain a five point g&#13;
78. Hjort scored on a pair of charity&#13;
for the Swedes to make it 83-80. on&#13;
The Rangers then had several opu ^&#13;
fouls and took the ball out of bou n ^&#13;
time until the final five seconds&#13;
Rick chose to shoot the foul sh®f' re.&#13;
both of them for the final 85-80 </text>
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              <text>The 27 Will Stay</text>
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              <text>0&#13;
g&#13;
C\&#13;
-~&#13;
0&#13;
~&#13;
l!&#13;
~&#13;
-1m c&#13;
:s&#13;
fI)&#13;
~~&#13;
~~&#13;
Editor's Note: The following news story&#13;
was written before the chancellor's&#13;
Monday morning announcement.&#13;
The purge has begun.&#13;
The "major surgery" Dean MacKinney&#13;
spoke of In October to remove those&#13;
faculty. who did not fit into Parkside's&#13;
plans has become a reality.&#13;
. Twenty-eight instructors have been&#13;
intorrned verbally tbat their contracts will&#13;
. not be renewed for the fall of 1971.Of these,&#13;
~enty-slx are second, third or fourth year&#13;
mstruclor~. Indications are that a similar&#13;
purge of first year faculty will take place&#13;
at the end of January. It is expected to take&#13;
a lesser number of instructors.&#13;
R.easons for the terminations have been&#13;
varied and vague. They include lack of&#13;
adequate publication, irrelevancy tu&#13;
Parkside'smission, better qualified people&#13;
can be hired, and lack of a Ph.D.&#13;
The administration claims some faculty&#13;
members promised to get Ph.D.'s when&#13;
hired, but haven't done so.&#13;
Some fac~lty members say in turn they&#13;
were promised more time to get Ph.D.'s&#13;
than given. They charge the administration&#13;
with bad faith.&#13;
The high number of terminations came&#13;
as a surprise to many faculty members.&#13;
Prof. James Shea, the president of the&#13;
University Committee, said, "The Vice&#13;
Chancellor and Dean MacKinney assured&#13;
me on Oct. 23 that there would be no more&#13;
than ten or 15 non-renewals of contracts. I&#13;
said to them, the information I had&#13;
suggested 20 to 30 faculty members would&#13;
have their contracts terminated. They said&#13;
absolutely not. It was nowhere near that."&#13;
Vice Chancellor Harris denied saying&#13;
this.&#13;
Among those who did - not ha ve their&#13;
contracts renewed at this time were John&#13;
Harbeson, who has long been involved in&#13;
the development of Parkside; Douglas&#13;
Laf'ollette, the defeated candidate for&#13;
Congress; Hal Stern; Carl Lindner, Robert&#13;
Schrader; Walter Graffin; and Gerald&#13;
Musich.&#13;
The 28 represent almost 20 per cent of&#13;
the full-time faculty, but more than 45 per&#13;
cent of the second. third and fourth year&#13;
instructors. In the Humanities Division.&#13;
roughly two-thirds have been terminated.&#13;
Looking at past terminations by the&#13;
school, no indication of this being expected&#13;
is seen. In 1967-68 there were four terminations;&#13;
in 1968-69 there were seven&#13;
terminations; and in 1969--70. there was&#13;
only one termination.&#13;
Faculty response was almost of&#13;
universal dismay at the number of terminations.&#13;
There is strong talk of&#13;
unionizing Parkside instructors, of seeking&#13;
punitive action from the American&#13;
Association of University Professors, and&#13;
to get the National Labor Relations Board&#13;
to hold a hearing about what has happened.&#13;
The ultimate decision to retain or not to&#13;
retain a faculty member was made by the&#13;
Dean and the Vice Chancellor. They&#13;
received recommendations from the&#13;
executive committees of each division.&#13;
The Executive Committees are made up of&#13;
the tenured people of the division.&#13;
But even before the Executive Committees&#13;
began their evaluations, the administration&#13;
had a list of potential terminees.&#13;
James Shea said, "The administration&#13;
carried out its own independent evaluation&#13;
of faculty. In fact, the divisional chairmen&#13;
were given a list of prospective terminees.&#13;
Agreement was sought from the chairmen&#13;
on this point.&#13;
':=;;:;;;:::--;;;;::=-::;;;::;:;;:;;:;;:;;=:;;===============___ • before the deliberations of the executive - "This happened," he continued, "even Lecture&#13;
committees had started."&#13;
In cases where the Dean had questions&#13;
about the recommendations. he referred&#13;
them to a special Ad Hoc committee he&#13;
appointed made up of six tenured faculty&#13;
members. They then made recommendations&#13;
to the Dean. The ultimate&#13;
decision, though, was still in the hands of&#13;
the administration.&#13;
The final number of terminations by the&#13;
administration exceeded the recommendations&#13;
for terminations by the&#13;
Divisions. In fact, the Social Science&#13;
division recommended that no terminations&#13;
be made. So far nine terminations&#13;
have been made in that division.&#13;
A few weeks ago the Division passed by&#13;
acclamation a condemnation of the administration.&#13;
Vice-Chancellor Harris said of this, "If&#13;
you give a body the power to evaluate&#13;
something, and they don't do it, then it's&#13;
obviously the responsibility of those in the&#13;
administration to do it."&#13;
VfETNAM WAR DEAD&#13;
COUNT RISES&#13;
WASHINGTON (CPS) Total&#13;
American deaths from the Indochinese&#13;
Waf have climbed to 52,757, according to&#13;
the most recent death count from the .S.&#13;
Department· of Defense. This figure iny&#13;
Chancellor Irvin Wyllie announced early&#13;
Monday that 17of the TI faculty memben&#13;
who had been informed verbally thetr&#13;
contracts were terminated will be re-hired&#13;
(or the 1971-197'2academic year.&#13;
The remaining len instructors will be&#13;
given until September 01 1971to complete&#13;
their doctor of philosophy degrees.&#13;
The reinstatements has been eUected,&#13;
Wyllie said, because when 22of these were&#13;
hired by former Dean Stephen Mitchell it&#13;
was not made clear in their contracts how&#13;
long their appointments were to be.&#13;
~e normal appointment period for an&#13;
assistant professor is three years.&#13;
While legally, Wyllie said, he felt the&#13;
university was within its rights to terminate&#13;
the contracts at one or two years,&#13;
txJt to render justice he said he felt the&#13;
professors should be retained for the third&#13;
year.&#13;
The chancellor said of these n teachers&#13;
who were not to be retained, eight were&#13;
recommended for non-retention by their&#13;
own divisional executive committees. 13&#13;
by the ad hoc advisory committee appointed&#13;
by Dean McKinney to give the&#13;
dean and vice-chancellor further&#13;
recommendation, and six by the personal&#13;
decision of the dean and vice-chancellor.&#13;
Of the eight faculty members recommended&#13;
for non-retention by their&#13;
divisional executive committee. five were&#13;
assistant professors and three were instructors&#13;
working on their Ph.D. degrees.&#13;
He said the executive committee informed&#13;
him they would see no reason to&#13;
change their initial recommendation on&#13;
the eight in the future.&#13;
Wyllie said, too, "our first and foremost&#13;
obligation is on teachi;g."&#13;
Wednesday-&#13;
,. Automobile Emissions: Environmental&#13;
Benefit vs. Technological&#13;
Costs" win be the topic of a public lecture&#13;
by Prof. Phillip S. Myers at 4:30 p.m. on&#13;
Wednesday. Dec. 9, in Greenquisl Hall&#13;
Room 101 at the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Wood Road Campus.&#13;
The lecture is sponsored by the Parkside&#13;
SCience Division.&#13;
Prof. Myers is a member of the&#13;
mechanical engineering Iaculty, at UWMadison&#13;
and is immediate past president&#13;
of the Society of Automotive Engineers&#13;
(SAEL Among his long-time research&#13;
interests are the vagaries of engines and&#13;
combustion.&#13;
His work has resulted in more than 40&#13;
technical publications and a number of&#13;
awards including the Benjamin Smith&#13;
Reynolds Teaching Award and the Horning&#13;
Memorial Award and Arch T. Colwell&#13;
Award 01 the SAE.&#13;
Prof. Myers received his undergraduate&#13;
degree from Kansas State University and&#13;
his MS and Ph.D. degrees from UWMadison.&#13;
eludes 43,959 deaths, "resultmg trom&#13;
action from hostile forces," and 8,798from&#13;
"other causes," which include aircraft&#13;
accidents and "incidents."&#13;
Weaver: University For' Purposes Of Students By MARGIE NOER entire answer lollows: strength of that thesis persons are being the Board his feelings about the policies of&#13;
"In fact, nobody has been dismissed. invited in for conversations with the Dean the institution that are in his judgment,&#13;
What has been occurring this week is the and lhe Vice-Chancellor about the based on his work with faculty and other&#13;
Dean (MacKinney) and the Vice- situation and during those conversations administrative officers, correct. The new&#13;
Chancellor have been talking to individual they are being afforded every opportunity UW president sees the Board 01 Regents&#13;
faculty members but no notices have been to, as 1understand it and I'm not in on this, and the president in a relationship&#13;
served on any faculty members. You see to speak their case and their situation, So representing an arena of discussion of the&#13;
you are stating as fact things that are not it's conceivable based on those con- university's problems and judgments&#13;
facts. The review process starts at the versations with the Dean and the Vice- made by the laymen who are represendivisional&#13;
level with the faculty who serve Chancellor that some of these things could tatives of the public.&#13;
on the divisional executive committees be turned around so that the notices would Weaver went on to say that "I feel very&#13;
making the initial judgments and offering not be sent, you see, and we are in a strongly in this particular moment and&#13;
advice on the renewal of these ap- situation in which student reaction is a time that even our students are demanding&#13;
pointments to the Dean. So that's one level. gun-jumping reaction based on claims that more of an opportunity to be heard in the&#13;
And in fact, a significant number of people are not stated by the people who are governance of the university. So also is the&#13;
were recommended for non-renewal by the responsible for the review." public." He stressed that the public is&#13;
divisional executive committees. Then the At that point the questions were getting "mighty insistent" about their&#13;
'next level of review is the Dean's level. redirected to president Weaver. In the feelings of need of greater accountability&#13;
And again, to build in protection for the short time. that remained, Weaver was on the part of the university to the public&#13;
faculty, the Dean created a special ad hoc asked if he felt the UW president should be that supports it. Although he has syrnadvisory&#13;
committee of faculty to help him submissive to some of the orders and pathies for the students' wish for parwith&#13;
the review process at this level. And requests made by the Board of Regents or ticipation in university governing and&#13;
that faculty group also recommended should the present university make an hopes they may be accomodated in the&#13;
people for non-renewal. There is an im- attempt to stand up to the Regents? councils of the university in the future,&#13;
portant distinction here between dismissal Weaver answered that the president Weaver also feels the public should be&#13;
for cause ana non-renewal. And then on the should use his judgment in representing to heard and represented in the same way.&#13;
"I am delighted to find that there are&#13;
some woodland and ecologic areas with&#13;
real merit that I hope this campus is going&#13;
to be able to preserve in the years ahead."&#13;
Such was UW president-elect John C.&#13;
Weaver's initial reaction to Parkside when&#13;
he visited our campus last Thursday.&#13;
In a press conference, followiDg his tourof&#13;
the campus, Weaver said that when he is&#13;
officially in office he hopes to find informal&#13;
ways of visiting with the students, "The&#13;
university is here for the purposes of&#13;
education and that means for the pur}X&gt;ses&#13;
of the students .. , With the Chancellors'&#13;
help I'll find ways to be able to visit with&#13;
the student, you can be sure of that."&#13;
Having arrived during the height of the&#13;
student rally, Weaver was asked several&#13;
questions about the faculty dismissals.&#13;
Since he had been in the state only 24&#13;
hours, Weaver said he couldn't effectively&#13;
answer due to lack of information on the&#13;
SUbject. At that point, the question was&#13;
directed to Chancellor Wyllie and his&#13;
I&#13;
r&#13;
•&#13;
The 27 Will Sta y&#13;
Editor:s Note: The following news story&#13;
was written before the chancellor's&#13;
Monday morning announcement.&#13;
The purge has begun.&#13;
The "major surgery" Dean MacKinney&#13;
spoke of in October to remove those&#13;
faculty who did not fit into Parkside's&#13;
plans has become a reality.&#13;
. Twenty-eight instructors have been&#13;
informed verbally that their contracts will . not be re~ewed for the fall of 1971. Of these,&#13;
~enty-s1x are s_eco~d, third or fourth year&#13;
instructors. Indications are that a similar&#13;
purge of first year faculty will take place&#13;
at the end of January. It is expected to take a lesser number of instructors.&#13;
Reasons for the terminations have been&#13;
varied and vague. They include lack of&#13;
adeq~at~ . p~bl_ication, irrelevancy to&#13;
Parkside s m1ss1on, better qualified people&#13;
can be hired, and lack of a Ph.D.&#13;
The administration claims some faculty&#13;
members promised to get Ph.D. 's when&#13;
hired, but haven't done so.&#13;
Some faculty members say in turn they&#13;
were promised more time to get Ph.D.'s&#13;
than given. They charge the administration&#13;
with bad faith.&#13;
The high number of terminations came&#13;
as a surprise to many faculty members.&#13;
Prof. James Shea, the president of the&#13;
University Committee, said, "The Vice&#13;
Chancellor and Dean MacKinney assured&#13;
me on Oct. 23 that there would be no more&#13;
than ten or 15 non-renewals of contracts. I&#13;
said to them, the information I had&#13;
suggested 20 to 30 faculty members would&#13;
have their contracts terminated. They said&#13;
absolutely not. It was nowhere near that."&#13;
Vice Chancellor Harris denied saying&#13;
this.&#13;
Among those who did not have their&#13;
contracts renewed at this time were John&#13;
Harbeson, who has long been involved in&#13;
the development of Parkside; Douglas&#13;
LaFollette, the defeated candidate for&#13;
Congress; Hal Stern; Carl Lindner, Robert&#13;
Schrader; Walter Graffin ; and Gerald&#13;
Musich.&#13;
The 28 represent almost 20 per cent of&#13;
the full-time faculty, but more than 45 per&#13;
cent of the second, third and fourth year&#13;
instructors. In the Humanities Division,&#13;
roughly two-thirds have been terminated.&#13;
Looking at past terminations by the&#13;
school, no indication of this being expected&#13;
is seen. In 1967~ there were four terminations:&#13;
in 1968-69 there were seven&#13;
terminations; and in 1969-70, there was&#13;
only one termination.&#13;
Faculty response was almost of&#13;
universal dismay at the number of terminations.&#13;
There is strong talk of&#13;
unionizing Parkside instructors. of seeking&#13;
punitive action from the American&#13;
Association of University Professors, and&#13;
to get the National Labor Relations Board&#13;
to hold a hearing about what has happened.&#13;
&#13;
The ultimate decision to retain or not to&#13;
retain a faculty member was made by the&#13;
Dean and the Vice Chancellor. They&#13;
received recommendations from the&#13;
executive committees of each division.&#13;
The Executive Committees are made up of&#13;
the tenured people of the division.&#13;
But even before the Executive Committees&#13;
began their evaluations, the administration&#13;
had a list of potential terminees.&#13;
&#13;
James Shea said, "The administration&#13;
carried out its own independent evaluation&#13;
of faculty. In fact, the divisional chairmen&#13;
were given a list of prospective terminees.&#13;
Agreement was sought from the chairmen&#13;
on this point.&#13;
Chancellor Irvin Wyllie announced early&#13;
tonday that 17 of the 27 faculty member~&#13;
who had been informed verbally their&#13;
contracts were terminated will be re-hired&#13;
for the 1971-1972 academic year.&#13;
The remaining ten instructors will be&#13;
given until September of 1971 to complete&#13;
their doctor of philosophy degree .&#13;
The reinstatements has been effected&#13;
Wyllie said, because when 22 of th ewer~&#13;
hired by former Dean Stephen Mitchell it&#13;
was not made clear in their contracts how&#13;
long their appointments were to be.&#13;
The normal appointment period for an assistant professor is three year .&#13;
While legally, Wyllie said, he felt the&#13;
university was within its rights to terminate&#13;
the contracts at one or two year ,&#13;
but to render justice he said he felt the&#13;
professors should be retained for the third&#13;
year.&#13;
The chancellor said of the e 27 teacher&#13;
who were not to be retained, eight were&#13;
recommended for non-retention by their&#13;
own divisional executive committees, 13&#13;
by_ the ad hoc advisory committee appointed&#13;
by Dean kKinney to give the&#13;
dean and vice;chancellor further&#13;
recommendation, and six by the personal&#13;
decision of the dean and vice-chancellor.&#13;
Of the eight faculty member recommended&#13;
for non-retention by their&#13;
divisional executive committee. five were&#13;
assistant professors and three were instructors&#13;
working on their Ph.D. degrees.&#13;
He said the executive committee informed&#13;
him they would ee no reason to&#13;
change their initial recommendation on the eight in the future.&#13;
Wyllie said, too, "our first and foremo t&#13;
obligation is on teaching."&#13;
"This happened, " he continued, "even&#13;
before the deliberations of the executive - Lecture w ednesday -- committees had started."&#13;
In cases where the Dean had questions "Automobile Em1ss1ons: Enabout&#13;
the recommendations, he referred vironmental Benefit vs. Technological&#13;
them to a special Ad Hoc committee he Costs" will be the topic of a public lecture&#13;
appointed made up of six tenured faculty by Prof. Phillip S. tyers at 4:30 p.m. on&#13;
members. They then made recom- \\'ednesday, Dec. 9, in Greenquist Hall&#13;
mendations to the Dean. The ultimate Room 101 at the Univer ity of Wi consmdecision,&#13;
though, was still in the hands of Parkside Wood Road Campu . the administration. The lecture is spon ored by the Park 1de&#13;
The final number of terminations bv the Science Divi ion .&#13;
administration exceeded the recom- Prof. :\tyer · is a member of th&#13;
mendations for terminations bv the mechanical engineering facult_· at WDivisions.&#13;
In fact, the Social Science • tadt on and I immediate pa t pr('l;id nt&#13;
division recommended that no ter- of the ociety of Automotive Engineer&#13;
minations be made. So far nine ter- &lt;SAE&gt; Among his long-time re £&gt;arch&#13;
minations have been made in that division. interest are the vagarie of engin s and&#13;
A few weeks ago the Division passed by com_bu lion. .&#13;
acclamation a condemnation of the ad- His work ha r ulted in more than 40&#13;
ministration. technical publication and a number of&#13;
Vice-Chancellor Harris said of this " If awards including the Benjamin m1th&#13;
you give a body the power to eval~ate Reynolds Teaching Award and the Horsomething,&#13;
and they don't do it, then it's rung Memorial Award and Arch T. Colwell&#13;
obviously the responsibility of those in the Award of the AE&#13;
administration to do it." Prof. · iyers received h1 undergraduate&#13;
VIETNAM WAR DEAD&#13;
COUNT RISE&#13;
degree from Kansas State University and&#13;
his MS and Ph.D degrees from UW·&#13;
fad1son&#13;
WASHINGTON ICP I Total&#13;
American deaths from the Indochine e clud 43 ,959 death . "r ulting trom&#13;
War have climbed to 52,757, according to action from ho tile fore , " and 8,798 from&#13;
the most recent death count from the t; "other cause ," which includ aircraft&#13;
Department -of Defense. Thi figure in- accidents and "inciden . "&#13;
Weaver: University For, Purposes Of Students&#13;
By MARGIE NOER entire answer follows: strength of that thesis persons are being the Board his feeling about the polici of&#13;
"I am delighted to find that there are&#13;
some woodland and ecologic areas with&#13;
real merit that I hope this campus is going&#13;
to be able to preserve in the years ahead.''&#13;
Such was UW president-elect John C.&#13;
Weaver's initial reaction to Parkside when&#13;
he visited our campus last Thursday.&#13;
In a press conference, following his tour~&#13;
of the campus, Weaver said that when he is&#13;
officially in office he hopes to find informal&#13;
ways of visiting with the students. "The&#13;
university is here for the purposes of&#13;
education and that means for the purposes&#13;
of the students ... With the Chancellors'&#13;
help I'll find ways to be able to visit with&#13;
the student, you can be sure of that."&#13;
Having arrived during the height of the&#13;
student rally, Weaver was asked several&#13;
questions about the faculty dismissals.&#13;
Since he had been in the state only 24&#13;
hours, Weaver said he couldn't effectively&#13;
answer due to lack of information on the&#13;
subject. At that point, the question was&#13;
directed to Chancellor Wylhe and his&#13;
"In fact, nobody has been dismissed. invited in for conversations with the Dean the institution that are in his judgment,&#13;
What has been occurring this week is the and the Vice-Chancellor about the based on his work with faculty and other&#13;
Dean (MacKinney) and the Vice- situation and during those conversations administrative officers, correct. The new&#13;
Chancellor have been talking to individual they are being afforded every opportunity UW president sees the Board of Regents&#13;
faculty members but no notices have been to, as I understand it and I'm not in on this, and the president in a relationship&#13;
served on any faculty members. You see to speak their case and their situation. So representing an arena of discussion of the&#13;
you are stating as fact things that are not it's conceivable based on those con- university's problems and judgments&#13;
facts. The review process starts at the versations with the Dean and the Vice- made by the laymen who are represendivisional&#13;
level with the faculty who serve Chancellor that some of these things could tativ~ of the public.&#13;
on the divisional executive committees be turned around so that the notices would Weaver went on to say that "I feel very&#13;
making the initial judgments and offering not be sent, you see, and we are in a ,trongly in this particular moment and&#13;
advice on the renewal of these ap- situation in which student reaction is a time that even our students are demanding&#13;
pointments to the Dean. So that's one level. gun-jumping reaction based on claims that more of an opportunity to be heard in the&#13;
And in fact, a significant number of people are not stated by the people who are governance of the university. So also is the&#13;
were recommended for non-renewal by the responsible for the review." public." He stressed that the public is&#13;
divisional executive committees. Then the At that point the questions were getting "mighty insistent" about their&#13;
next level of review is the Dean's level. redirected to president Weaver. In the feelings of need of greater accountability&#13;
And again, to build in protettion for the short time. that remained, Weaver was on the part of the university to the public&#13;
faculty, the Dean created a special ad hoc asked if he felt the UW president should be that supports il Although he has symadvisory&#13;
committee of faculty to help him submissive to some of the orders and pathies for the students' wish for parwith&#13;
the review process at this level. And requests made by the Board of Regents or ticipation in university governing and&#13;
that faculty group also recommended should the present university make an hopes they may be accomodated in the&#13;
people for non-renewal. There is an im- attempt to stand up to the Regents? councils of the university in the future,&#13;
portant distinction here between dismissal Weaver ;inswered that the president Weaver also feels the public should be&#13;
for cau:;e ana non-renewal. And then on the should use his Judgment in representing to heard and represented in the same way. &#13;
When "The Brids, The Bees and the&#13;
italians" lirsl played in U.S. theatres, the&#13;
ads for these engagements carried the&#13;
copy line: "A new triumph Ircm the&#13;
director of 'Divorce Italian Style' ...&#13;
Another PIetro Germi triumph ISprecisely&#13;
what it proved 10 be&#13;
The filrn IS suffused, start to finish, ..s-ith&#13;
the unique ense of delicious social satire&#13;
that I Germi's own mark on the screen&#13;
You laugh delightedly at hIS people, so&#13;
a urd in their pcsturmg and hypocrisy,&#13;
yet you do not despi them, for the rolhes&#13;
of Germi's human being are the uruversa!&#13;
tcrbt 01 manklOd&#13;
r n stars Virna List. never more&#13;
Italian Film Here Friday&#13;
beautiful and sexy. and masterly&#13;
comedian Gastone Moschin portray&#13;
b1isslul, unhappy lovers. The plot, set in a&#13;
town in northern Italy.&#13;
Critics have acclaimed "The Birds, The&#13;
Bees and The Italians" as: "An extremely&#13;
Iunny comedy .. . hilarious, orlglOal,&#13;
outrageously convincing - imm~r~l ..&#13;
an Italian Peyton Place ... Titlllatt~&#13;
... and lull 01sharp, satiric bile." It will&#13;
be shown at Parkside this Friday night. at&#13;
8:00 p.m. in the Parkside achVlhes&#13;
building. Admission is 75 cents and&#13;
Parkside \.0. It is one 01 the series 01 t9&#13;
feature films booked and sponsored&#13;
through the office of student activities.&#13;
LETTERS to the editors&#13;
To the Eouors&#13;
Th'r I a. trange and deadly disease&#13;
pi' 'adlOK aero the I;WP campuses.&#13;
Ther appc r-. 10 he no remedy lor thIS&#13;
t ·knt, . wtu h rhre len to d tro)' the&#13;
lotal stru .ture of thiS unl\ rsuy&#13;
Appart'ntly U'N'earner I somew here 10&#13;
T II 'nl lIall, bUI efforL, 10 pmpornt and&#13;
ceerm ~ It... dl eased h ve been thus far&#13;
un-u rut&#13;
II ppc r that those most vulnerable to&#13;
Ult'" kllh:r are faculty m mbers, parncularty&#13;
lh lack,n~ tenure Ph 0 's, and&#13;
,-,he) ha .. • pru\' n lhem~ch:es din·&#13;
~tru -tors of high qualll)' and promise&#13;
Thl dl"ca . call d "Faculty purgus" or&#13;
tht.' p18~ue. has reached epidemic&#13;
pruporhMs By la I \\oeek It had claimed 1:4&#13;
"Il·hm~. and IlK' toU mal go as high 8S 60&#13;
"In the meanllme," s~Hd one social&#13;
clfmc.:~ In 'ructor a. he \loas clearing out&#13;
hi nUu.:. "311 \\e can do I make&#13;
arran r rn('nL"ioto h~'a\'ecampus and seek&#13;
('mpt()~ m 'ot (.'1 .. (·"" tw.·re The bug could hit&#13;
.In) of lL'"..&#13;
Symplom. of the bug IOciude a bleak&#13;
pallor on facull) member.&gt;' faces. huddled&#13;
t(roup:-;.of dllJ(,(:tl'CI ·Iookmg Il\~tructors. and&#13;
,I gl'm-ritl lilp~e of all IOteresl In In1l'lh,'c:tual&#13;
pur~ulb. of the classroom as&#13;
f ..lcully und studl'nls alike wait for the next&#13;
\ Ictlm&#13;
H('p()rt~ OIr('that Go\'ernor·elect Lucey&#13;
IIl,I dl'C.:lan' a state of emergenc)' at the&#13;
l\\ c. mvu~ and ..lsk for federal troops&#13;
Jeff Parry&#13;
Tn lh(" editor&#13;
Th(' Amencan Institute of&#13;
Family HclatlOns&#13;
;,2R7 Sunset Boulevard.&#13;
l..cko. Angeles. California 9OOZ1&#13;
HE M ... tal lIeallh 01 College tudeols.&#13;
One of th serlOUSproblems 10 college&#13;
tmd UOl\'cr -(1)' hfe today is the lack of&#13;
aU nllon to the persona lily needs of the&#13;
.ludents UI'Ide IS the second most&#13;
l'Ommon cause of death on the camups.&#13;
topped onl)' b)' automobile accidents; but&#13;
th "ho ha\'e studIed lhe subjecl believe&#13;
lhat half of the latter are "concealed&#13;
SUICideS",thus SUICideactually leads the&#13;
11,1 I)r Ho"ard A Rusk or the New York&#13;
Unl' ('rsit) McdlC:al Center collected&#13;
l':)lImatc. that 90.000 students each year&#13;
\\llIlhr alen SUICide,one In ten will make&#13;
Ihc "Hempt, and lhal lhere ",11 be 1.000&#13;
t!c.'tual death.-.;r~ulttng Beyond this. he&#13;
"'olleulat . that amongslx mllhon students,&#13;
. )mc 6110,000 han' emotional problems&#13;
for "htch they need profeSSional&#13;
~ I lanl'c" Thl" ~altonal Institute of&#13;
:\lrntal H,,'alth find:s that "the factor of&#13;
human I.solatlonand \\ithdrawal" appears&#13;
10 lx- cnhc31 and the colleges recognize&#13;
IhI.' rlOlJ.'oiproblem created by these&#13;
"lnnl'rs" and arr tr)'lOg to pro\'ide help but&#13;
admit t 10 hundreds or lellers to lb from&#13;
&lt;iI'Dns1 that the)' do not have adequate&#13;
~olutJons&#13;
This \\01 ·te of some of the nallon's finest&#13;
youn~ people is Intolerable. 10ee for&#13;
l'\l"r} 3('(031 death, nearly a hundred have&#13;
f('lt so drspcrate a~ to threaten it. much&#13;
h~hl could be lhrown on lhe subject by&#13;
learmng whal ractor-Iiie-nabled the ror·&#13;
tul1att OI\('Sto ",ork out of the-ir diHiculties&#13;
and kct"p ~oing.&#13;
With the help of a friend who is vitally&#13;
IOtcrested in thiS subject. the American&#13;
Institute ~fFamily RelaliorJs is carrying&#13;
oul a nattonwl?e study of what is being&#13;
done and what could and should be done.&#13;
We need to hear from as many students&#13;
and Tor mer sludenlS as possible who have&#13;
faced such a crisis What pulled them out&#13;
01il? Was it aid furnished by lhe college or&#13;
university? or other community&#13;
organization~ or by a friend~ or religion?&#13;
or reading? Just how did they save&#13;
themselves?&#13;
We will not publish the names of any&#13;
individuals or schools; the information&#13;
WIll be handled slalistically and&#13;
anonymously. If you can call the attention&#13;
or your readers to this study and ask for&#13;
volunteers who will ~ rite their experiences&#13;
to me ("personal") at the above&#13;
address. it may contribute toward saving&#13;
valuable lives&#13;
We shall certainly be most grateful for&#13;
any help you can give.&#13;
Cordially yours,&#13;
Paul Popenoe, Sc.D.&#13;
President&#13;
Dear Sirs:&#13;
As Central Administrative Nomenclator&#13;
It IS my function to firm up and finalize the&#13;
academic lilies to be used at Parkside. In&#13;
the lOtereslS of brevity and efficiency I&#13;
suggest that appropriate acronyms be&#13;
d!\·ised wherever possible. Since there is&#13;
lillie time, we at Central Administration&#13;
have~igned the following code names to&#13;
faculty groups regarding who~&#13;
"t;~'cope has expressed concern. To&#13;
begm with there are those tenured faculty&#13;
who are not meeting the standards set by&#13;
Centeral Administration. These&#13;
profCSS(lrs, Identifiable by the Increased&#13;
l.oad 1--e\'Y with which we have laxed&#13;
them, are regarded by us as ILL. Next are&#13;
the 5econd·year Academic Doctorated, all&#13;
of whom. as you know. can be summarily&#13;
terminated by December 15. When&#13;
discussing thiS group's chances of&#13;
retention please refer to them as SAD.&#13;
Finally, there are the new teachers who&#13;
have come to U6 without the doctorate,&#13;
those first year probationary instructors&#13;
who have been Detained Earning&#13;
Academic Doctorates; these persons are·&#13;
DEAD.&#13;
Thank you for helping us facilitate&#13;
~atters - it is. after all, a ftulclioning&#13;
mput40utput model.&#13;
Yours obediently,&#13;
Central Administrative Nomenclator&#13;
Concerning EducatorRetentions&#13;
Please refer. inquires to CANCER at&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
SYMPOSIUM&#13;
The largest annual symposium ever&#13;
sponsored by the Wisconsin Student&#13;
Association, to include more than 30 in·&#13;
ternationally·known speakers over a 10-&#13;
day period in March, is planned by UW·&#13;
Madison students with the help of com·&#13;
mumty leaders,&#13;
"We want to demonstrate that the&#13;
Univer ity of Wisconsin still stands for&#13;
rati~naJ dial~ue," said WSA Symposium&#13;
chairman, Victor Rodwin.&#13;
"We believe it is important that America&#13;
be exposed to ideas that will stimulate&#13;
constructive action instead of useless&#13;
deslru~l.ion..The University is a strategic&#13;
place In whIch to breed these ideas and&#13;
present ~~ to thp A.merican public."&#13;
In the past, the Symposium has brought&#13;
such speakers to the UWcampus as Henry&#13;
Kissinger. Jesse Jackson, James Reston,&#13;
George Wallace, Eugene McCarthy and&#13;
B,shop James Pike.&#13;
RodwlO announced the theme for the&#13;
1971 Symposiwn will be "Alternative&#13;
Futures for America."&#13;
So far ~ financial support for the Sym4&#13;
POSlum mcludes a $5,000 appropriation&#13;
from the WSA budgel, and a $5.900granl&#13;
from the Board or Regents.&#13;
Violence lollowed the 1969 Symposium&#13;
o~ B!ack America and after a speech by&#13;
Ylppte leader Jerry Rubin during last&#13;
year's program. Douhts had arisen among&#13;
some UW administrative leaders as to&#13;
whether the traditional symposium should&#13;
be continued.&#13;
"To cancel major University programs&#13;
in the name of fear would contradict one&#13;
major goal of the University - the pursuit&#13;
of truth ... Rodwin explained.&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI , MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
STAFF&#13;
D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Arthur Gruhl, Walter Breach&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 11&#13;
December 1. 1970&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Jim Hanlon .'&#13;
Bill Jacohy, John Potente&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
PhotographerS&#13;
Published weekly by the students 01 the U~iversity 01 WiSCOO8inParkside&#13;
Kenosha Wisconsin, 53140. Mathng address ISParkside's Newseope.&#13;
3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha, Business and editoriallelephone number isIJII.&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
It was bound to come up , .. The&#13;
subject is: Beards.&#13;
"Now that you're going to college, I&#13;
suppose you'll be raising a beard. or&#13;
mustache" said a bald and over·wetght&#13;
Iriend. A~d when itold him that I had the&#13;
idea under consideration he gave me a&#13;
hopeless shrug, opened another can of beer&#13;
and turned on his TV. More calories to&#13;
him!&#13;
Actually, I sort 01 like a well·trimmed&#13;
beard or mustache. I was browsing&#13;
through a book the other day. It had in it&#13;
the portraits of our thirty-five Presidents&#13;
and about half of them had a beard or&#13;
mustache. Of course, most of the wearers&#13;
were prior to the time of Messrs. Gillette&#13;
and Schick. Nevertheless they were a&#13;
distinguished group and Isaluted each one&#13;
of them as I turned the pages.&#13;
Ithink that each man has his own face to&#13;
take care of and each has the privilege of&#13;
doing with it as he pleases. It's his private&#13;
property. If he wants to scare people away&#13;
with it, that's his business, too.&#13;
As far as I'm concerned, if a fellow&#13;
wants to raise dandelions on his face, it's&#13;
OK with me. But he had better not let the.&#13;
blossoms turn into seeds and show up in&#13;
our neighborhood. because then he would&#13;
really be in trouble. Mrs. Gruhl doesn't&#13;
like to see dandelion seeds floating around&#13;
our back yard,&#13;
Confidentially, the chances of my&#13;
growing a beard are very slim. Ibroached&#13;
the subject to Mrs. Gruhl. She said, for&#13;
instance, "Now if you could figure out a&#13;
way to make the hair come out on the top&#13;
of your head, Icould see some sense in it."&#13;
And the crack that really sent my idea&#13;
down the drain was, "You're-going to sleep&#13;
alone if you dare to even try to grow a&#13;
beard!"&#13;
Sleeping alone is about the last thing I&#13;
would want to do. My bride and I have&#13;
been sharing the same bunk for 46 years&#13;
3:nd I've sort of gotten used to it. And for&#13;
Dear Sir: .&#13;
I.remo~ed my name from the petition to&#13;
which this letter is attached. I did so&#13;
because I wish to remain an individual&#13;
and because I recognize that perhaps ther~&#13;
may have been good reason for removing&#13;
so~~ of the instructors from their teaching&#13;
po.sltion. I do feel, however, that a gross&#13;
mls~ke has been made in removing Mr.&#13;
Mus.l~h (English) and Mr. Simpson&#13;
(polItical science).&#13;
There are two attitudes an instructor&#13;
may have toward his job.&#13;
1: ~e may consider doing research and&#13;
writing books for recognition ad-&#13;
~ancement. and more pay as being most&#13;
tmpo~tan~. Thus, his attitude tow~rd&#13;
teac~mg ISthat it is something he must put&#13;
up With.&#13;
2. He may leel thai if he is a teacher&#13;
that IS the lob he is being paid to do. H~&#13;
may al.so feel that if a student pays for an&#13;
education, as a teacher h h obrg r • e as an&#13;
I a Ion to. give him one. This attitude&#13;
may t~?d to mterfere with doing research&#13;
or wnting books.&#13;
S.As a student under Mr. Musich and Mr&#13;
!mpson, I feel they have the second at~&#13;
lItude toward their job and for thi they f ' s reason&#13;
try were Ired. I do not mean they will not&#13;
., to ~dvan e thems_elves; but I do mean&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
\lle past fifteen years I've also had.1II&#13;
~ed to having our cat "Sbadow",laW&#13;
WIth us. I would conSIder it a greatllllll&#13;
victory if I could get "Shadow" III ..&#13;
derstand that she is not to sleeP..........&#13;
on my side 01 the bed.&#13;
But I've been workiog on si.....&#13;
I've been letting them slide down••&#13;
teenth of an inch at a lime. And 1'".&#13;
trying to let my hair grow a tilDe&#13;
can see some practical advantages&#13;
hair. If you let it grow long ......&#13;
don't have to wash your neck.so&#13;
you can wear a dirty shirt collar&#13;
being noticed. So there are&#13;
economic advantages to this 1011&#13;
business.&#13;
There is also in our house an eIe*Ir&#13;
clipper which I bought lor myseliwilli&#13;
barbers raised the' price of a hairall&#13;
two-lilty. With considerable proddillC_&#13;
a little practice, Mrs. Grohl has -&#13;
my personal barber. Nowshe is verr'"&#13;
at it. But a peculiar thing seems00 .....&#13;
to my coiffure when my dear wifegnea&#13;
haircut. When she says, "That'sil811&#13;
it," I uncross my fingers, open my.,.&#13;
and 10 and behold, my carefully.......&#13;
sideburns have been moved a half II.&#13;
north and my hair is up around lIIe,,"&#13;
my ears wh~re it was six months •&#13;
Parkside has some very well~&#13;
men on the campus. Some of 0Ir ..&#13;
faculty members are reaDy sharp. •&#13;
torically speaking, some 01 them :;&#13;
near make be turn green with ell\'}'.&#13;
..You can't have everything!&#13;
that they respect the righl of a s~&#13;
receive the education he has ~&#13;
Because they are such goodi ""&#13;
I am at a loss to undersmnd whylIIeJ&#13;
removed Irom the teaching stalli.lellt&#13;
I cannot help bul leellbat a m~ed'"&#13;
been made. These men have w ....&#13;
hard 10 do their jobs, aod in ~ltlJl1I....&#13;
received nothing, I respecU YlltIt..,&#13;
that their cases be re~lewedand «I It&#13;
be reinstated as lI1struetors&#13;
Parkside staff. Si~&#13;
Jo/1IIr~&#13;
f)&#13;
~:~~&#13;
'3322SHERIDAHROAD&#13;
HORTHCITYLIIlITS&#13;
Italian Film Here Friday&#13;
beautiful and sexy, and masterly&#13;
comedian Gastone • toschin portray&#13;
bli ful. unhappy lovers. The plot, set in a&#13;
town in northern Italy.&#13;
LETTERS&#13;
To th editor&#13;
Lilul of&#13;
Critic have acclaimed "The Birds, The&#13;
Bees and The Italians'' as: "An extr_e1!1elY&#13;
funny comedy . . . hilarious, ongmal,&#13;
outrageously convincing - immor~l ... -&#13;
an Italian Peyton Place ... Titillah~&#13;
... and full of sharp, satiric bite." It will&#13;
be shov,:n al Parkside this Friday night at&#13;
8:00 pm. in the Parkside activities&#13;
building. Admission is 75 ce~ts and&#13;
Parksid I.D. It i one of the series of 19&#13;
feature film booked and sponsored&#13;
through the o(fice of student activities.&#13;
to the editors&#13;
indl\ idual · or chool : the information&#13;
will be handled tatistically and&#13;
n,·mou h . If ,-ou can call the attention&#13;
of )O°w- r ad r to this tudy and a k for&#13;
volunl rs who will write their exritnc&#13;
to me ("personal''&gt; at the above&#13;
ddr , it may contribute toward saving&#13;
,. luable lh .&#13;
W .. hall c rtainly be mo ·t grateful for&#13;
any h p you can i\'e.&#13;
Cordially yours,&#13;
Paul Popenoe, Sc.D.&#13;
President&#13;
Dear '1r :&#13;
ntral dmim trative. 'omenclator&#13;
ii I my function to firm up and finalize the&#13;
demi t1U to be u eel at Parkside. In&#13;
th int r ts of brevity and efficiency I&#13;
, , t that appropriate acronyms be&#13;
di,·1. ed wh ren~r po ible ince there is&#13;
. littl tame, we at Central Administration&#13;
hl ,. igned t following code names to&#13;
facultv roup regarding whom&#13;
,,~" t:ol)(' ha. expr ·ed concern. To&#13;
in , ith there are tho e tenured faculty&#13;
ar not me tin the tandards set by&#13;
C nteral dm ini tration. These&#13;
prof r , iden ifiable by the Increased&#13;
Load Le\'y with which we have taxed&#13;
lh m, are re •arded bv u: a ILL., ·ext are&#13;
the. cond-year Academic Doctorated. all&#13;
of whom, a. you know, can be summarily&#13;
terminated by December 15. When&#13;
dLcu .. ing thi group's chances of&#13;
retention plea.-e refer to them as AD.&#13;
Finally, there are the new teachers who&#13;
have come to us without the doctorate,&#13;
those fir t year probationary instructors&#13;
who have been Detained Earning&#13;
,\cad mic Doctorates: the e persons are·&#13;
DE,\D.&#13;
Thank you for helping us facilitate&#13;
!Tlatters - it i . after all, a fllllctioning&#13;
input-output model.&#13;
Yours obediently,&#13;
entral Administrative Nomenclator&#13;
Concerning EducatorRetentions&#13;
Please refer. inquires to CA:--.CER at&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
SYMPOSIUM&#13;
The largest annual symposium ever&#13;
pon ored by the Wisconsin Student&#13;
ociation, to include more than 30 internationally-known&#13;
speakers over a 10-&#13;
day period in . larch, is planned by UW-&#13;
. lad1 n tudents with the help of com- munity lead rs.&#13;
"We want to demonstrate that the&#13;
niver ity of Wi consm still stands for&#13;
rational dialogue," said WSA Symposium&#13;
chairman, \'ictor Rodwm.&#13;
"We believe it i important that America&#13;
exposed to ideas that will stimulate&#13;
con tructtve action instead of useless&#13;
de ·tru~tion. The University is a strategic&#13;
place in which to breed these ideas and&#13;
pre. ent ~ei:n to thP .\merican public."&#13;
In the past, the Symposium has brought&#13;
~h ·peakers to the l:W campus as Henry&#13;
K1_ ·mger, J~e Jackson, James Reston&#13;
Geor e Wallace, Eugene McCarthy and&#13;
Bi hop James Pike.&#13;
Rod n announced the theme for the&#13;
1971 ymposium will be "Alternative&#13;
Futures for America."&#13;
So far, financial support for the Sympo&#13;
1um includes a 5,000 appropriation&#13;
from the W A budget. and a $5,900 grant&#13;
from the Board of Regents.&#13;
Violence followed the 1969 Symposium&#13;
o~ B!ack America and after a speech by&#13;
\ 1pp1e leader Jerry Rubin during last&#13;
year's program. Doubts had arisen among&#13;
some UW administrative leaders as to&#13;
whether the traditional symposium should&#13;
be continued.&#13;
"To cancel major University programs&#13;
in the name of fear would contradict one&#13;
major goal of the University - the pursuit&#13;
of truth," Rodwin explained.&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 11&#13;
December 7, 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI , MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
SvenTaffs&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Jim Hanlon _&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Potente&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Adyertising Manager&#13;
Photographers&#13;
STAFF&#13;
D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Arthur Gruhl, Walter Breach&#13;
Published weekly by the studen~ of the U~iversity of Wisconsin.&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin, 5314~. Ma1lmg a~dr~ss 1s Parkside's Newscope,&#13;
3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha. Business and editorial telephone number is 658-&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
It was bound to come up The&#13;
subject is: Beards.&#13;
"Now that you're going to college, I&#13;
suppose you'll be raising a beard or&#13;
mustache," said a bald and over-weight&#13;
friend. And when I told him that I had the&#13;
idea under consideration he gave me a&#13;
hopeless shrug, opened another can of beer&#13;
and turned on his TV. More calories to&#13;
him!&#13;
Actually, I sort of like a well-trimmed&#13;
beard or mustache. I was browsing&#13;
through a book the other day. It had in it&#13;
the portraits of our thirty-five Presidents&#13;
and about half of them had a beard or&#13;
mustache. Of course, most of the wearers&#13;
were prior to the time of Messrs. Gillette&#13;
and Schick. Nevertheless they were a&#13;
distinguished group and I saluted each one&#13;
of them as I turned the pages.&#13;
I think that each man has his own face to&#13;
take care of and each has the privilege of&#13;
doing with it as he pleases. It's his private&#13;
property. If he wants to scare people away&#13;
with it, that's his business, too.&#13;
As far as I'm concerned, if a fellow&#13;
wants to raise dandelions on his face, it's&#13;
OK with me. But he had better not let the&#13;
blossoms turn into seeds and show up in&#13;
our neighborhood because then he would&#13;
really be in trouble. Mrs. Gruhl doesn't&#13;
like to see dandelion seeds floating around&#13;
our back yard.&#13;
Confidentially, the chances of my&#13;
growing a beard are very slim. I broached&#13;
the subject to Mrs. Gruhl. She said for&#13;
instance, "Now if you could figure ~ut a&#13;
way to make the hair come out on the top&#13;
of your head, I could see some sense in it."&#13;
And the crack that really sent my idea&#13;
down the drain was, "You're-going to sleep&#13;
alone if you dare to even try to grow a beard!"&#13;
Sleeping alone is about the last thing I&#13;
would want to do. My bride and I have&#13;
been sharing the same bunk for 46 years&#13;
~nd I've sort of gotten used to it. And for&#13;
Dear Sir:&#13;
I_remo~ed my name from the petition to&#13;
which this letter is attached. I did so&#13;
because I wish to remain an individual&#13;
and because l recognize that perhaps ther~&#13;
may have been good reason for removing&#13;
so~~ of the instructors from their teaching&#13;
po_s1lton. I do feel, however, that a gross&#13;
mis~ke has been made in removing Mr.&#13;
Mus_a~h &lt;English) and Mr. Simpson&#13;
(pohhcal science).&#13;
There are two attitudes an instructor&#13;
may have toward his job.&#13;
1: :tte may consider doing research and&#13;
wntang books for recognition advancement,&#13;
and more pay as being most&#13;
impo~tant. Thus, his attitude toward&#13;
teach_mg is that it is something he must put&#13;
Up With.&#13;
2· ~e ma~ feel that if he is a teacher,&#13;
that is the Job he is being paid to do. He&#13;
may al_so feel that if a student pays for an&#13;
ed~cat~on, as a teacher, he has an&#13;
obligation to give him one. This attitude&#13;
may t~~d to interfere with doing research or wntmg books.&#13;
s· As a student under Mr. Musich and Mr&#13;
_1mpson, I feel they have the second at~&#13;
~tude towa_rd their job, and for this reason&#13;
~~ were fired. I do not mean they will not&#13;
. o advance thems_elves; but I do mean&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
the past fifteen years I've also had lo get&#13;
~ed to having our c?t "Shadow". in bed&#13;
with us. I would consider it a great mCll)&#13;
victory if I could get "Shadow" to 11&gt;-&#13;
derstand that she is not to sleep er~ on my side of the bed.&#13;
But I've been working on side-hlrns.&#13;
I've been letting them slide down a&#13;
teenth of an inch at a time. And I've bes&#13;
trying to let my hair grow a little loll'I' I&#13;
can see some practical advantages lolaiis&#13;
hair. If you let it grow long enough,.&#13;
don't have to wash your neck so oftenlld&#13;
you can wear a dirty shirt collar withom&#13;
being noticed. So there are certail&#13;
economic advantages to this lo~ lu&#13;
business.&#13;
There is also in our house an electnc&#13;
clipper which I bought for myself when dlt&#13;
barbers raised the price of a haircut to&#13;
two-fifty. With considerable prodding all! a little practice, Mrs. Gruhl has becomt&#13;
my personal barber. Now she is very goad&#13;
at it. But a peculiar thing seems to hap&#13;
to my coiffure when my dear wife gives me&#13;
a haircut. When she says, "That's il Bal&#13;
it," I uncross my fingers, open my eyes&#13;
and lo and behold, my carefully-nurtured&#13;
sideburns have been moved a half an ird&#13;
north and my hair is up around the ""af&#13;
my ears wh~re it was six montffi ago.&#13;
Parkside has some very well-groooied&#13;
men on the campus. Some of our malr&#13;
faculty members are really sharp. Sar&#13;
toric-ally speaking, some of them ~ near make be turn green with envy. \\&#13;
, You can't have everything!&#13;
th.at they respect the right of a s_tudelll - receive the education he has P31~&#13;
Because they are such good ins&#13;
I am at a loss to understand why !hey&#13;
removed from the teaching st~\.ate&#13;
I cannot help but feel that a nusked&#13;
been made. These men have wor&#13;
hard to do their jobs, and in return&#13;
received nothing. I respectfull)~t&#13;
that their cases be re~1ewed aact &lt;Xl&#13;
be reinstated as instructors&#13;
Parkside staff.&#13;
{f) ~:~~&#13;
·3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTH CITY LIMITS &#13;
New President Visits Campus&#13;
Honors Concert Thursday Night&#13;
Music students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside will present an honors&#13;
coocert at 8 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 10, in&#13;
the Fine Arts Room at Parkside's Kenosha&#13;
Campus. The program, which is free and&#13;
open to the public, will include both vocal&#13;
and instrumental music. .&#13;
Vocal soloists will be Kathleen McCombs&#13;
of Racine, a soprano, singing&#13;
Pergolesi's HSe tu m'aml": Dan zarletti of&#13;
Kenosha, bass, Stradella's "Pieta&#13;
Signore";" Douglas Anderson of South&#13;
Holland, Ill., haritone, Handel's aria&#13;
"Honor and Arms" from Samson; and&#13;
James Johnson of Kenosha, tenor, Handel's&#13;
recitative "Oh, Loss of Sight" and&#13;
aria "Total Eclipse! No Sun, No Moon"&#13;
from Samson.&#13;
Instrumental soloists will he Fred&#13;
Piano Recital Sunday&#13;
Parkside affiliate artist in music Annie&#13;
Petit will playa piano recital as part of the&#13;
University Artists Concert Series at 4 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, Dec. 13, in the Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse.&#13;
Her program will include the Bach- Liszt&#13;
Fantasy and Fugue in G minor,&#13;
Shumann's Carnaval Op. 9, three selections&#13;
from Debussy's First Book of&#13;
Preludes and Prokofiev's Sonata No.7, Op.&#13;
83.&#13;
Tickets are available at the door&#13;
(general admission $1, students 50 cents,&#13;
children 12 and under free).&#13;
Miss Petit will return to her native&#13;
France in January for a concert tour&#13;
.which will include a performance of a&#13;
Bartok concerto with the radio orchestra&#13;
of Lille.&#13;
Sell it&#13;
with&#13;
a classified&#13;
Hermes of Racine, Basoon, Mozart's&#13;
Concerto in B-flat Major; Adrienne Gerth&#13;
of Kenosha, viola, Telemann's Concerto in&#13;
AMajor for Viola; and Diane Chambers of&#13;
Kenosha, French horn, Jacob's Concerto&#13;
for Horn.&#13;
A flute trio comprised of Sharron Lee&#13;
Johnson", Kenosha, Lenee Karow,&#13;
Burlington, and Judith Brewer, Racine,&#13;
will play the Beethoven-Andraud Trio, Op,&#13;
87, and a saxaphone quartet includirig&#13;
Sheri Lueck, Kenosha, Joyce Andacht,&#13;
Franklin, Tina Thomas, Racine, and Miss&#13;
McCombs will play Singelee's Allegro de&#13;
Concert.&#13;
Accompanists will be Kathleen Devine,&#13;
Union Grove, Susan Hay, Oak Creek,&#13;
Joyce Richards, Racine, and Letha Wood,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The Parkside Student Chapter of the&#13;
Music Educators National Conference will&#13;
bost a reception after the program.&#13;
3 . 4 YEAR OLDS&#13;
$11.00 PER MONTH&#13;
STATE LICENSED&#13;
Applications are now being taken&#13;
for the United Presbyterian Cooperative&#13;
Nursery Center&#13;
Tues., Wed. &amp; Thurs. Morning&#13;
Parent Pcrticipution&#13;
Call Mr. P. LaMacchia 654-7468&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
French Fries or Onion Rings&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
ond&#13;
Schooner or Bottle or Glass of a"er&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20~&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity and Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
,,~~BRAT -STOP&#13;
Northwest Carner 1-94 and Highwoy 50&#13;
New President Visits Campus&#13;
Honors Concert Thursday Night&#13;
Music students of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside will present an honors&#13;
concert at 8 p.m. on Thursday, Dec. 10, in&#13;
the Fine Arts Room at Parkside's Kenosha&#13;
Campus. The program, which is free and&#13;
open to the public, will include both vocal&#13;
and instrumental music. Vocal soloists will be Kathleen Mc~ Combs of Racine, a soprano, singing&#13;
Pergolesi's "Se tu m'ami" ; Dan Zarletti of&#13;
Kenosha, bass, Stradella's "Pieta&#13;
Signore"; Douglas_ Anderson of Sou~&#13;
Holland, Ill., baritone, Handel's aria&#13;
"Honor and Arms" from Samson; and&#13;
James Johnson of Kenosha, tenor, Handel's&#13;
recitative "Oh, Loss of Sight" and&#13;
aria "Total Eclipse! No Sun, No Moon"&#13;
from Samson.&#13;
Instrumental soloists will be Fred&#13;
Piano Recital Sunday&#13;
Parkside affiliate artist in music Annie&#13;
Petit will play a piano recital as part of the&#13;
University Artists Concert Series at 4 p.m.&#13;
on Sunday, Dec. 13, in the Greenquist Hall&#13;
Concourse. Her program will include the Bach-Liszt&#13;
Fantasy and Fugue in G minor,&#13;
Shumann's Carnaval Op. 9, three selections&#13;
from Debussy's First Book of&#13;
Preludes and Prokofiev's Sonata No. 7, Op. 83.&#13;
Tickets are available at the door&#13;
(general admission $1 , students 50 cents,&#13;
children 12 and under free).&#13;
Miss Petit will return to her native&#13;
France in January for a concert tour&#13;
:which will include a performance of a&#13;
Bartok concerto with the radio orchestra&#13;
or Lille.&#13;
Sell it&#13;
with&#13;
a classified&#13;
Hermes of Racine, Basoon, Mozart's&#13;
Concerto in B-flat Major; Adrienne Gerth&#13;
of Kenosha, viola, Telemann's Concerto in&#13;
A Major for Viola; and Diane Chambers of&#13;
Kenosha, French horn, Jacob's Concerto&#13;
for Horn. A flute trio comprised of Sharron Lee&#13;
Johnson~ Kenosha , Lenee Karow,&#13;
Burlington, and Judith Brewer, Racine, will play the Beethoven-Andraud Trio, Op.&#13;
87, and a saxaphone quartet including&#13;
Sheri Lueck, Kenosha, Joyce Andacht, Franklin, Tina Thomas, Racine, and Miss&#13;
Mccombs will play Singelee's Allegro de&#13;
Concert.&#13;
Accompanists will be Kathleen Devine,&#13;
Union Grove, Susan Hay, Oak Creek, Joyce Richards, Racine, and Letha Wood,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The Parkside Student Chapter of the&#13;
Music Educators National Conference will&#13;
host a reception after the program.&#13;
3 - 4 YEAR OLDS&#13;
$11.00 PER MONTH&#13;
STATE LICENSED&#13;
Applications are now being taken&#13;
for the United Presbyterian Cooperative&#13;
Nursery Center&#13;
Tues., Wed. &amp; Thurs. Morning&#13;
Parent Participation&#13;
Call Mr. P. LaMacchia 654-7 468&#13;
The "BRAT",~&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
French F rie s or Onion Rings&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or Bottle or Gloss of Bter&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
Ava ilable For Parties&#13;
Includ ing Fratern ity and Sorority Part ies·&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
,~~ BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and Highway 50 &#13;
Campus&#13;
Events&#13;
Tuesday, Dec 8· Basketball; Rangers v.&#13;
Northern MichJgan University at 8 p.rn&#13;
There.&#13;
Thursday. Dec 10 . Concert. UWP&#13;
mUSIC tudents will present an Honors&#13;
Concert at 7·30 P m In the Kenosha&#13;
Campu Fine Arts Room&#13;
FIlm The Spanish facult} "III sponsor&#13;
. howmg or a film, -Los Tnrnntos," at 8&#13;
pm to Room Ul.1.Greenquist Hall&#13;
Froday, Dec II· Pia} The Parkside&#13;
Players '*111 present "Come 810y. Your&#13;
Horn" at " pm In the nacme Campu&#13;
l\;ldg -r Itoom Also Dec 12 Adrn chg&#13;
Film Stud -n1 Acuviues Ollice will&#13;
ponscr . hov.lnl( or tht· £11m"The Birds,&#13;
Ih,.1\4,'\"Sand the Italians" at Rp rn. In the&#13;
\:'h\ ItI~ BUlldlnK dm 75 cents&#13;
'. turda) Dec; 12 rm\'l"r~lly League:&#13;
Thl' annu..'! tnt\ 'f. ny L ague Christmas&#13;
dmn -r daOCl"ror all Unl\"er-olly faculty and&#13;
taU \AlII be hl'ld b(~lnnmg a16:30 p m at&#13;
HW.ICll nab ('uuntr) Club. H) SO.&#13;
K,'o. ha Tu:kl'tsar '8vallableat the maIO&#13;
l'~nlpU'" frum Jan FIlippone at Ext 291 or&#13;
(rom I.lnda ( ·k(&gt;r at 6:\.1.1(iR:J&#13;
B.....k"lh.11I Han~('r cager' v W ..&#13;
Grt~'n n,.) ~ pm. St Jt»eph's HIgh&#13;
SChnol. Kt'ntl~ha&#13;
F"'I'K'm~ liWP h.'n&lt;:cr WIll participate&#13;
In tht' lIhnOl~ Cnlll'jitiatc Open at Cham·&#13;
pal~n&#13;
Wn'!'lthnll. HanKcr matmen Will meet&#13;
W(~lt.'rn Ml('htgan Umv~rsity There&#13;
Sunday, Dt.-c 13· Film Intercollegiate&#13;
Film Council "'III sponsor shoy,mg of "Red&#13;
Ilt",,'rt" at 7 p 01 at the Gold n Rondelle&#13;
Thealer, Racme. Tickets are available on&#13;
l:ampu from Mar)· GeraelS (632·20&amp;1) or&#13;
J 'rr} Horton' 6.13-4769).&#13;
Artists Series Concert: Annie Petit.&#13;
UWP arr.hate arhsl. will play a piano&#13;
rt'Cltal In the University Artists Concert&#13;
Sc,:rtCSat 4 pm, m Hoom 103. Greenquist&#13;
lIall TlC,:kets available at the door: Gen.&#13;
&lt;.Idm $1, students 50 cent. children 12 and&#13;
under frl"C&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Ellllwood&#13;
Students lel fed c.arpet sel ....ice&#13;
(SO does e ....eryone ehe')&#13;
--&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
eR~&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62HI; ST.&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Hockey; UWP Hockey Club will meet&#13;
the Johnson's Wax company team at 10&#13;
a.m. at Wilson Park Recreation Center&#13;
rink, Milwaukee.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 15 - Poetry Forum: Bruce&#13;
Stichm of the UWP Spanish faculty will&#13;
read from his poetry in Spanish and&#13;
English at 7 p.rn. in Greenquist Han Room&#13;
127.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. t6 . Faculty Senate;&#13;
The UWP Faculty Senate will meet at3;3O&#13;
pm. In Room 101. Greenquisl Hall.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 17 . Wrestling; Ranger&#13;
-gr applers will meet UW·Milwaukee.&#13;
There.&#13;
Friday, Dec. 18 - Film; Student AcIrvities&#13;
Office will sponsor showing of the&#13;
film "You're a Big Boy Now" at 8 p.m. in&#13;
the Activities Building. Adm, 75 cents.&#13;
Regents Meeting: Regents of the&#13;
Umverstty or Wisconsin will meet in&#13;
Milwaukee .&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 23 . Basketball;&#13;
Ranger cagers v Southern Illinois&#13;
UnI\,ersity.Edwardsville. 8 p.rn., St.&#13;
Joseph's high school, Kenosha.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec. 29 . Wrestling; Ranger&#13;
matmen will participate in the Midlands&#13;
Tournament in Evanston, HI. Also Dec. 30.&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 30 - Basketball;&#13;
Ranger cagers will participate in the Corn&#13;
Palace Invitational Tournament at&#13;
MItchell, S. Oak. Participating teams are&#13;
UWP, WSU·LaCrosse, South Dakota&#13;
Wesleyan and Northwestern (Iowa)&#13;
College.&#13;
Monday. Jan 4 - Classes Resume.&#13;
News from&#13;
Other Campuses&#13;
College Park, Md. - ,I.P.l - The&#13;
University or Maryland's Board of&#13;
Regents recently announced the appointment&#13;
of a special commission&#13;
composed of prominent journalists and&#13;
educators to study metllods of separating&#13;
student publications from the University.&#13;
The creation of a commission was&#13;
recommended by a special committee of&#13;
the Board appointed to study all aspects of&#13;
lhe student activities fees. On the&#13;
recommendation of the committee, the&#13;
Regent acted to separate fee-supported&#13;
student publications from the University&#13;
and to have the proposed commission&#13;
advise them no later than February 1'-&#13;
1971, on the procedures to be followed to do&#13;
this.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Carbondale, fit - (l,P'&gt; - A major&#13;
restructuring of Southern Illinois&#13;
University with emphasis on educational&#13;
independence for its two campuses has&#13;
been recommended by a professional&#13;
management firm.&#13;
The report by Cresap, McCormick and&#13;
Paget. Inc., calls for decentralization of&#13;
the SIU President's office and&#13;
redistribution of administrative functions&#13;
under a strong four·man structure.&#13;
Under the plan the board of trustees&#13;
would assume clearcut responsibilities for&#13;
governance and polic;ymaking, with administration&#13;
just as clearly marked as the&#13;
system president's and. chancellors' roles.&#13;
Two advisory councils and a&#13;
professional staff woula reinforce the'&#13;
trustees in the far· reaching&#13;
"organizational changes" recommended&#13;
by the firm.&#13;
Councils. of students and faculty&#13;
members With equal representation from&#13;
each :ampus would sit with the trustees at&#13;
meeltngs. They would have open advisory&#13;
channels to the board and agenda time on&#13;
request. but no formal voting status. The&#13;
effect woold be a "two-way street" be.&#13;
tween the board, students and faculty.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Palo Alto, Calif. - ILP.) - Creation of a&#13;
comml~Jon to make .. a fair and comprehensive&#13;
examination of all major&#13;
lSSueS related to campus protest" has been&#13;
recommended at Stanford University.&#13;
The recommendation is contained in a&#13;
report prepared by the Ombudsman's&#13;
Intenm Study Group. Some of the broad&#13;
goals and problems facing the proposed&#13;
commiSSion were described in these ds&#13;
by the lSG; wor&#13;
"~he commission should examine acts&#13;
of VIolence on the Stanford campus but·t&#13;
sh.o~d also examine the charge or co~.&#13;
phclty on the part of the University in acts&#13;
of vloleoce pe~traled upon minority&#13;
gr?UPS elsewhere In this country, and by&#13;
thIS country elsewhere in the world&#13;
."It should look into all matters thai have&#13;
direct relevance to the sources and eff ts&#13;
ot. protest in the life of the univers~&#13;
Wlthoot, however, straying so far afield a~&#13;
to concern itself with problems whose&#13;
What a. stunning way to staft the HOlidS season! you'll&#13;
hypnotize everyone with this exciting hand screened&#13;
plint top by Jane Colby, Designed in 100% Dacron,. it&#13;
has long sleeves and a neat shirt collar. The StyliSh&#13;
fJgure flattering flared pants are pull-on, and are madeof&#13;
100% tiyl0n..1n .coordinating solid colors,&#13;
Top in Sizes S-M-L .&#13;
Pant in Sizes s-is&#13;
BARDEN'S&#13;
FREE CHRISTMAS BOXES -"-- -&#13;
resolution falls entirely outside of the&#13;
frame of University administration and&#13;
community.&#13;
EVERYBODY'S DOIN' IT!&#13;
CHICAGO (CPS) - Several years ago&#13;
people 'were surprised that underground&#13;
papers and student movements were&#13;
beginning to appear in high schools, Then&#13;
the movement reached some junior highs'&#13;
and administrators really began to worry.&#13;
Now there is an underground paper put&#13;
out by elementary school students. .&#13;
The paper named "The Eye", IS&#13;
published by ; group of students at Philip&#13;
Rogers school on Chicago'S far north Side.&#13;
u currently has a circulation of 500, sold.at&#13;
a dime aach. The eight-page paper 10-&#13;
eludes anti·war poetry, comics, and a&#13;
story criticiz.ing the school for putting in a&#13;
new intercom system when there was&#13;
already "a good system for gelling&#13;
messages around". There also are articles&#13;
about restrictions on the use of restrooms&#13;
and stairways.&#13;
Of course, underground papers aren't&#13;
any more popular in the elementary&#13;
schools than they are in the high schools,&#13;
and school officials have already "spoken&#13;
to" some of the students responsible for&#13;
the paper. However, the students are not&#13;
going to be intimidated, and are now&#13;
planning future issues of "The Eye".&#13;
New Exhibit&#13;
If to live in the tWentieth century is&#13;
really to come to grips with insantity, at&#13;
least reducing things to tpeir proper abo&#13;
surdity helps ease the pain. The New&#13;
Gallery One (formerly La Porte), located&#13;
at 503 Main Street, Racine is presenting an&#13;
exhibition of graphics and drawings by&#13;
Warrington Colescott. Warringt~n&#13;
Colescoll is the head of the print depart·&#13;
ment at the University of WisconsinMadison&#13;
and is Wisconsin's most noted&#13;
international artist. On the playing fields&#13;
of stinging and--or niggling satire, he runs&#13;
riot. The exhibition opened Sunday,&#13;
INSTANT FASHION&#13;
FOR&#13;
GIFTING&#13;
or&#13;
GETT!NG&#13;
TOP&#13;
$15.00&#13;
•&#13;
.,lanE&#13;
~OLPY&#13;
November 29. The show will run '&#13;
19th of December; some pieces hunlillbe&#13;
been on display at the New Gall ave....&#13;
5036 Sixth Avenue Kenosh ery ~&#13;
November 30. a "U1ee&#13;
Anchorln&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
ADU L TS SUD&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER IU $1.11&#13;
.CHILDREN UNDER 5 FRII&#13;
Prices include fillt&#13;
dinner beverace,&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
a....t Chl.ken wltll&#13;
BI•• ult. and gra vy&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sal. 5 p.m. - 11 Po"&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. 5 p.m. - 10 p.RI,&#13;
$un. 12 Noon 9 p.m.&#13;
9006 Sheridan Rd_ Phone 694-1731&#13;
PANTS&#13;
$13.00&#13;
Campus&#13;
E ents&#13;
rt· 'WP&#13;
n Honors&#13;
Keno~h&#13;
B nkof&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2104 lolh,op •-~ lo&lt;i"•• Wi,coi,11n&#13;
Students aet red carpet seiv1ce&#13;
(So do s everyone el~e!)&#13;
·-&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
ef.~&#13;
--·&#13;
KE OSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62i1:.; ST.&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
Hockey: U\ P Hockey Club will meet&#13;
the Johnson's Wax company team at 10&#13;
a.m. at Wilson Park Recreation Center&#13;
rink .• mwaukee.&#13;
Tuesday, Dec.15 - Poetry Forum: Bruce&#13;
Stiehm of the UWP Spanish faculty will&#13;
read from his poetry in Spanish and&#13;
English at 7 pm. in Greenquist Hall Room&#13;
127.&#13;
Wedn sday, Dec. 16 - Faculty Senate:&#13;
The 'WP Faculty Senate will meet at 3:30&#13;
p.m. in Room 101, Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Thursday, Dec. 17 - Wrestling: Ranger&#13;
•grappler will meet UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
There.&#13;
Friday, D c. 18 - Film· Student Acti\'ilie&#13;
· Office will ponsor showing of the&#13;
film " You're a Big Boy ·ow" at 8 p.m. in&#13;
th Cll\'1t1es Bwlding. Adm. 75 cents.&#13;
R~g nt . le ting: Regents of the&#13;
niver ity of Wi~con in will meet in&#13;
Malwauk . .&#13;
\ ' dn day, Dec 23 Basketball :&#13;
Han r ca er. v outhern Illinois&#13;
n1ver 1ty-Edwards\ill 8 p.m .. St.&#13;
J eph' hi •h chool, Keno ha.&#13;
Tu d :, , D c. 29 • Wre::;tling : Ranger&#13;
maim n "ill participate m the '.\tidlands&#13;
Tourn m nt in Evan ton, Ill. Al o Dec. 30.&#13;
Wedn . day, Dec. 30 - Basketball :&#13;
Rang r cager. will participate in the Corn&#13;
Palace ln\·itational Tournament at&#13;
11tchcll, . Oak . Participating teams are&#13;
WP , W '-LaCro e. outh Dakota&#13;
W I yan and , 'orthwestern &lt;Iowa)&#13;
II g .&#13;
londa} , Jan 4 • Cla . e Resume.&#13;
News from&#13;
Other Campuses&#13;
ollege Park, • td. - &lt;I.P.&gt; - The&#13;
niver. 1tv of larvland's Board of&#13;
R ents ~ecently aru1ounced the appomtmenl&#13;
of a pecial commission&#13;
compo:; d of prominent journalists and&#13;
educators to tudy methods of separating&#13;
Ludent publications from the University.&#13;
The creation of a commission was&#13;
recommended by a special committee of&#13;
the Board appointed to study all aspects of&#13;
the student activities fees. On the&#13;
recommendation of the committee, the&#13;
Regent acted to separate fee-supported&#13;
tudent publications from the University&#13;
and to have the proposed commission&#13;
advise them no later than February 1,·&#13;
1971, on the procedures to be followed to do&#13;
this.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Carbondale, Ill. - (I.P.) - A major&#13;
restructuring of Southern Illinois&#13;
University with emphasis on educational&#13;
independence for its two campuses has&#13;
been recommended by a professional&#13;
management firm.&#13;
The report by Cresap, McCormick and&#13;
Paget. Inc., calls for decentralization of&#13;
the SIU President's office and&#13;
redistribution of administrative functions&#13;
under a strong four-man structure.&#13;
nder the plan the board of trustees&#13;
would as ume clearcut responsibilities for&#13;
go_v~rnan~ ~nd policymaking, with adm1mstrallon&#13;
Just as clearly marked as the&#13;
ystem president's and chancellors' roles.&#13;
Two advisory councils and a&#13;
professional staff would reinforce the ·&#13;
lru ·tees in the far-reaching&#13;
··organizational changes" recommended&#13;
by the firm .&#13;
Councils . of students and faculty&#13;
members with equal representation from&#13;
each ~ampus would sit with the trustees at&#13;
meetings. They would have open advisory&#13;
channels to the board and agenda time on&#13;
request, but no formal voting status. The&#13;
effect would be a "two-way street" between&#13;
the board, students and faculty.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Palo_ Al_to. Calif. - (LP.)_ Creation of a&#13;
comm1~1on to make "a fair and comprehensive&#13;
examination of all major&#13;
issues related to campus protest" has been&#13;
recommended at Stanford University.&#13;
The recommendation is contained in a&#13;
repo~t prepared by the Ombudsman's&#13;
Interim Study Group. Some of the broad&#13;
goals ~n? problems facing the proposed&#13;
comm1ss1on were described in these wo d&#13;
by the ISG: r s&#13;
"'!'he commission should examine acts&#13;
of violence on the Stanford campus but ·t&#13;
should also examine the charge 0'r 1&#13;
1 ·ty th comp&#13;
ic1 . on e part of the University in acts&#13;
of vaolence perpetrated upon minority&#13;
gr~ups elsewhere in this country, and by&#13;
this country elsewhere in the world&#13;
. "It should look into all matters that have&#13;
direct relevance to the sources and err ts&#13;
of_ protest in the life of the Univers~&#13;
without, however, straying so far afield i'&#13;
to concern itself with problems whos!&#13;
resolution falls entirely outside of the&#13;
frame of University administration and&#13;
community.&#13;
EVERYBODY'S DOIN' IT!&#13;
CHICAGO (CPS) - Several years ago&#13;
people were surprised that underground ·&#13;
papers and student movements were&#13;
beginning to appear in high SC?°';lls. 1:hen&#13;
the movement reached some Jumor highs ·&#13;
and administrators really began to worry.&#13;
Now there is an underground paper put&#13;
out by elementary school students.&#13;
The paper named "The Eye", is&#13;
published by ; group of students at P~lip&#13;
Rogers school on Chicago's far north side.&#13;
It currently has a circulation of 500, sold_at&#13;
a dime each. The eight-page paper mcludes&#13;
anti-war poetry, comics, and a&#13;
story criticizing the school for putting in a&#13;
new intercom system when there was&#13;
already "a good system for getting&#13;
messages around". There also are articles&#13;
about restrictions on the use of restrooms&#13;
and stairways.&#13;
Of course, underground papers aren't&#13;
any more popular in the elementary&#13;
schools than they are in the high schools,&#13;
and school officials have already "spoken&#13;
to" some of the students responsible for&#13;
the paper. However, the students are not&#13;
going to be intimidated, and are now&#13;
planning future issues of "The Eye".&#13;
New Exhibit&#13;
If to live in the twentieth century is&#13;
really to come to grips with insantity, at&#13;
least reducing things to their proper absurdity&#13;
helps ease the pain. The New&#13;
Gallery One (formerly La Porte), located&#13;
at 503 Main Street, Racine is presenting an&#13;
exhibition of graphics and drawings by&#13;
Warrington Colescott. Warringt~n&#13;
Colescott is the head of the print department&#13;
at the University of WisconsinMadison&#13;
and is Wisconsin's most noted&#13;
international artist. On the playing fields&#13;
of stinging and-or niggling satire, he runs&#13;
riot. The exhibition opened Sunday,&#13;
INSTANT FASHION&#13;
FOR&#13;
GIFTING&#13;
or&#13;
GETT!NG&#13;
TOP&#13;
$15.00&#13;
•&#13;
November 29. The show will run . 19th of December; some pieces h llntil !ht&#13;
been on display at the New Gall ave also&#13;
5036 S_ixth Avenue Kenosh ery ~. Novel!lber 30. a since&#13;
_Anchor In&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
ADULTS $2.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 10 SI.SI&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 5 FRU&#13;
Prices include first&#13;
dinner beverage.&#13;
SUNDAY SPF.cJAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits and gravy&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sat. 5 p.m. - 11 p.m.&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. 5 p.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
~un. 12 Noon 9 p.m.&#13;
9006 Sheridan ~d. Phone 694-1733&#13;
J_.ane&#13;
~OLPY PANTS&#13;
$13.00&#13;
What a_ stunning way to start the Holiday season! You'll&#13;
hypnotize everyone with this exciting hand screened&#13;
print top by Jane Colby. Designed in 100% Dacron,. it&#13;
h_as long sleeves and a neat shirt collar. The stylish&#13;
fJgu;e flatter_ing flar~d p~nts are pull-on, and are made of&#13;
IPO ~ ~yJon_ in .coordinating solid colors.&#13;
Top in Sizes S-M-L ·&#13;
Pant in Sizes s-is&#13;
BA.RDEN'S&#13;
FREE CHRISTMAS BOXES &#13;
Athletic Director Thomas P: Rosandich&#13;
left yesterday for the Far East with his&#13;
pimeobjectives being the Philippines and&#13;
1baiIand.&#13;
Presidnet Marcos.of the Philippines has&#13;
iDvited Rosandich to be his guest at the&#13;
Asian Games being held in Bangkok.&#13;
Besides viewing the spectacular games,&#13;
Rosandich will review the Parkside&#13;
Coaches team currently working in the&#13;
Pbilippines and present a seminar to the&#13;
Asian Coaches Association, of which he&#13;
ns thefounder at the 1962 Asian Games in&#13;
Djakarta, Indonesia.&#13;
Reprinted here is an article written by&#13;
Ernie T. BUong of the Philippine News&#13;
Service which fully explains Rosandich's&#13;
mission. /&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Manila - Thomas P. Rosandich,&#13;
Atbletic Director of the University of&#13;
W"lICODSin-Parkside,was named recently&#13;
by the Philippine President Ferdinand E.&#13;
Marcos as the island Republic's adviser on&#13;
1pOrts.&#13;
Az, adviser to the Presidential Committee&#13;
on Sports, Rosandich will be in-&#13;
"crating the sports program of the&#13;
Department of Education, the Department&#13;
r,( National Defense (armed forces), the&#13;
Philippine Amateur Athletic Federation,&#13;
and the Office of the Philippine President.&#13;
One of America's outstandin coaches&#13;
Ranger Bear&#13;
To Accompany&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Athletic Teams&#13;
Cong ratulation s&#13;
Kathy Doherty&#13;
UW-P's First&#13;
uMiss Parkside"&#13;
Parkside crowned its first Sportsfest&#13;
Queen last Friday. The corcnauon activities&#13;
included the introduction or aU&#13;
queen candidates escorted by the captain&#13;
of the sport that nominated her. After&#13;
Coach Vic Godfrey introduced the can.&#13;
didates, Athletic Director Tom Rosandich&#13;
crowned Miss Kathy Doberty. Captain Bill&#13;
Benkstein escorted the Queen. who was the&#13;
wrestling team's candidate.&#13;
Kathy is a freshman at Parkside.&#13;
majoring in elementary education. She is a&#13;
member of the newly formed Mat Maids,&#13;
who assist at all wrestling meets.&#13;
Kathy likes dogs, spaghetti, boys.&#13;
swimming. waterskiing and little kids.&#13;
Being a Queen is nothing new. Last year&#13;
she was Kenosha Bradford's homecoming&#13;
Queen. She also was president of the HiStyle&#13;
Club. This year she was a Miss&#13;
IUDlted Fund, representing tbe commercial&#13;
and prctesslceal area.&#13;
About Parl&lt;Jilde. Kathy said. "I ilke th&#13;
people. you kn"", [ ilke to talk [thulk It&#13;
,,;11 be beller "~n we're all on one&#13;
campus,"&#13;
The otnee candidates and t~" escort&gt;&#13;
were Diane Thomas. escorted by gymnastics&#13;
co-captain Warren . tcCllhvar)' •&#13;
Basketball Queen Sue ,Iagee and her&#13;
escort. Ken Rick. Tennis and Golr Quem&#13;
Diane Lakatos and Captain Steve mlLh I&#13;
Fencing Queen Diane Lawler and Keith&#13;
Herbrechtsmeier Cross-Country and&#13;
Track Queen andy Houston and capta m&#13;
Skip Jones; Hockey Queen, 'ancy Helfnch&#13;
and Tom Krummel. ki Queen ~anC)'&#13;
tichels and JIm DeB..-ge, Dran Krann'll&#13;
and soccer captain. hke Jenrette. and the&#13;
•Volleyball Queen Jan Hermes. escorted by&#13;
Pete Habetler&#13;
Rosandich To Be Guest&#13;
Of Philippines' President&#13;
and sports organizers, Rosandich brings to&#13;
this position considerable expertise and a&#13;
~ wealth of experience, having spent close to&#13;
two decades in Asia as coach of national&#13;
teams in Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore,&#13;
Thailand, Laos, Borneo and Okinawa.&#13;
Mfectionately known in Asia as "Mr.&#13;
Tom" Rosandich came to the attention or&#13;
Philippine sports authorities some eight&#13;
years ago for his spendid work as chief&#13;
adviser or the Sports Ministry of Indonesia&#13;
and enabling Indonesia to vault from&#13;
obscurity to second place in the Fourth&#13;
Asian Games and world class in sports. In&#13;
Indonesia with a population of some 120&#13;
million, 'he established a National&#13;
Academy of Coaches and instituted a&#13;
National Physical Fitness program that&#13;
has become a model for developing&#13;
countries .&#13;
. Rosandich, who is Uncle sam~s unofficial&#13;
sports envoy in the Orient, is ~lso&#13;
remembered for organizing the first&#13;
national sports championships meet in the&#13;
kingdom of Laos and developing a Borneo&#13;
headhunter named Gabuh into a world&#13;
class triple jumper. .&#13;
An internationally known athletics&#13;
coach and writer, Rosandich has the&#13;
distinction of having prepared learns for&#13;
every major sports competitio~ in the&#13;
world, including three Olympiads ". He&#13;
carne to Manila with another American&#13;
sports mentor, Bob Lawson, h~d tra.ck&#13;
coach of the University of Wlsc_o~.m.&#13;
Parkside to train and develop F'ilipino&#13;
athletes for the Sixth Asian Games next&#13;
December in Bangkok. .&#13;
The Philippine Presl~ent. t~anked&#13;
Rosandich for his efforts m pruning the&#13;
national team to the next Asiad as he&#13;
'named the Wisconsin sports leader to ~e&#13;
position of adviser. In that. ca~cIty,&#13;
Rosandich will map out a .physlcal fitness&#13;
program for some nine million Philippme&#13;
school children on the elementary and&#13;
secondary levels.&#13;
The national sports program, to be&#13;
implemented by Rosandich through a&#13;
s of foreign and local CoachIng&#13;
corp'alists will also aim to discover aod speCI, . I d'n&#13;
develop athletes ~~rnationa an I·&#13;
ternational competihoos. . . ed&#13;
Rosandich has also been comm1SSl~&#13;
. the curriculum of the National&#13;
to reVise . Education so that it&#13;
College of PhYSICal&#13;
th&#13;
is1and Republic'.&#13;
will serve as e&#13;
academy for coaches.&#13;
Thomas Rosandich IS pictured above wuh Carlos RomuJo. first pn Idt-nt of the&#13;
United Nations and Monsarrat. head of the Plulipp me Olympic omrmuee&#13;
Atbletic Director Thomas Rosandicb is shown watching Parkside track coach Bob&#13;
Lawson work with some sprinters at one of the training centers in tbe Philippines. Coach&#13;
Lawson will return to Parkside after Christmas.&#13;
Athletic Director Thomas P: Rosandich&#13;
left yesterday for the Far East with his&#13;
IJ'lllle objectives being the Philippines and&#13;
Thailand.&#13;
Presidnet Marcos of the Philippines has&#13;
invited Rosandich to be his guest at the&#13;
Asian Games being held in Bangkok.&#13;
Besides viewing the spectacular games,&#13;
Rosandich will review the Parkside&#13;
Coaches team currently working · in the&#13;
Philippines and present a seminar to the&#13;
Asian Coaches Association, of which he&#13;
was the founder at the 1962 Asian Games in&#13;
Djakarta, Indonesia.&#13;
Reprinted here is an article written by&#13;
Ernie T. Bitong of the Philippine News&#13;
Service which fully explains Rosandich's&#13;
mission.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Manila - Thomas P. Rosandich,&#13;
Athletic Director of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, was named recently&#13;
by the Philippine President Ferdinand E.&#13;
Marcos as the island Republic's adviser on ports.&#13;
As adviser to the Presidential Committee&#13;
on Sports, Rosandich will be integrating&#13;
the sports program of the&#13;
Department of Education, the Department&#13;
of National Defense (armed forces), the&#13;
Philippine Amateur Athletic Federation,&#13;
and the Office of the Philippine President.&#13;
One of America's outstandin coaches·&#13;
Ranger Bear&#13;
lo Accompany&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Athletic Teams&#13;
Congratulations&#13;
Kathy Doherty&#13;
''Miss Parkside''&#13;
Parkside crowned its fir t rtsfe t&#13;
Queen last Friday. The coronation a&#13;
tivities included the introduction or all&#13;
queen candidates escorted by the captain&#13;
of the sport that nominated her. Afl r&#13;
Coach Vic Godfrey introduced the can- didates, Athletic Director Tom R ndich&#13;
cro'-ol.11ed Miss Kathy Doherty. Captain Bill&#13;
Benkstein escorted the Queen, ·ho"a the&#13;
wrestling team's candidate.&#13;
Kathy is a freshman al Par 1de. ll!ajoring in elementary educati •1 e i a&#13;
member of the newly formed fat M~ids, who a~ist at all wrestling meet ,&#13;
Kathy likes dogs, paghetti, boy ,&#13;
swimming, waterskiing and litUe kids.&#13;
Being a Queen is nothing new. La t year&#13;
~he was Kenosha Bradford's homecoming&#13;
Queen. She also was president of the HiStyle&#13;
Club. This year she was a . Ii&#13;
comRosandich&#13;
To Be Guest&#13;
Of Philippines' President&#13;
and sports organizers, Rosandich brings to&#13;
this position considerable expertise and a&#13;
wealth of experience, having spent close to&#13;
two decades in Asia as coach of national&#13;
teams in Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore,&#13;
Thailand, Laos, Borneo and Okinawa.&#13;
Affectionately known in Asia as "Mr.&#13;
Tom", Rosandich came to the attention of&#13;
Philippine sports authorities some eight&#13;
years ago for his spendid work as chief&#13;
adviser of the Sports Ministry of Indonesia&#13;
and enabling Indonesia to vault from&#13;
obscurity to second place in the Fourth&#13;
Asian Games and world class in sports. In&#13;
Indonesia with a population of some 120&#13;
million, 1&#13;
he established a National&#13;
Academy of Coaches and instituted a&#13;
National Physical Fitness program that&#13;
has become a model for developing&#13;
countries.&#13;
Rosandich, who is Uncle &amp;rm'.s unofficial&#13;
sports envoy in the Orient, is also&#13;
remembered for organizing the first&#13;
national sports championships meet in the&#13;
kingdom of Laos and developing a Borneo&#13;
headhunter named Gabuh into a world&#13;
class triple jumper. . An internationally known athletics&#13;
coach and writer, Rosandich has the&#13;
distinction of having prepared teams for&#13;
every major sports competitio~ in the&#13;
world including three Olympiads. He&#13;
&lt;;ame ' to Manila with another American&#13;
sports mentor, Bob Lawson, h~d tra_ck&#13;
coach of the University of W1sc_o!15_mParkside,&#13;
to train and develop Fil1pmo&#13;
athletes for the Sixth Asian Games next&#13;
December in Bangkok. The Philippine Presi?ent . t~anked&#13;
Rosandich for his efforts m pr_1mmg the&#13;
national team to the next As1ad as he&#13;
named the Wisconsin sports leader to _the&#13;
position of adviser. In that. capaetty •&#13;
Rosandich will map out a physical_ f_1tn~&#13;
program for some nine million Philippine&#13;
school children on the elementary and&#13;
secondary levels.&#13;
The national sports program, to be&#13;
implemented by Rosandich through_ a cor s of foreign and local coaching&#13;
spe~ialists, will also aim t? discover a~&#13;
develop athletes !~r national and international&#13;
competitions. . . Rosandich has also been comm1ss1~ned . the curriculum of the National to reVIse . hat ·t College of Physical Education so t . ,1&#13;
will serve as the island Repubhc s&#13;
academy for coaches.&#13;
Athletic Director Thomas Rosandich is sho\1.11 \l.atching Parkside track coach Bo&#13;
Lawson work \l.ith some sprinters at one of the training centers in the Philippines. Coach&#13;
Lawson will return to Parkside after Christmas. &#13;
u.s. Gymnastics&#13;
Federation&#13;
Appoints Ballester&#13;
Coach BI1IBallester has added another&#13;
star to his already impressive list of&#13;
credentials He Just received notice of his&#13;
appomtment to the governing body of the&#13;
Untied rates Gymnastlcs Federatioo.&#13;
TIllS Federation is the sole representative&#13;
to the Federation of International&#13;
Gymnasucs which is the world body of&#13;
gymnastics.&#13;
The United States Gymnastics&#13;
Federation has the responsibility of&#13;
leading the U.S to a higher ranking in the&#13;
world of gymnastics.&#13;
Besides Ballester, olhers serving on this.&#13;
goverrung board are the athletic director&#13;
of Penn Stale, the chairman for lIYmflashes&#13;
In the Junior Colleges of America,&#13;
the YMCA chairman and the Women's&#13;
chairmen The executive secretary of the&#13;
uscr IS Frank Bare of Tucson. Ariz.&#13;
Spotlight On Warren&#13;
his bes~ eve~t. on the campus for only a&#13;
Despite being n has proven to be a very&#13;
few weeks~warreWith his outgoing perpopul.ar&#13;
flg:eh&#13;
.&#13;
S&#13;
habit of introducing&#13;
sonality an I he doesn't know:&#13;
himself to almost a~yone I is to qualify&#13;
Warren's immediate go~, f Inr&#13;
the National AssoclatIO? o.&#13;
~~rcollegiate Athletics champlOnS~Pg at&#13;
Louisiana early next spn,n "&#13;
Northea~tran e plans include majormg in&#13;
Longeh&#13;
angdcoaching gymnastics once&#13;
geograp Y .&#13;
he has finished compettng- . d ba&#13;
Warren's main hobbles inclu e sc~&#13;
diving, which he can do here, and surfing,&#13;
which he cannot.&#13;
Warren McGilli\'ary, 1970-71 Ranger&#13;
gymnast, comes to Wisconsin fro.m Los&#13;
Angeles. Calif. Prior to enrolhng at&#13;
Parkside, this personable young man&#13;
attended Pierce Junior College for two&#13;
years . .,&#13;
Warren is no stranger ~o Wlsc~nsm ~&#13;
type of climate since he I~ a native 0&#13;
Toronto, Canada \\'hile at Pierce, W~rren&#13;
compiled an impressive list of credits.&#13;
He was captain of his gymnastic. team&#13;
both years he attended that institution. In&#13;
addition to this he was named *:hen:~st&#13;
valuable gymnast as a result of his abl1,lty&#13;
to perform all SIX Olympic events on a high&#13;
level. He has been the winner of several&#13;
tournaments. He considers the vault to be&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Awards&#13;
Given&#13;
Parkside's soccer team finished .its&#13;
season with a 4-6-1 record. lncludll:g&#13;
scrimmages its record was 6-6-~. Their&#13;
leading goal scorers were Dale Nickel, 11&#13;
goals and Wolff Keelfer, eight goals.&#13;
Joseph Orr was elected most. valuable&#13;
player. Joseph also was captain, along&#13;
WIth Michael Jennette.&#13;
Other letter winners from the team&#13;
mclude: Tom Thomsen, Tom Jaehne, Kurt&#13;
Wassauer, Tony Kriedl, Do.uglas&#13;
Beveridge, Edward St. Peter, ChrIS Andachl,&#13;
Charles Lees, Karl Liekoski,. Tim&#13;
Martinson, Stan Markovic, Dale NIckel,&#13;
Mike Jennette and Joseph Orr.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Dec. 8 - Parkside vs. Northern Michigan&#13;
University at Marquette, Mich.&#13;
6:00 p.m., Equestrian Club at&#13;
Greenquist, Room 127.&#13;
9:00 p.m., Kenosha bowling at the&#13;
Sheridan Lanes.&#13;
Dec. 9 - Parkside volleyball team. Racine&#13;
City League at Memorial Hall, 6:30&#13;
p.m.&#13;
4 p.m., Racine Bowling at J &amp; W Lanes.&#13;
Dec. to - 8:00 a.m., Karate Club at&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
7:30 p.m., Judo Club 'at Kenosha.&#13;
Dec. t2 - 8:00 p.m., Basketball, OWParks&#13;
ide versus UW·Green Bay at 81.&#13;
Joseph's H.S. in Kenosha.&#13;
BROOMBALL&#13;
Outdoor sports should get their brooms&#13;
ready. As soon as the water freezes on the&#13;
rink, broomball play will begin. Managers·&#13;
or players, get rour teams ready!&#13;
Ranger Basketball&#13;
Missed First Shot&#13;
CHICAGO "The whole lown's talking&#13;
about the Jones Boy" went the Ames&#13;
Brother .." hit record in the mid-1950's.&#13;
ParkSid basketball coach Sle"e Stephens&#13;
us('d to hum It while a schoolboy ace at&#13;
Plattenlle high school U's no longer 10 his&#13;
repertol reo&#13;
The Jones boy, called Skeel, nearly&#13;
slngle·handedly spoiled Parkside's&#13;
baskelball debut here lasl nighl through&#13;
great leaps and bounds around the basket.&#13;
The result of Jones' 42 points and 28&#13;
rebounds was a 111-97 victory for Xavier&#13;
College, a school which has used&#13;
scholarships to round up an Impressive&#13;
array or Ch.cagoland prep league talent in&#13;
preparation for its first season of varsity&#13;
basketball and so far has a 3-0 record to&#13;
show for it.&#13;
The 6-6 Jones, a Marshall product, is the&#13;
most notable acquisition. He was released&#13;
early from the Army to attend Xavier, a&#13;
Pentagon concession Stephens may never&#13;
(orgive. .,.&#13;
Parkside's SCOring twlOS, Jim Hogan&#13;
and Eli Slaughter, did their best to counter&#13;
Jo .... with 33 and 'Z7point productions to&#13;
take up where they left orr last year, but&#13;
the atory of the game is simply told 10 the&#13;
total domination of Xavier's quick, agile&#13;
one! leaping front line.&#13;
The few times Jones touched the floor,&#13;
teammales Bob Lanning, &amp;-7, and Mike&#13;
McGrath. 6-5. were in the air. Xavier&#13;
seldom went outside for a shot, but when&#13;
they did a miss remained so only for the&#13;
split second it took Jones and friends to&#13;
become airborne. They had 82 rebounds to&#13;
Parkside's 52, including as many off the&#13;
offensive boards as UWP had in lotal.&#13;
Slaughler, Chicago's gift to Parkside&#13;
who played with Jones at Marshall, stayed&#13;
with his former Ipammate for the first&#13;
half, scoring 23 to Jones' 25. 1&lt;'orthat&#13;
reason, UWP trailed by only two, 53·51, at&#13;
intermission.&#13;
But Eli got only four points the final 20&#13;
minutes compared to Jones' 17, and even a&#13;
19 poinl splurge by Hogan couldn't keep&#13;
Xavier from blitzing a _ lead to a 90-70&#13;
bulge during a decisive six·minute spurt.&#13;
Stan White added t7 points to the&#13;
Parkside effort and teamed with Slaughter&#13;
to proVide UWI' with its only rebounding.&#13;
strength. Both had 1I3. Bradford frosh&#13;
Mike Jackson gol to second half points.&#13;
Parkside compounded its troubles with&#13;
cold second half shooting to finish at 39 per&#13;
cent to Xavier's 47.&#13;
The Rangers will host· Purdue-North&#13;
Central, which Xavier beat by t4 despite a&#13;
seven foot center, Friday nigbt at St.&#13;
Jospeh's and the Swedish National team&#13;
saturday night at Racine Case high school.&#13;
UWP Women&#13;
On The Go&#13;
Parkside's Women's cross c~untry team&#13;
participated in its first nahon~ cross&#13;
country championship at St. Louis, Mo."&#13;
during the Thanksgiving ~reak: ,&#13;
Although the Parkside girls didn t pla~e&#13;
in the top 30 individuals, they all had their&#13;
best performances of the 1: careers.&#13;
Parkside's team of Judy Zlmmerma~,&#13;
sandy Houston, Mary Libal and. Bonnie&#13;
Eppers have had very little experIenc~ m&#13;
cross country and they were competing&#13;
against the best in the country, if not in the&#13;
world. . te f&#13;
Judy Zimmerman broke 12 mmu s or&#13;
the first time over a two mile course.&#13;
sandy Houston improved b~ more than 80&#13;
seconds with a 12:40 clocking. .&#13;
The winner of the race was Doris Brown&#13;
of Seattle, Wash. Brown, who IS the&#13;
defending international champion, .won the&#13;
race with a fine 10:39 for the hilly two&#13;
miles. .&#13;
The winning team was the Wolvenne&#13;
Parkettes a team that ran at Parkside&#13;
earlier in 'Ule year and won the Parkside&#13;
AAU Cross Country Championships.&#13;
Workouts will begin soon for the- 1971&#13;
Women's Track team. Interested girls&#13;
sbould contact coach Godfrey at the Office&#13;
of Athletics immediately.&#13;
Ski Rangers&#13;
In 2nd Year&#13;
Parkside will field its second ski team&#13;
this winter. Men and women are both&#13;
eligible for the team, which will compete&#13;
in both divisions.&#13;
Last year's initial team finished the&#13;
season. ranking' sixth in the Wisconsin&#13;
Intercollegiate Ski Association. With the&#13;
addition of ski coaches Andrei Glasberg&#13;
and Kari Liekoski, plus' new skiers on&#13;
campus, it is hoped that the Rangers will&#13;
be able to move up in the standings.&#13;
The 1971 ski schedule is as follows:&#13;
Jan. 9-19- Mt. Frontenac,.Red Wing, Minn.&#13;
Jan. 17 - Little Switzerland, Slinger, Wis.&#13;
Jan. 30-31 - Mt. LaCrosse, LaCrosse, Wis.&#13;
Feb. 7 - Wilmot, Wilmot, Wis.&#13;
Feb. 13·14 - Rib Mountain, Wausau, Wis.&#13;
Feb. 21 - Houghton, Mich.&#13;
Feb. 'Z7-28- Indlanhead Mountain, Mich.,&#13;
Tri-State Championships.&#13;
Marquette Fo.iled&#13;
Members of Ute Parkside Foils&#13;
team fenced and defeated Foil team&#13;
members at the Marquette Club.&#13;
./ohn Tank and Kim Nelson won all&#13;
three of their matches while Larry&#13;
Foreman was winning one and&#13;
losing two. The other member of the&#13;
team, Jim Cummings, was one and&#13;
one.&#13;
The Ranger Volleyball Club, playing in&#13;
th~ Racine National League, shut out the&#13;
WIgs and Ellies last Wednesday 15-6, 15-4&#13;
and 15-12.&#13;
Equestrians Meet&#13;
A meeting is scheduled for Tuesday,&#13;
December 8, at Greenquist at 7:00&#13;
p.m. Posters are posted announcing&#13;
the room nwnber.&#13;
Intramurals To&#13;
Start Soon&#13;
Intramural basketball teams are beIttI&#13;
formed in two leagues. Coach II&#13;
Ballester is director of the RacineLeIpI&#13;
and Coach Jim Koch the KenoshaLelIa&#13;
Men interested in playing or who In&#13;
managing teams should contact one 1Jl1lle&#13;
two coaches.&#13;
The Racine league will play its gaDllIli&#13;
Memorial Hall on Mondays, wedJleldlJl&#13;
and Fridays during the noon hour.&#13;
Kenosha players will be playing iI•&#13;
variety of junior high school ~&#13;
Thursday nights. The complete&#13;
will be posted in the next edition.&#13;
'Coach Koch is organizing a table.-&#13;
tournament for Kenosha entbuBiuta.&#13;
Everyone is encouraged to join inthe pIIt.&#13;
whether they think they are tournan::&#13;
players or not. The tOlD'Dament.&#13;
probably be a ladder tournamen~ wI1ido&#13;
leaves a space for everybody.&#13;
Many Ranger&#13;
Fencers Will&#13;
Make Debut&#13;
ti g con.... Collegiate fencers represen ~ to S4JllII&#13;
from Colorado to Ohio, WisconSin paifl.&#13;
Carolina will congregate al Ch"j'"Illin'"&#13;
nl., this Saturday for the annua&#13;
Collegiate Fencing Tournarn~·iPS"""1&#13;
Although no team c~ampl~ W·sconsilt'&#13;
stake, the UniverSIty 0 fO~ t.pia&#13;
Parkside will be there 10 full they tJI&#13;
whatever individual ~o~O:~eir b~&#13;
garner. Fencers who Will fromJl1iDOiI:&#13;
obstacles to these honors areh&#13;
· Stale""&#13;
the Air Force Academy, 0 10&#13;
Wayne State of Detroit. debut rar dII&#13;
This will be the season AI ~&#13;
following Ranger fencer~. NeJsol1,,JoIlI&#13;
Keith Herbrechlsmeier, KI~westbY,Jdi'&#13;
Tanke, Bruce Bosman, Bo Rick liofltlL&#13;
zanotti, Peter Shemanske, mrniDS".&#13;
John Hanzalik and JIm eu&#13;
Racine Bowle~ L&#13;
21 U&#13;
15 II "&#13;
I' II.&#13;
11 •&#13;
10 •til&#13;
ToddPet ..&#13;
ToddP~ ...&#13;
ToddPet.. -&#13;
Rattle Rousers&#13;
N.T.L.F.S.&#13;
Senior Citizens&#13;
Banana Splits&#13;
Untouchables&#13;
The Machine&#13;
High Game&#13;
High Series&#13;
High Average&#13;
Spotlight On Warren&#13;
his best eve~t. the campus for only a&#13;
U.S. Gymnastics&#13;
Federation&#13;
Appoints Ballester&#13;
Warren . tcGillivary. 1970-il Ranger&#13;
gvmna t, comes to Wiscon m fro_m Los&#13;
"ngel ' Calif. Prior to enrolling at&#13;
Park id • thi per onable young man&#13;
att nded Pierce Junior College for two&#13;
years. .. . . Warren I no stranger to W1sc~nsm s&#13;
type of climate ince he is a natl\'e of&#13;
Toronto, Canada. While at Pierce, W~rren&#13;
compiled an impre sl\:e list of credits. H wa captain of h1 gymna_sttc_ team&#13;
both ~ear. he attended that in tttullon. In&#13;
dd1tion to thi he was named f:he ~~st&#13;
\ luable gymna t a a r~ult of his ab1l_1ty&#13;
to perform all ix Olympic event . on a high&#13;
1 ,·el. He ha been the ,·inner of several&#13;
tournament . He considers the vault to be&#13;
Soccer&#13;
Awards&#13;
Given&#13;
Park ide'. occer team finished . its&#13;
ea on with a 4-6-1 record. lncludmg&#13;
crimmage its record was 6-6-1 Their&#13;
1 ading goal corer. were Dale ' ickel. 11&#13;
goal . and Wolff Keeffer. eight goals.&#13;
Jo eph Orr wa elected most . valuable&#13;
player. Joseph also was captain, along&#13;
with 'lichael Jennette. Other letter winners from the team&#13;
include: Tom Thomsen, Tom Jaehne, Kurt&#13;
Wa sauer. Tony Kriedl, D~uglas&#13;
Beveridge, Edward St. Peter, Chr_1s ~-&#13;
dacht, Charles Lees, Ka~i Liekoski,_ Tim&#13;
1artinson, Stan farkov1c, Dale Nickel,&#13;
1ike Jennette and Joseph Orr.&#13;
COMING UP&#13;
Dec. s - Parkside vs. Northern Michigan&#13;
University at Marquette, Mich.&#13;
6:00 p.m., Equestrian Club at&#13;
Greenquist, Room 1Z7.&#13;
9 00 p.m., Kenosha bowling at the&#13;
Sheridan Lanes.&#13;
Dec. 9 - Parkside volleyball team. Racine&#13;
City League at Memorial Hall, 6:30&#13;
p.m. 4 p.m., Racine Bowling at J &amp; W Lanes.&#13;
Dec. 10 - 8:00 a.m., Karate Club at&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
7:30 p.m, Judo Club ·at Kenosha.&#13;
Dec. 12 - 8 :00 p.m., Basketball, UWParkside&#13;
versus UW-Green Bay at St.&#13;
Joseph's HS. in Kenosha.&#13;
BROO 18 LL&#13;
Outdoor sports should get their brooms&#13;
ready. As soon as the water freezes on the&#13;
rink, broomball play will begin. Managers&#13;
or players, get rour teams ready!&#13;
Ranger Basketball&#13;
Missed First Shot&#13;
r rto1r&#13;
Th Jon boy, c !led keet. nearly&#13;
m I -hand dly poiled Park ide's&#13;
ba ketball debut here la~t night through&#13;
gre I leap and bounds around the ba ket.&#13;
The r ult of Jones' 42 points and 28&#13;
r bound was a 111-97 victory for Xavier&#13;
ollege, a chool which ha ~ed&#13;
cholar hips to round up an 1mpress1~e&#13;
array of Chic goland prep league talent_ m&#13;
pr paration for it first s on of varsity&#13;
ba ketball and o far ha a 3--0 record to&#13;
hov. for it.&#13;
The 6~ Jones, a Marshall product, is the&#13;
most notable acquisition. He was released&#13;
early from the Army to attend Xavier, a&#13;
p ntagon concession Stephens may never&#13;
forgive. . . Park ide's scoring twms, Jim Hogan&#13;
and Eli Slaughter, did their best to counter&#13;
Jone· with 33 and Z1 point productions.to&#13;
take up where they left off last year, but&#13;
th ·tory of the game is simply told in the&#13;
total domination of Xavier's quick, agile&#13;
and leaping front line.&#13;
Th few times Jones touched the floor,&#13;
teammates Bob Lanning, 6-7, and Mike&#13;
l\lcGrath. 6-5. were in the air. Xavier&#13;
eldom went outside for a shot, but when&#13;
they did a miss remained so only for the&#13;
plit second it took Jones and friends to&#13;
become airborne. They had 82 rebounds to&#13;
Parkside's 52, including as many off the&#13;
offensive boards as lJ'.VP had in total.&#13;
laughter. Chicago's gift to Parkside&#13;
who played with Jones at Marshall, stayed&#13;
with his former tP.ammate for the first&#13;
half, scoring 23 to Jones' 25. 1' or that&#13;
reason, UWP trailed by only two, 53-51, at&#13;
intermission.&#13;
But Eli got only four points the final 20&#13;
minutes compared to Jones' 17, and even a&#13;
19 point splurge by Hogan couldn't keep&#13;
Xavier from blitzing a 56-64 lead to a 90-70&#13;
bulge during a decisive six-minute spurt.&#13;
Stan White added 17 points to the&#13;
Parkside effort and teamed with Slaughter&#13;
to provide t]WJ:&gt; with its only rebounding.&#13;
strength. Both had 113. Bradford frosh&#13;
Mike Jackson got 10 second half points.&#13;
Parkside compounded its troubles with&#13;
cold second half shooting to finish at 39 per&#13;
cent to Xavier's 47.&#13;
The Rangers will host · Purdue-North&#13;
Central, which Xavier beat by 14 despite a&#13;
seven foot center, Friday night at St.&#13;
Jospeh's and the Swedish National team&#13;
Saturday night at Racine Case high school.&#13;
Despite bemg on y W n has proven to be a ver few weeks: arre ith his outgoing perpopul_ar&#13;
f1gf\-: habit of introducing&#13;
sonallty an I h doesn't know.&#13;
himself to almost a~yone el is to qualify&#13;
Warren's immediate go~ . of Inhe&#13;
National Assoc1at10n .&#13;
!~~co~legiate Athletics champions~pg at&#13;
Louisiana early next spn_n . .&#13;
N~eage~\ange plans include maj?nng m h. g gymnastics once geography and coac m.&#13;
he has finished compet!ng. . d scuba&#13;
Warren's main hobbies mclu e . . . h' h he can do here and surfing, divmg, w 1c '&#13;
which he cannot.&#13;
UWP Women&#13;
On The Go&#13;
Parkside's Women's cross c~untry team&#13;
participated in its first nattona_l cross&#13;
country championship at St. Lows, Mo.,.&#13;
during the Thanksgiving ~reak: '&#13;
Although the Parkside girls didn t pla~e&#13;
in the top 30 individuals, they ~II had their&#13;
best performances of their careers.&#13;
Parkside's team of Judy Zimmerma~,&#13;
Sandy Houston, Mary Libal and. Bonn~e&#13;
Eppers have had very little expenenc~ m&#13;
cross country and they were . com~etmg&#13;
against the best in the country, tf not m the&#13;
world. . t f&#13;
Judy Zimmerman broke 12 mmu es or&#13;
the first time over a two mile course.&#13;
Sandy Houston improved hr more than 80&#13;
seconds with a 12:40 clock.mg.&#13;
The winner of the race was Doris Brown&#13;
of Seattle, Wash. Brown, who is the&#13;
defending international champion, _won the&#13;
race with a fine 10:39 for the hilly two&#13;
miles. . The winning team was the Wolverine&#13;
Parkettes a team that ran at Parkside&#13;
earlier in 'the year and won the Parkside&#13;
AAU Cross Country Championships.&#13;
Workouts will begin soon for the 1971&#13;
Women's Track team. Interested girls&#13;
should contact Coach Godfrey at the Office&#13;
of Athletics immediately.&#13;
Ski Rangers&#13;
In 2nd Year&#13;
Parkside will field its second ski team&#13;
this winter. Men and women are both ·&#13;
eligible for the team, which will compete&#13;
in both divisions.&#13;
Last year's i~itial team finished the season ranking sixth in the Wisconsin&#13;
Intercollegiate Ski Association. With the&#13;
addition of ski coaches Andrei Glasberg&#13;
and Kari Liekoski, plus· new skiers on&#13;
campus, it is hoped that the Rangers will&#13;
be able to move up in the standings.&#13;
The 1971 ski schedule is as follows:&#13;
Jan. 9-19- Mt. Frontenac,,Red Wing, Minn.&#13;
Jan. 17 - Little Switzerland, Slinger, Wis.&#13;
Jan. 30-31 - Mt. Lacrosse, Lacrosse, Wis.&#13;
Feb. 7 - Wilmot, Wilmot, Wis.&#13;
Feb. 13-14 - Rib Mountain, Wausau, Wis.&#13;
Feb. 21 - Houghton, Mich.&#13;
Feb. Z7-28 - Indianhead Mountain, Mich.,&#13;
Tri-State Championships.&#13;
Marquette Fo.iled&#13;
Members of the Parkside Foils&#13;
team fenced and defeated Foil team&#13;
members at the Marquette Club.&#13;
,John Tank and Kim Nelson won all&#13;
three of their matches while Larry&#13;
Foreman was winning one and&#13;
losing two. The other member of the&#13;
team, Jim Cwnmings, was one and one.&#13;
The Ranger Volleyball Club, playing in&#13;
th~ Racine National League, shut out the&#13;
Wigs and Ellies last Wednesday 15-6, 15-4&#13;
and 15-12.&#13;
Equestrians Meet&#13;
A meeting is scheduled for Tuesday,&#13;
December 8, at Greenquist at 7:00&#13;
p.m. Posters are posted announcing the room nwnber.&#13;
lntramurals lo&#13;
Start Soon&#13;
Intramural basketball teams are beq&#13;
formed in two leagues. Coach Bill&#13;
Ballester is director of the Racine League&#13;
and Coach Jim Koch the Kenosha League.&#13;
Men interested in playing or who are&#13;
managing teams should contact one of the&#13;
two coaches.&#13;
The Racine league will play its games at&#13;
Memorial Hall on Mondays, Wednesdays&#13;
and Fridays during the noon ho~ ..&#13;
Kenosha players will be playmg m •&#13;
variety of junior high school gyms oo&#13;
Thursday nights. The complete schedaie&#13;
will be posted in the next edition. .&#13;
·coach Koch is organizing a table ~IIIIIS&#13;
tournament for Kenosha enthusia51S.&#13;
Everyone is encouraged to join in the play,&#13;
whether they think they are tournam~&#13;
players or not. The tournament .&#13;
probably be a ladder tournament, which&#13;
leaves a space for everybody.&#13;
Many Ranger&#13;
Fencers Will&#13;
Make Debut&#13;
ti g colleges Collegiate fencers represen ~ south&#13;
from Colorado to Ohio, Wiscon~:;paign&#13;
Carolina will congregate at I lllin&#13;
Ill this Saturday for the annua&#13;
c~ilegiate Fencing Tourna~en~.i 5 aJ'(' a'&#13;
Although no te~m c~amP1f 05wi~cons10· stake the University O e to ~aio&#13;
Parkside w!ll ~ -there in ful~t~ey can&#13;
whatever md1v1dual ~onoe their bigg&#13;
garner. Fencers who will b from ruino!S,&#13;
obstacles to these honors are . state ~&#13;
the Air Force Academy, Ohio&#13;
Wayne State of Detroit. d but ror tbt&#13;
This will be the season. ~l LJ&gt;CBnl&#13;
following Ranger fencer~. Nelson, J&#13;
Keith Herbrechtsmeier, Ki: westbY, J~&#13;
Tanke, Bruce Bosman, Bo Rick Moffel~&#13;
Zanotti, Peter Shem~nske, mming.s· John Hanzalik and Jim CU&#13;
Racine Bowle~s L&#13;
JI&#13;
15 Rattle Rousers&#13;
N.T.L.F.S.&#13;
Senior Citizens&#13;
Banana Splits&#13;
Untouchables&#13;
The Machine&#13;
High Game&#13;
High Series&#13;
High Average&#13;
29&#13;
25&#13;
2()&#13;
19 JI&#13;
17 SS ,0&#13;
10 24'&#13;
Todd petersetl 6d&#13;
Todd petersetl 184&#13;
Todd petersetl &#13;
Spotlight On Kari&#13;
xc Awards&#13;
... DeWitt junior from Kenosha&#13;
n..,er was elected captain of the 1970&#13;
;"..,.. country team and Rick&#13;
:."a lreshman from Marinette, -was&#13;
1II1II the most valuable runner ..&#13;
DeWitt won his third letter 10 cross&#13;
..., Ibis rall and bas been a leader by&#13;
.... ror!be harriers, Rick Lund came&#13;
.1IrGIII to rank as the Rangers' number&#13;
.1\1lIIOI',&#13;
IAIId boIds the school record in the four&#13;
ole, aJong with teammate Chuch Detl-&#13;
_ at 3:1:29, as well as the five and six&#13;
.. XC record.&#13;
Fite other Ranger runners were&#13;
mrded their varsity letters. These&#13;
raers are all freshmen and include&#13;
OW: Dettman, M.rinette; Jim McFadden,&#13;
W.terford; Tim McGilsky,&#13;
...... St. Catherine's; Gary Lance of&#13;
Ialorford aod John Wagner of Elmhurst,&#13;
I.&#13;
1lIe lop live ranked runners were Lund,&#13;
Dettman, McFadden, McGilsky and&#13;
I8e.&#13;
One. of the new faces around the&#13;
Parkslde campus is a member of th&#13;
United States biathlon team. TwentY-fou~&#13;
year ?ld Karl Liekowki has Come to&#13;
Parksld~ to study ecnomics after three&#13;
years WIth the U.S. Army.&#13;
Liekoski came to the United. States when&#13;
h~ was 17 from Helsinki, Finland, his&#13;
birthplace. He and his family settled in&#13;
New Yor~, where he finished high school.&#13;
Immediately after high school he briefly&#13;
attende? Orange County Community&#13;
College In New York and Arizona State&#13;
where he played soccer. •&#13;
This fall he was a standout on the&#13;
Ranger SOccerteam. This winter he will be&#13;
vying for a berth on the U.S. national team&#13;
in the biathlon as well as working with the&#13;
Ranger Alpine skiing team and playing for&#13;
the hockey team.&#13;
In his spare time he is teaching assistant&#13;
for the ski courses besides participating in&#13;
other sports such as table tennis and&#13;
volleyball,&#13;
While in tbe Army, Kari traveled&#13;
through much of the United States and&#13;
Europe, mostly competing in cross&#13;
country skiing and The biathlon.&#13;
Last winter .he competed in the world&#13;
biathlon championships in Sweden as well&#13;
as other competitions in the Scandinavian&#13;
countries.&#13;
After the world championships the&#13;
United States team traveled to Austria for&#13;
the World Military Championships (CISM)&#13;
in both cross country and downhill skiing.&#13;
Kari also found time to win a marathon&#13;
in Alaska and make the All-Alaska soccer&#13;
team .&#13;
Last September, 'Kari was married to a&#13;
girl from New York. Teresa shares bis&#13;
interest in skiing and sports. She IS a&#13;
competent skier and instructor.&#13;
Congrats&#13;
To The Bear&#13;
'.&#13;
Spotlight On Keith&#13;
k 'th ~ Herbrecbtsmeier, MASTER&#13;
.. R. That's quite. tille for a young&#13;
.. tohold.Especially when you consider&#13;
.... OtlIyahalf dozenor so men in tbe mldllIIeeanholclthat&#13;
tille and only one is •&#13;
~ a Master Fencer means that one&#13;
lila a aass A r.ting. To illustrate wh.t&#13;
.......1Deans one can point out th.t a former&#13;
lidI 01 the United States fencing team&#13;
..... "'- P.n American team member&#13;
~ to Milwaukee holds a Class B.&#13;
~bIY the most shocking f.ct about&#13;
•. 110 that he is a rookie as rar as fencers&#13;
"-'. baa only been competing for two&#13;
~,,-, elt won the '--- K'h Wlsconsm .'&#13;
lid rAte01 the American Fencing League&#13;
ed _d in the midwest. The&#13;
Olympic team is picked on the basis of&#13;
points compiled prior to the games: SoJ':::.&#13;
Keith bas picked up II~1Ots. put~k..th&#13;
in contension for a posslble Olymp&#13;
which is his goal. sch I .t Kenosha&#13;
While 10 high 00 . .&#13;
K ith was captain of his temus&#13;
Tremper, ~ b Coach Schmale. He.lso&#13;
::.m~ ';:~ber%flbe student council .nd&#13;
the senior advisory boa~haS gained most&#13;
Athletics is where KCI . as&#13;
of his f.me but he is equallY ouu:r::::. of&#13;
• student. In 1!MjlHj9, ':'w:~ for the out·&#13;
the Roger SUPfWete at parkside. He&#13;
.tanding studen -. . ." of the Bernard&#13;
also bas been a recIpIent&#13;
T.llent scholarship. 400 student .nd&#13;
Besides bemg a near. so served&#13;
outstanding fencer, KeIth has aI&#13;
as president of the VarsIty club.&#13;
Spotlight&#13;
On Hogan&#13;
Jim Hogan, P.rks,de's standout guard.&#13;
may not be very "high" m beighl but he',&#13;
the high scorer a good deal ollbe ume.&#13;
During the 1969-70 season. JIm led all&#13;
Rangers with a 23.9 a\'erage as well as&#13;
rankIng second in District 14 rree--Lh~&#13;
sbooting with a .895 percentage&#13;
In the day or the big man. irs refreshll'8&#13;
to see a 5'10" basketball player star hke&#13;
Hogan does. Being a standout is a babit,&#13;
While at Byron high school in IIhno; . he&#13;
was All-Conference. During tu.s senior&#13;
year he scored as high as 56 points in a&#13;
single game.&#13;
After high school, JIm attended Rock&#13;
Valley Junior College in Rockford. Ill,&#13;
where he was a leammate of fellow&#13;
Ranger, Stan White. While U1ereJun was&#13;
selected 10 U1ethird All·American Jumor&#13;
College learn.&#13;
Jim is a senior at Parkside and has&#13;
already started orr U1eseason WItha bang&#13;
by scoring 33 points ag.UlSt Xavier,&#13;
This young man is married tUnda Iaed&#13;
majoring in business management with a&#13;
minor in "point production"&#13;
Lose to Xavier&#13;
By JIM CASPER&#13;
Word got around that Keet Jones of&#13;
Chicago Xavier could touch the top of the&#13;
backboard and now Parkside players&#13;
probably figure that to be a conservative&#13;
estimate of his jumping ability. All Jones&#13;
did against Parkside last Tuesday was&#13;
score 42 points and grab 28 rebounds,&#13;
sending the Rangers down to an opening&#13;
111-97 loss to Chicago.&#13;
The game was close, with Parkside on&#13;
the short end of a 53-51 count at U1ebalf.&#13;
Mter Parkside narrowed the margin to 6S--&#13;
64 Jones took control and Xavier steadily&#13;
put the game out of reach.&#13;
The big problem for the Rangers was a&#13;
lack of rebounding, especially defensive&#13;
rebounding. Parkside had four players in&#13;
double figures, paced by Jim Hogan's 33&#13;
points. Eli Slaughter and Stan While, two&#13;
players who rebound Well, contributed n&#13;
and 17 points respectively. Mike Jackson&#13;
was the only other Ranger 10 score COl1-&#13;
sistantly, adding ten points. While Jones&#13;
innicted lhe most damage. three other&#13;
Xavier cagers also hit in double figures.&#13;
Parkside will get another shot at Xavier&#13;
on February 16 and that will be a home&#13;
game.&#13;
Basketball: Ranger cagers .. ,II par&#13;
ticlpate 10 the Qo8l~ a"'!" Holiday&#13;
InVItational Tournament through 0t'C It&#13;
Eight teams will take part Wllh Parb,de&#13;
opening .galO,t Y State at Old II' t·&#13;
bury followed by e1U1er 'orth Carolina AIt&#13;
Tor MarlSl College of Pough\&lt; oe 101Y&#13;
Soys and Girls In Varsity Sports&#13;
member of hlS tenru..s team&#13;
"The other pia) .... looked upon her a&#13;
CellO,.·pla)e.r and a ClJrlygood one at that&#13;
She dod all the runrung. dnll and&#13;
calesthenucs the others lhd Out 0( ..,&#13;
players. she probably ranked number&#13;
four Four other gIrl Ined out for th t am&#13;
but couldn't make It ,one \110&amp; tpven&#13;
peelal lre.lment "&#13;
An oJlPO!'ongcoachsaId of. golf conI&#13;
"One gIrl beat ml tlurdplace&#13;
both mal&lt;h.nd \rake play Tb&#13;
pl.)' .... ludded hun some bul th WI&#13;
derstood thaI !hel could ba, n '" th&#13;
same POSItion t. fifth-pI C'C man t&#13;
anolher &amp;lrl so!her". no probl&#13;
AnothPr op!&gt;O'&gt;,ngcoach saId he ,.&#13;
ag.,nst pial'" &amp;lr1 .1 the ou , ' but th&#13;
number one pial er 10 oor I gu I t lear&#13;
\110 as a girl made mt h ~rong I&#13;
~as.··&#13;
A boy .. bo fa'ored compellng a al&#13;
&amp;lrI saId "lIagu) gelS beat .. ,.hat" If&#13;
the guy doesn't like 10 admll a gIrl&#13;
beller, he has a .. now. problem ..&#13;
EIghI)'·fl\e per cenl of the girls lelt&#13;
accepted by boys as leam mem rs.' me&#13;
out of ten said their partJetpahon In varslt)t&#13;
sports drew more tnlerest. attention,&#13;
respect and fnendhnes5 from then&#13;
teachers, fell... students and communIty&#13;
School work lhd 001 suffer, and soc.. 1&#13;
ac:t;yities or home hfe were not affected&#13;
Only rove per cent of the &amp;Iris felt practice&#13;
sessioos were too strenuous&#13;
Main parental concerns were "noIlosll1l&#13;
idenllly as a lIU'L" While the ma)Ortly&#13;
favored the righl of • girl 10 compete on a&#13;
bo)'S' team, 39 per cenl said they preferred&#13;
that their ... '11 daughlers be memben of an&#13;
all-girls team .&#13;
"1 was pre:5eIlt at. number of cc:mtests,"&#13;
said one approving parenl, "and there was&#13;
oot even any of the hllle joItes and comments&#13;
Iexpected there would be. They JUSt&#13;
shook hands and wenl at 0110 see who could&#13;
a feminine win over the other. tl&#13;
By ArthUl'J. Snider&#13;
Daily News Science Editor&#13;
The tall, blond boy lunged to",.rd the&#13;
fading ball and desperately swung hIS&#13;
racquet - but too late. The pomt went to&#13;
his opponent and with it, the game, set.nd&#13;
m.tch. th&#13;
There was nothing unusual a.bout . e&#13;
tennis contest between the t\l.Ofl\'aj high&#13;
school varsity teams, except that the&#13;
decisive victory was won by a girl&#13;
After congratulating his pretty foe. the&#13;
losing youth said "ltned my besl. bul she&#13;
was too good. l'io, Idon't resent losmg to a&#13;
girl. Sbe deserved It." ,&#13;
The unusual scene was duplicated in 1&#13;
New York high schools thiS year as girls&#13;
competed on varsity team 10 10 noncontact&#13;
sports - tennis, golf, gymnastics.&#13;
cross-country. SWlmmin.g.track, fencmg,&#13;
riflery, skiing and bowhng&#13;
"Results of thiS expenment have led us&#13;
to conclude that girls should be permItted&#13;
to participate in boys' mterschool.,athletlc&#13;
teams in non-contact sports: Prof.&#13;
George H. Grover of the New York State&#13;
Department of Educati~n. told an&#13;
American Medical Associahon symposium&#13;
in Boston.&#13;
The experiment was undertaken. 1D&#13;
Marcb, 1969, afler the parents of a high.&#13;
school senior girl challenged the&#13;
regul.tions thaI .prevented girls from&#13;
competing in varsIty sports.&#13;
"We found we bad htlle oroo~mg to&#13;
support OUl' Iraditional position, S81d&#13;
Grover. ., til tal The experiment is cmtinll1Dll 1m , e&#13;
authorities can rule &lt;Xl the rec«nendation,&#13;
but an evaIuatim of the firsl16&#13;
:::mths showed 84 per cenl of U1eboys;99&#13;
r cent of U1e girls, 93 per cent of the&#13;
::rents 86 per cent of the coaches and 74&#13;
per ceni or the opposirc coaches f.vored&#13;
mixed athletic learns.&#13;
One coach commented m&#13;
Spotlight On Kari&#13;
L---------:::~::----·---1&#13;
One. of the new faces around the&#13;
XC Awards&#13;
)lik DeWitt junior from Kenosha&#13;
~ was eiected captain of the 1970&#13;
fTe!ll 'cross country team and Rick er . tt Ll:ll1, a freshman from Marme e, was&#13;
the most valuable runner ..&#13;
DeWitt won his third letter m cross&#13;
trY this fall and has been a leader by&#13;
OJl!l~e for the harriers. Rick Lund came&#13;
1roog to rank as the Rangers' number&#13;
runner.&#13;
Lund holds the school record in the four&#13;
along with teammate· Chuch Dett-&#13;
, at 20:29, as well as the five and six&#13;
·le XC record.&#13;
five other Ranger runners were&#13;
arded their varsity letters. These&#13;
IIJll)etS are all freshmen and include&#13;
k Dettman, Marinette; Jim Mcadden,&#13;
Waterford; Tim McGilsky,&#13;
Racme St. Catherine's; Gary Lance of&#13;
aterford and John Wagner of Elmhurst,&#13;
1be top five ranked runners were Lund,&#13;
Dtttman, McFadden, McGilsky and&#13;
wre.&#13;
Pa~ks1de campus is a member of the&#13;
Uruted States ~iatl_llon team. Twenty-four&#13;
year ?ld Kari L1ekowki has come to&#13;
Parks1d~ to study ecnomics after three&#13;
yea~s w1tl_l the U.S. Army.&#13;
L1ekosk1 came to the United States when&#13;
h~ was 17 from Helsinki, Finland, his&#13;
birthplace. He and his family settled in&#13;
New Yor~, where he finished high school.&#13;
Immediately after high school he briefly&#13;
attende? Orange County Community&#13;
College m New York and Arizona State&#13;
where he played soccer. ·&#13;
This fall he was a standout on the&#13;
Ranger soccer team. This winter he will be&#13;
vying for a berth on the U.S. national team&#13;
in the biathlon as well as working with the&#13;
Ranger Alpine skiing team and playing for&#13;
the hockey team.&#13;
In his spare time he is teaching assistant&#13;
for the ski courses besides participating in&#13;
other sports such as table tennis and&#13;
volleyball.&#13;
While in the Army, Kari traveled&#13;
through m11Ch of the United States and&#13;
Europe, mostly competing in cross country skiing and 'the biathlon.&#13;
Last winter he competed in the world&#13;
biathlon championships in Sweden as well&#13;
as other competitions in the Scandinavian&#13;
countries.&#13;
After the world championships the&#13;
United States team traveled to Austria for&#13;
the World Military Championships ( CISM)&#13;
in both cross country and downhill skiing.&#13;
Kari also found time to win a marathon&#13;
in Alaska and make the All-Alaska soccer&#13;
team.&#13;
Last September, ·Kari was married to a&#13;
girl from New York. Teresa shares his&#13;
interest in skiing and sports. She is a&#13;
competent skier and instructor.&#13;
Congrais&#13;
To The Bear&#13;
Spotlight On Keith&#13;
K~lt~ Herbrechtsmeier, MASTER&#13;
CER. That's quite a title for a young&#13;
lobold. Especially when you consider&#13;
only a half dozen or so men in the mid-&#13;
!iold that title and only one is a n.&#13;
~ a Master Fencer means that one&#13;
a Class A rating. To illustrate what&#13;
ans one can point out that a former&#13;
~ of the United States fencing team&#13;
0~er Pan American team member&#13;
In Milwaukee holds a Class B. ra&#13;
Probably the most shocking fact about&#13;
ll la that he is a rookie as far as fencers&#13;
has only been competing for two&#13;
~ Year, Keith won the Wisconsin&#13;
Placof the American Fencing League&#13;
ed 1&gt;econd in the midwest. The&#13;
01 m ic team is picked on the basis of&#13;
polnt!compiled prior to tJ:ie games_. Soh~:&#13;
Keith has picked up 11 ~mts, putlfckth&#13;
in contension for a possible Olymp&#13;
which is ~s g°'.'31. sch 1 at Kenosha While m high oo . . Keith was captain of his tenms&#13;
Trem~~ched by Coach Schmale. H~ also&#13;
team, mber of the student council and was a me . d&#13;
the seni?r ~dvisory ~ has gained most&#13;
Athletics is wh~e ei tstanding as&#13;
of bis fame but he lS 1:ae~ou the winner of&#13;
a student. In I961Hi9, award for the out-&#13;
~e Roger Sup~ete at Parkside. He&#13;
standing beestudena ~~ipient of the Bernard also has n .&#13;
Tallent schol~rship. 4 oo student and&#13;
Besides being a "if ~th has also served&#13;
outstanding fencer, ei . cl b&#13;
as president of the Varsity u .&#13;
Spotlight&#13;
On Hogan&#13;
Lose to Xavier&#13;
B, JI:\1 C.\, PFR&#13;
Word got around tha• Keet J • of&#13;
Chicago Xavier could touch t top th&#13;
backboard and no\\ Par ide players&#13;
probably figure that to be a conservative&#13;
estimate of his jumping ability. All Jon&#13;
did against Park ide la t Tuesday a score 42 points and grab 28 rebounds,&#13;
sending the Rangers down to an openi&#13;
111-97 loss to Chicago.&#13;
The game was close, with Parkside on&#13;
the short end of a 53-51 count at the half.&#13;
After Parkside narrowed the margin to 6!&gt;-&#13;
64 Jones took control and Xa,ier teadily&#13;
put the game out of reach.&#13;
The big problem for the Rangers was&#13;
lack of rebounding, especially defensive&#13;
rebounding. Parkside had four players m&#13;
double figures, paced by Jim Hogan's 33&#13;
points. Eli Slaughter and Stan White, two&#13;
players who rebound well, contributed Tl&#13;
and 17 points respectively. like Jackson&#13;
;as the only other Ranger to score consis&#13;
ta ntly, adding ten points. While Jones&#13;
inflicted the most damage, three other&#13;
Xavier cagers also hit in double figur~&#13;
Parkside will get another shot at Xavier&#13;
on February 16 and that will be a home&#13;
game. &#13;
Mr. Wrestling&#13;
Bill Benkstein ..&#13;
Bill Benkstein is in a unique but enviable 18 ~&#13;
position for an athlete in any sport - he IS ,&#13;
beginning his third season as a team lIlIIt&#13;
captain. The captainCY is usually a r&#13;
position reserved for a senior. However,·&#13;
Bill has asserted himself the past three&#13;
seasons and emerged as the team leader.&#13;
Bill is more than just the leader, he is the&#13;
number one point getter on the team. He.&#13;
was a regular from day one at Parkside,&#13;
and holds virtually every wrestling record&#13;
at the school The business major is a former Salem&#13;
Central graduate and hopes some day to&#13;
possibly be a coach. In Bill's junior year he&#13;
posted a !f-2 record, which included a State&#13;
AAU runner-up at 160 pounds. Coach Koch&#13;
leels that this should he Bill's year to win&#13;
national recognition and possibly a&#13;
championship. Koch has nothing but'&#13;
ursise for Benkstein, "Bill commands&#13;
respect from his teammates in such a&#13;
manner that he is more like a playing&#13;
coach. He has the tenacity and the desire&#13;
to make himself a national champion."&#13;
It could be a long and dreary season for&#13;
the Parkside opponents at Bill's 167 pound&#13;
Spotlight On A Coach&#13;
Dielt Wilson has just returned from a&#13;
lour of the Philippines where he worked&#13;
with their archery program as a member&#13;
~ the University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
coaching team. Wilson was highly commended&#13;
lor the program he laid out lor&#13;
that country. When he left, 16 master&#13;
coaches and 200 instructors had been&#13;
cerhfied 10carry on the archery program.&#13;
DIck Wilson allended Hillsdale College,&#13;
HIllsdale, MICh., and began his archery&#13;
career as a field tesl staf! member lor a&#13;
large archery tackle manufacturer, which&#13;
firm he later jomed, first as an exhibition&#13;
starr archer. then as advertising eonsullant.&#13;
As a toumament archer he was&#13;
MIchIgan tate fIeld Archery ChampIon&#13;
and won over 50 archery tournament&#13;
prne He later ran his own archery&#13;
eqwpmenl shop, the JOined Shakespeare&#13;
Company as Archery DIVision Manager&#13;
Wtlson serves as chairman of the&#13;
Educalion Committees 01 both the&#13;
Prol ional Archery Association and the&#13;
American Archery Council He serves on&#13;
the board 01 directors of lhe Archery&#13;
Manufacturers OrgaOlzatlon He also is&#13;
dlreclor of the ProlesslOnal Archery&#13;
Assoclahon's BuslOess and Instructors&#13;
hoOIs and lS a member 01 the Archery&#13;
Committee 01 the Outdoor Education&#13;
Project. He has served as President 01the&#13;
American Archery Council smce 1967. Mr&#13;
Wilson ISa member of the Outdoor Writers&#13;
Assoclallon. He received the Junior&#13;
Chamber of Commerce OSA award in 1954&#13;
for organizing a selr4supporting summer&#13;
recreation program He also is a charter&#13;
member of the American Camping&#13;
AssocIation, a member ollhe FIshing Hall&#13;
of fame, and ortglnator 01 the PAA. In&#13;
September. he was the principal&#13;
"ceIebrlly" 01 another American Sportsman&#13;
!ilm&#13;
Dlclc. has served as master instructor in&#13;
more than 20 Outdoor Education Project&#13;
Archery Workshops and as a Master instructor&#13;
in Lifetime Sports Master&#13;
Oinlciao Workshops. He is the author 01&#13;
several archery mstructor manuals and ot&#13;
magazme and book articles on archery&#13;
and howhunting. He has appeared in eight&#13;
television and distribution films on archery&#13;
HIS most recent archery nJms,&#13;
"Bowhuntini lor Exotic Deer" and&#13;
"Hunting and Fishing in South America"&#13;
have been seen by millions of television&#13;
VIC"'crS.&#13;
An accomplished bowhunter. Dick&#13;
Wilson has successfully hunted bear, axis&#13;
deer, white4tail and mule deer elk moose&#13;
wild boar and other game' in' severai&#13;
states.. I&#13;
Dick, tus Wile, Ellen, and their lour&#13;
daughters live on Crooked Lake near&#13;
Kalamazoo. Mich.&#13;
~e follow,ingis an article written by Mr.&#13;
Wtlson on hiS faVOrite subject.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Archery means many things to many&#13;
people, but to the citizens 01 the PtulipPIOesArchery&#13;
will become a sport of great&#13;
national pride In lhe very near future.&#13;
Archery wHl be a Gold Medal Sport in&#13;
the 1972OlympICS to be held al MWlich&#13;
Germany This alone should aWake~&#13;
people that the shooting 01 a how and&#13;
arrow is not just for savages and children.&#13;
This IS a game 01 greal skill and the top&#13;
archers 10 the world can shoot six arrows&#13;
In a 14 lOch circle at 90 meters! There has&#13;
been very lilUe archery in the Philippines&#13;
10 lhe past, but a long range program&#13;
develop~d by the National Archery&#13;
Association 01 the Philippines (NAAPl&#13;
WIder the dedicated and able guidance 01&#13;
Mr Ramon Lim, President 01 NAAP, and&#13;
Mr Bernabe G. Martinez, Vice President&#13;
and Executive Secretary 01 NAAP will&#13;
change this sorry fact. '&#13;
Up until .this year, the Philippines has&#13;
lagged behind all other coWltries in this&#13;
greal sport. Bul the pasl two years 01 ellort&#13;
by Mr. Lim and Mr. Martinez has&#13;
blossomed inlo a program thai has Iwo&#13;
primary iloals: first, 10 develop a&#13;
program WIthin the public school system&#13;
thai WIll allow the Philippine children 10&#13;
enJOYa physical activily that is healthful&#13;
as well as enjoyable and a challenge.&#13;
Second, to develop from this grass rools&#13;
base a team of top archers who will go to&#13;
MWlich and bring home the glory of a&#13;
Gold, Silver or Bronze medal to the&#13;
Phllippines.&#13;
To set goals is an easy task, bul implementing&#13;
the necessary lunctions of&#13;
oraalllzatlon to achieve the goals is&#13;
_her matter. The organization set up by&#13;
the NAAP lS that thru the public school&#13;
aystem archery will become a primary&#13;
:tiVily in P.E. classes. From these&#13;
.... will develop archery clubs in the&#13;
barrio schools, as well as the cily schools.&#13;
The archery in these clubs will gain&#13;
competition experience by having tournaments&#13;
(meets) with other schools in&#13;
preparation lor the Interscholastic Meets&#13;
and the National Championships. from&#13;
the winners of these major events, and&#13;
Irom other clubs, an Olympic try-oulevent&#13;
will be held 10 determine lhe teams that&#13;
will represent the Philippines.&#13;
Obviously, a program of such a&#13;
tremendous scale must have (1)&#13;
knowledgeable instructors and (2}&#13;
"'!uipment. In order to satisfy these needs,&#13;
the NAAP has developed a clinic&#13;
(workshop) program that is very intense&#13;
in subject matter. In a period of five days,&#13;
the delegates to one of the NAAP&#13;
workshops learn archery instruction, how&#13;
to make bows and arrows from local&#13;
materials and how to set up clubs and run&#13;
successlul meets. In order to develop the&#13;
broad hase of shooters and 10 help the&#13;
economy of the country, much emphasis is&#13;
given to the making of equipment with&#13;
materials that are readily available&#13;
anywhere in the Philippines instead 01&#13;
importing all 01the equipment. This e!fort&#13;
will help stabilize the economy 01 the&#13;
country yet allow studenls the satislaction&#13;
of creating a how and then using their&#13;
creations successfully. Imported equipment&#13;
will only be necessary lor the very&#13;
advanced archers.&#13;
In addition, the NAAP and the PAAF&#13;
have had the loresighlto engage archery&#13;
experts from America to enrich their&#13;
•knowledge of teaching methods and&#13;
construction of equipment. Workshops will&#13;
he held in the four major areas 01 the&#13;
Philippines and as of this writing&#13;
workshops have already been held at&#13;
Davao City (Mindanao Area) and Cebu&#13;
City (Visayan Area). Other workshops are&#13;
planned lor Quezon City (Luzon Area) in&#13;
the next few weeks. Follow up workshops&#13;
are planned for the next yet4r to assist&#13;
coaches in advanced techniques and to&#13;
assist the delegates who allend lhese&#13;
current clinics in establishing local&#13;
programs.&#13;
Archery is a motor skill activity and&#13;
sport and ~he stature, size or strength of&#13;
the archer IS not a criteria as it is in other&#13;
sports such as baskelball. The smallest&#13;
woman can beat the biggest man in an&#13;
archer~ co~test as it is a game of skill and&#13;
deter~lnalion, not si~e or strength. Many&#13;
prom.ment people enJoy the satisfaction of&#13;
shooting the how and arrow. Most 01 you&#13;
are familiar with Mr. O. D. Corpuz&#13;
Secretary of Education and Directo;&#13;
Gemma Cruz Araneta, lormer Miss international.&#13;
Both are Archery enthusiasts&#13;
and both believe that tpe Philippines c~&#13;
beco.me the international leader in Archery&#13;
In the near future.&#13;
. At the ~~es~nt time, organized archery&#13;
In ~e PhilIppmes consists of a very few&#13;
dedicated people, bul they are people who&#13;
are. working together for a common&#13;
nati~nal cause. With this cooperative&#13;
leeling and the dedication of lbe educators&#13;
who have been, and will be al the&#13;
workshops, Archery will become the Sport&#13;
01 the People.&#13;
Kenosha Bow lers&#13;
ThIs year the Kenosha Intramural&#13;
Bowling League was lormed under the&#13;
direction of Coach Jim Koch.&#13;
.The league howls regularly on Tuesda&#13;
mghts at 9:00 at Sheridan Lanes i~&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The intramural league consists of ei ht&#13;
teams of three persons. The league g&#13;
SlStsof mainly boys, but there is one&#13;
=&#13;
Mark Tullewski&#13;
·Tom Krummel&#13;
George Georgacopolos&#13;
Rich Rosko&#13;
weight class, and with a litlle luck and lot&#13;
of :-"ork, Bill could be Parkside', :in1&#13;
national champion.&#13;
Rangers Lose&#13;
To Loyola 7-4&#13;
The Parkside Ranger Hockey team&#13;
kicked orr the Sportsfesl weekend Thurs-'&#13;
day, December 3, at Wilson Park hosting&#13;
the Loyola Ramblers, losing 7-4.&#13;
Loyola, as they did in the lirst meeting,&#13;
jumped to an early lead with three goals in&#13;
the first period to Parkside's nothing.&#13;
Parkside's net minding was not at its best&#13;
as Loyola got several cheap goals coming&#13;
from long shots just inside the blue line.&#13;
Parkside, sparked by Rich Rosko,&#13;
George Georgacopolos and Kari Liekoski,&#13;
came back with three goals to put the"&#13;
Rangers back in the game after the second&#13;
period, 6-3.&#13;
The third period opened with two players&#13;
in the penalty box, Tom Krumme,&#13;
Parkside's verastile center, and Paul&#13;
Pateras, Loyola defenseman, both&#13;
drawing five-minute majors for fighting at&#13;
18:02 of the second period.&#13;
The game calmed down a bit in the third&#13;
period with Parkside and Loyola each&#13;
add.ing ~ne more goal. Parkside's goal&#13;
came WIth 5:45 remaining when Tom&#13;
Krummel fed winger Mark Lutlewski with&#13;
a perfect pass, and Lullewski banged her&#13;
home to end Parkside's scoring.&#13;
Dale Swenson, Parkside defenseman ,&#13;
Western Michigan&#13;
Wrestling Tournament&#13;
After ?pening the season with home&#13;
duals WIth Michigan Tech and WSU-&#13;
.Ste:rens PolOt, the wrestling team will find&#13;
therr next action in a five team tournamen-t&#13;
at Kalamazoo, Mich. lm;luded in the&#13;
to~rnan:ent with Parkside Will be the host&#13;
UnIVerSItyof W~tern Michigan, Hillsdale&#13;
College: AdrIan College, and the&#13;
Uruverslty of Western Ontario.&#13;
Western Michigan, a member of the&#13;
powerful Mid~American Conference is&#13;
expec~ed to be th~class of the tournam'ent.&#13;
Parksl~e, who will be using primarily the&#13;
sa~e line-up as they did in their opener&#13;
c~ll ~ be a contender. Parkside's line-up&#13;
WI Hugh Gately at 118, Steve Lamont&#13;
at 126, Ken M~rtin at 134, Gary Vincent at&#13;
142, Jeff Jenkins all50, Gene Fox al 158&#13;
Bill Benkstein at 167, Tom Beyer at 177'&#13;
be&#13;
Pau1Pancka at 190,and Mark Barnhill ai&#13;
avy weIght.&#13;
Use the Classifieds&#13;
of girls.&#13;
wiAsth°hiIDhecemberI, three hoys were tied&#13;
g average 190 G Phil Limhach a d' Ti' regg Hansen,&#13;
interesting po' tn. m Alfredson. The&#13;
In In the ra f h' average is that H c~ or 19b&#13;
lied in total' ansen and Limbach are&#13;
one total Pi~,~~,583d ,with Alfredson just&#13;
So In .&#13;
me 01 tbe individual h' hs follows: 19 are as&#13;
690~~h~r~ame series: Tim Alfredson,&#13;
636. bach, 563; Gregg Hansen,&#13;
High single game: Tim Alfredson .&#13;
Gregg Hansen 255' Ph'l Li b ' 258, .' ' I mach, 237.&#13;
played his best game 01 the season ...&#13;
cording to player-coach Bill Weslerlund.&#13;
Westerlund commented alter the game,&#13;
"I've never seen Dale play so aggressively&#13;
and heads-up as he did tonight."&#13;
Parkside's next home game will be willi&#13;
Johnson Wax Sunday, December t3 It&#13;
Wilson Park arena. '&#13;
Scoring&#13;
G A&#13;
1 1&#13;
o I&#13;
1 •&#13;
1 1&#13;
Kari Liekowki I I&#13;
The viedo tape of the game will be sboIi&#13;
at the Student Union Tuesday, Decemblr&#13;
8, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
In Italy,&#13;
everybody&#13;
else's grass&#13;
looks greener. ..&#13;
Th~i(ds, Th$OOSaod&#13;
. Th3talians&#13;
rRI., ut:~_ IIIH 1:1:00p ,M.&#13;
Activities Building&#13;
Porkside &amp; Wisconsin ID.&#13;
-.1\oolQo.og1"""t.Pl£TllOGV\Ilrs-TIlE'-'OS'THElHl .... nt:1\I;.IOII' ~~=lrdu~~~=~=.:::'-&#13;
s&#13;
Save a little bread each week·&#13;
RACINE SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIAtiON&#13;
Down~own Office&#13;
400 WISCONSIN /IVENU£&#13;
West Side Office NUE&#13;
5100 WASHINGTON AVE&#13;
Spotlight On A Coach Mr. Wrestli~g Bill Benkstein,=' ........ ..._. ...&#13;
rch ry m n.s many thing to many&#13;
pl • but to ~ citizen of the Philipp&#13;
n rch ry w11l come a port of great&#13;
national prid in the very near future.&#13;
Arch ry v. 111 a Gold '.\tedal port in&#13;
th 1972 Ol)mpi to be held at tunich&#13;
rm ny. Thi · alone hould awake~&#13;
opl th t th hooting of a bow and&#13;
not ju t for \·ages and children.&#13;
m of great kill and the top rch m the world can shoot ix arrows&#13;
m 14 Inch circle at meter ! There has&#13;
n ry litU arch ry in the Philippines&#13;
m th I , but long range program&#13;
d v l?P. d by the . 'ational Archery&#13;
oc1atton of the Philippines (NAAP)&#13;
under the dedicated and able guidance of&#13;
tr. Ramon Lim, Pre ident of NAAP, and&#13;
tr. Bernabe G. 1artinez, Vice President&#13;
nd Exl'Cutive ecretary of NAAP will change thi orry fact. '&#13;
P until _thi year, the Philippines has&#13;
la ed hind all other countries in this&#13;
great port. But the pa t two years of effort&#13;
by Mr. Llm and Mr. Martinez has&#13;
blo omed into a program that has two&#13;
primary goal : First, to develop a&#13;
progra_m within the public school system&#13;
th~t will allow the Philippine children to&#13;
en.)Oy a phy ical activity that is healthful&#13;
as wen as enjoyable and a challenge.&#13;
Second, to develop from this grass roots&#13;
base a team of top archers who wilJ go to&#13;
Munich and bring home the glory of a&#13;
Gold, Silver or Bronze medal to the&#13;
Philippines.&#13;
To set goals is an easy task, but im- plementing the necessary functions of&#13;
organization to achieve the goals is&#13;
another ma!ter. The organization set up by&#13;
the NAAP ts that thru the public school&#13;
ystem archery will become a primary&#13;
:ivity i_n P.E. classes. From these&#13;
w,11 develop archery clubs in the&#13;
Bill Benkstein is in a unique but enviab~e&#13;
position for an athlete in any sport - he 1s&#13;
beginning his third season as a team&#13;
captain. The captaincy ~s usually a _&#13;
position reserved for a semor. However,&#13;
Bill has asserted himself the past three&#13;
seasons and emerged as the team leader.&#13;
Bill is more than just the leader, he is the&#13;
number one point getter on the team. He&#13;
was a regular from day one at Parkside,&#13;
and holds virtually every wrestling record&#13;
at the school&#13;
The business major is a former Salem&#13;
Central graduate and hopes some day to&#13;
possibly be a coach. In Bill's junior year he&#13;
posted a 9-2 record, which included a State&#13;
AAU runner-up at 160 pounds. Coach Koch&#13;
feels that this should be Bill's year to win&#13;
national recognition and possibly a&#13;
championship. Koch has nothing but'&#13;
praise for Benkstein, "Bill commands&#13;
respect from his tea'.mmates in such a&#13;
manner that he is more like a playing&#13;
coach. He has the tenacity and the desire&#13;
to make himself a national champion."&#13;
It could be a long and dreary season for&#13;
the Parkside opponents at Bill's 167 pound&#13;
weight class_, and with a little luck and a lot&#13;
of work, Bill could be Parkside's f&#13;
national champion. 11'51&#13;
barrio schools, as well as the city schools.&#13;
The archery in these clubs will gain&#13;
competition experience by having tournam&#13;
nts (meets) with other schools in&#13;
preparation for the Interscholastic Meets&#13;
and the 'ational Championships. From&#13;
the winners of these major events, and&#13;
from other clubs, an Olympic try-out event&#13;
will be held to determine the teams that&#13;
v.ill repre en! the Philippines.&#13;
Obviou ly, a program of such a&#13;
tremendous scale must have C 1)&#13;
knowledgeable instr11ctors and ( 2l&#13;
equipment. In order to satisfy these needs&#13;
the 'AAP ha developed a clini~&#13;
(work hop) program that is very intense&#13;
in ubJect matter. In a period of five days,&#13;
the delegates to one of the NAAP&#13;
workshops learn archery instruction, how&#13;
to make bows and arrows from local&#13;
materials and how to set up clubs and run&#13;
Rangers Lose&#13;
To Loyola 7-4&#13;
uccessful meets. In order to develop the&#13;
broad ba e of shooters and to help the&#13;
economy of the country, much emphasis is&#13;
given to the making of equipment with&#13;
materials that are readily available&#13;
anywhere in the Philippines instead of&#13;
importing all of the equipment. This effort&#13;
will help stabilize the economy of the&#13;
country yet allow students the satisfaction&#13;
of creating a bow and then using their&#13;
creations successfully. Imported equipment&#13;
will only be necessary for the very&#13;
advanced archers.&#13;
In addition, the NAAP and the PAAF&#13;
have had the foresight to engage archery&#13;
experts from America to enrich their&#13;
_knowledge of teaching methods and&#13;
construction of equipment. Worksho~ will&#13;
be held in the four major areas of the&#13;
Philippines and as of this writing&#13;
worksho~ have already been held at&#13;
Davao City (Mindanao Area) and Cebu&#13;
City C Visayan Areal. Other workshops are&#13;
planned for Quezon City (Luzon Area) in&#13;
the next few weeks. Follow up workshops&#13;
are planned for the next yea,r to assist&#13;
coaches in advanced techniques and to&#13;
assist the delegates who attend these&#13;
current clinics in establishing local&#13;
programs.&#13;
Archery is a motor skill activity and&#13;
sport and ~he stature, size or strength or&#13;
the archer ts not a criteria as it is in other&#13;
sports such as basketball. The smallest&#13;
woman can beat the biggest man in an&#13;
archery co~test as it is a game of skill and&#13;
deter~ntnalton, not size or strength. Many&#13;
prom_ment people enjoy the satisfaction of&#13;
shooting the bow and arrow. Most of you&#13;
are familiar with Mr. o. D. Corpuz&#13;
Secretary of Education and Directo;&#13;
Gem~a Cruz Araneta, former Miss International.&#13;
Both are Archery enthusiasts&#13;
and both believe that the Philippines c~&#13;
bec~me the international leader in Arch- ery m the near future.&#13;
. At the ~~es~nt time, organized archery&#13;
m t~e Phihppmes consists or a very few&#13;
dedicated people, but they are people who&#13;
are. working together for a common&#13;
nati~nal cause. With this cooperative&#13;
feelmg and the dedication of the educators&#13;
who have been, and will be at th&#13;
workshops, Archery will become the Spor~&#13;
of the People.&#13;
K~nosha Bowlers&#13;
Th~s year the Kenosha Intramural&#13;
~wh~ League was formed under the&#13;
direction of Coach Jim Koch&#13;
. The league bowls regularly. on Tuesda&#13;
rughts at 9:00 at Sheridan Lanes i~&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
The intramural league consists of eight&#13;
~ms of three persons. The league con&#13;
StSts of mainly boys, but there is one tea~&#13;
The Parkside Ranger Hockey team&#13;
kicked off the Sportsfest weekend Thurs-·&#13;
day, December 3, at Wilson Park hosting&#13;
the Loyola Ramblers, losing 7-4.&#13;
Loyola, as they did in the first meeting,&#13;
jumped to an early lead with three goals in&#13;
the first period to Parkside's nothing.&#13;
Parkside's net minding was not at its best&#13;
as Loyola got several cheap goals coming&#13;
from long shots just inside the blue line.&#13;
Parkside, sparked by Rich Rosko,&#13;
George Georgacopolos and Kari Llekoski,&#13;
came back with three goals to put the'&#13;
Rangers back in the game after the second&#13;
period, 6-3.&#13;
The third period opened with two players&#13;
in the penalty box, Tom Krumme,&#13;
Park.side's verastile center, and Paul&#13;
Pateras, Loyola defenseman, both&#13;
drawing five-minute majors for fighting at&#13;
18: 02 of the second period.&#13;
The game calmed down a bit in the third&#13;
peri_od with Parkside and Loyola each&#13;
addmg ~ne more goal. Parkside's goal&#13;
came with 5:45 remaining when Tom&#13;
Krummel fed winger Mark Lutlewski with&#13;
a perfect pass, and Lutlewski banged her&#13;
home to end Parkside's scoring.&#13;
Dale Swenson, Parkside defenseman&#13;
Western Michigan&#13;
Wrestling Tournament&#13;
.&#13;
After ?pening the season wfrh home&#13;
duals Wt~ Michigan Tech and WSU-&#13;
_Steyens Pom~, the wrestling team will find&#13;
their next action in a five team tournamen·t&#13;
at Kalamaz&lt;&gt;?, Mich. In9luded in the&#13;
to~rna1'.1ent with Parkside will be the host&#13;
umvers1ty of Western Michigan Hillsdale&#13;
Co!lege_. Adrian College, 'and the&#13;
Uruvers1ty of Western Ontario.&#13;
Western Michigan, a member of the&#13;
powerful Mid-American Conference is&#13;
expec~ed to be th~ class of the tournam'ent.&#13;
Parkst~e, who will be using primarily the&#13;
same !me-up as they did in their opener&#13;
could be a contender Parks'd , 1. '&#13;
ill be · 1 es me-up w Hugh Gately at 118 Steve Lamont&#13;
at 126, Ken M~rtin at 134, Gary Vincent at&#13;
1~, Jeff Jen_kins at 150, Gene Fox at 158&#13;
Bill Ben~tem at 167, Tom Beyer at 177'&#13;
h&#13;
Paul Par1~ka at 190, and Mark Barnhill at&#13;
eavy weight.&#13;
Use the Classifieds&#13;
of girls.&#13;
wi Asth °.:, Dhecember 1, three boys were tied&#13;
mg average 190 G&#13;
Phil L. ba ' • regg Hansen&#13;
im ch and Ti Al , interesting point . ; fredson. The&#13;
average is that H m e race for high&#13;
tied in total pins 4a~n ~nd Limbach are&#13;
one total pin behu'.id. ' with Alfredson just&#13;
Some of the individual h. hs&#13;
follows: ig are as&#13;
H'gh 1 three-game series· Tim Alf eds&#13;
690; Phil Limbach 563. · G r on,&#13;
636. ' , regg Hansen,&#13;
High single game: Tim Alfreds&#13;
Gregg Hansen 255· Phil Ll on, 256;&#13;
.' • mbach, 237.&#13;
play~ his best game of the season accordmg&#13;
to player-coach Bill Westerlund,&#13;
~~terlund commented after the gamt,&#13;
I ve never seen Dale play so aggressively&#13;
and heads-up as he did tonight."&#13;
Parkside's next home game will be ~ith&#13;
Johnson Wax Sunday, December 13, at&#13;
Wilson Park arena.&#13;
Scoring&#13;
G A&#13;
Mark Tutlewski&#13;
·Tom Krummel&#13;
George Georgacopolos&#13;
Rich Rosko&#13;
1 I&#13;
0 2&#13;
1 0&#13;
1 I&#13;
Kari Liekowki 1 J&#13;
The viedo tape of the game will be shown&#13;
at the Student Union Tuesday, December&#13;
8, at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
In Italy, everybody else's grass looks greener. ..&#13;
TuIBi(ds, Tu!Beesand&#13;
· Tu3talians r'RI., Ut:C. 11 IH ij:00 P.M.&#13;
Activities Building&#13;
Parkside &amp; Wisconsin JD. ~KloclmDIQS#IISPIETIIOGlRMrS"Tlf:BRJS,M9WfJIJ1&gt;f&#13;
~~~ ..!-:!! ::. ~= ::.::::::.::'--&#13;
Save a little bread each week·&#13;
RACINE SAVINGS&#13;
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION&#13;
Downtown Office&#13;
400 WISCONSIN /J, VENUE&#13;
West Side Office NUE&#13;
5100 WASHINGTON AVE&#13;
-&#13;
Blow&#13;
Your Horn'&#13;
The Parkside Players will present the&#13;
Neil Simon comedy "Come Blow Your&#13;
Horn" at 8:15 p.m. on Friday and Saturday,&#13;
Dec. 11 and 12, in the Racine Campus&#13;
Badger Room.&#13;
General admission tickets are $1.50 and&#13;
student tickets are $1. Tickets are&#13;
available at the door.&#13;
Members of the cast are Michael Kragh,&#13;
Racine, Mitch Herbert, Kenosha, Katie&#13;
Hinke, Racine, Jon Christiansen, Racine,&#13;
,Jan Hall, Salem, Marsha Radewan,&#13;
Racine, and Terry Kollman, Kenosha.&#13;
Richard H. Carrington, assistant&#13;
professor, communication, will direct the&#13;
pray.&#13;
"Come Blow Your Horn" opened in New&#13;
York on Feb. 22, 1961, with Hal March&#13;
playing the lead.&#13;
SOUL DANCE&#13;
The Black Student Union is sponsoring a&#13;
dance on Saturday, December 12, at the&#13;
Student Activities building. Tbe dance will&#13;
be from 9:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. and will&#13;
feature the "Marvelous Mints". This&#13;
group consists of ten members who play&#13;
the latest hits of popular soul performers .&#13;
Admission will be $1.50 and is open to all&#13;
Parkside students. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin J.D. required.&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
Band In Concert&#13;
The Parbide C&lt;lncert Band and Sym.&#13;
phony Orchestra will Ift48It a jotnt&#13;
"""""rt at 4 p.m. on SUnday, Dec. 13, in&#13;
Raeme's Horlick high sdlool audilArium.&#13;
The band is undo.- lbe baton of Ge&lt;qe&#13;
Reynolds, associate professor of music&#13;
and the or&lt;:bestra will be cmducted by&#13;
Harry Lantz, also an associate professor of&#13;
musIC.&#13;
The Concert Band will play Fervent Is&#13;
My Longing. Chorale Fugue in G minor by&#13;
J. S. Bach, a Jubilant Overture by Alfnd&#13;
Reed, Solo de Concoun by Henri Rabaud&#13;
with Philip Smith as clarinet soIo.. t, The&#13;
WhitePeacodt by Charles Grilfes, Festive&#13;
Overture Op. 1I6 by Sh05takovich and The&#13;
Southerner March by RusseI1 Aiexandet'.&#13;
saturday, Dec 19 • Hohda y: am lInaa&#13;
recess begins&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
L... " ........&#13;
~i:#..~&#13;
626 nth 51. K.".....&#13;
Consider The&#13;
North-South Program&#13;
Are yOUinterested in attending an all- . .&#13;
black University? . The University of this app~eciation of differences to other&#13;
w~ Parkslde IS one of tbe Northern groups, t.e. the older generation&#13;
Univ.... ities which participate in the Parkside students parlicipa&amp;g in lbe&#13;
NortII-8OUthStudent Exchange Program. program will be attending North Car li&#13;
'[1Ie program is designed on both an In- Central University (NCCU) in ~ na&#13;
leIT.cial and intercultural experience North Carol.ina during the seco~d&#13;
inteaded to expand student personal semester.oflhis academic year. NCCU is.&#13;
bOri%OOS, sli'."ulate intellectural growth small hberal arts college with a&#13;
and afford mdiv.dual students an op- predominately residential student&#13;
rWnityto contribute in a personal· way jlOpuiation. The UWP students will be&#13;
~ the solution of major contemporary living in the resIdence units with tbe NCCU&#13;
blems. students. UW Parkside Exchange students&#13;
p1luw students have beeu participating in WIll regtster and pay tuition at Parkside,&#13;
the North-South Exchange Program since thus saving student out-of-state tuition&#13;
11166.Comments made by Wisconsin payments..&#13;
studentsabout the program are as follows: . Students mterested in the Nortb-South&#13;
For me, the most valuable aspect of the Exchange Program should contact Isom&#13;
p1lgram was that Ilearned a litlle of what Fearn or Jewel Echelbarger through the&#13;
it is to be Black and live in a White world. 'Office of Student Affairs before Friday,&#13;
I made many new friends who helped me December. 11. Parkside students paropen&#13;
my eyes to racial problems. The fact ticipants will be selected before Christmas&#13;
that I was brought out of·a situation of vacation.&#13;
hear·sayinto a situation of reality was the ' Com e&#13;
most valuahle ' aspect (to me) of the&#13;
....,gram ... f tried to be myself'-1 tried&#13;
to helppeople understand that one must he&#13;
judged and judge others on an individual&#13;
basis not on racial, regional,&#13;
denominational or any other basis. U I&#13;
succeededin this course, then this was my&#13;
most valuable contribution.&#13;
The most valuable part of the program&#13;
was that I developmed an emotional and&#13;
personal understanding of black America&#13;
which I previously understood only in&#13;
theorY.&#13;
... the oportunity for a person to grow&#13;
inthe understanding of himself. It opened&#13;
me and helped me realize my capabilities&#13;
and draw-backs within my personality -&#13;
!rombere Ican learn to grow. . . . This to&#13;
me, was the most valuable aspect of the&#13;
p'0gram - because of its challenge ...&#13;
the greatest contribution any exchange&#13;
student can give is feedback - spread the&#13;
word. Communicate your experience to as&#13;
manypeople as can be turned on by a fivebour&#13;
non-stop dissertation - I've tried&#13;
doing this and bope I've contributed&#13;
lOIIlethingby working on our own exhange&#13;
JlrOtlram.&#13;
rve nearly finished my college career.&#13;
Evaluating these last years has made me&#13;
..... tlon the extent of value much of my&#13;
course work and school activities. This&#13;
_ter I spent on the exchange is one&#13;
II1IDg Iknow to be invaluable, allowing me&#13;
III mature in some areas that may have&#13;
olIIerwiae required years, giving me rich&#13;
friendships that crossed some cultural (if&#13;
lOIIlewhatimaginary) lines, and making&#13;
me more sensitive to continue growing and&#13;
Ieoming. Ufe is also more painful,&#13;
clemanding and hard to face at times&#13;
beca\lle of some ways my eyes were&#13;
opened. This program allows individual&#13;
interaction and natural "4give and take" is&#13;
• bope for closer brotherhood - let's&#13;
challenge more students with its&#13;
possibilities.&#13;
I realized that differences between&#13;
groups of people are beautiful and funcu.al.&#13;
Certain behaviors and attitudes are&#13;
more adaptive to certain styles of living&#13;
than are others, i.e. white middle-class&#13;
values are not the best for everyone ... I&#13;
learned to appreciate the differences in&#13;
people ratber than to judge them by my&#13;
person values. I've since learned to extenn&#13;
THE ROCKER!&#13;
- - -&#13;
100-FM!&#13;
Radne Kenosha Radio!&#13;
- - -&#13;
24 HOURS!&#13;
RIGHT ON!&#13;
Consider The&#13;
North-South Program&#13;
Are you interested in attending an all- . .&#13;
black Universi~y? . The University of this app~eciation of &lt;Iµferences to other&#13;
WjsCOllSin Parks1~e 1s one _o~ the N~rthern groups, _1.e. the older generation.&#13;
universities which part1C1pate m the Parkside_ students participating in the&#13;
North-South Student Exchange Program. program will be attending North Car lina&#13;
nie program is designed on both an in- Central University (NCCU) in Dur~m&#13;
terracial and intercultural experience North Caro~ina during the second&#13;
intended to expand student personal semester_ of this academic year. NCCU is 8&#13;
tiorizons, stimulate intellectural growth small ~1beral arts college with a&#13;
and afford individual students an op- predo~mately residential student&#13;
rtunity to contribute ~n a personal way ~pul~tion. Th~ uwP students will be&#13;
fa the solution of maJor contemporary livmg m the residence units with the NCCU&#13;
blems. s~den~. UW Parkside Exchange students&#13;
proUW students have been participating in will regis_ter and pay tuition at Parkside,&#13;
the North-South Exchange Program since thus saving student out-of-state tuition&#13;
l966, Comments made by Wisconsin payments. .&#13;
students about the program are as follows: students mterested in the North-South&#13;
For me, the most valuable aspect of the Exchange Program should contact Isom&#13;
program was that I learned a little of what Fearn or Jewel Echelbarger through the&#13;
it is to be Black and live in a white world. ·Office of Student Affairs before Friday&#13;
I made many new friends who helped me J?e_cember. 11. Parkside students par:&#13;
open my eyes to racial problems. The fact ticipa~ts will be selected before Christmas&#13;
that I was brought out of a situation of vacation.&#13;
hear-say into a situation of reality was the 'CO me BI O W&#13;
most valuable · aspect (to me) of the&#13;
program . . . I tried to be myself - I tried&#13;
to help people understand that one must be&#13;
judged and judge others ?n an indi~idual&#13;
basis not on racial, regional,&#13;
denominational or any other basis. If I&#13;
succeeded in this course, then this was my&#13;
most valuable contribution.&#13;
The most valuable part of the program&#13;
was that I developmed an emotional and&#13;
personal understanding of black America&#13;
which I previously understood only in&#13;
theory.&#13;
... the oportunity for a person to grow&#13;
in the understanding of himself. It opened&#13;
me and helped me realize my capabilities&#13;
and draw-backs within my personality -&#13;
from here I can learn to grow . . . . This to&#13;
me, was the most valuable aspect of the&#13;
program - because of its challenge . . .&#13;
the greatest contribution any exchange&#13;
student can give is feedback - spread the&#13;
word. Communicate your experience to as&#13;
many people as can be turned on by a fivehour&#13;
non-stop dissertation - I've tried&#13;
doing this and hope I've contributed&#13;
something by working on our own exhange&#13;
irogram. .&#13;
I've nearly finished my college career.&#13;
Evaluating these last years has made me&#13;
~tion the extent of value much of my&#13;
course work and school activities. This&#13;
aernester I spent on the exchange is one&#13;
~ I know to be invaluable, allowing me&#13;
to mature in some areas that may have&#13;
otherwise required years, giving me rich&#13;
friendships that crossed some cultural (if&#13;
somewhat imaginary) lines, and making&#13;
me more sensitive to continue growing and&#13;
learning. Life is also more painful,&#13;
demanding and hard to face at times&#13;
because of some ways my eyes were&#13;
opened. This program allows individual&#13;
interaction and natural ~give and take" is&#13;
a hope for closer brotherhood - let's&#13;
challenge more students with its&#13;
possibilities.&#13;
I realized that differences between&#13;
groups of people are beautiful and functional.&#13;
Certain behaviors and attitudes are&#13;
more adaptive to certain styles of living&#13;
than are others, i.e. white middle-class&#13;
values are not the best for everyone . . . I&#13;
learned to appreciate the differences in&#13;
people rather than to judge them by my&#13;
person values. I've since learned to extenn&#13;
Your Horn'&#13;
The Parkside Players will present the&#13;
Neil Simon comedy "Come Blow Your&#13;
Horn" at 8:15 p.m. on Friday and Saturday,&#13;
Dec. 11 and 12, in the Racine Campus&#13;
Badger Room.&#13;
General admission tickets are $1.50 and&#13;
student tickets are $1. Tickets are avAilable at the door.&#13;
M~mber~ of the cast are Michael Kragh,&#13;
Racme, Mitch Herbert, Kenosha, Katie&#13;
Hinke, Racine, Jon Christiansen, Racine,&#13;
_Jan Hall, Salem, Marsha Radewan,&#13;
Racine, and Terry Kollman, Kenosha.&#13;
Richard H. Carrington, assistant&#13;
professor, communication, will direct the&#13;
play.&#13;
"Come Blow Your Horn" opened in New&#13;
York on Feb. 22, 1961, with Hal March&#13;
playing the lead.&#13;
SOUL DANCE&#13;
The Black Student Union is sponsoring a&#13;
dance on Saturday, December 12, at the&#13;
Student Activities building. The dance will&#13;
be from 9:00 p.m. to 1 :00 a.m. and will&#13;
feature the "Marvelous Mints". This&#13;
group consists of ten members who play&#13;
the latest hits of popular soul performers.&#13;
Admission will be $1.50 and is open to all&#13;
Parkside students. Parkside and&#13;
Wisconsin I.D. reQuired.&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
Drinks 25c For Th• Ladies&#13;
(Excl•di1tg Top Sftolf}&#13;
LIVE MUSIC&#13;
Now Appearing&#13;
IEYtrv Mon. and Tues. lowlint NIM DRINKS v, PRICE TO ALL&#13;
UNIFORMED BOWLERS&#13;
Zodiak&#13;
Band In Concert&#13;
The Parkside Concert Band and Symphony&#13;
Orchestra will present a joint&#13;
concert at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. 13, in&#13;
Racine's Horli high school uditorium.&#13;
The band is under the baton ol George&#13;
Reynolds, associate prof r ol m ic&#13;
and the orchestra \I.ill be cooducted b)&#13;
~ Lantz, also an associate professor of&#13;
music.&#13;
Pl t Tt IIJ&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
The Concert Band will pla) Fen·erit I&#13;
My Longing· Clorale Fugue in G minor b&#13;
J. S Bach, a Jubilant Overture b) Alfred&#13;
Reed, Solo de Concours b) Henri Rabaud&#13;
with Philip Smith as clarinet soloi t, The&#13;
White Peacock by Charles Griff , Festive&#13;
Overture Op. by Shostako, 'ch and The&#13;
Southerner arch by Russell Alexander.&#13;
Larpst Seltctt ..&#13;
6?6 S6th St. ktftOS a&#13;
THE ROCKER!&#13;
- - -&#13;
100-FM!&#13;
Racine Kenosha Radio! - -&#13;
24 HOURS!&#13;
RIGHT ON! &#13;
Criteria For Personnel Reviews \ I&#13;
therrnore 'it is probably unfair to the&#13;
man in hi's professional development to&#13;
continue him at an institution whose&#13;
program and resources caMot support&#13;
his special interests. .&#13;
8. Age and career-change factors: while&#13;
no importance attaches to age as such,&#13;
an individual's age in ~lati.on to&#13;
productivity and-or re-directIon of&#13;
career are of consequence. We f!lust&#13;
estimate the chances of any. given&#13;
person attaining distinction In hIS&#13;
special field. If the individual has spent&#13;
20 years as a ranch hand befo~e&#13;
becoming a zen accelerator,. hIS&#13;
prospects of achieving distinction in the&#13;
latter occupation are greatly reduced.&#13;
9. Time in graduate study: as a special&#13;
instance of NO.8 above, and. a~.an excellent&#13;
predictor of future productivity.&#13;
consider how much time elapsed&#13;
between the B.A. and the Ph.D. If over ,r~-----------=&#13;
five years, the evidence strongly&#13;
suggests that the chances for&#13;
distinction are reduced.&#13;
10. Prognosis: the fundamental point is the&#13;
prognosis for future performance. What&#13;
we must judge is the prohability that the&#13;
individual will bring distinction to&#13;
himself and to Parkside. If the.&#13;
assessment based on Ute above factors&#13;
is negative, then separation is indicated.&#13;
At this time and at this stage of&#13;
institutional _development we cannot&#13;
avoid making rigorous judgements of&#13;
"staff suitability arid quality.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
should be cOunted, but it cannot substitute&#13;
lor teaching effectiveness and&#13;
scholarly productivity. Furthermore,&#13;
the quality of the person's institutional&#13;
service must be demonstrated. Membership&#13;
on committees is not of i~ ~&#13;
proof 01 contribution. The question is,&#13;
what measurable constructive contribution&#13;
did the individual make?&#13;
September 30, 1970&#13;
TO- Division Chairmen.&#13;
Division Executive Committees&#13;
FROM: Jobn S. Harris,&#13;
Vice CbanceUor for&#13;
Academic Alfairs&#13;
RE: CRITERIA FOR&#13;
PERSONNEL REVIEWS&#13;
/&#13;
\&#13;
4. Community service: this can be considered&#13;
if it is germane to the faculty&#13;
member's field of specialization.&#13;
General community activities such as&#13;
church. service club, or other such&#13;
involvments do nol count in professional&#13;
evaluations.&#13;
In carrying out annual performanc ..&#13;
reviews 01probationary laculty members,&#13;
consIderation should he gIven to the&#13;
followi,. lactors: There is no importance&#13;
attached to the order)&#13;
Teaching: unless there i evidence to --&#13;
the contrary, we will assume at least&#13;
minimal adequac)' in teaching performance&#13;
OccasIonally, there will be&#13;
trong direct evidence of 10 lructional&#13;
up rlodt)' or Inadequacy. Such&#13;
viden hould be taken mto accounL&#13;
We -':11110 time come to an improved&#13;
procedur for evaluating teaching&#13;
pertormance. but for new 10 the absence&#13;
of strong direct evidence we will&#13;
8. urn mtnimal adequacy and nol&#13;
a.. ign thiS factor undue wight,&#13;
THE&#13;
DAISY • PIPES&#13;
• PAPERS&#13;
.·eELLS&#13;
• IN~ENS~&#13;
• CANDLES&#13;
5. Market factors: it is our obligation to&#13;
assemble the best qualified faculty that&#13;
our budget can afford. What money can&#13;
buy varies from time to time. Today's&#13;
market is a buyer'S market in most&#13;
fields. We must therefore assess some&#13;
of our present probationary staff in light&#13;
of the possibility 01 finding hetterqualified&#13;
replacements. This is&#13;
necessary from an institutional quality&#13;
and Institutional responsibility standpoint,&#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. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
.'&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24e&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
SSe&#13;
2 R arch and Publication: the degree&#13;
and kInd of holarl)· production to he&#13;
expected. depends on the discipline.&#13;
Faculty at UW campuses are expected&#13;
to producuve chola rs In evaluating&#13;
scholarly ment, quality should count&#13;
mere h avol)' than quantity. but both&#13;
factors should be taken into account. In&#13;
a essmg quality direct appraisal 01 the&#13;
published Item by UW-Parkslde staff is&#13;
e ential Indirect appraisal (peer&#13;
group review or articles submitted for&#13;
journal publication, (or example) can&#13;
be given considerable weight Attention&#13;
should be paid to the closeness and&#13;
rigorousness of peer group review;&#13;
articles published in journals are more&#13;
rigorously appraised and edited than&#13;
papers presented at meetings or&#13;
published in proceedings, and therefore&#13;
are enhtled to greater proportional&#13;
weight. The standIng 01 the journal in its&#13;
academic field. or the scholarly&#13;
reputalion of 8 press, in the case of a&#13;
book, can also be taken into account in&#13;
indirectly assessing the quality of a&#13;
published item.&#13;
6. Program coverage factors: if the individual's&#13;
area of specialization is&#13;
already adequately covered by another&#13;
memher of the faculty (perhaps a&#13;
tenured person of higher qualification),&#13;
then separation may be indicated. Wise&#13;
allocation of limited resources demands&#13;
that these resources he spent optimally&#13;
for the most needed and appropriate&#13;
personnel.&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
In addition, consider especially the&#13;
matter of completion of the Ph.D'- All&#13;
faculty are hired in the expectation that&#13;
the degree will he completed if indeed it&#13;
is not already in hand. Hence, if the&#13;
person has not yet completed the&#13;
degree. even if he is yet in his first year&#13;
of appointment, a searching look should&#13;
be taken and separation may very well&#13;
he indicated.&#13;
NORTH &amp; SpuTH SHERIDAN ROilD&#13;
-KENOSH-A -&#13;
FAMQUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROIlED&#13;
1 STEAKS&#13;
7. Relation to the Parkside special&#13;
mission: review should consider the&#13;
degree to which the individual's&#13;
specialized competence rela tes to the&#13;
mission of the campus. II the specialty&#13;
is remote froin the mission, the institutional-&#13;
interest suffers. Fur3&#13;
Insutunceal service: contribution to the&#13;
Institution in terms of committe- work&#13;
J &amp; J TAPE CENTER T&#13;
H&#13;
E Good Lookin' Pants Co.&#13;
329 MAIN STREET&#13;
LPS - 8 TRACK, CASSETTE &amp;&#13;
REEL TO REEL TAPES;&#13;
POSTERS, CAR PLAYERS, STEREOS&#13;
JEANS AND PANTS&#13;
ARE WHAT WE SELL&#13;
We have the largest selection of&#13;
tapes in the Racine-Kenosha area. We&#13;
have all the new records and tapes&#13;
before anyone.&#13;
"We also handle Slack Lights and Fixtures"&#13;
2056 Taylor Avenue&#13;
Racirie&#13;
~LY ONE wan BUCK PER PURCHASE&#13;
OPENING SOON&#13;
IN DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Criteria For Personnel Reviews I&#13;
pt rnber 30, 1970&#13;
2&#13;
should be counted, but it cannot substitute&#13;
for teaching effectiveness and&#13;
scholar!} productivity. Furthermore,&#13;
the quality or the person's institutional&#13;
sen.ice must be demonstrated. Membership&#13;
on committees is not of itself a&#13;
proof of. cootribution. The question is,&#13;
what measurable constructive contribution&#13;
did the individual make?&#13;
4. Community service: this can be conidered&#13;
if it is germane to the faculty&#13;
member's field of specialization. General community activities such as&#13;
church, service club, or other such&#13;
involvments do not count in professional&#13;
evaluatioru..&#13;
s. 1arket factors: it is our obligation to a· emble the best qualified faculty that&#13;
our budget can afford. What money can&#13;
bu) vari · from time to time. Today's&#13;
market i a buyer's market in most&#13;
Cields. We must therefore assess some&#13;
of our pr . nt probationary staff in light&#13;
of the po ~ibility of finding better- qualifi ed replacements. This is n ry Crom an institutional quality&#13;
and in. litutional respon ibility standpoml&#13;
&#13;
6. Program coverage factors: if the indiv&#13;
dual' area of pecialization is&#13;
already adequately covered by another&#13;
member of the faculty (perhaps a&#13;
tenured person of higher qualification),&#13;
then paration may be indicated. Wise&#13;
allocation of limited resources demands&#13;
that the. e resources be spent optimally&#13;
for the most needed and appropriate&#13;
persoMel.&#13;
In addition, consider especially · the&#13;
matter of completion of the Ph.D: All&#13;
faculty are hired in the expectation that&#13;
the degree will be completed if indeed it&#13;
is not already in hand. Hence, if the&#13;
person has not yet completed the&#13;
degree, even if he is yet in his first year&#13;
of appointment, a searching look should •&#13;
be taken and separation may very well&#13;
be indicated.&#13;
3. Institutional rvice: contribution to the&#13;
institution in term of committeo work&#13;
7. Rel a lion to the Parkside special&#13;
mission: review should consider the&#13;
degree to which the individual's&#13;
specialized competence relates to the&#13;
mission of. the campus. If the specialty&#13;
is remote froin the mission, the ins&#13;
ti tu tion&lt;! 1 · interest suffers. FurJ&#13;
&amp; J TAPE CENTER&#13;
LPS - 8 TRACK, CASSETTE &amp;&#13;
REEL TO REEL TAPES;&#13;
POSTERS, CAR PLAYERS, STEREOS&#13;
We have the largest selection of&#13;
tapes in the Racine-Kenosha area. We&#13;
have all the new records and tapes&#13;
before anyone.&#13;
"We also handle Black Lights and Fixtures"&#13;
2056 Taylor Avenue&#13;
Racirie&#13;
thermore ' it is probably unfair to the&#13;
man in hi~ professional d~vel_opment to&#13;
continue him at an institution whose&#13;
program and resources cannot support&#13;
his special interests.&#13;
8. Age and career-change factors: while&#13;
no importance attaches to age a~ such,&#13;
an individual's age in ~elati_on to&#13;
productivity and-or re-direction of&#13;
career are of consequence. We ~ust&#13;
estimate the chances of any. giv~n&#13;
person attaining distinction m his&#13;
special field. If the individual has spent&#13;
20 years as a ranch hand befo~e&#13;
becoming a zen accelerator, his&#13;
prospects of achieving distin~tion in the&#13;
latter occupation are greatly reduced.&#13;
· use Classifieds&#13;
I&#13;
• CANDLES&#13;
9. Time in graduate study: as a special&#13;
instance of No. 8 above, and_ as_ an excellent&#13;
predictor of future productivity,&#13;
consider how much time elapsed&#13;
between the B.A. and the Ph.D. If over , ,------------&#13;
five years, the evidence strongly&#13;
suggests that the chances for&#13;
distinction are reduced.&#13;
10. Prognosis: the fundamental pointis the&#13;
prognosis for future performance. What&#13;
we must judge is the probability that the&#13;
individual will bring distinction to&#13;
himself and to Parkside. If the&#13;
assessment based on the above factors ·&#13;
is negative, then separation is indicated.&#13;
At this time and at this stage of&#13;
institutional . development we cannot&#13;
avoid making rigorous judgements of&#13;
·staff suitability artd quality.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NORTH &amp; S.PUTH SHERIDAN RO!,D&#13;
-KENOSH-AFAMQUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#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;
CHARCOA~ BROILEDi 55( _ ST_EAKS . - -======~*=~-~~~-~&#13;
T&#13;
H&#13;
E Good Lookin' Pants Co.&#13;
329 MAIN STREET&#13;
JEANS AND PANTS&#13;
ARE WHAT WE SELL&#13;
OPENING SOON&#13;
IN DOWNTOWN KENOSHA &#13;
In an interview necessitated by the&#13;
t dismissals of certain Parksids&#13;
~ty members, Chancellor Wyllie told&#13;
raUl Rolbiecki and Marc Eisen of the&#13;
B WSCOPE tbat wbat has to be con-&#13;
~red is "the professional man and his&#13;
51 ressional effectiveness in his&#13;
professional role. What he thinks about&#13;
JI'O matters can not t:nter in~o this kind&#13;
otherd&#13;
termination and still do him (faculty&#13;
rJ.e lustice." member) JUs ceo&#13;
Asked if certain instructors were being&#13;
dismissed because they were outspoken&#13;
d rhaps opposed to administration&#13;
anlie pe Wyllie' assured the interviewers&#13;
~t ~'that kind of consi~rat~on does not&#13;
enter into the deliberations, lOT contract&#13;
renewal or non-renewal.&#13;
Pursuing the point tbat the faculty may&#13;
organize, the Chancellor was asked what&#13;
his reaction would be If the fa~ulty&#13;
lDlionized. And WyllIe all!;wered, The&#13;
faculty here could not uni?nize ,:"itJ:lout&#13;
total university system b~mg W1l00lzed&#13;
and tbere is a great hazard mvolved tbat 1&#13;
think faculty are well aware of: or should&#13;
be in unionization. The mmute you&#13;
1D1ionizethen the relationship between the&#13;
institution and the faculty member&#13;
changes. It becomes strictly an employeremployee&#13;
relationship In a busmess ~r&#13;
cooperative ~en~e ~n~ the ~mploye.e5&#13;
participation In mstitution policy-makmg&#13;
is wiped out. In other words, he the~ has&#13;
ooly those rights tbat are spelled out 10 the&#13;
labor contract. 1 think most faculty,&#13;
looking at this rationally, are of the OpInIOn&#13;
that whatever might be gained in terms ?f&#13;
dollars in the paycheck by thIS&#13;
l81ionization process would be more than&#13;
lost in the offset in what 1 call the faculty&#13;
participatory rights."&#13;
In regard to Parkside's special mission&#13;
of contributing to an industrial society, the&#13;
OIancellor indicated that those members&#13;
rJ.the faculty whose interests are far-field&#13;
from the mission (for example, a certam&#13;
instructor may be interested in some&#13;
lDldeveloped part of the world), and if&#13;
the university bas .an opportumty to&#13;
replace those members with faculty who&#13;
are more useful in terms -of UWP's&#13;
mission, then Parkside has the right to&#13;
make alterations in its faculty. "You've&#13;
lOt to put your resources, your program,&#13;
and your staff where your mission is."&#13;
The Chancellor was then asked how, for&#13;
example, an English, Spanish, or Art instructor&#13;
could correlate his field with the&#13;
mission. Not directly answering the&#13;
question, Wyllie commented tbat an artist&#13;
who painted urban scenes or people m&#13;
wort situations could fit well with the&#13;
""ted mission. Wyllie went on to say, "I do&#13;
not conceive the point that focus on the&#13;
mission produces narrowness of the&#13;
program."&#13;
EnSUing questions suggested that&#13;
pernapa the Parkside mission had not been&#13;
elaborated to such a degree that the&#13;
raculty member could tell on his own&#13;
wbether or not he fits the mission. And the&#13;
Chancellor answered tbat the meaning of&#13;
the mission should be perfectly understandable:&#13;
"It should be no mystery to&#13;
anybody that this mission is present and&#13;
that we have from the very beginning had&#13;
a responsibility' to pursue it and a&#13;
... ponsibiiity to offer program and staff&#13;
that's related to it." Also, the question of&#13;
mission fulfillment is only one of the&#13;
considerations involved in the review&#13;
Irocess.&#13;
Where does the student stand on the&#13;
question of the adequacy of his in8tructors~&#13;
According to Wyllie "it places&#13;
Wyllie Responds To Student Questions By MARGIE NOER th enable lhose haVing act,v~ prof IOnal&#13;
e students Where the student has long exactly that or 2) what he meant by projeCts 10 carry U.. m out&#13;
been. That is, with every Opportunity to saying thal On the ~hon of r,ft n houri he"'C&#13;
make representations about what he Wyllie flatly denied that he ever told assigned to some of Ule faculty and&#13;
regards to be good teaching." Students certain junior faculty members that If they whether or flO( th...., IS the opbon to turn&#13;
bavetbe Opportunity every day to go to the badn't fmished their Ph.D.'s they were to do"." such a load. Wyll,~ .... d. "The potnt&#13;
diVlslo.nal chairmen, to the executive spend more time on rmishing thesis than is that you can't ha"e ,I both " .• y So 10&#13;
commIttees about who tbey believe are teaching. "U any junior faculty member 0Iher "'ords, the lacully ... n nol come and&#13;
strong or weak instructors. says that I advised him to neglect his say we "ant load reducuon and nol ha e&#13;
Question: why did Vice-Chancellol teaching in fa.or ol fmislung his thesIS, he certalO load mcru" The f,ft n hour&#13;
Harris' criteria say that teaching shall be is not telling the truth. That is a thoughl load asslgnmenl can he turned do"n and&#13;
assumed adequate? It doesn't seem to give that would not occur to me because we do sucb an asslgnmenl I not ml~ndod I.&#13;
much room for student reaction upon the employ in the first instance to do a pumsh or "gel nd of' tenured faculty&#13;
teaching of the faculty member. Answer teaching job and a good teaching job" a.ancellor Wyllie fell facully morale&#13;
from Wyllie: 1 can't speak to that point; OIancellor Wyllie POinted out that the bad been very good to Uu cl10te Ho.. ee,&#13;
because I don't know 1) whether he said reason for six-bour loads for faculty was to "faculty morale is undoubl~y dasturb«l&#13;
at lIus moment but I d al say that, lnI4!&#13;
i.n any Iluatlon at any lime, that ~&#13;
are faced "'th the problem of uncertainty&#13;
aboul lhe,r future Th~ mere rael thaI&#13;
at a given urne there are morale problfm&#13;
doesn't prove thaI rn UtUhonal InJOsUe&#13;
are being done"&#13;
The Cbancellor "ent on to explain thaI&#13;
each year each facully member fills out a&#13;
record 10 whJch he describes hi te.chIOC.&#13;
wbal he teaches. any other prof lonal&#13;
3ClJvity, the institutions he attended. hllo&#13;
degrees, and anylhing else that facully&#13;
members Wishes lo volunteer about&#13;
himself&#13;
FACULTY EVALUATION CATEGORlES&#13;
lea tegory 1: Serious deficiency on several criteria;&#13;
1971-72indicated. termination for&#13;
BASIC, BLUESY, BALLSY&#13;
4437. 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha. Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654~774&#13;
Category 2: Serious deficiency on at least one crucial criterion; future&#13;
termination likely.&#13;
Category 3: Deficiencies in several criteria which&#13;
remediable; appropriate action to be determined.&#13;
Category 4: Lecturer status: renewal of appointment not assured; will&#13;
depend upon developing an institutional policy regarding appointment&#13;
of laboratory lecturers.&#13;
may&#13;
Category 5: The desirability of granting tenure is in question; furthe&#13;
detailed evaluation necessary.&#13;
Category 6: All other probationary faculty.&#13;
•&#13;
that's what a concerti workshop js&#13;
featuring&#13;
PARAMOUNT RECORDING ARTIST&#13;
CHARLIE MUSSELWHITE&#13;
AND HIS CHICAGO BLUES BAND&#13;
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11th&#13;
WORKSHOP 3:~ CONCERT 4:30&#13;
FREEADMISSION&#13;
be&#13;
Thrifty Thrtads&#13;
For Your Back...&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Ftet!&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
ooor,nOWN KENOSHA&#13;
UI\I\Y side 10risl&#13;
rl!enhouses --"..---&#13;
3021· ,,'W .,.&#13;
tARGURmE'S&#13;
ROBES-Regulo' SIS 00.&#13;
5oec;01. S10OO.&#13;
E!"10y theu· cool&#13;
evenmgs In COty&#13;
comfort'&#13;
Short quilted, vel"et&#13;
toned rI bon down.&#13;
the front, I,ned w IIh&#13;
sohest nylon&#13;
peocl, Of&#13;
lavendor&#13;
Smoll.&#13;
~orguerU et SIS open&#13;
9 unIt! 9 Mondays cnd&#13;
fndoys. other weelcdoy_,&#13;
9 ',01 530, Sundoys&#13;
from 10 a.m. until&#13;
S p.m.&#13;
6207 - 22nd A •• nua&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 531'0&#13;
Pho... , 652·2681'&#13;
Wyllie Responds To Student Questions&#13;
By MARGIE NOER th tud h \ n&#13;
e s ents wher~ the student has long h t he m n b) 1T) t m&#13;
an interview necessitated by the&#13;
In t dismissals of certain Parkside&#13;
rec~rty members, Chancellor_ Wyllie told&#13;
fa~ Rolbiecki and Marc Eisen of the&#13;
B WSCOPE that what has to be conNEd&#13;
ed is "the professional man and his ~ er t· . h" r ssional effec 1veness m 1s&#13;
pror!sional role. _What he thinks about&#13;
~ matters can not enter into this kind 0 dertermination and still do him (faculty ote .ti .. member) JUS ce. Asked if certain instructors were being&#13;
di issed because they were outspoken&#13;
s;i perhaps opposed to administration&#13;
anJ'cy Wyllie assured the interviewers&#13;
:a&#13;
1&#13;
t :'that kind of consi~rat~on does not&#13;
enter into the deliberations -1or contract&#13;
enewal or non-renewal. r Pursuing the point that the faculty may&#13;
ganize the Chancellor was asked what&#13;
: rea~tion would be if the faculty&#13;
~onized. And Wyllie a~w~red, . "The&#13;
faculty here could not uru?ruze ~1tI:1out&#13;
total university system b~ing W11omzed&#13;
and there is a great hazard involved that I&#13;
think faculty are well aware of! or should&#13;
be in unionization. The minute you&#13;
unionize then the relationship between the&#13;
·nstitution and the faculty member&#13;
~anges. It becomes strictly an eI?ployeremployee&#13;
relationship in a business ~r&#13;
cooperative ~en~e ~n~ the ~mploye_e s participation m mstitubon pohcy-making&#13;
is wiped out. In other words, he the~ has&#13;
only those rights that are spelled out m the&#13;
labor contract. I think most fac_u~ty,&#13;
looking at this rationally, are of the opm1on&#13;
that whatever might be gained in terms ?f&#13;
dollars in the paycheck by this&#13;
1mionization process would be more than&#13;
lost in the offset in what I call the faculty&#13;
participatory rights.'.' . . . In regard to Parks1de's special m1ss10n&#13;
of contributing to an industrial society, the&#13;
Chancellor indicated that those mem~ers&#13;
of the faculty whose interests are far-f1e~d&#13;
from the mission (for example, a certam&#13;
instructor may be interested in some&#13;
undeveloped part of the world), ~d if&#13;
the university has an opporturuty to&#13;
replace those members with faculty who&#13;
are more useful in terms of UWP's&#13;
mission, then Parkside has the right to&#13;
make alterations in its faculty. "You've&#13;
got to put your resources, yo~r pro~~~·&#13;
and your staff where your m1ss10n 1s.&#13;
The Chancellor was then asked how, for&#13;
example, an English, Spanish, or ~rt instructor&#13;
could correlate his field With the&#13;
mission. Not directly answering t~e&#13;
question, Wyllie commented that an arh~t&#13;
who painted urban scenes or t&gt;e?Ple m work situations could fit well With the&#13;
stated mission. Wyllie went on to say, "I do&#13;
not conceive the point that focus on the&#13;
mission produces narrowness of the&#13;
program."&#13;
Ensuing questions suggested that&#13;
perhaps the Parkside mission had not been&#13;
elaborated to such a degree that the&#13;
faculty member could tell on his own&#13;
whether or not he fits the mission. And the&#13;
Chancellor answered that the meaning of&#13;
the mission should be perfectly under&#13;
landable: "It should be no mystery to&#13;
anybody that this mission is present and&#13;
that we have from the very beginning had&#13;
a responsibility to pursue it and a&#13;
r ponsibility to offer program and staff&#13;
that's related to it." Also, the question of&#13;
mission fulfillment is only one of _the&#13;
considerations involved in the review&#13;
process.&#13;
Where does the student stand on the&#13;
question of the adequacy of his intructors?&#13;
According to Wyllie "it places&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
been. That is, with every opportWlity to tr of ,r&#13;
make representations about what he of&#13;
regards to be good teaching." Students u."h1&gt;th,1'1" th&#13;
~".e_the opportunity every day to go to the n a d ·lh&#13;
diviSio_nal chairmen, to the executive that }OU can't l&#13;
committees about who they believe are oth • r cut&#13;
strong or weak instructors. d n,u1u1.:•1u&#13;
Question: why did Vice-Chancellor&#13;
Harris' criteria say that teaching shall be&#13;
assumed adequate? It doesn't seem to give&#13;
much room for student reaction upon the&#13;
teaching of the faculty member. Answer&#13;
from Wyllie: I can't speak to that point,&#13;
because I don't know 1) whether he said&#13;
FACULTYEVALUATIO CATEGORIE&#13;
ategory 1: Serious deficiency on several criteria: termination for&#13;
1971-72 indicated.&#13;
Category 2: Serious deficiency on at least one crucial criterion; future&#13;
termination likely.&#13;
Category 3: Deficiencies in several criteria which&#13;
remediable; appropriate action to be determined. may be&#13;
Category 4: Lecturer status: renewal of appointment not assured; will&#13;
depend upon developing an institutional policy regarding appointment&#13;
of laboratory lecturers.&#13;
Category 5: The desirability of granting tenure is in question ; further&#13;
detailed evaluation necessary.&#13;
Category 6: All other probationary faculty.&#13;
BASIC, BLUESY, BALLSY&#13;
•&#13;
that's what a concert/ workshop is&#13;
featuring&#13;
PARAMOUNT RECORDING ARTIST&#13;
CHARLIE MUSSELWHITE&#13;
AND HIS CHICAGO BLUES BAND&#13;
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11th&#13;
WORKSHOP 3:3() CONCERT 4:30&#13;
FREE ADMISSION&#13;
Thnfty Thread&#13;
For Your Ba 'it. ..&#13;
Far Out Fitting&#13;
For our et.'&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
ENOSHA&#13;
unny. id lo ri l&#13;
I R&#13;
enhou e&#13;
14 0&#13;
RITT •&#13;
!'IOY&#13;
n,ng&#13;
c:o fo I&#13;
c:ool&#13;
in c:o:ty&#13;
day_&#13;
Sundays&#13;
from JO a .m. un 11&#13;
5 p .m.&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenua&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 531-40&#13;
Phon : 652-2681 · &#13;
Chancellor Letter&#13;
Professor Leon Applebaum, Chairman&#13;
Social SCience Division&#13;
Dear Lee:&#13;
This will acknowledge receipt of the&#13;
resolution that the Social Science Division&#13;
adopted "by acctamauon" on October 30&#13;
That means, according 10 my dictionary.&#13;
that the resolution was adopted "by&#13;
cheers, shouts. or applause rather than by&#13;
ballot" That no doubt reflects intensny 01&#13;
I hng. but It docs not reflect credit on the&#13;
def iber ative processes of the Social&#13;
tenet DI\"tS1OO&#13;
The fact that the resoluuon was&#13;
dch\'ered to tudents for publication in&#13;
'F.\\. OPE In advance at being delivered&#13;
to my oIh« al 0 )'S somethmg about&#13;
Iaculty r. poru.,blhty and proless,onat&#13;
Nhl ~ In your drvrsice Usmg students In&#13;
that "'8) tak('s something away from the'&#13;
resotuuen's Identification of Its authors as&#13;
"honorable people In an honorable endNWor&#13;
..&#13;
Y . terda)' during your visit to m} office&#13;
'IOU nnd Prof£' sO( Ii rbeson tesuned at&#13;
i·nglh about the good ",iii and ccrstrucuve&#13;
pcrpce, or Ih(' faculty I can appreciate&#13;
\our ('hagran, ther (ore. at having to&#13;
(t'por1 \l.llhlO mtnut of that visit that&#13;
(lnu.-ol'M,~In }UUr dl\ ISIGnhad dell\'ercd the&#13;
n~olUhon to ...tudents an ad\'ance of its&#13;
bt.'lng tro"",lmlted to me. The tactic of&#13;
If)"lng to rally student to support fa cult)"&#13;
"Cij~s" I!) not new on this or on other&#13;
c mpuses But It IS transparent. and It IS&#13;
counterprOOuctI "c.&#13;
The resolution ItsCIr IS too vague and&#13;
mdt'flmte to m\"lte or permit a reasoned.&#13;
~JX'Clr.C response propaganda It IS&#13;
uperb. but as an accout of administrative&#13;
poIlC). procedure. and purpose It is sheer&#13;
fantasy All the familiar rallymg Cries are&#13;
therr - "publish or perish:' "democracy&#13;
IS dead." "low faculty morale:' and so on.&#13;
But the broad·brush claims of the&#13;
resolution are susLamed not by evidence&#13;
hut by "perception" that are demonstrably&#13;
Inaccurate,&#13;
The claim that "the faculty is not&#13;
respected and IS demed its tradJtional role&#13;
In setttn~ policy or esLablishing long-range&#13;
~oals of the university" is patently false.&#13;
Th(' . tructurC of government at UWParksldt-~&#13;
'Aa.. dt&gt;\Ised by the faculty, and&#13;
through that government and through an&#13;
elaborate committee system proposed by&#13;
the faculty t we have more than 50 committees'l&#13;
the faculty has been directly and&#13;
stradlly Involved in shaPing policy and&#13;
proposln~ institutional goals. The key to&#13;
much of the dlffaculfy IS to be found in the&#13;
language of the resolul1on which talks&#13;
about the faculty "settmg" po!icy and&#13;
"establishing" goals. as though that were&#13;
an exc1usl\'e faculty right. In a public&#13;
uOIverslt)· legislators, Regents. Coor·&#13;
dlnatlng Councils, administrators. and&#13;
others are also Involved in setting policy&#13;
and establishing goals. Unfortunately,&#13;
\l.hen olher parties exercise their partiCipatory&#13;
nghts. or take irutiatives that&#13;
are necessa.r)" In terms of their respon·&#13;
Iblltty, their actions. however proper, are&#13;
routme)y condemned as violations of&#13;
lacully nghlS.&#13;
Facull)' reacllon to Dean t\lacKinney's&#13;
"Inslant greatness' re"mark certainly&#13;
ral es the Question of responsibility for&#13;
the alleged "hostile and hateful climate at&#13;
Parkside" As an act of (rlendliness&#13;
lov.ard the faculty Dean l\tacKinney&#13;
\'olunteered to share With them this fall&#13;
snmethlng of his educational philosophy.&#13;
somettung o( his perception of the nature&#13;
of the academic enterpri e. based on his&#13;
expenence al Iowa tate before joining&#13;
our staff; hIS speech was intended as a&#13;
tartlng POint for discussion. not as an&#13;
announcement of policy or an evaluation of&#13;
Parkside personnel. goals. or announcement&#13;
of policy or an evaluation of&#13;
Parkside personnel. goals, or programs.&#13;
And he made that quite clear. His purpose&#13;
was to be positive and encouraging, to&#13;
sllmulate thelacully to think well of itsell&#13;
and of Its prospects, and to enlist faculty&#13;
support In the work of institutional improvement&#13;
His "instant greatness"&#13;
remark was Intended to build morale. to&#13;
encourage the faculty to understand that&#13;
substantial gains could be made this year.&#13;
His purpose was quite like that of a new&#13;
coach exhorting his team to strive for a&#13;
winning season this )'ear. The hostility and&#13;
ridicule that greeted his remark, and the&#13;
calculated distortions and misrepresentations&#13;
01 it. had the unlortunate ellect of&#13;
shulttng off discussion of practical steps&#13;
and measures, and of putting the whole&#13;
question into the realm of propaganda.&#13;
The aSSE'rlion that Dean MacKinney's&#13;
remark '"'ranslates inta an immediate&#13;
purge of junior faculty and punishment of&#13;
senior faculty" is blatant propaganda.&#13;
Annual reviews of staff qualifications,&#13;
workload, and performance are standard&#13;
in every university, and go forward under&#13;
well-established policies and prodecures.&#13;
Such reviews are under way now, with&#13;
faculty involvement. Dean MacKinney&#13;
and Vice Chancellor Harris tell me that to&#13;
assure objectivity and fairness judgments&#13;
will be made on the basis of demonstrable&#13;
facts, and showings on the record, r.af!1er&#13;
than on the basis or casual oprruon,&#13;
memorials, resolutions, petitions, and the&#13;
like.&#13;
UW-Parkside does not and will not have,&#13;
SO long as I am Chancellor, "a severe&#13;
-pobhsh or Perish' altitude which t~anslates&#13;
into a near complete deemphasls of&#13;
teaching." Good teaching is our fi~st&#13;
responsibility. It has been 10·&#13;
sutuuonalized. recognized, and rewarded&#13;
here, and will continue to have first&#13;
prionty in our campus rewards syste~.&#13;
That does not mean, however, that instructional&#13;
service is the only service that&#13;
we expect of faculty; that undocumented&#13;
claim of teaching merit overbalance&#13;
other demonstrable deficiencies of&#13;
professional Qualification or perforr:'ance;&#13;
or that Parkside is obliged to retain nontenured&#13;
faculty who do not fit the campus&#13;
mission or instructional program.&#13;
mce we have an approved academic&#13;
program to implement and a specific&#13;
mdustrial society mission to fulfill we have&#13;
a responsibility to .invest institutional&#13;
resources m faculty who are best Qualified&#13;
twhlch means specifically, direcUy, and&#13;
measurably qualified) to teach the&#13;
program and implement the mission. You&#13;
understand this, I'm sure, since you&#13;
participated in the recent mission&#13;
discussions with CCHE sLafL Because of&#13;
limitations of staff resources and other&#13;
kinds of resources new campuses&#13;
everywhere are much more mission-oriented&#13;
than older. more lully·develope&lt;!&#13;
campuses. The mission provides a focus (a&#13;
program focus and a staffing focus) for the&#13;
general as well as the specialized undergraduate&#13;
offerings" Mission-oriented&#13;
faculties and programs are not narrow, or&#13;
hostile to the goals of liberal education.&#13;
They are capable. in fact, of producing&#13;
better educational results by encouraging&#13;
students to integrate what they learn&#13;
around the central concerns of the institutional&#13;
mission. We need more mission&#13;
focus in our staffing, and need to understand&#13;
that more is required to identify&#13;
a man as mission-suitable than a general&#13;
interest in undergraduate education or the&#13;
ability to teach certain courses listed in the&#13;
catalogue.&#13;
Weare pleased. as the laculty should be,&#13;
that students in increasing numbers are&#13;
enrolling at UW·Parkside and taking their&#13;
degrees here. That renects favorably on&#13;
our faculty and on our program.&#13;
Enrollment growth underwrites all the&#13;
things that strong faculties value - new&#13;
opportunities for service, new courses and&#13;
programs, new faculty colleagues, expanded&#13;
library collections, a total increase&#13;
in the inteUectual resources of the&#13;
university. Developing institutions need&#13;
faculties that welcome growth and the&#13;
service opportunities that growth brings.&#13;
They do not need faculties that see in&#13;
growth npthing but "the use of students as&#13;
objects in an elaborate public relations&#13;
and 'numbers game'."&#13;
Your division's final set of assertions&#13;
represents that "democracy is dead at&#13;
Parkside," that committies are powerless&#13;
"fronts." and that "communication and&#13;
power at Parks ide run in only one direction&#13;
- from top to bottom." Such&#13;
assessments are grossly unfair to faculty&#13;
colleagues who, through committee service&#13;
and participation in faculty government,&#13;
have greatly strengthened this&#13;
institution and contributed to almost every&#13;
aspect of its development. The point about&#13;
one-way communication reflects total lack&#13;
of awareness of the strong way in which&#13;
the University Committee and the&#13;
divisional chairmen have represented the&#13;
faculty and its interests to the campus&#13;
administration, as well as lack of&#13;
awareness, of the administrative&#13;
response. Reaching understandings and&#13;
having one's own way are two very dif·&#13;
ferent things. Those who do not succeed in&#13;
having their way feel aggrieved in all&#13;
human institutions.&#13;
Feel Iree to share this response with&#13;
your colleagues. I hope you will also share&#13;
with them my judgment, based on direct&#13;
knowledge of many universities, that&#13;
faculty power is a function of professional&#13;
achievement, and of satisfaction in&#13;
professional achievement, and not of&#13;
anything else.&#13;
Blues Concert Friday&#13;
'This Friday afternoon, Dec. n'h:t n~&#13;
I amming will be broug 0&#13;
~pek~i:'::':.'mpus by the Office 01 Student&#13;
ar . . Th ragram will be a blues&#13;
ActiVIties. e p d'll leature the&#13;
concert workshop an WI I hit&#13;
nationally popular Charlie Musse w e&#13;
Blues Band. It will be Iree and Willbe h~ld&#13;
in tbe activities building Irom 3:3\l to 5.30&#13;
with a workshop-question and answer&#13;
session during the first hour and a concert&#13;
during the second. Students are encouraged&#13;
to have question~ ~eadY C?~-&#13;
eeming blues music, what It IS, 11.Ow It s&#13;
played, etc., as Charlie Musselwhite and&#13;
memberS 01 his five piece group have&#13;
consented to talk to Parkside students&#13;
concerning this unique and purely&#13;
Americana form of musical expressIOn.&#13;
'-WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 D,m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phane 657"-9747&#13;
For those not familiar with CharI'&#13;
Musselwhite and his group. he. along Wi~&#13;
Paul Butterfield, is at the top 01the whit&#13;
blues harp players-singers in the busm":&#13;
today. This is displayed in more than 15&#13;
albums be has cut o~ labels like RCA&#13;
Victor, Capttol , EpIC, Buddah and&#13;
Paramount. You get to be good, or Bad a.&#13;
be puts It, not by listening to and imitating&#13;
other people's records. But by living the&#13;
life, creating the folklore, playing aOll&#13;
playing those legendary dues to and forthe&#13;
black audiences that respect the blues aOll&#13;
the men who can lay them down.&#13;
Nickie"s&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
1202 • 56th Street&#13;
Kenasha, Wis. 652-6904&#13;
SKI JACKETS - Reg. $45.00&#13;
Haw $27.50&#13;
Pric.esto&#13;
Fit Your Pocket&#13;
LA TEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
VALEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINHERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
FREE OELIVERY 4,00 P.M. TO 12,00 P.M.&#13;
KENOSHA 657·5191&#13;
ATTENTION S.ENIORS&#13;
HA VE YOU FILED&#13;
FOR A SENIOR SUMMARY?&#13;
AVAILABLE AT STUDENT RECORDS OFFICI&#13;
NECESSARY FOR GRADUATI.ON&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
Tremendous values on all types of books&#13;
• Stop in at all three stores •&#13;
- Different books at each store.&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE '--------------------::&#13;
=&#13;
=~'@!£::JI~. . WATCHES _~ .J&#13;
....... Acc_- w.~.!.-~&#13;
Ultr..... n ....... 1_ ~~ __&#13;
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1,.eC .... 1-&#13;
.1:"'*""1 .~~ ..:.:;:..;.r&#13;
10% ..... :.-I1:::.nCourtesy&#13;
Oiscount sHA&#13;
t S· DOWNTOWN.KENO o tudents and ~&#13;
Facuit y . . eerti/iod0;.'-&#13;
(Must Show I.D.);;·I.~~:;t. ",.~J&#13;
Fa irtrade Y.f!l1iliJJli;r, 11eJlTI':;&#13;
~OHD C&lt;mSULTANTS excepted ,It ~.. s mole. diHefe"'O...... .,..&#13;
_.-&#13;
CHINA ]&#13;
Chancellor letter .enior faculty" is blatant propaganda.&#13;
Annual re\'iews of taff qualifications,&#13;
·or ·load, and performance are standard&#13;
in every uni,ersity, and go forward under&#13;
well-established policies and prodecur~.&#13;
Blues Concert Friday&#13;
For those not familiar with Charli&#13;
Musselwhite and his group, he, along wi;&#13;
Paul Butterfield, is ~t the l?P of the White&#13;
blues harp players-smgers m the busines&#13;
today. This is displayed in more than 1~&#13;
albums he h~s cut o~ labels like RCA&#13;
Victor, Capitol, Epic, Buddah and&#13;
Param~unt. You ~et to_ be good, or Bad as&#13;
he puts 1t, not by hstenmg to and imitating&#13;
other peop~e's records. But by living the&#13;
life, creating the folklore, playing and&#13;
playing those legendary dues to and for the&#13;
black audiences that respect the blues and&#13;
the men who can lay them down.&#13;
uch re\'iews are under way now, with&#13;
r ·ulty involvement. Dean . tacKinney&#13;
and \'ice Chancellor Harris tell me that to&#13;
a ·ure objectivity and fairness judgments&#13;
will be made on the basi of demonstrable&#13;
facts, and howings on the record, r~l?er&#13;
than on the ba is of casual opm1on,&#13;
memorial , ·re~oJutions, petitions, and the&#13;
This Friday aftern~n, Dec. 1\:ton~:&#13;
type of programming will be ~roug d t&#13;
Parkside campus by the Of~;~\~f !t~l~~&#13;
Activities The program w1 the · ksh and will feature&#13;
concert wor op Ch r Musselwhite&#13;
nationally popular ar ie . h id&#13;
Blues Band. It will be free and will be ~ . the activities building from 3:30 to 5.30&#13;
:ith a workshop-question and answer&#13;
session during the first hour and a concert&#13;
during the second. Students are encouraged&#13;
to have question~ ~eady c?~-&#13;
cerning blues music, what it is, h_ow it s&#13;
like.&#13;
W-Park ide d not and will not have,&#13;
o long as I am Chancellor, "a severe&#13;
' publi h or Peri. h' attitude which t~anlal&#13;
· into a near complete deemphasis of&#13;
t ching." Good teaching is our fi~st&#13;
r pon ibilily. It has been mltluhonalized,&#13;
recognized, and rewarded&#13;
here, and will continue to have first&#13;
priority in our campus rewards syste~.&#13;
That does not mean, however, that mtrucllooal&#13;
ervic i the only service that&#13;
w e peel or faculty: that undocumented&#13;
claim. of teaching merit overbalance&#13;
other demon trable deficiencies of&#13;
of iooal qualification or performance;&#13;
r that Park id i. obliged to retain nont&#13;
nured facult,· who do not fit the campus&#13;
mi ion or m 0&#13;
lru tional program.&#13;
mce w have an approved academic&#13;
pro •ram to implement and a specific&#13;
indu ·trial ocietv mi ion to fulfill we have r ~pon ibiht~· to _invest institutional&#13;
~ourcc. m faculty who are best qualified&#13;
(which m ans pecifically, directly, and&#13;
mea. urably qualified&gt; to teach the&#13;
program and implement the mi ion. You&#13;
und rstand thi , I'm ure, ince you&#13;
participated in the recent mission&#13;
di cussions with CCHE taff. Because of&#13;
limitation of taff re ources and other&#13;
kind· of re ·ources new campuses&#13;
everywhere are much more mission-oriented&#13;
than old r. more fully-developed&#13;
campu . The m1 10n provides a focus &lt;a&#13;
program focu and a staffing focus) for the&#13;
general as well as the specialized und&#13;
rgraduate offerings. • fission-oriented&#13;
faculties and programs are not narrow. or&#13;
ho tile to the goal or liberal education.&#13;
They are capable. in fact, of producing&#13;
helter educational results by encouraging&#13;
·tud nt to integrate what they learn&#13;
around the central concerns of the inlltuhonal&#13;
mi sion. We need more mission&#13;
focus m our staffing, and need to und&#13;
rstand that more is required to identify&#13;
a man as mission- uitable than a general&#13;
interest in undergraduate education or the&#13;
ability to teach certain courses listed in the&#13;
catalogue. We are pleased, a the faculty should be,&#13;
that tudents in increasing numbers are&#13;
enrolling at '\\'-Parkside and taking their&#13;
d grees here. That reflects favorably on&#13;
our faculty and on our program.&#13;
Enrollment growth underwrites all the&#13;
things that strong faculties value - new opportunities for ervice, new courses and&#13;
programs, new faculty colleagues, expanded&#13;
library collections, a total increase&#13;
in the intellectual resources of the&#13;
uni\'ersity Developing institutions need&#13;
faculties that welcome growth and the&#13;
erv1ce opportunities that growth brings.&#13;
They do not need faculties that see in&#13;
growth nplhing but "the use of students as&#13;
objects in an elaborate public relations&#13;
and 'numbers game'."&#13;
Your division's final set of assertions&#13;
represents that "democracy is dead at&#13;
Parkside." that commit ties are powerless&#13;
"fronts." and that "communication and&#13;
power al Parkside run in only one direction&#13;
- from top to bottom." Such&#13;
as essments are grossly unfair lo faculty&#13;
colleagues who, through committee service&#13;
and participation in faculty government,&#13;
have greatly strengthened this&#13;
institution and contributed to almost every&#13;
aspect of its development. The point about&#13;
one-way communication reflects total lack&#13;
of awareness of the strong way in which&#13;
the University Committee and the&#13;
divisional chairmen have represented the&#13;
faculty and its interests to the campus&#13;
administration, as well as lack of&#13;
awareness, of the administrative&#13;
response. Reaching understandings and&#13;
having one's own way are two very different&#13;
things. Those who do not succeed in&#13;
having their way feel aggrieved in all&#13;
human institutions.&#13;
Feel free to share this response with&#13;
your colleagues. I hope you will also share&#13;
with them my judgment, based on direct&#13;
knowledge of many universities, that&#13;
faculty power is a function of professional&#13;
achievement, and of satisfaction in&#13;
professional achievement, and not of&#13;
anything else.&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
Chancellor&#13;
layed, etc., as Charlie Musselwhite and&#13;
~embers of his five piece group have&#13;
nsented to talk to Parkside students&#13;
~ncerning this unique and pur_ely&#13;
Americana form of musical expression.&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 ~:m· 1 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 651'-97 47&#13;
VAi.ED'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Nickie-'s&#13;
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1202 · 56th Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 652-6904&#13;
LA TEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACKETS - Reg. $45.00&#13;
Now $27.50&#13;
Pric,es to&#13;
Fit Your Pocket&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m. a v 4 oo PM To 12 oo PM FREE D IVER : . . : . .&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave. KENOSHA 657•5191&#13;
ATTENTION SENIORS&#13;
HA VE YOU FILED&#13;
FOR A SENIOR SUMMARY?&#13;
AVAILABLE AT STUDENT RECORDS OFFICE&#13;
NECESSARY FOR GRADUATI_ON&#13;
BOOK SALE&#13;
Tremendous values on all types of books&#13;
- Stop in at all three stores -&#13;
Different books at each store.&#13;
OIAMOND C&lt;fflSULTAHTS&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORE&#13;
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CHINA&#13;
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excepted&#13;
Courtesy Discount sHA · DOWNTOWN-KENO to Students and to!#&#13;
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(Must Show 1.0.) _ /&#13;
ti// '' 1&#13;
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,, ,oes make a difference &#13;
THE&#13;
V.....el-N_ ... u&#13;
neeemller It, 1"1 FACTS&#13;
Intramurals Started&#13;
On Both Campuses&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
ByMARCHAARBAUER&#13;
The Parkside intramural league standings&#13;
remained about the same after the&#13;
night of December 8. The team of Tom&#13;
Bsin, Tim Alfredson and Phil Limbach&#13;
remained in fll'St place with a 23-5 record.&#13;
In second place, tl'.! game off the pace, is&#13;
the team of Marc Hasrbauer, Dave&#13;
Semrad and Gregg Hansen, with an 181'.!·&#13;
91'.!record. Both teams had bad nights, but&#13;
managed to still win two games and series&#13;
!rom their opponents.&#13;
The hottest team of the night was the&#13;
team of Tom Gascoigne, Gene Schnuckel&#13;
and Ed St. Peter. The team had high game&#13;
(634) and high series (1768). (These&#13;
figures include handicap.)&#13;
The best male bowler of the night was&#13;
Tim Alfredson, who had a 583 series with a&#13;
high game of 232. Alfredson also has high&#13;
average in the league - a 191 average.&#13;
• The best female bowler Tuesday night&#13;
was Sandy Schmauss. She had a 348 series&#13;
with a 148 high game. Sandy also has the&#13;
girls high average - a 110 average.&#13;
•&#13;
TABLE TENNIS&#13;
Sixteen students signed up to play in the&#13;
Parkside intramural table tennis tour.&#13;
nament. 'Ibis is a rather unique tour.&#13;
nament where an individual sigllS up to&#13;
play in the tournament and then the 1M&#13;
Director pairs the contestants off.&#13;
The contestants then can make&#13;
arrangements to play their opponent when&#13;
they have some free time. The winner will&#13;
eventually advance to the championship.&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
Intramural Basketball is in full swing at&#13;
the Kenosha Campus. Eight teams&#13;
comprise the league, which plays one night&#13;
a week at one of the local junior high&#13;
schools. Games are at 8:00 and at 9:00.&#13;
Teams still interested in joining the&#13;
league may be able to enter, depending on&#13;
the number of late entries. Contact Coach&#13;
Jim Koch, Room. 144. The evenings to be&#13;
used for 1M Basketball are as follows:&#13;
1st week . Monday, Dec. 7: Lance&#13;
2nd week· Wednesday, Dec. 16: Lance&#13;
3rd week· Tuesday, Jan. 5: Bullen&#13;
4th week . Tuesday, Jan. 12: Washington&#13;
5th week - Wednesday, Feb. 10: Lance&#13;
6th week • Monday, Feb. 15: Lance&#13;
7th week - Monday, Feb. 22: Lincoln&#13;
8th week - Monday, Mar. 1: Lance&#13;
9th week - Monday, Mar. 8: Lance&#13;
10th week - Monday, Mar. 15: Lance&#13;
11th week· Monday, Mar. 22: Lance&#13;
12th week - Monday, Mar. 29: Lance&#13;
Spot'ig f&#13;
On.&#13;
Judy&#13;
Zimmerman&#13;
Eli Slaughter, left, and Stan White, righi, are two of Parbide's leading scorers.&#13;
Stan was the leading scorer (28 points) in the Michigan game.&#13;
Competition Tougher&#13;
ByWALTSIIIRER&#13;
MARQUETTE, MICH - Parkside&#13;
stepped up. notch in competition but gsve&#13;
a good account of itself before bowing to&#13;
powerful Northern Michigan 101-85&#13;
Tuesdsy night.&#13;
A cold spell to start the second half was&#13;
more than Parkside could afford against&#13;
the team wbose only loss in four starts has&#13;
been to Tennessee and whose schedule&#13;
includes such major university powers as&#13;
Utah and Illinois.&#13;
Northern broke a 39-39deadlock late in&#13;
the first half and spurted to a 45-39lead at&#13;
intermission. The winners came out of the&#13;
dressing rooms red bot and quickly&#13;
l"ounted an 18 point bulge, 75-57,midway&#13;
through the final stanza while UWP was&#13;
having trouble fmding the range. Northern's&#13;
bot streak resulted in a sizzling 51&#13;
per cent shooting mark for the game, while&#13;
the Rangers' frigid spell left them at 40 per&#13;
cent.&#13;
Parkside didn't fold, however, and led&#13;
by Stan White and Mike Madsen, the&#13;
Rang ...s whittled the lead down to 10, 21-&#13;
81, with three minutes to play, but it was&#13;
too late.&#13;
White, continuing Ilia fme play, led both&#13;
teams with 28 points, including 18 in the&#13;
second half, and had 10rebounds. Madsen,&#13;
enjoying his finest night by far, gsrnered&#13;
19 points and pulled in 11 rebounds.&#13;
Northern handcuffed normally high·&#13;
scoring Jim Hogan and Eli Slaughter.&#13;
They got only four between them the&#13;
second half.and finished the night with 13&#13;
and 8, respectively. Eli couldn't buy a&#13;
baaket, hitting just 3 of tS ahots.&#13;
The Legs of a 5' 4" Blue-Eyed Blonde&#13;
BEAR&#13;
Athletes portray many different images,&#13;
oot very few are the image of a lovely, 5'4"&#13;
blue eyed blond.&#13;
JUdy Zimmerman, an 18 year old freshman&#13;
from West Allis Hale, does much to&#13;
shatter one's image of an athlete. But an&#13;
athlete ahe is, and a good one.&#13;
Judy has just finished her first year of&#13;
full COmpetition in cross country in admirable&#13;
fashion. She has defeated all&#13;
comers in the area and has done very well&#13;
against national competition.&#13;
She admits to being a half-rniler and&#13;
after running 1.5 miles and 2 miles all fall&#13;
abe should feel like sprinting the half mile&#13;
during the winter and spring track&#13;
seasons.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside, Judy had&#13;
eslabliahed quite a reputation for herself&#13;
and the Milwaukee Track Club. She has&#13;
been a Wisconsin state champion in the 4&lt;10&#13;
and 880 as well as capturing the state XC&#13;
tiUe this past fal1..&#13;
In addition to her state honors abe has&#13;
been active on the national level. In 1969&#13;
abe placed third in the 4&lt;10 at the Junior&#13;
Olrmpic championshiP. in San Diego. Just&#13;
this past summer, Judy placed third in the&#13;
880 at the Junior Nationals in "Bowling&#13;
Green, Kentucky. Earlier in the spring she&#13;
had taken the runner-up spot in the Golden&#13;
Midwest championships in Chicago.&#13;
Two years ago her relay team from the&#13;
Milwaukee Track Club won the spring&#13;
medley relay at the world famOWlDrake&#13;
Relays. Parkside·tearnmaIe,Mary Libal,&#13;
.... aIao a member of that team.&#13;
Perhaps her greatest honor was ir)&#13;
beiDll selected to' represent .the United&#13;
States at tlle Cultural Olympics beld ill&#13;
conjunction with the 1968 Olympics in&#13;
Mexico City.&#13;
It was here that abe received her biggest&#13;
thrill in athletics. This came when she&#13;
viewed the opening ceremonies and was&#13;
thrilled to watch the United States&#13;
Olympic team parade into the Olympic&#13;
Stadium.&#13;
Perhaps her highest aim for the immediate&#13;
future came from watching the&#13;
magnificent spectacle of the Games; that&#13;
of being an Olympian herself.&#13;
other ambitions include being a coach&#13;
and teacher of cross country and track.&#13;
'Ibroullb this vocation she would like the&#13;
opportuntiy to work with inner-core&#13;
youngsters.&#13;
IT abe could imitate anyone ahe would&#13;
like to approach the examples that her&#13;
gymnastics coach, Jim Farbs, has taUKht&#13;
her. Mr. Farkas is .the coach of the&#13;
Milwaukee TUrners.&#13;
Besides her track hack-ground, Judy&#13;
was captain of her high school gymnastics&#13;
team as well as being a member of the&#13;
varsity cheerleading aquad.&#13;
On top of all this, somehow, someplace,&#13;
abe found time to compile a 3.8 academic&#13;
grade. It just seems that some people have&#13;
it!&#13;
Lee Palmer, high-leaping S'4 forward,&#13;
led Northern with 20 points and a gam ..&#13;
high 15 rebounds., as the winners&#13;
dominated the boards 6H6.&#13;
With his outburst, white has passed&#13;
Slaughter and is second to Hogan in the&#13;
Ranger liCoring derb.)'. After four games,&#13;
Hogan has·96 points (a 24 average!., White&#13;
81 (20), Slaughter 69 (17), Madsen 37 (9),&#13;
captain Ken Rick 211 (7), Mike Jackson 17&#13;
W, and Nick Perrine 15 (4). White is the&#13;
leading rebounder, followed by Madsen&#13;
Parkside will host undefeated UW-Green&#13;
Bay Saturday night at Kenosha SI. Joseph&#13;
High School (8 p.m.), The Phoenix of UW·&#13;
GB are one of the strongest teams in the&#13;
state and Ieature Ray Willis, an all·NAJA&#13;
District 14 first team choice last season&#13;
and better than ever this campaign. The&#13;
6'5 Willis is averaging close to 30 points a&#13;
game, and hit 30 in Green Bay's latest&#13;
triumph, a convincing 94·77 rout of always&#13;
formidable SI. Norbert's.&#13;
Green Bay defeated its arch rival,&#13;
Parkside, twice last season, but only by&#13;
one point here, so an upset Saturday is a&#13;
possibility.&#13;
UW-Pamlde (lIS)&#13;
fg ft pf&#13;
Hogan 5 3 1&#13;
Perrine 1 0 0&#13;
Rick 2 6 0&#13;
Slaughter 3 2 2&#13;
White 11 6 4&#13;
Madsen 7 5 4&#13;
Jackson 2 1 2&#13;
Totals 31 23 13&#13;
Nortbe", Michigan (Ie.)&#13;
fg It pf&#13;
Conklin 2 0 0&#13;
Friday 8 3 1&#13;
Griffm 9 0 3&#13;
Duehning 4 0 4&#13;
Vaneklasen 5 0 3&#13;
Barber 6 0 4&#13;
Inkola 4 2 4&#13;
Palmer 8 4 2&#13;
Totals t6 9 21&#13;
Fencers Defeat&#13;
Tw 0 Big 10'ers&#13;
Coach Loren Hein was more than satisfied&#13;
with the results of the Fencing competition&#13;
during Sportsfest weekend.&#13;
Besling the University of WiscolISin 17·3&#13;
and the University of Minnesola 24-3is an&#13;
accompliahment in itself, but to add icing&#13;
to the cake, Freshmen had a big hand in&#13;
the victory.&#13;
For example, in epee against Madison&#13;
frosh Bob Westby in his collegiste debut:&#13;
had a 3-0 record. Veterans John Hanzalik&#13;
and Broce Bosman came through with two&#13;
and one records.&#13;
Another frosh, John Tank, gave one of&#13;
the fmest exhibitions in the foil class to&#13;
defeat Big 10 champion Neal Cohen.&#13;
Cohen was leading 4-0 before Tank began&#13;
Ilia magnilicent comeback to win the bout&#13;
5-4.&#13;
Kim Nelson, another promising freshman,&#13;
had a 4-1 record for the day and a&#13;
perfect record against Minnesota. Another&#13;
yearling, Rich Moffett, fmished with a 3&#13;
and 3 record.&#13;
For the veterans, Keith Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
was 5-1 in foil, Pete&#13;
Scbemanake 5-1, and John zanotti 4-2 in&#13;
sabre.&#13;
Bob Westby and Captain Bruce Bosman&#13;
were 3-0 in epee.&#13;
THE&#13;
BEAR&#13;
Volame z - Namber lZ&#13;
December 14, 1171&#13;
lntramurals Started&#13;
FACTS&#13;
On Both Campuses&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
By MARC HAARBAUER&#13;
TABLE TENNIS&#13;
The Parkside intramural league standings&#13;
remained about the same after the&#13;
night of December 8. The team of Tom&#13;
Bain, Tim Alfre~n and Phil Limbach&#13;
remained in first place with a 23-5 record.&#13;
In second place, 4½ game off the pace, is&#13;
the team of Marc Haarbauer, Dave&#13;
Semrad and Gregg Hansen, with an 18½-&#13;
9½ record. Both teams had bad nights, but&#13;
managed to still win two games and series&#13;
from their opponents.&#13;
Sixteen students signed up to play in the&#13;
Parkside intramural table tennis tournament.&#13;
This is a rather unique tournament&#13;
where an individual signs up to&#13;
play in the tournament and then the IM&#13;
Director pairs the contestants off.&#13;
Eli Slaughter, left, and Stan White, right, are two of Parkside's leading scorers.&#13;
The hottest team of the night was the&#13;
team of Tom Gascoigne, Gene Schnuckel&#13;
and Ed St. Peter. The team had high game&#13;
(634) and high series (1768). (These&#13;
figures include handicap.)&#13;
The best male bowler of the night was&#13;
Tim Alfredson, who had a 583 series with a&#13;
high game of 232. Alfredson also has high&#13;
average in the league - a 191 average.&#13;
The best female bowler Tuesday night&#13;
was Sandy Schmauss. She had a 348 series&#13;
with a 148 high game. Sandy also has the&#13;
girls high average - a 110 average.&#13;
Stan was the leading scorer (28 points) in the Michigan game.&#13;
The contestants then can make&#13;
arrangements to play their opponent when&#13;
they have some free time. The winner will&#13;
eventually advance to the championship.&#13;
Competition Tougher&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
Intramural Basketball is in full swing at&#13;
the Kenosha Campus. Eight teams&#13;
comprise the league, which plays one night&#13;
a week at one of the local junior high&#13;
schools. Games are at 8:00 and at 9:00.&#13;
Teams still interested in joining the&#13;
league may be able to enter, depending on&#13;
the number of late entries. Contact Coach&#13;
Jim Koch, Room. 144. The evenings to be&#13;
used for IM Basketball are as follows:&#13;
1st week - Monday, Dec. 7: Lance&#13;
2nd week - Wednesday, Dec. 16: Lance&#13;
3rd week - Tuesday, Jan. 5: Bullen&#13;
4th week - Tuesday, Jan. 12: Washington&#13;
5th week - Wednesday, Feb. 10: Lance&#13;
6th week - Monday, Feb. 15: Lance&#13;
7th week - Monday, Feb. 22: Lincoln&#13;
8th week - Monday, Mar. 1: Lance&#13;
9th week - Monday, Mar. 8: Lance&#13;
10th week - Monday, Mar. 15: Lance&#13;
11th week - Monday, Mar. 22: Lance&#13;
12th week - Monday, Mar. 29: Lance&#13;
By WALT SHIRER&#13;
MARQUETTE, MICH - Parkside&#13;
stepped up a notch in competition but gave&#13;
a good account of itself before bowing to&#13;
powerful Northern Michigan 101-85&#13;
Tuesday night.&#13;
A cold spell to start the second half was&#13;
more than Parkside could afford against&#13;
the team whose only loss in four starts has&#13;
been to Tennessee and whose schedule&#13;
includes such major university powers as&#13;
Utah and Illinois.&#13;
Northern broke a 39-39 deadlock late in&#13;
the first half and spurted to a 45-39 lead at&#13;
intermission. The wiMers came out of the&#13;
dressing rooms red hot and quickly&#13;
Jllounted an 18 point bulge, 75-57, midway&#13;
through the final stanza while UWP was&#13;
having trouble finding the range. Northern's&#13;
hot streak resulted in a sizzling 51&#13;
per cent shooting mark for the game, while&#13;
the Rangers' frigid spell left them at 40 per&#13;
cent.&#13;
Parkside didn't fold, however, and led&#13;
by Stan White and Mike Madsen, the&#13;
S I i:---~-- .,. er · ·tt; t. ead down to 10, !.'1&#13;
PO f ign f 81, with three minutes to play, but it was too late.&#13;
White, continuing his fine play, led both 0 n teams with 28 points, including 18 in the&#13;
• second half, and had 10 rebounds. Madsen,&#13;
enjoying his finest night by far, garnered&#13;
d 19 points and pulled in 11 rebounds. JU y Northern handcuffed normally highscoring&#13;
Jim Hogan and Eli Slaughter.&#13;
They got only four between them the Zimmerman second half_and finished the night with 13&#13;
and 8, respectively. Eli couldn't buy a&#13;
basket, hitting just 3 of 16 shots.&#13;
Lee Palmer, high-leaping 6'4 forward,&#13;
led Northern with 20 points and a gnm&#13;
high 15 rebounds. , as the winner&#13;
dominated the boards 61-46.&#13;
With his outburst, white ha pa ed&#13;
Slaughter and is second to Hogan in the&#13;
Ranger $Coring derby. After four games,&#13;
Hogan has·96 points ca 24 averagel, White&#13;
81 (20), Slaughter 69 (17), Madsen ~ (9),&#13;
captain Ken Rick 26 (7), Mike Jackson 17&#13;
m, and Nick Perrine 15 (4). White i the&#13;
leading rebounder. followed by Mad en. Parkside will host undefeated UW-Green&#13;
Bay Saturday night at Kenosha St. Joseph&#13;
High School (8 p.m.&gt;. The Phoenix of UW- GB are one of the strongest teams in the&#13;
state and feature Ray Willis, an all-NAIA&#13;
District 14 first team choice last eason&#13;
and better than ever this campaign. The&#13;
6'5 Willis is averaging close to 30 poin a&#13;
game, and hit 30 in Green Bay's late t&#13;
triumph, a convincing 94-n rout of alway&#13;
formidable St. Norbert's.&#13;
Green Bay defeated its arch rival,&#13;
Parkside, twice ast season, but only by&#13;
one point here so an upset turday is B&#13;
possibility.&#13;
UW-Parkslde (85)&#13;
Hogan&#13;
Perrine&#13;
Rick&#13;
Slaughte,·&#13;
White&#13;
Madsen&#13;
Jackson&#13;
Totals&#13;
Northern&#13;
fg&#13;
5&#13;
1&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
11&#13;
7&#13;
2&#13;
31&#13;
11chlgan &lt;IOI)&#13;
Ct pf&#13;
3 1&#13;
0 0&#13;
6 0&#13;
2 2&#13;
6 4&#13;
5 4&#13;
l 2&#13;
23 13&#13;
ft pf&#13;
0 0&#13;
The Legs of a 5' 4" Blue-Eyed Blonde&#13;
Conklin&#13;
Friday&#13;
Griffin&#13;
Duehning&#13;
Vaneklasen&#13;
Barber&#13;
lnkola&#13;
Palmer&#13;
fg&#13;
2&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
4&#13;
5&#13;
6&#13;
4&#13;
8&#13;
3 1&#13;
0 3&#13;
0 4&#13;
Athletes portray many different images,&#13;
but very few are the image of a lovely, 5'4"&#13;
blue eyed blond.&#13;
Judy Zimmerman, an 18 year old freshman&#13;
from West Allis Hale, does much to&#13;
shatter one's image of an athlete. But an&#13;
athlete she is, and a good one.&#13;
Judy has just finished her first year of&#13;
full competition in cross country in admirable&#13;
fashion. She has defeated all&#13;
comers in the area and has done very well&#13;
against national competition.&#13;
She admits to being a half-miler and&#13;
after running 1.5 miles and 2 miles all fall&#13;
she should feel like sprinting the half mile&#13;
during the winter and spring track seasons.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside, Judy had&#13;
established quite a reputation for herself&#13;
and the Milwaukee Track Club. She has&#13;
been a Wisconsin state champion in the 440&#13;
and 880 as well as capturing the state XC&#13;
title this past fall....&#13;
In addition to her state honors she has&#13;
been active on the national level. In 1969&#13;
she placed third in the 440 at the Junior&#13;
Olympic championships in San Diego. Just&#13;
this past summer, Judy placed third in the&#13;
880 at the Junior Nationals in ·Bowling&#13;
Green, Kentucky. Earlier in the spring she&#13;
~d taken the runner-up spot in the Golden&#13;
Midwest championships in Chicago.&#13;
Two years ago her relay team from the&#13;
Milwaukee Track Club won the spring&#13;
medley relay at the world famous Drake&#13;
Relays. Parkside·teammate, Mary Liblll,&#13;
was also a member of that team.&#13;
Perhaps her greatest honor was in&#13;
being selected to represent · the United&#13;
States at the Cultural Olympics held in&#13;
conjunction with the 1968 Olympics in&#13;
Mexico City.&#13;
It was here that she received her biggest&#13;
thrill in athletics. This came when she&#13;
viewed the opening ceremonies and was&#13;
thrilled to watch the United States&#13;
Olympic team parade into the Olympic&#13;
Stadium.&#13;
Perhaps her highest aim for the immediate&#13;
future came from watching the&#13;
magnificent spectacle of the Games; that&#13;
of being an Olympian herself.&#13;
Other ambitions include being a coach&#13;
and teacher of cross country and track.&#13;
Through this vocation she would like the&#13;
opportuntiy to work with inner-core&#13;
youngsters.&#13;
If she could imitate anyone she would&#13;
like to approach the examples that her&#13;
gymnastics coach, Jim Farkas, has taught&#13;
her. Mr. Farkas is · the coach of the&#13;
Milwaukee Turners.&#13;
Besides her track back-ground, Judy&#13;
was captain of her high school gymnastics&#13;
team as well as being a member of the&#13;
varsity cheerleading squad.&#13;
On top of all this, somehow, someplace,&#13;
she found time to compile a 3.8 academic&#13;
grade. It just seems that some people have&#13;
it!&#13;
0&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
4&#13;
Totals 46 9&#13;
Fencers Defeat&#13;
Two Big lO'ers&#13;
3&#13;
4&#13;
4&#13;
2&#13;
21&#13;
Coach Loren Hein was more than satisfied&#13;
with the results of the Fencing comp tition&#13;
during Sportsfest weekend.&#13;
Beating the University of Wi consin 17·3&#13;
and the University of Minnesota 24·3 is an&#13;
accomplishment in itself, but to add icing&#13;
to the cake, Freshmen had a big hand in&#13;
the victory.&#13;
For example, in epee against Madison,&#13;
frosh Bob Westby in his collegiate debut,&#13;
had a 3-0 record. Veterans John Hanzalik&#13;
and Bruce Bosman came through with two&#13;
and one records.&#13;
Another frosh, John Tank, gave one of&#13;
the finest exhibitions in the foil class to&#13;
defeat Big 10 champion Neal Cohen.&#13;
~hen w~s. leading 4-0 before Tank began&#13;
his magnificent comeback to win the bout&#13;
5-4.&#13;
Kim Nelson, another promising freshman,&#13;
had a 4-1 record for the day and a&#13;
perfect record against Minnesota. Another&#13;
yearling, Rich Moffett, finished with a 3&#13;
and 3 record.&#13;
For the veterans, Keith Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
was 5-1 in foil, Pete&#13;
Schemanske 5-1, and John Zanotti 4-2 in&#13;
sabre.&#13;
Bob Westby and Captain Bruce Bosman&#13;
were 3-0 in epee. &#13;
Ranger Basketballers Have&#13;
Rough Schedule Ahead&#13;
Parbide basltetballers will have a&#13;
heavy Idledule durin&amp; Ibe Christmas&#13;
holidays.&#13;
They will begin lhe period wilb a eight&#13;
team tournament at Quantico, Virginia.&#13;
They will be in action next at home when&#13;
Ibey take on Ibe Cougan 01 Soulbern&#13;
minois at Edwardsville.&#13;
Alter a short breslt for Christmas, Ibe&#13;
Rangers will head west where they will&#13;
play in the Com Palace tournament in&#13;
Mitchell, South Dakota.&#13;
December 17 the Rangers will open the&#13;
Quantico tournamenl by oquaring oIf&#13;
againsl ew York State 01 Old Westbury.&#13;
The wln_ of lhal game will meet the&#13;
WInner of the North Caroliua AiT vs.&#13;
Marl I CoIlOCe of PoueJlkeepsle, New&#13;
York&#13;
----&#13;
Other teams in Ibe tournamenl are&#13;
A1dersoo-Boarddus College 01 Phillippi.&#13;
West Virginia, Groves City College,&#13;
Pennsylvania, Findlay College of Obio aod&#13;
the Quantico Marines.&#13;
'!be Com Palace loUI'Dllmenl is a four&#13;
team affair hosled by Dakota Wesleyan, a&#13;
regional power. .&#13;
Parkside will open on January 30 WlIb&#13;
Wisconsin State University-LaCrosse&#13;
while the hosl Tigers will be meeting&#13;
Northweslern College of Orange City,&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
The fmals will be played on New Year's&#13;
Eve. The Rangers will begin the 1971&#13;
season by hosting Millon (January 6),&#13;
Lakehead Universily of Onlarlo on the 9th&#13;
and Northeastern D1inois on Ibe 12th.&#13;
Cross Country MVP, Coach, Team&#13;
WHITEW ATER - Four freshmen and a&#13;
lWllor waged a close race for Ibe MVP of&#13;
lhe uno Croll country District 14 balloting&#13;
by the Dlslnct coaches Jim Drews, Ibe&#13;
tandout from LaCroue, was the clear&#13;
MVP choice bul Ibe other four were very&#13;
clOle. Rick Lund 01 Parks.de fllushed&#13;
fourth an the ballollng&#13;
The same was true for the Coach ollbe&#13;
Year honor. as five coaches were aU in the&#13;
runnm&amp; with Bob Fiskum o( Whitewater&#13;
the WIMer Only Ibree votes separated Ibe&#13;
next three coaches&#13;
Plauevolle was voted as Ibe top team&#13;
""ib almost I dead heat between Carthage&#13;
Ind UW·Plrkside ror runner· up honors IS&#13;
Carlbage hid a slight edge. Parkside&#13;
defeated bolb lelms in competition this&#13;
son&#13;
Drews. who won eight individual races&#13;
thIS season. posted a 25:30 clock,ng for this&#13;
best (i'ie mile performance and was the&#13;
'It' UC chamption in his first season at&#13;
LaCrosse. McGhee, a freshman 01 Car·&#13;
thage. fimshed second to Drews as he&#13;
posted a 26:05 clocking over rive miles and&#13;
",as third in the CCTW meet. Schnepf of&#13;
WhIle",ater was third as he had a 26:33&#13;
mark (or his best time as he won eight&#13;
meel Russell of Pia Ueville rounded out&#13;
the top five as he won sevtf'l meets and had&#13;
a lhlrd place finish with his best time at&#13;
25:57&#13;
Flskum was given the nod as Coach of&#13;
the Year (or his guidance of a young team&#13;
that climbed from fifth to second in Ibe&#13;
WSUC meet and posted a much improved&#13;
9-3-1 record after falling 10 4-111-1just a&#13;
year ago.&#13;
Tom Vail, Ibe Platteville coach, was&#13;
second while Jon Swift, the Carthage&#13;
menl":, was third, Warren Kinzel of River&#13;
Falls was fourlb while Vic Godfrey of UWParkside&#13;
was fiflb. Only three voles&#13;
separaled Vail, Swifl and Kinzel.&#13;
Plalteville was a solid pick as Team of&#13;
the Year as the Pioneers posted a 12-1&#13;
record (or the season, won the WSUC&#13;
meet, was second in the Whitewatef invitational&#13;
meet, third in the Pioneer Invitational,&#13;
and finished in the lop 15 leams&#13;
in the NAIA finals.&#13;
Carthage, with a dual meet record of 28&#13;
straight wins, was second with a 7-0 dual&#13;
meet, was second in the ccrw, finished&#13;
sixth in the Platteville Invitational, and&#13;
second in the District Invitational meet&#13;
and also was in the top 15 of lhe NAIA&#13;
finals.&#13;
Parkside was 4-1 in dual meets, finished&#13;
third in the Whitewater Invitational, and&#13;
won the District Invitational meet.&#13;
Whitewater fmished fourth in the team&#13;
balloting with a 9-3-1 record while&#13;
LaCrosse finished a close fifth with a 7-3&#13;
dual meet record and third in the WSUC&#13;
meet while getting fourlb in a large 12-&#13;
team meet during the season.&#13;
Spotlight on Doug&#13;
Doug Anderson: Co-Captain&#13;
5' 10" -ISO lbs.•Frosh&#13;
Doug comes to Parkside from the&#13;
nation's hotbed of high school gymnastics&#13;
- Illinois. His home is in South Holland,&#13;
minois, a southern suburb of Chicago,&#13;
where he was graduated from Tbornridge&#13;
High School.&#13;
Doug was captain of his high school&#13;
team and won many individual honors. An&#13;
all-around man, Doug works side horse,&#13;
free exercise, high bar, rings, parallel&#13;
bars, and vaulting. His strongesl event is&#13;
high bar, where he must be considered for&#13;
national honors. Doug's goal in gymnastics&#13;
is to represenlthe United States in&#13;
inlemational competition.&#13;
Doug's major fields are Biological&#13;
Science and Music. His music background&#13;
is equally as impressive as his gym·&#13;
nastics, having been awarded All-Siate&#13;
honors as a baritone vocalist. His other&#13;
areas of interest afe sailing and snow&#13;
skiing.&#13;
Rick Lund and Chuck Dettman. Parkside's t~o representatives OIl the&#13;
NAJA All-Siar team, are sbown leading the pack against WSU-PlatteVllle.&#13;
WHITEWATER _ Two repeal per- named 10 the top 10 for their&#13;
d&#13;
tstanding -up of yearling record.&#13;
formers an an ou ... - Al R 11 . . f PIa&#13;
freshmen runners paced lhe NAJA District usse ,af1unthlOrprom&#13;
14 All-Star squad for the 1970 season. The Ibe top runner or e lOnoors lbIa&#13;
. I' f 10 runners was was selected for the second str8l&amp;li&#13;
team, consis mg 0 , al'lb M k D I j.......&#13;
sel ted b th ote 01 the District ong wt ar e aney, a -&#13;
':~ y e v Whilewater and lhe WarhawU'&#13;
coecnes thi Rick 'Lund and Chuck Dettman, two two runner IS season.&#13;
P&#13;
kside f hm fro Marinelte were seven freshmen, the largest&#13;
ar 51 fes en m , selected to an NAIA District 14&#13;
voted as top performers, along&#13;
sophomore. Heading the freshmu&#13;
was Jim Drews, the LaCrosse tap&#13;
who had eight wins and a fourth&#13;
finish in nine meets.&#13;
Carthage, always a dominate I&#13;
cross country, paced two first year&#13;
the squad - Mark Reisweber&#13;
McGhee. McGhee finished Ihird III&#13;
CCTW meet after winning three&#13;
meets, getting three second place&#13;
also for the unbeated Redmen.&#13;
was fifth in the CCTW meet as he .....&#13;
dual meets and was second in two&#13;
Rounding out the team were&#13;
Schnepf, a freshman from Whi&#13;
Ibe Hawks' lop runner; Gary Y&#13;
freshman from Platteville&#13;
Pioneers' second man; Chuck' ~.~.-&#13;
freshman from UW-Parkside who&#13;
wins and a third place in five meets;&#13;
Lund, another freshman from&#13;
Parkside who liad Ibree wins and I&#13;
second. place finishes; and sophomllIe&#13;
Stemper of Plalteville, with a seooad&#13;
five thirds for the Pioneers.&#13;
There were seven rtmners ..&#13;
Honorable Mention list. They wert:&#13;
Sumner, a freslunan from River&#13;
John Sindola, a sophomore from&#13;
Doug I}refezynski, a freshmaD&#13;
Oshkosh; Harry PeMinglon, a&#13;
from Carthage; John' Carlson, a&#13;
from LaCrosse; Joho Wilke, a&#13;
from Lakeland; and Bill Fojtik. s&#13;
man from Eau Claire.&#13;
In all, there were 26 runners frail&#13;
District teams nominated for the&#13;
team. Drews was the only runner&#13;
on every ballot as the nwnber one&#13;
Coaches did not vote for their own&#13;
in the balloting.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
Dec. 17-19: Rangers al Quantico,&#13;
Virginia, for Quantico Tournament.&#13;
Dec. 23: Southern IllinoisEdwardsville,&#13;
8:00, St. Joseph's,&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Dec. 30-31: Corn Palace Tournamenl,&#13;
Mitchell, Soulb Dakota,&#13;
. WSU-LaCrosse, Dakota Wesleyan,&#13;
Northwestern College.&#13;
Jan. 6: Millon College (Home) 8:00,&#13;
Union Grove High School.&#13;
Jan. 9: Lakehead University&#13;
(Ontario), Home, 8:00, Case Higli&#13;
School.&#13;
Jan. 12: Northeastern Illinois&#13;
(Home), 8:00, St. Joseph's.&#13;
FENCING&#13;
Jan. 8: University of Missouri,&#13;
Kansas Cily, Milwaukee Tech.&#13;
(Home), John Bullen Junior Higli.&#13;
Jan. 16: Air Force Academy" UWMadison&#13;
and Oliio Stale at&#13;
Madison.&#13;
WRESTLING&#13;
Dec. 17: UW-Milwaukee&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Dec. 29-30: Midlands Tournament&#13;
at LaGrange, Illinois.&#13;
Jan. 9: Beloit College (Home), John&#13;
Bullen Junior Higli.&#13;
GYMNASTICS&#13;
Jan. 9: Wisconsin State U-Stevens&#13;
Point, 3:00&#13;
TRACK&#13;
Jan. 2: Indiana State&#13;
Haute.&#13;
at Terre&#13;
al&#13;
Word Is Out! Here It Is!&#13;
By C. ROBERT PAUL. JR.&#13;
Director of Public Information&#13;
The Sports Year 1970 was NOT a vintage&#13;
year for the United States in amateur&#13;
sports in the Olympic Garnes, internationally&#13;
speaking.&#13;
Two developments worth mentioning&#13;
are: The success of the young basketball&#13;
team which won 10 out of 13 as the U.S.&#13;
Olympic Training Squad toured eastern&#13;
Europe afler three weeks of practice in&#13;
Colorado. Tom McMillen, currenlly a&#13;
freshman at the University of Maryland.&#13;
showed that he may be a strong candidate&#13;
for both the 1971 USA Pan-American Team&#13;
and tbe 1972 Olympic Tearn.&#13;
The comeback of the USA in ice hockey.&#13;
ReIegaled to Group B after a disastrous&#13;
1969 lournament, a revamped USA&#13;
Natl?~al learn swept to victory, and&#13;
qualified for Ihe 1972 Olympic Games. At&#13;
the presenl time, this augmented Natiol)lll&#13;
team, actu~y an Olympic training squad,&#13;
IS '? tbe mIdst of a backbreaking 51-game&#13;
trammg schedule prior to tbe Group A ice&#13;
hockey cbampionships in Switzerland.&#13;
In Ibe world wrestling cbampionships al&#13;
Edmonlon, Alberta, the USA continued 10&#13;
bold ils own in world wreslling by placing&#13;
second to Ibe Soviet Union in the free-style&#13;
competition as Wayne Wells became a&#13;
gold medalist in Ibe 163'pound&#13;
OUr other three medal wtnners&#13;
Olympic veteran Larry KriStl!1I,&#13;
medal, 220 pounds; 1968 OlymptC&#13;
Bobby Douglas, bronze, 149~:f::"&#13;
Mike Young, bronze, 136.5 jJUYU--&#13;
Team Sports e1d&#13;
In the tearn sports of soccer, ft ",'II&#13;
and volleyball (men's and "'om ....&#13;
future of the USA could prelty&#13;
determined by tbe pan-Amenca.:.&#13;
So far as soccer is con&lt;:ern~ ell&#13;
the "Olympic" team invOv III&#13;
preliminary q~~fying ~ eIII&#13;
Olympic competillon 1I11971, USA.&#13;
same teajD will represent \he ..... s&#13;
Pan-AiDerican Games. II hasweU ill&#13;
time since the USA has done&#13;
competition. e:ese ill IbI&#13;
Much depends on sOC ~&#13;
American Games for the VOlle&#13;
iJeld (men's and women's) and the _&#13;
team. Itis mandatory thai ~J~&#13;
if they expect to play at M~ gold&#13;
the volleyball. teamS won \he iieId&#13;
at Winnipeg 1I11967 and de forlbl&#13;
team edged oul hosl e.::::t evet ..... If&#13;
medal - the fU'St m bOd'1&#13;
USA in international field&#13;
petition.&#13;
Ranger Basketballers Have&#13;
Rough Schedule Ahead&#13;
Other teams in the tournament are&#13;
Aldersoo-Boarddus College of Phillippi,&#13;
West Virginia, Groves City Co!lege,&#13;
PeMSylvania, Findlay College of Ohio and&#13;
the Quantico 1arines.&#13;
The Corn Palace tournament is a four&#13;
team affair hosted by Dakota Wesleyan, a&#13;
regional power. . Parkside will open on January 30 with&#13;
Wi consin State University·LaCrosse&#13;
while the host Tigers will be meeting&#13;
, ·or th western College of Orange City,&#13;
Iowa. , The finals v.ill be played on New Years&#13;
Eve. The Rangers will begin the 1971&#13;
season by hosting 1ilton (January 6),&#13;
Lakehead University of Ontario on the 9th&#13;
·ev. and , 'orthea tern Illinois on the 12th.&#13;
Cross Country MVP, Coach, Team&#13;
the Year for his guidance of a yoWlg team&#13;
that climbed from fifth to second in the&#13;
w C meet and po ted a much improved&#13;
9-3·1 record after falling to 4-10-1 just a&#13;
year ago. Tom Vail, the Platteville coach, was&#13;
second while Jon Swift, the Carthage&#13;
ment~. wa third, Warren Kinzel of River&#13;
Fall was fourth while Vic Godfrey of UWPark&#13;
ide was fifth Only three votes&#13;
eparated Vail, Swift and Kinzel.&#13;
Platteville was a solid pick as Team of&#13;
the Year a the Pioneers posted a 12-1&#13;
record for the season, won the WSUC&#13;
mee , was econd in the Whitewater Invitational&#13;
meet. third in the Pioneer In-&#13;
,itational, and fini hed in the top 15 teams&#13;
m the · AIA final . Carthage, with a dual meet record of 28&#13;
traight wins, was second with a 7--0 dual&#13;
meet, was second in the ccrw. finished&#13;
i th in the Platte,ille Invitational, and&#13;
. econd in the District Invitational meet&#13;
and also was in the top 15 of the NAIA&#13;
finals.&#13;
Parkside was 4-1 in dual meets, finished&#13;
third in the Whitewater Invitational, and&#13;
won the District Invitational meet.&#13;
Whitewater finished fourth in the team&#13;
balloting ...,;th a 9-3-1 record while&#13;
LaCrosse finished a close fifth with a 7-3&#13;
dual meet record and third in the WSUC&#13;
meet while getting fourth in a large 12-&#13;
team meet during the season.&#13;
Spotlight on Doug&#13;
Doug Anderson: Co-Captain&#13;
s· 10" -150 lbs., Frosh&#13;
Doug comes to Parkside from the&#13;
nation's hotbed of high school gymnastics&#13;
- Illinois. His home is in South Holland,&#13;
lliinois, a southern suburb of Chicago,&#13;
where he was graduated from Thornridge&#13;
High School.&#13;
Doug was captain of his high school&#13;
team and won many individual honors. An&#13;
all-around man, Doug works side horse,&#13;
free exercise, high bar, rings, parallel&#13;
bars, and vaulting. His strongest event is&#13;
high bar, where he must be considered for&#13;
national honors. Doug's goal in gymnastics&#13;
is to represent the United States in&#13;
international competition.&#13;
Doug's major fields are Biological&#13;
Science and Music. His music background&#13;
is equally as impressive as his gymnastics,&#13;
having been awarded All-State&#13;
honors as a baritone vocalist. His other&#13;
areas of interest are sailing and snow&#13;
skiing.&#13;
Rick Ltmd and Ch~ck Dettman, Parkside' s t~o representative~ on the District 14&#13;
NAIA All-Star team, are shown leading the pack agamst WSU-Plattevdle.&#13;
Tw peat per- named to the top 10 for their ou~&#13;
WHITEWATER - 0 . re ou of yearling record.&#13;
formers and an outedstatnhedinNgAIAgrnf trict AI Russell, a junior from Platteville _. freshmen runners pac th t f th p· hi - d f the 1970 Season The e op runner or e 10neers t s -- 14 All-Star squa or · l ted f th d · -- . · f 10 tmners was was se ec or e secon str8Jgbt ~&#13;
team, consb 1st~ 0 te fr the District along with Mark Delaney, a j1D1ior ~ selected Y e vo O Whitewater and the Warhawks' lllllllbw&#13;
coaches th' · d Ch ck D ttman two two runner 1s season. Rick Lund an u e. ' Seven freshmen, the largest group&#13;
Parkside freshmen from Marmette, were selected to an NAIA District 14 team evw&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
Dec. 17-19: Rangers at Quantico,&#13;
Virginia, for Quantico Tournament.&#13;
&#13;
Dec. 23: Southern IllinoisEdwardsville,&#13;
8:00, St. Joseph's,&#13;
Kenosha. Dec. 30-31: Corn Palace Tournament,&#13;
Mitchell, South Dakota,&#13;
. WSU-LaCrosse, Dakota Wesleyan,&#13;
Northwestern College.&#13;
Jan. 6: Milton College (Home) 8:00,&#13;
Union Grove High School.&#13;
Jan. 9: Lakehead University&#13;
(Ontario), Home, 8:00, Case High&#13;
School.&#13;
Jan. 12 : Northeastern Illinois&#13;
(Home), 8:00, St. Joseph's.&#13;
FENCING&#13;
Jan. 8: University of Missouri,&#13;
Kansas City, Milwaukee Tech.&#13;
(Home), John Bullen Junior High.&#13;
Jan. 16: Air Force Academy., UWMadison&#13;
and Ohio State at&#13;
Madison.&#13;
WRESTLING&#13;
Dec. 17: UW-Milwaukee at&#13;
Milwaukee.&#13;
Dec. 29-30: Midlands Tournament&#13;
at LaGrange, Illinois.&#13;
Jan. 9: Beloit College (Home), John&#13;
Bullen Junior High.&#13;
GYMNASTICS&#13;
Jan. 9: Wisconsin State U-Stevens&#13;
Point, 3:00&#13;
TRACK&#13;
Jan. 2: Indiana State at Terre&#13;
Haute.&#13;
..... voted as top performers, along with 1&#13;
sophomore. Heading the freshman il'lllt was Jim Drews, the LaCrosse top l'lllllllr&#13;
who had eight wins and a fourth place&#13;
finish in nine meets.&#13;
Carthage, always a dominate force ii&#13;
cross country, paced two first year men•&#13;
the squad - Mark Reisweber and Joe&#13;
McGhee. McGhee finished third in the&#13;
CCTW meet after winning three dlll!&#13;
meets, getting three second place finishfs&#13;
also for the unheated Redmen. Reisweber was fifth in the CCTW meet as he woo fcudual&#13;
meets and was second in two others.&#13;
Rounding out the team were: Joe&#13;
Schnepf, a freshman from Whitewater and&#13;
the Hawks' top runner; Gary Yanke, a&#13;
freshman from Platteville and Ille&#13;
Pioneers' second man; Chuck Dettman, 1&#13;
freshman from UW-Parkside who had four&#13;
wins and a third place in five meets; Rkt&#13;
Lund, another freshman from UW·&#13;
Parkside who had three wins and a pair al&#13;
second place finishes; and sophomore Pal&#13;
Stemper of Platteville, with a second and&#13;
five thirds for the Pioneers.&#13;
There were seven runners on Ille&#13;
Honorable Mention list. They were: Gar,&#13;
Sumner a freshman from River Falla,&#13;
John St~ola, a sophomore from Superkr.&#13;
Doug :Qrefezynski, a freshman fl"CIII&#13;
Oshkosh; Harry Pennington, a sophomort&#13;
from Carthage; John Carlson, a freshmll&#13;
from Lacrosse; John Wilke, a sophomore&#13;
from Lakeland; and Bill Fojtik, a (relllman&#13;
from Eau Claire.&#13;
In all there were 26 runners from lilt&#13;
District' teams nominated for the All.:&#13;
team. Drews was the only runner P1&#13;
on every ballot as the nwnber one !11111«&#13;
Coaches did not vote for their own !'lllner1&#13;
in the balloting.&#13;
Word Is Out! Here It Is!&#13;
By C. ROBERT PAUL, JR.&#13;
Director of Public Information&#13;
The Sports Year 1970 was NOT a vintage&#13;
year for the United States in amateur&#13;
sports in the Olympic Games, internationally&#13;
speaking.&#13;
Two developments worth mentioning&#13;
are: The success of the young basketball&#13;
team which won 10 out of 13 as the U.S.&#13;
Olympic Training Squad toured eastern&#13;
Europe after three weeks of practice in&#13;
Colorado. Tom McMillen, currently a&#13;
freshman at the University of Maryland,&#13;
showed that he may be a strong candidate&#13;
for both the urn USA Pan-American Team&#13;
and the 1972 Olympic Team.&#13;
The comeback of the USA in ice hockey.&#13;
Relegated to Group B after a disastrous&#13;
196~ tournament, a revamped USA&#13;
Nati?~al team swept to victory, and&#13;
quahf1ed for the 1972 Olympic Games. At&#13;
the present time, this augmented Natiotial&#13;
~m, actu~ly an Olympic training squad,&#13;
lS 1~ !he midst of a backbreaking 51-game&#13;
tra1mng schedule prior to the Group A ice&#13;
hockey championships in Switzerland.&#13;
In the world wrestling championships at&#13;
Edmonton, Alberta, the USA continued to&#13;
hold its own in world wrestling by placing&#13;
second to the Soviet Union in the free-style&#13;
competition as Wayne Wells became a&#13;
. visil,Ggold&#13;
medalist in the 163-po~nd di we!'&#13;
Our other three medal wmners .:i.« . toff :,u•- Oly.mpic veteran Larry Kris . • ~&#13;
medal, 220 pounds; 1968 Olympic ca. and&#13;
Bobby Douglas, bronze, 149-5 ~·&#13;
Mike Young, bronze, 136.5 poWl ·&#13;
Team Sports id be)Ck~&#13;
In the team sports of soccer, fie ,51 lbe&#13;
and volleyball (men's and wom~udl i,r&#13;
future of the USA could pre~ty GaJlll!'-&#13;
deterinined by the Pan-Amencanot orJY ii&#13;
So far as soccer is conc~e&lt;\~ed ,nt&#13;
the "Olympic" team invo in tJlf&#13;
preliminary qua~ifyi!1g gam;t 8150 tilt&#13;
Olympic competition m lg,l, USA ID 11'&#13;
same teBJll will represent the l)eell • tcllC&#13;
Pan-Ainerican Games. It has ll in eitbl&#13;
time since the USA has done we&#13;
competition. in the Pf'&#13;
Much depends on succ~ yt&gt;all u,Jllf&#13;
American Games for the v~ efteld h~&#13;
(men's and women's) and e will at c)i&#13;
team. It is mandatory that tr J Of~&#13;
if they expect to play at M:th gold~~&#13;
the volleyball teams won the field IW-"~.&#13;
at Winnipeg in 1967 and da for the~&#13;
team edged ou~ host &lt;;;1J ever won bY~&#13;
medal - the first m f' Id boekeY&#13;
USA in international ie&#13;
petition. &#13;
potlight on 8ig&#13;
One of the most exciting hasketball&#13;
yers in Wisconsin collegiate circles is a&#13;
3" senior from Marshall High School in&#13;
·cago.&#13;
Eli Slaughter, or the "E" as Ranger fans&#13;
him, has been a big gun since his&#13;
etball dehut at Parkside.&#13;
Slaughter is one of the junior college&#13;
ansfers that has made Parkside&#13;
etball fortunes go.&#13;
After a so-so career at Marshall, Eli&#13;
e a sudden star at Wright J.C. He&#13;
An earlJl scuffle resulting in the loss of a&#13;
player and a late rally by Purdue&#13;
Ortb Central were overcome by UWrkside&#13;
in posting their first season&#13;
*tory 7~ Friday, Dec. 4.&#13;
After opening the game with a flurry and&#13;
ing up a strong half-time lead of 43-29,&#13;
second half pumping almost turned&#13;
disaster as Purdue closed the gap to&#13;
o points with less than a .minute&#13;
ining.&#13;
With five minutes gone, a "misunderstanding"&#13;
between Parkside's Eli&#13;
ugIIter and Hoot Craig Salik of Purdue&#13;
Best of Year&#13;
Parkside's Volleyball Club played some&#13;
o! its best volley hall of the year hefore&#13;
Ioeing in sudden death to place second in&#13;
the Volleyball Tournament won hy UWMilwaukee&#13;
held during the Sportsfest.&#13;
The Rangers opened the four-team&#13;
lAlurnament by scraping past UW-Green&#13;
Bay 16-14; 15-12; and 1hen bowing 7-15.&#13;
Second round opponent, Milwaukee,&#13;
furnished the Rangers an opportunity to&#13;
play their best volleyball of the tourney.&#13;
Parkside edged the Congars 15-13 in the&#13;
final game helore faltering in the second&#13;
14-16.Parkside rallied to capture the third&#13;
game 15-11.&#13;
Millon College furnished little opJIOOition,losing&#13;
15-2, 15-1and 15-6. At this&#13;
stage Parkside's record was 7-2, and&#13;
Milwaukee was playing Green Bay. If&#13;
.. ther learn would win two games, then&#13;
Parkside would he the winner, hut this&#13;
-asn't the case as Milwaukee won all&#13;
Ihree games, forCing the tournament into&#13;
Sudden death.&#13;
Because of a lime factor, the play-off&#13;
Was set at one game instead of best two out&#13;
of Ihree. The cold Rangers got a 2-1 lead&#13;
but thia was the best they could do and&#13;
MiJ-waukeeromped to a 15-6 win.&#13;
became the team's leading scorer both&#13;
years and was named to the second team&#13;
J.C. All-American cage squad.&#13;
Slaughter took right off last year with a&#13;
24 point average. In the squad's first three&#13;
games this year he has had 32 and TI points&#13;
plus a two pointer when he was ejected&#13;
from a game in its early stages for&#13;
fighting.&#13;
Eli is a great scorer with a soft, fade.&#13;
away jumper that usually hits the target if&#13;
he is in the 111-20foot range.&#13;
Whlte&#13;
Slaughter&#13;
Jackson&#13;
Madsen&#13;
Hogan&#13;
Perrine&#13;
Rick&#13;
Mann&#13;
Gonsorek&#13;
Hart&#13;
Pizarek&#13;
Swanson&#13;
Haynes&#13;
salik&#13;
Janzaruk&#13;
Parkside&#13;
PurdueNC&#13;
1IH4&#13;
0-0&#13;
0-0&#13;
IH&#13;
8-9&#13;
2-5&#13;
4-7&#13;
3-5 5&#13;
6-9 3&#13;
1-3 4&#13;
0-1 1&#13;
3-3 3&#13;
2-3 4&#13;
3-3 4&#13;
0-1 2&#13;
31 - 74&#13;
39-68&#13;
Ski Rangers: Plans Include&#13;
Winter Carnival Events&#13;
The Ski Rangers are in the preliminary&#13;
stages of planning a "Winter Carnival"&#13;
series of events. The events are scheduled&#13;
tentatively from February 17-20.&#13;
Planning committees are working on a&#13;
theme, name and schedule of events.&#13;
According to Ski Ranger President Jim&#13;
DeBerge, events that are being discussed&#13;
are: Ice Carving, Ski Racing, Cross&#13;
Country Skiing, Sled Racing, Broomball&#13;
Tournaments for men and women, Saow&#13;
Shoe Races, Hockey and a drop by sky&#13;
divers.&#13;
Held in conjunction with this snow spree&#13;
would he a breakfast, dances, basketball&#13;
New Advisor&#13;
For Girls&#13;
HI was born and raised in North Dakota,&#13;
and I'm proud of it!" she says with a&#13;
smile. Doreen Kristjanson is the new,&#13;
advisor for Parkside's Cheerleaders and&#13;
Rangeretles. She is a 1969graduate of the&#13;
University of North Dakota and is in her&#13;
second year of teaching home economics&#13;
at Racine Park High School.&#13;
Doreen was a cheerleader aU four years&#13;
at Grand Forks Central High School in&#13;
Grand Forks, North Dakota. At the&#13;
University of North Dakota she was a&#13;
member of Phi Upsilon Omicron, an&#13;
honorary home economics fraternity. Last&#13;
August she traveled to Mexico with a&#13;
friend and went to Yucatan. She also is the&#13;
advisor to Parkside's Porn-Porn girls.&#13;
Though one can easily see she has little&#13;
spare time, she usually spends it sewing,&#13;
swimming crocheting or bowling. She&#13;
says her f~vorites are men and parties.&#13;
Her first impression of Parkside was&#13;
that she was disappointed to see that it was&#13;
so hard to get kids involved here&#13;
At the next balf lime of a hasketball&#13;
game, Jook for the record player. The&#13;
young lady standing there with the long,&#13;
light brown hair and blue eyes is Doreen.&#13;
Editor's Note: Due to the background of&#13;
some of our coaching staff, I was asked to&#13;
'lay that "North Dakota is the second best&#13;
state in the country, next to South&#13;
Dakota' ..&#13;
game, and the crowning of • Snow Queen.&#13;
This type of event will take much&#13;
planning and the cooperation of studen18&#13;
and faculty alike. Espec:ially important&#13;
will be the participatioo of all clubs 00&#13;
campus.&#13;
Each event will have a chairman and&#13;
committee that is responsible for the&#13;
promotion of the event.&#13;
More will be published in the next issue&#13;
of Newscope.&#13;
Miss Kristjanson&#13;
Godrey Speaks&#13;
Cross Country Coach Vic Godfrey spoke&#13;
at Proviso West's cross country banquet&#13;
last Friday night. Proviso West IS located&#13;
in Hillside, Illinois, and has long been&#13;
famous for tile quality of Its distance&#13;
nmners.&#13;
This Friday, Godfrey will he speaking In&#13;
Toledo, Ohio, at the banquet honoring the&#13;
Ohio Stale Cross Country Champions,&#13;
DeVilbiss High School of Toledo.&#13;
Spotlight on Jeff Jenkins&#13;
Jeff Jenkins has Coach Koch smiling&#13;
when he goes out to meet his opponents in a&#13;
wrestling match,&#13;
Jeff is a sophomore from Bradford HIgh&#13;
School who, according to Koch, may just&#13;
he coming of age. Jeff had an unimpressive&#13;
4-4 record last year, but he did&#13;
win a match at the NAJA National Tournament.&#13;
Koch is quick to point out that this is a&#13;
new season and Jeff Jenkins has asserted&#13;
himself as a mainstay on the team. "Jeff is&#13;
probably the most exciting wrestler to&#13;
watch on the team due to his unorthodox&#13;
style and his variety of moves. He moves&#13;
like butler on a hot knife."&#13;
In Jeffs first two matches, he lived up to&#13;
his coach's kind remarks by decisioning&#13;
his opponents 21·11 and IH. During the&#13;
remainder of the season, the 150-poWlder's&#13;
courage will he put to the test many limes.&#13;
At this weight class, the opponents usually&#13;
seem to have ahout their best wrestler&#13;
also.&#13;
o&#13;
4 Ranger Wrestlers to Meet UW-M&#13;
2&#13;
5&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
In what could prove to be a very interesting&#13;
afternoon of wrestling, the&#13;
Parkside wrestlers meet the uwMilwaukee&#13;
wrestling team on Thursday,&#13;
December 17, at 1:30. The match, which&#13;
was originally scheduled for Parkside,&#13;
Rangers Post first Victory&#13;
resulted in Slaughter's ejection with only&#13;
two points scored hy the Ranger ace.&#13;
Stan White took over the rebounding&#13;
reins for Parkside, leading both teams&#13;
with 12 pick offs. It was White, in the&#13;
second half, who battled Purdue back from&#13;
a rush that brought the score to 56-52.&#13;
Hitting on jumpers and drives and&#13;
counting a few chairty tosses, White hit&#13;
seven straight to give the Rangers some&#13;
breathing room. .&#13;
Purdue, not giving in easily, drilled on&#13;
and with 2 :45 remaining, trailed only 67-63.&#13;
White again clicked a jwnper to make it&#13;
69-63. Purdue out-gunned the Rangers 5-1&#13;
to tighten the score with forty seconds&#13;
remaining at 70-68.&#13;
A missed bonus situation by Purdue cost&#13;
them a chance at a tie and with only 30&#13;
seconds remaining a similar opportunity&#13;
was missed by Parkside's Ken Rick.&#13;
Another bonus play was converted with&#13;
just a few seconds remaining by Rick to&#13;
put the game away.&#13;
Parkside hit 43 per cent for the evening&#13;
after a hot SO per cent first half. Purdue&#13;
shot a respectahle48 per cent for the night.&#13;
Jim Hogan topped all scorers for Parkside&#13;
with 26 points, followed by White with 24.&#13;
Parkalde-74&#13;
7&#13;
1&#13;
o&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
Purdue NC-68&#13;
5&#13;
2&#13;
5&#13;
1&#13;
5&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
43&#13;
29&#13;
JOGGING&#13;
Faculty or Staff members and&#13;
their spouses who are interested in a&#13;
morning jobbing program should&#13;
contact Vic Godfrey at the Office of L Athletics, Ext. 245, this week.&#13;
was rescheduled for Milwaukee to coincide&#13;
with their winter homecoming activities.&#13;
Between the Mat Maids and the newly&#13;
organized Mat Rats, which is a male group&#13;
of wresUing boosters, the Rangers may&#13;
well feel that they are wresUing in front of&#13;
a home crowd anyway.&#13;
The line-up for the UW-Milwaukee&#13;
match should he as follows: 188 Hugh&#13;
Gately, t26 Steve Lamont, 134 Ken Marlin,&#13;
142 Gary Vincent, ISO Jeff Jenkins, 158&#13;
Tony Kolnik, 167 Bill Benkstein, 177Tom'&#13;
Beyer, 190Paul Paricka, and heavyweight&#13;
Mark Barnhill.&#13;
Parkside has never defeated Milwaukee&#13;
in wrestling.&#13;
Spotlight on Big&#13;
One of the most exciting basketball&#13;
players in Wisconsin collegiate circles is a&#13;
6'3" senior from Marshall High School in&#13;
Oticago.&#13;
Eli Slaughter, or the "E" as Ranger fans&#13;
call him, has been a big gun since his&#13;
basketball debut at Parkside.&#13;
Slaughter is one of the junior college&#13;
transfers that has made Parkside&#13;
basketball fortunes go.&#13;
After a so-so career at Marshall, Eli&#13;
became a sudden star at Wright J.C. He&#13;
"E"&#13;
became the team's leading scorer both&#13;
years and was named to the second team&#13;
J.C. All-American cage squad.&#13;
Slaughter took right off last year with a&#13;
24 point average. In the squad's first three&#13;
games this year he has had 32 and '1:1 points&#13;
plus a two pointer when he was ejected&#13;
from a game in its early stages for&#13;
fighting.&#13;
Eli is a great scorer with a soft, fad~&#13;
away jumper that usually hits the target if&#13;
he is in the 10-20 foot range.&#13;
Rangers Post First Victory&#13;
An earl.)r scuffle resulting in the loss of a&#13;
star player and a late rally by Purdue&#13;
North Central were overcome by UWParkside&#13;
in posting their first season&#13;
Victory 74-68 Friday, Dec. 4.&#13;
After opening the game with a flurry and&#13;
running up a strong half-time lead of 43-29,&#13;
cold second half pumping almost turned&#13;
into disaster as Purdue closed the gap to&#13;
two points with less than a · minute&#13;
remaining.&#13;
With five minutes gone, a "misunderstanding"&#13;
between Parkside's Eli&#13;
Slaughter and 7-foot Craig Salik of Purdue&#13;
Best of Year&#13;
Parkside's Volleyball Club played some&#13;
of its best volleyball of the year before&#13;
losing in sudden death to place second in&#13;
the Volleyball Tournament won by UW·&#13;
Milwaukee held during the Sportsfest.&#13;
The Rangers opened the four-team&#13;
lournament by scraping past UW-Green&#13;
Bay 16-14; 15-12; and then bowing 7-15.&#13;
Second round opponent, Milwaukee,&#13;
furnished the Rangers an opportunity to&#13;
play their best volleyball of the tourney.&#13;
Parkside edged the Cougars 15-13 in the&#13;
final game before faltering in the second&#13;
14-16. Parkside rallied to capture the third&#13;
game 15-11.&#13;
Milton College furnished little opllOSition,&#13;
losing 15-2, 15-1 and 15-8. At this&#13;
stage Parkside's record was 7-2, and&#13;
~Waukee was playing Green Bay. If&#13;
either team would win two games, then&#13;
Parkside would be the winner, but this&#13;
wasn't the case as Milwaukee won all&#13;
three games, forcing the tournament into&#13;
Sudden death.&#13;
Because of a time factor, the play-off was set at one game instead of best two out&#13;
of three. The cold Rangers got a 2-1 lead&#13;
~t this was the best they could do and&#13;
Milwaukee romped to a 15-8 win.&#13;
resulted in Slaughter's eiection with only&#13;
two points scored by the Ranger ace.&#13;
Stan White took over the rebounding&#13;
reins for Parkside, leading both teams&#13;
with 12 pick offs. It was White, in the&#13;
second half, who battled Purdue back from&#13;
a rush that brought the score to 56-52.&#13;
Hitting on jumpers and driv~ an~&#13;
counting a few chaii;ty tosses, White hit&#13;
seven straight to give the Rangers some&#13;
breathing room. · Purdue, not giving in easily, drilled on&#13;
and with 2: 45 remaining, trailed only 67~.&#13;
White again clicked a jumper to make it&#13;
6~. Purdue out-gunned the Rangers 5-1&#13;
to tighten the score with forty seconds&#13;
remaining at 70-68.&#13;
A missed bonus situation by Purdue cost&#13;
them a chance at a tie and with only 30&#13;
seconds remaining a similar opportunity&#13;
was missed by Parkside's Ken Rick.&#13;
Another bonus play was converted with&#13;
just a few seconds remaining by Rick to&#13;
put the game away. . Parkside hit 43 per cent for the evening&#13;
after a hot 50 per cent first half. Purdue&#13;
shot a respectable 48 per cent for the night.&#13;
Jim Hogan topped all scorers for Parkside&#13;
with 26 points, followed by White with 24.&#13;
White&#13;
Slaughter&#13;
Jackson&#13;
Madsen&#13;
Hogan&#13;
Perrine&#13;
Rick&#13;
Mann&#13;
Gonsorek&#13;
Hart&#13;
Pizarek&#13;
Swanson&#13;
Haynes&#13;
Salik&#13;
Janzaruk&#13;
Parkside&#13;
Purdue NC&#13;
Parkside - 74&#13;
7&#13;
1&#13;
0&#13;
3&#13;
9&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
Purdue NC-68&#13;
5&#13;
2&#13;
5&#13;
1&#13;
5&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
43&#13;
29&#13;
10-14&#13;
0-0&#13;
0-0&#13;
0-1&#13;
8-9&#13;
2-5&#13;
4-7&#13;
4&#13;
0&#13;
2&#13;
5&#13;
2&#13;
3&#13;
2&#13;
3-5 5&#13;
6-9 3&#13;
1-3 4&#13;
0-1 1&#13;
3-3 3&#13;
2-3 4&#13;
3-3 4&#13;
0-1 2&#13;
31 - 74&#13;
39 - 68&#13;
Ski Rangers: Plans Include&#13;
Winter Carnival Events&#13;
The Ski Rangers are in the preliminary&#13;
stages of planning a "Winter Carnival"&#13;
series of events. The events are scheduled&#13;
tentatively from February 17-20.&#13;
Planning committees are working on a&#13;
theme, name and schedule of events.&#13;
According to Ski Ranger President Jim&#13;
DeBerge, events that are being discussed&#13;
are: Ice Carving, Ski Racing, Cross&#13;
Country Skiing, Sled Racing, Broomball&#13;
Tournaments for men and women, Snow&#13;
Shoe Races, Hockey and a drop by sky&#13;
divers.&#13;
Held in conjunction with this snow spree&#13;
would be a breakfast, dances, basketball&#13;
New Advisor&#13;
For Girls&#13;
"I was born and raised in North Dakota,&#13;
and I'm proud of it!" she says with a&#13;
smile. Doreen Kristjanson is the new.&#13;
advisor for Parkside's Cheerleaders and&#13;
Rangerettes. She is a 1969 graduate of the&#13;
University of North Dakota and is in her&#13;
second year of teaching home economics&#13;
at Racine Park High School.&#13;
Doreen was a cheerleader all four years&#13;
at Grand Forks Central High School in&#13;
Grand Forks, North Dakota. At the&#13;
University of North Dakota she was a&#13;
member of Phi Upsilon Omicron, an&#13;
honorary home economics fraternity. Last&#13;
August she traveled to texico with a&#13;
friend and went to Yucatan. She also is the&#13;
advisor to Parkside's Porn-Porn girls.&#13;
Though one can easily see she has little&#13;
spare time, she usually spends it sewing.&#13;
swimming, crocheting or bowling. She&#13;
says her favorites are men and parties.&#13;
Her first impression of Parkside was&#13;
that she was disappointed to see that it was&#13;
so hard to get kids involved here&#13;
At the next half time of a basketball&#13;
game, look for the record player. The&#13;
young lady standing there with_ the long,&#13;
light brown hair and blue eyes Doreen.&#13;
Editor's Note: Due to the background of&#13;
some of our coaching staff, I was asked to&#13;
c;;ay that "North Dakota is the second best&#13;
state in the country. next to South&#13;
Dakota' ..&#13;
game, and the crowning of a Sno" Qu&#13;
This type of ev nt will take much&#13;
planning and the cooperation of tuden&#13;
and faculty alike. Especially important&#13;
v.;n be the participation of all clubs on&#13;
campus.&#13;
Each event will have a chairman and&#13;
committee that i respon ible for the&#13;
promotion of the event.&#13;
More will be published in the next i ue&#13;
of Newscope.&#13;
Miss Kristianson&#13;
Godrey Speaks&#13;
Cros Country Coach ic Godfr y pok&#13;
at Proviso West's er country bang t&#13;
last Friday night. Pro,;so W t I located&#13;
in Hillside, Illinoi , and ha Ion been&#13;
famou for the ;iality of 1ts di tancc runner .&#13;
Thi Friday, Godfrey \\111 be _pc kin in&#13;
Toledo, Ohio, at the banquet honorin the&#13;
Ohio State Cr Country Ch mpion .&#13;
DeVilbi High ch I of Toledo.&#13;
Spotlight on Jeff Jenkins&#13;
Jeff Jenkin ha Coach Koch _ miling&#13;
\\'hen he g out tom hi oppon 11t in&#13;
\\TesUing match.&#13;
Jeff i a ophomore from Bradford High&#13;
School who, according to Koch, may ju t&#13;
be coming of age. J ff h d n unimpre&#13;
iv -4 record la t y r, but h did&#13;
win a match at th 'AIA • · Uonal Tour·&#13;
seem&#13;
also.&#13;
Ranger Wrestlers to Meet UW- M&#13;
In what could prove to be a very interesting&#13;
afternoon of wrestling, the&#13;
Parkside wrestlers meet the UWMilwaukee&#13;
wrestling team on Thursday,&#13;
December 17, at 1:30. The match, which&#13;
was originally scheduled for Parkside,&#13;
JOGGING . Faculty or Staff members and&#13;
their spouses who are interested in a&#13;
morning jobbing program should&#13;
contact Vic Godfrey at the Office of L Athletics, Ext. 245, this week.&#13;
was rescheduled for Milwaukee to coincide&#13;
with their winter homecoming activities.&#13;
Between the 1at Maids and the newly&#13;
organized Mat Rats, which is a male group&#13;
of v.Testling boosters, the Rangers may&#13;
well feel that they are wrestling in front of&#13;
a home crowd anyway.&#13;
The lin~up for the UW-Milwaukee&#13;
match should be as follows: 188 Hugh&#13;
Gately, 126 Steve Lamont, 134 Ken Martin,&#13;
142 Gary Vincent, 150 Jeff Jenkins, 158&#13;
Tony Kolnik, 167 Bill Benkstein, rn Tom•&#13;
Beyer, 190 Paul Paricka, and heavyweight&#13;
Mark Barnhill.&#13;
Parkside has never defeated .1ilwaukee&#13;
in \\-Testling. &#13;
A Wrestling Spectacular&#13;
biI two ma"'" Jet\DI ,.ad .. 11&#13;
paiIIb • .kIIID ,.. (1'8dll 11 ....&#13;
... ill _ '" fIM1 DI.' t • •&#13;
I" ' ErIc 0 • I+&amp;:&#13;
AItI6 G.- FlIll ;'1DjInd ill.. baIIl.&#13;
1a; B1DT8IlIMd ~ "::t~&#13;
.... dI 1lIIl&#13;
.... --&#13;
.. 2"' __ .,at-· ....&#13;
_1: '" _edL AItI6 a.a&#13;
...., IS-I, 117 palIIIdIr aDd C8fAID BIll&#13;
P' ' 1II2dI vCJIIII '"&#13;
7:.P , ,._ r·--&#13;
Wi I- IIIIt ,....&#13;
AMI r-==bman• Tom Be1er of&#13;
D WIll&gt; • ---'!be mat&#13;
I.- _ ad2lIII ". .21!tW bJ aut·&#13;
polDtitII JItD Wll2II I51') ~IJ aDd ...&#13;
CIlIIII2Dll beck witII ..... 2 :d.r pID !ba2&#13;
_ ....-It '"•bIp -. A -jdM!d 'l'Gm~-""""._- ."., be&#13;
""*&#13;
ma2 _ ... bllI bIIcl&lt; with&#13;
.:• .- In!bematdl.&#13;
Ex...... ) wellbt Paul Parlc:U sp112for&#13;
!be ."....... II)wiDDIDI. bard foullht 4-2&#13;
dac:IIIiaa _ LareIl WiDlaDla '" Tecb ....&#13;
...... bJ • pID • PaID!'. Jim Notslad in&#13;
.:•.&#13;
A little .... lDupeI'IeDeed Mart Bambill&#13;
made bllI debu2 85 • bea¥)'WeIgb? an excitinllf&#13;
not winDItC aoe. BambiIl at 190&#13;
p.eupll6pounda to Da¥id Tarbell of Tech&#13;
and went down to a 6-2 defeat, Dave&#13;
Garber. a ll00d beavyweigbt from Point,&#13;
put Bambill down for the co... t in .: 10.&#13;
+ + + ,&#13;
MlchIpn Tecb. a wresUIDll leam that&#13;
ParUide defeated durinI Sportafest, went&#13;
OYffCto Cartballe !benext day and woo the&#13;
Carthalle Quadrangle.&#13;
Michigan Tech scored 90 points to 70 for&#13;
Carthalle, North Park was third with 42,&#13;
and AUJ'(lI'alast with 31,&#13;
Publde w, '''*'8 lana wen ~ted to&#13;
a IlaII sr..._ 01 wreat1InI cIuriJlI ....&#13;
.....-I ~ SportaIeoP,&#13;
E." d _ 1102 ....&#13;
R .,. baIdod W t I Tecb wttIt _&#13;
.... _ III8ldl baIon&#13;
............ P' 2nrr-WSVsae._&#13;
Poid.&#13;
PubIda ....... II poIII?a .. eadl_&#13;
.........-*II -1lu'lIJ '"'7.&#13;
P'Inl 01 all lost dI ....&#13;
1. 2 ,.... rrP'&#13;
t,.. c....,... ....&#13;
IItDIL To ..... dim P8lIIIor +. ",&#13;
It T" *"'*Is G.a "" .... ..., Ida&#13;
..... ill ....-'1 01 biI lin?&#13;
mMdl. T_ ..., m IJ poIII?a&#13;
___ R • • II paIiI?&#13;
ben , ., dad : .1lIIl !be&#13;
Poid 1II8ldl- adIIIoo_..,·&#13;
PubIda lost a Dol7 I " ....&#13;
PubIda·. t .... ) .1'.2 Ibtll&#13;
PanIIIID _In a .aIIaDl.ort ..... tlk.&#13;
the P k iII lIDaIe, A Pa' 11 will&#13;
..., ba Ra,..n Ilolh ric-&#13;
....&#13;
At _ l2DM .... Ba ,Ir .......&#13;
the Poid 17-3 baIon ~ Ido&#13;
Frallmaa Kea .... rtla (34) from&#13;
CaImaa • ...-m, led III ..... In&#13;
~ with two piDI. Ha pIDDed Teet cap?8ID GftI Ha__ oa\y 46 -..ado&#13;
nmaiDIaI .... MartID bobIIId. HIs ascoad&#13;
vk:1Im _ PalDt'. Dele Ha*\ewlC1&#13;
AilCI2IIltr Iroo\l, IluIb Gataly of K.-bI&#13;
1ftmpIr. made bllI coIIeIIate deIU • ...-lui _ with • pID over FTaak&#13;
(11_ 01 T_ and a &amp;-2 declaloa OYffC&#13;
Kevin Campbell ill!be 111 pouad daa.&#13;
Jeff JeakinI. a 150 pouad IOJIb from&#13;
Pradt • d, ran up \arII ocona in winDItC&#13;
. Fresluna~ Tom Berer has a pinning combination on Jim Wit1lll Of&#13;
Porn!. Beyer missed the pm, but went on to a wild 15-12 decision.&#13;
Rangers Come Back&#13;
To Win Over Swedes&#13;
By JOHN ANDERSON&#13;
Journ.I·Tlmes Stiff&#13;
A ~rrage of late baskets provided UW·&#13;
Parks"le. WIth a Ihrilling come-from·&#13;
hem.nd VlCtory over. the touring Swedish&#13;
Nahonal team 85-80 in the Case HIgh&#13;
Saturday n!llh!. gym&#13;
The taller Swedes spotted the Ran ers&#13;
the lead for the ftrst 13 mintues and ~en&#13;
took over on torrid shooting by6'S Jorgen&#13;
~n to lead by S at half time, Parkslde&#13;
eg~ed the lead with five minules&#13;
remammgand held on to gain the win&#13;
The t-.ams. played WIder Internatio~1&#13;
rules wh.ch differ from those used 'by U.S.&#13;
::::::' t: free throws are shot on fouls&#13;
shoo . person fouled Is in the act of&#13;
In ting. ,then two shots are awarded. .&#13;
the fmal three minutes of the g&#13;
all fouls give th te . arne.&#13;
either shootmg'~ am fouled the option of&#13;
hoWlds ,"'.0 or 1a1&lt;lng the ball inlea&#13;
. Th~ dl!Clslonmust come from the&#13;
m captain and not the bench&#13;
Another intere . .&#13;
Ifter each sting variation results&#13;
handle th ~aske!. The officials do not&#13;
not toUChethe and the scorinll team may&#13;
called If th hall, Technical fouls are&#13;
ciden!. ey touch the ball even by ac·&#13;
Substitutes enter th buzzer, but notify thee game only on a&#13;
makla a' scorer's Iable by&#13;
then ing&#13;
th rolling ~otlon with their handa,&#13;
rul ey 110. W.th all the chan ..es' th&#13;
es, some thirty f - m e&#13;
controlled the g 0 t,hem. the officials&#13;
argument from ~e~chth a minimum of&#13;
The SWed dI es,&#13;
sound in fWl':am spl.yed a brand of ball&#13;
differed in the enlals and their shooting&#13;
Seldom do the ~t touch they display,&#13;
usinll a hi&amp;h';' ~ve the ball at the basket,&#13;
re than most American&#13;
.. wIa~i pm lleDkItein rldinll Russ Bentley of WSU-Steveas Point. Benkstein went on&#13;
Heavyweipt Mark Barnhill Is Ihown tryinll to tear If I I&#13;
Tarbell, the Michigan Tech heavyweight. T.rbell weighed? the bead of one David&#13;
Tarbell emer&amp;ed the winnffC6-2. m at 285 to Barnhi1l's 190.&#13;
Capt BW Benbtein ~ Rua Bentley of WSU-Stevens Poinl Benkstein went on&#13;
lo 1J,&#13;
I I&#13;
Heavyweight Mark Barnhill la shown trying to tear off the bead of one DaVid&#13;
Tarbell, the Michigan Tech heavywejpt. Tarbell Wei8hed in at 285 to BarnhilJ•s 190&#13;
Tarbell emerged the winner 6-2. ·&#13;
Freshman Tom Beyer has a pinning c~mbination ~n. Jim Willig al&#13;
Point. Beyer missed the pin, but went on to a wlld 15-12 dec1s1on.&#13;
Rangers Come Back&#13;
To Win Over Swedes&#13;
By JOHN ANDERSON&#13;
Journal-Times Staff&#13;
A barrage of late baskets provided UWParkside&#13;
with a thrilling come-frombehind&#13;
Victory over. the touring Swedish ,'iational team 85-80 in the Case High gym&#13;
Saturday night.&#13;
The taller Swedes spotted the Rangers&#13;
the lead for the fll'St 13 mintues and then&#13;
took over on torrid shooting by 6'8 Jorgen&#13;
Hansson to lead by 8 at half time. Parkside&#13;
regained the lead with five minutes&#13;
remaining and held on to gain the. win.&#13;
The teams played under International&#13;
rules which differ from those used by U.S. teams. No free throws are shot on fouls&#13;
unless the person fouled is in the act of&#13;
shooting, then two shots are awarded.&#13;
In the f?3al three minutes of the game,&#13;
all fouls give the team fouled the option of&#13;
either shooting two or taking the ball inbounds.&#13;
The decision must come from the&#13;
team captain and not the bench.&#13;
Another interesting variation results&#13;
after each basket. The officials do not&#13;
handle the ball and the scoring team may&#13;
not touch the ball. Technical fouls are&#13;
~lied if they touch the ball even by accident.&#13;
&#13;
Substitutes enter the game only on a&#13;
buzzer, but notify the scorer's table by&#13;
m~g a rolling motion with their hands,&#13;
then ID they go. With all the changes in the&#13;
rules: some thirty of them, the officials&#13;
controlled the aame with a minimum of&#13;
argument from the benches.&#13;
The _Swedes displayed a brand of ball&#13;
8?'1Dd ID f undamenta1s and their shooting&#13;
differed 10 the Soft touch they display.&#13;
=~m d~ they drive the ball at the basket,&#13;
g a higher arc than most American </text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 2, Issue 11, December 3, 1970</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Report of Committee Chair Meeting with the Chancellor</text>
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              <text>Report of Committee Meeting&#13;
With The Chancellor&#13;
On Tuesday, October zt, 1970, the&#13;
Umverslty Committee met for more than&#13;
two h~rs with Cancellor Wyllie to discuss&#13;
with him a number of poticy questions of&#13;
concern to tbe faculty. The following are&#13;
the results of that discussion:&#13;
1. Personnel Criteria and Evaluation of&#13;
ProbaUonary FaCUlty: Tbe University&#13;
Committee reported its concern that the&#13;
divi.si?ns were being asked to accept as&#13;
defirnte the evaluation criteria&#13;
suggested by the Dean and Vice&#13;
Chancellor. Chancellor Wyllie said that&#13;
It was his understanding thattbe criteria&#13;
were offered as suggestions and that the&#13;
Chairmen and tbe Executive Committees&#13;
were asked to use them in their&#13;
evaluations.&#13;
2. Increased Teaching Loads for Selected&#13;
Faculty: The Committee protested the&#13;
deCISIOn to assign teaching responsitilities&#13;
of 15 hours to selected tenured&#13;
faculty members without prior consultation&#13;
with Divisional Executive&#13;
Committees concerning the policy itseU&#13;
criteria, procedures, conditions, and&#13;
personnel to be involved. The Chancellor&#13;
expressed his understanding that the&#13;
workload increases were a necessary&#13;
offset to workload reductions that the&#13;
University Committee had proposed for&#13;
the support of faculty research, and that&#13;
the policy of increasing some loads while&#13;
reducing otbers had been laken up with&#13;
the Divisional Chairmen, and with the&#13;
Divisional Executive Committees before&#13;
being put into effect. He offered&#13;
assurances that consideration for&#13;
promotions and merit increases would&#13;
not be categorically denied to such&#13;
personnel who received such assign.&#13;
ments. These assignments should not be&#13;
considered as penalties.&#13;
Big Sportsfest This Weekend&#13;
Today: Lecture on Meditation&#13;
Permanent High&#13;
Without Drugs&#13;
By JIM MURRAY Meditation Society is making instruction&#13;
available on campuses across the country&#13;
and at present has about 50,000 members&#13;
in the U.S. alone. In tbe month of October,&#13;
over 8,000 students began the practice. In&#13;
Madison, SIMS in the second largest&#13;
student organization on campus.&#13;
Meditation itself, as a form of ex·&#13;
periencing higher levels or consciousness,&#13;
is as old as man, but its recent translation&#13;
into the scientific language of the twentieth&#13;
century helps to explain its present&#13;
popularity. Recent laboratory experiments&#13;
at Harvard, Stanford and UCLA&#13;
have proved Transcendental Meditation to&#13;
be effective in lowering heart rate and&#13;
respiration while increasing skin&#13;
resistance. TM has also proved effective in&#13;
replacing the use of drugs by offering a&#13;
more permanent, beneficial "high". All&#13;
interested persons are cordially invited to&#13;
attend the introductory lecture.&#13;
On Monday, Nov. 30 at 8 p.m. in Dl'n&#13;
Greenquist, the first of two introductory&#13;
lectures will be presented for any student&#13;
or faculty member who is interested in&#13;
beginning the practice of Transcendental&#13;
Meditation. T.M. is a natural technique&#13;
which allows the conscious mind to experience&#13;
increasingly more subtle states&#13;
of thought until the source of thought, the&#13;
unlimited reservoir of energy and&#13;
creative intelligence, is reached. This&#13;
simple practice expands the capacity of&#13;
the conscious mind and a man is able to&#13;
use his full potential in all fields of thought&#13;
and action.&#13;
The practice of Transcendental&#13;
Meditation was brought to this country by&#13;
Marharishi Mahesh Yogi who is presently&#13;
in the United States instructing teachers of&#13;
meditation. The Students' International&#13;
Pianist To Play Two Public Recitals&#13;
Genevieve Prevot, the young pianist who&#13;
came from France last year to study with&#13;
Carmen Vila, artist-in-residence at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, will&#13;
present two free public recitals this week.&#13;
Miss Prevot, who is continuing her&#13;
studies with Miss Vila and teaching at&#13;
Prairie School, will play on Thursday,&#13;
Dec. 3, at 7:30 p.m. in the UWP Kenosha&#13;
Campus Fine Arts Room and on Saturday,&#13;
Dec. 5, at 8 p.m. in the Racine Campus&#13;
Badger Room.&#13;
Her program for both recitals will include&#13;
three chorales by Bach, six preludes&#13;
by Debussy and Liszt's Sonata in B minor.&#13;
Miss Prevot was born in Talence,&#13;
Gironde, France, and began her piano&#13;
studies attbe age of five. She subsequently&#13;
pursued her studies at the Bordeaux&#13;
Conservatory of Music, Dramatic Art and&#13;
Dance, where she received the first prize&#13;
for piano at the age of 15.&#13;
She also has studied at the National&#13;
Conservatory of Music in Paris, where she&#13;
was awarded prizes both for instrumental&#13;
ensemble ahd solo piano performance.&#13;
She has made a number of concert appearances&#13;
both in France and Spain.&#13;
3. Ad Hoc Faculty Advisory Committee:&#13;
The University Committee protesled&#13;
that tbe formation of the Ad Hoc Committee&#13;
of tenured faculty to advise the&#13;
Dean in those cases concerning&#13;
prohationary faculty on which the administration&#13;
and the Divisional&#13;
Executive Committees might reach&#13;
different conclusions and recommendations.&#13;
The committee believed&#13;
such review to be the province of the&#13;
College Executive Committee. Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie indicated that the Dean's&#13;
right to appoint his own advisory&#13;
committees cannot be infringed, and&#13;
that an administrative officer can seek&#13;
advice from any quarter before making.&#13;
his own decisions and recommendations.&#13;
He also reported that Acting President&#13;
Clodius had suggested that this Ad Hoc&#13;
Advisory Committee be appointed by the&#13;
Dean as a means of enhancing faculty&#13;
participation in the personnel review&#13;
process. Tbe Ad Hoc Committee is an&#13;
advisory committee, advisory to the&#13;
Dean; it is not an executive committee.&#13;
4. Role of the Chairmen and ExecuUve&#13;
Committees: The University Committee&#13;
expressed concern that the Divisional&#13;
Chairmen were being expected to act&#13;
solely as an extension of the administration&#13;
and independently of the&#13;
Executive Committees. Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie stated his understanding that&#13;
Divisional Chairmen have a double&#13;
responsilility in tbe conduct of their&#13;
offices, which means that they must act&#13;
as spokesmen for their faculties as' well&#13;
as officers of administration. This&#13;
represents no change in established&#13;
policy.&#13;
5. Mission: The Committee expressed&#13;
concern over recent statements&#13;
describing the Parkside mission which&#13;
seemed to focus on industrial society at&#13;
the expense of undergraduate liberal&#13;
arts education. The Committee was&#13;
particularly concerned about the role of&#13;
the mission, so defined, as a criterion for&#13;
evaluating personnel. The Chancellor&#13;
stated that Parkside's industrial society&#13;
mission provided a necessary focus for&#13;
the undergraduate educational program&#13;
and for tbe staffing of that program. He&#13;
indicated that mission orientation and&#13;
suitability will be a factor in personnel&#13;
decisions. That does not mean that&#13;
faculty without an industrial society&#13;
focus in their specialties will necessarily&#13;
be terminated or that such personnel are&#13;
without instructional value to the institution.&#13;
He also slated his view that a&#13;
strong mission orientation is in no way&#13;
inimical to the broad goals of liberal arts&#13;
education.&#13;
6. The Chancellor indicated that he&#13;
would convey to Vice Chancellor Harris&#13;
and Dean MacKinney the concerns&#13;
expressed above as wen as matters&#13;
raised in their letter to tne Chancellor&#13;
(October 22, 1970),&#13;
Prof. To Present&#13;
Paper&#13;
A visiting associate professor of&#13;
engineering science at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parks ide, Sam Tang, will&#13;
present an invited paper at the annual&#13;
meeting of The American Society of&#13;
Mechanical Engineers Nov. 29 through&#13;
Dec. 3 in New York City.&#13;
The paper, titled "A Discussion on&#13;
Wave-Front Stress Relaxation in a One&#13;
Dimensional Nonlinear Inelastic Material&#13;
with Temperature and Position Dependent&#13;
Properties," also will be published in the&#13;
Journal of Applied Mechanics.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside last fan,&#13;
Tang had been a faculty member at&#13;
Columbia University, New York&#13;
University and State University of New&#13;
York and held industrial positions as a&#13;
design engineer and research scientist.&#13;
See Special Section&#13;
Library&#13;
Hours&#13;
The Library announces longer hours in&#13;
the evening at Tallent HaD. Because of a&#13;
light budgetary situation, hours will be&#13;
somewhat reduced elsewhere where&#13;
attendance is low. '&#13;
1. Beginning November 30, the Library&#13;
in Tallent Hall will remain open, Monday.&#13;
Thursday, until midnighl. This will be&#13;
experimental for the rest of the first&#13;
semester. If use justifies, the midnight&#13;
closing can be continued into the second&#13;
semester.&#13;
2. Beginning November 30, all three&#13;
Parkside libraries (Tallent, Kenosha, and&#13;
Racine) will open half an hour later in the&#13;
morning, Monday-Friday (at 7:45 rather&#13;
than at 7: 15),&#13;
3. Beginning November 28, the libraries&#13;
at Kenosha and Racine Campuses will&#13;
normally be closed on Saturdays.&#13;
However, the library in Tallent Hall will&#13;
continue to be open on Saturdays from 9 to&#13;
5-.We shall also make special rules for&#13;
exam periods. Under the closed-onSaturday&#13;
ruie, reserve books may be 1aken&#13;
out from the two campus libraries on&#13;
Friday at 3 p.m. for tbe whole weekend.&#13;
Milwaukee Rep.&#13;
Here Friday&#13;
The Milwaukee Repertory Theal .. will&#13;
stage an informal performance of the&#13;
"Interview" segment of Jean-Claude van&#13;
Itallie's "America Hurrah" at 2 p.rn. on&#13;
Friday, Dec. 4, in the Fine Arts Room at&#13;
Parkside's Kenosha Campus. The&#13;
program is free and is sponsored by the&#13;
Division of Humanistic Studies.&#13;
"Interview" is the first in the series or&#13;
three plays satirizing American life which&#13;
make up America Hurrah.&#13;
The play, which has been widely hailed&#13;
by critics, begins with a group of appJicants&#13;
being questioned at an employment&#13;
agency. In a series of transitions&#13;
the action shifts to a subway, an accident,&#13;
a charm school, a confessional and.&#13;
eventually, a psychiatrist's couch.&#13;
Newsweek calls the play "a highly&#13;
stylized, intricately choreographed&#13;
exercise in loneliness and depersonalization."&#13;
Time calls it "a Wedding&#13;
between pop art and the theater of&#13;
cruelty." Said New Republic, "WIth&#13;
America Hurrah, the concept of theatrical&#13;
unity finally becomes meaningful in this&#13;
country and the American theater takes&#13;
three giant steps towards maturity."&#13;
Other comments:&#13;
amusing, startling and invigorating,&#13;
a stage along the road to a real'&#13;
theater of commitment in America.. ..&#13;
- Eric BenUey.&#13;
"Brilliant." - Harold Pinter.&#13;
..Almost as though we were Greeks&#13;
again, searching out a sight sound for the&#13;
stage." - Walter Kerr.&#13;
On U.S. TV&#13;
WASHINGTON (CPS) - "Our people&#13;
have never done any harm against the&#13;
American people," says Mme. Nguyen Thi&#13;
Binh, foreign minister of Provisional&#13;
Revolutionary Government&#13;
Mme. Binh will address President Nixon&#13;
and the American people concerning the&#13;
desires of the Vietnamese people in a tw()-&#13;
part filmed segment of "The Advocates,"&#13;
to be televised Dec. 8 and Dec. 15 on most&#13;
of the 200 affiliates of the Public Broadcasting&#13;
Service (PBS). Mme. Binh is the&#13;
chief nogotiator in Paris and author of the&#13;
PRG's eight-point peace proposal offered&#13;
in Paris in September. Her appearance&#13;
will be during the first show, Dec. 8, which&#13;
will present the pro-coalition side of the&#13;
dehate.&#13;
The program will center around the&#13;
question "Should the United States agree&#13;
to a coalition government in Saigon?"&#13;
Mme. Binh is one of several "witnesses"&#13;
speaking in favor of the coalition government.&#13;
lill·&#13;
0&#13;
trll&#13;
Report of Committee Meeting&#13;
With The Chancellor&#13;
:s&#13;
Wl&#13;
i!~&#13;
i~&#13;
~ ~esday, October 'n, 1970, the&#13;
Uruvers1ty Committee met for more than&#13;
~o h~rs with Cancellor Wyllie to discuss&#13;
With him a number of policy questions of&#13;
concern to the faculty. The following are&#13;
the results of that discussion:&#13;
1. Personnel Criteria and Evaluation of&#13;
Proba~onary Faculty: The University&#13;
Committee reported its concern that the&#13;
divi_si?ns were being asked to accept as&#13;
definite the evaluation criteria&#13;
suggested by the Dean and Vice&#13;
~hance~or. Chancellor Wyllie said that&#13;
1t was his understanding that the criteria&#13;
were offered as suggestions and that the&#13;
Chairmen and the Executive Committees&#13;
were asked to use them in their&#13;
evaluations.&#13;
2. Increased Teaching Loads for Selected&#13;
Faculty: The Committee protested the&#13;
decision to assign teaching responsitilities&#13;
of 15 hours to selected tenured&#13;
faculty members without prior consultation&#13;
with Divisional Executive&#13;
C~ITU1;1ittees concerning the policy itsell, cr1tena, procedures, conditions, and&#13;
personnel to be involved. The Chancellor&#13;
expressed his understanding that the&#13;
workload increases were a necessary&#13;
offset to workload reductiom that the&#13;
University Committee had proposed for&#13;
the support of faculty research, and that&#13;
the policy of increasing some loads while&#13;
reducing others had been taken up with&#13;
the Divisional Chairmen, and with the&#13;
Divisional Executive Committees before&#13;
being put into effect He offered&#13;
assurances that consideration for&#13;
promotiom and merit increases would&#13;
not be categorically denied to such&#13;
personnel who received such assignments.&#13;
These assignments should not be&#13;
considered as penalties.&#13;
Today: Lecture on Meditation&#13;
Permanent High&#13;
Without rugs&#13;
By JIM MURRAY&#13;
On Monday, Nov. 30 at 8 p.m. in Dl'n&#13;
Greenquist, the first of two introductory&#13;
lectures will be presented for any student&#13;
or faculty member who is interested in&#13;
beginning the practice of Transcendental&#13;
Meditation. T.M. is a natural technique&#13;
which allows the conscious mind to experience&#13;
increasingly more subtle states&#13;
of thought until the source of thought, the&#13;
unlimited reservoir of energy and&#13;
creative intelligence, is reached. This&#13;
simple practice expands the capacity of&#13;
the conscious mind and a man is able to&#13;
use his full potential in all fields of thought&#13;
and action. The practice of Transcendental&#13;
Meditation was brought to this country by&#13;
Marharishi Mahesh Yogi who is presently&#13;
in the United States instructing teachers of&#13;
meditation. The Students' International&#13;
Meditation Society is making instruction&#13;
available on campuses across the country&#13;
and at present has about 50,000 members&#13;
in the U.S. alone. In the month of October,&#13;
over 8,000 students began the practice. In&#13;
Madison, SIMS in the second largest&#13;
student organization on campus.&#13;
Meditation itself, as a form of experiencing&#13;
higher levels of consciousness, is as old as man, but its recent translation&#13;
into the scientific language of the twentieth&#13;
century helps to explain its present&#13;
popularity. Recent laboratory experiments&#13;
at Harvard, Stanford and UCLA&#13;
have proved Transcendental Meditation to&#13;
be effective in lowering heart rate and&#13;
respiration while increasing skin&#13;
resistance. TM has also proved effective in&#13;
replacing the use of drugs by offering a&#13;
more permanent, beneficial " high". All&#13;
interested persons are cordially invited to&#13;
attend the introductory lecture.&#13;
Pianist To Play Two Public Recitals&#13;
Genevieve Prevot, the young pianist who&#13;
came from France last year to study with&#13;
Carmen Vila, artist-in-residence at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, will&#13;
present two free public recitals this week.&#13;
Miss Prevot, who is continuing her&#13;
studies with Miss Vila and teaching at&#13;
Prairie School, will play on Thursday,&#13;
Dec. 3, at 7:30 p.m. in the UWP Kenosha&#13;
Campus Fine Arts Room and on Saturday,&#13;
Dec. 5, at 8 p.m. in the Racine Campus&#13;
Badger Room.&#13;
Her program for both recitals will include&#13;
three chorales by Bach, six preludes&#13;
by Debussy and Liszt's Sonata in B minor.&#13;
Miss Prevot was born in Talence,&#13;
Gironde, France, and began her piano&#13;
studies at the age of five. She subsequently pursued her studies at the Bordeaux&#13;
Conservatory of Music, Dramatic Art and&#13;
Dance, where she received the first prize&#13;
for piano at the age of 15.&#13;
She also has studied at the National&#13;
Conservatory of Music in Paris, where she&#13;
was awarded prizes both for instrumental&#13;
ensemble and solo piano performance.&#13;
She has made a number of concert appearances&#13;
both in France and Spain.&#13;
3. Ad Hoc Faculty Advisory Committee:&#13;
The University Committee protested&#13;
that the formation of the Ad Hoc Committee&#13;
of tenured faculty to advise the&#13;
Dean in those cases concerning&#13;
probationary faculty on which the administration&#13;
and the Divisional&#13;
Executive Committees might reach&#13;
different conclusions and recommendations.&#13;
The committee believed&#13;
such review to be the province of the&#13;
College Executive Committee. Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie indicated that the Dean's&#13;
right to appoint his own advisory&#13;
committees cannot be infringed, and&#13;
that an administrative officer can seek&#13;
advice from any quarter before making.&#13;
his own decisions and recommendations.&#13;
He also reported that Acting President&#13;
Clodius had suggested that this Ad Hoc&#13;
Advisory Committee be appointed by the&#13;
Dean as a means of enhancing faculty participation in the personnel review&#13;
process. The Ad Hoc Committee is an&#13;
advisory committee, advisory to the&#13;
Dean; it is not an executive committee.&#13;
4. Role of the Chairmen and Executive&#13;
Committees: The University Committee&#13;
expressed concern that the Divisional&#13;
Chairmen were being expected to act&#13;
solely as an extension of the administration&#13;
and independently of the&#13;
Executive Committees. Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie stated his understanding that&#13;
Divisional Chairmen have a double&#13;
responsilility in the conduct of their&#13;
offices, which means that they must act&#13;
as spokesmen for their faculties as· well&#13;
as officers of administration. This&#13;
represents no change in established&#13;
policy.&#13;
5. Mission: The Committee expressed&#13;
concern over recent statements&#13;
describing the Parkside mission which&#13;
seemed to focus on industrial society at&#13;
the expense of undergraduate liberal&#13;
arts education. The Committee was&#13;
particularly concerned about the role of&#13;
the mission, so defined, as a criterion for&#13;
evaluating personnel. The Chancellor&#13;
stated that Parkside's industrial society&#13;
mission provided a necessary focus for&#13;
the undergraduate educational program and for the staffing of that program. He&#13;
indicated that mission orientation and&#13;
suitability will be a factor in personnel&#13;
decisions. That does not mean that&#13;
faculty without an industrial society&#13;
focus in their specialties will necessarily&#13;
be terminated or that such personnel are&#13;
without instructional value to the institution.&#13;
He also stated his view that a strong mission orientation is in no way&#13;
inimical to the broad goals of liberal arts&#13;
education.&#13;
6. The Chancellor indicated that he&#13;
would convey to Vice Chancellor Harris&#13;
and Dean MacKinney the concerns&#13;
expressed above as well as matters&#13;
raised in their letter to tne Chancellor&#13;
(October 22, 1970).&#13;
Prof. To Present&#13;
Paper&#13;
A visiting associate professor of&#13;
engineering science at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside , Sam Tang, will&#13;
present an invited paper at the annual&#13;
meeting of The American Society of&#13;
Mechanical Engineers Nov . 29 through&#13;
Dec. 3 in New York City.&#13;
The paper, titled "A Discussion on&#13;
Wave-Front Stress Relaxation in a One&#13;
Dimensional Nonlinear Inelastic Material&#13;
with Temperature and Position Dependent&#13;
Properties," also will be published in the&#13;
Journal of Applied Mechanics.&#13;
Before coming to Parkside last fall,&#13;
Tang had been a faculty member at&#13;
Columbia University, New York&#13;
University and State University of New&#13;
York and held industrial positions as a design engineer and research scientisL&#13;
Library&#13;
H ours&#13;
The Library announces longer hours in&#13;
the evening at Tallent Hall. Becau of a tight budgetary situation, hours will b&#13;
somewhat reduced elsewhere. where&#13;
attendance is low.&#13;
1. Beginning November 30, the Librar_ in Tallent Hall will remain open, Monday- Thursday, until midnight. Thi will be&#13;
experimental for the rest of the fir t&#13;
semester. If use justifies, the midnight&#13;
closing can be continued into the econd&#13;
semester.&#13;
2. Beginning November 30, all three&#13;
Parkside libraries (Tallent, Kenosha, and&#13;
Racine&gt; will open half an hour later in the&#13;
morning, Monday-Friday cat 7:45 rather&#13;
than at 7:15 ).&#13;
3. Beginning November 28, the librarie·&#13;
at Kenosha and Racine Campuse will&#13;
normally be closed on Saturday .&#13;
However, the library in Tallent Hall will&#13;
continue to be open on Saturdays from 9 to&#13;
5._ We shall also make special rule for&#13;
exam periods. Under the clo ed-onSaturday&#13;
rule, reserve books may be taken&#13;
out from the two campus libraries on&#13;
Friday at 3 p.m. for the whole weekend.&#13;
Milwaukee Rep.&#13;
Here Friday&#13;
The Milwaukee Repertory Theater will&#13;
stage an informal performance of the&#13;
"Interview" segment of Jean-Claude van&#13;
Itallie's "America Hurrah" at 2 p.m. on&#13;
Friday, Dec. 4, in the Fine Arts Room at&#13;
Parkside's Kenosha Campus. The&#13;
program is free and is sponsored by the&#13;
Division of Humanistic Studies.&#13;
" Interview" is the first m the erie of&#13;
three plays satirizing American life which&#13;
make up America Hurrah.&#13;
The play, which has been widely hailed&#13;
by critics, begins with a group of ap- plicants being questioned at an employment&#13;
agency. In a series of transition&#13;
the action shifts to a subway, an accident,&#13;
a charm school, a confessional and,&#13;
eventually, a psychiatri l's couch .&#13;
Newsweek calls the play "a highly&#13;
stylized, intricately choreogra ph d&#13;
exercise in lonelines and depersonaliz.ation."&#13;
Time calls it "a wedding be wee pop art and the th I r o&#13;
cruelty." Said New Republic, "With&#13;
America Hurrah, the concept of theatrical&#13;
unity finally becomes meaningful in thi&#13;
country and the American theater tak&#13;
three giant steps towards maturity."&#13;
Other comments:&#13;
. . . amusing , tartling and invigorating,&#13;
a stage along the road to a real·&#13;
theater of commitment in America ... " - Eric Bentley.&#13;
"Brilliant. " - Harold Pinter.&#13;
"Almost as though we w r Gr k.&#13;
again, searching out a ight ound for the&#13;
stage." - Walter Kerr.&#13;
On U.S. TV&#13;
WASHINGTQJI,.; CCPS &gt; - "Our peopl&#13;
have never done any harm again t llw&#13;
American people," say Mme., guyen Thi&#13;
Binh, foreign mini. ter of Provisional&#13;
Revolutionary Government&#13;
1me. Binh will addr ·s Pr ·- id nl , 'ix n&#13;
and the American people cone ming the&#13;
desires of the Vietnam -e people in a twopart&#13;
filmed segment of ''Th Advocat ,"&#13;
to be televised Dec . 8 and Dec. 15 on most&#13;
of the 200 affiliates of the Public Broad·&#13;
casting Service CPBS&gt; Mme. Binh i th•&#13;
chief nogotiator in Paris and author of the&#13;
PRG's eight-point peace proposal offered&#13;
in Paris in September. Her appearance&#13;
will be during the first show, Dec. 8, which&#13;
will present the pro-coalition side of the&#13;
debate.&#13;
The program will center around the&#13;
question "Should the United States agree&#13;
to a coalition government in Saigon?" Mme. Binh is one of several "witnesses"&#13;
speaking in favor of the coalition govern- ment.&#13;
Big Sportsf est This Weekend&#13;
See Special Section I&#13;
-J &#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
Severed Nerve&#13;
The axe should fall any day now and you might fmd yo~eU&#13;
looking around next semester and finding a ghostown campus. Yes, !l's&#13;
that time of year; Old santa gives out his Christmas presents; ;-veeding&#13;
out all that dirty cancer from his garden. This year students might find&#13;
they're minus an Economic or Political Science teacher - sometunes&#13;
that axe i mighty sharp. But nevertheless, it will l1et the job don~.&#13;
Some of the teachers that you like and you think did a good JOb m&#13;
relating their knowledge to you will be leaving. In their place the&#13;
Admini tration will hire professors with their 20 years. But the ~urprise&#13;
i the Old Timers are hard to come by, wait and see. This tune If It&#13;
happens, If you think one of your Professors got dumped unjustly.Iet us&#13;
know and we guarantee there will be action taken.&#13;
Top Secret University&#13;
Durmg the better part of this year reporters on this paper have&#13;
r peatedly tried to report news stories of the Administration Sour~e,&#13;
but w re confronted with strong opposition. The AdmmlstratlOn&#13;
d .n't want c rtain thing printed, which is understandable.&#13;
Howev r two I ue that concern students and are directly relevant to&#13;
th rr Iuture . hould and will be printed in this newspaper. Many times&#13;
w will be informed that a faculty guidelines sheet or a letter from the&#13;
n ellor to the Political cience Division is available but not for&#13;
pnnt. What doe "not available for print" mean? Well, it is the&#13;
m t erial we requ ·ted which i in the office but cannot be taken out of&#13;
the offtce; cannot be copied m any way and, by request, no portion may&#13;
be print d In other words, "hands off"! To do the story justice and to&#13;
s ape po sible liable, the reporter would have to have a photographIc&#13;
memory. The rea on ... but of course they have a reason ... why&#13;
wouldn't the Administration want the students to see a copy of the&#13;
fa ulty guid lines or a copy of anything that pertains to the public&#13;
policy of thi DIver ity? The reason could possibly be: first, that the&#13;
Administration weighs research far more than teaching. You see, the&#13;
tudent wouldn't understand, they're hung up on good teaching. To&#13;
publicize this would just stir up trouble on this revolutionary campus.&#13;
But for the Administration to stand by weak, instead of strong in&#13;
defending what it has created, shows a part of the character that runs&#13;
this University.&#13;
Secondly, the guidelines are seemingly written by.a fifth grader.&#13;
It could also be the Administration is ashamed of what it has issued and&#13;
nghtfully so - it is slop! Faculty Guidelines should not be something&#13;
which are shut up in some dark corner of a closet. They should be&#13;
brought into the open for debate and discussion by all.&#13;
Mississippi Editors Censored&#13;
By JAN A PEPPER &amp; M. B. STACEY&#13;
College Press Service&#13;
STATE COLLEGE, Miss. (CPS) - Parallel moves were announced&#13;
last week by the Board of Trustees of the institutions of Higher&#13;
Education and the highest county chapter of the Mississippi State&#13;
Alumni Association in an attempt to quell the voice of the student press&#13;
in Mississippi.&#13;
The Board of Trustees of the Institutions of Higher Learning has&#13;
ordered all institutional heads to appoint faculty or staff members to&#13;
upervise and edit each edition of campus newspapers and annuals&#13;
before press release. Both the staff editor and institutional head will be&#13;
ultimately responsihle to the Board for such publications and their&#13;
content&#13;
Earlier this week the highest county alumi association called for&#13;
the impeachement of all Reflector (MSU student paper) editors except&#13;
the busmess manager. They charged the paper had failed to represent&#13;
and reflect the general views of the student body and the University&#13;
Administration, stating that the paper had embarktod upon a program&#13;
of ocial and political reform repugnant to the members of the student&#13;
bo&lt;!y, ~e University Administration, alumni and friends of the&#13;
Umverslty.&#13;
The action was provoked by a recent "God is Dead" editorial&#13;
which appeared in the Reflector. The Reflector was the center of&#13;
controversy last year when it printed an editorial condemning the&#13;
state's ban on teaching evolution.&#13;
Student press reaction in the state soundly condemns the&#13;
trustees.&#13;
Alan Pearson, president of the Mississippi Collegiate Press&#13;
Association and editor of the Miss Delta, student newspaper at Delta&#13;
State, released the following statement: "The Board of Trustees of the&#13;
Institutions of Higher Learning appears to have over-reacted to the&#13;
publication of one.editorial in the student MSU campus newspaper, the&#13;
Reflector. Its action evmces a Willingness to abrogate first amendent&#13;
rights to a segment of the Mississippi population in an effort to curtail a&#13;
single activity of a single organ of that segment. The Board in taking&#13;
action in an area in which it has no legal competence - maWy ruling&#13;
from a secular position on a sectarian matter - has shown a&#13;
~lIousn~ss toward intellectual activity and a disdain for every indiVidual&#13;
s nght to think which can only serve, if implemented, to&#13;
a~ndge. f~eedom of the press on the campuses of the state of&#13;
MI SISSIPPI and eventually erode the level of higher education in tht.&#13;
state."&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
STAFF&#13;
D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Arthur Gruhl, Walter Breach&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the University of Wisco...,.&#13;
P k&#13;
ide Kenosha Wisconsin, 53140.Mailing address IS Parkside's Newsc....&#13;
ar Sl " . d dit . I t I h -.... 3700Washington Rd., Kenosha. Busmess an e 1 Dna e ep one number is 65a4861,&#13;
exl. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
Volume 11 - Number 10&#13;
November 30. 1970&#13;
Sven Talls&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Polenle&#13;
The Subject is: "Issues"&#13;
I was talking with a Parkside instructor&#13;
about writing this column ... sort ~f a&#13;
get-acqua inted-explora tory conversation.&#13;
I showed him a few of the articles I had&#13;
pounded out. He agreed thata column such&#13;
as this might be a good idea but from what&#13;
I had shown him he wondered about when I&#13;
would get around 10 dealing with the "Big&#13;
Issues" and he called my attention to the&#13;
fact that many of the people on this&#13;
campus are "pretty sophisticated" and the&#13;
implication was that if I didn't get into the&#13;
nitty-gritty of today's problems that I'd&#13;
probably be talking 10 myself.&#13;
- I gave his comments a lot of thought. I&#13;
even listed the issues .. , Vietnam,&#13;
ecology, poverty, drugs, education, law&#13;
and order, dissent, assent, how to run a&#13;
university ... What a list! And people of&#13;
all ages want pretty much the same things&#13;
- peace, clean air, an educated and&#13;
healthy society, a prosperous and solvent&#13;
economy, a country at peace with the&#13;
world. And, I might add, a university&#13;
where everybody gets a passing grade ...&#13;
(now that -would be nice!&gt; Seriously,&#13;
though Our hang-ups come in the&#13;
ways we propose to implement our muchdesired&#13;
goals.&#13;
In order to share my thinking on this&#13;
issue business Idecided to talk it over with&#13;
our Editor, Bill Rolbiecki. Bill and Iagreed&#13;
that there were probably enough "issue&#13;
experts" already on the campus and we&#13;
decided that there was no real need for me&#13;
to add to the congestion. And besides, I'm&#13;
over thirty.&#13;
Of cours~, I have my own ideas on the&#13;
serious problems which somehow must be&#13;
faced and solved. Oh, Imight occasionally&#13;
make a comment or observation about one&#13;
of the big issues but I'm going to think at&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sports Edilor&#13;
Adyertising Manager&#13;
Photographers&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
least twice before doing so. Irtrntllblo&#13;
.several occasions in the past wbeI&#13;
sounded-off about something ooly to ~&#13;
later that I had kept my mouth_&#13;
Yet, I DO have "issues" for whidtr.&#13;
always campaigning. (Let's call IIIJ II&#13;
"causes't.) They are: Live, love,and_&#13;
... and let's add a fourth ... IIICb&#13;
sometimes at myself.&#13;
We each bring something sP'dll&#13;
Parkside . . . You might even bnt&#13;
search to lind your gift ... some*.&#13;
personal quality ... somethingwIidt&#13;
enhance the life of this college.,.,....,&#13;
Now wbat do you have to Itler,.&#13;
classmates? What's your "thing'~ t:.&#13;
you sing? .. write? ' .. runa 11'0_&#13;
. .. usher? ... sell ads? ... ~&#13;
in a sport? . . . lead cheers? ......&#13;
all you can offer is to show upat a ..&#13;
and cheer for Ihe team. Okay.. ..&#13;
show up and cheer. Your being 1IIn'&#13;
important.&#13;
And I decided what my "thing" wi&#13;
This will be my contribution: AI btl&#13;
the editor asks for another pieceIt&#13;
he will get it. If Ididn't siocerelyfell ...&#13;
sharing my thoughts and past e~&#13;
might possibly help at least one .....&#13;
then I wouldn't even hother to IlIli,UII&#13;
sentence.&#13;
The Editor tells me I can write .-&#13;
anything I please. And, believeme,DI1I1l&#13;
of subjects ',ViIllast longer than I wiI. 111&#13;
things I will write about will be~'&#13;
person. , , often personal ... ahGIllIr.&#13;
love, learning and laughter.&#13;
Now if such subjects are ..&#13;
sophisticated enough for y.... t:..&#13;
suggest that you turn the page. It&#13;
read the ads . , . and remember..&#13;
. ,&#13;
sure to patronize our adverllSel1·....&#13;
So good-bye to some of you... aDd ..&#13;
luck!&#13;
Notes From Other Campuses&#13;
Oxford, Ohio- (!.P.) -The new Miami&#13;
University. goyerna,nce plan provides a&#13;
student VOicem pollcy-making in at least&#13;
three new ways.&#13;
~acul~y Council, !he execu4ve body for&#13;
Un~vers~ty Sena~e, is replaced by a&#13;
Umvers,ty CounCil of 36 which indudes 12&#13;
voting student members.&#13;
r Se~ondly, the University Council will be&#13;
eqwred at least to consider any proposals&#13;
placed before it by the Student Senate.&#13;
Thirdly, 10 setting up councils around&#13;
each of Miami's four vice presidents the&#13;
new plan clea~ly identifies the new Stu'dent&#13;
Affairs CounCilas the principal legislative&#13;
bo.d~ of the university in matters pertalmng.&#13;
to student social and conduct&#13;
regul.ahons and general student affairs&#13;
f ThIS counci~ will include 15 students, H)&#13;
~~ulty .and fIve presidential appointees&#13;
cer verslt.y Senate no longer will be -con~&#13;
ned WIth student counduct regulations.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Brunswick Me Call •. - (. P.) - Bowdoin&#13;
curr~~~ ~~~~~nt.:, beginnin.g with the&#13;
freedom" h ml~ year, fmd a "new&#13;
courses. w en It comes to selecting&#13;
Detroit, Mich. - (I.P.1 - ::&#13;
University of Detroit's Collegeof~ •&#13;
Sciences has introduc~d cb~n&amp;III&#13;
enlarge the student's role '" des~ ..&#13;
own curriculum. At the samerouJI!lll&#13;
entire college's faculty was ~n.1lili'I&#13;
encourage a grea ter degree "" .•&#13;
Beginning with the current.J beC""&#13;
students, including freshmen,will~&#13;
a co-advisor with one of 20 bats I ,.&#13;
faculty members, givingstuden""",,_&#13;
vital role in designing their own tbr'&#13;
study. Emphasis will be on"","_&#13;
dividuality of the student, andg36 "",,-&#13;
the old strictures such as t~ields ~&#13;
required study m vanous iud*'&#13;
were not always related to the S&#13;
major interest. nd tlleP&#13;
In the fijture, the student a d aad'&#13;
will design the program ofstull~l f""&#13;
the courses of study ~hi~h w~e s~&#13;
the pattern of achieVIngedUcaliOl'- III&#13;
goals, based on his past knes¢';&#13;
family environment, hiS weB&#13;
his strengths.&#13;
Use Classifieds&#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
Severed Nerve&#13;
Top Secret University&#13;
Mississippi Editors Censored&#13;
B · J , ' ' PEPPER &amp; M. B. STACEY&#13;
ollege Pres Service&#13;
T T OLLEGE, 1is . (CPS) - Parallel moves were and&#13;
la t week by the Board of Trustees of the institutions of Higher&#13;
du lion and the highe t county chapter of the Mississippi State&#13;
lumni iation in an attempt to quell the voice of the student press&#13;
in it i ippi.&#13;
Th Board of Trustees of the Institutions of Higher Learning has&#13;
d all institutional heads to appoint faculty or staff members to&#13;
u rvi and edit each edition of campus newspapers and annuals&#13;
for pr r l . Both the staff editor and institutional head will be&#13;
ultim t ly r ·ponsible to the Board for such publications and their&#13;
cont nt.&#13;
arli r thi week the highest county alumi association called for&#13;
th im1&gt;_each ment of all R n t r &lt; 1SU student paper) editors except&#13;
th 1 tn manager. They charged the paper had failed to represent&#13;
nd r n ·t th en ral view ~ of the student body and the University&#13;
dmi~i tration, . !-1ling that the paper had embarktd upon a program&#13;
oc1 I and pohhcal reform repugnant to the members of the student&#13;
·• th niv r ity dmini tration, alumni and friends of the&#13;
niv r ity.&#13;
Th action w s provoked by a recent "God is Dead" editorial&#13;
whi h pp ared in the Reflector. The Reflector was the center of&#13;
ontrov r y la t year when it printed an editorial condemning the&#13;
tat ' ban n teaching evolution.&#13;
tud nt pre reaction in the state soundly condemns the&#13;
Alan Pear on. pre id nt of the Hssissippi Collegiate Press&#13;
. ociation and editor of the . ti Delta, student newspaper at Delta&#13;
Stat . relea. eel the following statement: "The Board of Trustees of the&#13;
In titution of Higher Learning appears to have over-reacted to the&#13;
publication of on .edito~ial in the st_udent MSU campus newspaper, the&#13;
~ fl . t r. It action evmces a w1llmgness to abrogate first arnendent&#13;
right to a e ment of the fississippi population in an effort to curtail a&#13;
ingl activity of a ingle organ of that segment. The Board in taking&#13;
action in an area in which it has no legal competence - rnaicly ruling&#13;
from a cular po ition on a sectarian matter - has shown a&#13;
. l~ou n~ · _toward in.tellec~al activity and a disdain for every individual&#13;
right to thmk which can only serve. if implemented to&#13;
a~ri~ge_ f~eedom of the pres on the campuses of the state' of&#13;
11s 1 1pp1 and eventually erode the level of higher education in tht.&#13;
tat ."&#13;
Volume n - Number 10&#13;
November 30, 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Potente&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Adyertising Manager&#13;
Photographers&#13;
STAFF&#13;
D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Kei;i Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Arthur Gruhl, Walter Breach&#13;
Published weekly by the studen~ of the U~iversity_ o! Wisconsin.&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin, 5314?· Ma1hng a~dr~ss 1s Parkside s Newscope,&#13;
3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha. Business and editorial telephone number is 658-&#13;
4861 , ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
The Subject is: "Issues"&#13;
I was talking with a Parkside instructor&#13;
about writing this column .. . sort o_f a get-acquainted·exploratory conversat10n.&#13;
I showed him a few of the articles I had&#13;
pounded out. He agreed that a column such&#13;
as this might be a good idea but from what&#13;
I had shown him he wondered about when I&#13;
would get around to dealing with the "Big&#13;
Issues" and he called my attention to the&#13;
fact that many of the people on this&#13;
campus are "pretty sophisticated" and the&#13;
implication was that if I didn't get into the&#13;
nilly-gritty of today's problems that I'd&#13;
probably be talking to myself.&#13;
I gave his comments a lot of thought. I&#13;
even listed the issues . . . Vietnam,&#13;
ecology, poverty, drugs, education, law&#13;
and order, dissent, assent, how to run a&#13;
university . . . What a list! And people of&#13;
all ages want pretty much the same things&#13;
- peace, clean air, an educated and&#13;
healthy society, a prosperous and solvent&#13;
economy, a country at peace with the&#13;
world. And, I might add, a university&#13;
where everybody gets a passing grade . . .&#13;
(now that would be nice!) Seriously,&#13;
though . . . Our hang.ups come in the&#13;
ways we propose to implement our muchdesired&#13;
goals.&#13;
In order to share my thinking on this&#13;
issue business I decided to talk it over with&#13;
our Editor, Bill Rolbiecki. Bill and I agreed&#13;
that there were probably enough "issue&#13;
experts" already on the campus and we&#13;
decided that there was no real need for me&#13;
to add to the congestion. And besides, I'm over thirty.&#13;
Of cours~, I have my own ideas on the&#13;
serious problems which somehow must be&#13;
faced and solved. Oh, I might occasionally&#13;
make a comment or observation about one&#13;
of the big issues but I'm going to think at&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An A ware Square&#13;
least twice before doing so. I rem&#13;
-~everal occasions in the past wbe&#13;
sounded-off about something only to&#13;
later that I had kept my mouth bu&#13;
Yet, I DO have "issues" for which 1111 always campaigning. (Let's call mJ&#13;
"causes".) They are: Live, love, and&#13;
. . . and let's add a fourth ... laugh&#13;
sometimes at myself.&#13;
We each bring something s&#13;
Parkside . . . You might even bait&#13;
search to find your gift . . . some tale1t tr&#13;
personal quality . . . something which&#13;
enhance the life of this college comm&#13;
Now what do you have to offer l&#13;
classmates? What's your "thing"? C&amp;&#13;
you sing? . . . write? ' . . run a project«'&#13;
. . . usher? . . . sell ads? ... partidpit&#13;
in a sport? . . . lead cheers? . . . Ma&#13;
all you can offer is to show up at a pmt&#13;
and cheer for the team. Okay ...&#13;
show up and cheer. Your being there 1&#13;
important.&#13;
And I decided what my "thing" will bt.&#13;
This will be my contribution: As lcq •&#13;
the editor asks for another piece oC a,pJ'&#13;
he will get it. If I didn't sincerely feel&#13;
sharing my thoughts and past experieln&#13;
might possibly help at least one per-.&#13;
then I wouldn't even bother to finish&#13;
sentence.&#13;
The Editor tells me I can write a&#13;
anything I please. And, believe me, m}&#13;
of subjects ~ill last longer than I will. n,&#13;
things I will write about will be perd II&#13;
person . , , often personal . . . a~l&#13;
love, learning and laughter.&#13;
Now if such subjects are&#13;
sophisticated enough for you, ~ I&#13;
suggest that you turn the page. MJ&#13;
read the ads . . . and remember ·&#13;
sure to patronize our advertisers!&#13;
So good-bye to some of you . . and&#13;
luck!&#13;
Notes From Other Campuses&#13;
Oxford, Ohio - ( I .P.) - The new Miami&#13;
University_ go_verna_nce plan provides a&#13;
student v01ce m pohcy-making in at least&#13;
three new ways.&#13;
~acul~y Council, !he executive body for&#13;
Un~vers~ty Sena~e, is replaced by a&#13;
Uru_vers1ty Council of 36 which includes 12&#13;
voting student members.&#13;
Se~ondly, the University Council will be&#13;
reqwred at least to consider any proposals&#13;
plac~d bef~re it by the Student Senate.&#13;
Thirdiy' 10 setting up councils around&#13;
each of Miami's four vice presidents the&#13;
new plan clea~ly identifies the new St~dent&#13;
Affairs Council a_s the_principal legislative&#13;
bo_d~ of the umvers1ty in matters pertammg.&#13;
to student social and conduct&#13;
reg~ahons ~nd _general student affairs.&#13;
This council will include 15 students 10&#13;
faculty U and fiv 'd . ' . . e pres1 enhal appointees ruvers1t~ Senate no longer will be con~&#13;
cerned with student counduct regulations.&#13;
+ + + Brunswick Me Colle ' · - (. P. &gt; - Bowdoin&#13;
ge students, beginning with the&#13;
current academic year find a "new&#13;
freedom" h · ' w en it comes to selecting courses.&#13;
Detroit, Mich. - (I.P.l -&#13;
University of Detroit's College of Ar&#13;
Sciences has introduced chan~es&#13;
enlarge the student's role in desig . . th ame 11me. own curriculum. At e s rlXl&#13;
entire college's faculty was r~&#13;
encourage a greater degree of neear&#13;
Beginning with the current.} '&#13;
students, including freshmen, will da&#13;
c~advisor with one of 20 ha~ a&#13;
faculty members, giving_ 5luden~;&#13;
vital role in designing their own tht ,&#13;
study. Emphasis will be on e&#13;
dividuality of the student, and g: ~ d&#13;
the old strictures such ~s t~ields&#13;
required study in various the c&#13;
were not always related to ·&#13;
major interest. nd !head(. In the future, the student a and&#13;
will design the program_ of s!~~t fil _,&#13;
the courses of study ~hi_ch the s&#13;
the pattern of achieving (!UcatiO&#13;
goals based on his paSt e k-~crs&#13;
family • environment, h" is wea ~&#13;
his strengths.&#13;
Use Classifieds &#13;
THORN&#13;
PART 9&#13;
By KEN KONKOL&#13;
I was sorry to see a letter by Miss, E. B.&#13;
Tey in the last issue. Here we have another&#13;
of those casual readers who cannot&#13;
recognize something wrong when they see&#13;
it For those of you who missed it because&#13;
of the sbort week Iwill state that Miss Tey&#13;
(a Junior at this senoo\) accused me of&#13;
immaturity and personal deficiency and&#13;
said I was destroying morale. As to the&#13;
charge of immaturity, J at least recognize&#13;
the things that are wrong with this school&#13;
and am doing my utmost to make others&#13;
cognizant of the facts so conditions might&#13;
he improved. I would consider an immature&#13;
person one who does not have the&#13;
good sense to notice that this institution is&#13;
being misrun, not only in my opinion but in&#13;
the opinions of nearly all the student hody&#13;
and a great deal of the faculty. Such an&#13;
immature person might be Miss Tey.&#13;
As to personal deficiencies, I repeat once&#13;
•again for other casual readers such as&#13;
Interested?&#13;
Miss Tey that the opinions expressed in my&#13;
column are those commonly held by al&#13;
:ast90 ~ cent of those people that make&#13;
etr. OPlDlons known to me during the&#13;
preVIous week (approx. tOO).&#13;
ii,As to destroying morale, Ihave it from&#13;
ose same people that I am improving&#13;
~orale among the students, and not a few&#13;
a~ty members have said the same, If&#13;
MISS Tey thinks sbe is being expended&#13;
upon, I guess sbe'll just have to learn to&#13;
,take It as one of life's litUe dissppolDtmenls.&#13;
Regarding Miss Tey's sarcastic rejoiner&#13;
at the end - You might get to be arrogant&#13;
someday too, dear, that is if it ever turns&#13;
out that you may be right in something&#13;
someday. 0, yes, I was sorry to see YOU;&#13;
letter. Sorry to see you make a fool of&#13;
yourself, that is.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
How ahout a student referendum and&#13;
faculty referendum to be held by secret&#13;
ballet in order to improve the non-teaching&#13;
Instructor. mishandling administrator&#13;
situation?&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Dr. Parsons and Dr. McDonald are still&#13;
lied in the poll for best Psych teacher, This&#13;
IS the last week to get your votes in.&#13;
This is a list of organizations on campus. For those interested in&#13;
any specific one, call the advisor listed.&#13;
Archery Club&#13;
Baseball Club&#13;
Black Student Union&#13;
Booster Club&#13;
Cheerleaders&#13;
Concerned Students Coalition&#13;
Equestrian Club&#13;
Film Society&#13;
Flying Club&#13;
HockeyClub&#13;
Indica tions&#13;
Judo-Karate Club&#13;
Management Science Club&#13;
Modem Language Club&#13;
Motor Sports Association&#13;
Music Educators Nat'l. Con.&#13;
NeumanClub&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
Pre Law Club&#13;
PreMedClub&#13;
Rangerettes&#13;
Sigma Delta Psi&#13;
Ski Club&#13;
Student Education Association&#13;
Students for a Clean Environment&#13;
Students International Meditation Society&#13;
Varsity Club&#13;
Veteran's Club&#13;
Volley Ball Club&#13;
War Moratorium Committee&#13;
Weight Lifters Club&#13;
YoungDems&#13;
Zeta Beta Tau Fraternity&#13;
65&amp;-2233&#13;
'3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTH CITY LIMITS&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62ND ST.,&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
Phone 694-1733&#13;
"&#13;
NORTH &amp; ~TH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-'KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SunmpiJe glorUls&#13;
&amp; (jrunJwweJ&#13;
_ - FnoIl_ - CitlI&#13;
P_:'4U700 •&#13;
YI.1d fllNl~ WEIIISlOC~&#13;
3021·75TH ST.&#13;
Anchorlnn&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
nUL TS n,lI&#13;
CHllDREIl UIlDIR II Sl.1I&#13;
CHllDREIl UIlDlR 5 FRU&#13;
Prieta lUlU" first&#13;
dlnn., bU.'IC,-&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
R.. sl Cbk:k... wllll&#13;
._lIIl1aad envy&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sal 5 p.m. - 11 p.m.&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. 5 p.m. - 10 p.m,&#13;
Athletics Sun. 12 Noon 9 p.m.&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Tom Rosandich 150mFearn ~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ -r. ,..--- --.,&#13;
Athletics I&#13;
Harold Stern&#13;
Russ Coley&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
Stanley Walsh&#13;
Brian Murray&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
Vic Godfrey&#13;
Leroy Couzle&#13;
Ken Holsten&#13;
Darrell Douglas&#13;
Rev. Gary Kees&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
Andrew McLean&#13;
Richard Rosenberg&#13;
Anna Maria Williams&#13;
Athletics&#13;
LoranHein&#13;
Andrei Glasberg&#13;
Jack Elmore&#13;
Henry Cole&#13;
Ken Holsten&#13;
Russ Coley&#13;
Dick Frecka&#13;
Henry Cole&#13;
Jim Koch&#13;
Bernard Porzak&#13;
Dave Bishop&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 53'40&#13;
V&#13;
F °G A U&#13;
6R&#13;
E I&#13;
IC I&#13;
FABRICS FOR S&#13;
ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
- 658--a612 -&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
4437· 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654~774&#13;
9006 Sheridan Rd.&#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. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
THORN&#13;
PART9&#13;
By KEN KONKOL&#13;
I was sorry to see a letter by Miss-E. B.&#13;
Tey in the last issue. Here we have another&#13;
of those casual readers who cannot&#13;
recognize something wrong when they see&#13;
it. For those of you who missed it because&#13;
of the short week I will state that Miss Tey&#13;
(a Junior at this scnool) accused me of&#13;
immaturity and personal deficiency and&#13;
said I was destroying morale. As to the&#13;
charge of immaturity, I at least recognize&#13;
the things that are wrong with this school&#13;
and am doing my utmost to make others&#13;
cognizant of the facts so conditions might&#13;
be improved. I would consider an immature&#13;
person one who does not have the&#13;
good sense to notice that this institution is&#13;
being misrun, not only in my opinion but in&#13;
the opinions of nearly all the student body&#13;
and a great deal of the faculty. Such an&#13;
immature person might be Miss Tey.&#13;
As to personal deficiencies, I repeat once&#13;
again for other casual readers such as&#13;
Interested?&#13;
Miss Tey that the opinions expressed in my&#13;
column are those commonly held by at&#13;
~a~t 90 ~ cent of those people that make&#13;
en-_ opinions known to me during the&#13;
~~~us week _(approx. 100).&#13;
· 0 destroymg morale, I have it from&#13;
those same people that I am improving f 0u1rale among the students, and not a few&#13;
a~ ty members have said the same. If&#13;
Miss Tey thinks she is being expended&#13;
upon, .&#13;
1 guess she'll just have to learn to&#13;
· ta~e it as one of life's little disap- pomtments.&#13;
Regarding Miss Tey's sarcastic rejoiner&#13;
at the end - You might get to be arrogant&#13;
someday too, dear, that is if it ever turns&#13;
out that you may be right in something&#13;
someday. 0, yes, I was sorry to see you;&#13;
letter. Sorry to see you make a fool of&#13;
yourself, that is.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
How about a student referendum and&#13;
facul~ referendum to be held by secret&#13;
~llot m order ~o impro~e the non-teaching&#13;
mstructor, m1shandlmg administrator&#13;
situation?&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Dr. Parsons and Dr. McDonald are still&#13;
~ed in the poll for best Psych teacher. This&#13;
1s the last week to get your votes in.&#13;
This is a list of organizations on campus. For those interested in&#13;
any specific one, call the advisor listed.&#13;
Archery Club&#13;
Baseball Club Athletics&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Isom Fearn&#13;
Use Classifieds&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NORTH &amp; S,OUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
- ·KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
SunmpiJe gforub&#13;
&amp; g,anlu,wes&#13;
~-fnlM .... - Clfll&#13;
Pllollt: SCS.'700 - VI and FRANK WUNSTOCII&#13;
3021 • 75TH aT.&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN !13140&#13;
Anchor Inn&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
ADULTS $2.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 10 SI.SO&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 5 FREE&#13;
Pricu Include first&#13;
dinner bevera''-·&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
'Bbcalll and gravy&#13;
, -:---'I&#13;
·Anc~or&#13;
INN&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sal 5 p.m. - 11 p.m.&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. 5 p.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
Sun. 12 Noon 9 p.m.&#13;
Black Student Union 9006 Sheridan Rd. Phone 694-1733&#13;
Booster Club&#13;
Cheerleaders Tom Rosandich -:=c~::-==~;:.=-===========:===~ ,---------------.&#13;
Concerned Students Coalition&#13;
Equestrian Club&#13;
Film Society&#13;
Flying Club&#13;
Hockey Club&#13;
Indications&#13;
Judo-Karate Club&#13;
Management Science Club&#13;
Modern Language Club&#13;
Motor Sports Association&#13;
Music Educators Nat'l. Con.&#13;
Neuman Club&#13;
Newscope&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
Pre Law Club&#13;
Pre Med Club&#13;
Rangerettes&#13;
Sigma Delta Psi&#13;
Ski Club&#13;
Student Education Association&#13;
Students for a Clean Environment&#13;
Students International Meditation Society Varsity Club&#13;
Veteran's Club&#13;
Volley Ball Club&#13;
War Moratorium Committee&#13;
Weight Lifters Club&#13;
YoungDems&#13;
Zeta Beta Tau Fraternity&#13;
658-2233&#13;
'3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTH CITY LIMITS&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62ND ST.&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Harold Stern&#13;
Russ Coley&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
Stanley Walsh&#13;
Brian Murray&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
Vic Godfrey&#13;
Leroy Couzle&#13;
Ken Holsten&#13;
Darrell Douglas&#13;
Rev. Gary Kees&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
Andrew McLean&#13;
Richard Rosenberg&#13;
Anna Maria Williams&#13;
Athletics&#13;
Loran Hein&#13;
Andrei Glasberg&#13;
Jack Elmore&#13;
Henry Cole&#13;
Ken Holsten&#13;
Russ Coley&#13;
DickFrecka&#13;
Henry Cole&#13;
Jim Koch&#13;
Bernard Porzak&#13;
Dave Bishop&#13;
V&#13;
FOG A U&#13;
6 R E I&#13;
'C I&#13;
FABRICS fOR S . ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
- 658-8612 -&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
4437-22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha. Wi"onsin 53140&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
SH&#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;
Chemical Infiltrator That Rivals DDT&#13;
B) JOHN HA~lER&#13;
Come the Silent Spring, when lile on&#13;
earth is dymg and helpless man asks why,&#13;
lhe names of tho e chemicals, pesticides&#13;
and synthetics he has poured into his&#13;
environment for the sake of "progress"&#13;
will come back to haunt him&#13;
Along with DDT, mercury. 2. 4, 5-T.&#13;
dieldnn, paratluon and other deadly&#13;
ubstene , the autopsy 01 earth w,lI&#13;
reveal another compound whose recentlydl'le&lt;:led&#13;
efleelS are w,de pread, chrome.&#13;
nd In. Idiou_&#13;
Thl latest hemlcal mflltrator IS PCB,&#13;
""hlch . land. (or ploychlcrinated&#13;
blph n) 1 ,a pecial class of compounds&#13;
wuh &amp;Trat "a rt ') 01 hou_ehold and&#13;
lOOU trial us Available commercially&#13;
,nce I • , the prevalenc .. 01 PCB in the&#13;
en ..ltonmtnt", s not clI. 0\' red until 1966.&#13;
wben S~edl h (I("nust found It In coott'ntr&#13;
tlons a high a. DDT&#13;
l.ke nor lh PCB compound&gt; contam&#13;
chlnnn." hydrogen and carbon Also like&#13;
DIn, thc) an" not soluble 10 water. are&#13;
r 1 lant to oXldatton. the)' accumulate in&#13;
lauy II u and are extremely persi tent&#13;
In th n\ Ironment&#13;
The major diHer nee bet'" een the two i&#13;
Ihat DDT ha be n dIstrIbuted&#13;
d Ube.... t), a_ a pe..liClde, the spread 01&#13;
f '0 ha' been acdden...l. and no one&#13;
knu\lo xaclly how It happens, where leaks&#13;
oc;c,:ur nor 00'" mu h escapes, But 10 the&#13;
posl four years, scientists have detected&#13;
PCBs In flsh, birds, waler, trees, sediment&#13;
nd 1O~\'itabl)' - 10 human fal and&#13;
moth 'milk amples contatntng PCBs&#13;
have been taken tn England, ScoUand,&#13;
. andlllaVla, The Netherlands, Antartica,&#13;
ntta} America and in many parts or lhe&#13;
nlled tates, making them truly&#13;
ob'QUltOU&gt;pollu",nts&#13;
In the U ,PCBs are manufactured&#13;
lei) b) the lonsanto Company and sold&#13;
under the trade name "Aroclor", They are&#13;
al 0 made by chemical companies in&#13;
Europe and Japan, and have been used&#13;
extensively Since World War II. PCBSs&#13;
can be purchased 10 containers ranging&#13;
from SQ. pound cans to 600-pound drums, or&#13;
are available by the railroad car tankload.&#13;
The unique quahbes 01PCBs made them&#13;
userul as name retardents. insulating&#13;
nUlds, plasticll:ers and coating compounds&#13;
Consequently, they may appear in&#13;
a bewildering variety of consumer&#13;
products. such as floor tile, flourescent&#13;
lights. printer'S 10k, brake linings,&#13;
SWimming pools, automobile-body&#13;
sealants. asphalt. adhesives, molded&#13;
p1asbcs, polyester Iilm. paramn, paints,&#13;
carbonless copy paper, window envelopes,&#13;
Imitation gold lear, varnishes. waxes,&#13;
ceramIc ptgments, synthetic rubber and&#13;
""ater-repellant canvas for camping&#13;
equipment&#13;
Industrial applications of PCBs include&#13;
coolant flUids in transformers, capacitors&#13;
and askarel-type transformers, hydraulic&#13;
fluids, specialized lubricants, gasket&#13;
sealers, electrical wiring, heat transfer&#13;
agents and machine tool cutting oils.&#13;
In addition the Monsanto technical sales&#13;
bulletin recdmmends mixing PCBs with&#13;
chlorinated insecticides to ad as a vapor&#13;
suppressant and sticking agent, so the&#13;
insecticide may maintain its "kill-life" on&#13;
hard surfaces for as long as three months.&#13;
The bulletin also suggests blending insecticides&#13;
into tacky PCB-coatings "to&#13;
make insect traps or barriers on tree&#13;
trunks for foilage or fruit protection."&#13;
With all of these uses, it is little wonder&#13;
that PCBs are released into the environment&#13;
10 persistent forms, which c~n&#13;
be distributed widely over the earth 10&#13;
water and air currents. Scientists have&#13;
cited 5 chief ways in which PCBs get into&#13;
the environment:&#13;
_ From the smokestacks of the Monsanto&#13;
plants &lt;inSauget, Ill., and Anniston.&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
1202 • 56th Street&#13;
Kenosho, Wis. 652·6904&#13;
Ala) where Aroclor is manufactur~.&#13;
I - the slacks 01 plants which&#13;
~~:'ufaCbJre products containing Aroclor,&#13;
and Irom. European and Japanese PCB&#13;
p1~~'rom otherrorms 01 industrial waste, L.A1E51 FA5HIONS&#13;
such as leakage of hydrauhc nU1~from&#13;
supposedly "closed systems", which are FOR MEN&#13;
seldom leak-proof. .&#13;
_ Gradual wear and weathermg.ol SKI JACKETS - Reg, $45.00&#13;
oduclS (such as asphalt&gt; conlammg&#13;
~oclor which may cause PCBs to be How $27_50&#13;
slowly released in the IorIO 01 vapor or Pricesto&#13;
particles into the atmosphere. .&#13;
_ From prodUcts containing PCB which F'Y: P k&#13;
are thrown out as trash and eventually end I~~~~~tt~!!o~u~r~~oc~e~t~!i; up being burned in city ~wnps or tncinerators,&#13;
releasing PCBs in the form of&#13;
highly toxic fumes. (Carbonless&#13;
copy "It'Sthe&#13;
paper. paints and many plastics, for&#13;
example, are commonly burned'&gt; ..&#13;
- And finally, through PCB-conlammg real thing&#13;
pesticides.&#13;
Gymnastics Club&#13;
Swinging&#13;
Activity&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our PricesLast"&#13;
Jumping, flipping, flying, swinging,&#13;
climbmg, bouncing and watching are&#13;
among the many activities to be experienced&#13;
at Parkside's newest activity:&#13;
"Social Gymnastics".&#13;
Girls-Guys: shor~ lall, thin, healthy!!!&#13;
All shapes, aUsizes and aU levels of ability&#13;
and-or lack of ability are to be seen at&#13;
Washington Park high school every&#13;
Wednesday night Irom 8 to 10 p.m.&#13;
Probably the most difficult thing about&#13;
becoming involved in Social Gymnastics is&#13;
getting into the Park high school building.&#13;
With persistence, patience and a litlle&#13;
searching, you can find at least one door&#13;
open. Then you must find your way&#13;
through the maze of halls, stairs, and&#13;
classrooms to the girls old gym where aU&#13;
01 the happenings begin.&#13;
Once in the gym you wiD have an 0pportunity&#13;
to watch, participate, coach,&#13;
criticize or sleep.&#13;
Park high school is the homesite of&#13;
Parkside's varsity gymnastics squad. The&#13;
gym is equipped with excellent, new apparatus&#13;
including a goliath trampoline.&#13;
Also there are overhead teaching aids that&#13;
will allow the greenest beginner "the opportunity&#13;
to do flips in complete salety.&#13;
Stop over this Wednesday and check out&#13;
the activity_ You will lind the gym if you&#13;
listen for the "in" music that is booming&#13;
through the halls. Once you're there, just&#13;
relax and watch or actively participate.&#13;
No formal meeting, no dues, no&#13;
president ... just a good time.&#13;
~--~&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
II RiPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watch ... JI'ftIry&#13;
Daa .. oad Se"" .'omp',,, ..,.&#13;
Dept.&#13;
ROIl Duipl ..&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
••• e.. _ A""utl'9n&#13;
UltrMIt .. n • \..&lt;InOln.&#13;
.ulov. _ MO¥WIIO&#13;
ear .... II. - Tlm.x;&#13;
LACoultr.&#13;
CHINA&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
RECISTRY 10%&#13;
Courtesy Oiscount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
F ac u It Y Graduate Gemologist.Certifie.d DiamOfltolocist&#13;
(Must Show 1.0.)&#13;
~gg~&#13;
DOWNTOWN-KENOSHA&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
DIAMOND CONSULTANTS excepted " floes md'e • difference where you ."&#13;
J &amp; J TAPE CENTER&#13;
lPS - 8 TRACK, CASSETTE &amp;&#13;
REel TO REel TAPES;&#13;
POSTERS, CAR PLAYERS, STEREOS&#13;
:/a&amp;t:t&amp;e:M!on ~ """'UIlI["S CI-lO'C[S' PIlIOOUC'S PROV'DE "5 PAIZED !'LAVOA&#13;
ONl.T THe !"N[S' 0'- HO""S .,..0 G".INS .,,£ USEO&#13;
~ QUlmr/1lt:a4:.Bt'JIt In 1893&#13;
"We also handle alack lights and Fixtures"&#13;
PHONE 632-0506&#13;
We have the largest selection of&#13;
tapes in the Racine-Kenosha area. We&#13;
have all the new records and tapes&#13;
before anyone.&#13;
Chemical Infiltrator That Rivals DDT Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
8) JOH. H tER and askarel-type transformers, hydraulic&#13;
fluids, specialized lubricants, gasket&#13;
lire on ealers, electrical wiring, heat transfer&#13;
agents and machine tool cutting oils&#13;
In addition, the. tonsanto technical sales&#13;
bulletin recommends mixing PCBs with&#13;
chlorinated in ecticides to act as a vapor&#13;
uppressant and sticking agent, so the&#13;
insecticide may maintain its "kill-life" on&#13;
hard urface for as long as three months.&#13;
The bulletin als.o ugge ts blending in-&#13;
. ecticides into tacky PCB-coatings "lo&#13;
make i ct traps or barriers on tree&#13;
tru · - for foilage or fruit protection."&#13;
Wilh II of th ·e w;es, it i little wonder&#13;
that PCB are relea ed into the en-&#13;
,,ronmcnt in per·i tent form . which can&#13;
di tribuled widely O\er the earth in&#13;
ter and air currents. cientists have&#13;
cit d 5 chi r way in wh ch PCB gel into&#13;
the nvironmcnt:&#13;
- Fr m th&#13;
nto plar,ts (in&#13;
Gymnastics Club&#13;
Swinging&#13;
Activity&#13;
Jumping, flipping, flying, swmg1ng,&#13;
climbing, bouncing and watching are&#13;
among the many activities to be ex-&#13;
·rienced at Parkside's newest activity:&#13;
Social Gymnastics".&#13;
Girls-Guy : hort. tall, thin, healthy!!!&#13;
All hapes, all size and all levels of ability&#13;
and- lack of ability are to be seen at&#13;
Wa hington Park high school every&#13;
Wednesday night from 8 to 10 p.m.&#13;
Probably the most difficult thing about&#13;
oming involved in ocial Gymnastics is&#13;
getting into the Park high school building.&#13;
With persistence. patience and a little&#13;
earch1ng, you can find at least one door&#13;
open. Then you must find your way&#13;
through the maze of halls, stairs, and&#13;
cla rooms to the girls old gym where all&#13;
of the happenings begin.&#13;
One . in the gym you ill have an oppo_r~!11tY&#13;
to watch, participate, coach,&#13;
cr1hc1ze or sleep.&#13;
Park high school is the homesite or&#13;
Park~ide's ~arsity gymnastics squad. The&#13;
gym 1s C9Wpped with excellent, new apparatus&#13;
including a goliath trampoline.&#13;
Al_so there are overhead teaching aids that&#13;
will ~ow the greenest beginner the opporturuty&#13;
to do flips in complete safety.&#13;
Stop over this Wednesday and check out&#13;
the activity. You will find the gym if you&#13;
hsten for the "in" music that is booming&#13;
through the halls. Once you're there just&#13;
relax and watch or actively participate.&#13;
N~ formal meeting, no dues, no&#13;
president . .. just a good time.&#13;
Ala.) where Aroclor is manufactur~,&#13;
from the stacks of plants which&#13;
manufacture products containing Aroclor,&#13;
and from European and Japanese PCB&#13;
plants. - From other forms of industrial waste,&#13;
such as leakage of hydraulic fluids from&#13;
supposedly "closed systems", which are&#13;
seldom leak-proof. - Gradual wear and weathering of&#13;
products (such as asphalt) containing&#13;
Aroclor which may cause PCBs to be&#13;
slowly released in the form of vapor or&#13;
particles into the atmosphere. - From products containing PCB which&#13;
are thrown out as trash and eventually end&#13;
up being burned in city dumps or incinerators,&#13;
releasing PCBs in the form of&#13;
highly toxic fumes. (Carbonless copy&#13;
paper, paints and many plastics, for&#13;
example, are commonly burned.) - And finally, through PCB-containing&#13;
pesticides.&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last"&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
10%&#13;
1202 · 56th Street&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 652-6904&#13;
LA TEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACKETS - Reg. $4S.OO&#13;
Now $27.SO&#13;
Prices to&#13;
Fit Your Pocket&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
WATCHES II aolex - Accutron&#13;
Ultraehron - Lonolne&#13;
•ulova - Movado&#13;
Caravelle - Timex&#13;
L.eCoultre&#13;
CHINA&#13;
Wedgwood • Spode Minton • lloyal Worcester Adam• - aavarlan ••lleek&#13;
REPAIR DEPT. ]&#13;
Watches - Jewelry Diamond Settioe&#13;
,COmplete Re111ir&#13;
Dept, Ring Dtsigni19&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
RECISTRY&#13;
DOWNTOWN-KENOSHA Courtesy Oiscount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Faculty (Must Show I . D.) Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
~C.8"'1U Fairtrade&#13;
DIAMOND CONSULTANTS excepted It does malc.e a dffference where you sltop!&#13;
J &amp; J TAPE CENTER&#13;
LPS - 8 TRACK, CASSETTE &amp;&#13;
REEL TO REEL TAPES· I&#13;
POSTERS, CAR PLAYERS, STEREOS&#13;
We have the largest selection of&#13;
ta pes · h int e Racine-Kenosha area. We&#13;
have all the new records and tapes&#13;
before anyone. .&#13;
"We a I so handle Blaclc Lights and Fixtures''&#13;
PHONE 632-0506 &#13;
SUPParkside NEWSCOPE&#13;
Sportsfest 1970 Dec. 3-5&#13;
MISS PARKSIDE TO BE SELECTEDFRIDAY&#13;
Diane Lakatos - Golf and Tennis&#13;
Diane Thomas - Gymnastics&#13;
SUE MAGEE is a 5'6" Parkside freshman,&#13;
with brown hair and brown eyes. At&#13;
Prairie H.S. she was active in the yearbook,&#13;
gymnastics, and in plays. Sue enjoys&#13;
swimming, sewing, skiing, and is interested&#13;
in cats. She says she likes almost&#13;
everything and especially dancing. She&#13;
dislikes oysters and people who kill&#13;
animals. Sue has no definite plans for the&#13;
future, but she would like to attend a large&#13;
school and major in elementary education.&#13;
She is now living at 3921North Bay Drive&#13;
Sportsfest at Parkside originated&#13;
a year ago by Tom Rosandich,&#13;
Director of Athletics. The athletic&#13;
schedule included volleyball games&#13;
between UW-Milwaukee and&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Fencing teams competing included&#13;
Milwaukee Institute of&#13;
Technology and the University of&#13;
Chicago. Parkside won both. The&#13;
basketball game was between Green&#13;
Bay and the Rangers, which the&#13;
northerners won narrowly.&#13;
Following the basketball game the&#13;
Ranger wrestlers avenged the&#13;
basketball defeat with an easy win&#13;
over the Bay Badgers. In between&#13;
time, Sub's judo students performed&#13;
a spectacular exhibition highlighted&#13;
by Sub's demonstration on falling.&#13;
At the balftime of the basketball&#13;
game Chancellor Wyllie presented&#13;
Mark Harris Wiih the prize plaque&#13;
for giving Parkside its nickname of&#13;
the Rangers, and then the&#13;
Rangeretles performed.&#13;
This year's Sportsfest has grown&#13;
considerably in one year with the&#13;
addition of a gymnastics team,&#13;
electioo of a mascot and the naming&#13;
of a Sportsfest Queen. We should not&#13;
forget the hockey club which gets&#13;
things off to a start 00 Thursday.&#13;
The addition of the student activities&#13;
building should ensure the&#13;
success of the activities sponsored&#13;
by the Office of Student Activities.&#13;
They have lined up two nights of&#13;
exciting entertainment with .The&#13;
Lottery playing for the dance Friday&#13;
night, and The Gregory James OUtfIt&#13;
making a return engagement for the&#13;
colfeeho~ce saturday night.&#13;
SPORTSFEST&#13;
A TRADITION&#13;
Dian Kraning - Soccer&#13;
Kathy Doherty - Wrestling&#13;
in Racine. Sue is representing Parkside's&#13;
Ranger basketball team.&#13;
DIANE THOMAS is a senior at&#13;
Parkside, majoring in English. She is&#13;
5'4'h" and has brown hair and brown eyes.&#13;
You may have seen her working as a&#13;
secretary-receptionist in the Student&#13;
Mfairs office at Tallent Hall. Diane likes&#13;
being involved in student activities and&#13;
thinks more kids in school should be. In the&#13;
future she would like to fit in some&#13;
traveling. She may teach, but she is not&#13;
sure yet. Diane now lives at 117 71st S1. in&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Nancv Helfrich - Hockey Club Sue Magee - Basketball&#13;
SPORTSFEST&#13;
1970&#13;
Jan Hermes&#13;
DIANE LAKATOS is a Parkside&#13;
sophomore, living at 5228 3mile Rd. in&#13;
Racine. Twenty year old Diane has brown&#13;
hair, blue eyes, and is 5'7". She is&#13;
majoring in Business Management and&#13;
was a member of Ranglftttes last year.&#13;
This year her activities include Booster&#13;
Club, sewing, dating, and working at SI.&#13;
Mary's Hospital where she is assistant to&#13;
the controller. Diane likes MEN, baseball,&#13;
football, and brandy, and in the future she&#13;
woold like to become a business office&#13;
manager.&#13;
GO RANGERS&#13;
Thunday,D..,ember3&#13;
Mascot Selection (vole on all&#13;
campuses) . 8 a.m. to 9 p m,&#13;
Ice Hockey - UWP vs. Loyola,&#13;
Wilson Park, 6 to 8 p.m., bus trip&#13;
from school&#13;
Parkside 200 Reeeplion.&#13;
Friday. December e&#13;
Queen and Court Coronation&#13;
Student Activities BUilding, 2 p.m&#13;
Wrestling· UWP vs. Mich. Tech,&#13;
WSU-Stevens Point, at Bullen&#13;
Junior High School, 3 p.m.&#13;
Basketball. UWP vs. Purdue North&#13;
Central, at SI. Joe's H.S.,&#13;
K-. 8p.m. ~rett .. at&#13;
half-time and winner of mumt&#13;
contest.&#13;
Spertsf .. t Dance - Student Achvihes&#13;
Bldg" 10 p.m. to 1 am., music by&#13;
The Lottery, Admission .&#13;
Satanlay. December 5&#13;
(All sport events at J. I. Case H S&#13;
Fieldhouse in Racine)&#13;
Volleyball· Parkside vs. UWM, UW·&#13;
GB, Millon, 8 to 12 noon&#13;
Fencing - UWP vs. U of wtscoesm '"&#13;
U. of Minnesota, 1-&lt;1 p.m&#13;
Judo. Karate Demonstration . by&#13;
UWP Demonstration Team, 7 to 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Basketball • UWP vs. Swedish&#13;
National Team, 8 to 10 p.m.&#13;
Gymna.tlcs • UWP Demonstration&#13;
Team, Halftime &lt;also&#13;
Ranglftttesl&#13;
Night Cl.... Dance • featuring Romeo&#13;
'" The Gregory James Group,&#13;
Student Activities Bldg., 10p.m to&#13;
1 a.m. Admission .&#13;
DIAN KRANING is a 5'21&#13;
';1:" Junior at&#13;
Parkside with "blondey·brown" hair and&#13;
green eyes. At Parksrde she has been •&#13;
memher of Ensemble, Booster Club, and a&#13;
homecoming chairman. In her spare time&#13;
she enjoys sewing and baseball. Dian also&#13;
likes Fanta Red Cream Snda, sports,&#13;
watching Parkside teams resp soccer),&#13;
and dancing. She doesn't like apathellc&#13;
people who don't want to get involved at&#13;
Parkside and people who don't give&#13;
Parkside a cbance. She is living at 4322&#13;
21st St. in Racine.&#13;
NANCY HELFRICH rs a t970 graduate&#13;
of SI. Catherine's H.S. where she was in&#13;
Lorelei Club and J.A. She is 5'9" and has&#13;
brown hair and brown eyes. She enjoys&#13;
sewing, art projects, and swimming.&#13;
Nancy also likes dancing, music, fashions,&#13;
the outdoors, and taking walks. She&#13;
doesn't like unfriendly people, poor music&#13;
groups, and cliques. Nancy lives at 1508&#13;
Russet in Racine. Nancy was nominated&#13;
by the Parkside Hockey Club.&#13;
Clockwise from the top are Nancy Helfrie/l, Jan Hermes, Diane Thomas. Kathy&#13;
Dohet1Y. Diane Lakatos, Sue Magee, Dian Kraning. Not pictured are Nancy Micbals,&#13;
Sandy Houston and Diane Lawler.&#13;
GO RANGERS GO&#13;
Supplement&#13;
Parkside NEWSCOPE&#13;
Sportsfest 1970 Dec. 3-5&#13;
MISS PARKSIDE TO BE SELECTED FRIDAY&#13;
Diane Lakatos - Golf and Tennis&#13;
Diane Thomas - Gymnastics&#13;
SUE MAGEE is a 5'6" Parkside freshman,&#13;
with brown hair and brown eyes. At&#13;
Prairie H.S. she was active in the yearbook,&#13;
gymnastics, and in plays. Sue enjoys&#13;
swimming, sewing, skiing, and is interested&#13;
in cats. She says she likes almost&#13;
everything and especially dancing. She&#13;
dislikes oysters and people who kill&#13;
animals. Sue has no definite plans for the&#13;
future, but she would like to attend a large&#13;
school and major in elementary education.&#13;
She is now living at 3921 North Bay Drive&#13;
SPORTS FEST&#13;
A TRADITION&#13;
Sportsfest at Parkside originated&#13;
a year ago by Tom Rosandich,&#13;
Director of Athletics. The athletic&#13;
schedule included volleyball games&#13;
between UW-Milwaukee and&#13;
Parkside . .&#13;
Fencing teams competing included&#13;
Milwaukee Institute of&#13;
Technology and the University of&#13;
Chicago. Parkside won both. The&#13;
basketball game was between Green&#13;
Bay and the Rangers, which the&#13;
northerners won narrowly.&#13;
Following the basketball game the&#13;
Ranger wrestlers avenged the&#13;
basketball defeat with an easy win&#13;
over the Bay Badgers. In between&#13;
time, Sub's judo students performed&#13;
a spectacular exhibition highlighted&#13;
by Sub's demonstration on falling.&#13;
At the halftime of the Qasketball&#13;
game Chancellor Wyllie presented&#13;
Mark Harris 'with the prize plaque&#13;
for giving Parkside its nickname of&#13;
the Rangers, and then the&#13;
Rangerettes performed.&#13;
This year's Sportsfest has grown&#13;
considerably in one year with the&#13;
addition of a gymnastics team,&#13;
election of a mascot and the naming .&#13;
of a Sportsfest Queen. We should not&#13;
forget the hockey club which gets&#13;
things off to a start on Thursday.&#13;
The addition of the student activities&#13;
building should ensure the&#13;
success of the activities sponsored&#13;
by the Office of Student Activities.&#13;
They have lined up two nights of&#13;
exciting entertainment with The&#13;
Lottery playing for the dance Friday&#13;
night, and The Gregory James outfit&#13;
making a return engagement for the&#13;
coffeehouse-dance Saturday night.&#13;
Dian Kraning - Soccer&#13;
Kathy Doherty - Wrestling&#13;
in Racine. Sue is representing Parkside's&#13;
Ranger basketball team.&#13;
DIANE THOMAS is a senior at&#13;
Parkside, majoring in English. She is&#13;
5'4½" and has brown hair and brown eyes.&#13;
You may have seen her working as a&#13;
secretary-receptionist in the Student&#13;
Affairs office at Tallent Hall. Diane likes&#13;
being involved in student activities and&#13;
thinks more kids in school should be. In the&#13;
future she would like to fit in some&#13;
traveling. She may teach, but she is not&#13;
sure yet. Diane now lives at 117 71st St. in&#13;
Kenosha.&#13;
Nancv Helfrich - Hockey Club&#13;
Jan Hermes&#13;
DIANE LAKATOS is a Parkside&#13;
sophomore, living at 5228 3mile Rd. in&#13;
Racine. Twenty year old Diane has brown&#13;
hair, blue eyes, and is 5'7". She is&#13;
majoring in Business Management and&#13;
was a member of Rangerettes last year.&#13;
This year her activities include Booster&#13;
Club, sewing, dating, and working at St.&#13;
Mary's Hospital where she is assistant to&#13;
the controller. Diane likes MEN, baseball,&#13;
football, and brandy, and in the future she&#13;
would like to become a business office&#13;
manager.&#13;
GO RANGERS&#13;
Clockwise from the top are Nancy Helfriefl, Jan Hermes, Diane Thomas, Kathy&#13;
Doherty, Diane Lakatos, Sue Magee, Dian Kraning. Not pictured are Nancy Michals&#13;
Sandy Houston and Diane Lawler. '&#13;
Thur da ·. Dttembt-r 3 , ta . cot election ( \'O t on all&#13;
cam~ ) - 8 a.m. to p.m.&#13;
Ice Hocke) · WP v . Lo ·ol ,&#13;
WiLon Park, 6 to 8 p m .. b trip&#13;
from school.&#13;
Park id ? Rte plion .&#13;
Frida, . December4&#13;
Queen and - ourt oronation .&#13;
Stud nt Activill Building, 2 p m&#13;
Wr Oing - UWP v .. 1ich T h,&#13;
WSU-Stevens Point, at Bull n&#13;
Junior Hi h School, 3 p.m&#13;
Ba kelball - UWP v . Purd&#13;
Central, at SL Joe' H. .,&#13;
Kenosha, 8 p.m. Ran rett at&#13;
half-time and winner of mascot&#13;
contest.&#13;
SpGrt fest Dafl&lt;'e · tudent Activiti&#13;
Bldg., 10 p.m. to 1 a .m., mu ic b&#13;
The Lottery, Admi ion •&#13;
aturdaJ, Decembers&#13;
&lt;All port even~ at J. I. C H ..&#13;
Fieldhou in Racine)&#13;
Volle\ ball - Parks de v .&#13;
GB: 1ilton, 8 to 12 noon .&#13;
Fencing · WP v • U. of Wt&#13;
. of 1inn ta , 1-4 p.m.&#13;
Judo &amp; Karate D mon tration - b •&#13;
UWP D mon tration T am, 7 lo 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Ba ketball - UWP v. . w dish&#13;
National T am, 8 to 10 p.m.&#13;
G mna tk - UWP Demo tration&#13;
Team, Halflim ( 1 o&#13;
Rang rett )&#13;
• "ight lu~Danre. featuring Rom&#13;
&amp; The Gr ory J m roup,&#13;
tudent Activiti Bid .• 10 p.m. to&#13;
l a .m. Adm1 10n •&#13;
DI . · KRA. ·1. 'G is a 5'21 " junior at&#13;
Park ide with " blondey-brown" hair and&#13;
green ey . At Park 1d ha n&#13;
member of En mbl , Bo t r lub, and a&#13;
homecommg chairman. In her pare tim&#13;
he enjoy ewing and . ball. Dian al&#13;
like Fanta Red Cream oda, por&#13;
watching Parkside t am &lt; p. cerl,&#13;
and dancing. Sh d n't hke apath ic&#13;
people who don't want to g t involved at&#13;
Park ide and people who don't give&#13;
Park ide a chance. he L living at 4322&#13;
21st St. in Racine.&#13;
'A! 'CY HELFRI H i a 1970 graduate&#13;
of St. Catherine' H.S. where he was in&#13;
Lorelei Club and J.A he i 5'9" and ha&#13;
brown hair and brown ey . She enjoy&#13;
sewing, art projects, and wimming.&#13;
Nancy also likes dancing, music, fashion ,&#13;
the outdoors, and taking walks. he&#13;
doesn't like unfriendly people, poor music&#13;
groups, and cliques. Nancy lives at 1508&#13;
Russet in Racine. Nanc~· was nominated&#13;
by the Parkside Hockey· Club.&#13;
GO RANGERS GO &#13;
Coach 'Red'&#13;
Assists&#13;
Stephens&#13;
Kennoth "Bed" Oborbruner IS a ''In!5It&#13;
man" at Pa .... ide. but he IS hardly that In&#13;
ttrm 01 athlehc servree Oberbrun ...&#13;
come lrom MdtOflCoU.. e where he has&#13;
served a athletic director He also has&#13;
COBhed lootball. basketball and baseball&#13;
lor the pasl 24 years&#13;
Coach Oberbeuner has an Impressive&#13;
ports background He lettered in&#13;
b.. btball and baseball at Notre Dame&#13;
wh.lr: ""mnlng AII·Arnerlcan honors In both&#13;
par He went on to become a charter&#13;
m mber 0' the BA. playing lor the Ft.&#13;
Wayne loll ne r·PlstOfl During the "olf·&#13;
ason" he played minor league baseball&#13;
ParkSldt' I happy 10 have "Red"&#13;
tJ!&gt;&lt;:rhruoer a. Its assistant basketball&#13;
coach and a a counselor lor ludent arralr.&#13;
night their opponent is the SwedWI&#13;
National team. The game will he played.&#13;
the Racine case H.S. lieldhouse at S·.&#13;
p.m. This year's captain is senior K..&#13;
Rick.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens is the llIII,&#13;
basketball coach the University 01&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside has ever had Lut&#13;
year's team, despite a lack 01 experience,&#13;
This year's Ranger basketeers will be After Tuesday's game against Chicago posted a winning record of 13-12.WithlllllJ&#13;
striving to improve on last year's 13and 12 Xavier I the Rangers open up their home a few exceptio~s ~e Ra~ers played riIbt&#13;
mark With eight players returning, they season Friday night when they lace down to the WIre m their losing effortl,&#13;
have plenty of experience and should he Purdue-North Central at St. Joseph's in Stephens was a starting guard for tile&#13;
tough to beat. Kenosha. Game time is 8:00 p.m The next University of Wisconsin Badgers a1ler ~ _________________________________ high school career at Platteville. COIdI&#13;
Stephens also did his graduate wort II&#13;
Madison. He recently co-authored IIIlI&#13;
published a basketball textbook li1led&#13;
"The Trident Offense".&#13;
Additional duties for this persolllbll&#13;
young coach include coordinaliaC&#13;
Parkside's physical education progJ'IIl&#13;
and coaching the golf team in the S......&#13;
VARSITY BASKETBALL&#13;
COACH STEVE STEPHENS&#13;
.4SST. KEN OBERBRUNEI&#13;
December&#13;
1 at Xavier College----Chicego&#13;
4 UNIV. OF PURDUE-NORTH CENTRAL&#13;
5 SWEDISH NATIONAL TEAM&#13;
8 et Northern Michigan Univ.-MlIrqUltlt&#13;
12 UNIV. OF WISCONSIN.GREEN BAY&#13;
~~.19S~~i~k~asl~~,~~~;~n~~lnljCO, Va.&#13;
EDWARDSVILLE&#13;
30-31 Christmas Tournillmenl-Mitchel1. S.D.&#13;
Jlnuuy&#13;
6 MILTON COLLEGE&#13;
9 LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY (ONTARIO)&#13;
12 NORTHEASTERN ILLINOIS&#13;
14 at Wayne State University&#13;
19 at Dominic"n College&#13;
30 HOPE COLLEGE (HOLLAND, MICH.)&#13;
Februlry&#13;
1 at Grand Valley State-Allendele, Mich.&#13;
6 at Lake Forest College&#13;
9 at University of Wisconsin-Green 81'(&#13;
13 at University of Wisconsin·Milwluktl&#13;
16 XAVIER COLLEGE&#13;
19 LAKELAND COLLEGE&#13;
23 NORTHLAND COLLEGE&#13;
26 at University of Missouri-St. louis&#13;
27 at Southern Illinois Univ.--Edw.rdsvI1l1&#13;
HOME GAMES IN CAPS AT 8 P.M.&#13;
LEFT TO RIGHT, FRONT ROW: Jeff Pie. Larry Wade, Jim Hoga?, Ca~t. Ken Rick, Nick&#13;
Perrine, Don Woods and Eli Slaughter, BACK ROW: Asst. Coach Kenneth RED Oberbruner, Tom&#13;
'l'hompsoo, Steve Hagenow, Stan White, Mike Madsen, MIke Jackson, Tom Flndrmg, Dennis&#13;
Fechham and Coach Steve Stephens.&#13;
Eight Returning Players&#13;
Key To Winning Season&#13;
UWP fencers Gain&#13;
National Prominence&#13;
The 1970-71Ranger fencers open their&#13;
regular season schedule this Saturday&#13;
when they meet WisconSin and Minnesota.&#13;
Parkslde will fence Madison at 1: 00 p.m.&#13;
on 'aturday. Al 2'00 MInnesota will take&#13;
on Madison with Parkside finishing up&#13;
Wllh Mmnesota at 3:00,&#13;
Parksrde's lineup for the Foil event&#13;
Includes Keith Herbrechtsmeser, John&#13;
TaM, AI Lotante and KIm e1son.&#13;
In the Eppe John Hanzalok will lead the&#13;
team alooR with Bruce Bosman, Jim&#13;
Cummmgs and Bob Weslby&#13;
John laoolll. Pele Shemanske and&#13;
Richard Moffell comprise the sabre team.&#13;
Much has been written aboot Parkside's&#13;
most successful coach Loren Hein. He was&#13;
recently named "coach 01 the month" by&#13;
Fl'acing M8galin~ Hem also has been&#13;
called "Ihe Lombard. of leoeing".&#13;
In 8 short time. he has taken Parkside to&#13;
national promtneoee with such standouts&#13;
as Keith Herbrechtsmeier and John&#13;
Hanz.ahk, Hanzalik recently represented&#13;
the United States 10 international com·&#13;
petlllOn In Turin. Italy.&#13;
FENCING&#13;
COACH LORAN HEIN&#13;
D ._&#13;
S UW·MAOISON. UNIVERSITY Of&#13;
MINNESOTA.&#13;
12 lIIinols Collegiete Open--Chempaign&#13;
Jaftu.,.,&#13;
8 UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI-KANSAS&#13;
CITY, MILWAUKEE TECH&#13;
16 AI,. Force et Medison&#13;
30 Pureh..., University of Indiena, Bowling&#13;
Green Stete University at Lafeyette&#13;
..........,&#13;
6 Notre Dame, University of Illinois at&#13;
Chic~ C.mpus&#13;
13 UW-MAOISON. MICHIGAN STATE&#13;
19 Tri·Stale, Oberlin el Angole, Indiena&#13;
20 Detroit, University of Illinois, Weyne&#13;
Stete .1 Detroit&#13;
26 Notre Dame, Milwaukee Tech at&#13;
Milw.ukee&#13;
27 University of Chic.ego, Ohio Stete at&#13;
Chic~&#13;
-.10&#13;
2 University of Illinois-Chicego Campus,&#13;
Milwaukee Tech at Milwaukee&#13;
6 G.... I lakes Invilational et Angola,&#13;
Indi.n. Loren Hein&#13;
--~---------&#13;
Sp.el.1 sportsfnt E~ltI••&#13;
Edltols&#13;
Yle G.dfr.,&#13;
Bn lI.bl. Kith, M.·er_&#13;
LEFT TO RIGHT. FRONT ROW: Richard Moffett, Peter Shemansk J' Cu' .&#13;
Boaman and Kim Nelson. BACK ROW: Don Ours, Don-Koser Keith Herbre&#13;
, 1m . mmlngs, Bruce&#13;
Bob Pawlock, Larry Foreman, John lanotti, John Hanzalik"';d Coach Lore~~~:eler, Bob Westby,&#13;
Coach 'Red'&#13;
Assists&#13;
Stephens&#13;
LEFT TO RIGHT, FRONT ROW: Jeff Pie, Larry Wade, Jim Hoga~, Ca~t. Ken Rick, Nick&#13;
Perrine, Don woods and Eli Slaughter. BACK ROW: Asst. Co~ch Kenneth RED O~er~runer, Toi:n&#13;
Thompson. Steve Hagenow, Stan White, Mike Madsen, Mike Jackson, Tom Fmdrmg, Dennis&#13;
Fechham and Coach Steve Stephens.&#13;
Eight Returning Players&#13;
Key To Winning Season&#13;
Thi ye r' Ranger basketeers will be&#13;
trh·ing to improve on last year's 13 and 12&#13;
mark. With eight players returning, they&#13;
hav p enty or experience and hould be&#13;
night their opponent is the Swedish&#13;
National team. The game will be played in&#13;
the Rac~ne Cas~ H.S. f~eld_house at 8:00&#13;
p.m. This year s captain 1s senior Ken&#13;
Rick.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens is the only&#13;
basketball coach the University or&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside has ever had. Last&#13;
year's team, despite a lack of experience&#13;
posted a winning record of 13-12. With only&#13;
a few exceptions the Rangers played right&#13;
down to the wire in their losing efforts.&#13;
Stephens was a starting guard for the&#13;
University of Wisconsin Badgers after 8&#13;
tou h to beat. -------------------------------- high school career at Platteville. Coach Stephens also did his graduate work at&#13;
After Tuesday's game against Chicago&#13;
Xavier, the Rangers open up their home&#13;
season Friday night when they face&#13;
Purdue-North Central at St. Joseph's in&#13;
Kenosha. Game time is 8:00 p.m The next&#13;
UWP Fencers Gain&#13;
National Prominence&#13;
FENCING&#13;
COACH LORAN HEIN&#13;
S UW-MAOISON, lVERSITY Of&#13;
I ESOTA&#13;
12 lll"nois Coll egiate Open-Champaign&#13;
Janvary&#13;
8 UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI-KANSAS&#13;
CITY. MIL A EE TECH&#13;
16 Air Force at Madison&#13;
30 Pure!~. University of Indiana , Bowli ng&#13;
Green State Un iversity at Lafayette&#13;
Faoruary&#13;
6 Notre Dame, Un iversity of Illinois at&#13;
Chicago Campus&#13;
13 UW-MADISON, MICHIGAN STATE&#13;
19 Tri-State, Oberlin at Angola, Indiana&#13;
20 Detroit, University of Illi nois, Wayne&#13;
State at Detroit&#13;
26 Notre Dame, Milwaukee Tech at&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
27 University of Chicago, Ohio State at&#13;
Chicago&#13;
Mardi&#13;
2 University of Illinois-Chicago Campus,&#13;
Milwaukee Tech at Milwaukee&#13;
6 Great Lakes Invitational at Angola,&#13;
Indiana Loren Hein&#13;
LEFT TO RIGHT, FRONT ROW: Richard Moffett, Peter Shemanske J' c ·&#13;
Bosman and Kim Nelson. BACK ROW: Don Ours, Don .Koser Keith Herbr • im ~mmings, Bruce&#13;
Bob Pawlock. Larry Foreman, John Zanotti, John Hanzalik ;u;d Coach Lore:~!f:eier, Bob Westby,&#13;
Madison. He recently co-authored and&#13;
published a basketball textbook titled&#13;
"The Trident Offense".&#13;
Additional duties for this personable&#13;
young coach include coordinating&#13;
Parkside's physical education program&#13;
and coaching the golf team in the Spring.&#13;
VARSITY BASKETBALL&#13;
COACH STEVE STEPHENS&#13;
ASST. KEN OBERBRUNER&#13;
December&#13;
1 at Xavier College--Chlcago&#13;
4 UNIV. OF PURDUE-NORTH CENTRAL&#13;
5 SWEDISH NATIONAL TEAM&#13;
8 at Northern Michigan Univ.-Marquette&#13;
12 UNIV. OF WISCONSIN-GREEN BAY&#13;
17-19 Christmas Tournament--Quantico, Va.&#13;
23 SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIV.-&#13;
EDWARDSVILLE&#13;
30-31 Christmas Tournament-Mitchell, S.O&#13;
January&#13;
6 MILTON COLLEGE&#13;
9 LAKEHEAD UNIVERSITY (ONTARIO)&#13;
12 NORTHEASTERN ILLINOIS&#13;
14 at Wayne State University&#13;
19 at Dominican College&#13;
30 HOPE COLLEGE ( HOLLAND, MICH.)&#13;
February&#13;
1 at Grand Valley State-Allendale, Mich.&#13;
6 at Lake Forest College&#13;
9 at University of Wisconsin-Green Bay&#13;
13 at University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee&#13;
16 XAVIER COLLEGE&#13;
19 LAKELAND COLLEGE&#13;
23 NORTHLAND COLLEGE&#13;
26 at University of Missouri-St. Louis&#13;
27 at Southern Illinois Univ.-Edwardsvillt&#13;
HOME GAMES IN CAPS AT 8 P.M.&#13;
Steve Stephens&#13;
Special Sportsfesf Edlfi 111&#13;
Editors&#13;
Vic Godfrey&#13;
Bev Ntble UfhY M~ &#13;
Mat Maids Cheer Team&#13;
.The 1970 version of Ranger wreslling line up features Allan Sosinski at 118,&#13;
will begin the campaign at Bullen Junior Larry Danblarcum at 126, Caplaln Greg&#13;
High School near the Kenosha Campus Hauser at 134, Vic M"ldJetoo at 142, John&#13;
Friday aflernooo. at. 3:00. Parkslde is Lindsay at 150. Gary Roes at 158, MItch&#13;
slated to lake on MIchIgan Tech and WSU· Vogeli at 167, Tom Hamstree! at 177, L&lt;nn&#13;
Stevens POIOt. Williams at 190, and Hwt David TarbeIJ&#13;
The line up for Parkside will be: Parkslde has not received tbe Slnens&#13;
118 Hugh Gately Point line up as of yet.&#13;
126 Steve Lamont Adding some "beauty" to the Parkside&#13;
134 Ken Martin "beasts" are the Mat Maids, who will keep&#13;
142 Bob Clarke, Gary Vincent statistics at the wrestling meets. These&#13;
or Bill Talbert girls "ill don brand new uniforms 01 green,&#13;
Jeff Jenkins white and black to add additiooal color to&#13;
Gene Fix, George Sielski the meets.&#13;
•&#13;
........ or Gary Vincent Jim Koch is the newest man on the&#13;
. . 167 Captai~ Bill Benkstein coaching staff, coming from South Dakota&#13;
LEFT TO RIGHT, WRESTLERS: Hugh Gately Steve Lamont Ke M' 177 Tom Beyers Slate where he did Ius undergraduate and&#13;
Clarke, Gary Vincent, Jeff Jenkins, Gene Fox Capt Bill Benkstei T' :;., artins, Bob 190 Paul Paricka graduate work South Dakota Slate has&#13;
Paricka. Coach Jim Koch is standing. SEATED iN FRONT ~E:"T k"l:~PJaauln Hwt . Mark Barnhill been traditionally known as OOe 01 the&#13;
Hermes, Cris Vlakakis, Nancy MIchals, Kathy Doherty Nance Kon d c I MIchIgan Tecb, who was 13 and 6 in the great NCAA college wvisloo wrestling&#13;
Ricciardi. • ecny an ar a tough ~orlhern Intercollegiate Con- powers.&#13;
~G;::::y=-m--n-a--s--t;--s--;P;;;:-e--r-f-:;-o--r-m---A--=-t_f~er~H~nc~e::"~a~coa~i~f~ed~t~bY~i~D~m~E~ln~e:e'~Th~"~' ~g~:~~~~&#13;
successful wrestling climes ever held In&#13;
this state with almost 500 participants&#13;
This year's Ranger grapplers are young&#13;
but should provide some exerting&#13;
wrestling.&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside's&#13;
first gymnastics team will be on display in&#13;
an exhibition during the half time of the&#13;
Parkside-Swedish National Team&#13;
Saturday night. The learn is composed of&#13;
Dan Boswein, Warren Vogel, Fred&#13;
Wolnerman, Warren McGillivray and&#13;
Doug Anderson.&#13;
This team of five gymnasts will meet&#13;
NCAAchampions Southern Illinois as well&#13;
as Ball Stale, the University of Chicago,&#13;
Marquette University, the University of&#13;
Winois Circle Campus, Eastern Illinois,&#13;
Indiana State and Kansas State at various&#13;
dates during the year.&#13;
CoachBill Ballester is in his first year at&#13;
Parkside as its gymnastics coach.&#13;
Ballester comes from Southern Illinois&#13;
University and Waukegan High School,&#13;
where he has developed some of the finest&#13;
gymnastic teams in the United States.&#13;
Ballester is the president of the United&#13;
Slates High School Gymnastics Federation&#13;
and has served as the team manager for&#13;
the Uniled States Gymnastics team as well&#13;
as serving as director of the World Games&#13;
Tryouts this past summer.&#13;
fn the short time that Ballester has been&#13;
at Parkside, he has put together a first&#13;
class team that could do very well in the&#13;
NAIA. Few coaches can match his energy&#13;
and capacity for work.&#13;
GYMNASTICS&#13;
COACH BILL BALLESTER&#13;
--&#13;
28 Midwest Gymnastics Championship lit&#13;
Addison, Illinois&#13;
_ulry&#13;
30 University of Chicago at Chica~&#13;
Pobrv....,&#13;
5 M.rquette University, University of&#13;
ChiclgO It Milwlukee&#13;
6 Wisconsin ()pen It Brookfield, Wis.&#13;
l3 University of Illinois-Circle Campus,&#13;
George Williams at Downers Grove, 111.&#13;
19 illinois Stlte University, St. Cloud at&#13;
Normll, Illinois&#13;
20 Eastern Illinois University, George&#13;
Willilms It Chlrleston, Illinois&#13;
26 Indiana Stlte University, Kansas State&#13;
University It Terre Heute&#13;
27 Triton Inyilltlonll: Trlton College, DuPage&#13;
College, University of Chiclgo, Marquette&#13;
University, Milwlukee Tech,&#13;
Whtlton College It Chicago&#13;
-&#13;
13-1. District #1. Championships&#13;
'8-20 NAIA Chlmpionship It&#13;
Natchitoches, Louisilnl&#13;
Cagers Slated To&#13;
Play Swedish Team&#13;
Saturday niglit's game between&#13;
Parkaide and the Swedish National team&#13;
wU1 be the eighth game of a 15 game tour&#13;
for !be Ieam from Sweden.&#13;
The Ieam left Stockholm November 22&#13;
and will tolD' the United States playing&#13;
Micl-American colleges for almost one&#13;
month. The Swedes will be coming to&#13;
Parkside from St. Peter, Minnesota,&#13;
""ere they played Gustavus Adolpbus&#13;
College.Gustavus Adolphus was one of the&#13;
moot famous of all tbe Swedish kings.&#13;
Teams on the scbedule include: Robert&#13;
Morris College at Carthage, Illinois;&#13;
~ College; Lea CoDege at Albert Lea,&#13;
Minnesota; Wisconsin State University at&#13;
Eau Claire' Central Iowa, Hamline&#13;
University 01'St. Paul; Northern Michigan&#13;
UniVersity; Lakeland College; Carthage&#13;
College; Milton CoDege; Chicago Slate&#13;
IDd Sl Procopiua.&#13;
150&#13;
158&#13;
FRONT TO BACK: Dan Boswein, Warren Vogel, Fred Wolnerman, Warren&#13;
McGillivray and Doug Anderson. Coach Bill Ballester is kneeling along side Ius team.&#13;
Squad To Cheer AI All Sporls&#13;
Different from past years, the 1971).71&#13;
cheerleading squad will cheer at all&#13;
sporting events instead of just at&#13;
hasketball games. The squad has five&#13;
members. Four of tbe girls are freshmen,&#13;
wbile this year's captain, Kathy Mauer, is&#13;
a senior.&#13;
For tryouts, eacb girl had to do two&#13;
cheers; a series of jumps, and certain&#13;
stunls.&#13;
The squad has two sets of uniforms that&#13;
were designed especially to match the&#13;
team's uniforms. One set includes green&#13;
jumper with a white stripe at the&#13;
waistline. White turtleneck sweaters are&#13;
worn with this set. The other uniforms are&#13;
wbite culotte jumpers with a green stripe&#13;
at the hipline. Green turtleneck sweaters&#13;
are worn under the white uniforms.&#13;
This year's squad members are Pam&#13;
Engdahl, Lenay Grimmer, Jan Hermes,&#13;
Nancy Miller and Kathy Mauer.&#13;
Pam Engdahl, a blue-eyed brunette,&#13;
graduated from Tremper H.S. While in&#13;
lugh school Pam was Red Cross Presid~t:&#13;
participated in gymnastics and gll'ls&#13;
track, belonged to a capella and the&#13;
Trojenettes. Pam is a freshman and IS&#13;
majoring in Sociology and Psychology.&#13;
Lenay Grimmer is a blue-eyed blonde&#13;
who graduated from Kenosha Tremper.&#13;
While in lugb school Lenay was a member&#13;
of the Red Cross Club. She is majoring in&#13;
Life SCience and plans on a career as a&#13;
physical therapist.&#13;
Jan Hermes, another blue-eyed blonde,&#13;
graduated from Horlick High School in&#13;
Racine. At Horlick Jan was active in&#13;
National Hooor Society. AFS, and was a&#13;
cheerleader ber seI\ior year. Sbe hasn't&#13;
decided upon a major as of yet and has no&#13;
immediate future plans.&#13;
Nancy Miller graduated from Racine SL&#13;
Catherine's where she was a J. V&#13;
cheerleader, a member of National Honor&#13;
Society,oo "Lance" staff, and belonged to&#13;
hoth French Club and the Art Club. Nancy&#13;
has not decided upon a major. She has&#13;
brown bair and grey eyes.&#13;
Katby Mauer, a brown-eyed brunette,&#13;
also graduated from St. Catherine's. She&#13;
was an associate editor of "The Shield" t&#13;
belonged to National Honor Society, Pep&#13;
Club, Hostess Club, Players, and German&#13;
Club. At Parkside she has been a&#13;
cheerleader for folD'years, is a member of&#13;
Booster Club, SIts as a student&#13;
represenlative on the Human Rights&#13;
Committee, and has belonged to the&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Committee Kathy&#13;
is a senior majonng In PolitiCal SctenCe&#13;
and Communications. After graduation in&#13;
June she plans to go onto professIonal Red&#13;
Cross Work in its Water Safety Depart·&#13;
ment.&#13;
MISSDoreen Kristjanson IS the group's&#13;
advisoe Doreen attended the Umverslty of&#13;
North Dakota where she majored In home&#13;
economics. She now is teaching home ec at&#13;
Park High School on Rac,ne,&#13;
FIRST ROW, LEFT TO RIGHT: Lenay Grimmer, Kathy Mauer, Pam Engdahl;&#13;
SECOND ROW: Nancy Miller, Jan Hermes. (Tom Mainland PhotoJ&#13;
LEFT TO RIGHT, WRESTLERS: Hugh Gately Steve Lamont · Clarke, Gary Vincent, Jeff Jenkins, Gene Fox Capt Bill Benkst . T' Ken Mart ms, Bob&#13;
Paricka. Co~ch Jim ~och is standing. SEA TED iN FRONT ~E ~~ Beyer and_ Paul&#13;
Hermes, Cris Vlakak1s, Nancy Michals Kathy Doherty N · K T MAIDS. Jan&#13;
Ricciardi. ' • ance onecny and Carla&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside's&#13;
first gymnastics team will be on display in&#13;
an exhibition during the half time of the&#13;
Parkside-Swedish National Team&#13;
Saturday night. The team is composed of&#13;
Dan Boswein, Warren Vogel, Fred&#13;
Wolnerman, Warren McGillivray and&#13;
Doug Anderson.&#13;
This team of five gymnasts will meet&#13;
NCAA champions Southern Illinois as well&#13;
as Ball State, the University of Chicago,&#13;
Marquette University, the University of&#13;
lliinois Circle Campus, Eastern Illinois,&#13;
Indiana State and Kansas State at various&#13;
dates during the year. Coach Bill Ballester is in his first year at&#13;
Parkside as its gymnastics coach.&#13;
Ballester comes from Southern Illinois&#13;
University and Waukegan High School,&#13;
where he has developed some of the finest&#13;
gymnastic teams in the United States.&#13;
Ballester is the president of the United&#13;
States High School Gymnastics Federation&#13;
and has served as the team manager for&#13;
the United States Gymnastics team as well&#13;
as serving as director of the World Games&#13;
Tryouts this past summer. In the short time that Ballester has been&#13;
at Parkside, he has put together a first&#13;
class team that could do very well in the&#13;
NAIA. Few coaches can match his energy&#13;
and capacity for work.&#13;
GYMNASTICS&#13;
COACH BILL BALLESTER&#13;
150&#13;
158&#13;
167&#13;
177&#13;
190&#13;
November&#13;
28 Midwest Gymnastics Championship at&#13;
FRONT TO BACK: Dan Boswein, Warren Vogel, Fred \\'olnerman, Warren&#13;
McGillivray and Doug Anderson. Coach Bill Ballester is kneeling along side his team.&#13;
Addison, Illinois&#13;
January&#13;
30 University of Chicago at Chica~&#13;
February&#13;
5 Marquette University, University of&#13;
Chicago at Milwaukee&#13;
6 Wisconsin Open at Brookfield, Wis.&#13;
13 University of Illinois-Circle Campus,&#13;
George Williams at Downers Grove, Ill.&#13;
19 Illinois State University, St. Cloud at&#13;
Normal, Illinois&#13;
20 Ea_st~rn Illinois University, George&#13;
W,11,ams at Charleston, Illinois&#13;
26 ln~iana State University, Kansas State&#13;
University at Terre Haute&#13;
27 Triton Invitational : Triton College, DuPage&#13;
College, University of Chicago, Marquette&#13;
University, Milwaukee Tech,&#13;
Wheaton College at Chicago&#13;
March&#13;
13-1,4 District #1,4 Championships 18•20 NAIA Championship at&#13;
Natchitoches, Louisiana&#13;
Cagers Slated To&#13;
Play Swedish Team&#13;
Saturday night's game between&#13;
Parkside and the Swedish National team&#13;
will be the eighth game of a 15 game tour&#13;
£or the team from Sweden.&#13;
The team left Stockholm November 22&#13;
an_d will tour the United States playing&#13;
Mid-American colleges for almost one&#13;
month. The Swedes will be coming to&#13;
Parkside from St. Peter, Minnesota,&#13;
where they played Gustavus Adolphus&#13;
College. Gustavus Adolphus was one of the&#13;
most famous of all the Swedish kings. Teams on the schedule include: Robert&#13;
M~rris College at Carthage, Illinois;&#13;
Quincy College; Lea College at Albert Lea,&#13;
Minnesota; Wisconsin State University at&#13;
Eau Claire · Central Iowa, Hamline&#13;
U~versity of1&#13;
St. Paul; Northern Michigan&#13;
University; Lakeland College; Carthage&#13;
College; Milton College; Chicago State&#13;
and St. Procopius.&#13;
Squad To Cheer At All Sports&#13;
Different from past years, the 1970-71&#13;
cheerleading squad will cheer at all&#13;
sporting events instead of just at&#13;
basketball games. The squad has five&#13;
members. Four of the girls are freshmen,&#13;
while this year's captain, Kathy Mauer, is&#13;
a senior. For tryouts, each girl had to do two&#13;
cheers, a series of jwnps, and certain&#13;
stunts. The squad has two sets of uniforms that&#13;
were designed especially to match the&#13;
team's uniforms. One set includes green&#13;
jumper with a white . stripe at the&#13;
waistline. White turtleneck sweaters are&#13;
worn with this set. The other uniforms are&#13;
white culotte jumpers with a green stripe&#13;
at the hipline. Green turtleneck sweaters&#13;
are worn under the white uniforms. This year's squad members are Pam&#13;
Engdahl, Lenay Grimmer, Jan Hermes,&#13;
Nancy Miller and Kathy Mauer. Pam Engdahl, a blue-eyed brunette,&#13;
graduated from Tremper H.S. While in&#13;
high school Pam was Red &lt;-:ross Presid~nt:&#13;
participated in gymnastics and girls&#13;
track, belonged to a capella and ~e&#13;
Trojenettes. Pam is a freshman and 1s&#13;
majoring in Sociology and Psychology. Lenay Grimmer is a blue-eyed blonde&#13;
who graduated from Kenosha Tremper. While in high school Lenay was a member&#13;
of the Red Cross Club. She is majoring in&#13;
Life Science and plans on a career as a&#13;
physical therapist. Jan Hermes, another blue-eyed blonde,&#13;
graduated from Horlick High School in&#13;
Racine. At Horlick Jan was active in&#13;
National Honor Society, AFS, and was a cheerleader her senior year. She hasn't&#13;
decided upon a major as of yet and has no&#13;
immediate future plans.&#13;
Nancy Miller graduated from Racine St.&#13;
Catherine's where she was a J.V. cheerleader, a member of National Honor&#13;
Society, on "Lance" staff, and belonged to&#13;
both French Club and the Art Club. , 'ancy&#13;
has not decided upon a major. She ha.&#13;
brO\\-'Tl hair and grey eyes. Kathy Mauer, a bro,m~yed brunette,&#13;
also graduated from St. Catherine' h&#13;
was an as ociate editor of "The Shield",&#13;
belonged to National Honor Society. P p&#13;
Club, Hostess Club, Players, and German&#13;
Club. At Parkside she has been a&#13;
cheerleader for four year , is a member of&#13;
FIRST ROW, LEFT TO RIGHT: Lenay Grimmer, Kathy Mauer, Pam Engdahl;&#13;
SECOND ROW: Nancy Miller, Jan Hermes. (Tom Mainland Photo.) &#13;
The 1970Ranger cross country team Standing from lell to right: Marc Conrad,&#13;
Gary Lance, Jim McFadden, Keith Merrill, Rick Lund, Oluck Del.lman, Mike DeWitt,&#13;
John Wagner, Coach VICGodfrey Kneeling are Tim McGilsky and Jim Bark.&#13;
Runners Have Success Story&#13;
Park Ide'S young cress country team.&#13;
compaoedof rune freshmen and one junior.&#13;
capped 011 a succesaful season WItha 26-29&#13;
wln o.. r Carthage in the District 14 Invnatlonal&#13;
•&#13;
Tlu Win along With a ...·in over the&#13;
WlSCOnIn ate University champion.&#13;
P1all Ville, capped the season for the&#13;
Rangers Other highlight mcluded a 4·1&#13;
dual meel record and a second place finish&#13;
m the Mid-America Federation Championships.&#13;
JUOIor Mike DeWitt of Kenosha&#13;
Tremper. was elected captain for lhe 1970&#13;
season. Freshman, Rick Lund of&#13;
Marinette Catholic, was named the most&#13;
valuable runner.&#13;
SPORTSFESTivities&#13;
In addition to the many athletic compehllOllS&#13;
that Will he taking place this&#13;
coming Fnday and Saturday, Sportsfest&#13;
wlll also include two rughts of social activities&#13;
to top off the weekend's events.&#13;
These "Sportsfestivihes" will take place&#13;
m the ActiVities BUildmg foUowing the&#13;
baskelhall games both rughts, which will&#13;
be at ahoullO:OOp.m., and run to 1:00a.m.&#13;
Featured wIDbe a rock dance and a dancA&gt;-&#13;
Nlbldub. Adm~ 10 each of lhese&#13;
even" will he $1.50per penon allhe door.&#13;
Friday night's dance will mlroduce&#13;
popular Wisconsm rock band "The Lot·&#13;
tery", a group that has been appearing on&#13;
campusea and in clubs throughout the&#13;
stale for the past foUl' years. Then for&#13;
Saturday night's dance-nightclub,&#13;
relurning to Parksid~ by popular requesl&#13;
wlll he the highly entertaining "Gregory&#13;
James" group. This versatile act, which&#13;
was here about a month ago (see&#13;
Newscope issues Nov. 2 and 16 for story&#13;
and review), will be presenting three&#13;
shows al 10:15, 11:15 and 12:15 in a&#13;
nightclub selting that wID this lime include&#13;
a dance lioor for lhose who wisb to dance.&#13;
This type of setup proved to be very&#13;
popular at the last dance-nightclub which&#13;
featured "The Neighborhood".&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin State I.D_ will&#13;
be reqUired for admission to both events.&#13;
Mr. Byung Dae Suh's Judo and Karate clubs will he on exhibition Saturday night&#13;
Irom 7:00 t07:30 al the Case Fieldhouse. Mr. Sub is a sixth degree balck helt in judo.&#13;
Here he is shown watching two of his students at last year's Sportfest.&#13;
WRESTLING&#13;
COACH JIM KOCH&#13;
ASST. a\UG SIAl&#13;
16 WStJ..EAU CLAIRE &amp; AUGUSTANA&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
hbruary&#13;
6 Michigan Technical University at&#13;
Houghton&#13;
13 Ripon College Tournament at Ripon&#13;
20 Northern Michigan University at&#13;
Marquette&#13;
26 WStJ..LACROSSE&#13;
-&#13;
... MICHIGAN TECHNICAL ltIIlVERSITY&#13;
&amp; WSl).STEVENS POINT&#13;
.2 Western Michigan TOUmlimenl al&#13;
Kalamazoo&#13;
11 UW·MllWAUICEE&#13;
29·30 Midlands Toumament at&#13;
LlGrange, Illinois March&#13;
6 Easlern Illinois at Charleston&#13;
11·12-13 NAIA Tournament at 8c:xIne. N.C. -...&#13;
• IIflO'T CCllL£GE&#13;
Hockey • SomethingNew&#13;
At Parkside&#13;
The Parkside Hockey Club, in itsoffirsthel&#13;
. . already one&#13;
year of operation, IS . on this&#13;
osl successful student enterprISeS . f&#13;
m pus Under the energetic leadershiP 0&#13;
cam "denlof the club, Bill Weslerlund,&#13;
~: P~~ters have shown whal studenl&#13;
power can he. f th Under the rules of club sports most 0 e&#13;
financial backing comes from the students&#13;
themselves. The members of the. club are&#13;
lble lor fmancinll their ice time, responSI ho and for which comes to $25.00 per W'&#13;
games like the one Thursday nighl, they&#13;
have in raise S80.00. Many of the outstanding&#13;
intercollegiate progrllllla .&#13;
country, i.e., Notre Dame, have ~&#13;
their start in the same humble wly....&#13;
Going into the game ThIll'Sda .&#13;
(December 3 al 6:00 p.m.) lhe ~::&#13;
icemen have beaten Johnson Wax ........&#13;
losing 10 lhe Powerful Marquette cIidropping&#13;
a close decision 10 Loyola ~&#13;
game ThW'sday night will he a reri.i;&#13;
with Loyola.&#13;
It is anticipaled lhal a relatively I-..&#13;
crowd will he on hand at the Wils&lt;m P:&#13;
recreation center in Milwaukee to 1IIlIl&#13;
one of the world's most exciting 'IlOrtL&#13;
Volleyball In The Morning&#13;
Ouch blck Frecke&#13;
New Squad For&#13;
Rangerettes&#13;
Vickie Leslie lives at 2801Rosalind Ave.&#13;
in Racine. A graduate of Case H.S., she is&#13;
now a freshman at Parkside. This 5'2%"&#13;
strawberry blonde majoring in sociology,&#13;
has green eyes and is 18 years old. Her&#13;
activities include Booster Club and&#13;
Rangeretles. Outside scbool she enjoys&#13;
dancing, sewing, sports and boys. She also&#13;
likes Italian food, sports and boys. She&#13;
may lead an interesting life, for her future&#13;
includes hecoming a legal secretary, rich&#13;
and famous, an Italian chel and a stripper&#13;
m.&#13;
Joyce Milkie, a sophomore at Parkside,&#13;
lives at 9316 Racine Ave. in Sturtevant. She&#13;
was a porn-porn girl at Case H.S. and is&#13;
now in Booster Club and Rangerettes. A&#13;
5'6" 19 year old majoring in Education _&#13;
Modern American Society, Joyce has&#13;
brown hair and green eyes. Her pastimes&#13;
mclude knitting, singing, bicycling and&#13;
sports. She also likes flowers picnics&#13;
books, snow and fireworks. A~ for he;&#13;
f~t.ure pla~, she wants "to find me by&#13;
livmg my hfe and answering every op.&#13;
portunity."&#13;
Ba~bara Brown is a junior, majoring in&#13;
English and elementary education, who&#13;
translerred here Irom Madison. She has&#13;
previous experience in the Angel F1ight&#13;
Drill Team and as'a cheerleader. Her&#13;
hobbies in~lu~e dancing, cooking, sewing,&#13;
men and slngmg. Barb likes sex, food and&#13;
sporls. She is 5'6" tall and has brown hair&#13;
and blue eyes. At her ageof21, she plans to&#13;
Parkside's volleyhall team II in ..&#13;
second year of competition under c.,..&#13;
Dick Frecka. lis regular scheduleIf&#13;
competition revolves around play al ...&#13;
Racine City A League. Other IIOIftla II&#13;
competition include games wlth ......&#13;
and universities such as MiltCl!~&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and UW-Green Bay.&#13;
Last year the team traveled to ..&#13;
southern part of Iowa to play in the U...&#13;
Graceland College Invitational when ...&#13;
finished filth. The National Assodalilall&#13;
Intercollegiate Athletics spon .&#13;
national championship. This II the...&#13;
that Parkside Volleyballers are!rl'blllt&#13;
reach.&#13;
The lineup for the 1970-71team ••&#13;
follows:&#13;
Bob Domanik 4, Jim Bigson 9,VicGdnr&#13;
8, Pete Hahetler 10, David Klimekl,"&#13;
Kraus 5, Jim.Mohrbacher 12,Harry"&#13;
II, Don Woods 7, Dick Frecka 2.&#13;
Saturday morning's schedule ••&#13;
lollows: Green Bay vs. Parkside • e.t&#13;
one at9 and Milwaukee vs. Millon._&#13;
AI 10:00 Millon plays Green Bay ...&#13;
and Parkside is against Milwaukee._&#13;
The final session at 11:00 bas Mil....&#13;
Parkside and Green Bay vs. MihraM&#13;
he an elementary education teacher&#13;
fold-out girl for Playboy. She aIIo '-&#13;
good sense of humor. Barb lives at ..&#13;
Washington in Racine.&#13;
Julie Frese, a freshman at UWP, ~&#13;
here from Tremper, where she - •&#13;
choralier. She thinks she will IIlIjar II&#13;
e1emenlary education. Her 110'- It&#13;
clude sports, bicycling, boys and .....&#13;
at Burger King. Julie also enjoys~&#13;
money, walking through woods,boll"&#13;
dancing. She is 18 years old, 5'6" --&#13;
lighl brown-hair and brown eye•.She"&#13;
al 784033rd Ave. in Kenosha. In the"&#13;
she would like "to explore life _ willi&#13;
ils true meaning through helping~&#13;
A sophomore al Parkside, this II&#13;
Noble's second year as captain of ..&#13;
Rangeretles. Her past experienceiJldIlII&#13;
two high school drill teams and two::&#13;
of dancing lessons. A graduate rJ II&#13;
lord, she is now livin~ at 6306~~&#13;
Kenosha. She is maJOrmg 10_.&#13;
and psychology and would ~ke ~ ~1111&#13;
guidance counseling. She IS5 4~ ____&#13;
brown hair and hazel eyes. Bev• ~&#13;
include dancing, Scottish mUSlc~ _&#13;
knitting, fencing, seWIng, :~&#13;
working at McDonaids. She os~&#13;
people, dill pickles, snurling, ~&#13;
walking on heaches, guys who~ ..&#13;
and stuffed animals. In oor&#13;
*&#13;
would like to do Iwo things. l)~&#13;
people to get to know and bI'"&#13;
themselves, and 2) see everyOOO&#13;
reason to smile.&#13;
LE!"T TO RIGHT: Joyce Milkie Julie Frese&#13;
and VIckIe Leslie. ','&#13;
Runners Hav,e Success Story&#13;
du I meet record and a . econd place finish&#13;
in th Ud-America Federation Champio&#13;
hips. Junior like DeWitt of Kenosha&#13;
Tremper, wa elected captain for the 1970&#13;
a on . Fre hman , Rick Lund of&#13;
tarinette Catholic, was named the most&#13;
valuable runner.&#13;
SPORTSFESTivities&#13;
tale for the past four years. Then for&#13;
Saturdav night's dance-nightclub, returning to Parksid~ by popular request&#13;
\\ill be the highly entertaining "Gregory&#13;
James" group. This versatile act, which was here about a month ago (see&#13;
'ew cope i ues r.;ov. 2 and 16 for story&#13;
and review), will be presenting three&#13;
shows at 10:15, 11 :15 and 12:15 in a&#13;
nightclub etting that will this time include&#13;
a dance floor for those who wish to dance.&#13;
This type of setup proved to be very&#13;
popular at the last dance-nightclub which&#13;
featured "The Neighborhood".&#13;
Parkside and Wisconsin State 1.0. will&#13;
be required for admission to both events.&#13;
Ir. Byw,g Dae Suh's Judo and Karate clubs will be on exhibition Saturday night&#13;
from 7:00 to 7:30 at the Case Fieldhouse. Mr. Suh is a sixth degree balck belt in judo.&#13;
Her he is shown watching two of his students at last year's Sportiest.&#13;
Oe«mbe,-&#13;
WRESTLING&#13;
COACH JIM KOCH&#13;
ASST. IYUNG SUH&#13;
... MICH IGAN TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY&#13;
&amp; WSU-STEVENS POINT&#13;
12 Wes1cm Michigan Tournament at&#13;
K1l1muoo&#13;
17 UW-MILWAUKEE&#13;
29-30 Midlands Tournament at&#13;
LlGnnge, Illinois&#13;
January&#13;
9 Afl.OIT COLLEGE&#13;
16 WSU-EAU CLAIRE &amp; AUGUSTANA&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
February&#13;
6 Mich;gan Technical Universily at&#13;
Houghton&#13;
13 Ripon College Tournament at Ripon&#13;
20 Northern Michigan Universily at&#13;
Marquetle&#13;
26 WSU-LACROSSE&#13;
March&#13;
6 Eastern Illinois at Charleston&#13;
11-12-13 NAIA Tournament al Boone, N.C.&#13;
Hockey - Something·&#13;
New At Parkside . Club in its first The Parkside Hockey ' f the . · already one o Year of operation, 1s . th"&#13;
ful student enterprises on is&#13;
most success . d h·p of&#13;
Under the energetic lea ers I campus. Bill Westerlund&#13;
the president of the club, what student&#13;
the pucksters have shown&#13;
power can be. f th Under the rules of club sports most o e fi . l backing comes from the students&#13;
mancelaa The members of the club are thems ves. · · tun· e ·b' for financing therr ice ' respons1 ,e d for&#13;
which comes to $25.00 per ho~ an&#13;
like the one Thursday mght, they&#13;
gamesto, . $80 00 Many of the out- have raise · ·&#13;
standing intercollegiate programs .&#13;
country, i.e., Notre Datne, have re: !ht&#13;
their start in the same humble way Vfd&#13;
Going into the game Thursday · .&#13;
(December 3 at 6:00 p.m.) the R~~ icemen have beaten Johnson wa;-cer&#13;
losing to the Powerful Marquette clubWhile&#13;
dropping a close decision to Loyola ~ game Thursday night will be a rem ,.._ with Loyola. a~&#13;
It is anticipated that a relatively larg&#13;
crowd will be on hand at the Wilson p t&#13;
recreation center in Milwaukee to w ::&#13;
one of the world's most exciting spo~.&#13;
Volleyball In The Morning&#13;
cuch blck Frecka&#13;
New Squad For&#13;
Rangerettes&#13;
Vickie Leslie lives at 2801 Rosalind Ave.&#13;
in Racine. A graduate of Case H.S., she is&#13;
now a freshman at Parkside. This 5'2½"&#13;
strawberry blonde majoring in sociology,&#13;
has green eyes and is 18 years old. Her&#13;
activities include Booster Club and&#13;
Rangerettes. Outside school she enjoys&#13;
dancing, sewing, sports and boys. She also&#13;
likes Italian food, sports and boys. She&#13;
may lead an interesting life, for her future&#13;
includes becoming a legal secretary, rich&#13;
and famous, an Italian chef and a stripper&#13;
m.&#13;
Joyce Milkie, a sophomore at Parkside,&#13;
lives at 9316 Racine Ave. in Sturtevant. She&#13;
was a pom-pom girl at Case H.S. and is&#13;
now in Booster Club and Rangerettes. A&#13;
5'6" 19 year old majoring in Education -&#13;
Modern American Society, Joyce has&#13;
?rown hair and green eyes. Her pastimes&#13;
mclude knitting, singing, bicycling and&#13;
sports. She also likes flowers, picnics,&#13;
books, snow and fireworks. As for her&#13;
f~t_ure pla~, she wants "to find me by&#13;
livmg my hfe and answering every op- portunity."&#13;
Ba~bara Brown is a junior, majoring in&#13;
English and elementary education, who&#13;
transferred here from Madison. She has&#13;
previous experience in the Angel Flight&#13;
Drill Team and as ·a cheerleader. Her&#13;
hobbies in~lu~e dancing, cooking, sewing,&#13;
men and smgmg. Barb likes sex, food and&#13;
sports. She is 5'6" tall and has brown hair&#13;
and blue eyes. At her age of 21, she plans to&#13;
Parkside's volleyball team is in lb&#13;
second year of competition under Coad!&#13;
Dick Frecka. Its regular schedule Of&#13;
competition revolves around play at lbt&#13;
Racine City A League. Other sources of&#13;
competition include games with collega&#13;
and universities such as Milton College,&#13;
UW-Milwaukee and UW-Green Bay.&#13;
Last year the team traveled to !ht&#13;
southern part of Iowa to play in the 12 team&#13;
Graceland College Invitational where Ibey&#13;
finished fifth. The National Association of&#13;
Intercollegiate Athletics sponsors 1&#13;
national championship. This is the goal&#13;
that Parkside Volleyballers are trying to&#13;
reach.&#13;
The lineup for the 1970-71 team is as&#13;
follows:&#13;
Bob Domanik 4, Jim Bigson 9, Vic Godhty&#13;
8, Pete Habetler 10, David Klimek 6, RGI&#13;
Kraus 5, Jim Mohrbacher 12, Harry Roat&#13;
11, Don Woods 7, Dick Frecka 2.&#13;
Saturday morning's schedule is as&#13;
follows: Green Bay vs. Parkside on Court&#13;
one at 9 and Milwaukee vs. Milton on two&#13;
At 10:00 Milton plays Green Bay on ant&#13;
and Parkside is against Milwaukee on two.&#13;
The final session at 11: 00 has Milton YI.&#13;
Parkside and Green Bay vs. Milwauae.&#13;
be an elementary education teacher and a&#13;
fold-out girl for Playboy. She also has 1&#13;
good sense of humor. Barb lives at 2%14&#13;
Washington in Racine.&#13;
Julie Frese, a freshman at UWP, camt&#13;
here from Tremper, where she was 1&#13;
choralier. She thinks she will majcr ill&#13;
elementary education. Her hobbies _llt&#13;
elude sports, bicycling, boys and woriill&#13;
at Burger King. Julie also enjoys food.&#13;
money, walking through woods, boys and&#13;
dancing. She is 18 years old, 5'6" and_blS&#13;
light brown-hair and brown eyes. She li\1S&#13;
at 7840 33rd Ave. in Kenosha. In the fulW'f&#13;
she would like "to explore life and to find&#13;
its true meaning through help~ o~·&#13;
A sophomore at Parkside, this IS :&#13;
Noble's second year as captain &lt;i ud!I&#13;
Rangerettes. Her past experience md&#13;
two high school drill teams and two Y:&#13;
of dancing lessons. A graduate of 8&#13;
ford she : is now living at 6306 391h Ai·e 111&#13;
, . . urnaliSID Kenosha. She is majoring m JO O iJjD&#13;
and psychology and woul~ li,ke !? g d blS&#13;
guidance counseling. She as 5 4~ antim6&#13;
brown hair and hazel eyes. Bev ~ pas r1S,&#13;
include dancing, Scottish mus1~'. 5~ di&#13;
knitting, fencing, sewing, ~ttin~&#13;
working at McDonalds. She hkesdandl'&#13;
people, dill pickles, snurfmg, ·tar&#13;
walking on beaches, guys who ~ar:&#13;
and stuffed animals. In her u otb!&#13;
would like to do two things: l) h:rsia,l&#13;
people to get to know and une ba~t,&#13;
themselves, and 2) see everyon&#13;
reason to smile.&#13;
. l Barb aro'11&#13;
!-£FT TO RIGHT: Joyce Milkie Julie Frese Bev Noble (captain '&#13;
and Vickie Leslie. ' ' &#13;
'I Don't Need A Weatherman&#13;
By I. M. TERHUNE&#13;
College Press Service&#13;
(cps) - .ff. Grand Jury decision&#13;
exonerated the Ohio National Guard from&#13;
the guilt of the Murders of four students at&#13;
Kent State in the face of evidence to the&#13;
contrary, indicting instead twenty-five&#13;
people who incited to throw rocks at the&#13;
men charging upon them with M-16s; the&#13;
invocation of the Emergency War&#13;
Measures Act by Trudeau in Canada has&#13;
suspended civil liberties of the Canadian&#13;
people,making them subject to unlimited&#13;
search and seizure, without the right to&#13;
resort to suit against the government in&#13;
the event of false arrest: as a result,&#13;
several hundred separatists and sym-&#13;
-pafhizerswere arrested without warrants;&#13;
Angela Davis was apprehended after&#13;
having already been tried and convicted of&#13;
murder and conspiracy by the press on&#13;
circumstancial evidence, well in advance&#13;
ofher courtroom trials. The last two weeks&#13;
have been a paranoic nightmare, with&#13;
these frightening high points being just a&#13;
few more persuasive proofs that the&#13;
conflictbetween Them and Us is becoming&#13;
as c1earcut as the slash from the National&#13;
Guardsman's bayonet. It is more intense,&#13;
it is more down home real, it is more&#13;
violent than ever before. And it is not&#13;
standing still.&#13;
Concurrent with the execution of the&#13;
foregoing realities, the Weathermen&#13;
issueda statement of intention to bomb, in&#13;
"a fall offensive of youth resistance that&#13;
will spread from Santa Bar~ra to Boston,&#13;
hack to Kent and Kansas . . . We are&#13;
building a culture and society that can&#13;
resist genocide. It is a culture of total&#13;
resistance to mind-controlling maniacs, a&#13;
culture of high-energy sisters getting it on,&#13;
of hippie acid-smiles and communes and&#13;
freedom to be the farthest out people we&#13;
can be." It is directed against the&#13;
"Promises of peace from a government&#13;
that bombs Cambodia while talking about&#13;
an end to war, that killed students at&#13;
Jackson and Kent while calling for&#13;
responsibility on campus, that murdered&#13;
Fred Hampton and hundreds of blacks&#13;
while calling for racial harmony."&#13;
The difficulties inherent in any analysis&#13;
of the recent activities of the Weathermen&#13;
become obvious upon examination of their&#13;
motives and upon recognition of the undeniable&#13;
validity of such motivation. lt is&#13;
afler ten years of attempts at peaceful&#13;
4emonstrations, non-violent attempts.-&#13;
marches, sit-ins, strikes, from which&#13;
participants have, almost from the outset,&#13;
been dragged, beaten, gassed, and wors.t&#13;
01 all, ignored by the agencies of the&#13;
government; it is after this that dissenters&#13;
have come to expect violence, to be&#13;
defensive of it and finally to return it, in a&#13;
state of such hopeless frustration with&#13;
"channels" and vaporous promises of&#13;
bureaucrats that they see no other&#13;
recourse but violence.&#13;
It is clearly not the factors that motivate&#13;
the Weathermen et al that can be justly&#13;
critiqUed - not when thay inhabit a&#13;
political corner created by a government&#13;
insensitive to the needs of its constituents.&#13;
"We did not choose to live in a time of&#13;
war," likely the most shattering war this&#13;
COUntry has ever engaged in. What is&#13;
questionable about the Weathermen at tlus&#13;
POintin the disintegration of the U.S. is the&#13;
political value of their tactics.&#13;
It is useful for analysis to isolate the&#13;
tactic of bombing as the Weathermen have&#13;
dedicated themselves to it. From aU appearances,&#13;
especially to the public at&#13;
large, the Weathermen bombings, partly&#13;
hecauseoft!r~equ!~~vLk~hich Way The Wind Blows'&#13;
the aspect of "random acts f . 1 .. of bombings In the name of the revolution IS worthless and while the&#13;
While homhings by a small t 0 vlotence. Weathermen or radicals in general. In- leaders may .be capahle and pohhcally&#13;
. errons group ta f tho h . I red th II be h d m the In a revolutionary situation rna be s nces 0 IS ave certam y occur astute. ey WI not uman, an In ln1:'&#13;
fruitful such actions are du tl Y nl already. Hundreds of bomb threats were end may be as mecbam lie as their&#13;
when they are strategicah~O co~r;cet°an~ called. into sch~ls in Marin County predecessors. The revolution must nol lx':I&#13;
strategically significant d t 1 following the bombmgof the courthouse. It revolution of death, endmg In a totalitarian&#13;
symbolic scare techniqu: ~rpem;~~~ is inconceiv3?le .that they were all police state. Only the revolution of life can&#13;
against the Amor h If Weathermen-Inspired. When acts of liberate. p ous enemy. a be d . .&#13;
bombing is to have any effect, it must be ~ tage an provocation are u-respon- r-------------..,&#13;
aimed at an institution that can be stbly chosen and effected, the movement&#13;
recognized as repressi b tha cannot help but suffer. sive y more n a Of till .. th d f&#13;
few people. Also, to he truly educative to a s greater exigecy IS e len ency 0&#13;
great mass of peo 1 be bt be some radicals to separate politics from&#13;
. . p e, m mgs cannot personal ethics. This is dangerous In a&#13;
unpredictable 10 effect. Unfortunately, revolution for the people _ it cannot be&#13;
they are. highly unpredictable. People are engaged in if a truly human and producunintentionally&#13;
killed by them. While the tive political, cultural and social situation&#13;
destruction?f property outrages ~ose who is to emerge. While maintaining comare&#13;
well soclt:Il1zedIn.tothe American Way, mitment to change _ to revolution _ it is&#13;
tJ:le destruction of l~e. makes them self- Imperatjve that the importance of perrighteous&#13;
"" hence It IS extremely coun- sonal liberation, of the ability to see the&#13;
terproductive. . . . world in other than political hues, is not&#13;
The. leader of the Brazilian guerilla lost sight of. U those who are grappling to&#13;
orgaDlz~tIon. Vang':lardla Popular save the people do not have a clear sense of&#13;
Revoluctcnarfa, Ladisl aw Dobor, ex- themselves as human beings then the&#13;
plained why his group did not use bombs: '&#13;
"We do not use forms of violence that can '------------=~~=::Jpj~i;::=_---------l be twisted by the government. If people I&#13;
heard that we use bombs, the government&#13;
would do exactly what the U.S. does in&#13;
Vietnam, and what the French did in&#13;
Algeria. They would put a few bombs in a&#13;
moviehouse on a Saturday afternoon,&#13;
when it was full of children. And then we&#13;
would have the entire popula tion running&#13;
after us in the streets. We choose very&#13;
selective targest whose meaning cannot be&#13;
distorted by the government." Random&#13;
bombings which kill or threaten innocent&#13;
people create in this country a mood of&#13;
fear and the reactionary repression tha t is&#13;
contingent upon such fear. Right-wing&#13;
groups can easily augment the repressive&#13;
climate by staging enough of the right sort&#13;
For achieving a perfect scholastic&#13;
record in nuclear engineering at the&#13;
University &lt;ofWisconsin-Madison, Robert&#13;
L. Stiller, Lake Mills, won the Rusch&#13;
Senior Scholarship Award for 1970.&#13;
Wisconsin residents attending the 16&#13;
campuses of the University of Wisconsin&#13;
increased hy 10,589 in t969-71, with total&#13;
enrollment climbing from 59,997 to 67,874&#13;
in the same period.&#13;
FLORrST&#13;
eRi!!-&#13;
FRUIT BASKETS AND c.icWlr&#13;
Deliver Aeroa Town or ~ the World&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 a.m. 7 day&gt;&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657 -97 47&#13;
SPECIAL • SAVE 10%&#13;
On All Boxed Xmas Cards&#13;
University&#13;
Book Store&#13;
Thrifty Threads&#13;
For Your &amp;uk...&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet!&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN ~ENDSH"&#13;
1 II&#13;
Is&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20~&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity and Sorority Parties&#13;
Oflen Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
~~~BRAT-STOP&#13;
,Northwest Carner 1-94 and Highway 50&#13;
'I Don't Need A Weatherman&#13;
By I. M. TERHUNE&#13;
College Press Service&#13;
(CPS) - _A Grand Jury decision&#13;
exonerated the Ohio National Guard from&#13;
the guilt of the Murders of four students at&#13;
Kent State in the face of evidence to the&#13;
contrary, indicting instead twenty-five&#13;
people who incited to throw rocks at the&#13;
men charging upon them with M-16s; the&#13;
invocation of the Emergency War&#13;
Measures Act by Trudeau in Canada has&#13;
suspended civil liberties of the Canadian&#13;
people, making them subject to unlimited&#13;
search and seizure, without the right to&#13;
resort to suit against the government in&#13;
the event of false arrest: as a result,&#13;
several hundred separatists and sym-&#13;
.pathizers were arrested without warrants;&#13;
Angela Davis was apprehended after&#13;
having already been tried and convicted of&#13;
murder and conspiracy by the press on&#13;
circumstancial evidence, well in advance&#13;
of her courtroom trials. The last two weeks&#13;
have been a paranoic nightmare, with&#13;
these frightening high points being just a&#13;
few more persuasive proofs that the&#13;
conflict between Them and Us is becoming&#13;
as clearcut as the slash from the National&#13;
Guardsman's bayonet. It is more intense,&#13;
it is more down home real, it is more&#13;
violent than ever before. And it is not&#13;
standing still.&#13;
Concurrent with the execution of the&#13;
foregoing realities, the Weathermen&#13;
issued a statement of intention to bomb, in&#13;
"a fall offensive of youth resistance that&#13;
will spread from Santa Barbara to Boston,&#13;
back to Kent and Kansas ·. . . We are&#13;
building a culture and society that can&#13;
resist genocide. It is a culture of total&#13;
resistance to mind-controlling maniacs, a&#13;
culture of high-energy sisters getting it on,&#13;
of hippie acid-smiles and communes and&#13;
freedom to be the farthest out people we&#13;
can be." It is directed against the&#13;
"Promises of peace from a government&#13;
that bombs Cambodia while talking about&#13;
an end to war, that killed students at&#13;
Jackson and Kent while calling for&#13;
responsibility on campus, that murdered&#13;
Fred Hampton and hundreds of blacks&#13;
while calling for racial harmony."&#13;
The difficulties inherent in any analysis&#13;
of the recent activities of the Weathermen&#13;
become obvious upon examination of their&#13;
motives and upon recognition of the undeniable&#13;
validity of such motivation. It is&#13;
after ten years of attempts at peaceful&#13;
demonstrations, non-violent attempts -&#13;
marches, sit-ins, strikes, from which&#13;
participants have, almost from the outset,&#13;
been dragged, beaten, gassed, and worst&#13;
of all, ignored by the agencies of the&#13;
government; it is after this that dissenters&#13;
have come to expect violence, to be&#13;
defensive of it, and finally to return it, in a&#13;
state of such hopeless frustration with&#13;
"channels" and vaporous promises of&#13;
bureaucrats that they see no other&#13;
recourse but violence.&#13;
It is clearly not the factors that motivate&#13;
the Weathermen et al that can be justly&#13;
critiqued - not when thay inhabit a&#13;
political corner created by a government&#13;
insensitive to the needs of its constituents.&#13;
"We did not choose to live in a time of&#13;
war," likely the most shattering war this&#13;
country has ever engaged in. What is&#13;
questionable about the Weathermen at this&#13;
point in the disintegration of the U.S. is the&#13;
political value of their tactics.&#13;
It is useful for analysis to isolate the&#13;
tactic of bombing as the Weathermen have&#13;
dedicated themselves to it. From all appearances,&#13;
especially to the public at&#13;
large, the Weathermen bombings, partly&#13;
SPECIAL -&#13;
reeauseor,!.&lt;? .... !~~.L~hich Way The Wind Blows'&#13;
the aspect of "random acts of . 1 ,. of bombings m the name of the&#13;
Whi v10 ence w th d. l · I I . le bombings by a small terrorist group ea ermen _or ra 1ca m_ genera . n- m a revolutionary situation be stances of this have certainly occurred&#13;
fruitful, such actions are prod t~ay nl already. Hundreds of bomb threa were&#13;
uc ive O Y lled · sch l · C when ~ey ar~ strategically correct and ca .· mto ~ m Marin ounly&#13;
strategically significant, and not merely ~oll~wmg th~ bombmg of the courthO\Le. ll&#13;
symbolic scare techniques perpetrated 1S1 mconce1va?le _that t~y were all&#13;
against the Amorphous enemy. If a Weathermen-in p1red ._ \\hen _act of&#13;
bombing is to have any effect, it must be ~botage and provocation are 1rresponaimed&#13;
at an institution that can be s1bly chosen and effected, the movement&#13;
recognized as repressive by more than a cannot_ help but u~fer .. few people. Also, to be truly educative to a Of still ~eater exigecy 1 the l~ndenc} of&#13;
great mass of people, bombings cannot be some radicals to ~pa_rate pohhc f_rom&#13;
Thnfty Threads&#13;
unpredictable in effect. Unfortunately, pei:son~ ethics. This 1 dan¥erous m a For Your Back. .. they are highly unpredictable. People are re1,olutio~ for the ~pie - 1t cannot be&#13;
llllintentionally killed by them. While the E:"gag~ _m 1f a trul) human ~d producdestruction&#13;
of property outrages those who ~ve political, cultural and _ oc1~l- 1luallon&#13;
are well socialized into the American Way IS . to emerge. While mamtau~mg C~ll_lFar&#13;
Out Fi/tings&#13;
the destruction of life k th If~ ~utmen~ to change - !O revolulion - 1t i . . . ma es em se 1mperat•ve that the importance of per- righteous - hence it is extremely coun- al l'be t· f th b·1·t t th ter rod r son I ra 10n, o e a 1 1 y o ee e&#13;
F()r Your Feet!&#13;
P uc ive. . . . world in other than political hue , is not&#13;
The. lea~er of the Brazilian guerilla lost sight of. If those who are grappling to&#13;
orgamz~llon . Vang1:1ardia Popular save the people do not ha\'e a clear sense of&#13;
Re~oluciona~ia, Lad1~law Dobor, ex- themselves as human beings, then the&#13;
plained why his group did not use bombs:&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
"We do not use forms of violence that can&#13;
be twisted by the government. If people&#13;
heard that we use bombs, the government&#13;
would do exactly what the U.S. does in&#13;
Vietnam, and what the French did in&#13;
Algeria. They would put a few bombs in a&#13;
moviehouse on a Saturday afternoon,&#13;
when it was full of children. And then we&#13;
would have the entire population running&#13;
after us in the streets. We choose very&#13;
selective largest whose meaning cannot be&#13;
distorted by the government." Random&#13;
bombings which kill or threaten innocent&#13;
people create in this country a mood of&#13;
fear and the reactionary repression that is&#13;
contingent upon such fear. Right-wing&#13;
groups can easily augment the repressive&#13;
climate by staging enough of the right sort&#13;
For achieving a perfect scholastic&#13;
record in nuclear engineering at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Madison, Robert&#13;
L. Stiller, Lake Mills, won the Rusch&#13;
Senior Scholarship A ward for 1970.&#13;
Wisconsin residents attending the 16&#13;
campuses of the University of Wisconsin&#13;
increased by 10,589 in 1969-71, with total&#13;
enrollment climbing from 59,997 to 67,874&#13;
in the same period.&#13;
FLORfST&#13;
£~ FRUIT BASKETS AND c,{Ni,yDellver&#13;
AU&lt;* Town or Aaoa the World&#13;
~EST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th ~t.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 o.m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-9747&#13;
SAVE 10% -&#13;
The&#13;
Drinks 25c For The udi s (bcllHli•• re,. Shell}&#13;
LIVE MUSIC&#13;
ljc,w ,._,,&#13;
1...,., Mea. •• T-. _. N,te&#13;
DlllNKS ~ PlllCE TO All.. UNIFOllMED IOW1.EllS&#13;
Zodiak&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs.,&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Fri.&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
ond&#13;
French Fri:&gt;s or On ion Rin9s&#13;
or Potato $clod&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or 6ottle or Gloss of Seer&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
K~OStiA&#13;
//&#13;
Is&#13;
On All Boxed Xmas Cards Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
8 p.m.&#13;
University&#13;
Book Store&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity and Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
1~~ BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and H ighwoy 50 &#13;
SHORTS&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
SPORTFESTIVITIES&#13;
FRIDAY, DEC. 4th - SATURDAY, DEC. 5 th&#13;
Helmut Kah tDok a first in a judo tournament&#13;
in ChlclIIO. Nov. t5 - the White&#13;
Belt divwoo.&#13;
Mr. Sull. Parkside jUdo instructor. attended&#13;
a judo coovenUoo in SI. Louis the&#13;
same weekend. Mr. Sull has recenUy been&#13;
certified a, an internaUooal judo referee.&#13;
hocky team whips johnson wax .....&#13;
The Ranger Hockey Club whipped&#13;
Johnson Wax last week at Milwaukee (4-&#13;
3).&#13;
The Rangers held a shut-out until the end&#13;
at the 2nd quarter when Scott Piem .. sl, the&#13;
goahe, wa hilln the head With a puck. The&#13;
sco« then toed at 3'(),&#13;
Johnson', Wax came back in the third&#13;
~&#13;
..&#13;
-&#13;
at&#13;
o&#13;
D.&#13;
A SUN~INE PECIAL TV&#13;
(to Sharon and Larry!)&#13;
Sometimes&#13;
I can see&#13;
the SWl shining&#13;
through&#13;
Very special People&#13;
nurturing&#13;
each&#13;
other "'ilh love&#13;
and giving&#13;
growth&#13;
To others&#13;
a joy springing&#13;
forth&#13;
Inebriating aU&#13;
within reach -&#13;
a sunshine fountain!&#13;
Classified advertisements are 50&#13;
cents per line for anyone interested.&#13;
All classifieds must be submitted to&#13;
lbe Newscope offices at Kenosha&#13;
campus by noon lbe Thursday before&#13;
Monday publication.&#13;
ROCK DANCE&#13;
featuring&#13;
Lottery&#13;
peroid with three more goals. In the 4th&#13;
quarter Rick RosI&lt;o scored the winning&#13;
goal. Karl Kieltosl&lt;i. Tom Krimmel. and&#13;
R06ko all scored the goals - RosI&lt;obad&#13;
two. The men who gave the assist were&#13;
Don Ailf.... Lieltowski. Dennis Jensen.&#13;
Mark Tuttews,ki. .&#13;
A video-Iape 01 the game will be shown&#13;
00 the nooo hour at the student activities&#13;
building during the week 01 Nov. 3O-Dec. 3.&#13;
It will be a free showing and open to the&#13;
public. The next game will be against&#13;
Tohala on Dec. 3 in Milwaukee. A bus trip&#13;
is being planned by the BOO6ter Club.&#13;
Tickets are being sold at all three campuses.&#13;
The Hockey Club is selling bullOOS to&#13;
support their queen candidate "Miss&#13;
Hockey Puck" Nancy Helfrich,&#13;
(Perhaps it's DOt)&#13;
I watched the collectors today&#13;
(and they haven't very much to&#13;
speaking or new items and and say&#13;
things nothing.&#13;
to absolutely&#13;
add. nothing .&#13;
very Ge&#13;
sad. in&#13;
their&#13;
way.)&#13;
(Yet I wonder:&#13;
What at them when old age&#13;
gets in their way?)&#13;
They'll be senile collectors&#13;
(when penicillin bas no effect)&#13;
wiling away from the hours that&#13;
held&#13;
the&#13;
forevers&#13;
and&#13;
eternities&#13;
that faded away (after all. they're only&#13;
stolen moments.)&#13;
It's sad that collections wither once the&#13;
body does.&#13;
I wonder then&#13;
where will the emptiness go.&#13;
Collectors&#13;
reviewing their work,&#13;
looked over the beauty&#13;
they snatched from life.&#13;
There's no worry.&#13;
only jokes&#13;
about conquests.&#13;
There's no secret vault,&#13;
only maps&#13;
drawn out very clear&#13;
(and I wonder if they can hear&#13;
the&#13;
world&#13;
faU&#13;
apart,&#13;
away&#13;
from&#13;
a&#13;
heart.)&#13;
The menu was discussed&#13;
and today's special&#13;
cuts&#13;
of&#13;
meat.&#13;
NIGHTCLUB/DANCE&#13;
back by populor request&#13;
Gregory James&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
10:00 - 1:00&#13;
ADMISSION: suo WITH PARKSIOE &amp; WISCONSIN 10.&#13;
MINORITY GROUPS&#13;
IN UW PROGRAM&#13;
Indian Americans and Spanishsurnamed&#13;
Americans. as well as blacks.&#13;
are eligible for college aid through the&#13;
Consortium for Graduate Study 10&#13;
Business for Disadvantaged Students ..&#13;
The enlarged scope of the progr~m. tied&#13;
in with The University of wtsccnsm&#13;
Graduate School of Business. includes&#13;
students from such ethnic groups as&#13;
.puerto Ricans, Indians, MexlcanAmericans,&#13;
and Cubans who are American&#13;
citizens. Its purpose is to basten the entry&#13;
of minority persons into management&#13;
positions in bestness.&#13;
~&#13;
DELICA JESSEN - lEVERAGEs&#13;
3203 F1PTY-$lCOND STIttfT&#13;
ICINOSllA, WISCONSIN&#13;
INSTANT FASHION&#13;
FOR&#13;
GIFTING&#13;
or&#13;
GETTING&#13;
•&#13;
TOP&#13;
$15.00&#13;
•&#13;
"lanE&#13;
~OLPY PANTS&#13;
$13.00&#13;
, \:&#13;
What a stunning way to startfhe Holiday season! you'll&#13;
h~pnotlze everyone with this exciting hand screened&#13;
pnnt top by Jane Colby. Designed in 100% Dacron, it&#13;
has long sleeves and a neat shirt collar. The stylish&#13;
fJgure f1atter,ing flared pants are pull-on. and are made of&#13;
100% Nylon In coordinating solid colors.&#13;
Top in Sizes S-M-L '&#13;
Pant in Sizes a-fa&#13;
BARDEN'S&#13;
FREE CHRISTMAS BOXES&#13;
SHORTS&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
Helmut Kah a first in a judo tournament&#13;
in cago, Nov. 15 - the White&#13;
Belt divi ion.&#13;
1r. uh, Par ide judo instructor, att&#13;
oded a judo convention in St. Louis the&#13;
end. 1r. Suh has recently been&#13;
an international judo referee.&#13;
hocky t m whips johnson wax .....&#13;
R n r H key Club whipped&#13;
on 'a la t v.eek at tilwaukee (4·&#13;
&gt;I&#13;
..&#13;
..&#13;
•&#13;
0&#13;
G.&#13;
k in the third&#13;
tH . 'E PE IALTI"&#13;
aron and Larr) !)&#13;
V ry "al P ople&#13;
nurturing&#13;
each&#13;
other with love&#13;
nd ivmg&#13;
owth&#13;
To othe&#13;
joy pringin&#13;
forth&#13;
1 briatmg all&#13;
v,ithin reach -&#13;
a nshine fountain!&#13;
Cla ified advertisements are 50&#13;
cents per line for anyone interested.&#13;
All classifieds must be submitted to&#13;
the Newscope offices at Kenosha&#13;
campus by noon the Thursday before&#13;
1:onday publication.&#13;
peroid with three more goals. In the 4th&#13;
quarter Rick Rosko scored the winning&#13;
goal. Kari Kiekoski, Tom Krimmel, and&#13;
Rosko all scored the goals - Rosko had&#13;
two. The men who gave the assist were&#13;
Don Aiffer, Llelrnwslti, Dennis Jensen,&#13;
tark Tuttews,lti.&#13;
A vid~tape rJ. the game will be shown&#13;
on the noon hour at the student activities&#13;
building during the week of Nov. ~Dec. 3.&#13;
It will be a free showing and open to the&#13;
public. The next game will be against&#13;
Tolz.ala on Dec. 3 in rnwaukee. A bus trip&#13;
is being planned by the Booster Club.&#13;
Tickets are being sold at all three campuses.&#13;
&#13;
The Hoc.key Club is selling buttons to&#13;
upport their queen candidate "Miss&#13;
Hockey Puck" Nancy Helfrich.&#13;
I v.atched the collectors today&#13;
(and they haven't very much to&#13;
pe ing of new items and and say&#13;
things nothing.&#13;
to absolutely&#13;
add. nothing.&#13;
(Perhaps it' not) very Gets&#13;
sad. in&#13;
(Ye I wonder:&#13;
What of them when old age&#13;
gets in their way?)&#13;
They'll be senile collectors&#13;
(when penicillin ha no effect)&#13;
v.iling away from the hours that&#13;
their&#13;
way.&gt;&#13;
held&#13;
the&#13;
forevers&#13;
and&#13;
eternities&#13;
that faded away (after all, they're only&#13;
stolen moments.)&#13;
It' sad that collections wither once the&#13;
body does.&#13;
I wonder then&#13;
where v.ill the emptiness go.&#13;
Collector·&#13;
reviewing their work,&#13;
looked over the beautv&#13;
they snatched f;om life.&#13;
There's no worry.&#13;
only jokes&#13;
about conquests.&#13;
There's no secret vault,&#13;
only maps&#13;
drawn out very clear&#13;
(and I wonder if they can hear&#13;
The menu was discussed&#13;
and today's special&#13;
cuts&#13;
of&#13;
meat.&#13;
the&#13;
world&#13;
fall&#13;
apart,&#13;
away&#13;
from&#13;
a&#13;
heart.)&#13;
SPORTFESTIVITIES&#13;
FRIDAY, DEC. 4th - SATURDAY, DEC.5th&#13;
ROCK DANCE&#13;
featuring&#13;
Lottery&#13;
NIGHTCLUB DANCE&#13;
bock by popular request&#13;
Gregory James&#13;
ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
10:00 - 1:00&#13;
ADMISSION: Sl.50 WITH PARKSIDE &amp; WISCONSIN ID.&#13;
MINORITY GROUPS&#13;
IN UW PROGRAM&#13;
Indian Americans and Spanishsurnamed&#13;
Americans, as well as blacks,&#13;
are eligible for college aid through tt:ie&#13;
Consortium for Graduate Study m&#13;
Business for Disadvantaged Students ..&#13;
The enlarged scope of the progr~m, ti~&#13;
in with The University of W1sconsm&#13;
Graduate School of Business, includes&#13;
students from such e~nic group_s as&#13;
.Puerto Ricans, Indians, Mex1canAmericans,&#13;
and Cubans who are American&#13;
citizens. Its purpose is to hasten the entry&#13;
of minority persons into management&#13;
positions in )?usiness.&#13;
INSTANT FASHION&#13;
FOR&#13;
GIFTING&#13;
or&#13;
GETTING&#13;
TOP&#13;
$15.00&#13;
• ~~nE&#13;
(:OlPY&#13;
...&#13;
PANTS&#13;
$13,00&#13;
What a. stunning way to start·fhe Holids season! You'll&#13;
h~pnot1z_e everyone with this exciting hand screened&#13;
print top by Jane Colby. Designed in 100% Dacron, it&#13;
h_as long sleeves and a neat shirt collar. The stylish&#13;
fJgure flatter_ing flared pants are pull-on, and are made of&#13;
lOO% Nylon in coordinating solid colors.&#13;
Top in Sizes S-M-L&#13;
Pant in Sizes 8-ia&#13;
BARDEN'S&#13;
FREE CHRISTMAS BOXES &#13;
Goal For Fencers&#13;
Despite losing two of the country's top&#13;
collegiate fen,eers, .Umversity of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkslde fen~mg. coach Loran&#13;
lIein refuses to lower his Sights from his&#13;
goalof achieving the No. 1 ranking in the&#13;
Midwestthis season.&#13;
That goal, as well as a high national&#13;
ranking, seemed well within reach until&#13;
the loss of the Anderson hrothers of&#13;
Kenosha, Clark and Grant. Grant, who&#13;
won the United State 19 and under foil&#13;
championship in New York last summer,&#13;
transferred to the Madison campus shortly&#13;
beforethe start of the fall semester. Clark,&#13;
a national ranking epeeist who beat the&#13;
NCAAchampion, Pete Nadas, twice last&#13;
season, has been declared scholastically&#13;
ineligible for the 1970-71season.&#13;
"We've still got two other national&#13;
calibre fencers in (John) Hanzalik and&#13;
(Keith)Herbrechtsmeier, as well as three&#13;
proven lettermen and some promising&#13;
newcomers," Hein said. "How far we go&#13;
depends on how fast I can develop these&#13;
new boys. I'm going to have to prove&#13;
myself allover again."&#13;
Heinhas received national attention for&#13;
developingParkside into a fencing power&#13;
inits first year of varsity competition last&#13;
season. The Rangers went 21-4 and were&#13;
ranked fifth in the Midwest, an area extendingfrom&#13;
the Rockies to Pennsylvania&#13;
and south to Tennessee. They knocked off&#13;
•• To Be No.1&#13;
~IlM~~W:~tee's~o. 1 team, Wayne State, as&#13;
. ping through their B' 10&#13;
rivals, including Wisconsin Ig&#13;
Han.zalik, now a junior, w~n the national&#13;
colleglat~ epee trials and a spot on the U.S.&#13;
team which fenced in the World G&#13;
last summer in Italy Herbrechts ~mes&#13;
. . meier- a&#13;
senior. :a'as second in the Midwest in foil&#13;
and ~c?ie~ed an "A", or Masters, fencing&#13;
classlfICa~lOnin Amateur Fencing League&#13;
of ~enca competition, a rare accomplIshment&#13;
for a university fencer.&#13;
.Both are from Kenosha.&#13;
.Also back ~re senior John Zanotti as No.&#13;
1 I.nsabre~ sophomore Al Locante, No.3 in&#13;
foil, and Junior Bruce Bosman, No. 2 in&#13;
epee. All are-from Kenosha.&#13;
Sophomore Pete Shemanske shifted&#13;
from foil, will fence No. 2 sab~e behind&#13;
Zanotti, with freshman Richard Moffett&#13;
from Kenosha Bradford No.3.&#13;
Fencing No. 3 behind Hanzalik and&#13;
Bosman in epee will be either Jim Cum.&#13;
mings of Kenosha or Bob Westby of&#13;
Janesville, both freshmen.&#13;
Fencing No.2 between Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
and Locante in foil will be the most highly&#13;
touted newcomer, John- Tank of&#13;
Wauwatosa who placed third in the Midwest&#13;
in 19 and under competition while a&#13;
high school senior.&#13;
Others vying for spots are Dave&#13;
Sorenson of Racine and Larry Foreman&#13;
and Kim Nelson of Kenosha in foil and&#13;
Bob Pawlak and Don Ours of Kenosha In&#13;
sabre.&#13;
Parkside will open its 23-match season&#13;
against Big 10 teams Wisconsin and&#13;
Minnesota Dec. 5 at 1 pm. at Case High&#13;
school in Racine as part of "Sportsfest."&#13;
the two-day campus athletic and social&#13;
event which annually kicks orr the winter&#13;
sports season at UWP.&#13;
Other home matches 'hill be held at&#13;
Bullen junior high in Kenosha. Jan. 8&#13;
against Wisconsin and Michigan State.&#13;
Road contests will see Parkside facing&#13;
the likes of Air Force. Wayne State,&#13;
illinois, Notre Dame, Indiana, Purdue.&#13;
Bowling Green, Detroit. Ohio State. and&#13;
Illinois Circle Campus.&#13;
City'. ~1oI"aukee T&lt;'Ch at Bullen JUnIor&#13;
HIgh. Kenosha. 6 pm&#13;
Jan 16· AIr Force at :'.tad! n&#13;
Jan. 30· Purdue, Umversity of Irxl!all8.&#13;
Bowling Green tale Univer It}' at&#13;
Layfayette.&#13;
Feb. 6 • • 'otre Dame. Cmverslt)" or&#13;
Illinois at Chicago Campus.&#13;
Feb. 13- UW-Madlson. Mldugan tate at&#13;
Bullen Junior high, Kenosha. I p m&#13;
Feb. 19 - Trt-State, Oberhn at Angola,&#13;
Indiana,&#13;
feb 20 - Detroit. Cruverslty of IIhn..&#13;
Wayne Slate at Detroit.&#13;
Feb. 26 - t 'otre Dame, Milwaukee Tech&#13;
at Milwaukee.&#13;
Feb. T1 - University of Otic_go. OhiO&#13;
State at Chicago .&#13;
Mar. 2 . University of Hhnols..Q1icago&#13;
Campus, Milwaukee Tech at Mllwauke-e&#13;
Mar 6 . Great Lakes lnvitational at&#13;
Angola. Indiana&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF&#13;
\\'ISCONSIN - PARKSlDE&#13;
1976-71 fENCING SCHEOI.:LE THE&#13;
DAISY , PIPE5&#13;
• PAPERS&#13;
, BELLS&#13;
,INCEN5E&#13;
Dec. 5 . UW-l\tadison, University of&#13;
Minnesota at Case High school. Racine. 1&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Dec. 12 . Il1inois Collegiate Open at&#13;
Champaign.&#13;
Jan. 8 - niversity of Missouri-Kansas&#13;
schools and environment groups. and&#13;
writing a general handbook in the problem&#13;
and several brief booklets on specific&#13;
problems and diseases.&#13;
Led by Rick Atkins, a third-year medical&#13;
student on leave from Stanford. and Paul&#13;
Witt, a Stanford political science&#13;
graduate, the group stresses "sensitization"_&#13;
to workers' problems and local&#13;
initiatives by coalition groups of students.&#13;
workers, and community members. They&#13;
have received a $20,000 grant from the&#13;
Stern Foundation to begin work, and their&#13;
advisory board includes Leonard Woodcock,&#13;
Stewart Udall, Willard Wirtz and&#13;
George Wald.&#13;
Among specific student activities they&#13;
will help organize and promote are:&#13;
- conducting inventories of local in·&#13;
dustrial hazards and applicable laws;&#13;
- holding seminars and teach-outs or.&#13;
the problems of in-plant pollution:&#13;
- making university laboratories and&#13;
skills available for analyzing gas and&#13;
partculate matter found within plants;&#13;
- setting up regional, week-long&#13;
training sessions at medical schools for&#13;
union r epr-esentafives and university&#13;
students.&#13;
In addition, the project members hope to&#13;
interest the national media in the problem,&#13;
perhaps eliciting a network documentary&#13;
They also want to establish a national tollfree&#13;
telephone number for workers to call&#13;
for specific answers on induSlrial hazards&#13;
Another student group begun thiS&#13;
summer is Youth Projects, led by former&#13;
University of Pennsylvania instructor Jlm&#13;
Goodell. Also working With founda11on&#13;
grant money, they have several projects&#13;
underway. one of which is a content&#13;
analysis of news media 10 coal miOlng&#13;
regions of Appalachia.&#13;
Kenosh.&#13;
Americans-- They'll Die On The Job&#13;
problems," according to company medical&#13;
records.&#13;
Harvey Cowan, a chemical operator at&#13;
the plant for more than 5 years, left in 1967&#13;
totally disabled from emphysema. He filed&#13;
for workmen's compensation in 1969after&#13;
suffering 2 heart attacks, but Union&#13;
Carbide refused to bring the case before&#13;
the compensation board. On Sepl 26, 1970,&#13;
Cowan died, at age 55.&#13;
A union representative who approached&#13;
management got this reply from one&#13;
executive: "I'm not in the business of&#13;
safety, I'm in the business of making&#13;
molecular sieves."&#13;
ITEM - Proponents of American&#13;
nuclear power - both for industry and&#13;
defense - have consistently maintained&#13;
that mining large.stockpiles of uranium is&#13;
more vital than protecting miners by&#13;
setting strict exposure standards for&#13;
radon, the cancer- producing gas emitted&#13;
in mines. Environmentalists Iamilar with&#13;
the Atomic Energy Commission's long&#13;
reluctance to establish truly safe standards&#13;
for radiation exposure were not&#13;
surprised when the indust~'s Feder~l&#13;
Radiation Council dragged Its feet In&#13;
demanding proper ventilation of radon gas&#13;
in uranium mines.&#13;
For mining operations on the Colorado&#13;
Plateau, the fRC set "standards" that&#13;
were 10 to 100 times the levels set by the&#13;
International Commission on Radiological&#13;
Protection, a neutral, non·industrial&#13;
agency Still, compensation cla.i~s by&#13;
disabled miners or the famlhes of&#13;
deceased m.iners are often denied because&#13;
"little is known" about the correlation&#13;
between deadly radon gas and cancer. But&#13;
much isJcnown, it seems, about the profitmaking&#13;
potential of the uranium industry.&#13;
for which the AEC and the fRC have both&#13;
lobbied in Congress.&#13;
Who is at work to begin correcting su~&#13;
shocking and criminal conditions 10&#13;
American industry?&#13;
Among student efforts, one whic~ shows&#13;
promise is a newly formed project by&#13;
Environmental Resources, Inc., one of two&#13;
lasting organizations which grew out of the&#13;
Environmental Teach-In and Eart~ D~y&#13;
last April 22. In their. h~d .. offlce 10&#13;
Washington, ADC, the five IOloal. ~embers&#13;
of the project have started bUI~I~ a&#13;
working resource Iibrar~. estabhs~mg&#13;
contacts with labor UOions. medical&#13;
By JOHN HAMER&#13;
COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE&#13;
(CPS) - This week nearly 400 very&#13;
special Americans will die needlessly,&#13;
Not in Indochina, not in 'airplane accidents,&#13;
not on the nation's highways.&#13;
They'll die on the job, in American industry.&#13;
In the 25 years since World War&#13;
Il, America's factories, foundries, mills,&#13;
plants and shops have been killing their&#13;
workers at the incredible average rate of&#13;
about 15,000per year.&#13;
In addition, every day 8,500 workers are&#13;
eIlsabledon the job.&#13;
Every day, more than 2:1,000workers are&#13;
Injured on the job.&#13;
And every year, some 390,000 workers&#13;
contract occupational diseases, many of&#13;
which are crippling, chronic, or fatal.&#13;
That this carnage still goes on and the&#13;
conditions which cause it are not&#13;
eliminated is a damning indictment of&#13;
corporate indifference, governmental&#13;
inefficiency and, until recently, labor&#13;
apathy.&#13;
But the move to clean up and make safe&#13;
theindustrial environment, where some 80&#13;
million working Americans spend half&#13;
their waking hours, is beginning. Some&#13;
small groups of union members, college&#13;
stUdents, environmentalists, doctors,&#13;
scientists, and even legislators are coming&#13;
together to form strong, active alliances.&#13;
The problems are immense; 'the obstacles&#13;
formidable. But the many horrifying&#13;
hazards of America's workplaces have&#13;
engendered great dedication among the&#13;
newcrusaders for the health and safety of&#13;
American workers.&#13;
A few selected examples of the lethality&#13;
and toxicity of industrial environments&#13;
may demonstrate why:&#13;
ITEM - Union Carbide's plant in&#13;
Tonawanda,' New York, near Buffalo,&#13;
manufactures the "molecular sieve," an&#13;
absorbent chemical powder with many&#13;
commercial uses. Last spring, union&#13;
examinations of 18workers who had been&#13;
employedin that department showed that&#13;
all 18 had acute bronchitis, all 18 had&#13;
Suffered from dermatitis, 7 had emphysema&#13;
and 2 had circulatory problems&#13;
caused by ulcerated sores. Yet Union&#13;
Carbideclaimed none or the men had "any&#13;
OCcupationallyincurred pulmonary (lung)&#13;
--------~&#13;
asters&#13;
Supper Club&#13;
1040&#13;
Shericlan Rd.&#13;
Ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
with Almondine Sauce&#13;
AI.o OUR DELICIOUS PR'IME RIB&#13;
T~. Plae.T. U,&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
L-l'" Stl.et...&#13;
:j~&#13;
626 56th 51.&#13;
tARCURITIE'S&#13;
6207 • nnd Avenu.&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53' 40&#13;
Phone, 652-2681&#13;
ROBES-Regulor Sf 500,&#13;
Special, S 1000.&#13;
Enloy these coal&#13;
evenings tn cozy&#13;
comfortl&#13;
Short quilted; velvet&#13;
tcoed ribbon down&#13;
the front, lined w, th&#13;
sohesl nylon&#13;
peach or&#13;
lcvendcr ,&#13;
Small,&#13;
Marguentte's 1$ open&#13;
19 until 9 Monday. and&#13;
,&#13;
IFridoY5, other weekdays&#13;
Sundoys&#13;
from 10 o. m. untd&#13;
Bank of&#13;
EIIn-wood&#13;
5 p.m.&#13;
Students eet red carpet service&#13;
(SO does everyone else'l&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30,h Ave.&#13;
FREE DELIVERY "00 P.M. TO "2:00 P.M.&#13;
KENOSHA 657-5191&#13;
Goal For Fencers -- To Be No. 1&#13;
Despite losing two of the ~oun~y's top&#13;
collegiate fen_cers, _University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside fen~mg_ coach Loran&#13;
Hein refuses to lower his sights from his&#13;
goal of achieving the No. 1 ranking in the&#13;
Midwest this season.&#13;
That goal, as well as . a _high national&#13;
ranking, seemed well w1thm reach until&#13;
the Joss of the Anderson brothers of&#13;
Kenosha, Clark and Grant. Grant, who&#13;
won the United State 19 and under foil&#13;
championship in New York last summer,&#13;
transferred to the Madison campus shortly&#13;
before the start of the fall semester. Clark,&#13;
a national ranking epeeist who beat the&#13;
NCAA champion, Pete Nadas, twice last&#13;
season, has been declared scholastically&#13;
ineligible for the 1970-71 season.&#13;
"We've still got two other national&#13;
calibre fencers in (John) Hanzalik and&#13;
(Keith) Herbrechtsmeier, as well as three&#13;
proven lettermen and some promising&#13;
newcomers," Hein said. " How far we go&#13;
depends on how fast I can develop these&#13;
new boys. I'm going to have to prove&#13;
myself all over again."&#13;
Hein has received national attention for&#13;
developing Parkside into a fencing power&#13;
in its first year of varsity competition last&#13;
season. The Rangers went 21-4 and were&#13;
ranked fifth in the Midwest, an area extending&#13;
from the Rockies to Pennsylvania&#13;
and south to Tennessee. They knocked off&#13;
the Midwest's No. 1 team, Wayne State as&#13;
~ell as_ sw~ping through their Bi . rivals, mcludmg Wisconsin g 10&#13;
Han_zalik, now a junior' w·on the national&#13;
colleg1at~ epee trials and a spot on the U.S&#13;
team which fenced in the World Games&#13;
last_ summer in Italy. Herbrechtsmeier a&#13;
senior, "."as second in the Midwest in f~il&#13;
and ~c?ie~ed an "A", or Masters, fencing&#13;
class1f1ca~1on in Amateur Fencing League&#13;
of AI:1enca competition, a rare accomplishment&#13;
for a university fencer. Both are from Kenosha.&#13;
_Also back are senior John Zanotti as No. 1 '." sabre'. sophomore Al Locante, No. 3 in&#13;
foil, and Junior Bruce Bosman, No. 2 in&#13;
epee. All are·from Kenosha .&#13;
Sophomore Pete Shemanske shifted&#13;
from foil , will fence No. 2 sab;e behind&#13;
Zanotti, with freshman Richard foffett&#13;
from Kenosha Bradford No. 3.&#13;
Fencing No. 3 behind Hanzalik and&#13;
Bosman in epee will be either Jim Cummings&#13;
of Kenosha or Bob Westby of&#13;
Janesville, both freshmen .&#13;
Fencing No. 2 between Herbrechtsmeier&#13;
and Locante in foil will be the most highly&#13;
touted newcomer, John- Tank of&#13;
Wauwatosa who placed third in the tidwest&#13;
in 19 and under competition while a high school senior.&#13;
Others vying for pots are Dav&#13;
Sorenson of Racine and Larry Foreman&#13;
and Kim . ·e1 on of Ken ha in foil, and&#13;
Bob Pawlak and Don Ours of Ken ha in&#13;
sabre.&#13;
Parkside will open its 23-match eacon&#13;
against Big 10 team Wisconsin and&#13;
tinnesota Dec. 5 at 1 p.m. at Ca e H&#13;
school in Racine a part of •· por fe t,"&#13;
the tw&lt;Klay campus athletic and 1al&#13;
event which annually kic · off the ·mter&#13;
sports season at UWP.&#13;
Other home matches ill be held at&#13;
Bullen junior high in Ken ha, Jan. 8&#13;
against Wiscon in and • lichigan tate.&#13;
Road contests will see Par ide fa ·m&#13;
the likes of Air Force, Wa)11e ate.&#13;
lliinois, 'otre Dame, Indiana Purdue,&#13;
Bowling Green. Detroit, Ohio tale, and&#13;
lliinois Circle Campus.&#13;
Dec. 5 - fW-. ladi on, "niversitv of&#13;
Minnesota at Case High school, Racine, I&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Dec. 12 - Illinoi C-01legiate Open at&#13;
Champaign.&#13;
Jan. 8 - niversity of • ti souri-Kansa&#13;
Americans-- They'll Die On The Job&#13;
By JOHN HAMER&#13;
COLLEGE PRESS SERVICE&#13;
(CPS) - This week nearly 400 very&#13;
special Americans will die nee~lessly.&#13;
Not in Indochina, not in airplane accidents,&#13;
not on the nation's highways.&#13;
They'll die on the job, in American industry.&#13;
In the 25 years since World War&#13;
II, America's factories, foundries, mills,&#13;
plants and shops have been killing their&#13;
workers at the incredible average rate of&#13;
about 15,000 per year.&#13;
In addition, every day 8,500 workers are&#13;
disabled on the job.&#13;
Every day, more than 'l7 ,000 workers are&#13;
injured on the job.&#13;
And every year, some 390,000 workers&#13;
contract occupational diseases, many of&#13;
which are crippling, chronic, or fatal.&#13;
That this carnage still goes on and the&#13;
conditions which cause it are not&#13;
eliminated is a damning indictment of&#13;
corporate indifference, governmental&#13;
inefficiency and, until recently, labor&#13;
apathy.&#13;
But the move to clean up and make safe&#13;
the industrial environment, where some 80&#13;
million working Americans spend half&#13;
their waking hours, is beginning. Some&#13;
small groups of union members, college&#13;
students, environmentalists, doctors,&#13;
scientists, and even legislators are coming&#13;
together to form strong, active alliances.&#13;
The problems are immense ; the obstacles&#13;
formidable. But the many horrifying&#13;
hazards of America's workplaces have&#13;
engendered great dedication among the&#13;
new crusaders for the health and safety of&#13;
American workers.&#13;
A few selected examples of the lethality&#13;
and toxicity of industrial environments&#13;
may demonstrate why:&#13;
ITEM - Union Carbide's plant in&#13;
Tonowanda, · New York, near Buffalo,&#13;
manufactures the "molecular sieve," an&#13;
absorbent chemical powder with many&#13;
commercial uses. Last spring, union&#13;
examinations of 18 workers who had been&#13;
employed in that department showed that&#13;
all 18 had acute bronchitis, all 18 had&#13;
uffered from dermatitis 7 had emphysema&#13;
and 2 had circul;tory problems&#13;
caused by ulcerated sores. Yet Union&#13;
Carbide claimed none of the men had " any&#13;
occupationally incurred pulmonary (lung)&#13;
problems," according to company medical&#13;
records.&#13;
Harvey Cowan, a chemical operator at&#13;
the plant for more than 5 years, left in 1967&#13;
totally disabled from emphysema. He filed&#13;
for workmen's compensation in 1969 after&#13;
suffering 2 heart attacks, but Union&#13;
Carbide refused to bring the case before&#13;
the compensation board. On Sept. 26, 1970,&#13;
Cowan died, at age 55.&#13;
A union representative who approached&#13;
management got this reply from one&#13;
executive: "I'm not in the business of&#13;
safety, I'm in the business of making&#13;
molecular sieves."&#13;
ITEM - Proponents of American&#13;
nuclear power - both for industry and&#13;
defense - have consistently maintained&#13;
that mining large.stockpiles of uranium is&#13;
more vital than protecting miners by&#13;
setting strict exposure standards for&#13;
radon, the cancer-producing gas emitted&#13;
in mines. Environmentalists familar with&#13;
the Atomic Energy Commission's long&#13;
reluctance to establish truly safe standards&#13;
for radiation exposure were not&#13;
surprised when the industr,:'s Feder~!&#13;
Radiation Council dragged its feet m demanding proper ventilation of radon gas&#13;
in uranium mines.&#13;
For mining operations on the Colorado&#13;
Plateau, the FRC set "standards" that&#13;
were 10 to 100 times the levels set by the&#13;
International Commission on Radiological&#13;
Protection, a neutral, non-industrial&#13;
agency Still, compensation cla_ii:ns by&#13;
disabled miners or the fam1hes of&#13;
deceased miners are often denied because&#13;
"little is known" about the correlation&#13;
between deadly radon gas and cancer. But&#13;
much is known it seems, about the profitmaking&#13;
potenti~l of the uranium industry.&#13;
for which the AEC and the FRC have both&#13;
lobbied in Congress. . Who is at work to begin correc_t1~ u~h&#13;
shocking and criminal cond1t1on m&#13;
American industry?&#13;
Among student efforts, one whic~ how .&#13;
promise is a newly formed proJect ~Y&#13;
Environmental Resources, Inc .. one of two&#13;
lasting organizations which grew out of the&#13;
Environmental Teach-In and Earth D~y&#13;
last April 22. In their. head __ office m&#13;
Washington, ADC. the five m1tial _ 1:1embers&#13;
of the project have started bm~m~ a&#13;
working resource librar~·· establishing&#13;
contacts with labor unions. medical&#13;
3sters&#13;
Supper Club&#13;
1040&#13;
Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
with Aln,ondine Sauce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PR.IME RIB&#13;
schools and environment groups, and&#13;
writing a general handbook in th problem&#13;
and several brief bookle on peciiic&#13;
problems and di ea es.&#13;
Led by Rick A tkiri . a third-year medical&#13;
student on leave from tanford. and Paul&#13;
Witt, a Stanford political cience&#13;
graduate, the group stresses .. ensitization"&#13;
to workers' problem and local&#13;
initiatives by coalition groups of students.&#13;
workers, and community members. They&#13;
have received a $20,000 grant from the&#13;
Stern Foundation to begin work, and their&#13;
advisory board includes Leonard Woodcock,&#13;
Stewart Udall, \ illard Wirtz and&#13;
George W&amp;ld.&#13;
Among specific student activitie they&#13;
will help organize and promote are:&#13;
- conducting inventories of local industrial&#13;
hazards and applicable law ;&#13;
- holding seminars and teach-outs or.&#13;
the problems of in-plant pollution:&#13;
- making university laboratories and&#13;
skills available for analyzing ga and&#13;
partculate matter found within plant :&#13;
- setting up regional, \I.eek-long&#13;
training sessions at medical chool for&#13;
union repre entati\.'e and uni\'er. it)&#13;
students. In addition, the project members hope to&#13;
interest the national media in the problem,&#13;
perhap eliciting a network documentary.&#13;
They al o want to estabh ha national tollfree&#13;
telephone number for workers to call&#13;
for specific an wers on indu trial hazard .&#13;
Another student group be un thi&#13;
summer is Youth Projects, led b) former&#13;
University of Penn ylvania instruct r Jim&#13;
Goodell. Al o working with foundation&#13;
grant money. they have everal projec&#13;
underwav, one of which i a cont nt&#13;
anah is· of new· media in coal mini&#13;
region of Appalachia&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elm"\IVOOd&#13;
2704 Lotftrop A-re • ., locu,ef W,,co,uu,&#13;
Students eet red carpet ser ice&#13;
( So does everyo ne ehe')&#13;
YALEO'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
THE&#13;
DAISY&#13;
Kl:NOSHA&#13;
SE&#13;
T I Plact Tt BMJ&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
L1ri11t Stltctlt&#13;
Lewut Pricu&#13;
626&#13;
~~ 56t St . Ktnostla&#13;
I RG 'RITIE~&#13;
ROBES-Regular 15 00,&#13;
Special, $10.00.&#13;
En joy hesc cool&#13;
evenings in coiy&#13;
comfor 1&#13;
d, velvet&#13;
ooed ribbon down&#13;
the front, lin d wi h&#13;
soft t nylon&#13;
peach or&#13;
orgu ri e's ,sop&#13;
I 9 until 9 ondoys ond ,&#13;
ridoys, o h r w doys&#13;
9 ' ii 5·30, Svndoys&#13;
from 10 o.m. until&#13;
5 p.m.&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenu&#13;
enosho, Wisconsin 531 AO&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN&#13;
FREE DELIVERY ~:00 P • TO l&#13;
0&#13;
2 00 P.M.&#13;
KENOSHA 657-5191 &#13;
SPORTSFESll970&#13;
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3&#13;
fllASCOT SELECTION (Vat. on all Campuses), 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
ICE HOCKEY - Parksid. vs. Loyola, Wilson Park, 6 to 8 p.m.&#13;
PARKSIDE 200 RECEPTION&#13;
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4&#13;
QUEEN &amp; COURT CORONATION - Student-Activities Building, 2 p.m.&#13;
WRESTLING - Parksid. vs. Michigan Tech, WSU-Stevens Paint,&#13;
Bullen Junior High School, Kenosha, 3· p.m.&#13;
BASKETBALL· Parks ide vs. Purdue North Central,&#13;
St. Joseph High School, Kenosha, 8 p.m.&#13;
COFFEE HOUSE/NIGHT CLUB - Student Activities Building,&#13;
10 p.m. to 1 a.m. Music by The Lollery&#13;
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5&#13;
(All Sport Events at J. I. Case Fieldhouse, Racine)&#13;
VOLLEYBALL- Parkside vs. UWM, UW-GB, Milton, 8 to 12 noon&#13;
FENCING - Parkside vs. U. of Wisconsin, U. of Minnesota, 1 to 4 p.m.&#13;
JUDO &amp; KARATE DEMONSTRATION by PARKSIDE DEMONSTRATION&#13;
TEAM, 7 to 8 p.m.&#13;
BASKETBALL- Parks ide vs. Swedish National Team, 8 to 10 p.m.&#13;
GYMNASTICS· Parkside Demonstration Team, Ha"lftime&#13;
SPORTSFEST DANCE - Student Acll~i!le~ Building, 10 p.m. to 1 a.';'.&#13;
~\.&#13;
For additional information and tickets,&#13;
contact the OlfiCeo~leiics, Wood Road-.&#13;
Uni"versHy 01 Wisconsin_Parkside. Kenosha ..&#13;
Phone: 65~486'. ex. 24S:-&#13;
I.&#13;
_, P&#13;
·SPORTSFEST 1970&#13;
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3&#13;
MASCOT SELECTION (Vote on all Campuses}, 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.&#13;
ICE HOCKEY . Parkside vs. Loyola, Wilson Park, 6 to 8 p.m.&#13;
PARKSIDE 200 RECEPTION&#13;
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4&#13;
QUEEN &amp; COURT CORONATION - Student-Activities Building, 2 p.m.&#13;
WRESTLING - Parkside vs. Michigan Tech, WSU-Stevens Point,&#13;
Bullen Junior High School, Kenosha, 3 p.m.&#13;
BASKETBALL - Parkside vs. Purdue North Central,&#13;
St. Joseph High School, Kenosha, 8 p.m.&#13;
COFFEE HOUSE/NIGHT CLUB - Student Activities Building,&#13;
10 p.m. to 1 a.m. Music by The Lottery&#13;
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5&#13;
(All Sport Events at J. I. Case Fieldhouse, Racine}&#13;
VOLLEYBALL - Parkside vs. UWM, UW-68, Milton, 8 to 12 noon&#13;
FENCING - Parkside vs. U. of Wisconsin, U. of Minnesota, 1 to 4 p.m.&#13;
JUDO &amp; KARATE DEMONSTRATION by PARKSIDE DEMONSTRATION&#13;
TEAM, 7 to 8 p.m.&#13;
BASKETBALL · Parkside vs. Swedish National Team, 8 to 10 · p.m.&#13;
For additional information and tiCkets,&#13;
contact -the Office of Athletics, Wood Road,&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha.&#13;
Phone: 65&amp;-4861, ex. 24S:-</text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 2, Issue 10, November 30, 1970</text>
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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>George W. Beadle to Present Lecture Here</text>
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              <text>George W. Beadle To Presenl Lecture Here&#13;
Nobel laureate George Wells&#13;
emeritus president of . Beadle, Beadle received the Nobel prize. the&#13;
Chicago will the Umven!ty of highest scientific bonor society bestows, in&#13;
at the Univ~~ ~::'::'~~~'1.~':958 ror his research on the relation of&#13;
Wood Road Campus at8 p.m. on Tuesda genes to specific biochemical reactions.&#13;
Nov..24, IDGreenquist HaD, Room 101 n;'~ The prize, which he sbared with Edward L.&#13;
talk ISSponsored by the Parkside Lecture Tatum and Joshua Lederber'g, was in&#13;
and FIDe Arts Committee psysiology and medicine.&#13;
His ~pic will he "Myst~ry and Myth of In addition to the Nohel Prize, he has&#13;
MaIze. The talk, which wiU be iUustrated received the Priestley Memorial Award or&#13;
~Y c~lo~ transparencies, will cover the Dickinson CoUege in 1967; the Kimber&#13;
hngUlStIc,. historical, archeologl'cal, Genetics Award of the National Academy&#13;
m hoI 1 of Sciences in 1960; the national award of&#13;
orp ogicat, cytological and genetic the American Cancer Society in 1959; the&#13;
eVldenc~ o.f.evolution of maize, or corn, E from ti mil Christian Hansen Prize of the Royal&#13;
varietf~~l ve species to modern hybrid Danish Academy of Sciences in 1953; the&#13;
During the day. he also will meet with Dyer Award 01 the ational Institutes of&#13;
Parkside science students. Health in 1951; and the Lasker Award of&#13;
.~is will be the Nobel laureate's second the American Public Health Association10&#13;
VISIt t.o.Parkside in less than a year. He 1950Be'adle 'd 1 f he . . al ted th was presi en 0 t mversrty&#13;
so VISI e campus last May when he of Chicago from 1961until his retirement in&#13;
presented a major public address at the&#13;
Symposium on Biochemistry of Brain and 1968. Prior to that he was professor and&#13;
M chairman of the Division of Biology at the&#13;
themory which brought scientists from Califorma Institute of Technology from&#13;
roughout the world to Parkside. 1946 to 1961. He also has been a member of&#13;
Murphy Represented In Craft Shows&#13;
.. Ceramisl John Satre Murphy of the&#13;
Universtty of Wisconsin-Parkside art&#13;
faculty is represented in two current invita~ional&#13;
.shows and has been granted a&#13;
merit achievement award for works be is&#13;
exhibiting in a third show.&#13;
Murphy received the award for two&#13;
stoneware bowls with platinum and gold&#13;
lusters which are included in the invitational&#13;
Craft Committment Show which&#13;
will open Dec. 7 al the Rochester (Minn.)&#13;
Art Center and will then tour for two years.&#13;
Murphy also is represented in the&#13;
Wisconsin Craft Invitational No. 3&#13;
traveling exhibit opening Friday and&#13;
continuiog through Dec. 20 at L'Atelier&#13;
Gallery in Milwaukee and in the December&#13;
invitational craft show of the Contemporary&#13;
Crafts Association in PorUand,&#13;
The role of the urban university intrigues me.'&#13;
Ore.&#13;
In the Milwaukee show, Murphy has two&#13;
larger luster bowls - one a head bowl&#13;
adorned with faces with copper, gold,&#13;
orange and red lusters and one an abstract&#13;
stoneware bowl with cobalt blue stain and&#13;
platinum luster - and a small porcelain&#13;
wall relief with gold luster mounted in&#13;
ilIexiglass.&#13;
Murphy also has a porcelain wall relief&#13;
in plexiglass in the Portland exhibit. His&#13;
ceramics have been widely exhibited&#13;
throughout the United Slates and were&#13;
included in last winter's Montana Craftsmen&#13;
Exhibit at the Smithsonian Institution.&#13;
Murphy, who received his&#13;
graduate degree from the University of&#13;
Montana, joined the Parkside faculty last&#13;
year.&#13;
Weaver Will Work To Better&#13;
UW Public Relations&#13;
Reprint from Milwaukee Journal&#13;
Madison, Wls; - Improving relations&#13;
between the University of Wisconsin and&#13;
the people of the state will be a high&#13;
priority objective during the administration&#13;
of John C. Weaver, the new&#13;
.preaiden!of IJW._ . .&#13;
In a conservation wilb Edwin Young,&#13;
chancellor of the Madison campus; seen on&#13;
WHA-TV Tuesday night, Weaver siad:&#13;
"We have no greater objective than to&#13;
regain the faith of the people who support&#13;
the university. We have to transmit to&#13;
them that the essence or what lbey have&#13;
always had faith in-is still there, H&#13;
Weaver described university admil)istrators&#13;
as canght between students&#13;
who are demanding a greater role in lbe&#13;
governing of their schools and lbe public&#13;
which is demanding greater accountabiliiy&#13;
from the administrators.&#13;
"People Will Be Heard"&#13;
Referring to the people of lbe slate,&#13;
Weaver said, "They have listened to a&#13;
tremendous amount of noise from the&#13;
campus, even bombs. The people are going&#13;
to be heard.&#13;
"Just as students have interest because&#13;
their educations are at stake, the people&#13;
have an interest because it is their money&#13;
that is bemg spent. I feel the public has a&#13;
right to be heard just as the students have&#13;
a right to be heard."&#13;
Weaver indicated he believed that lbe&#13;
I'IIIe of students was limited to making&#13;
recommendations.&#13;
"I don't lblnk you can turn lbe&#13;
deelslOnmaking process over to the&#13;
ltuden1a. The students should be heard,&#13;
but it may be that the university can't bUy&#13;
an of their recommendations."&#13;
Weaver said the role of the faculty of a&#13;
uniVersity should be broad and deep. He&#13;
IIIlidthe faculi}' should be responsible for&#13;
determining general academic programs&#13;
Ind requirements.&#13;
As for the role of the president of lbe&#13;
IIlivenity, Weaver said, "The day to day&#13;
ClperatiOll8of a campus fall to the ~&#13;
ceDor.The president has faDen back IDtoa&#13;
"without involving ourselves in the civic&#13;
decisionmaking. "&#13;
Weaver said development of urban&#13;
studies at these campuses would provide&#13;
them a growth area without duplicating&#13;
many of the programs or the Madison&#13;
campus.&#13;
"These campuses would have an area of&#13;
development that is untouched. There are&#13;
some things that all campuses must do,&#13;
but when it comes to the more specialized&#13;
programs there must be some rationing. t&#13;
am sure that you don't have to duplicate&#13;
Ph.D. programs in every department on&#13;
four campuses in Wisconsin.&#13;
Weaver said he also opposed "raising&#13;
tuition for in-stale students to anything.&#13;
like rull per student cost."&#13;
"Inevitably students are going to pay a&#13;
greater part of the cost or their education ,I&#13;
they can afford to, but tuition should not&#13;
prevent any qualified student from attending&#13;
the university," he added.&#13;
The conversation between Young and&#13;
Weaver was recorded earlier Tuesday at&#13;
the University of Missouri television&#13;
station at Columbia. Weaver is president&#13;
of the University of Missouri. He is expecled&#13;
to assume his duties in Madison&#13;
sbortly after Christmas.&#13;
somewhat more detached position. The&#13;
president's job is to see that the chancellor&#13;
of a campus has the resources to maintain&#13;
the greatness of his campus."&#13;
Weaver also mentioned maintaining the&#13;
universities relations with the alumni, the&#13;
State Legislature and the governor as&#13;
among the president's responsibilities.&#13;
Urban Campus Role&#13;
Weaver sees increased roles for the&#13;
UW's Milwaukee and Racine campuses as&#13;
urban campuses. "The role of the urban&#13;
university intrigues me," Weaver said. He&#13;
pointed out that the University of Miss"'!ri&#13;
had campuses in Sl Louis and Kansas CIty&#13;
which specialize in problems of the cities.&#13;
•'There must be a tremendous OIr&#13;
portunity to do this in Milwaukee and&#13;
Racine," Weaver said&#13;
"The question is, can we bring the land&#13;
grant idea of service into the urban scene?&#13;
Can we bring to the urban areas the&#13;
knowledge that we have that can work to&#13;
the betterment of urban life. H&#13;
weiver cautioned that this must be done&#13;
Violinist To Perform In UWP Concert Series&#13;
Japanese-born violinist Keiko Furiyoshi,&#13;
affiliate artist in music at the Uruverslty of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, will present the next&#13;
program in the University Artists Concert&#13;
Series at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 22, m&#13;
Greenquist HaD at the UWP Wood Road&#13;
Campus. .&#13;
Single admission tickets will be&#13;
available at the door. (Adults $1, students&#13;
50 cents, cbiIdren 12 and under free.)&#13;
Miss Furiyoshi's program wiU Include&#13;
Vitali's Chaconne, Tcbaikowsky's Concerto&#13;
in D. Major, Op. 35, Mozart's Ada.glO&#13;
in E Major K261. Bloch's Nigu., (lIDprovisationl&#13;
and Sarasate's Gypsy AU'S&#13;
Op. 20. She wiD be accompamed at the&#13;
piano by Genevieve Prevot, a studenl or&#13;
Carmen Vila, Parkside artiSt-m-resldence.&#13;
Miss Furiyoshi, who joined the Parl&lt;Slde&#13;
music staff this faU, comes to UWP from.&#13;
the University of Indiana where she was Ii&#13;
student of Josef Gingold. former concertmaster&#13;
of the Cleveland Symphony&#13;
and nOWhead of ~e violin department at&#13;
the Indiana institution.&#13;
Born in Yokohama, Miss Furiyoshi&#13;
began her study of the violin at the age of&#13;
three at the world-renowned Suzuki School&#13;
- the "little children's music school" of&#13;
Japan.&#13;
She has made concert appearances in&#13;
New York and in the Midwest and returned&#13;
to Japan earlier this year to present a&#13;
recital at Toshi Center Hall in Tokyo. She&#13;
also has made several recordings in&#13;
Japan.&#13;
In January, she wiU present a concert in&#13;
carnegie Hall in the JeWlesse5 Musicales&#13;
International Artists Series.&#13;
MEMO&#13;
In a memodaled Nov. 12Anthony Totero&#13;
warns there will be suspension of&#13;
privileges to recognized student&#13;
organizations unless they dissolve all&#13;
oul8ide bank accounts and deposit their&#13;
funds with the bursar.&#13;
the faculty of Stanford University, Cornell&#13;
Unlvenity, the Califorma Institute or&#13;
Tec/wdocy, the Institut de Biolog,e 01&#13;
Paris and Harvard Umvenity.&#13;
He cu.......,t1yII presldenl of the ChIcago&#13;
Horticultural Society where he rs con-&#13;
&lt;kK:tingmuch of his current research&#13;
Film Series&#13;
At Rondelle&#13;
The Intercollegiate Film Councrl,&#13;
comprised of Parkside, Carthage and&#13;
Dominican students and Iaculty presents a&#13;
film series which is sponsered b) John·&#13;
son's Wax Inc. at (he Golden Roodelle&#13;
All films w ill be shown at the GoIdf'n&#13;
RonMUr Theater at 7:00 p.m. on Sunda~&#13;
evenings.&#13;
Some of the films to be shown arc'&#13;
"War of the Buttons" 7\'0\ 22, 1970&#13;
"The Red Desert" Dec. 6.1970&#13;
"Weekend" Feb. H, 19711&#13;
"Persona" ~lan::h7,I97u&#13;
"L,Avventura" ~1arch21.197U&#13;
The-Janus-New Cinema AprI14.19i0&#13;
(To be announced) Aprl12S. I~U&#13;
The tickets are free. but only a \l'r)&#13;
limited amount of tickets are available&#13;
and these will be given out on "f'dnt'Sda)s&#13;
and Thursday s 10 the GrN"nquisl concoarse&#13;
from 12 nooo lill I p.m. and abo on&#13;
Wednesdays and Thur-sdays at the en&#13;
trance to the lounge at the Itactne campo ...&#13;
from II a.m. Uti It noon. It was Iirst stated&#13;
that tickets would be given oul on Thur-s&#13;
days and Fridays. but do to the mixup of&#13;
trying to get tickets from other school . It&#13;
has been changed to leave Fridays to&#13;
straighten things out.&#13;
The tickets will be given out on the&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday preeeedmg the&#13;
Sunday 01 the film.&#13;
For further mformahon contact either&#13;
Mary Geraets (632·20541 or Jerry Horton&#13;
1633-47691.&#13;
Grant Accepted&#13;
A grant from the Amencan Chemical&#13;
Society Petroleum Research Fund 10&#13;
support of research by Virgmla Scherr. an&#13;
assistant professor of chemistry at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside. \lo as&#13;
accepted al Wausau Fnda)' by lilt'&#13;
University Board of Regents.&#13;
The $7,500 grant will supporl a Ihreeyear&#13;
research proposal by Miss Scherr for&#13;
molecular orbatal studies as a basis for&#13;
understanding conformation, ele&lt;:trofllc&#13;
structure and electroDlc energy of&#13;
molecules&#13;
Besides the correlation between ex&#13;
perimental data and calculation. the study&#13;
seeks to generate mformation which will&#13;
facilitate development of undergraduate&#13;
research ~ograms&#13;
The American Chemical oClely&#13;
program under which lhe grant wa:;&#13;
awarded is designed for r latively new&#13;
holders of the Ph D degree and is&#13;
designed to allow them to conltnue 10·&#13;
wvidual fundamental research In the&#13;
petroleum field&#13;
MISS Scherr received hrr o('l('toral&#13;
degree at Fordham Univen,11\ ,Ind ,.IlAghl&#13;
at Louisiana State Univel"oll"and ( ~lrdU\31&#13;
Stritch College Imm',·d;.tll·l,) bC'fort'&#13;
joining the Parkslde fat:ulh la~l f .111 ...h(·&#13;
was a faculty research ptt~Ill·II ..I·11 al&#13;
Argonne &lt;111.) ational Laboratory&#13;
Recruitm t6 be herr&#13;
The Manne Corps Oll,cer e1ect,on&#13;
Team will VISit the University or&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Kenosha,&#13;
Wisconsm campus on November 25th&#13;
to interview student interested In&#13;
becoming commissioned officers.&#13;
The Omcer Selection Team wtll be&#13;
located in Room 117to provide Information&#13;
pertaining to Manne Officer Programs,&#13;
accordmg to 1st Lieutenant R. W&#13;
DU LAP, the Marme Corps Oflicer&#13;
Selection Oflicer.&#13;
MI ORITY GROUPS&#13;
1 UWPROGRAM&#13;
Indian Americans and Spanishsw-named&#13;
Americans, as well as blacks,&#13;
are eligible for college aid through the&#13;
Consortium for Graduate Study in&#13;
Business ror Disadvantaged Students.&#13;
The enlarged scope or the program, tied&#13;
in with The University of Wiscomin&#13;
Graduate School of Business, includes&#13;
students from such ethnic grou~ as&#13;
Puerto Ricans, Indians, MexicanAmericans,&#13;
and Cubans who are American&#13;
citizens. Its purpose is to hasten the entry&#13;
0( minority persons inlo management&#13;
p&gt;sitions in business.&#13;
George W. Beadle To Present Lecture Here&#13;
No~ laureate George Wells B&#13;
emeritus president of the U . ~die, . Beadle received the obel prize, the&#13;
Chat itcheagou, nW11·v.llerspriesent a fr_ ee pum_b~:7ec1tytureof highest scientific honor society bestows, m ty of 1958 for his research on the relation of&#13;
Wood Road Ca WtSConsm-Parkside genes to pecific biochemical reactions.&#13;
N . mpus at 8 p.m. on Tuesda Th . ov. 24, m Greenquist Hall R Y, epr1ze, which he shared with Edv.ard L.&#13;
talk is_ sponsored by the P~r~i ~~ree Tatum and Joshua Lederberg, was in&#13;
and_ Fme_ Arts Committee. psysiology and medicine.&#13;
~is t~ptc will be "Mystery and Myth of In addition to the Nobel Prize. he ha&#13;
Maize. The talk, which will be illustrated received the Priestley. temorial Award of&#13;
~y c~lo~ transparencies, will cover the Dickinson College in 1967; the Kimber&#13;
hnguistic,_ historical, archeological Genetics Award of the, ational Acad m,·&#13;
m~rphological, cytological and geneti~ of Sciences in 1960, the national award of&#13;
evidence_ o_f _evolution of maize, or corn, the American Cancer ociety in 1959; he&#13;
fro Emil Christian Hansen Prize of the Ro al&#13;
var%tf~~itive species to modern hybrid Danish Academy of Sciences in 1953: the&#13;
Dur!ng t~ day, he also will meet with Dyer Award of the , 'ational Institut of&#13;
Par~side science students. Health in 1951 ; and the La ker A ard of&#13;
. ~1s will be the Nobel Jaureate's second the American Public Health A iation m&#13;
visit t~ _Parkside in less than a year. He&#13;
1&#13;
~~adle was president of the nive 1t,&#13;
also visited the campus last May when he of Chicago from 1961 until h1 retirement in&#13;
presen~ a major public address at the&#13;
Symposmm on Biochemistry of Brain and 1968. Prior to that he wa prof - or a nd&#13;
Memory which brought scient1·sts from chairman of the Div· ion of Biol . at th&#13;
th gh California Institute Technolo · fr m rou out the world to Parkside. 1946 to 1961. He also h been a member of&#13;
Murphy Represented In Craft Shows . . C_eram!st John Satre Murphy of the&#13;
Umvers1ty of Wisconsin-Parkside art&#13;
faculty is represented in two current invitational&#13;
shows and has been granted a&#13;
merit achievement award for works he is&#13;
exhibiting in a third show.&#13;
Murphy received the award for two&#13;
stoneware bowls with platinum and gold&#13;
lusters which are included in the invitational&#13;
Craft Comrnittment Show which&#13;
will open Dec. 7 at the Rochester (Minn.)&#13;
Art Center and will then tour for two years.&#13;
Murphy also is represented in the&#13;
Wisconsin Craft Invitational o. 3&#13;
traveling exhibit opening Friday and&#13;
continuing through Dec. 20 at L'Atelier&#13;
Gallery in Milwaukee and in the December&#13;
invitational craft show of the Contemporary&#13;
Crafts Association in Portland,&#13;
Ore.&#13;
In the 1ilwaukee ho~ .. lurph) h · tv. o&#13;
larger luster bowl - one a h ad bo\, I&#13;
adorned with faces with copper. gold,&#13;
orange and red Ju ters and one an a ·tract&#13;
stoneware bowl with cobalt blue tain and&#13;
platinum lu ter - and a mall porcelain&#13;
wall relief with gold lust r mount d in&#13;
J3)exiglass.&#13;
Murphy also has a porcela in wall r Ii r&#13;
in plexiglass in the Portland exhibit. Hi&#13;
ceramics have been widely exhibited&#13;
throughout the United tates a nd were&#13;
included in last winter' - . 1ontana Craftsmen&#13;
Exhibit at the milhsonian In·&#13;
stitulion. 1urph~ , who received h1&#13;
graduate degree from the niversity of&#13;
Montana, joined the Par ide faculty la t&#13;
year.&#13;
The role of the urban university intrigues me.'&#13;
Weaver Will Work To Better&#13;
UW Public Relations&#13;
Reprint from Milwaukee J oumal&#13;
Madison, Wis: - Improving relations&#13;
between the University of Wisconsin and&#13;
the people of the state will be a high&#13;
priority objective during the administration&#13;
of John C. Weaver, the new&#13;
president of UW.&#13;
In a conservation with Edwin Young,&#13;
chancellor of the Madison campus; seen on&#13;
WHA-TV Tuesday night, Weaver siad:&#13;
"We have no greater objective than to&#13;
regain the faith of the people who support&#13;
the university. We have to transmit to&#13;
them that the essence of what they have&#13;
always had faith in·is still there."&#13;
Weaver described university admirµstrators&#13;
as caught between studen~&#13;
who are demanding a greater role in the&#13;
governing of their schools and the public&#13;
which is demanding greater aceountability&#13;
from the administrators.&#13;
"People Will Be Heard"&#13;
somewhat more detached position. The&#13;
president's job is to see that the chancellor&#13;
of a campus has the resources to maintain&#13;
the greatness of his campus."&#13;
Weaver also mentioned maintaining the&#13;
universities relations with the alumni, the&#13;
State Legislature and the governor as&#13;
among the president's responsibilities.&#13;
Urban Campus Role&#13;
Weaver sees increased roles for the&#13;
UW's Milwaukee and Racine campuses as&#13;
urban campuses. "The role of the urban&#13;
university intrigues me," Weaver said. He&#13;
pointed out that the University of Missouri&#13;
had campuses in SL Louis and Kansas City&#13;
which specialize in problems of the cities.&#13;
"There must be a tremendous o~&#13;
portunity to do this in Milwaukee and&#13;
Racine," Weaver said.&#13;
"The question is, can we bring the land&#13;
grant idea of service into the urban scene?&#13;
Can we bring to the urban areas the&#13;
knowledge that we have that can work to&#13;
the betterment of urban life."&#13;
wea·ver cautioned that this must be done&#13;
·'without involving oursel e in the civic&#13;
decisionmaking. ·· Weaver said development of urban&#13;
studies at these campuses would pro, id&#13;
them a growth area v.,ithout duplicating&#13;
many of the program of the tadison&#13;
campus.&#13;
" These campuses would have an area of&#13;
development that is untouched . Th re are&#13;
some things that all campu es m t do,&#13;
but when it comes to the more pec1alized&#13;
programs there mu t be some rationing. I&#13;
am sure that you don't have to duplicate&#13;
Ph.D. programs in every department on&#13;
four campuses in Wi. con in.&#13;
Weaver said he al o opposed "'rai 1ng&#13;
tuition for in-state tudents to anythm .&#13;
like full per stud nl cosl"&#13;
"Inevitably students are going to pa) a&#13;
greater part of the co l of their education 1f&#13;
they can afford to, but tuition hould not&#13;
prevent any qualified tudent from al·&#13;
tending the university," he ad d&#13;
The conversation between Young and&#13;
Weaver was recorded earlier Tu day at&#13;
the niversity of 1issouri tel v1 ioo&#13;
station at Columbia. Weaver i pr ident&#13;
of the University of 1i ouri. He i expected&#13;
to assume hi duties in 1ad1_on&#13;
shortly after Chri tma . Referring to the people of the state,&#13;
Weaver said, "They have listened to a&#13;
tremendous amount of noise from the&#13;
campus, even bombs. The people are going&#13;
to be heard.&#13;
Violinist To Perform In UWP Concert Series&#13;
"Just as students have interest because&#13;
their educations are at stake, the people&#13;
have an interest because it is their money&#13;
~t is being spent. I feel the public has a&#13;
right to be heard just as the students have&#13;
a right to be heard."&#13;
Weaver indicated he believed that the&#13;
role of students was limited to making&#13;
recornmenda lions.&#13;
"I don't think you can turn the&#13;
decisionmaking process over to the&#13;
student.;. The students should be heard,&#13;
but it may be that the university can't buy&#13;
all of their recommendations."&#13;
Weaver said the role of the faculty of a&#13;
university should be broad and deep. He&#13;
said the· faculty should be responsible for&#13;
determining general academic programs&#13;
and requirements.&#13;
~ for the role of the president of the&#13;
university, Weaver said, "The day to day&#13;
Ol)erations of a campus fall to the chancellor.&#13;
The president has fallen back into a&#13;
Japanese-born violinist Keiko Furiyoshi,&#13;
affiliate artist in music at the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, will present the next&#13;
program in the University Artists Conce:t&#13;
Series at 4 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 22, tn&#13;
Greenquist Hall at the UWP Wood Road&#13;
Campus. . . Single admission tickets will be&#13;
available at the door. (Adults $1, students&#13;
50 cents, children 12 and under_ fr~.)&#13;
Miss Furiyosbi's program will mclude&#13;
Vitali's Chaconne, Tchaikowskts Co~-&#13;
certo in D. Major, Op. 35, Mozart s Ada_g10&#13;
in E Major K261, Bloch's Nigu"'l &lt;~-&#13;
provisation) and Sarasate's Gypsy AU"S&#13;
Op. 20. She will be accompanied at the&#13;
piano by Geneviev~ Prev?1, _a st~ent of&#13;
Carmen Vila, Parkside artist-1D-res1de~e.&#13;
Miss Furiyoshi, who joined the Parkside&#13;
music staff this fall, comes to UWP from.&#13;
the University of Indiana where she was .i&#13;
student of Josef Gingold, former concertmaster&#13;
of the Cleveland Symphony&#13;
and now head of the violin department at&#13;
the Indiana institution&#13;
Born in Yokohama, 1i Furi)· hi&#13;
began her study of the violin at the age of&#13;
three at the world-renowned Suzuki School&#13;
- the "little children's music school " of&#13;
Japan. She has made concert appearances m&#13;
ew York and in the Iidwest and returned&#13;
to Japan earlier this year to present a&#13;
recital at Toshi Center Hall in Tokyo She&#13;
also has made several recording in&#13;
Japan. In January, she will present a concert in&#13;
Carnegie Hall in the JeW1esses tusicales&#13;
International Artists Series.&#13;
MEMO&#13;
In a memo dated 'ov. 12 Anthony Totero&#13;
warns there will be suspension of&#13;
privileges to recognized student&#13;
organizations unless they dissolve all&#13;
outside bank accounts and deposit their&#13;
funds with the bursar.&#13;
the faculty of tanford nlv&#13;
University, the California&#13;
Technology, the lnstitut d Bi l 1&#13;
Paris and Harvard ru\ ty.&#13;
He currently is president the Cha&#13;
Horticultural Societ h&#13;
Cklcting much cl his curr nt&#13;
Film Series&#13;
At Rondelle&#13;
Grant Accepted&#13;
i.·&#13;
Indian American and&#13;
surnamed Americans, a well a bl&#13;
are eli ible for college aid through th&#13;
Con ortium for Graduate tudy in&#13;
Bu iness for Disadvantaged tud n .&#13;
The enlarged scope of the program, tied&#13;
in with The niversll of Wi co in&#13;
Graduate School of Busin . includ&#13;
students from uch ethnic grou!)l&gt; a&#13;
Puerto Ricans, Indian . • 1exicanAmericans,&#13;
and Cuban who are American&#13;
citizens. Its purpose is to hasten the entry&#13;
of minority persons mto management&#13;
positions in business. &#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
The Tension Remains&#13;
We have been trying for weeks to make some assessment of&#13;
student feeling. Why? This fall, students seem to have something on&#13;
their minds - some sort of indescribable tension.&#13;
Last pring there were the Kent killings, the bombings, the&#13;
demonstrations. Last summer there was the bombing of Sterling Hall.&#13;
So far this fall nothing destructive has come of any of our various hangups.&#13;
But the tension is there.&#13;
That tension obviates itself in various ways. Students seem less&#13;
than willing to talk about strong issues - after all, where has ~lJting&#13;
led to in the past? And the bombing fad is wearing off - where did that&#13;
type of violence lead? Students appear to be guarding strongly and&#13;
ilently their personal convictions. What can one person do to end the&#13;
war, stop pollution, lower taxes, stop drug abuse - "what can one man&#13;
do, my friend, what can one man do?"&#13;
But the tension remains. Specifically for this campus, we have&#13;
come up with the idea that the underlying feeling is not one of apathy,&#13;
but rather one 01 hopelessness. Students have an interest in such things&#13;
the formation of a student government, or the idea that instructors&#13;
pay more attention to teaching than to research. You can talk until who&#13;
lin.... when and nothing will ever come of anything. It's less or an&#13;
pathetic, 'I don't care' attitude, than it is one or 'who would hear what&#13;
I said' And so there is that undeniable and undefinable tension. Even&#13;
th (acuity are experiencing the pangs or DO communication, as was&#13;
-n by the resolution passed by members of the Social Science&#13;
division.&#13;
Maybe the tension we feel isn't a tension at all. Maybe it's the&#13;
plateau of the so-called student revolution that is apparent in this&#13;
country. There's probably more to come.&#13;
Correction&#13;
The editors of the EWSCOPE received and printed some incorrect&#13;
information in last week's issue. Vice-Chancellor Brockman is&#13;
not co-owner 01 the University Bookstores. Howard Thielen is the&#13;
owner.&#13;
Oil 11(11"'011\\ Y&#13;
t lcve churches I really do. Not just&#13;
ror lh ph)"5lcal components and aesthetic&#13;
values but because or what happens to me&#13;
~ hen Iam Ill)lde of a church. For me, a&#13;
....ffk ...',thout a church service is like a&#13;
pumpl,," P'~WIthout whIpP"'! cream&#13;
3pplt pie ''''lthout cheese •• or a kiss&#13;
"lthout a squeeze. So It IS natural that&#13;
.......0 Mrs CruhJ and I are traveling that&#13;
... not onl) VISit the museums and fine&#13;
I"fStaurants In that area but houses of&#13;
.. on.tup a .. ell&#13;
I tt') to be- reverent at all limes ...&#13;
.. here\"er Irna)' be at any given moment&#13;
In a Quistian church, a Moslem&#13;
mosque. a Je'*1 h synagogue. a Buddhist&#13;
t mple. a Hindu of Shinto shnne or In&#13;
cl room. on the street or In my orrice.&#13;
I) thapel t.n ~. ,Iy be • room ttl my&#13;
home or a . at In an alrplame This aU&#13;
mok for a ,,"ery com"enient arrangement.&#13;
.".nd, mct there IS ooly one God and&#13;
God I t\"er')-v..here. • what difference&#13;
• hQuJd time place or deeore make~&#13;
I hnd m)'self onI,)" mildl,)" Interested in&#13;
t.' tartan procedures although I do&#13;
rt'CO~nlt.e the-Ir lmportance and 1rs"&#13;
Cruhl and I I') do do our share But I&#13;
gr. lh en)o) • me.runglul hturgy. a line&#13;
M'mlon nd beautiful mUSIc. It has been a&#13;
mal ler of opllonal chOice for over forty&#13;
)t·ar Lhat ""e ha,,'e attended the services&#13;
at The First United Methxh I church In&#13;
f me tach unda)' mormng" We recoup&#13;
our lreongth for IInog to the wonderful&#13;
feti~\\, hip ....e find there&#13;
II \\,a out good fortune 10 pend most of&#13;
: plember of 1968 In 'o",,"ay and It was&#13;
1f.....·"ltable that ....e . houJd ""' It se,,'eral of&#13;
II",,. •·..t.,. Churthes" So-c.lled, I&#13;
. uppose. btcause the roughly-he'o'n boards&#13;
whlth make up the Sides 01 the church&#13;
stand on end&#13;
\ l\ r""eglan slave church is made&#13;
('nllrel} of y.0Dd These churches are not&#13;
large You could put the ba e of one Inside&#13;
"Iarg. la room The rools ar~ hIgh and&#13;
It"ep u ually ....Ith t\lo 0 or three hers of&#13;
roofs rl or like. pagoda Th~ lew&#13;
pews In Ide .....ould seal from twent)' to&#13;
Ihlrty people In the 18th century. we wer~&#13;
told there were se\"eral hwtdreds of these&#13;
churches In Norway. Now onl)' twenty-&#13;
~ght remain Each is con Idered a&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
national treasure.&#13;
My "special wave-length" was&#13;
operating when we were in the Fantoft&#13;
Slave church about five miles south of&#13;
Bergen.. As we walked around inside I&#13;
gently touched the wood which had been&#13;
cut from the forest in the thirteenth century.&#13;
Ithought 01 Norway's thousand years&#13;
of Olristian history". . . of the many&#13;
gener.tions which had worshiP"'! in this&#13;
place· And I tho~ht 01 the manv other&#13;
churches Mrs. Gruhl and I had visited.&#13;
1said to Mrs. Gruhl, "Ruth, please leave&#13;
me alone for a few minutes ... Iwanllo&#13;
record my thoughts right now." She was&#13;
familiar with requests such as this, and&#13;
said, "Okay, dear ... see you later." Sh~&#13;
went outside and walked around the&#13;
grounds.&#13;
Now I had the church to myself .nd&#13;
talked to the tape recorder which I always&#13;
carry With me when 00 a trip. That little&#13;
Sony has a wonderful memory and a&#13;
month later, when we were back home I&#13;
played the t.pe ... and this is what Ih~d&#13;
recorded I will simply title it ...&#13;
THE STAVE CHURCH&#13;
These next thoughts are about&#13;
Churches ...&#13;
Ruth and I have been in many&#13;
In our travels 'round the world.&#13;
Here we've met up with another&#13;
Form of reverent architecture ...&#13;
We are told it's caUed a "Stave Church"&#13;
For its boards aU stand on end.&#13;
Cleverly they're fabricated&#13;
What ingenious construction' ..&#13;
Built to raise your eyes tow~rds' heaven&#13;
Built to shed the winter's snows. '&#13;
N~w this old ~orwegian Stave Church&#13;
Brmgs nostalgic recollections&#13;
Of the places where we've worshipped&#13;
Of the churches that we've seen. '&#13;
O1ristian churches without number&#13;
Notre Dame. Westminster Abbey •.&#13;
Washington's National Cathedral&#13;
Cbrist's birthplace in Bethlehem:&#13;
A long tabin in Alask.&#13;
Store!ronl Lutheran Ch~ in Hong K&#13;
Denver's Red Rock Amphitheater ong,&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 9&#13;
November 23, 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOEll&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
STAFF&#13;
D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, ken Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Arthur Gruhl, Walter Breach&#13;
Sven Tarrs&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Bill Jacoby, JohnPotent~&#13;
N~ws Editor&#13;
. Sports Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Published weekly by the studen~ 01 the ti~iversity. "! W~&#13;
P&#13;
kside Kenosha Wisconsin, 5314(). MaIlIng address IS Parksida s N-· .... • r si " . d edito lal t I ho --~,.., 3700 Washingtoo Rd., Kenosha. BUSiness an I rr e ep ne number b ...&#13;
4861, ext. :16, and 652-4177.&#13;
LETTERS to the Editor&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
Re: The letter of Louie Petts 6755808&#13;
USNRR, which appeared in Newscope,&#13;
Nov. 16. .&#13;
Congratulations on receiving your check&#13;
Nov. 6. Your success may be an exception&#13;
instead 01 the rule.&#13;
Personally I haven't been so lucky.&#13;
When I checked with Student Records to&#13;
find out about my VA check I was informed&#13;
that my records had been submitted&#13;
on Oct. 19. On Friday, Nov. 13, I&#13;
went to the local V.A. offi ce in th~ court&#13;
house. There Iwas informed that they had&#13;
called Milw.ukee six (6) limes that&#13;
morning (or six Parkside vets who had not&#13;
received their checks. Finally they quit&#13;
making individual phone calls and began&#13;
to list the complaints, they were going to&#13;
make one call late in the day.&#13;
December is no joke. Two years ago&#13;
some vets got their first check two days&#13;
before Christmas.&#13;
The woman at the VA said that she&#13;
could not pinpoint the fault, but she said&#13;
she was going to ask the Milwaukee office&#13;
to investigate the matter. She also said&#13;
that she had heard that the Student&#13;
Records office had delayed submitting the&#13;
necessary forms so as to save time&#13;
correcting drops and transfers, but they&#13;
were not supposed to do that.&#13;
Yours truly,&#13;
RA16720257&#13;
(Name withheld)&#13;
Where we went one Easter morn.&#13;
Christian Science Church in Boston,&#13;
Salt Lake City's Mormon Temple,&#13;
Mexlcana's Quaclalupe,&#13;
Riverside ChurCh in New York.&#13;
Mifiosionary Church on Mauii&#13;
Chapel at United Nations, '&#13;
Ciose to h,ome Chicago Temple,&#13;
Cluldhood s church on Christmas Eve.&#13;
The High Altar in St. Peter's&#13;
Made 01 gold and alabaster&#13;
Private chapels, tabernacl~&#13;
Prayer nooks in the c·acaco~bs.&#13;
And the church where Albert Schweitzer&#13;
Often went to play the organ ...&#13;
What a privilege it was lor&#13;
Me to play that organ, too!&#13;
~en trn:re .were non-Christian Temples&#13;
WIth. theIr d:llerent rules and cultures,&#13;
Urulled by One Creator&#13;
But with Prophets of th~ir own.&#13;
David's Tomb Room in Jerus'lem&#13;
The G~eat. ~lue Mosque in Istanb~l!&#13;
th~ Ba Hal World Faith in Haila .&#13;
Hmdu Shrines in Singapore. - ,&#13;
Temples shelt'ring jeweled Buddhas&#13;
Shmto ~hrines for contemplation, •&#13;
Many-tiered Chinese pagodas&#13;
W.t Arum in Bangkok Th '1' d M k'd ' alan, an m chooses - each his 0&#13;
. wo.&#13;
So we stand belore the altar&#13;
In thIS. old Norwegian Stave Ch h&#13;
And With loving hearts we thinkuro~ ,&#13;
Our own church and folks back home.&#13;
Dear Sir:&#13;
I agree completely With the IeUe&#13;
censored Ken Konkol lor his PUblic: ~&#13;
01 immaturity. Why Konkol'. ......&#13;
deficiencies must be foisted upon::::&#13;
sludents- at our expense_ is beY!IIII&#13;
His apparently unceasing e!fortl ~~&#13;
sludent and fa~ulty morals certaiaII.&#13;
this campus little good.&#13;
In a recent column Konkol ~ ..&#13;
he was arrogant because he bad !hilI&#13;
years. Gee, what impressive ~&#13;
Sincer.ly-.&#13;
E. B. Tey,JiIIa&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
In response to Mr. Petts (wIKi ....&#13;
dubious pleasure 01 knowing his&#13;
number) whose letter appeared II•&#13;
column, I would like to get a rew..&#13;
straight.&#13;
First, I'm sorry il Imisplaced tII!'"&#13;
of holding up veteran's paperworlt II.&#13;
wrong office - Student Aflairs iDslsIU&#13;
Student Records - the lonner "".&#13;
office I was directed to ask&#13;
concerning VA. benefits.&#13;
Second, I thank him lor his ...&#13;
approach to the problem 01lindinll..&#13;
the paperwork is handled, both hereill.&#13;
the V.A.&#13;
Third, Iwant to point out that ~&#13;
he got his check on the 6th of N.....&#13;
mosf 01 the vets I've talked to got M&#13;
around the 13th, midway between(Jd*&#13;
and December. As Isaid belore til! IsII&#13;
VA Office told me it would lAkl! .-..&#13;
month .&#13;
Although I don't know the majariJ.&#13;
veteran's marital status, I do bloW l1li&#13;
there are some 01 us wbo are IIIIIlil&#13;
which means financi.1 hardship DIll.&#13;
for ourselves, but lor our lamiliel •&#13;
Another point is that the ooly time-:&#13;
swning part 01 the lorms to be -:.&#13;
looking up the number of eredib&#13;
taken and addressing the ......&#13;
Granted, for one person this migbt ..&#13;
quite a while. If so she should ba"&#13;
=&#13;
wh~n so many people depend ..&#13;
money. . •&#13;
And last 01 all, I'd like to clue~.&#13;
Louie, Ted and I aren't in the ..&#13;
crying, just airing a view that ,most II",&#13;
vets we know support. It's posstble!,,"...&#13;
sowell ofl finaancially th.tyuu~ t III&#13;
an unneccessary period of ~~ItiJC.&#13;
most 01 us aren't in that POSltl~ ...&#13;
Still~&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
The Tension Remains&#13;
feel isn't a tension at all. Maybe it's the&#13;
tud nt revolution that is apparent in this&#13;
bly more to come.&#13;
Correction&#13;
ito of th • PE received and printed some int&#13;
information in I ·t week' i ue. Vice-Chancellor Brockman is&#13;
wn r th University Boo tore . Howard Thielen is the&#13;
&lt; ll lH 111 IH\\ ,\ Y&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
national trea ure&#13;
ty " pecial wave-length" wa s&#13;
operating when we were in the Fant.oft&#13;
lave church about five miles south of&#13;
Bergen. As we walked around inside I&#13;
gently touched the wood which had been&#13;
cut from the for t in the thirteenth cen- tury. I thought of ·orway's thousand years&#13;
m Christian hi tory · . . . of the many&#13;
generations which had worshiped in this&#13;
pla~e. And I tho~ht of the many other churches , lrs. Gruhl and I had visited.&#13;
I said to lrs. Gruhl, "Ruth, please leave&#13;
me alone for a few minutes ... I want to&#13;
record my thoughts right now." She was&#13;
familiar with requests such as this and&#13;
said," ay, dear ... see you later.'" She&#13;
went outsid and walked around the&#13;
grounds.&#13;
, '°"' I had the church to myself and&#13;
ta ed to the tape recorder which I always&#13;
carry with me when on a trip. Tha t little&#13;
ny ha a wonderful memory and a month later, when we were back home I&#13;
played the tape ... and this is what I h~d&#13;
recorded. I will imply title it . _ .&#13;
TH E STA\'ECHURCH&#13;
Th ·e next thoughts are about&#13;
Churches . ..&#13;
Ruth and I have been in many&#13;
In our travels 'round the world.&#13;
Here we've met up with another&#13;
Form of reverent architecture&#13;
We ~re told it's called a "Slav~ Church"&#13;
For its boards all stand on end.&#13;
everly they're fabric ated ...&#13;
What ingeruous construction&#13;
Built to raise your eyes towa.rds. heaven,&#13;
Built to shed the winter's snows.&#13;
'ow thi old :orwegian lave Church&#13;
Brmgs nostalgic recollections&#13;
the places where we've worshipped,&#13;
the churches that we've seen.&#13;
Chri tian churches \\-ithout number&#13;
:01r1: Dam~, Westminster Abbey, '&#13;
\\ ashmgton s 'ational Cathedral&#13;
Chri t's birthplace in Bethlehem'.&#13;
A long cabin in Alaska&#13;
torefront Lutheran Ch~rch in Hong Ko&#13;
Denver's Red Rock Amphitheater ng,&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 9&#13;
November 23, 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOEil&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Bill Jacoby, JohnPotente&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
_ Photographers&#13;
STAFF&#13;
D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Arthur Gruhl, Walter Breach&#13;
Published weekly by the studen~ of the U~iversity_ of Wisco~inParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin, 531~- Ma1hng a~dr~s is Parks1de's Newscope&#13;
3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha. Business and editorial telephone number is 6Si&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
LETTERS to the Editor&#13;
To the Editors: Re: The letter of Louie Petts 6755808&#13;
USNRR, which appeared in Newscope,&#13;
Nov. 16. Congratulations on receiving your check&#13;
Nov. 6. Your success may be an exception&#13;
instead of the rule. Personally I haven't been so lucky.&#13;
When I checked with Student Records to&#13;
find out about my V.A. check I was informed&#13;
that my records had been submitted&#13;
on Oct. 19. On Friday, Nov. 13, I&#13;
went to the local V.A. office in the court&#13;
house. There I was informed that they had&#13;
called Milwaukee six (6) times that&#13;
morning for six Parkside vets who had not&#13;
received their checks. Finally they quit&#13;
making individual phone calls and began&#13;
to list the complaints, they were going to&#13;
make one call late in the day.&#13;
December is no joke. Two years ago&#13;
some vets got their first check two days&#13;
before Christmas.&#13;
The woman at the V.A. said that she&#13;
could not pinpoint the fault, but she said&#13;
she was going to ask the Milwaukee office&#13;
to investigate the matter. She also said&#13;
that she had heard that the Student&#13;
Records office had delayed submitting the&#13;
necessary forms so as to save time&#13;
correcting drops and transfers, but they were not supposed to do that.&#13;
Yours truly,&#13;
RA16720257&#13;
(Name withheld)&#13;
Where we went one Easter morn.&#13;
Christian Science Church in Boston&#13;
Salt Lake City's Mormon Temple '&#13;
Mexicana's Quadalupe, '&#13;
Riverside Church in New York.&#13;
Mi~sionary Church on Mauii&#13;
Chapel at United Nations '&#13;
CJ~e to ~ome Chicago T~mple,&#13;
Cluldhood s church on Christmas Eve.&#13;
The High Altar in St. Peter's&#13;
Made of gold and alabaster&#13;
Private chapels, tabernacl~&#13;
Prayer nooks in the cacaco~bs.&#13;
And the church where Albert Schweitzer&#13;
Often went to play the organ . . . What a privilege it was for&#13;
Me to play that organ, too!&#13;
~en th~re _were non-Christian Temples&#13;
W1!11. their d:fferent rules and cultures&#13;
Unified by One Creator '&#13;
But with Prophets of their own.&#13;
David's Tomb Room in Jerus'lem&#13;
The G~eat_ ~Jue Mosque in Istanb~l.&#13;
~e Ba Ha~ Wo~ld Faith in Haifa, · Hindu Shrines in Singapore.&#13;
Te~ples shelt'ring jeweled . Buddhas&#13;
Shinto ~brines for contemplation, • Many-tiered Chinese pagodas&#13;
WMat k~rudm in Bangkok, Thail~nd an in chooses - each hi • . sown.&#13;
So w~ stand before the altar&#13;
In this_ old Norwegian Stave Church&#13;
And with loving hearts we think f ,&#13;
Our own church and folks back h:me.&#13;
Dear Sir:&#13;
I agree completely with the letter&#13;
cen~ored Ke~ Konkol for his public~&#13;
of immaturity. Why Konkol's ·&#13;
deficiencies must be foisted upon C:::&#13;
s~dents- at our expense- is beyotrJ mt&#13;
His apparently unceasing efforts lo lotir&#13;
student and fa~ulty morale Certainly de&#13;
this campus little good.&#13;
In a recent column Konkol asserted&#13;
he was arrogant because he had uveci 21&#13;
years. Gee, what impressive credenliali&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
Sin&lt;:erely YGIII.&#13;
E.B. Tey,&#13;
In response to Mr. Petts (who &amp;aYellli&#13;
dubious pleasure of knowing his&#13;
number) whose letter appeared in llil&#13;
column, I would like to get a few fn&#13;
straight.&#13;
First, I'm sorry if I misplaced the blami&#13;
of holding up veteran's paperwork to&#13;
wrong office - Student Affairs instead fl&#13;
Student Records - the former ns&#13;
office I was directed to ask quelia&#13;
concerning V.A. benefits.&#13;
Second1 I thank him for his sd&#13;
approach to the problem of finding out lloJ&#13;
the paperwork is handled, both here ind&#13;
the V.A.&#13;
Third, I want to point out that al~&#13;
he got his check on the 6th of Novemhlr&#13;
most of the vets I've talked to got&#13;
around the 13th, midway between Octtk&#13;
and December. As I said before the&#13;
V.A. Office told me it would take atxMi a&#13;
month.&#13;
Although I don't know the majonty fl&#13;
veteran's marital status, I do kno&#13;
there are some of us who are mamit.&#13;
which means financial hardship not&#13;
for ourselves, but for our families&#13;
Another point is that the only time OIi"&#13;
swning part of the forms to be sm! 1&#13;
looking up the number of credits&#13;
taken and addressing the eD\'tkf5&#13;
Granted, for one person this mighl&#13;
quite a while. If so she should ha1e&#13;
when so many people depend Oil&#13;
money.&#13;
And last of all I'd like to clue l&#13;
Louie, Ted and i aren't in the halit&#13;
crying, just airing a view that mii;t rl&#13;
vets we know support. It's possible~&#13;
so well off finaancially that yuu ~oo 1&#13;
an unneccessary period of ~~itin&amp;-&#13;
most of us aren't in that pos1llon Hank&#13;
Sti!ID&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing &#13;
THORN&#13;
International Dictionary - Unabridged&#13;
de~mes It a~: "a statement or represen.&#13;
tation r,ubhshed withoot just cause or&#13;
excuse. This representation should also&#13;
have an element of falsehood. O.K.. Fran.&#13;
~ho have I told unwarranted lieS about?&#13;
Speak. me no generalities. speak me&#13;
specifics. I and most people at this&#13;
umvers.'ty are intellectually,&#13;
academically, and emotionally fit to&#13;
~ecogruze something wrong when they see&#13;
It. Also, believe it or not, most of tlie&#13;
student~ and all of the faculty at this&#13;
Univer-sity do pay taxes. Next time yoo&#13;
decide to cut somebody down get yoor&#13;
facts straight before you start. However,&#13;
once again, I compliment you on baying&#13;
the courage to sign your name to your&#13;
convictions· Well done.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
An independent poll was conducted last&#13;
week concerning reader reaction to Thorn.&#13;
It was independent since it was conducted&#13;
by a person not on the staff and personally&#13;
antagonistic to my own column. Twentyfive&#13;
students and 7 faculty were in favor of&#13;
Thorn. 22.students and 5 faculty thought it&#13;
could be improved (usually these&#13;
suggestions cancelled each other out.),&#13;
and 61 students had no opinion!&#13;
+ +.+&#13;
Keep those cards and letters coming in.&#13;
How are we going to know what you want&#13;
to see unless you write and let us know.&#13;
Don't leave it to the other guy, he's as&#13;
apathetic as you used to be. Any comments&#13;
concerning Thorn should be addressed to&#13;
me so that they might be handled more&#13;
efficiently and answered in the same issue&#13;
ra~her than subsequent ones.&#13;
"&#13;
o&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
..&#13;
'C&#13;
J.T.&#13;
I smiled at you&#13;
and discovered life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the times repeated,&#13;
bringing hack the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world.&#13;
And although I found the universe&#13;
a vise upon the marrow of my soul,&#13;
I followed you,&#13;
seeking life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
. and the times repea ted,&#13;
bringing hacl\ the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world.&#13;
My touch reached. implored.&#13;
could you understand the universe&#13;
of me&#13;
the sea of darkness and bright suns&#13;
raging all around you&#13;
grasping at life anew.&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the limes repeated&#13;
bringing back the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world? .&#13;
Somehow, though I clung (crying, "I want you! "seeking a hfeanew)&#13;
your person stung the force&#13;
of my life • I&#13;
you didn't know (you can't! you couldn t.)&#13;
Do you even want to know&#13;
the Wliverse of me,&#13;
this sea of darkness&#13;
and bright suns&#13;
raging all around you&#13;
grasping life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the limes repeated&#13;
bringing hack the era&#13;
when the Sun ruled the&#13;
world?&#13;
But you took my gold and made it tinselsaw&#13;
the beautiful ocean I offered and&#13;
made it a mud puddle ...&#13;
nes For Recognition&#13;
W•• hlngt .... D.C. - (I.P) - In one of the&#13;
first court cases to deal with the&#13;
procedural rights of political .tudent&#13;
organizations attempting to gain official&#13;
recognition. a U.S. District Court judge in&#13;
Connecticut has ordered Central Cooneclicut&#13;
State College to hold a hearing on&#13;
whether to recognize a local chapter of the&#13;
Students for a Democratic Society.&#13;
The chapter complied with college&#13;
procedures in applying for recognition.&#13;
and stated that the local group did not&#13;
follow dictates from any national&#13;
organization.&#13;
The dean of students. three faculty and&#13;
four students voted to recommend that the&#13;
administration grant recognition.&#13;
Nevertheless. President Don James&#13;
denied recognition on the grounds that in&#13;
his view the aims of the national SDS. and&#13;
the charter of the CoUege were incompatible.&#13;
The court's decision concluded that no&#13;
group is enlilled per se to recognition. and&#13;
did not deny the president's authority to&#13;
refuse an application.&#13;
It ruled, however. that once a school&#13;
allows student groups to organize and&#13;
grants recognition to them, it must apply&#13;
constitutional safeguards to aUgroups that&#13;
seek recognition process and a fair application&#13;
of these standards to all groups.&#13;
Suits brought by students against public&#13;
coUege administrators. listed by the&#13;
American Association of State Colleges&#13;
and Universities, include those that claim&#13;
the administration was too lax with&#13;
dissenters as well as those that argue&#13;
unduly harsh measures were used against&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
£~&#13;
dissenters.&#13;
Students and parents 01 students .t OhIO&#13;
Slate University sought injunctions&#13;
agamst a p-ofessor. several teach1f~&#13;
assistants. and four students'&#13;
organizations whom they clerm led activities&#13;
which resulted m dasruption on&#13;
campus&#13;
The Franklin Counly court granled an&#13;
injunclion against specified distrupuve&#13;
action by most of 1he mdivlduals 1O\'oIved.&#13;
but did not enjoin three of Ihe student&#13;
organizations because of legal&#13;
techrucalihes involved&#13;
SwuupiJe gL,ri.Jb&#13;
&amp;' (jru.nlwweJ&#13;
PARTS&#13;
The letterS to' the editors were extionally&#13;
good last week as they usual1y&#13;
cep Iwas especially happy to see the one :;e'"Name withheld by request" who&#13;
tated some things that I have heen trying&#13;
s rd to do all the time. that we do have.&#13;
hary good Psyc. teachers at this school&#13;
~en though the whole department has&#13;
beengiven a bad name by a few students&#13;
whOrao into a great deal of difficulty with&#13;
certain mstructors. However, response&#13;
!rom individual students in naming our&#13;
competent instructors IS woefully slow.&#13;
'\bey seem more inclined to respond to&#13;
... tructors on the other side of the scale.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
There was another letter printed&#13;
alongside my last column that was also&#13;
very good from Fran Jaeschke. She must&#13;
be commended on her lack of apathy. I&#13;
found her metaphor "crown of thorns"&#13;
very appropriate if she meant that as&#13;
.symbolicof the sins of the administra tion&#13;
falling on the heads of faculty and&#13;
slllOOnts. If Mrs. -Jaeseke thinks the&#13;
University audience deserves 'better',&#13;
whydoesn't she write her own column. If&#13;
Mrs. Jaeschke was more than a casual&#13;
reader of this publication she would not&#13;
havewrilten her fourth paragraph. But for&#13;
the inattentive who missed the same article&#13;
that Fran did. I suggest you find a&#13;
copy of the October 26 issue which explained&#13;
exactly that I write only what&#13;
peopleImeet during the week would like&#13;
to see in the next issue, what they believe, I&#13;
would also suggest that Mrs. Jaeschke&#13;
look up the definition of 'Iibel' in the dietionarv&#13;
as I did. Webster's Third New&#13;
------&#13;
_,"-,lOll •&#13;
VI .1Id ftAU IlUlISlOCl&#13;
:SOZ1 ·15TH.T&#13;
FRUlT BASKETS ANn CANDY&#13;
Delivu ACTOlI$ Town or ~ lhe World&#13;
«37· :nnd Av.nu.&#13;
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e&#13;
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as1ers&#13;
Supper Club&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
wit+. Almondine Sauce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIM.E RIB&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Faculty&#13;
CrHllllt Gemololilt-Ce:rtlhed D" .. OII,olol"'&#13;
(Must Show 1.0.)&#13;
Fairtrade Y~gg(JnA,&#13;
excepted DIAMOND CONSULTANTS&#13;
1040&#13;
Sheridan Rd.&#13;
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Ph. 654·1375&#13;
WATCHU=,CU'AII DIrT. J&#13;
-- - _--.. w.tcllft - k_lry "J__ - ,,-... D~",", Sf" ....&#13;
."'_ . _ ymplc:tl' .lI:p."&#13;
C-w_I ... Tl_ Dept&#13;
wc-I_ ,_. Dt~f"""&#13;
---CHIN.-=---] __.- _...,...--... _.-...........&#13;
IIIDAl&#13;
lECISTU&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
HEAVIED-oUT&#13;
Playing games&#13;
with my mind&#13;
searching to find&#13;
the perfect response&#13;
to the groping life&#13;
in which I am myself.&#13;
I decide&#13;
and can go no longer&#13;
hide&#13;
the burning heart&#13;
on my face&#13;
and your strength gives it&#13;
warmth&#13;
and power to stand&#13;
amidst&#13;
the crumbling&#13;
walls.&#13;
Every road&#13;
upon which&#13;
I walk&#13;
Love finds me&#13;
and makes me&#13;
suffer!&#13;
To be friends with love&#13;
is a demanding life&#13;
full of suffering -&#13;
Although I undergo&#13;
this passion,&#13;
Somehow, someway&#13;
I found my peace.&#13;
_ and I'm free!&#13;
I'm Free!&#13;
I'm free at last!&#13;
o Freedom, let me be;&#13;
o Freedom, let me love!&#13;
Let me fr the world!&#13;
THORN&#13;
pART 8&#13;
The letters to the editors were extionallY&#13;
good last week as they usually&#13;
cep 1 was especially happy to see the one&#13;
are. "Name withheld by request" who&#13;
b~ted some things that I have been trying&#13;
~ d to do all the time, that we do have . ~ good Psyc. teachers at this school&#13;
~~en though the whole department has&#13;
been given a bad name by a few studei:its&#13;
who ran into a great deal of difficulty with&#13;
certain instructors. However, response&#13;
from individual students in naming our&#13;
mpetent instructors is woefully slow.&#13;
;ey seem more inclined to respond to&#13;
mstructors on the other side of the scale.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
There was another letter printed&#13;
alongside my last column that was also&#13;
very good from Fran Jaeschke. She must&#13;
be commended on her lack of apathy. I&#13;
found her metaphor "crown of thorns"&#13;
very appropriate if she meant that as&#13;
·symbolic of the sins of the administration&#13;
falling on the heads of faculty and&#13;
students. If Mrs. Jaescke thinks the&#13;
University audience deserves 'better',&#13;
why doesn't she write her own column. If&#13;
Mrs. Jaeschke was more than a casual&#13;
reader of this publication she would not&#13;
have written her fourth paragraph. But for&#13;
the inattentive who missed the same article&#13;
that Fran did, I suggest you find a&#13;
copy of the October 26 issue which explained&#13;
exactly that I write only what&#13;
people I meet d~ring the week wou~d like&#13;
to see in the next issue, what they believe. I&#13;
would also suggest that Mrs. Jaeschke&#13;
Jook up the definition of 'libel' in the dictionary&#13;
as I did. Webster's Third New&#13;
I smiled at you&#13;
Internat~onal Dictionary • Unabridged&#13;
de~nes it as: "a statement or representation&#13;
F,bli~hed without just cause or excuse. This representation should also&#13;
have an element of falsehood. O.K., Fran&#13;
~ho have I told unwarranted lies about?&#13;
Spea_k_ me ·no generalities, speak me&#13;
s~c1f1c~. I and most people at this&#13;
umvers_ity are intellectually,&#13;
acader~ucally, and emotionally fit to&#13;
~ecogruze something wrong when they see&#13;
it. Also, believe it or not, most of Uie&#13;
students and all of the faculty at this&#13;
University do pay taxes. Next time you&#13;
decide to cut somebody down get your&#13;
facts straight before you start. However, once again, I compliment you on having&#13;
the courage to sign your name to your convictions - Well done.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
An independent poll was conducted last&#13;
week concerning reader reaction to Thorn.&#13;
It was independent since it was conducted&#13;
by a person not on the staff and personally&#13;
antagonistic to my own column. Twentyfive&#13;
students and 7 faculty were in favor of&#13;
Thorn, 22 .students and 5 faculty thought it&#13;
could be improved ( usually these&#13;
suggestions cancelled each other out.),&#13;
and 61 students had no opinion!&#13;
+ +.+&#13;
Keep those cards and letters corning in. How are we going to know what you want&#13;
to see unless you write and let us know.&#13;
Don't leave it to the other guy, he's as&#13;
apathetic as you used to be. Any comments&#13;
concerning Thorn should be addressed to&#13;
me so that they might be handled more&#13;
efficiently and answered in the same issue&#13;
rather than subsequent ones.&#13;
,, J.T.&#13;
0&#13;
I&#13;
and discovered life anew,&#13;
.. -&#13;
~&#13;
IC&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the times repeated,&#13;
bringing back the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world.&#13;
And although I found the universe&#13;
a vise upon the marrow of my soul,&#13;
I followed you,&#13;
seeking life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the times repeated,&#13;
bringing ba~ the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world.&#13;
My touch reached, implored,&#13;
could you understand the universe&#13;
of me the sea of darkness and bright suns&#13;
raging all around you&#13;
grasping at life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the times repeated&#13;
bringing back the era when&#13;
the Sun ruled the world'? . . Somehow, though I clung (crying, "I want you!" seeking a hfe anew)&#13;
your person stung the force&#13;
of my life , 1&#13;
you didn't know (you can't! you couldn t.)&#13;
Do you even want to know&#13;
the universe of me,&#13;
this sea of darkness&#13;
and bright suns raging all around you&#13;
grasping life anew,&#13;
Mellow and sweet&#13;
and the times repeated&#13;
bringing back the era when the Sun ruled the&#13;
world'?&#13;
But you took my gold and made it tinsel - saw the beautiful ocean I offered and&#13;
made it a mud puddle · · ·&#13;
HEAVIED-OUT&#13;
Playing games&#13;
Every road&#13;
upon which&#13;
I walk&#13;
Love finds me with my mind&#13;
searching to find&#13;
the perfect response&#13;
to the groping life&#13;
in which I am myself.&#13;
I decide&#13;
and can go no longer&#13;
hide&#13;
the burning heart&#13;
on my face&#13;
and your strength gives it&#13;
warmth&#13;
and power to stand&#13;
amidst&#13;
the crumbling&#13;
walls.&#13;
and makes me&#13;
suffer!&#13;
To be friends with Jove&#13;
is a demanding life&#13;
full of suffering -&#13;
Although I undergo&#13;
this passion,&#13;
Somehow, someway&#13;
I found my peace,&#13;
and I'm free!&#13;
I'm Free!&#13;
I'm free at last!&#13;
o Freedom, Jet me be;&#13;
o Freedom, let me love!&#13;
Let me fr the world!&#13;
Wa hington. D.C. - ( I.Pl - In one of the&#13;
first court ca e to deal with the&#13;
procedural rights or political tudent&#13;
organiz.ations attempting to gain official&#13;
recognition, a U S. District Court judge in&#13;
Connecticut has ordered Central Connecticut&#13;
State College to hold a hearing on whether to recognize a local chapter of the&#13;
Students for a Democratic Society. The chapter complied \\ith college&#13;
procedures in applying for recognition. and stated that the local group did not&#13;
follow dictates from any national&#13;
organiz.ation.&#13;
The dean of students, three faculty and&#13;
four students voted to recommend that the&#13;
administration grant recognition .&#13;
Nevertheless. President Don James&#13;
denied recognition on the grc.unds that m&#13;
his view the aims of the national D and&#13;
the charter of the College were incompatible.&#13;
&#13;
The court's decision concluded that no&#13;
group is entitled per se lo recognition, and&#13;
did not deny the presid nt's authority to&#13;
refuse an application. It ruled, however, that once a chool&#13;
allows student groups to organize and&#13;
grants recognition to them, it must apply&#13;
constitutional safeguards to all groups that&#13;
seek recognition process and a fair air&#13;
plication of these standards to all group .&#13;
Suits brought by students aga inst public&#13;
college administrators listed by the&#13;
American Association or tale Colleges&#13;
apd Universities, include those that claim&#13;
the administration was too Jax with&#13;
dissenters as well as tho e that argue&#13;
unduly harsh measures were u ed against&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
£~ FRUIT BASKETS ANil CANDY&#13;
Deliver A""* Town or ""-th« Worid&#13;
campu&#13;
Toe Franklin ount · court r ntcd n inJunction gains! ified d trupt1v&#13;
action by m _t of the individ im·ol\'cd,&#13;
but did not enjoin 1hr of th tu t&#13;
or anization. bl.'cau or le I&#13;
technfcalitie in\'Ol\'l'd&#13;
SumupiJe gforuts&#13;
&amp; (j,eoJz.owe.s&#13;
3021 • 7,TH ST&#13;
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4437 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Free Delit·ery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
3s1ers 8040&#13;
Sheridon Rd. . -&#13;
DIA.MOHD CONSULTANTS&#13;
Supper Club Ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDAREO SNAPPER&#13;
with Almondine Souce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIM.E RIB&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
WATCHlS=:J~llt Dll'T. j&#13;
..... . A ~ Wit, ti - '""''" 111--• ._,,.. D -4 Sett'°'t • .,... • .......,. C• pktr ~p,u car.-.. -. • • 'f't Orpt&#13;
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IIIOAL&#13;
UGISTU&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Facult Y Gndo,e Gemol cht,Cut1f1cd 0,1111on1olo ilt&#13;
(Must Show 1.0.)&#13;
Fairtrade y~llSo-ru excepted It does iNh a d,fferenc• whre rou sltopf &#13;
From Other Campuses&#13;
Grand Forks, N D - (I.P.) - Two&#13;
national magazines, Readers Digest and&#13;
The AUantic lonthly, bave published&#13;
artkles praising errorts or the University&#13;
of 'orth Dakota New School of Behavioral&#13;
tudles in Education to remodel&#13;
elern ntary school education in the state&#13;
along informal lin&#13;
Th megann Ieeture articles based&#13;
on a thrff-and·a-ball·year study of the&#13;
education of educators, commissioned by&#13;
the arnegie Corporahon Cbarles&#13;
,'berm n, • member of Fortune&#13;
m saIl . rei of editors, and hi wife,&#13;
Arl oe, conducted the tudy and each&#13;
uthoro&lt;! on or the erucl&#13;
+ + +&#13;
~th ny. W Va - II p) - tudent&#13;
tloard of cverne-s offiCIals l\OIIi bave&#13;
ofh pa a'·allabl. ,n the Bethany&#13;
OIl r mbl t Administration bu,ldlng&#13;
l'OUr lncrt"a ent 1 on shared&#13;
de lon·m k,n by tall and students."&#13;
Rubert nderoo. 'ii Pres'dent and&#13;
t n 01 • tud~ts. td In an lOt rvitlA' He&#13;
id .h, mo heralds the decade's&#13;
,wut hll lrmd m tudent abllll1es, in·&#13;
h-n" h nt·...I 4tnd con equ ot new&#13;
tllr linn u chool per onnet&#13;
"' It".J h&gt;R)!&#13;
lud,-" enter the decade of the&#13;
un . I 1 ot reaction is their response to&#13;
thl g or In tantaneou com·&#13;
munlcatlon ,'. 0 an andercox said&#13;
"R&lt;lp,d new repor\lng of developments IS&#13;
compaN~ b)' Immediate ac:tiOft from&#13;
yOung peopl&#13;
"Tr dil,QruIlly. the ''''ory tOllier had&#13;
bUilt 10 pr ur s for long·calrn&#13;
It r loon and pondering ol,mpltcations&#13;
01 , Tho&lt;Cht pr1!Ceded action '0\Ii&#13;
luden. wanl 10 rno\ quickly in a heated&#13;
Ilu lion on campu3 or elsewhere in the&#13;
nation or world. because they feel they are&#13;
a vital part of the solution. . . .&#13;
"When lhere is an explosive Situation,&#13;
educators need to have more speedy&#13;
dialogue with students 10 discuss problems&#13;
01 concern and ways to make their parueular&#13;
contrtbetlcn. The objective is not to&#13;
talk students out of doing something; but&#13;
the conversations do have the benefiCial&#13;
effecl many times of helping stuQents see&#13;
that precipitate decisions and actions are&#13;
not their most effective means of communicating&#13;
their interest and making ~eir&#13;
particular contributions to resolVIng&#13;
problems."&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Hayward, Calif. - (I.PJ - Initiation of&#13;
a new program at California Stale College.&#13;
Hayward, to aid young drug abusers was&#13;
announced recently by President Ellis E.&#13;
McCune.&#13;
He said a federal contract for $260.800&#13;
bas been awarded to the Center for Drug&#13;
Informaloon, Research and Education at&#13;
the college by the National Institute of&#13;
Mental Health. The contract provides&#13;
funds ror IS one- and two-week training&#13;
cycles planned for the year's dw-ation.&#13;
The training will vary in intensity, accordmg&#13;
to the category of the trainee: The&#13;
2~ professional and para-profess,onal&#13;
personnel to be trained will get a more&#13;
mtensi ..·e and in depth course, and wIll go&#13;
to angencies for their field experi~nce&#13;
which are in bospital or clinical settIngs.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
salt Lake City. Utah - (J.P.) -&#13;
Asserting that the University of Utah can,&#13;
in no way, impose censorship or prior&#13;
restraint upon speakers. Alfred C. Emery,&#13;
proressor of law and chairman of the&#13;
President's Commission on Speaker&#13;
Policy, recently released the comPseudo&#13;
Event Of The Week&#13;
WASHINGTON &lt;CPS) - The selective&#13;
Sl......'ce ystem has qUleUy dropped a pI",!&#13;
10 . t up "orientation camps" for men&#13;
grant('(l Consclenl1OUS obJe&lt;:tOl"status who&#13;
do not ht mto any of the standard alternatJve&#13;
""ark . "ignmenls&#13;
In a recent inlen-lew. National Director&#13;
CUrti W Tarr. the rormer president of&#13;
La'l,l,'rtnce ni"'erslty in Appleton,&#13;
Wlsconsin informally discussed his&#13;
(oehngs about the ConSCIentious Objector&#13;
Alternative Sen'ice s.ituation. currently&#13;
pending upreme Court decisions, and the&#13;
new image of the Selective Service&#13;
ytem&#13;
On lhe S&lt;H:alled "o.-ientation camps,"&#13;
Tarr explamed that a study group headed&#13;
by the Deputy Publtc Information Ollicer&#13;
ror the ) tern had corne up with the idea&#13;
01 brlngmg together men who would not&#13;
accepl the k'nd 01 alternative service job&#13;
wluch the .. local boards wanted to gi ...e&#13;
them&#13;
The purpose of these "orientation&#13;
camps" would be to help "adjust" the&#13;
rt"Calcltranls toexi Ung JOb openings, or to&#13;
pro ..·tde special work ror them.&#13;
The Idea never got too rar, though.&#13;
'a'ional Headquarters decided to hold a&#13;
conference and let some of the national&#13;
COI\SC1t'1!l1ouobjector oriented groups in&#13;
on the ,dea and see how they would nact.&#13;
Amo~ the organuations which partiCipated&#13;
10 the mid-October Washington&#13;
meet,ng were the National Interreligious&#13;
....'ce Board for Consc,entious ObJ"Ctors&#13;
the Central CommIttee for Contentious&#13;
Objectors, and the American&#13;
Froerods Ser""ce Committee. They reacted&#13;
ry badly&#13;
The Idea sounded 100 much like the old&#13;
"work camps" of World War n. men who&#13;
opposed fighting the war were auowed to&#13;
alay in what amounted to concentration&#13;
eamps. as long as they paid their ""'"&#13;
room and board&#13;
In the faclsof this unexpected opposition&#13;
from wbat offic:Jals lerm ··C. O.&#13;
agencies" Ihe planners at national&#13;
headquartera. II described by Tarr. "put&#13;
the Idea to bed and let it die in its sleep."&#13;
So the idea of bnrcinC everybody to a&#13;
camp to counsel them Is dead, though a&#13;
proposal to counsel men OIl an individual&#13;
"SOCial worker" basis ia aWl ali ...e.&#13;
(lsienaillly the plan WII flnt thought up&#13;
with the sole inlent of heIplng men who&#13;
could not flfid CO worll. Men who are&#13;
granted CO status can sometimes gain the&#13;
approval of their local board to perform&#13;
alternative service at an acency of their&#13;
own t'booIing. (n many cases however. the&#13;
local DOIrd tries _to be punitive by arbitrarily&#13;
assigning the men to some low&#13;
paying. disagreeable job. and the man&#13;
balks. If no compromise can be worked&#13;
out, the present practice is to call in an&#13;
arbitrator from State Selective Service&#13;
Headquarters. who of len winds up issuing&#13;
a final ultimatum. The proposed plan&#13;
wwld provide a tidy "out" in cases which&#13;
have reached an impasse, and yet avoid&#13;
the sticky appearance of coercion.&#13;
It was a nice idea while lliasted But it&#13;
ran up against an image problem - the&#13;
image of manipulative social engineering.&#13;
And if lbere is anything lbe present-day&#13;
managers of the draft system are conscious&#13;
of, its their image.&#13;
They very proudiy point to the lottery&#13;
selection system, the elimination of&#13;
blatant SOCial engineering in the form of&#13;
job deferments. and the request that&#13;
Congress give the President aulbority to&#13;
revoke undergradua le student&#13;
deferments as examples of the policy of&#13;
"channeling" which former Director Gen.&#13;
Lewis B. Hersey once caued, "One of lbe&#13;
major products of the selecti ...e Service&#13;
Classification process."&#13;
Indeed. very few of the blatantly&#13;
repressive polic:Jes wbich guided General&#13;
Hersey'S 3()-.year administration of the&#13;
draft find many supporters around&#13;
national headquarters bad less than 200&#13;
employees) the national director sets the&#13;
tone for the agency."&#13;
Tarr was asked about this shift if. the&#13;
agency's image and the analysis put&#13;
forward by some draft counseling&#13;
organizations tbat the increased effort at&#13;
image-building is mosUy designed to buy&#13;
the system some time by defusing public&#13;
indignalidh in lbe coming two or three&#13;
years while the Nixon administration&#13;
moves towards its goal 01 a "zero draft."&#13;
He said, "No, I believe it is very true&#13;
that the measures we ha ...e laken bave&#13;
10000eredour prome somewbat, but I would&#13;
ba ...e wanted to do the same things if I had&#13;
been director five years ago. II&#13;
Whatever the motivation, it's clear that&#13;
Tarr himself keeps a eloser ear to public&#13;
opinion than did his predecessor.&#13;
The CO "orientation camp" caper is an&#13;
example 01 that. It grew of a study of what&#13;
to do with the grOlliing number of COS - a&#13;
study headed by a fresh, new public&#13;
relations man who was recently a Marine&#13;
colonel. When itlool&lt;ed like the plan, which&#13;
system officials slill feel has validity.&#13;
woold run lOto some controversy, it was&#13;
dropped,&#13;
- ous report - a simple. 4-&#13;
misSion'S unamm ff 'ng the Conpage&#13;
statement. rea u;::uthe firSt and&#13;
stitutional gua:~~:ls and recognizing&#13;
fourteenth amel..... •&#13;
boundaries established by I~W. "&#13;
. the report the commISSIon&#13;
In Jfte'::'~g present sp;..ker policy and.&#13;
exerrnn d b law students on court&#13;
hada study n;.~g~r~ing Constitutional&#13;
decl~lOns th limit the power of a&#13;
prOVISIOns as ey&#13;
university to control speakers. ker&#13;
The commission also exammed. spe3U S&#13;
Iicies of a number of major .,&#13;
l::.iversilies. held ed0penr ~ea[':;,~s 1'::;;&#13;
mpus and review a IS 0 .&#13;
:Oakers who have appeared on campus m&#13;
the last five years, . .. M&#13;
"The present University policy, r.&#13;
id "has permitted some con- Emery sal • ed b&#13;
fusioo between speakers spoDSO! . Y&#13;
official University groups using Umve.rsltt&#13;
y&#13;
funds d those sponsored by pnva e&#13;
• an·th their own. funds who are&#13;
groups WI iliti permitted to use University fac I es.&#13;
"While both groups may invite speakers&#13;
the nature of the sponsorship should be&#13;
made clear," the report continues. .&#13;
"Only those commillees eslabltshed&#13;
IIDder University policies and procedu~es&#13;
to select any invile speakers and for which&#13;
University funds .,.. have been&#13;
budgeted may in.,.;te speakers to :,ppear at&#13;
the University under the aegIs of the&#13;
University and use the name of. !he&#13;
University in the invitations, advertlsmg&#13;
and program," the report continues.&#13;
• WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHo&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 ·a.m. till 11 p.m. ida"&#13;
,COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-9747&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
~ORTH. &amp; SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
tnic.Q,~ &amp;1"1. Q,t i~&#13;
be~t .... Fri. "e¥. 0\1&#13;
M4~('td tic.ld~ .Mo&#13;
A~\"lIt cleo' ... ·• !.oo&#13;
at. S1cu'td,nQ Co.&#13;
107 £4'" 'b't. J&#13;
RClc.ine.&#13;
8k..tIt£"f:¥:mI£;iM;\l. rDj·. ,q)£_- '1j:~~-~--- fA '\.Ji'VLi' U\&amp;'JfHkJt ...l.JUIK'Jle!Y"" !J«'(.&#13;
NATURE'S CH01CES~ PAOOU~~S PROVIDE ITS PRIZED FL.......OR&#13;
ONLY THE FINEST OF HOPS AND GR"IN5 ....RE USED&#13;
cP/uIid ~:Jjf!IJt in 1893&#13;
From Oiher Campuses&#13;
nation or world. because they feel they are&#13;
a \'ital part of the solution. . . "When there is an explosive situation,&#13;
educators need to have more speedy ·a1ogue ilh tudent to discuss pr~blems&#13;
ol concern and ways to make their particular&#13;
contribution The objective is not to&#13;
t.al tudent out of doing omething, ~ut&#13;
th conversations do have the beneficial&#13;
effect many times of helping stw;lents see&#13;
that precipitate deci ions and actions are&#13;
not th ·r most effective means of communicating&#13;
their interest and making ~eir&#13;
particular contributions to resolving&#13;
probl m ,"&#13;
+ -t&#13;
H yw rd, Calif. - (1.P , - Initiation of&#13;
a new pr ram at California State College,&#13;
H .,.. rd to aid young drug abusers was&#13;
nnounced recent!) by Pre ident Ellis E.&#13;
tcQme&#13;
He id a federal contract for $260,800&#13;
n awarded to the Center for Drug&#13;
Information, Research and Educ~tion at&#13;
1hc colleg by the , ·ational Institute of&#13;
ental Health. The contract provides&#13;
fu for 15 one- and two-week training&#13;
cycl planned for the year·~ dur~tion. Th training ...... n vary in intensity. acrdin&#13;
to the category of the trainee. The&#13;
2 prof ional and para-professional&#13;
rsonncl to be trained will get a more&#13;
int i\'e and in depth course. and will go&#13;
to end for their field experience&#13;
hich are in ho pital or clinical settings.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
lt La e City, tah - &lt;I.P.) -&#13;
rtin that the University of Utah can,&#13;
in no ,1,ay, un censorship or prior&#13;
'traint upon peakers, Alfred C. Emery,&#13;
prof r of law and chairman of the&#13;
Pre 1dent' Commis ion on Speaker&#13;
Policy. recently released the comPseudo&#13;
Event Of The Week&#13;
local ooard trie; . to be punitive by arbitrarily&#13;
assigning the men to some low&#13;
paying, disagreeable job, and the man&#13;
balk . If no compromise can be worked&#13;
out, the present pr-actice is to call in an&#13;
arbitrator from State Selective Service&#13;
Headquarters, who often winds up issuing&#13;
a final ultimatum. The proposed plan&#13;
would provide a tidy "out" in cases which&#13;
have reached an impasse, and yet avoid&#13;
the sticky appearance of coercion.&#13;
It was a nice idea while it lasted. But it&#13;
ran up again.5t an image problem - the&#13;
image of manipulative social engineering.&#13;
And if there is anything the present-day&#13;
managers of the draft system are conscious&#13;
of. its their image.&#13;
They very proudly point to the lottery&#13;
election system, the elimina tion of&#13;
blatant SOCJal engineering in the form of&#13;
job deferments, and the request that&#13;
Congress give the President authority to&#13;
revoke undergraduate student&#13;
deferments as examples of the policy of&#13;
"channeling'' which former Director Gen.&#13;
1,ew· B. Hersey once called, "One of the&#13;
major products of the Selective Service&#13;
C1a ification process."&#13;
Indeed, very few of the blatantly&#13;
repressive policies which guided General&#13;
Hersey's 30-year administration of the&#13;
draft find many supporters around&#13;
national headquarters had less than 200&#13;
employees) the national director sets the&#13;
tone for the agency."&#13;
Tarr was a ked about this shift in the&#13;
agency's image and the analysis put&#13;
forward by some dra ft counseling&#13;
organizations that the increased effort a t&#13;
image-building is mostly designed to buy&#13;
the ystem ome time by defusing public&#13;
indignatid'n in the coming two or three&#13;
years while the , ixon administration&#13;
moves towards its goal of a " zero draft."&#13;
He said, " 'o, 1 believe it is very true&#13;
that the measures we have taken have&#13;
lowered our profile somewhat, but I would&#13;
have wanted lo do the same things if I had&#13;
been director five years ago."&#13;
Whatever the motivation, it's clear that&#13;
Tarr himself keeps a closer ear to public&#13;
opinion than did his predecessor.&#13;
The CO "orientation camp" caper is an&#13;
example of that. It grew of a study of what&#13;
lo do with the growing number of COs - a&#13;
b.Jdy headed by a fresh, new public&#13;
relations man who was recently a Marine&#13;
colonel. When it looked like the plan, which&#13;
system off!cials still feel has validity,&#13;
would run into some controversy, it was dropped.&#13;
. us report - a simple, 4-&#13;
mission's unanuno ffirming the Conpage&#13;
statement . rea f the first and&#13;
·tuti nal guarantees o . . sti o dments and recogmzing&#13;
f Urteenth amen , 0 · blished by law.&#13;
boundanes _estathe report the commission&#13;
In ~e~~g present s~ker policy and . examm d b law students on court&#13;
had_a ~tudy n;.:g:r~ing Constitutional&#13;
decisions li ·t the power of a provisions as they mi · ersi·ty to control speakers. univ · ed speaker The commission also examm . U S&#13;
licies of a number of maJ~r . .&#13;
~iversities, h~ldedopenli ~e:r~!s 1: campus and review a s . speakers who have appeared on campus m&#13;
the last five years. . . . " Mr "The present Umversity policy, · 'd " has permitted some con- Emery sai • ed b&#13;
fusion between speakers sponso_r . Y&#13;
official University groups using Umve_rsitty&#13;
funds, and those sponsored by pnva e 'th their own funds who are groups W1 il'ti ·tted lo use University fac i es. perm1 · ·te kers "While both groups may mvi spea&#13;
the nature of the sponsorship should be&#13;
made clear," the report continues ..&#13;
"Only those committees established&#13;
W1der University policies and procedu:es&#13;
to select any invite speakers and for which&#13;
University funds . · · · have been&#13;
budgeted may invite speakers lo ~ppear at&#13;
the University under the aegis of the&#13;
University and use the name of. ~e&#13;
University in the invitations, 9:dvertismg&#13;
and program," the report continues.&#13;
St. S1&lt;1 ndi nQ Co.&#13;
101 LI"' ~. J&#13;
Re1eine&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 day,&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-97 47&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NORTH &amp; SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
t\iitG.f &amp;\ue, °'t ,t~ be~t. . . . Fri. Mft, A.l&#13;
M-4o.1\(td titld~ ~-50&#13;
At ~t dooY . · · · • '5.00&#13;
~ tt«tfJI\~~i!NJ\L:f'a&amp;t:BGa.J&lt;i!fon 1tut, NATURE'S CHOICEST PRO'OUCTS PROVIDE ITS PRIZED FLAVOR&#13;
ONLY THE FINEST OF HOPS ANO GRAINS ARE USED&#13;
~ at//mouraf/Jmt m 189.3 &#13;
Koc~ Joins Parkside&#13;
Coach ing Staff&#13;
Jim Koch is the newest and the youngest Front Row left to right: Jan Hennes,&#13;
member of the Parkside coaching staff. He Cris V1akakis, Nancy Michals, Kathy&#13;
is the head wrestling coach, director of Doherty,NancyKonecny, Carla Ricciardi.&#13;
intramurals, and an instructor in physical Second row: Hugh Gately, Steve&#13;
education. Just a year ago the young Lamont, Ken Martins, Bob Clarke, Gary&#13;
bachelor completed work on his Master of Vincent, Jeff Jenkins, Gene Fox, Bill&#13;
Science degree at South Dakota State Berkstein, Tom Beyer, Paul Paricka.&#13;
University. While at SDSU Koch was the&#13;
assistant wrestling coach and assistant teresting season.&#13;
intramural director. He also did his uo- Coach Koch, what are the Mat Maids?&#13;
dergraduate work at South Dakota State That is a pretty easy question. The Mat&#13;
where he graduated with honors majoring Maids are a group of very attractive girls&#13;
in physical education and mathmatics. His who are interested in promoting the sport&#13;
senior year he captained the South Dakota of wrestling. Last year at South Dakota&#13;
wrestling team to a fourth place national. State Ihelped start a group of girls which&#13;
rating. Jim was a member of the South we called Mat Maids to promote our&#13;
Dakota Wrestling Federation Executive wrestling team. As a team we finished&#13;
Committee prior "to coming to Wisconsin. fourth in the national tournament and our&#13;
In an attempt to get an inside view of attendance was up about 500 per match. I&#13;
CoachKocbwe asked him a few questions: can't give the girls all the credit but Ifeel&#13;
eoach KocIi, no","that you have heen at they helped. At Parkside there are aboul&#13;
Parkside for a couple of months what do twelve girls who are interested in heing&#13;
you think of the school? Mat Maids or whatever they want to call&#13;
Myflrst impression was that! wished we themselves. They will help us with&#13;
bad a school that was established, all in publicity, promoting, cheering, and any&#13;
one spot and running smooth. I felt there other ways that they can. I hope that we&#13;
wouldbe alot of inconveniences involved can get them a distinctive and attractive&#13;
with a school in the formulative stage such uniform. I am sure that my wrestlers will&#13;
as Parkside. Now that I have developed feel the practicing is easier and more&#13;
some pride in Parkside Ithink my attitude worthwhile if they know there are people&#13;
bas changed. I can't help but wonder when who care buw they do in the meets. I enIdrive&#13;
thru the Parkside campus and see courage people to come to the first meet&#13;
some of the different departments and see our Mat Maids in action.&#13;
operating out of farmhouses how different&#13;
things will be in a few years. Then Irealize&#13;
that this difference will depend on myself&#13;
and others like me. This school isn't like&#13;
the University at Madison or other&#13;
established scbuols where when you leave&#13;
theschoolit is about the same as when you&#13;
came. Here each student and teacher is&#13;
lUying a founding role. Some day I suppose&#13;
I could he called the the Father of&#13;
Wreatling at Parkside, or any of my&#13;
wrestlers could become known as Mr.&#13;
Wrestling at Parkside. How often do you&#13;
bave an opportunity like that.&#13;
CoachKoch, what kind of a team are you&#13;
going to have this year?&#13;
A wreatling team. I think I know what&#13;
you mean, but this is a hard question to&#13;
answer. Our team is just about as new.as I&#13;
am. At the present we&gt;have three boys&#13;
working out who were on Iast years team.&#13;
They are Bill Benkstein, Paul Paricka and&#13;
Jeff Jenkins. These three were about the&#13;
best on last years team and should do a&#13;
good job for us this year. Bill was last&#13;
years captain, and most valuable wrestler,&#13;
and ia again this years captain. Among the&#13;
newcomers on the squad Ihave three boys&#13;
who I am looking for big things to come.&#13;
They are Steve Lamont a transfer from&#13;
Ricbland Center Junior College, and fresh-'&#13;
men Ken Martin from Coleman and Tom&#13;
Beyer from Clintonville. Rounding out our&#13;
team are HUgh Gately, Gene Fox, Bob&#13;
Clarke, Gary Vincent, Mark Barnhill,&#13;
George Sielski, Tony Kolriik, and Bob&#13;
Sanders.&#13;
Whether these men will be good enough&#13;
to win or not is a hard question. I don-,-t&#13;
~ how good our opposition will be or&#13;
how goodour men will look in c6mpetion. I&#13;
do knowthat my men work hard enough in&#13;
.... etice and have the character necessary&#13;
to be winners. I think it could !?" an inRepresentatives&#13;
of Reach-Out,&#13;
University of Wisconsin student&#13;
organization, work to clear up misunderstandings&#13;
tha t may exist hetween&#13;
students and citizens of the state&#13;
"classified advertisements are SO&#13;
ceots per Iioe for anyone interested.&#13;
All classifieds must be submitted to&#13;
the Newscope offices at Kenosha&#13;
campus by DOOO the Tbursday before&#13;
Monday publication.&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62ND ST DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
The \\B RAT "IS&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:0Q-l:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
French" Fries or Onion Rin9s&#13;
Or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or aottle or Glass of a.er&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity and Sorority Parties&#13;
7 p.rn. to 8&#13;
20(&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
,~~ BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and Highway 50&#13;
KOCh Joins Parkside&#13;
Coaching Staff&#13;
•i&#13;
Jim Koch is the newest and the youngest&#13;
member of the Parkside coaching staff. He&#13;
is the head wrestling coach, director of&#13;
intramurals, and an instructor in physical&#13;
education. Just a year ago the young&#13;
bachelor completed work on his Master of&#13;
Science degree at South Dakota State&#13;
University. While at SDSU Koch was the&#13;
assistant wrestling coach and assistant&#13;
intramural director. He also did his undergraduate&#13;
work at South Dakota State&#13;
where he graduated with honors majoring&#13;
in physical education and mathmatics. His&#13;
senior year he captained the South Dakota&#13;
wrestling team to a fourth place national&#13;
rating. Jim was a member of the South&#13;
Dakota Wrestling Federation Executive&#13;
Committee prior "to coming to Wisconsin.&#13;
In an attempt to get an inside view of&#13;
Coach Koch we asked him a few questions:&#13;
Coach Koch, now that you have been at&#13;
Parkside for a couple of months what do&#13;
you think of the school?&#13;
My first impression was that I wished we&#13;
had a school that was established, all in&#13;
one spot and running smooth. I felt there&#13;
would be a lot of inconveniences involved&#13;
with a school in the formula live stage such&#13;
as Parkside. Now that I have developed&#13;
some pride in Parkside I think my attitude&#13;
has changed. I can't help but wonder when&#13;
I drive thru the Parkside campus and see&#13;
some of the different departments&#13;
operating out of farmhouses how different&#13;
things will be in a few years. Then I realize&#13;
that this difference will depen9 on myself&#13;
and others like me. This school isn't like&#13;
the University at Madison or other&#13;
established schools where when you leave&#13;
the school it is about the same as when you&#13;
came. Here each student and teacher is&#13;
playing a founding role. Some day I suppose&#13;
I could be called the the Father of&#13;
Wrestling at Parkside, or any of my&#13;
wrestlers could become known as Mr.&#13;
Wrestling at Parkside. How often do you&#13;
have an opportunity like that.&#13;
Coach Koch, what kind of a team are you&#13;
going to have this year?&#13;
A wrestling team. I think I know what&#13;
you mean, but this is a hard question to&#13;
answer. Our team is just about as new. as I&#13;
am. At the present we. have three boys&#13;
Working out who were on fast years team.&#13;
They are Bill Benkstein, Paul Paricka and&#13;
Jeff Jenkins. These three were about the&#13;
best on last years team and should do a&#13;
good job for us this year. Bill was last&#13;
Years captain, and most valuable wrestler,&#13;
and is again this years captain. Among the&#13;
newcomers on the squad I have three boys&#13;
who I am looking for big things to come.&#13;
They are Steve Lamont a transfer from&#13;
Richland Center Junior College, and fresh-· men Ken Martin from Coleman and Tom&#13;
Beyer from Clintonville. Rounding out our&#13;
team are Hugh Gately, Gene Fox, B_ob&#13;
Clarke, Gary Vincent, Mark Barnhill,&#13;
George Sielski, Tony Kolnik, and Bob&#13;
Sanders.&#13;
Whether these men will be good enough&#13;
to Win or not is a hard question. I don~t&#13;
know how good our opposition will be or&#13;
how good our men will look in competion. I&#13;
do know that my men work hard enough in&#13;
Jractice and have the character necessary&#13;
to be winners. I think it could ~ an inFront&#13;
Row left to right: Jan Hermes&#13;
Cris Vlakakis, Nancy Michals, Kathy&#13;
DQherty, Nancy Konecny, Carla Ricciardi.&#13;
Second row: Hugh Gately, Steve&#13;
Lamont, Ken Martins, Bob Clarke, Gary&#13;
Vincent, Jeff Jenkins, Gene Fox, Bill&#13;
Berkstein, Tom Beyer, Paul Paricka.&#13;
teresting season.&#13;
Coach Koch, what are the Mat Maids?&#13;
That is a pretty easy question. The Mat&#13;
Maids are a group of very attractive girls&#13;
who are interested in promoting the sport&#13;
of wrestling. Last year at South Dakota&#13;
State I helped start a group of girls which&#13;
we called Mat Maids to promote our&#13;
wrestling team. As a team we finished&#13;
fourth in the national tournament and our&#13;
attendance was up about 500 per match. I&#13;
can't give the girls all the credit but I feel&#13;
they helped. At Parkside there are about&#13;
twelve girls who are interested in being&#13;
Mat Maids or whatever they want to call&#13;
themselves. They will help us with&#13;
publicity, promoting, cheering, and any&#13;
other ways that they can. I hope that we&#13;
can get them a distinctive and attractive&#13;
uniform. I am sure that my wrestlers will&#13;
feel the practicing is easier and more&#13;
worthwhile if they know there are people&#13;
wr.c, care how they do in the meets. I encourage&#13;
people to come to the first meet&#13;
and see our Mat Maids in action.&#13;
Representatives of Reach-Out,&#13;
University of Wisconsin student&#13;
organization, work to clear up misunderstandings&#13;
that may exist between&#13;
students and citizens of the stat~&#13;
Classified advertisements are so&#13;
cents per line for anyone interested.&#13;
All classifieds must be submitted to&#13;
the Newscope offices at Kenosha&#13;
campus by noon the Thursday before&#13;
Monday publication.&#13;
..&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTIO&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62 D ST&#13;
The\\ BRAT 1115&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:0Q-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
::renck Fries or Onion Rin9s&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
er&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00&#13;
7 p.m. to&#13;
GLASS 20(&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity ond Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
"'~~ BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and Highway 50&#13;
8 p.m. &#13;
Seattle Rhymes With Chicago&#13;
By JON HILLSON&#13;
CoU~lt Pres Servic:e&#13;
EATILE (CPS) - Perhaps you've&#13;
heard the n&lt;!W saying; "spread the word&#13;
about attle," and wondered exactly&#13;
what that word, Itrhymes with Chicaso.&#13;
The Seattle consp,racy trial begins on&#13;
evernber 16 In Tacoma&#13;
On April 15, 1970, w,ght people were&#13;
'nd'cted on a rederal llJ'and jury and&#13;
eharg d With con plring. combining,&#13;
conrederaling and agreeing together to&#13;
eomrm: errerses against the Uruted States&#13;
In Vlolalion 01 '8 U 371,2101. and 1361&#13;
(lIoo371 01 the Cnmmal Code imposes&#13;
a pt'nalty 01$10,000and five years in pnson&#13;
(or con ptring to Violate the laws of the&#13;
lion 2101, th Interstate RIot Act&#13;
U!&gt; d In the hlCagO onspiracy. Imposes a&#13;
. 1mliar penalty (or traveling 10, or using&#13;
the r Ihlles or. Interstate commerce with&#13;
lMo mt nt 01 in ihng. organiZing. enc(JUraglng.&#13;
Or participating in a riot. A riot&#13;
I!; any \'101("01 act by' anyone person when&#13;
thr or more persons are assembled&#13;
to\:I,tlwr&#13;
St'chon t. 1 Im~es a $10,000 Cine andor&#13;
a tco }'l'3r pri50n term for damaging&#13;
r('&lt;ltral pl'ropt'rty ,n excess of StOO.Each&#13;
d.,rl'ndant thu, r ces a potenlial $30,000&#13;
ho and '\10' nty ye:1rs in prison&#13;
Thccharg . stem from a demonstrationnot&#13;
""Id on Fcbruary t6 In protest or the&#13;
hlcago 7 cOn\'ictions, Federal in·&#13;
wctments - I'" ued at the behest 01 the&#13;
Ju, tI('~ Department came over the&#13;
prot _ts of Seattle's local prosecuting&#13;
apparatu'&#13;
lOce they were handed down. there has&#13;
tx-en a \·Irtual news black·out of in·&#13;
dlctments. the trial, pre--trial defense and&#13;
Ihe history of the local movement upon&#13;
"hlch such heavy represession has faUen,&#13;
To recapitulate, then. we go back to late&#13;
January. 1970. on the campus of the&#13;
Um\'~rslty oCWashington. in Seattle.&#13;
\\ll\TW,\ llIESE,\TILE&#13;
I.IRER,\ nON FRONT?&#13;
1\11 hael Lerner. at that time an&#13;
ass,stant prolessor or philosophy at uW,&#13;
soon to become oneof the seatUe8 - atTl,&#13;
a teacher and a vet~ran of the Bay Area&#13;
radtcal movement - began reformulating&#13;
.the "new form" of radical organization.&#13;
The autonomous collective, as it was&#13;
caned. was to serve as the arena for indJvidual&#13;
growth as well as the vehicle for&#13;
soclahst aclton. Lerner - since "not rehired"&#13;
by his departmental colleagues -&#13;
found early success in his classes.&#13;
ACtion centered around a tax·incenlive&#13;
program to the general SeatOe area, which&#13;
ha an unemployment that spans both blue&#13;
collar and ",h,te collar working class and&#13;
IS estimated to be about 15 per cent.&#13;
Crealer seattle, with a population of&#13;
about 800,000has an army 01 unemployed&#13;
'.-..orking people - industrial, with less&#13;
than a high school education and&#13;
proCes ional. with Ph Os in engineeringand&#13;
the tax lOcentwe program sought to&#13;
rai e transitional and revolutionary&#13;
demand at the same t~me.&#13;
Soon after its dissemination and coupled&#13;
....ith a public meeting, Seattle Liberation&#13;
Front ( LFl collectives were formed&#13;
round work on the incentive, as well as a&#13;
13 POint program that ranged from&#13;
m,lItanl support to black and brown selfdetermination.&#13;
and similar positions on&#13;
imperialism. to IX)lnts defending youth&#13;
culture. self·defense and an out·and·out&#13;
fight agamst male supremacy. This point&#13;
_ not lived up to by SLF leadership - was&#13;
to underpin the dissolution of the&#13;
orgaOlzahon&#13;
Work on the lax incentive program&#13;
centered on door· to-door campaigns.&#13;
leafletttng unemployment offices armed&#13;
With coffee and donuts and talking to&#13;
students, as well as pushing the program.&#13;
Leadership emerged in the Sundance&#13;
coUechvl,\- each collective took names -&#13;
a group composed of Lerner and a bulk of&#13;
the others indicted for conspiracy. Among&#13;
them - ChIp ~Iarshall, Joe Kelly, Jeff&#13;
Dowd and Mike Abels - were cited for&#13;
crossing state lines and using interstate&#13;
commerce for the inttnt of inciting riot.&#13;
The four - and several others - had·&#13;
migrated from Ithaca New York in&#13;
December of 1969 to live and do political&#13;
work 10 Seattle. Many of the "Ithaca&#13;
pt'ople" had backgrounds in SDS - some&#13;
In Weathermen - but lelt the group&#13;
because of.sharp political disagreements.&#13;
The fledgling organization called&#13;
demonstrations in protest of the conviction&#13;
01 the ChicaGO7 on February 16_&#13;
Reports on crowd size vary - the sea ttle&#13;
commercial papers, both archconservative,&#13;
guessed 2,000, others cite&#13;
3,000. The crowd erupted as it neared the&#13;
federal building as rocks broke government&#13;
windows. Police, appearing from a&#13;
""f'by building, put on, according to&#13;
many on the scene, an uncommonly brutal&#13;
show, beating non-violent demonstratrors&#13;
with vigor,&#13;
one 01 the eight conspiracy defendants&#13;
were arrested at the demonstration.&#13;
Eighty participants were, and the Seattle&#13;
investigating grand jury reported that "at&#13;
least hair' or about 1,000 in their estimate,&#13;
took an "active" part in the melee .&#13;
The massive demonstrations around the&#13;
country varied in the amount of property&#13;
damage exacted. While over 20,000&#13;
peaceful demonstrators marched in&#13;
Boston, the Associated Press chose only to&#13;
report the street-light eng.gemenl between&#13;
5,000 militants and Boston police. In&#13;
spite of the report, the Boston demonstration&#13;
gave Harvard Square its Baptism&#13;
of fire. Demonstrations in numerous cities&#13;
were larger than Seattle's, and in Berkeley&#13;
and Boston at least, the intensity of&#13;
combat and the amount of damage was&#13;
higher than seattle.&#13;
Frantic SLF activity - inwardly and&#13;
outwardly - followed. The Day Aller&#13;
(TDA) demonstration Collectives&#13;
developed rapidly, gusbing young people&#13;
_ numerous UW students - into radical&#13;
politics for the first time. Collectives&#13;
around dormitory organizing, high school&#13;
organizing, free food for street people, Ule&#13;
tax-incentive, campus work, youth culture&#13;
organizing, unemployment projects - and&#13;
the Boeing plant - gained motion in a&#13;
fever·piteh.&#13;
The freneticism of events, the rapidity&#13;
of action and growth manifest weaknesses&#13;
and faults in the SLF. The most cutting&#13;
aspect was male supremancy. Leadership&#13;
soon took the familiar male dominated&#13;
Oavor; the swaggering, hip lifestyle of the&#13;
Sundance collective veneered what many&#13;
women began to see as an oppressive,&#13;
machismo form.&#13;
This contradiction would fester internally&#13;
for months as women sought to&#13;
pt'rsonally confront and work out the&#13;
problem.&#13;
In early April, the Federal Bureau of&#13;
Investigation conducted a private press&#13;
conference with the seattle commercial&#13;
medi,a. More like a battle briefing, its&#13;
ramifications pt'rhaps will only be decided&#13;
by the Tacoma jury.&#13;
Replete with international-conspiracy&#13;
paranoia, the Seattle media began an&#13;
hysterical campaign against the SLF -&#13;
particularly through attacKs on "its selfproclaimed&#13;
leadership, Lerner, Marshall,&#13;
Dowd and Kelley.&#13;
A three part series in the Seattle Post&#13;
Intelligencer - a Hearst owned paper -&#13;
conducted a campaign, a common mixture&#13;
01 half-truth, editorial potiey and witchhunt&#13;
sensationalism - which read&#13;
something like a "conspitacy!" Factual&#13;
mistakes, misquotes, a refusal to&#13;
talk at length - in m-any cases at aII- to&#13;
SLF members, religious reliance on FBI&#13;
information and colorful layout set the&#13;
base for indictments that would come less&#13;
than a week before the invasion of Cambodia,&#13;
the killings at Jackson and Kent&#13;
States, and the Augusta uprising.&#13;
Battered on one hand by the media attack&#13;
- "outside agitator" and "hard-core&#13;
exponents of violence and chaos" cliches&#13;
- and suffering internally from too rapid&#13;
gro~!h, male supremancy, and whirlwind&#13;
activlly, the SLF was dealt a on.,.two&#13;
ptJn:h by the events surrounding Cam-&#13;
~a Week and the issuing of the conspIracy&#13;
indictments, '&#13;
It.led "r:tilitant" actions that week that&#13;
baSically mvolved the inhalation of tear&#13;
gas alter blocking tbe freeway near the&#13;
seattle campus, and began to isolate itself.&#13;
Into the summer its energy was&#13;
generally disapated. Around the country,&#13;
however, heresay and the wishful thinking&#13;
of some SLF leadership was building a&#13;
myth. Movement people began flocking to&#13;
sea~tle: Women in the SLF, however, were&#13;
beginning to pullout.&#13;
WHY A SEATILECONSPffiACY?&#13;
Knowing that seattle'S TDA was by no&#13;
means unique, why federal conspiracy&#13;
indictments, over the protests of local&#13;
prosecuting authorities? .&#13;
To begin with, seattle, an Isolated city,&#13;
has been a testing ground for repressIOn.&#13;
seattle's general strike dunng which&#13;
workers shut down the city precipitated&#13;
mass detention, deporation and busting .of&#13;
scores of militant socialist, commumst&#13;
and anarchist workers a t the end of postWorld&#13;
War I recessions.&#13;
Raids on trade unions, harassment and&#13;
repression - minimized by the media -&#13;
paved the way for then Attorney General&#13;
A. Mitchell Palmer to institute, shortly&#13;
thereafter, similar escapades on a&#13;
national level: the infamous Palmer&#13;
Raids. Thousands of militant workers&#13;
were departed and jailed - no knocks, of&#13;
course - In a 24-hour perlnd and broke the&#13;
back of the trade-union's revolutionary&#13;
wing.&#13;
seattle workers, expecting their general&#13;
strike to move na tionaUy, retreated in&#13;
militant action: their isolation set the pace&#13;
for a dryrun, and Palmer took the experiment's&#13;
results nationally.&#13;
Three decades later, hefore few people&#13;
outside of Wisconsin knew then-senator&#13;
Joseph McCarthy, local witch-hunt&#13;
bearings went on in Seattle, as the redscare&#13;
was tested in the isolated Northwest.&#13;
More than possibly, McCarthy had an eye&#13;
not only to the Pugel. Sounds, but to&#13;
reaction around the country. With "reds"&#13;
scared in seattle, a·nd with a nation&#13;
unawakened to the coming of its saddest&#13;
days, McCarthy mounted a pndium whose&#13;
base had the mark of Seattle lumber.&#13;
Thus, the Seattle Conspiracy trial not&#13;
only fits in~o a general strategy of&#13;
repression - from busting student body&#13;
president mnderates at Kent State to&#13;
Black Panthers in Detroit - but into an&#13;
historical pattern. The Nixon-AgnewMitchell&#13;
regime, its corporate, financial,&#13;
industrial and labor bureaucrat backers,&#13;
have a national strategy. .&#13;
Anchorlnn&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
ADULTS S2.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 10 SI.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 5 FREE&#13;
Prices Include flnt&#13;
dinner beverag\,&#13;
SUNDAY SPEClAL&#13;
ft.... t Chicken with&#13;
Bloeult. and gravy&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sat. 5 p.m. - II p_m,&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. 5 p.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
Sun. 12 Noon 9 p.m.&#13;
Like any good strategy, it is lime&#13;
And wh!l&lt;:Seattle's only two neWSpa~&#13;
are reactionary - the Hearst P&#13;
telligencer and Scripps HOINardSea04\ latheir&#13;
monopoly powers are still notlIIe_&#13;
secondly, the strategy does ha lotoJ.&#13;
seattle target for certain reasons ;:;,..'!'!&#13;
history and geography. In spite of .;~&#13;
failures and hassles, the SLF made ~'~&#13;
short run, what will some day be ,Ill ill&#13;
as key steps in a revolutionary ~&#13;
While the Justice Department is note1a~&#13;
about this, it has a fundamental POli~&#13;
understanding: and had that wben ~&#13;
was attacked at its peak. "'"&#13;
SLF was a city-wIde movement..&#13;
autonomous project and liVingeollecti'.&#13;
were in constant touch with each ...&#13;
through phone lines, relationshipsoIbIr&#13;
weekly coordinating committee m~&#13;
While maintaining a campus t&gt;be,-&#13;
members organized off ~mpus, Were•&#13;
of school, worked for a living ",ere':&#13;
time in the sense of the word t~t makeo&#13;
Edgar Hoover start to wonder. They ~&#13;
the ivory tower in a way that did&#13;
parallel the fanatacism of Weathet1llelt I1lIt&#13;
the guilt and self-denial of "into-U:&#13;
factory" brigades.&#13;
Even without the SLF apparatus, II1e&#13;
strongest .motton In seattle is ",ith YQ11ll&#13;
and working people, ill the UnionIiII1e&#13;
Unemployed which has staged marebos ..&#13;
Boeing, 10 free fond and clothing II'OJecta&#13;
in white working class neighborhoodo.&#13;
working with the unemployed. ~&#13;
with the realization that unempl"YJDlltl&#13;
continues to skyrocket with recession_&#13;
NBC recentl~ reported that Y.ulll&#13;
unemploymentls up 35 per cent - 8Ild II1e&#13;
growth of unionization among ae~&#13;
engineers, teachers, and other white.&#13;
occupations, SLF's projects - at ..&#13;
according to the Justice Departmentud&#13;
, the corporate power structure ofBoeiIthad&#13;
to he crushed.&#13;
Clearly, the question is not conspirsq&#13;
but politics. The federal indict_&#13;
handed down cities, in Count II, the 11&#13;
"overt acts" indicative of conspiraer&#13;
Only two - the last two - ..&#13;
specifically to violence, and to pbyIiII&#13;
acts of violence committed. No names ..&#13;
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DELIVERY 4:00 P.M. TO&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Seattle Rhymes With Chicago&#13;
in Weathermen - but left the group&#13;
because of ,sharp political disagreements.&#13;
The fledgling organization called&#13;
demonstrations in protest of the conviction&#13;
ol the Chica&amp;o 7 on February 16.&#13;
Reports on crowd size vary- the Seattle&#13;
commercial papers, both archcon&#13;
ervative, guessed 2,000, others cite&#13;
3,000. The crowd erupted as it neared the&#13;
fed ral building as rocks broke government&#13;
wmdow . Police, appearing from a&#13;
,by building, put on, according to&#13;
many on the scene, an uncommonly brutal&#13;
how, beating non-violent demonstratrors&#13;
v. ith vigor. ·one of the eight conspiracy defendants&#13;
were arrested at the demonstration.&#13;
Eighty participants were, and the Seattle&#13;
inv ligating grand jury reported that "at&#13;
l a t half' or about 1,000 in their estimate,&#13;
took an "active" part in the melee. The massive demonstrations around the&#13;
country varied in the amount of property&#13;
damage exacted. While over 20,000&#13;
p aceful demonstrators marched in&#13;
Bo ·ton, the ociated Press chose only to r port the treet-fight engageme"nt be-&#13;
·een S 000 militants and Boston police. In&#13;
pile of the report, the Boston demontration&#13;
gave Harvard Square its Baptism&#13;
of fire. Demonstrations in numerous cities w re larger than Seattle's, and in Berkeley&#13;
and Bo ton at lea t, the intensity of&#13;
combat and the amount of damage was&#13;
high r than Seattle.&#13;
Frantic SLF activity - inwardly and&#13;
outwardly - followed. The Day After&#13;
&lt;TOA) demonstration Collectives&#13;
developed rapidly, gushing young people&#13;
- numerous U\V students - into radical&#13;
politics for the first time. Collectives&#13;
around dormitory organizing, high school&#13;
organizing, free food for street people, the&#13;
tax-incentive, campus work, youth culture&#13;
organizing, unemployment projects - and&#13;
the Boeing plant - gained motion in a&#13;
fever-pitch.&#13;
The freneticism of events, the rapidity&#13;
of action and growth manifest weaknesses&#13;
and faults in the SLF. The most cutting&#13;
aspect was male supremancy. Leadership&#13;
soon took the familiar male dominated&#13;
flavor: the swaggering, hip lifestyle of the&#13;
Sundance collective veneered what many&#13;
women began to see as an oppressive,&#13;
machismo form.&#13;
This contradiction would fester internally&#13;
for months as women sought to&#13;
personally confront and work out the&#13;
problem.&#13;
In early April, the Federal Bureau of&#13;
Investigation conducted a private press&#13;
conference v.-ith the Seattle commercial&#13;
medi;1. More like a battle briefing, its&#13;
ramifications perhaps will only be decided&#13;
by the Tacoma jury.&#13;
Replete with international-conspiracy&#13;
paranoia, the Seattle media began an&#13;
hysterical campaign against the SLF -&#13;
particularly through attacks on 'its selfproclaimed&#13;
leadership, Lerner, Marshall,&#13;
Dowd and Kelley.&#13;
A three part series in the Seattle Post&#13;
Intelligencer - a Hearst owned paper -&#13;
conducted a campaign, a common mixture&#13;
of half-truth, editorial policy and witch- hunt sensationalism - which read&#13;
something like a "conspiJ;:acy!" Factual&#13;
mistakes, misquotes, a refusal to&#13;
talk at length - in m·any cases at all - to&#13;
LF members, religious reliance on FBI&#13;
information and colorful layout set the&#13;
ba e for indictments that would come less&#13;
than a week before the invasion of Cambodia,&#13;
the killings at Jackson and Kent&#13;
States, and the Augusta uprising.&#13;
Battered on one hand by the media attack&#13;
- "outside agitator" and "hard-core&#13;
exponents of violence and chaos" cliches&#13;
- and suffering internally from too rapid&#13;
gro~~. male supremancy, and whirlwind&#13;
activity, the SLF was dealt a one-two&#13;
pun_ch by the events surrounding Cambodia&#13;
Week and the issuing of the conspiracy&#13;
indictments.&#13;
It led "militant" actions that week that&#13;
basically involved the inhalation of tear&#13;
gas after blocking the freeway near the&#13;
Seattle campus, and began to isolate itself.&#13;
Into the summer its energy was&#13;
ge~r~lly clisapated. Around the country,&#13;
however, heresay and the wishful thinking&#13;
of some SLF leadership was building a&#13;
myth. Movement people began flocking to&#13;
Sea~tle_. Women in the SLF, however, were&#13;
begmnmg to pull out.&#13;
WHY A SEATTLE CONSPIRACY?&#13;
Knowing that Seattle's TDA was ~y no&#13;
means unique, why federal conspiracy&#13;
indictments, over the protests of local&#13;
prosecuting authorities? . To begin with, Seattle, an isolated c_1ty,&#13;
has been a testing ground for repress1~n.&#13;
Seattle's general strike during which&#13;
workers shut down the city precipitated&#13;
mass detention, deporation and busting _of&#13;
scores of militant socialist, commurust&#13;
and anarchist workers at the end of postWorld&#13;
War I recessions.&#13;
Raids on trade unions, harassment and&#13;
repression - minimized by the media - paved the way for then Attorney General&#13;
A. Mitchell Palmer to institute, shortly&#13;
thereafter, similar escapades on a&#13;
national level: the infamous Palmer&#13;
Raids. Thousands of militant workers&#13;
were departed and jailed - no knocks, of&#13;
course - in a 24-hour period and broke the&#13;
back of the trade-union's revolutionary&#13;
wing.&#13;
Seattle workers, expecting their gener~l&#13;
strike to move nationally, retreated m&#13;
militant action: their isolation set the pace&#13;
for a dryrun, and Palmer took the experiment's&#13;
results nationally.&#13;
Three decades later, before few people&#13;
outside of Wisconsin knew then-Senator&#13;
Joseph McCarthy, local witch-hunt&#13;
hearings went on in Seattle, as the redscare&#13;
was tested in the isolated Northwest.&#13;
More than possibly, McCarthy had an eye&#13;
not only to the Puget Sounds, but to&#13;
reaction around the country. With "reds"&#13;
scared in Seattle, and with a nation&#13;
unawakened to the coming of its saddest&#13;
days, McCarthy mounted a podium whose&#13;
base had the mark of Seattle lumber.&#13;
Thus, the Seattle Conspiracy trial not&#13;
only fits in.o a general strategy of&#13;
repression - from busting student body&#13;
president moderates at Kent State to&#13;
Black Panthers in Detroit - but into an&#13;
historical pattern. The Nixon-AgnewMitchell&#13;
regime, its corporate, financial,&#13;
industrial and labor bureaucrat backers,&#13;
have a national strategy.&#13;
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CHILDREN UNDER 10 $1.50&#13;
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SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sat. 5 p.m. _ ll p.m.&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. s p.m. _ 10 p.m.&#13;
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ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
Like any good strategy, it is time Les&#13;
And while Seattle's only two new led.&#13;
are reactionary - the Hearst ;pallera&#13;
telligencer and Scripps Howard Sea~ In.&#13;
their monopoly powers are still not t e - Secondly, the strategy does ha otal.&#13;
Seattle target for certain reasons ~ the&#13;
history and geography. In spite of in;o~&#13;
failures and hassles, the SLF made . ~I&#13;
short run, what will some day be r ' Ill its&#13;
as key steps in a revolutionary di,~ While the Justice Department is not:on.&#13;
about this, it has a fundamental P0liti ~ understanding: and had that when S cal&#13;
was attacked at its peak. LF&#13;
SLF was a ~ity-wide movement· . autonomous proJect and living collecti 1ts&#13;
were in constant touch with each ves&#13;
through phone lines, relationshi 0thet&#13;
weekly coordinating committee m:r i'-1&#13;
While maintaining a campus base""-&#13;
members organized off campus wer ' 111&#13;
of sc~ool, worked for a living, 'were'ru~&#13;
time m the sense of the word that makes&#13;
Edgar Hoover start to wonder. They 1&#13;
~· the ivory tower in a way that did t&#13;
parallel the fanatacism of Weathermen not&#13;
the guilt and self-denial of "into-0:,&#13;
factory" brigades.&#13;
Even witho~t ~e SLF apparatus, the&#13;
strongest _motion m ~attle is with YOOtb&#13;
and workmg ~pie, m the Union or the&#13;
Une_mpl~yed w~ch has staged marches 011&#13;
Boemg, m free food and clothing projects&#13;
in white working class neighborh~ in&#13;
working with the unemployed. Coupled&#13;
with the realization that unemployment&#13;
continues to skyrocket with recession _&#13;
NBC recently reported that youth&#13;
unemployment is up 35 per cent - and the&#13;
growth of unionization among aerospace&#13;
engineers, teachers, and other white collar&#13;
occupations, SLF's projects - at least&#13;
according to the Justice Department and&#13;
- the corporate power structure of Boeinghad&#13;
to be crushed.&#13;
Clear I~,. the question is not ~onspiracy,&#13;
but politics. The federal indictment&#13;
handed down cities, in Count II, the 11&#13;
"overt acts" indicative of conspiracy&#13;
Only two - the last two - refer&#13;
specifically to violence, and to physical&#13;
acts of violence committed. No names m&#13;
GO TOP. 7&#13;
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Small,&#13;
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Fridays, other weekday&#13;
9 'ti I 5:30, Sundays&#13;
from JO a.m. until&#13;
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Phone: 652-~681&#13;
FREE DELIVERY 4;00 P.M. TO&#13;
KENOSHA &#13;
Seattt~con't.&#13;
defined police-state u Thi . ac Ion •s is tbe liti r:'. SLF tr· l: po itieal s.gnificance of th&#13;
13. the same e&#13;
governmental for C~rporate and&#13;
Franco's fascism a~es'l~lCh lubricate&#13;
a score of dicta torshi 01 e machinery of&#13;
coming down on itsPSS8roundthe world is&#13;
Th . eattle antagon' ts&#13;
ere IS no question abo t tha . IS.&#13;
the neeessit of u l Cliches for&#13;
imperialism y not only defending the&#13;
. ~ racism, male supr and repression will be - emancy&#13;
social system which . repeated until the&#13;
the profit mecbam rn egrates them into&#13;
Thi . msm IS abolished.&#13;
th IS IS not only the lesson of Seattle but&#13;
an~ "::'..~sde of Agnew, the advice of Nixon&#13;
wi om of the Bank fA'&#13;
The Sealtle 8 knows well th 0 di ~enca.&#13;
Malcolm X: "the chick e c m of&#13;
home to roost" ens have come&#13;
And they know the real trial is to build&#13;
futu,:" worth liVing for: and that the r ~&#13;
verdict can never be made in courtroo:&#13;
Wrestling Is&#13;
The Lead Off&#13;
The first action of the winter&#13;
sea~ at Parkside will he taken :POthrls&#13;
wrestling UWP W tl. Y e Fr' . res Ing Team On&#13;
Iday Dec. 4, at3 p.m. in the aftern';"n at&#13;
John .Bullen Junior high school the&#13;
.wrestlmg team encounters WSU ~ Point and Mi h' ~ tevens " . c 19an Tech. John Bullen&#13;
jUmor hIgh school is loca ted less than onehaU&#13;
mile south of the Kenosha Cam&#13;
39th flvenue. pus on&#13;
This will be the first action of the season&#13;
for the Rangers. Team memhers h&#13;
there will he a large turnout to cheer thope&#13;
on to a VICtory. em&#13;
The Mat Maids and Coach Koch will he&#13;
makmg theIr debuts at Parkside.&#13;
'Parksides First&#13;
Wrestling Clinic&#13;
By WALTER BREACH&#13;
Once upQIl a time, as all good stories&#13;
sbould begin, a friend 01mine had a kindly&#13;
aunl This kindly aunt had a ninety year&#13;
old uncle. And, as the story goes, one day&#13;
she found him high in an old tree, standing&#13;
one foot on the top rung of a rickety ladder&#13;
and the other on a rather unsure looking&#13;
branch. "Oh, come down, come down."&#13;
she cried when she saw him, "you surely&#13;
will strain yourself." But the old man only&#13;
looked down on her and calmly said, "my&#13;
younger brother is helping me, so don't&#13;
worry." His eighty-nine year-old brother&#13;
t1:len appeared, and was indeed helping&#13;
him.&#13;
What has this got to do with a Booster&#13;
Club you ask? Not much, but I like the&#13;
story. For those who insist on a meaning,&#13;
however, substitute Kathy Mauer for the&#13;
kindly old aunt, the Booster Club for the&#13;
old timer. Then take the student body as&#13;
the younger brother and the tree as the&#13;
effort to raise school spirit, and the story&#13;
makes less sense then hefore.&#13;
The events the Club has plaMed sound&#13;
alright, but after all, we're not just out of&#13;
highschool, at least most of us aren't, well&#13;
maybe some of us aten't Uten agam maybe&#13;
this is just Parkside high school. If so,&#13;
more power to you Booster club, and I sure&#13;
w!JUldlike to be able to smoke on the bus.&#13;
UW LAB FIRST TO AID&#13;
SUPERIOR STUDE '1'8&#13;
The University of Wisconsin ""as the&#13;
first uni . eulti ~verslty to devote its attention to&#13;
tivalmg the land's greatest natural&#13;
resource - the intellectually superior&#13;
student.&#13;
Via the Madison campus Research and&#13;
~uldance Laboratory Cor Superior&#13;
tudents, more than 3.000 students rrom&#13;
high schools all over Wisconsin have taken&#13;
partm the project.&#13;
~&#13;
DE1JCA TESSEN -lEVERAGES&#13;
3203 f1m.secOND STIHI&#13;
l&lt;IN&lt;»&gt;tA. WISCONSIN&#13;
t'l\' ADULT EDl:CATfON&#13;
POPl:LAR IN TATE&#13;
A University of Wisconsin urvej&#13;
Research Laborator) sludy sho"ed that 13&#13;
per cenl of all Wiscon.,n adult par .&#13;
ticipated 1_ In l:W education program In&#13;
THE&#13;
DAISY • PIPEt&#13;
• PAPERS&#13;
• BELl.'&#13;
• INCENSE&#13;
• CANDLES&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Ellllwood&#13;
Students let red carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone elSe!)&#13;
to be seen. In fact, the grand jury itseU&#13;
estimate. at least 1,000 people took "active"&#13;
part i~the disruptive portions of the&#13;
demonstration.&#13;
Still- the alleged criminals - the over&#13;
act continue, name da tes when the con-&#13;
,prators are alleged to "have met in&#13;
seattle" or "to have talked." Accusations&#13;
«:idle crime of "addressing an 'assembly"&#13;
te I "d ' "taking ~ra ~,ass an advocating&#13;
lIacts of VIOlence are enough to issue&#13;
cbarges whose penalties range to 20 years&#13;
inprison.Lerner is "alleged" to have used&#13;
telephones;Marshall "addressed a rally,"&#13;
OOWd, :'spok~ to a gathering." The "overt&#13;
acts" are, 10 one sense, simply the&#13;
chronicling of certain practices guaranteed&#13;
by the Constitution and the Bill of&#13;
Rights.&#13;
10 1970 America, they are cause for&#13;
arresL&#13;
To make the situation more insidious:&#13;
_ Weathermen (whom none of the&#13;
defendantsknow), accused of blowing up a&#13;
"""t-office, were tacked onto the indicbnent&#13;
as co-conspirators "not named&#13;
as defendants."&#13;
'!'benews blackout- save for one article&#13;
in tbeNation magazine and an appearance&#13;
III the Dick Cavett show by one SLF&#13;
lawyer- mesh with the moving of the trial&#13;
from Seattle to Tacoma;' some. 40 miles&#13;
sooth.Moved by a' federal judge over the&#13;
protest of SLF lawyers, Ta.coma has far&#13;
feweryoung people, no youth community&#13;
lI' newspapers, is still dominated by&#13;
seattle's arclH:onservative media, is an&#13;
inconvenience for the defendants and&#13;
makes trial by peer an impossibility.&#13;
And, of course, the Rap Brown statute&#13;
and conspiracy itseU are "thO\lgh-crime"&#13;
laws, needing no specific action by&#13;
defeodants, no crimes, bul intent: It is no&#13;
wCliderthat Chicago 7 lawyer William&#13;
KWlStlerstatedthe primary importance of&#13;
!be Seattle-Tacoma trial. .&#13;
U the federal government can win, if&#13;
there are no mass outcries and if there is&#13;
oot significant support outside the Northwest&#13;
for the seattle 8, the base in once&#13;
again laid for federally oriented decentralized&#13;
masS scale repression. This&#13;
,trategy is partically being employed -&#13;
001WIthoutfederal overtones - in Athens&#13;
Keo~ California and other places. Bui&#13;
federal application leitimizes constant&#13;
federal surveilllince, full utilization of&#13;
Dat~onal .repression apparatus, the&#13;
ven.table Importation of thought police&#13;
asa~t any movement for social change,&#13;
be.• t black and Third World, women's&#13;
oriented, revolutionary, moderate or&#13;
liberal, because everyday, anybody&#13;
comnllts the overt acts cited against the&#13;
Seattle 8 by the federal grand jury.&#13;
Perhaps those facts are what motivated&#13;
IIUl:hbroad-based support for the Seattle 8&#13;
DefenseCommittee: the clergy heads of&#13;
!be. N.ewman Center and the Campus&#13;
Ouiatian Ministry at the University of&#13;
Washington; Engineering and nursing&#13;
pro.fesaions;. lawyers, young people,&#13;
:~~itl~~:~::n,,:,~~andmemherSOf Parkside Booster Club&#13;
The Defense Committee states the law&#13;
ll'edicating the charges against the eight"&#13;
.... 01 dubious conStitutionality, is as&#13;
lr'oad .and.elastic as government wants to&#13;
make.t and threatens the civilliherties 01&#13;
all Americans."&#13;
deThe SLF itself is now gathered into a&#13;
lense collective, which is trying to&#13;
solidifythe large Seattle movement - as&#13;
Wboarell as liberals and moderates - behind a&#13;
d and massive defense.&#13;
.Rallies have been planned in at least 15&#13;
Cities.around the country to coincide with&#13;
!he onglnallrial da te of November 9 since&#13;
mOYedhack to the 23. The demonsU:ations&#13;
~e set (0 confr0!'1tarea media operations&#13;
loree them to cover the trial and to give&#13;
.... ponse to the protests. Coincidentally,&#13;
::: dem~trations can only corroherate&#13;
~OW1ngclaims of reporters in com-&#13;
;::re.al press of censorship, political&#13;
rassment and news 1nanagement.&#13;
~onsPirators Lerner, Dowd, Kelley,&#13;
S, Marshall, Stern, and Roger Lipp- =.expect the trial to go into 1971. The&#13;
. al government, meanwhile, pursues&#13;
~d el Justensen, the eighih conspirator&#13;
a fugitive.&#13;
~ttle situation is, on every level,&#13;
ill . t setting: the concept of the SLF,&#13;
to Ulroads to working people, i!S attempts&#13;
llli Understand the meaning of young&#13;
_~';"Iaas people in the context of social&#13;
~~; the women's action and its&#13;
---...uences; and the namre of federally&#13;
Lirpl. Sellett.&#13;
Parkside's first annual Wrestling Clinic Lt ••• t Pric ••&#13;
last Saturday could only be looked at one ~&#13;
way - successful and huge. Unofficially idinflP..JL&#13;
there were over 500. wrestlers and coaches ~-~7"JJ·&#13;
in attendence. This would make it possibly ~f.&#13;
the largest one-day participation clinic L_,;.6,;.~6:...:5:.6t::;h:...S::t::-. ~K~e~no~s~h~.'__J&#13;
ever ~eld in the sport of wrestling. Instruction&#13;
took place on six individual mats&#13;
by five differ.ent instructors.&#13;
The instructors had many national&#13;
championships between them, but even&#13;
more important then that was that they&#13;
were able to leach their techniques at a&#13;
level that nearly everyone was able to&#13;
understand.&#13;
Coach Koch, the clinic director, felt that&#13;
all the organization and work which he and&#13;
others put into the clinic was worth it. "I&#13;
think we opened a lot of eyes concerning&#13;
the quality of the type of program we are&#13;
trying to run at Parkside."&#13;
TlIt PI•• T. I.,&#13;
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Organ Music Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
From 9 p.m. til 2 a.m.&#13;
•• '"'j: .... ; , , .&#13;
Seattle_ con't.&#13;
to be seen. In fact, the grand jury itself&#13;
estimates at leas~ 1,000 people took "active"&#13;
part in the disruptive portions of the&#13;
dernonstra tion. . . Still - the alleged crimmals - the over&#13;
act continue, name dates when the conspirators&#13;
are alleged to "have met in&#13;
Seattle" or "to have talked." Accusations&#13;
of the crime of "addressing an assembly , ,&#13;
"taking .k~rate ~!ass" and advocati~&#13;
"acts of violence are enough to issue&#13;
charges whose penalties range to 20 years&#13;
in prison. Lerner is "alleged" to have used&#13;
telephones; Marshall "add!'essed a rally,"&#13;
oawd,:'spok~ to a gathering." The "overt&#13;
acts" are, m one sense, simply the&#13;
chronicling of certain practices guaranteed&#13;
by the Constitution and the Bill of&#13;
Rights.&#13;
In 1970 America, they are cause for&#13;
arresL&#13;
To make the situation more insidious:&#13;
three Weathermen (whom none of the&#13;
defendants know), accused of blowing up a&#13;
post-office, were tacked onto the indictment&#13;
as co-conspirators "not named&#13;
as defendants."&#13;
The news blackout-save for one article&#13;
in the Nation magazine and an appearance&#13;
on the Dick Cavett show by one SLF&#13;
lawyer - mesh with the moving of the trial&#13;
from Seattle to Tacoma, · some 40 miles&#13;
sooth. Moved by a federal judge over the&#13;
protest of SLF lawyers, Ta~oma has far&#13;
fewer young people, no youth community&#13;
or newspapers, is still dominated by&#13;
Seattle's arch-conservative media, is an&#13;
inconvenience for the defendants and&#13;
makes trial by peer an impossibility.&#13;
And, of course, the Rap Brown statute&#13;
and conspiracy itself are "though-crime"&#13;
laws, needing no specific action by&#13;
defendants, no crimes, but intent: It is no&#13;
wonder that Chicago 7 lawyer William&#13;
Kunstler stated the primary importance of&#13;
the Seattle-Tacoma trial.&#13;
U the federal government can win, if&#13;
there are no mass outcries and if there is&#13;
not significant support outside the Northwest&#13;
for the Seattle 8, the base in once&#13;
again laid for federally oriented decentralized&#13;
mass scale repression. This&#13;
strategy is partically being employed -&#13;
not without federal overtones - in Athens&#13;
Kent, California and other places. But&#13;
federal application leitimizes constant&#13;
£ed~ral surveillance, full utilization of&#13;
nat_1onal _repression apparatus, the&#13;
ven_table importation of thought police&#13;
aga~t any movement for social change,&#13;
be_ 1t black and Third World, women's&#13;
oriented, revolutionary moderate or&#13;
libera_l, because every'day, anybody&#13;
commits the overt acts cited against the&#13;
Seattle 8 by the federal grand jury.&#13;
Perhaps those facts are what motivated&#13;
such broad-based support for the Seattle 8&#13;
Defense Committee: the clergy heads of&#13;
the . N_ewman Center and the Campus&#13;
Chr1s?an Ministry at the University of&#13;
Washmgton; Engineering and nursing&#13;
deThfin_ed_ police-state action&#13;
IS IS the liti . ·. SLF trial: l:e ~ Significance of the&#13;
governmental force e c~rporate and&#13;
Franco's fascism and !u v;:1ch lu~ricate&#13;
a score of dictatorshi e machinery of&#13;
coming down on itsp; around the world is&#13;
There is no question abo eattle antagonists.&#13;
~e necessity of not o::it that. Cli~hes for&#13;
imperialisqi, racism m~ defending the&#13;
and repression will be e supremancy&#13;
social system which . repeated until the&#13;
the profit mechan· 1D: egrat~ them into&#13;
Th. . 15m IS abohshed&#13;
1s 1s not only the lesson f ·&#13;
:~ mtheessa~edof Agnew, the a~vi~!?~~i!&#13;
wisomoftheBnk f . The Seattle 8 knows wJ o ~menca.&#13;
Malcolm X: "the cbicke the dictum of&#13;
home to roost,, ns have come&#13;
And they know the real trial is to build a&#13;
futu~e worth living for: and that the real&#13;
verdict can never be made in courtrooms.&#13;
Wrestling Is&#13;
The Lead Off&#13;
The first action of the . · season at Parkside will be ~ter bsports wrestling UWP . en Y the Fr' · Wrestling Team On&#13;
Jo::!ay ~~- 4, at 3 ~-m. ~ the aftern~n at . en Juruor high school the&#13;
.wr~tlmg team encounters WSU-Ste&#13;
~o~t ~d Michigan Tech. John B~*:&#13;
Juruor ~1gh school is located less than one- half mile south of the Kenosha Ca&#13;
39th avenue. mpus on&#13;
i This will be the first action of the season&#13;
or the_ Rangers. Team members ho&#13;
there will_ be a large turnout to cheer the: on to a victory.&#13;
'rh_e Mat ~aids and Coach Koch will be&#13;
makmg their debuts at Parkside. ,&#13;
Parksides First&#13;
Wrestling Clinic&#13;
Parkside's first annual Wrestling Clinic&#13;
last Saturday could only be looked at one&#13;
way - successful and huge. Unofficially&#13;
there were over 500 wrestlers and coaches&#13;
in attendence. This would make it possibly&#13;
the largest one-day participation clinic&#13;
ever held in the sport of wrestling. Instruction&#13;
took place on six individual mats&#13;
by five different instructors.&#13;
The instructors had many national&#13;
championships between them, but even&#13;
more important then that was that they&#13;
were able to teach their techniques at a&#13;
level that nearly everyone was able to&#13;
understand.&#13;
Coach Koch, the clinic director, felt that&#13;
all the organization and work which he and&#13;
others put into the clinic was worth it. "I&#13;
think we opened a lot of eyes concerning&#13;
the quality of the type of program we are&#13;
trying to run at Parkside."&#13;
pro_fessions; lawyers, young people,&#13;
~:1&#13;
~~stJ~~~~~!i~~-rsandmembersof Parkside Booster Club&#13;
The Defense Committee states the law&#13;
predicating the charges against the eight"&#13;
· · · . of dubious constitutionality, is as broad _and elastic as government wants to&#13;
make it and threatens the civil liberties of&#13;
all Americans."&#13;
The SLF itself is now gathered into a&#13;
defense collective which is trying to&#13;
solidify the large Seattle movement - as&#13;
well as liberals and moderates - behind a&#13;
board and massive defense.&#13;
. ~ies have been planned in at least 15&#13;
Cities .ai:ound the country to coincide with&#13;
the ongmal trial date of November 9 since&#13;
moved back to the 23. The demonstr'ations&#13;
~e set Co confro!lt area media operations&#13;
w force them to cover the trial and to give&#13;
~es~nse to the protests. Coincidentally,&#13;
the em~nstrations can only corroberate&#13;
e &amp;~owing claims of reporters in com-&#13;
~~rcial press of censorship, political&#13;
assment and news management.&#13;
A~onspirators Lerner, Dowd, Kelley,&#13;
s, Marshall, Stern, and Roger Lipp-&#13;
~an expect the trial to go into 1971. Tqe&#13;
M' eral government meanwhile pursues&#13;
anidchael Justensen, the eighth co~spirator&#13;
a fugitive.&#13;
The Seattle situation is on every level,&#13;
:e_cedent setting: the co~cept of the SLF,&#13;
to inroads to working people, i!S attempts&#13;
nu understand the meaning of young&#13;
8~ 1e-c1 lass people in the context of social&#13;
gg e; the women's action and its&#13;
consequences; and the nature of federally&#13;
By WALTER BREACH&#13;
Once upon a time, as all good stories&#13;
should begin, a friend of mine had a kindly&#13;
aunt. This kindly aunt had a ninety year&#13;
old uncle. And, as the story goes, one day&#13;
she found him high in an old tree, standing&#13;
one foot on the top rung of a rickety ladder&#13;
and the other on a rather unsure looking&#13;
branch. "Oh, come down, come down."&#13;
she cried when she saw him, "you surely&#13;
will strain yourself." But the old man only&#13;
looked down on her and calmly said, "my&#13;
younger brother is helping me, so don't&#13;
worry." His eighty-nine year-old brother&#13;
then appeared, and was indeed helping&#13;
him. What has this got to do with a Booster&#13;
Club you ask? Not much, but I like the&#13;
story. For those who insist on a meaning, however, substitute Kathy Mauer for the&#13;
kindly old aunt, the Booster Club for the&#13;
old timer. Then take the student body as&#13;
the younger brother an~ . the tree as the&#13;
effort to raise school spint, and the story&#13;
makes less sense then before. The events the Club has planned sound&#13;
alright, but after all, we're not just out of&#13;
high school, at least most of us ar~'t, well&#13;
maybe some of us aten't then agam maybe&#13;
this is just Parkside high school. If so,&#13;
more power to you Booster club, and I sure&#13;
w9Uld like to be able to smoke on the bus.&#13;
UW LAB FIRST TO ID&#13;
SUPERIOR TUDE. •&#13;
The ':Jniversity of Wisc in the&#13;
firs~ un!versity to d vote its attention to&#13;
cultivatmg the land's gr t t natur I&#13;
~::~~ - the intellectually .uperior&#13;
\l_ia the 1adison campus R arch and&#13;
~Uldance Laboratory for Superior&#13;
~udents, more than 3. . tudents from&#13;
high ~ools all over Wiscon in have taken&#13;
part m the project.&#13;
?et«tlcu&#13;
DELICATESSEN-BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 flm-SKOND STlfn&#13;
K!NOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 lotlirep ""·• aodlle, w;,...,,..;,.&#13;
Students get red carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone e l se !)&#13;
T I PINI Tt l•J&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
Larc11t s.11ct1&#13;
6?6 56th St. Kenosha&#13;
MIKE DAVIS&#13;
SPEED CITY&#13;
"Check Our Prices Last''&#13;
4807 7th AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
65&amp;-2233&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTli CITY L ITS&#13;
THE&#13;
DAISY&#13;
Thrifty Thrtads&#13;
CE.NSE&#13;
OLES&#13;
For Your &amp;u! ..&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Fut.'&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
1202 - 56th Street&#13;
Kenuha, Wis.• 652-6904&#13;
LA TEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACKETS _ Reg. $,5.00&#13;
How $27 .50&#13;
Pric · to&#13;
Fit Your Pock t&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A. , TILL IDNITE&#13;
FRI. I SAT. TILL 2 A. ,&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR and RESTAURANT&#13;
Italian-American Foods&#13;
2114 52nd St.&#13;
20 hrs. a dayJ7 days a week&#13;
Organ Music Thurs., Fr· , Sot&#13;
F rom 9 p.m. t il 2 o.m. &#13;
SPoNSOReD BY:&#13;
VARSI"l'Yewe&#13;
SIGMA D£t..TA Pf.fl&#13;
PEP -' BOOSlCQ ewB&#13;
CAPTAI""S COUNCIL.&#13;
HOI»&#13;
t\eouT&#13;
-. (t1i.....L.&#13;
TOUGH&#13;
0\..1&gt;&#13;
MrJG.GRi'&#13;
SUBMIT&#13;
IDEAS TO&#13;
NEWSCope,&#13;
STUOeNT as&#13;
-!&lt;~~...&#13;
SPONSOR@ BY:&#13;
VARS•TYcws&#13;
SIGMA DELTA PMI&#13;
PEP.&amp; SOOs-TtR CLUB&#13;
CAPTAIN'S COUNCtL.&#13;
Vc~Ai1L.e&#13;
FE"C.t..A, ·nv,,-&#13;
s~~ Ge-AA.&#13;
Ho~&#13;
AeovT&#13;
'- AAAL.&#13;
Tb~&#13;
01..t)&#13;
~l"Jl"~~r&#13;
~TH~ 'tlA c.E&#13;
LS No.,..&#13;
/&gt;. l,.W A '/...S&#13;
Tb Tt-\€&#13;
ScµlFi- 11 </text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 2, Issue 9, November 23, 1970</text>
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                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="61644">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="61645">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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          <element elementId="42">
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                <text>Newspaper</text>
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                <text>English</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61652">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>World's Craziest Sport</text>
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              <text>World's&#13;
Craziest&#13;
Sport&#13;
Billed as the world's "craziest" sport,&#13;
wilder than a rodeo, and funnier than a&#13;
circus, Bob Crosby's donkey basketball&#13;
show comes to Kenosha on Friday I Nov.&#13;
20, at 8 p.m. in the Carthage College&#13;
physical education center. The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside cheerleaders will&#13;
(ace the Carthage College cheerleaders in&#13;
the feature game. The other game will&#13;
feature a match-up between a team&#13;
comprised of faculty and administration of&#13;
Carthage versus a team comprised of&#13;
Carthage's sorority all-stars. The winner&#13;
of the first game will play the winner of the&#13;
second game for a short championship&#13;
game.&#13;
This event is being sponsored by the&#13;
Delta Omega Nu fraternity at Carthage.&#13;
The idea of donkey basketball is to attempt&#13;
to play basketball while riding on a&#13;
donkey. Sounds simple! However, the&#13;
donkeys don't always go in the direction&#13;
they are supposed to go. This results m&#13;
SOme very funny situation. .&#13;
The game will consist of two eight&#13;
minute halves, with four players from&#13;
....eachteam on the court atone time. Some&#13;
of the rules are that the players must take&#13;
their donkeys with them wherever they&#13;
go; all players must be mounted to score;&#13;
players may ride or lead donkeys to the&#13;
ball and all players must be mounted to&#13;
play defense.&#13;
Advance sale tickets are $1.00 for adults&#13;
and 75 cents for students, and may be&#13;
purchased at the Parkside Student Activities&#13;
Office or from the Parkside&#13;
cheerleaders. Tickets may also be purChased&#13;
at the door the night of the game at&#13;
the price of $1.25 for adults and $1.00 for&#13;
students.&#13;
DRAFT COUNSELING&#13;
The Student Affairs Office is prepared to&#13;
help students explore their questions&#13;
concerning the draft and proVlde the&#13;
needed information in considering tneir&#13;
service choice. .&#13;
If you are interested in such counsehng&#13;
services contact Steve Bangert at Student&#13;
Affairs in Kenosha, Room 135.&#13;
SPONSOReD BY: vAasny CUJe&#13;
SIGMADELTAPHt&#13;
P£P~~CUJ&amp;&#13;
CAPTAIN's COUNCIl.&#13;
Rene Dubos to&#13;
Present Lecture&#13;
Pulitzer prize-winning ecologist Rene&#13;
Dubos will present a free public lecture,&#13;
HSo Human an Animal: The Development&#13;
of Man's Potential" , at 8 p.m. on Tuesday J&#13;
Nov. 17, at Parkside.&#13;
The lecture, in Room 103, Greenquist&#13;
Hall, is sponsored by the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee.&#13;
Professor of environmental biomedicine&#13;
at Rockefeller University, a graduate&#13;
institution and scientific research center,&#13;
Dubos received the 1969 Pulitzer prize for&#13;
the book which shares its title with his&#13;
lecture topic. Prof. Dubos' other books&#13;
include "Man Adapting" and "The Unseen&#13;
World", both winners of Phi Beta Kappa&#13;
awards. His most recent book is "Reason&#13;
Awake".&#13;
A member of the Citizens' Advisory&#13;
Committee on Environmental Quality to&#13;
President Nixon, Prof. Dubos was, until&#13;
last year, president of the Scientists' Institute&#13;
for Public Information and continues&#13;
to serve on Its board of directors. He&#13;
was among the prime organizers of the&#13;
Environmental Teach-Ins last spring on&#13;
the nation's college campuses.&#13;
Throughout his professional life, Dr.&#13;
Dubos has been intensely concerned with&#13;
the effects that environmental forces&#13;
physiochemical, biological and social -&#13;
exert on human life.&#13;
Poetry Forum&#13;
Tuesday&#13;
Alan Shucard, assistant professor of&#13;
English at Parkside, will read from his&#13;
recently published book of poetry, "The&#13;
Gorgon Bag", when the Poetry Forum&#13;
meets at 7 p.m. Nov. 17 in room 121,&#13;
Greenquist. He'll also read a number of&#13;
poems written since coming to Parkside.&#13;
Shucard, who "started writing poetry&#13;
when I was old enough to wonder who 1&#13;
was and what aU those people were doing&#13;
around me," recently read from "The&#13;
Gorgon Bag" and other poems at the&#13;
Johnson Foundation's International&#13;
Writers' Conference at Wingspread.&#13;
Brooklyn born, Shucard did graduate&#13;
work at the University of St. Andrew,&#13;
Scotland, and the University of Connecticut&#13;
and received his Ph.D. from the&#13;
University of Arizona. His work has been&#13;
published in a number of poetry journals in&#13;
the United States and canada.&#13;
"The Gorgon Bag" is available at all&#13;
UWP bookstores.&#13;
The Dec. 15 poetry forum will feature&#13;
Bruce Stiehm of the Spanish discipline&#13;
reading his English and Spanish poetry&#13;
Anyone interested in reading his poems&#13;
at the forum should contact Andy McLean&#13;
in Kenosha or AI Wallace in Racine.&#13;
Future programs are already in the&#13;
making - but there's still lots of room for&#13;
anyone who might want to read.&#13;
Not Responsible&#13;
For Thefts&#13;
Severa) inquiries about insurance&#13;
coverage for theft, loss, or damage to&#13;
personal property have been received as a&#13;
result of recent incidents on campus&#13;
Therefore, Central Risk Management felt&#13;
it advisable to again review the University&#13;
policy on this subject.&#13;
The University is NOT responsible&#13;
for personal property. Normally&#13;
anyone having personal&#13;
property on campus or using&#13;
personal property in projects off&#13;
campus is expected to provide his&#13;
or her own insurance coverage on&#13;
such property lwhether it is books,&#13;
an automobile. or cmet'ung else)&#13;
At one lime such property was easily&#13;
covered by personal insurance policies&#13;
However, today there is considerable&#13;
diversity among companies on coverage.&#13;
Therefore, we strongly suggest each&#13;
person check with his or her own company&#13;
on how coverage may be provided&#13;
If you have any questions, contact Mr- J&#13;
Ross, UWP Business office, extension 2M&#13;
Booster Club&#13;
Plans Events&#13;
A bus trip to Parkside's opener for the&#13;
1970-71 basketball season is being planned&#13;
by the Booster Club. Parkside cagers will&#13;
face Chicago Xavier on Tuesday, Dec. 1.&#13;
Game time is 8:00 p.m, Tickets are&#13;
scheduled to go on sale Nov, 23.&#13;
Also in the planning stage is a pep rally&#13;
and a victory bonfire to be held the night of&#13;
Dec. 3 as a kick-off for SPORTSFEST's&#13;
weekend of activities.&#13;
Other events Include trips to see some of&#13;
the Milwaukee Bucks or the Chicago Bulls&#13;
basketball games as well as Chicago&#13;
Blackhawk games. A winter carnival has&#13;
also been suggested as a possible activity&#13;
to be held second semester .&#13;
Only a handful of people showed up fbr&#13;
last Wednesday's meeting. They are now&#13;
working on up-coming events. But many&#13;
more students are needed to make future&#13;
events successful. Chairmen are still&#13;
needed for these committees: publicity,&#13;
special activities, trips, programs and a&#13;
bleacher bum section.&#13;
The next meeting is slated for Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 18. It will be held in Room&#13;
Ull.Greenquist at 4:00. If students are&#13;
interested but are unable to attend, contact&#13;
Kathy Mauer.&#13;
Upcoming Events&#13;
Donkey BaskethaU Game - Carthage&#13;
cheerleaders have challenged&#13;
Parkside cheerleaders in a game of&#13;
Donkey Basketball. The game will take&#13;
place Friday, Nov. 20, at 8:00 p.m. at&#13;
the Carthage Fieldhouse. Tickets may&#13;
be purchased from the cheerleaders,&#13;
the Rangerettes, and the Student&#13;
Activities Office, or they can be bought&#13;
at the door.&#13;
Bus trip to the first basketball gameNeighborhood&#13;
to Perform Here&#13;
Popular and successful recording group,&#13;
'The Neighborhood", will be performing&#13;
at Parkside this Saturday, Nov. 21, for a&#13;
dance-nightclub at the student activities&#13;
building. The event, sponsored through the&#13;
Student Activities Office, will run from&#13;
9:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. with the group&#13;
performing three sets.&#13;
Relatively new to the contemporary&#13;
music scene, The Neighborhood has&#13;
recently received much attention through&#13;
their hit recording of "Big Yellow Taxi"&#13;
and their latest release "Laugh". Both&#13;
may be found in the group's first album:&#13;
The Neighborhood - Debut.&#13;
Nine me!J1bers strong, the group is rich&#13;
Parkside vs. Chicago Xavier. Game&#13;
time is 8:00 p.m. on Dec. 1. Tickets go&#13;
on sale Nov. 23.&#13;
Pep Rally and Victory Bonfire - Kickoff&#13;
for Sportsfest weekend to beheld on the&#13;
night of Dec. 3.&#13;
First Home Basketball Games - Dec. 4,&#13;
8:00 p.m. St. Joe's High school,&#13;
Kenosha, UWP vs. U. of Pwdue, North&#13;
Central.&#13;
December 5, 8:00 p.m. Case high&#13;
school, Racine, UWP vs. Swedish&#13;
National team.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Austin, Tex. - (J.P.) - The first class of&#13;
the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public&#13;
Affairs at the University of Texas is a&#13;
cross-section of the United States in&#13;
geographic, cultural and academic&#13;
backgrounds, according to Dean John A.&#13;
Gronouski.&#13;
in its composite of musicians and singers.&#13;
Its makeup is piano, lead and bass guitar,&#13;
drums, five male vocalists, plus Elaine&#13;
and Ellen, two of the smallest bundles of&#13;
talent around todav. Thev stand only 4'9"&#13;
but can belt out songs like six footers.&#13;
The sound and style of The Neighborhood&#13;
is uniquely their own, yet they&#13;
move with ease from such things as the&#13;
somewhat wild score of "Hair" to the&#13;
more calming sounds of the Fifth&#13;
Dimension. Much of their material is&#13;
written and arranged by the group itself,&#13;
and each member is choreographed to&#13;
make their show exciting visually as well&#13;
as musically.&#13;
The group has been kept busy with&#13;
numerous club bookings ("Someplace&#13;
Else" in Milwaukee, "Mister Kelly'S" in&#13;
Chicago, etc.) as well as appearing in&#13;
concert on many college campuses {including&#13;
a date at the Carthage College&#13;
fieldhouse two Saturdays ago with Mason&#13;
Profit&gt;. This makes their appearance in&#13;
the limited capacity Parkside Activities&#13;
Building an extremely unusual opportunity&#13;
to see a top entertainment attraction&#13;
in a very intimate setting.&#13;
Because admissions will be limited in&#13;
number, tickets are now being sold in&#13;
advance at the regular price of $1.50 per&#13;
person. These advance sale tickets are on&#13;
sale now at the Student Activities Building&#13;
service counter, the Office of Student&#13;
Affairs (Racine and Kenosha campuses) I&#13;
and the Student Activities Office in Tallent&#13;
Hall. Remaining tickets, if any, will he&#13;
sold at the door at $2.00 per person.&#13;
World's&#13;
Crazies&#13;
Sport&#13;
Billed as the world's "craziest" sport,&#13;
wilder than a rodeo, and funnier than a&#13;
circus, Bob Crosby's donkey basketball&#13;
show comes to Kenosha on Friday, Nov.&#13;
20, at 8 p.m. in the Carthage College&#13;
physical education center. The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside cheerleaders will&#13;
face the Carthage College cheerleaders in&#13;
the feature game. The other game will&#13;
feature a match-up between a team&#13;
comprised of faculty and administration of&#13;
Carthage versus a team comprised of&#13;
Carthage's sorority all-stars. The winner&#13;
of the first game will play the winner of the&#13;
second game for a short championship&#13;
game.&#13;
This event is being sponsored by the&#13;
Delta Omega Nu fraternity at Carthage.&#13;
The idea of donkey basketball is to attempt&#13;
to play basketball while riding on a&#13;
donkey. Sounds simple! However, the&#13;
donkeys don't always go in the directi~n&#13;
they are supposed to go. This results m&#13;
some very funny situation. . The game will consist of two eight&#13;
minute halves, with four players from&#13;
1!.lch team on the court at·one time. Some&#13;
of the rules are that the players must take&#13;
their donkeys with them wherever they&#13;
go; all players must be mounted to score;&#13;
players may ride or lead donkeys to the&#13;
ball and all players must be mounted to&#13;
play defense.&#13;
Advance sale tickets are $1.00 for adults&#13;
and 75 cents for students, and may be&#13;
purchased at the Parkside Student ':-,ctivities&#13;
Office or from the Parkside&#13;
cheerleaders. Tickets may also be purchased&#13;
at the door the night of the game at&#13;
the price of $1.25 for adults and $1.00 for&#13;
students.&#13;
DRAFT COUNSELING&#13;
The Student Affairs Office is prepared to&#13;
help students explore their q~stions&#13;
concerning the draft and . pro~de ~e&#13;
needed information in cons1denng their&#13;
service choice. . H you are interested in such counseling&#13;
services, contact Steve Bangert at Student&#13;
Affairs in Kenosha, Room 135.&#13;
Rene Dubos to&#13;
Present Lecture&#13;
Pulitzer prize-winning ecologist Rene&#13;
Dubos will present a free public lecture,&#13;
"So Human an Animal: The Development&#13;
of Man's Potential", at 8 p.m. on Tuesday,&#13;
ov. 7, Pa . .~· ,-.-·--·~&#13;
The lecture, in Room 103, Greenquist&#13;
Hall, is sponsored by the Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts Committee.&#13;
Professor of environmental biomedicine&#13;
at Rockefeller University, a graduate&#13;
institution and scientific research center,&#13;
Dubos received the 1969 Pulitzer prize for&#13;
the book which shares its title with his&#13;
lecture topic. Prof. Dubos' other books&#13;
Booster Club&#13;
Plans Events&#13;
A bus trip to Parkside's opener for the&#13;
1970-71 basketball season is being planned&#13;
by the Booster Club. Parkside cagers will&#13;
face Chicago Xavier on Tuesday. Dec. 1.&#13;
Game time is 8:00 p.m. Tickets are&#13;
scheduled to go on sale Nov. 23.&#13;
Also in the planning stage is a pep rally&#13;
and a victory bonfire to be held the night of&#13;
Dec. 3 as a kick-off for SPORTSFEST's&#13;
weekend of activities.&#13;
Other events include trips to see some of&#13;
the Milwaukee Bucks or the Chicago Bulls&#13;
basketball games as well as Chicago&#13;
Blackhawk games. A winter carnival has&#13;
also been suggested as a possible activity&#13;
to be held second semester.&#13;
Only a handful of people showed up for&#13;
last Wednesday's meeting. They are now&#13;
working on up-coming events. But many&#13;
more students are needed to make future&#13;
events successful. Chairmen are still&#13;
needed for these committees: publicity,&#13;
special activities, trips, programs and a&#13;
bleacher bum section.&#13;
The next meeting is slated for Wednesday,&#13;
Nov. 18. It will be held in Room&#13;
101-Greenquist at 4:00. If students are&#13;
interested but are unable to attend, contact&#13;
Kathy Mauer.&#13;
Upcoming Events&#13;
Donkey Basketball Game - Carthage&#13;
cheerleaders have challenged&#13;
Parkside cheerleaders in a game of&#13;
Donkey Basketball. The game will take&#13;
place Friday, Nov. 20, at 8:00 p.m. at&#13;
the Carthage Fieldhouse. Tickets may&#13;
be purchased from the cheerleaders,&#13;
the Rangerettes, and the Student&#13;
Activities Office, or they can be bought&#13;
at the door.&#13;
Bus trip to the first basketball gameinclude&#13;
"Man Adapting" and "The Unseen&#13;
World", both winners of Phi Beta Kappa&#13;
awards. His most recent book is "Reason&#13;
Awake".&#13;
A member of the Citizens' Advisory&#13;
Committee on Environmental Quality to&#13;
President Nixon. Prof. Dubos was, until&#13;
last year, pre ident of the Scientists' InPoetry&#13;
Forum&#13;
Tuesday&#13;
Alan hucard, assi tant pror r or&#13;
English at Parkside, will read from hi&#13;
recently publi hed book of poetr , "Th&#13;
Gorgon Bag·•, when the Poetry Forum&#13;
meets at 7 p.m. , ·ov. 17 m room 127,&#13;
Greenqui t. He'll al o read a number of&#13;
poems written since coming to P rksid&#13;
hucard, who "started writing poetry&#13;
wh n I was old enough to wond r who I&#13;
wa and what all those people wer doing&#13;
around me," recently read from ''Th&#13;
Gorgon Ba " and other poem at the&#13;
Johnson Foundation' Int rnational&#13;
Writers' Conference at Wing pread.&#13;
Brooklyn born, hucard did graduate&#13;
work at the Univer ity of t Andrew,&#13;
ScoUand, and the ni\.'er ity or onnecticut&#13;
and received h1 Ph.D. from the&#13;
niver ity of Arizona. Hi work ha been&#13;
publi h din a number of poelr. journal in&#13;
the nited State and Canada.&#13;
"The Gorgon Bag" i available at all&#13;
UWP book tores.&#13;
The Dec. 15 poetr forum will feature&#13;
Bruce tiehm of the pani h di cipline&#13;
reading his Engli h and Spani. h poetr .&#13;
Anvone intere ted in reading h1 poem&#13;
at the forum should contact Andy • 1cLean&#13;
in Kenosha or Al Wallace in Racine.&#13;
Future programs are already m th&#13;
making - but there' still lots of room for&#13;
anyone who might want to read.&#13;
Not Responsible&#13;
For Thefts&#13;
Several inquirie about&#13;
stitute for Publi Information an:.:-,d=-=c:.::o-,en_------aci-,nlLui&#13;
tinues to serve on its board of director . He&#13;
was among the prime organizers of the&#13;
Environmental Teach-Ins last spring on&#13;
the nation's college campuses.&#13;
Throughout his prof es ·ional life, Dr.&#13;
Dubos has been intensely concern d with&#13;
the effects that environmental forces -&#13;
physiochemical, biological and ocial -&#13;
exert on human life.&#13;
Neighborhood&#13;
to Perform Here&#13;
Popular and succes ful recording group,&#13;
'The Neighborhood", will be performing&#13;
at Parkside this Saturday, , 'ov. 21, for a&#13;
dance-nightclub at the student acti\ities&#13;
building. The event, ponsored through the&#13;
Student Activities Office, will run from&#13;
9:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. with the group&#13;
performing three sets.&#13;
Relatively new to the contemporary&#13;
music scene, The Neighborhood ha&#13;
recently received much attention through&#13;
their hit recording of "Big Yellow Taxi"&#13;
and their latest release "Laugh". Both&#13;
may be found in the group's first album:&#13;
The Neighborhood - Debut.&#13;
Nine me!flbers strong, the group is rich&#13;
Parkside vs. Chicago Xavier. Game&#13;
time is 8:00 p.m. on Dec. 1. Tickets go&#13;
on sale Nov. 23.&#13;
Pep Rally and Victory Bonfire - Kickoff&#13;
for Sportsfest weekend to be held on the&#13;
night of Dec. 3.&#13;
First Home Basketball Games - Dec. 4,&#13;
8:00 p.m. St. Joe's High school,&#13;
Kenosha, UWP vs. U. of P1.11due, North&#13;
Central.&#13;
December 5, 8:00 p.m. Case high&#13;
school, Racine, UWP vs. Swedish&#13;
National team.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Austin, Tex. - (I.P.)-The first class of&#13;
the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public&#13;
Affairs at the University of Texas is a cross-section of the Untted States in&#13;
geographic, cultural and academi-c&#13;
backgrounds, according to Dean John A.&#13;
Gronouski.&#13;
in it composit of m ic,an a, d . mger . It makeup i piano, I ad and b guit r,&#13;
drums, five male vocali ·t , plu. Elam&#13;
and Ellen, two of th mall bundl of&#13;
tal nl around todav. Thev t nd only 4' "&#13;
but can belt out ong lik . ix foot r . The sound and tyl of Th , 1ghborhood&#13;
i uniqu ly th ir own, •e th • mo\.'e with ea from u h thm th&#13;
omewhat wild . core or "Hair" to th&#13;
mor calming ound of th Fifth&#13;
Dimen ion. Much or their mat rial I&#13;
wTitten and arranged by th group 11.5 If,&#13;
and each memb r i choreographed to&#13;
make their how exciting vi ually a· well&#13;
as musically.&#13;
The group has been kept bu y with&#13;
numerous club booking (''Someplace&#13;
Else" in Milwaukee, " 1ister Kelly's" in&#13;
Chicago, etc.&gt; a well as appearing in&#13;
concert on many college campuses &lt;including&#13;
a date at the Carthage College&#13;
fieldhouse two Saturdays ago with , lason&#13;
Profit&gt;. This makes their appearance in&#13;
the limited capacity Parkside Activities&#13;
Building an extremely unusual opportunity&#13;
to see a top entertainment attraction&#13;
in a very intimate setting.&#13;
Because admissions will be limited in&#13;
number, tickets are now being sold in&#13;
advance at the regular price of $1.50 per&#13;
person. These advance sale tickets are on&#13;
sale now at the Student Activities Building&#13;
service counter, the Office of Student&#13;
Affairs (Racine and Kenosha campuses),&#13;
and the Student Activities Office in Tallent&#13;
Hall. Remaining tickets, if any, will be&#13;
sold at the door at $2.00 per person. &#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
A Guided Free Will&#13;
Itseems that if the Parkside student were to reflect as to why he&#13;
is attending this University he just may seek out the honest reason .. u&#13;
The Government pressures him, the draft, Vie~am, and ';Ollege ar: a&#13;
heavy burdens, like an iron anvil tied to his feet, cnppling. e ery&#13;
young man into and sometimes through college. He's faced Wl~ ?ne&#13;
alternative in which they tell him "You must learn". There isn t. a&#13;
democratic decision involved. In forcing a student to college, while&#13;
trying to keep a taggering amount of Gover.nment, six wee~, twel::&#13;
weeks and final pressure, you are turmng out neurotic fore&#13;
education rather than free-flowing creative knowledge. hil&#13;
Wouldn't it be better to lessen the number of students w . e&#13;
rai ing the quality of each student ... Army, Jail, or College - whIch&#13;
do you choose?&#13;
Small Student Voice&#13;
tudents who would like to have a student-size v~ice ~ ~e hiring&#13;
and firing of their professors can do so by voicing their opmion to ~e&#13;
divi ion chairman, the dean, chancellor, or any of the higher authority.&#13;
You could build up a favorable opinion of your professors, therefore&#13;
making it difficult for the "lynch committee" to el~ate on~ of yo~&#13;
prof . or . The time to take this action IS now! ~ y.ear 5 axe IS&#13;
cutting out the non-Ph.D., unpublished cancer of this Uruverslty. Get&#13;
moving and you might save a life!&#13;
Bookstore a Closed Case&#13;
The University bookstores on our campuses are based in Appi&#13;
ton, Wi onsin. The stores are owned by Clarence Broc~an (UWP&#13;
i tant Chancellor) and Howard Thielen. Both are natives of Appleton.&#13;
Univer ity bookstores are operating on all campuses of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin.&#13;
P()!'CRIPTTO" TOn:M POLE&#13;
TIn 1 50rt of a pestscnpt to the article I&#13;
wrore hUed "Th. Acad rmc Totem Pol."&#13;
It "'. print in the '0\1 mber 2nd lS5ue&#13;
01 '~W' PE Som. 01 the things I said&#13;
In that arhcle came up for discussion&#13;
around the table In the lounge in Lake Hall&#13;
an Racme between morning classes.&#13;
"You sur' descrtbed a dog .at dog&#13;
I 1)',to commented one or the fellows.&#13;
"LIke a materiali be ral race." he added&#13;
lito name was "Greg" I didn't g.t the&#13;
la 1 name.)&#13;
"When and wher.· .. I asked&#13;
"In the 'Kong 01 the HIli' rout one you&#13;
lalked about where everyone is&#13;
scrambhng and tryong to g.1 ahead 01&#13;
someone .Ise . colleg. peopl., business&#13;
pi e ....erybody. h's a way of life&#13;
that doesn't appeal to me:'&#13;
"Il' not qUlle as grim a game as you&#13;
thmk." I told him, "And it can be an exe'ling.&#13;
challengmg and re~ ..arding way of&#13;
Itf. Your belllg her. right now indicates&#13;
that )'ou are tnterested in getting ahead&#13;
preparing for a race of some kind.&#13;
II"" do )·ou expeel to be earning a hving&#13;
rl.... e leaf'S from no,.,'!'"&#13;
". w8ntlo teach hi tory or social studies&#13;
on a hIgh hool _ mayhe on a coUeg.&#13;
~etlme." replied Greg&#13;
"Look round this room." I said. tH.&#13;
did I , "You·r. probably lookong al ten&#13;
people who will he applyong for the same&#13;
job you'll he alt.r when you graduat •. Lik.&#13;
11or not, the)' are yOW' competilors ...&#13;
e\tn n ..&#13;
'\I'hat I ...·a. trymg to say," I continued,&#13;
og noone had cut In."Is that the beUer&#13;
person is .ducated, the bett.r will be the&#13;
\'1 h can render . Ole finer&#13;
p&lt;oduCI ...111 he he abl to make and&#13;
the hIgh r '" III be that person's eventual&#13;
Ilion on the tottrn pole of success And&#13;
my de-fiOlhonof Utt is in bemg a useful&#13;
human being ..&#13;
ThOK around the table were listening so&#13;
I r n ....Ith the ball ...h,l. I still had il "You&#13;
don't have to Itterally give lOmebody a&#13;
blood)' """" 10 order to gel ah.ad in IiI •.&#13;
Only n arrogant person would try that&#13;
t hmque and ....ould probably com. out&#13;
nd best Arrogance IS no asset 10&#13;
anyone It's filty per cenl blull and certaInly&#13;
no 1001 to use when you are trying to&#13;
make people see things your way_ I can't&#13;
thlOk 01 a songl. arrogant person who ever&#13;
won h, last balll ....&#13;
.. , Just want to Iiv. and I.t Iiv.," said&#13;
Greg. "W. ought to dev.lop a soci.ty in&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
which you can find your place without&#13;
every move being a competitive effort&#13;
where you have to darn near knock&#13;
somebody down in order to gel ahead. It&#13;
J.an . . . beautiful, bright-eyed and&#13;
serious. . . was listening to this exchange.&#13;
"You've got to break it up, fellows, she&#13;
said. "The bell will ring in a minute." We&#13;
quickly picked up our books and went to&#13;
five diHerent classrooms.&#13;
Herwalching the clock was lucky lor me&#13;
because I needed time to think over what&#13;
else I wanted to say to Greg. Very late that&#13;
evening my thoughts came into locus&#13;
along these lines ....&#13;
I know where a person could go to get&#13;
a....ay lrom this rough-house king 01 the hill&#13;
business. There are countries where you&#13;
go to school and learn what the govern·&#13;
ment wants you to learn. "University" is&#13;
the fancy name for a propaganda center&#13;
and you won't even know the names of the&#13;
administrators. Your job will be assigned,&#13;
your wages fIXed, your dwelling place&#13;
state-owned. Your health will he car.d lor&#13;
(rom the cradle to the grave. You will be&#13;
told when, where and lor whom to vote.&#13;
You will have security ... and you will be&#13;
a slave.&#13;
I prefer to lake my chances playing&#13;
"King 01 the Hill". And I think that many&#13;
of you reading this will choose the Ire.&#13;
enterprise game because you are already&#13;
showing a strong tendency of wanting t(lrun&#13;
things. That, I think, is good.&#13;
However, you will eventually learn that&#13;
in our society there is a lot more to&#13;
adulthood than having the ability to heget&#13;
a child or rire a gun. Nor is becoming an&#13;
adult an automatic happening based on&#13;
chronological age. Economic self.&#13;
sufficiency is also a measure of maturity.&#13;
Expect this in our society ... It will only&#13;
be when you are entirely on your own that&#13;
you will he numhered among the lullfledged,&#13;
dues-paying adult memhers 01 the&#13;
trihe.&#13;
List.n, Greg ... Your time to lake over&#13;
will be here sooner than you think. And in&#13;
many cases, befor. you are lully pr.pared&#13;
... If there ever is such a time. The quirks&#13;
of timing will be one of your many&#13;
p-oblems. It's strange ... when you are&#13;
yOWlg and impatient, time seems to go so&#13;
slowly. You wish that you could speed il&#13;
up. And when you ar. older, time goes&#13;
much too last.&#13;
And actually, you don't have to worry&#13;
much about finding your station in lile&#13;
your place on the totem pole. Yo~'~~&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 8&#13;
November 16. 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven TaIls&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Marggie TaIls&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John potenle&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Advert~sing Manager&#13;
Busmess Manager&#13;
Photographers&#13;
r&#13;
STAFF&#13;
D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
Ma,;,c Eisen, Arthur Gruhl, Walter Breach&#13;
Published weekly by the students 01 the University o( Wisconsin.&#13;
P k&#13;
'de Kenosha Wisconsin, 53140. Mailing address IS Parkside s Newscope&#13;
ar sr " .. d edito . It I h '&#13;
3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha. Busmess an 1 rta e ep one number is 658-&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
picking it out right now. You are already at&#13;
one of the lower levels riding the escalator&#13;
to success. (Pardon the mixed metaphor&#13;
... totem pole and escalato.r.) Thousands&#13;
are riding right along With you. And&#13;
sometime, somewhere along the way,&#13;
somebody will tell you where to get oIl.&#13;
And don't be surprised if that person IS a&#13;
Ph.D.&#13;
In totidem verbis, id est vita.&#13;
&lt;Latin: in total words, that is life, or&#13;
that's Ihe way life is.)&#13;
Madison, Wis. - (I.P.l - An at!emptlo&#13;
steer away Irom the tradilional Iccno-,.&#13;
quiz course toward a multidisciplinary&#13;
approach has resulted in a new course fll'&#13;
Ihe Integrated Liberal Studies program at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin, according to&#13;
Prolessor Robert A. Kimbrough, cbair.&#13;
man 01 the department.&#13;
Tilied "Approaches to Knowl.dge", tlle&#13;
year-long four-credit course is designedto&#13;
provide a means of drawing logether IIId&#13;
integrating the facts, ideas and points al&#13;
view developed within each 01 three baoic&#13;
courses which ILS freshmen take d~&#13;
their first semester. These cOW"SeSceQ&#13;
around the three disciplines - nabal&#13;
science, social science and the humanitia.&#13;
FREE DELIVERY 4,00 P.M: TO IHO P.M.&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave. KENOSHA - 657·5191&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR and RESTAURANT&#13;
Italian-American Foods&#13;
2114 52nd St.&#13;
20 hrs. a day/7 doys a week&#13;
Organ Music Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
From 9 p.m. til 2.a.m.-&#13;
Coming Saturday, November 21st&#13;
popular recording artists&#13;
DANCE/NIGHTCLUB&#13;
9:30-12:30 _ Three Shows _ Activities Bldg.&#13;
ADMISSION: $1.50 IN ADVANCE _ $2.00 AT THE DOOR&#13;
TIC PARKSIDE &amp; WISCONSIN 10. REQUIRED T AFFAItIl&#13;
KETS AVAILABLE: ACTIVITIES BLDG., KENOSHA.&amp; RACINE STUDEN&#13;
, COMMENTS on the news&#13;
A Guided Free Wilt&#13;
SmaU Student&#13;
Bookstore a Closed Case&#13;
tor on r camp es are based in Aptor&#13;
are owned by Clarence Brockman (UWP&#13;
nd Ho ·ard Thielen. Both are natives of Apoperating&#13;
on all campuses of the&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An A ware Square&#13;
which you can find your place without&#13;
every move being a competitive effort&#13;
here you have to darn near knock&#13;
m bod} do 11 m order to get ahead. "&#13;
Jean . . . beautiful, bright-eyed and&#13;
serious ... was listening to this exchange.&#13;
"You've got to break it up, fellows, she&#13;
said. " The bell v.i ll ring in a minute." We&#13;
quickly picked up our books and went to&#13;
five different classrooms.&#13;
Her v.atching the clock was lucky for me&#13;
because I needed time to think over what&#13;
el e Iv. anted to say to Greg. ery late that&#13;
e•,ehing my thoughts came into focus&#13;
aJong these lines . . . .&#13;
I know where a person could go to get&#13;
away from thi rough-house king of the hill&#13;
busin . There are countries where you&#13;
go to chool and learn what the government&#13;
·ants you to learn. "University" is&#13;
the fancy name for a propaganda center&#13;
and you v.on't even know the names of the&#13;
admini trators. Your job will be assigned,&#13;
)Our wages fixed , your dwelling place&#13;
tate--0wned. Your health will be cared for&#13;
from the cradle to the grave. You will be&#13;
told when, where and for whom to vote. You will have security ... and you will be&#13;
a slave.&#13;
I prefer to lake my chances playing&#13;
" King or the HiJI". And I think that many&#13;
of you reading this will choose the free&#13;
enterprise game because you are already&#13;
howing a trong tendency of wanting tt'&#13;
run thing . That. I think, is good.&#13;
However, you will eventually learn that&#13;
in our society there is a lot more to&#13;
adulthood than ha\ing the ability to beget a child or fire a gun. Nor is becoming an&#13;
adult an automatic happening based on&#13;
chronolog1cal age. Economic selffic1ency&#13;
i al o a measure of maturity.&#13;
E peel lhi in our society . .. It will only&#13;
be when you are entirely on your own that&#13;
you will be nwnbered among the fullfledged,&#13;
dues-paying adult members of the&#13;
tribe.&#13;
Listen, Greg ... Your time to take over&#13;
will be here sooner than you think. And in&#13;
many cases, befo_re you are fully prepared&#13;
•.• 1f there ever 1s such a time. The quirks&#13;
of timing will be one of your many&#13;
problems. It's strange . . . when you are&#13;
young and impatient, time seems to go so slowly. You wish that you could speed it&#13;
up. And when you are older, time goes&#13;
much too fast.&#13;
And actually, you don't have to worry&#13;
much about finding your station in life . . .&#13;
your place on the totem pole. You're&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 8&#13;
November 16, 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Marggie Taffs&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Potente&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Advert~sing Manager&#13;
Busmess Manager&#13;
Photographers&#13;
STAFF&#13;
D.JI. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Arthur Gruhl, Walter Breach&#13;
Published weekly by the studen~ of the U~iversity_ o! Wisconsinp&#13;
k 'd Kenosha Wisconsin, 53140. Ma1lmg address 1s Parkside s Newscope ar si e, ' · · d ed't · 1 t I h · 3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha. Busmess an 1 ona e ep one number is 658-&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
picking it out right now. You are already at&#13;
one of the lower levels riding the escalator&#13;
to success. (Pardon the mixed metaphor&#13;
... totem pole and escalato_r.) Thousands&#13;
are riding right along with you. And&#13;
sometime, somewhere along the way,&#13;
somebody will tell you where to get _off.&#13;
And don't be surprised if that person 1s a&#13;
Ph.D.&#13;
In totidem verbis, id est vita.&#13;
(Latin : in total words, that is life, or&#13;
that's the way life is.)&#13;
VALEO'$&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
Madison, Wis. - (I.P.) -An attempt to&#13;
steer away from the traditional lcctur&#13;
quiz course toward a multidisciplin~&#13;
approach has resulted in a new course for&#13;
the Integrated Liberal Studies Program at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin, according to&#13;
Professor Robert A. Kimbrough, chair.&#13;
man of the department.&#13;
Titled "Approaches to Knowledge". the&#13;
year-long four-credit course is designed 10&#13;
provide a means of drawing together aid&#13;
integrating the facts, ideas and points of&#13;
view devel9ped within each of three ba IC&#13;
courses which IL.5 freshmen take durq&#13;
their first semester. These courses center&#13;
around the three disciplines - natural&#13;
science, social science and the humanities.&#13;
{ I ,r&#13;
FREE DELIVERY 4:00 P.M: TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
KENOSHA 657-5191&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR and RESTAURANT&#13;
Italian-American Foods&#13;
2114 52nd St.&#13;
20 hrs. a day/7 days a week&#13;
Organ Music Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
From 9 p.m. til 2 .a.m.&#13;
Coming Saturday, N·ovember 21st&#13;
popular recording artists&#13;
DANCE/NIGHTCLUB&#13;
~:30-12:30 - Three Shows - Activities Bldg.&#13;
ADMISSION: $1.50 IN ADVANCE - $2.00 AT THE DOOR&#13;
TICKET PARKSIDE &amp; WISCONSIN ID. REQUIRED T AffAli!S&#13;
s AVAILABLE: ACTIVITIES BLDG., KENOSHA_&amp; RACINE sruoEN &#13;
LETTERS to the Editor&#13;
To the Editors: •&#13;
Even the most clouded water clears with&#13;
time. Dean MacKinney's speech to the&#13;
laculty clarilied m.any of the problems and&#13;
seemed to explain some new polictes,&#13;
inCludingthe parking situation.&#13;
If you haven't noticed recently, the&#13;
parking lot at Tallent Hall is patrolled&#13;
during the day by two me~ in a bl~,e station&#13;
wagon with the polite title of security&#13;
trol" stenciled on the side. If you&#13;
~ondered at lirst what they were doing (as&#13;
I did) I'll tell you; they are checking lor&#13;
parki~ permits on cars and giving&#13;
various sorts of fines to those who fail to&#13;
obserVethe "rules and regulations of the'&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside". It&#13;
seems strange that a school finds it&#13;
necessary to bring security to the parking&#13;
lot via numbered yellow stickers when&#13;
very few problems have ever been experienced&#13;
at any of the campuses in the&#13;
last lew years. (When asked about the&#13;
need for parking permits, those responsible&#13;
simply reply "You will receive a&#13;
ticket if yoy don't have one.") Possibly the&#13;
Wliversilyis anticipating increasing theft&#13;
as their university grows, the average&#13;
class size increases, the professors begin&#13;
to stress research and publishing over&#13;
teacbing and the university begins to&#13;
assume the impersonal air of so many of&#13;
wr "great universities".&#13;
I have yet to see the "security patrol"&#13;
looking for anything but who is in the&#13;
administration parking positions or the&#13;
existence of the yellow tags on the cars in&#13;
thelot. I rarely have seen their car or their.&#13;
people patrolling the grounds at night&#13;
when attack to persons or damage to&#13;
property is most likely to occur. Maybe&#13;
they have difficulty seeing the yellow&#13;
stickers at night or perhaps the administration&#13;
no longer needs their&#13;
preferred parking position since they have&#13;
not lound it practical to open their offices&#13;
at night.&#13;
It seems strange that-an administration&#13;
that has already approved plans for the&#13;
despoilment of massive land areas for&#13;
automobile parking feels compelled to&#13;
regulate parking at all. Parking permits&#13;
are given to any and all students upon&#13;
request but with or without a permit a&#13;
student still must park in the general&#13;
vicinity 01 the buildings. If a student&#13;
arrives at the parking lot and linds it filled,&#13;
he has no recourse but to park illegally&#13;
(i.e. in the apple orchards or in the corn&#13;
field, on top of or across yellow lines)&#13;
making that person subject to a ticket.&#13;
Someone at the lop, true to their new&#13;
style, that, of course, being efficiency, has&#13;
chosento stress the privately owned car as&#13;
the major mode of transportation to and&#13;
Irom the school, largely through the&#13;
neglect of a more convenient and reliable&#13;
bus system. The unwillingness of the&#13;
administration to allow yellow school&#13;
buses (dependable transportation) to&#13;
tarnish their image as an "Instant great&#13;
university" has contributed to this costly&#13;
and dangerous situation. Such is their&#13;
solution to an economic and ecological&#13;
problem.&#13;
il Parkside is to have its great rolling&#13;
sprawl 01 asphalt and concrete for the&#13;
deposition of the hundreds 01 metal boxes,&#13;
Why consider any type of planning? A&#13;
school built in the inner city would have&#13;
ample justification for strong regulation of&#13;
a minimum number of parking positions.&#13;
As it stands the only ones who are hurt&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
OISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPaR rs CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62NO ST.&#13;
Aid try one ouf! (or bothl&#13;
Cheerleadlng" Rangerettes&#13;
(fined) are the occasional visitor the&#13;
student who brought the "wrong" ~ar to&#13;
school, or the person who made the&#13;
mistake ?f believing that Dean MacKinney&#13;
w3;s se.rlOus about cooperation at the&#13;
~l\:erslty ~d swung his car into an adrmrustrator&#13;
s parking position.&#13;
.If we can be told that we must earn the&#13;
nght t? participate in governing the&#13;
umversity, I wonder when and where the&#13;
administration "earned" the right to&#13;
administer. Or does the administration&#13;
lik~ the parking permits, exist because it&#13;
exists?&#13;
I for one, would like to think that the&#13;
"security patrol" exists for more broadly&#13;
based aims than to keep students out of&#13;
administrators' privileged parking&#13;
positions and cut a few Score well needed&#13;
steps .off their walk to their second story&#13;
sanctlonary at Tallent Hall. I also wish to&#13;
believe that the administration exists for a&#13;
purpose greater than that of creating an&#13;
"instant great university' whether the&#13;
students want it that way or not. IT not,&#13;
what do those shortened steps cost and&#13;
what is to become 01 a school that has&#13;
made an admirable start in teaching?&#13;
Anonymous&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
In response to the article by Ken Konkol&#13;
in the Oct. 26issue of the Newscope, part of&#13;
the "silent majority" is now ready to&#13;
speak.&#13;
Ken asked the question, "Do we have a&#13;
competent Psych teacher at this school?"&#13;
I believe that we have two, although they&#13;
are not full-time staff. Dr. McDonald, a&#13;
practicing clinical psychologist, is pretty&#13;
competent, if one can pass judgement&#13;
after a half semester in his class. Dr.&#13;
Ciotola, also a clinical psychologist and ad&#13;
hoc to the staff, is an excellent psych&#13;
teacher who doesn't just "teach froin the&#13;
book", but gives his classes in-depth insights&#13;
into current research, opportunity&#13;
for student research and the benefit of his&#13;
clinical experience - plus - he doesn't&#13;
put you to sleep! However, he is presently&#13;
teaching in the Education Department,&#13;
which seems a waste of this man's talents.&#13;
I believe from discussing this with other&#13;
students, that the majority of psych&#13;
students concur in my observations. Both&#13;
students and University should be grateful&#13;
that these competent psychologists make&#13;
themselves available for teaching, and the&#13;
Psych Department could at least give&#13;
them their choice of Psych courses (esp,&#13;
2nd and 3rd leveD and hours that are&#13;
compatible with their schedules.&#13;
Ken why don't you interview the "silent&#13;
majority" 01 students currently taking&#13;
experimental, intra and other psych&#13;
courses, and let the University know just&#13;
how bad or how good it really is? Perhaps&#13;
we could then petition the Psych Departoosr~&#13;
~ WED. ~&#13;
NDY. 18&#13;
MEETING&#13;
HM. 101-OR&#13;
4:00&#13;
CLUB&#13;
me~t for some positive changes in policy,&#13;
~IDg both those psychologists who are&#13;
experienced in research and those who are&#13;
competent to teach.&#13;
Name withheld by requesL&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
Upon my discovery that your newspaper&#13;
was being used as a crying towel Cor some&#13;
of the vets, I thought that you might appredate&#13;
a friend that has a dryer. After&#13;
wringing my copy of the NEWSCOPE out I&#13;
went up to the Student Records Ollice and&#13;
acquainted myself with a lew of the lacts&#13;
that are available to the public (obviously&#13;
some people don't do this). First, there are&#13;
approximately 250 continuing veterans&#13;
here and 401 of us altogether (not 252).&#13;
Second, I found out that the secretary went&#13;
through the veterans' papers alphabetically&#13;
starting with A and thai my&#13;
papers were sent on the 19th of October.&#13;
This means that the secretary started to&#13;
HAND process these papers (time consuming,&#13;
to say the least). including adds&#13;
and drops, on approximately the ninth of&#13;
October. That means that they waited only&#13;
IS working days for the finicky and fickle&#13;
vets (of which I am one) to make up their&#13;
minds as to which COUI'SeS they really&#13;
wanted.&#13;
Getting back to a few timely facts, I&#13;
found that it took the V.A. only 15working&#13;
days to receive, process, send, and get&#13;
cashed their monetary rewards tor services&#13;
rendered (for the less concerned,&#13;
that means I got my check on the 6th of&#13;
November). That still puts Decemher a&#13;
long way orr.&#13;
I have also discovered, in my short lime&#13;
II year) here, that it is the Students&#13;
Records Office, not Student Affairs, that is&#13;
concerned about our money, and that it is&#13;
Student Records. again, who is responsible&#13;
for sending out our certificates.&#13;
Hank and Ted are correct ID sayIng thai&#13;
it is too late Cor any corrections to take&#13;
place; however, if they can convince their&#13;
fellow vets to make no mistakes, such as&#13;
filling out their own fonns and not makmg&#13;
any program changes, I am sure the&#13;
Records office would be more than happy&#13;
to send out your papers as soon as the&#13;
registration period is completed So use&#13;
your Johnson's Baby Shampoo and cry-nomore.&#13;
Louie Petts 6755808U.S. RR&#13;
Pcrk s ide Feature Film Series&#13;
Presents:&#13;
ALAN ARKIN&#13;
IN&#13;
THE HEART&#13;
IS A&#13;
LONELY&#13;
HUNTER&#13;
FRI. NOV. 20, 8:00 P,M,&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
AOMISSION: 7S W'Trl&#13;
PARK510E &amp; WISCONSIN 10.&#13;
FOR MEN ONLY&#13;
Join the Bleacher Bums&#13;
meeting - Wed., Nov. 18&#13;
4:00 - rm. 101 - gr.&#13;
... )&#13;
Good old·time flavor!&#13;
LETTERS to the Editor ment for some po iti ·e change in policy,&#13;
ing both those psycholog1 t ho are To the Editors:&#13;
Even the most clouded ~ater clears with . e Dean MacKinney's speech to the&#13;
f&#13;
tiJllul.ty clarified many of the problems and ac . 1· · med to explam some new po icies,&#13;
~Iuding the parking situation.&#13;
UlCif ou haven't noticed recently, the&#13;
ki~ lot at Tallent Hall is patrolled&#13;
:~g the day by two men in a blue station&#13;
gon with the polite title of "security wa trol" stenciled on the side. If you&#13;
pa ondered at first what they were doing (as r did), I'll tell you; they are checkin~ ~or rking permits on cars and givmg&#13;
~rious sorts of fines to those who fail to&#13;
~bserve the "rules_ and r_egulatioi:is ?,f the · University of Wisconsm-Parkside . It&#13;
seems strange that a . school finds. it&#13;
necessary to bring security to the parkmg&#13;
Jot via numbered yellow stickers when&#13;
very few problems have ever b~n experienced&#13;
at any of the campuses m the&#13;
last few years. (When. asked about the&#13;
need for parking permits, those responsible&#13;
simply reply "You will receive a ticket if yoy don't have one.") Pos_sibly the&#13;
university is anticipating increasmg theft&#13;
as their university grows, the avera~e&#13;
class size increases, the professors begm&#13;
to stress research and publishing over&#13;
teaching and the university begins to&#13;
assume the impersonal air of so many of our "great universities".&#13;
I have yet to see the "security patrol"&#13;
looking for anything but who is in the&#13;
administration parking positions or ~e&#13;
existence of the yellow tags on the cars m&#13;
the Jot. I rarely have seen theiF car or their.&#13;
people patrolling the grounds at night&#13;
when attack to persons or da~age to&#13;
property is most likely to occur. Maybe&#13;
they have difficulty seeing the yellow&#13;
stickers at night or perhaps the administration&#13;
no longer needs their&#13;
preferred parking position since they have&#13;
not found it practical to open their offices&#13;
at night. _ . It seems strange that an administration&#13;
that has already approved plans for the&#13;
despoilment of massive land areas for&#13;
automobile parking feels compelled to&#13;
regulate parking at all. Parking permits&#13;
are given to any and all students upon&#13;
request but with or without a permit a student still must park in the general&#13;
vicinity of the buildings. If a student&#13;
arrives at the parking lot and finds it filled,&#13;
he has no recourse but to park illegally&#13;
(i.e. in the apple orchards or in the corn&#13;
field, on top of or across yellow lines)&#13;
making that person subject to a ticket.&#13;
Someone at the top, true to their new style, that, of course, being efficiency, has&#13;
chosen to stress the privately owned car as&#13;
the major mode of transportation to and&#13;
from the school, largely through the&#13;
neglect of a more convenient and reliable&#13;
bus system. The unwillingness of the&#13;
administration to allow yellow school&#13;
buses (dependable transportation) to&#13;
tarnish their image as an "Instant great&#13;
university" has contributed to this costly&#13;
and dangerous situation. Such is their&#13;
solution to an economic and ecological&#13;
problem.&#13;
If Parkside is to have its great rolling&#13;
sprawl of asphalt and concrete for the&#13;
deposition of the hundreds of metal boxes,&#13;
why consider any type of planning? A&#13;
school built in the inner city would have&#13;
ample justification for strong regulation of&#13;
a minimum number of parking positions.&#13;
As it stands the only ones who are hurt&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPOR rs CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62ND ST.&#13;
CIIT IT OUT!&#13;
And try one out! (or both)&#13;
Cheerleadlng &amp; Rangerettes&#13;
(fined) are the occasional visitor the&#13;
.itudent who brought the "wrong" dar to&#13;
~ool, or the person who made the&#13;
mistake ?f believing that Dean MacKinney&#13;
w~s se_rious about cooperation at the&#13;
umversity and swung his car into an administrator's&#13;
parking position.&#13;
If we can be told that we must earn the&#13;
right to participate in governing the&#13;
university, I wonder when and where the&#13;
administration "earned" the right to&#13;
administer. Or does the administration&#13;
like the parking permits, exist because it&#13;
exists?&#13;
I for one, would like to think that the&#13;
"security patrol" exists for more broadly&#13;
based aims than to keep students out of&#13;
administrators' privileged parking&#13;
positions and cut a few score well needed&#13;
steps off their walk to their second story&#13;
sanctionary at Tallent Hall. I also wish to&#13;
believe that the administration exists for a purpose greater than that of creating an&#13;
"instant great university' whether the&#13;
students want it that way or not. If not,&#13;
what do those shortened steps cost and&#13;
what is to become of a school that has&#13;
made an admirable start in teaching?&#13;
Anonymous&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
In response to the article by Ken Konkol&#13;
in the Oct. 26 issue of the Newscope, part of&#13;
the "silent majority" is now ready to&#13;
speak.&#13;
Ken asked the question, "Do we have a :ompetent Psych teacher at this school?"&#13;
I believe that we have two, although they&#13;
are not full-time staff. Dr. McDonald, a practicing clinical psychologist, is pretty&#13;
competent, if one can pass judgement&#13;
after a half semester in his class. Dr.&#13;
Ciotola, also a clinical psychologist and ad&#13;
hoc to the staff, is an excellent psych&#13;
teacher who doesn't just "teach from the&#13;
book", but gives his classes in-depth ~- sights into current research, opporturuty&#13;
for student research and the benefit of his&#13;
clinical experience - plus - he doesn't&#13;
put you to sleep! However, he is presently&#13;
teaching in the Education Department,&#13;
which seems a waste of this man's talents.&#13;
I believe from discussing this with other&#13;
students that the majority of psych&#13;
students' concur in my observations. Both&#13;
students and Univer i y shoul be grateful&#13;
that these competent psychologists make&#13;
themselves available for teaching, and ~e&#13;
Psych Department could at least give&#13;
them their choice of Psych courses (esp.&#13;
2nd and 3rd level) and hours that are&#13;
compatible with their schedules. . Ken, why don't you interview the "sil~nt&#13;
majority" of students currently taking&#13;
experimental, intro and other ps?'ch&#13;
courses and let the University know Just&#13;
how batl or how good it really is? Perhaps we could then petition the Psych Departo0S1~&#13;
&#13;
~ WED. ~ NOV. 18&#13;
MEETING&#13;
RM. IOI-GR&#13;
4:00&#13;
CLUB&#13;
experienced in research and those who are competent to teach.&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
, 'ame withheld by reque t.&#13;
Upon my discovery that your new paper was being used as a crying towel for some&#13;
of the Ve~. I thought that you might appreciate&#13;
a friend that ha a dryer. After&#13;
wringing my copy of the 'EW COPE out I&#13;
went up to the Student Records Office and&#13;
3cquainted myself with a fe of the facts&#13;
that are available to the public (obviously some people don't do this). First, there are approximately 250 continuing veteran&#13;
here and 401 of us altogether (not 2521.&#13;
Second, I found out that the secretary went&#13;
through the veterans' papers alphabetically&#13;
starting with A and that my&#13;
papers were sent on the 19th of October.&#13;
This means that the secretary tarted to&#13;
HAND process these papers (time consuming,&#13;
to say the least&gt;. including add&#13;
and drops, on approximately the ninth of&#13;
October. That means that they Y.aited only&#13;
15 working days for the fimcky and fickle&#13;
vets (of which I am one) to make up their&#13;
minds as to which course the · really&#13;
wanted.&#13;
Getting back to a few timely fact , I&#13;
found that it took the V.A. only 15 working&#13;
days to receive, process, send, and get&#13;
cashed their monetary rewards for services&#13;
rendered (for the less concerned, that means I got rny check on the 6th of&#13;
November). That still puts December a long way off. I have also discovered, in my short time&#13;
(1 year) here, that it is the Students&#13;
Records Office, not Student Affairs, that is&#13;
concerned about our money, and that it is&#13;
Parkside Feature Film Series&#13;
Presents:&#13;
ALAN ARKIN&#13;
IN&#13;
THE HEART&#13;
IS A&#13;
LONELY&#13;
HUNTER&#13;
FRI, NOV. 201 8:00 P.M.&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDI G&#13;
ADMISSION: 75 1Tri&#13;
PARKSIDE &amp; ISCO SIN ID.&#13;
FOR MEN ONLY&#13;
Join the Bleacher Bums&#13;
meeting - Wed., Nov. 18&#13;
4:00 - rm. 101 - gr.&#13;
Good old-time flavor! &#13;
THORN&#13;
B} KE' KO'IKOL&#13;
One of the most interesting parts of this&#13;
paper are the teuers to the editor 111e}&#13;
how that not all our readers are as&#13;
epa theuc as most. There w a a vel"} ruce&#13;
one 10 the last I ue from Henr) Kozicki of&#13;
Humamu Mr KOZiCki outlined how&#13;
tea hong excellence hould be oblaoned&#13;
rm _orry, IT KOZiCki, it ain't always so&#13;
\ teacher 15 a person who imparts&#13;
knov.ledge to hI. tudents. a man from&#13;
hom hi ludenlS learn If students&#13;
c Moll am from therr Instructor then he&#13;
e mnot be con Ide red a teacher On the&#13;
averag man might be a better teacher&#13;
it Ph 0 than that _ me man wa as an&#13;
\.. bul II 01", 10110,",.that a lou ey MA&#13;
rm ht be an t:\ en lou ICT Ph D • witnessed&#13;
b) Q Iew Ph n.' on C'amptb who have&#13;
t,k"gl'lYraIM n&lt;' gethnK their Dector.'h'&#13;
\LL u mu t be h ndled on an&#13;
I. lJl\'lUt: \L ba' once 'I' so ouen the&#13;
c t thut the m~trudor the department&#13;
he d d' Ilk"" penon"II) I olten a better&#13;
I 3,,:h r than the on who kl.· a&#13;
I ',r H U tum ~UI "hOI. t able 10&#13;
Jut! 't' rom~tt'nce'll the d partm nt&#13;
ht' d '" ho h In!'Jotructors at coffee&#13;
hour" ,0 F('lIo\o\ faculty members&#13;
ho t ~him holy oul Id' of c1 't '0_&#13;
ludln 'Aho re\\llhhlm e\er)' da)' and&#13;
m"flt Il ht· I compt·tt·nl and uHer If he i&#13;
r.lt" mil 'rt JUndmg Y I&#13;
111l'T ....t·re n grt'ut many complalnlS&#13;
r -~'I\l'(tfrom tudt'nl~ about a rtaln&#13;
IMtructor I. 1 ) 'ar Th r ull ....as that&#13;
thl m,," 'Ail h Id to 10.....r le\'('1 daes&#13;
thlS )t·,r \\ho' bnt(ht Id a 'A0lSlhat't The&#13;
rc utll ,hat mort.".luch·nL .. are expo eel to&#13;
h 10 IlllprH'nc' at the 10.... r le,,'el than&#13;
....~t before Lt'l cOlnl"t~'1thiS man's class&#13;
Il tI El\TIHi';I.Y ~ hl' can concenlrate hi&#13;
I·(forl. s,oul}on rc 'ar h. since he I qwte&#13;
)(noo a th.;.ll In tb.' pr . nl Situation both&#13;
SUlUupiJe fllorUls&#13;
&amp; (jrunJwwes&#13;
,_ WUll10&#13;
VII .. f K WlIIISTIXK&#13;
3021-15T" ST&#13;
KeNoSHA WISCONSIN 531"0&#13;
Thrifty Threads&#13;
For Your Back...&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet!&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
DOIII1HOWN KENOSHA&#13;
THE&#13;
DAISY . PIPES'&#13;
·PAPERS&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
DlU'OND COH1Ul.TAHn excepted&#13;
be and his students suffer: the other way&#13;
around. aU would benefit.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
There are .basically lour groups of&#13;
people at this school. In order of their&#13;
importance they are: Students, teachers,&#13;
researchers, and administrators. Just as&#13;
no one can write (or a paper and be a&#13;
student and do both jobs well, no man can&#13;
both teach and do research and admirustrate.&#13;
A man should be hired either to leach.&#13;
research, or administrate, one of the&#13;
three. You cannot hold the same slandards&#13;
here as in Madison, the situation is entirely&#13;
dillerent. In ladison graduate students&#13;
aid In the research and teaching assistants&#13;
do the classwork. We are thankful that this&#13;
situation does not exist here. But still Dean&#13;
MacKmney preaches Publish or Perish&#13;
ana "lnsLanl Greatness". I hope he soon&#13;
opens his eyes and notices that. he can&#13;
expect competence in only one of tilt three.&#13;
He prefers research. but the students. lor&#13;
whom this school exists, vote 100 per cent&#13;
to 0 lor COMPETENT TEACHING. If a&#13;
man cannot serve the people for whom an&#13;
l~lItulion exists, he should tender his&#13;
resignation,&#13;
+ + +&#13;
111,s is a student paper and should be&#13;
upported by the students. But we need&#13;
mote than the donations we receive (or&#13;
sale to survive. Why not add $1 to the&#13;
segregated fund from everyone's tuition to&#13;
use in our support? I conducted a semiindependent&#13;
poll this past week and lound&#13;
the majority of students in favor of such a&#13;
plan. $1 Irom each 01 4.000 studenls per&#13;
semester would enable us to bring you a&#13;
much ,mproved product. What do you&#13;
think" Write our editors and let us know&#13;
your reactions to the paper as a whole and&#13;
THORN Don't leave it to the guy next to&#13;
you - he's as apaUletic as you are. You&#13;
WRITE'&#13;
+ + +&#13;
In the race lor competent Psych&#13;
teachers, Parsons is in the lead with three&#13;
votes. McDonald IS close behind with three&#13;
and Morrow trails the two with one, but he&#13;
is far ahead of the tvlO who have now&#13;
received a total of T1 votes in the incompetent&#13;
class. Cast your votes with&#13;
THOR care of this paper. You have two&#13;
weeks lell.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
Tuesday, Nov. 17: Lecture - Pulitzer prizewinning&#13;
ecologist Rene Dubos,&#13;
professor of environmental&#13;
bi.omedicine at Rockefeller University,&#13;
Will present a free public lecture&#13;
sponsored by the UWP Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Commitlee at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Wednesday. Nov. 18:Film· Parkside Film&#13;
Society will sponsor showing of "Duck&#13;
Soup" at 8 p.m. in Greenquisl HaU.&#13;
Free.&#13;
Friday, ov.20: Film· Feature film, "The&#13;
Heart Is a Lonely Hunter'" will be&#13;
shown at 8 p.m. in the Activities&#13;
Building, sponsored by the Student&#13;
Activities Ollice and SA Board. Admission&#13;
75 cents.&#13;
Sunda~, TOV.~: Concert - University&#13;
Artists Sertes concert will feature&#13;
UWP Affiliate Artists Keiko Furiyoshi&#13;
and: Annie Petit in a violin and piano&#13;
reclt.al at 4 p.m. in the Greenquist&#13;
Concourse. General admission $1&#13;
students SO cents (children 12 and&#13;
under free).&#13;
~ilm . Intercollegiate Film Council&#13;
Will sponsor showing of "War of the&#13;
Buttons" at 7 p.m. in the Golden&#13;
Rondelle Theater, Racine. Free tickets&#13;
available in the Greenquist Concourse&#13;
111ursday and Friday preceding the&#13;
film. .&#13;
WATCHlS II&#13;
._·AU.......&#13;
UIIrMfo.... L_l ..&#13;
...-.-..,.&#13;
c.._tM. T''''&#13;
CAC_I_&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
W~tCh6 _ Je_lry&#13;
DloIIalond Setting&#13;
COlllplete Rtp.ir&#13;
. Dept.&#13;
I.., De~gfting&#13;
CHIHA. I&#13;
IRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
LETTERS to&#13;
the editors&#13;
To the Editors: k id congratulations to the staff of Par SI e&#13;
Newscope on the success of our up-and·&#13;
eomin campus pubHcation!. rhe free&#13;
interJange of discussion, g?od cov~rage ,&#13;
and editorial comment are Impres,slve.&#13;
One "too-bad" note, howev.er, .IS .Ken&#13;
Konkol's resort to yellow·dog JournalIsm.&#13;
If he keeps it up his articles will turn out to&#13;
be a crown of thorns that will prove more&#13;
painful than impressive.&#13;
erude, blatant insult. and ','expos':1re of&#13;
people" type journalism IS ObVlOUS!Y&#13;
meant to attract attentIOn. But this IS embarrassingly&#13;
immature and Konkol s~ould&#13;
realize that a University' audIence&#13;
deserves better than that. . .&#13;
What is even more appallmg IS that&#13;
Konkol threatens to fertilize all of our local&#13;
newspapers with his opinion. Fortunately,&#13;
they know consid~rably mor,e about&#13;
responsibility of the press and lIbel laws&#13;
than he does.&#13;
Someone should tell Konkol thitt all he&#13;
will accomplish is reinforcement' of the&#13;
idea commonly held by the tax-I'!'ying&#13;
publiC: that there are too many sludents&#13;
enrolled at universities who are m-'&#13;
tellectually, academically and&#13;
emotionally unfit to meet its challenges.&#13;
Fran Jaeschke&#13;
CLASS I FI ED&#13;
ADVERTI SEMENT&#13;
Classified advertisements are 50 cents&#13;
per line (or anyone interested. All&#13;
c1assifieds must be submitted to the&#13;
Newscope offices at Kenosha campus by&#13;
noon the Thursday before Monday.&#13;
publication.&#13;
Interested In Law?&#13;
Interested in law? There .&#13;
organizational meeting of thewu:,be III&#13;
Pre·law Club at7:30 p.m. this Wedn8rbicIe&#13;
Nov. 18. in room Dill of Gree . eada"&#13;
U you can't attend and would~t au:&#13;
member of the club, call 652-4142. to be,&#13;
-~-------&#13;
Xn,~&#13;
f!))en&#13;
BARBERSTUDIO&#13;
SPECIALIZE IN MENS HAIR&#13;
STYLING&#13;
STYLE CUTIING &amp; SHAPING&#13;
HAIR PEKES&#13;
7509 45TH AVE.&#13;
APPOINTIlENll&#13;
694-4601&#13;
4437· 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
.•...,,,..&#13;
I~ , ~&#13;
&gt; •&#13;
_'~ , .0&#13;
""".' .....,/'&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
asters&#13;
.Supper Club&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
with AlmondJne Sou.ce'&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIME FI.B&#13;
8040&#13;
Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Ph. 654-1375&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
Brat or Steak Or Beefburger&#13;
ond&#13;
.French Fries or Onion Rings.&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
ond&#13;
Schooner or Bottle or Glass of Beer&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday th F 'd ru n ay 7p.m, to 8&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20(&#13;
I I . Avoiloble For Porties&#13;
nc udlng Frat . ernlty and Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
"~~ BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest C I 9 orner _ 4 ond Highwoy 50&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fr'I.&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Faculty .&#13;
(Must Show 1.0.) Cr,du.te &lt;Amotocist-Certified Di,montololist&#13;
Y~g8tm4&#13;
It dMJ nwb • d;U~te'f1ce wlter~ you shop!&#13;
p."',&#13;
THORN&#13;
Wtnlj iJ~ gf ori b&#13;
&amp; (jrunh.ouu.s&#13;
- fta&#13;
0 21 • 75TH T&#13;
NO HA W15CO IN 53140&#13;
Thrift Threads&#13;
For Your Back. ..&#13;
1-ar Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet.'&#13;
MULLE 'S&#13;
0&#13;
T1HE&#13;
DAISY&#13;
OLES&#13;
1&#13;
he nd his tuden suffer: the other way&#13;
around, all \\OU)d benefit. T + -+&#13;
There are basically four groups ~f&#13;
people at this school. In order of their&#13;
importance they are: Students, teachers,&#13;
r rch rs, and administrators. Just as&#13;
no one can ·rite for a paper and be a&#13;
_tudent and do both jobs well, no man can&#13;
th te ch and do research and ad·&#13;
minLtrate. man should be hired either to teach,&#13;
r rch, or administrate. one of the&#13;
three. You cannot hold the same standards&#13;
her a · in adi on, the situation is entirely&#13;
different. In . tadi on graduate students&#13;
id in the re arch and teaching assistants&#13;
do th cl . work. We are thankful that this&#13;
itu t ion d not exist here. But still Dean&#13;
ta Kinney preaches Publish or Perish&#13;
nd " ln,tant Greatne " . I hope he soon&#13;
hi y _ and notices that ,he can&#13;
ct competence in only one of the three.&#13;
H pr r earch, but the students, for&#13;
horn thi _chool exi ts, \ote 100 per cent&#13;
to O for CO. 1PETE. "T TEACHING. If a&#13;
rve the people for whom an , he hould tender his&#13;
+&#13;
In the race for competent Psych&#13;
t ach r , P · i in the lead with three&#13;
vot . lcDonald i close behind with three&#13;
and torrow trail the two with one, but he&#13;
· far ahead of the two who have now&#13;
receh d a total of Tl \'Otes in the in·&#13;
competent class. Cast your votes with&#13;
THOR. · care of this paper. You have two&#13;
w left.&#13;
CAMPUS EVENTS&#13;
Tuesday, ·ov. 17: Lecture - Pulitzer prizewinning&#13;
ecologist Rene Dubos,&#13;
profes or of environmental&#13;
biomedicine at Rockefeller University,&#13;
will present a free public lecture&#13;
ponsored by the UWP Lecture and&#13;
Fine Arts Committee at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Greenqui t HaJI.&#13;
\\.edne day, 'ov. 18: Film - Parkside Film&#13;
Society will ponsor showing of "Duck&#13;
Soup" at 8 p.m. in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Free.&#13;
Friday, ·ov. 20: Film - Feature film, "The&#13;
Heart Is a Lonely Hunter", will be&#13;
hown at 8 p.m. in the Activities&#13;
Building, pon ored by the Student&#13;
Activitie Office and SA Board. Ad·&#13;
mt ion 75 cents.&#13;
, nda&gt;:, . ·o\'. ~ : Concert - University&#13;
rti ts nes concert will feature&#13;
WP Af~liate ~ -lists Keiko Furiyoshi&#13;
an&lt;1: Annie Pettt m a violin and piano&#13;
recital at 4 p.m. in the Greenquist&#13;
Concourse. General admission $1&#13;
tudents SO cents (children 12 and&#13;
under free ).&#13;
Film · Intercollegiate Film Council&#13;
will ponsor showing of "War of the&#13;
Button ·· at 7 p.m. in the Golden&#13;
Rondelle Theater, Racine. Free tickets&#13;
available in the Greenquist Concourse&#13;
Thursday and Friday preceding the&#13;
film. ·&#13;
WATCHES 7~1 _ R-'-EP..;.. A:.;.: IR:..D::.:E:.:.. PT:.:.·--l&#13;
u,~.:,.; "~t!:..,. W~t&lt;hts - Jewelry • .,.. . -- Dia•olld Setting c-... • . Ti-.• Cofflplete Re~1r s..c-.11n Dept.&#13;
CHINA I&#13;
liat Du,gning&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
DOWNTOWN_ KENOSHA&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Faculty&#13;
( ust Sho l.O.) Gud111te G«moloc1st-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
~C.Ctm-1,&#13;
It d~s m11h II difference where you shop!&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
excepted&#13;
LETTERS to&#13;
the editors&#13;
To the Editors: k ·d&#13;
Congratulations to the staff of Par s1 de&#13;
Newsco on the success of our up-an -&#13;
comin ~ampus publ~cation!. The free&#13;
interc;ange of discussion, g?O&lt;i cov~rage '&#13;
and editorial comment are impres~1ve.&#13;
One " too-bad" note, howev_er, is _Ken&#13;
Konkol's resort to yell?w-do~ Journalism.&#13;
rr he keeps it up his articles will turn out to&#13;
be a crown of thorns that will prove more&#13;
painful than impressive. Crude blatant insult and "expos1:1re of&#13;
people"' type journal_ism is ~b~ously&#13;
meant to attract attent10n. But this is em- barrassingly immature and Konkol s~ould&#13;
realize that a University audience&#13;
deserves better than that.&#13;
What is even more appalling is that&#13;
Konkol threatens to fertilize all of our local&#13;
newspapers with his opinion. Fortunately,&#13;
they know consid~rably mor_e about&#13;
responsibility of the press and hbel laws&#13;
than he does. . Someone should tell Konkol that all he&#13;
will accomplish is reinforcement ·of_ !he&#13;
idea commonly held by the tax-~ymg&#13;
public: that there are too many stud~ts&#13;
enrolled at universities who are mtellectually,&#13;
academically and&#13;
emotionally unfit to meet its challenges.&#13;
Fran Jaeschke&#13;
CLASS I Fl ED&#13;
ADVERTISEMENT&#13;
Classified advertisements are 50 cents&#13;
per line for anyone interested. All&#13;
classifieds must be submitted to the&#13;
Newscope offices at Kenosha campus by&#13;
noon the Thursday before Monday&#13;
publication.&#13;
Interested In Law?&#13;
Interested in law? There Will&#13;
organizational meeting of the p be .an&#13;
Pre-law ~ub at 7:30 p.m. this We&lt;1.:ks1c1e&#13;
Nov. 18, m room D111 of Green . esday,&#13;
H you can't attend and would 11~'% flan.&#13;
member of the club, call 652-4142_ be a&#13;
~~&#13;
• (jj)en&#13;
BARBER STUDIO&#13;
SPECIALIZE IN MENS HAIR&#13;
STYLING&#13;
STYLE CUTTING &amp; SHAPING&#13;
HAIR PEKES&#13;
7~09 45TH AVE. APPOINTMEN'fl&#13;
.J.-.:.---------~694-46~1&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53l4Q&#13;
Free Delivery&#13;
654-0774&#13;
3sters&#13;
.Supper Club&#13;
8040&#13;
Sheridan Rd,&#13;
Ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIOARED SNAPPER&#13;
with Almond.ine Sau.ce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRI.ME RIB&#13;
The\\ BRAT 1115&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
,French Fries or On,·on Rings. .&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or Bottle or Glass of Beer&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 ·p.m. to 8 P·111•&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20¢&#13;
1 I . Available For Parties nc uding Fr t . a ern,ty and Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
·,~~ BRAT-STOP&#13;
NorthweS t Corner 1-94 and Highway 50 &#13;
Vo&#13;
F· G&#13;
An U&#13;
PRE&#13;
Ie&#13;
FABRICS FOR S&#13;
ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
- 658-8612 -&#13;
[)OWNTOW~ K~NOSHA&#13;
MARGURITTE'S&#13;
ROBES-Regular $15.00,&#13;
Special, $10.00.&#13;
Enjoy these cool&#13;
evenings in coz.y&#13;
comfort!&#13;
Short qui lted: velvet&#13;
toned ribbon down&#13;
the Irant, Iined with&#13;
softest nylon&#13;
peach or&#13;
lavendor.&#13;
. Small,&#13;
Margueritte '·5 is open&#13;
9 until 9 Mondays and&#13;
Fridays, other weekdays&#13;
Sundays&#13;
Iram 10 c.m. until&#13;
5 p.m.&#13;
6207 • 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone, 652,2681&#13;
Donkey basketball&#13;
Friday night.&#13;
From Other&#13;
Campuses&#13;
Washington, D.C. - (I.P.J - In one of&#13;
the first court cases to deal with the&#13;
procedural rights of political student&#13;
organizations attempting to gain official&#13;
recognition, a U.S. District Court judge in&#13;
Connecticut has ordered Central Connecticut&#13;
State College to hold a hearing on&#13;
whether to recognize a local chapter of the&#13;
Students for a Democratic Society.&#13;
The chapter compiled with college&#13;
procedures in applying for recognition,&#13;
and stated that the local group did not&#13;
follow dictates from any national&#13;
organization.&#13;
CI'hedean of students, three faculty and&#13;
four students voted to recommend that the&#13;
administration grant recognition.&#13;
Nevertheless, President Don James&#13;
denied recognition on the grounds that in&#13;
his view the aims of the national SDS, and&#13;
the charter of the College were incompatible.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Pittsburgh, Pa. - (I.P.l - Chatham&#13;
College has adopted a new academic&#13;
program which frees the sl~dent from&#13;
traditional requirements and gives her an&#13;
opportunity to design the course of study&#13;
which hest fulfills her personal&#13;
educational interests and abilities.&#13;
Under the new program, the student&#13;
may complete the 34 courses required ~or&#13;
graduation by choosing freely from a .w,de&#13;
selection of courses in the humanities,&#13;
social and natural sciences.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
New London, Conn. - (I.P.l - For the&#13;
first time beginning this fall, 45 undergraduates&#13;
at Connecticut College will&#13;
serve as voting members on rune standing&#13;
committees and one special committee of&#13;
the faculty body.&#13;
Moreover, with one exception, the&#13;
number of student representatives elected&#13;
to each committee will equal the number&#13;
of those elected by the faculty. The single&#13;
departure from the principle. of parity is.on&#13;
the academic policy committee to which&#13;
students will elect three representatives as&#13;
opposed to nine from the faculty.&#13;
This innuential group receives and&#13;
considers all proposals relating to the&#13;
educational program of the college, and&#13;
out of it come recommendations for CuU&#13;
faculty action in such vital areas as&#13;
curriculum innovation or alteration,&#13;
requirements Cor the bachelor of arts&#13;
degree and the honors program.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Hamilton, N.Y. - (I.P.) - The students&#13;
and faculty of Colgate University have&#13;
combined to produce a system of oncampus&#13;
governance which they feel will&#13;
also be of value to sister institutions.&#13;
The governance machinery is designed&#13;
J) cope with the day-to-day administration&#13;
of the University. In effect, it is a coalition&#13;
of ejected representatives of the students&#13;
and faculty and designated administrators.&#13;
Through the council, the chief oncampus&#13;
governing body. and its subsidiary&#13;
commissions, communications have been&#13;
opened to all members of the college&#13;
community residing here.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Spartanburg, S.C. - (LP.) - In a move&#13;
designed to emphasize the positive aspects&#13;
of learning, Wofford College has altered its&#13;
grading system by dropping the grades of&#13;
D and F beginning this fall.&#13;
In the place of these marks, grades of&#13;
"Placement Credit only" (PL) and" 0&#13;
Credit" (NC) will be given. The grades, A,&#13;
Band C will be maintained.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Cincinnati, O. - (LP.l - Current&#13;
problems being experienced on campuses&#13;
are only one manifestation of a much&#13;
broader problem a national&#13;
revolutionary movement - according to&#13;
Dr. Walter C. Langsam, president of the&#13;
University of Cincinnati.&#13;
He has told a meeting of his top administrative&#13;
advisors that "the real&#13;
danger facing our nation is not turmoil on&#13;
campuses but a national revolution". And&#13;
this, he added, the public and the national&#13;
government apparently have been unable&#13;
or unwilling to recognize.&#13;
Because of the revolutionary movement,&#13;
Dr. Langsam said, "any invective or&#13;
sarcasm aimed at a few hundred&#13;
university administrators is a diversion of&#13;
energy and a waste of time.&#13;
PHON E 658-3551&#13;
AIELLO&#13;
lA-lid· T CYlJdn&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
A Complete' flol'Ol ~e""ice&#13;
'''(lith MoJel'n Desiqn&#13;
2108 P'IFTY SECOND sTAEIIT&#13;
K!:N05HA.. WltlCOH8lN&#13;
.. All the university presidents In&#13;
America cannot stop a revelution; this is&#13;
the job of the American people and their&#13;
government Preserving America is ooe&#13;
buck that cannot be passed."&#13;
+ +&#13;
DeKalb, Ill. - (1 P) - The pass-fall&#13;
option has resulted In a substantial increase&#13;
in number of 'orthem llltnois&#13;
University undergraduates makmg the&#13;
academic honor roll.&#13;
F.-.l&#13;
/.1"*4-&#13;
n&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NDRTll CITY LIMITS&#13;
CHAT&#13;
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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;
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(triple decker)&#13;
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TACOS • ENCHILADAS • TAMALES&#13;
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so Taco Kings are fun places"&#13;
• •&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11 a.m.&#13;
6829 39th Avenue&#13;
-AT THE SIGN OF THE CACTUSPhone&#13;
6$4·5117&#13;
VO&#13;
F - G&#13;
An U&#13;
u R E&#13;
'.c&#13;
FABRICS FOR 5&#13;
ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
- 658-8612 -&#13;
l;)OWNTOWN K~NOSHA&#13;
MARGURITIE'S&#13;
ROBE~-Regular $15.q0,&#13;
Special, $10.00.&#13;
Enjoy these cool&#13;
evenings in CO'LY&#13;
comfort!&#13;
Short quilted; velvet&#13;
toned ribbon down&#13;
the front, lined with&#13;
softest nylon&#13;
Marguer itte' s is open&#13;
9 until 9 Mondays and&#13;
from 10 a.m. until&#13;
5 p.m.&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652~2681&#13;
Donkey basketball&#13;
Friday night.&#13;
From Other&#13;
Campuses&#13;
Washington, D.C. - (I.P.) - In one of&#13;
the first court cases to deal with the&#13;
procedural rights of political student&#13;
organizations attempting to gain official&#13;
recognition, a U.S. District Court judge in&#13;
Connecticut has ordered Central Connecticut&#13;
State College to hold a hearing on&#13;
whether to recognize a local chapter of the&#13;
Students for a Democratic Society.&#13;
The chapter complied with college&#13;
procedures in applying for recognition,&#13;
and stated that the local group did not&#13;
follow dictates from any national&#13;
organization. .'.fhe dean of students, three faculty and&#13;
four students voted to recommend that the&#13;
administration grant recognition.&#13;
Nevertheless, President Don James&#13;
denied recognition on the grounds that in&#13;
his view the aims of the national SDS, and&#13;
the charter of the College were incompatible.&#13;
&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Pittsburgh, Pa. - (LP.) - Chatham&#13;
College has adopted a new academic&#13;
program which frees the student from&#13;
traditional requirements and gives her an&#13;
opportunity to design the course of study&#13;
which best fulfills her personal&#13;
educational interests and abilities.&#13;
Under the new program, the student&#13;
may complete the 34 courses required ~or&#13;
graduation by choosing freely from a -~1de&#13;
selection of courses in the humaruhes,&#13;
social and natural sciences.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
New London, Conn. - (LP.) - For the&#13;
first time, beginning this fall, 45 undergraduates&#13;
at Connecticut _College ~ill&#13;
serve as voting members on rune standmg&#13;
committees and one special committee of&#13;
the faculty body.&#13;
Moreover, with one exception, the&#13;
number of student representatives elected&#13;
to each committee will equal the number&#13;
of those elected by the faculty. The single&#13;
departure from the principlt: of parity is_ on&#13;
the academic policy committee to which&#13;
students will elect three representative a&#13;
opposed to nine from the faculty.&#13;
"All th&#13;
This influential group receives and&#13;
considers all proposal relaung to the&#13;
educational program of the college, and&#13;
out of it come recommendations for full&#13;
faculty action in such vital area a&#13;
curriculum innovation or alteration.&#13;
requirements for the bachelor of arts&#13;
degree and the honors program.&#13;
+&#13;
Hamilton, .Y. - Cl.P.&gt; - The tudents&#13;
and faculty of Colgate University have&#13;
combined to produce a sy tern of oncampus&#13;
governance which they feel will&#13;
also be of value to si ter institutions.&#13;
The governance machinery is designed&#13;
o cope with the day-to-day administration&#13;
of the University. In effec it i a coalition&#13;
of elected representatives of the students&#13;
and faculty and designated administrators.&#13;
&#13;
Through the council, the chief oncampus&#13;
governing body, and its ub idiary&#13;
commissions, communications have been&#13;
opened to all members of the college&#13;
community residing here.&#13;
+ +&#13;
Spartanburg. S.C. - (l,P.) - In a move&#13;
designed to emphasize the positive a pee ts&#13;
of learning, Wofford College has altered its&#13;
grading system by dropping the grades of&#13;
D and F beginning this fall.&#13;
In the place of these marks. grades of&#13;
" Placement Credit only" (PLl and ··, 'o&#13;
Credit" (NC) will be given. The grades, A,&#13;
B and C will be maintained.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Cincinnati, 0 . - (I.P.&gt; - Current&#13;
problems being experienced on campuses&#13;
are only one manifestation of a much&#13;
broader problem a national&#13;
revolutionary movement - accordmg to&#13;
Dr. Walter C. Langsam, president of the&#13;
University of Cincinnati.&#13;
He has told a meeting or his top administrative&#13;
advisors that " the real&#13;
danger facing our nation is not turmoil on&#13;
campuses but a national revolution". And&#13;
this, he added, the public and the national&#13;
government apparently have been unable&#13;
or unwilling to recognize.&#13;
Because of the revolutionary movement,&#13;
Dr. Langsam said, " any invective or&#13;
sarcasm aimed at a few hundred&#13;
university administrators is a diversion of&#13;
energy and a waste of time.&#13;
PHONE 658-3551&#13;
AIELLO&#13;
fMi'd-TOrzxJn&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
2108 P'IF!Y SECOND STREIT&#13;
KENOSHA, W ISCONSIN&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTli CITY LIMITS&#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. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A ••&#13;
HAMBUR ERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
NOW SERVING&#13;
TACOS • ENCHILADAS • TAMALES&#13;
COMPLETE MENU OF.&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARRY OUT&#13;
"Mexican food is fun lood •&#13;
so Taco Kings are fun places"&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11&#13;
6829 39th Avenue&#13;
"AT THE SIGN OF THE CACTUS''&#13;
Phone 6&amp;4-5717&#13;
• • &#13;
Joint Communique Of The Chernier,&#13;
Dieppe And Liberation Cells . t&#13;
. . ments in office, since they seem to he pas&#13;
OTTAWA (cps·cup) (October zr 1970) to the ideas and intentions ~ch the masters in that field. Our a-"cestors were&#13;
- The Front de Liberation du Quebec authorities. in power attribute to tt. . nollhe fathers of confederation: they wer~&#13;
would like to point out a lew things relating As we said in the Manifesto, the Froot is the patriots 01 1837·38. Our fathers, c:;:&#13;
not after political power. The FLQ IS made older brothers, our uncles were not e&#13;
up of groups of workers who have decided Bordens, the Saint·Laurenls, the&#13;
to lake steps toward the revolutioo -. the Duplessis: They were the men who had&#13;
only real way for the workers to ~chle~e no choice but to be massacred at&#13;
and exercise power. This revoluhoo will Dieppe having been forced to serve as the&#13;
nol be made hy a hundred people, as the ~inea:PigSofcheap labour: they ,:"ere the&#13;
authorities want" everyone to believe, but men nightsticked at Murdochvllle a~d&#13;
by the whole popul~tion. The only true elsewhere for wanting to defend their&#13;
power 01the people IS power exercised by simple right to exist Our brothers today&#13;
the people and lor the people. The FLQ are not the Trudeaus, the Bourassa, the&#13;
leaves coup d'etat to the three govern- Drapeaus, they are the ".gars ~e&#13;
LaPalme" - the people that BIll 38 :-vill&#13;
assassinate tomorrow: all the exploited&#13;
people of Quehec.&#13;
The FLQ is made up of groups of&#13;
workers who have given themselves the&#13;
objectives of fighting against the daily acts&#13;
of terrorism perpetrated by the state. The&#13;
crime of the FLQ in the eyes of the&#13;
authorities in power is not so much ~at we&#13;
used violence but that we use violence&#13;
against the establishment This ahove all&#13;
is unpardonable. This above all fnghtens&#13;
them.&#13;
It is in the interests of the establishment&#13;
to transmit this fear to the population.&#13;
Primarily to justify an armed intervention&#13;
into Quebec, which, they think, will give&#13;
them a certain degree of protection. But&#13;
also, to make it clear to the people of&#13;
Quebec that the:.:.had better forget about&#13;
any ideas about liberation.&#13;
But the Front de Liberation du Quehec&#13;
knows the population is not duped by such&#13;
games (tricks), even if. the different&#13;
governments are doing their best to make&#13;
itiook otherwise. This is what they tried in&#13;
the case of the same results in the&#13;
municipal election in Montreal.&#13;
We want to briefly point out some conclusive&#13;
facts concerning that: the high&#13;
anglophone turnout, the great percentage&#13;
of abstentions in the "quartiers&#13;
populaires" and the percentage of votes&#13;
accorded to workers' candidates in those&#13;
same areas. After making those observations&#13;
it's easy to see that the Civic&#13;
Party (sic) was elected with the concurrence&#13;
of scarcely ten per cent of the&#13;
population. And this they dare call&#13;
democracy.&#13;
Quebecois, the time for dupery is&#13;
finished.&#13;
Quebeeois, the hautes bourgeoisies,&#13;
English and French, has spoken: Now is&#13;
the time to act.&#13;
T1MIPl., TI •• ,&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
LIrIII' 1I',ett..&#13;
:jj;~~&#13;
626 ~6th 51. K.nosh'J&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
£~&#13;
nUIT 8A$XET'S AlIO CAXDY&#13;
DtlI"ff Atf'OII TOW'I' Of AaoN 1M World&#13;
A HEAVY OUNU&#13;
~--&#13;
125&#13;
AM-FM Stereo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
Here is a good way to discover&#13;
what 'Fisher sound'&#13;
is like .. Play J record on Ihe&#13;
Fisher 125. Play Ihe saine&#13;
record on ;,lnother make.&#13;
Lislen for the difference,&#13;
\.~peC'ially 10 Ihe very low&#13;
and ver) high frequencies.&#13;
A Fish~, .limply .Iotmd.l&#13;
h,,/~r. And (he Fisher 125&#13;
IS the firsl complete AMFM&#13;
See-reo Music Center&#13;
1010011.;ugrcat as it sounds.&#13;
See and Hlar&#13;
Floh" SI"IO!&#13;
40 W.llS of MIJ~ Po)W~1&#13;
tlH~) - WI\l\·.R.ln,c AM _&#13;
'ul'K'r·~IC'~·II\~· FM anI.! FM·&#13;
Sie-reo With FET and ICs in&#13;
front-end ;lilS IF staan _ 4_&#13;
~p~e'd Automelil:' Turntablewilh&#13;
CUe' Control. Anli-Sk:a.l·&#13;
In~. ,\IIlUM:'Ili!: ,hut·oIY _ T",o&#13;
Aco.:stic:ally.Malchrd TwoWay&#13;
Spnl.C'r SYSlcms _ Full&#13;
Audav Coni rob Wilh T..~ and&#13;
Pttono f3Cillll"&#13;
Hammond 0,,,,,"&#13;
Sludio. 01 Kenosha&#13;
3215 6Ot" Sr.&#13;
658-1801&#13;
SPECIAL IIlCLUDES&#13;
SlOI FREE RECORDS&#13;
Equestrian's Club&#13;
Being Formed&#13;
A new club is being formed on campus&#13;
lor aU students interested in horses. The&#13;
organization is the Parkside Equestrians'&#13;
Club, aod its purpose will be to provide an&#13;
opportunity to learn, enjoy, and compete&#13;
in all fields connected with the horse.&#13;
These areas include showing, care, riding,&#13;
training, and management.&#13;
The club plans to hold clinics in order to&#13;
acquaint the non-owner with the horse. For&#13;
the more accomplished horsemen and&#13;
women, the organization plans to have&#13;
competition with other colleges in events&#13;
from barrel racing to saddle seat equition.&#13;
Already the club has drawn some top&#13;
riders. For instance cathy Moper, who has&#13;
placed consistantly in class A shows, an&#13;
and bas been champion or reserve in state&#13;
competition lor the last three years.&#13;
Amy Fulmer is another equestrian who&#13;
has shown since she's been eight, does all&#13;
ber own training and has won several High&#13;
Point trophies. Amy is at Parkside for preveterinary&#13;
study. Both cathy and Amy&#13;
perform difficult self-taught dressage&#13;
routines.&#13;
Mauine Stauder is another member with&#13;
an admirable record. She was instrumental&#13;
in starting the 4-H Horse&#13;
Science Project in Kenosha County, and&#13;
she also places consistantly in class A&#13;
shows. There are others, some with the&#13;
same great abilities, some just beginning&#13;
to show their talents, We need everyone, so&#13;
please join. Watch for the date and attend&#13;
the club's first meeting.&#13;
Six Named to&#13;
All-Star Team&#13;
Six members of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin·Parkside soccer team have&#13;
been named to the NAIA District 14&#13;
(Wisconsin) All-Star team.&#13;
Fullback Joe Orr 01 Milwaukee and&#13;
forwards Dale Nickel, Waukesha, and Stan&#13;
Markovic, Racine, were named to the first&#13;
team, while defensivemen Kari Liekowski,&#13;
Kingston, N.Y., Doug Beveridge,&#13;
Milwaukee, and goalie Charlie Lees,&#13;
Kearny, N.J., were picked on the five-man&#13;
reserve squad.&#13;
Nine UW-Green Bay players and one&#13;
from Platteville Stale University com·&#13;
pleted. the two teams. They are Torleiv&#13;
Bilstad 01 Platteville and Chris&#13;
Arrowsmith, Horst Slemke, Bill Scheller,&#13;
Ken Hess, Peter Stratton, Zach&#13;
Papanikolaou and Fred Justin of Green&#13;
Bay on the lirst leam, and Erich Dietrich&#13;
and Ray Gumpert of Green Bay on the&#13;
reserve team.&#13;
A senior from Plymouth, Dennis M,&#13;
Chaplin, was the 19'70 winner of the Minneapolis.Honeyweli&#13;
Co. award of $200and&#13;
a silver tray presented to the outstanding&#13;
University of Wisconsin engineering&#13;
student.&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Ellllwood&#13;
2704 l.,lttop ,be., Ift;lIe, WiuoII,i"&#13;
Students get fed carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone else!)&#13;
Liberation, Chenier, and&#13;
Dieppe Cells&#13;
Nous Vaincrons&#13;
Front de Liberation du Quebec&#13;
Tapes of the lecture on W&#13;
Liberation given at the Univer:rnen'.&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside recently by ~ly?!&#13;
Steinem are available free to lOlia&#13;
organizations or schools by conlacli C Ubo,&#13;
Public Information Office at Park "Lib.&#13;
The talk by Miss Steinem, wide!'1 .&#13;
journalist and Women's Lib spoi knOWn&#13;
rlUIS about 45 minutes. e.1llan,&#13;
it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
Anchorln&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
AD U L TS S2.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 10 SLII&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 6 FRlI&#13;
Prices Include first&#13;
dinner beveragl.&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chleken with&#13;
BIs.a1ts andgFavy&#13;
r ~ .Ancl.or~&#13;
INN'.&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sat. 5 p.m, - 11 p.m.&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. 5 p.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
Sun. 12 Noon 9 p.m,&#13;
9006 Sheridan Rd. • • Phone 694-1733&#13;
eMpplt SM1ee eftl.fA(JlliM4&#13;
proudly announces the long awaited&#13;
revival of ...&#13;
HARDMAN'S&#13;
Hard Rock Cafe&#13;
2519-60th 51&#13;
Sin City&#13;
{{Ji ~~rAHMn-"&#13;
PEACE • • •&#13;
Joint Communique Of The Chernier,&#13;
Tapes of the lecture on w&#13;
Liberation given at the Univer ~lllen•a&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside recently by s~y ~f&#13;
Steinem are available free to 10na&#13;
organizations or schools by contacu clubs,&#13;
Public Information Office at Park 7e the Dieppe And Liberation Cells . . ments in office, since they seem to be past&#13;
The talk by Miss Steinem wide! 81 ·&#13;
journalist and Women's Lib spoi knoWn runs a!&gt;&lt;&gt;ut 45 minutes. . esrnan,&#13;
OTTAWA (CP -ClJP) (October z; l970) to the ideas and intentions w~1ch the masters in that field. Our a_ncestors were&#13;
- The Front de Liberation du Quebec authorities in power attribute to it. . not the fathers of confederation: they were it's the&#13;
real thing&#13;
\\ould like to point out a re .... thing relating As we said in the fanifesto, the ~ront is the patriots of 1837-38. Our fathers, our not after political power. The FLQ 1s n:ade older brothers, our uncles were not the&#13;
T t Place Tt IMJ&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
626 !6th St. Keno sh-a&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
UIT 8A A CAKDY&#13;
l r Aer- Tvwn o, Ao.- 1M Worill&#13;
Hf. \'Y&#13;
125&#13;
AM-FM Stereo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
·u&#13;
Herc i a good way to dis·&#13;
cover what 'Fisher sound'&#13;
1 m.c, Play .i record on the&#13;
Fi her 125. Play the sarne&#13;
re ord on :mother make.&#13;
l.1 ten tor 1he difference,&#13;
c pec1 lly in the very low&#13;
and vcr) high trequenciC\.&#13;
A Fishu .simply sounds&#13;
hmu. And the Fisher 125&#13;
I\ the fir t complete AMf&#13;
I tereo 1 usic enter&#13;
to lcxik a gre.11 a it ounds.&#13;
See and Hear&#13;
Fisher Stereo!&#13;
40 Wans or Mu ,.: P.:,wc,&#13;
t IHt' l • Wnk-R,tlll:C A 1 •&#13;
'iUJICr "- lc,1h~ I· I and FM-&#13;
~ltrtu w11h F ET ;ind !Cs 1n&#13;
frl'nl ·cnd :iid IF staccs • •·&#13;
')peed Au1om11k Turntable&#13;
wi1h Cuc Conirol. An1i- L:it ,&#13;
,n ,\11111m.Uh.' ,hu1 ,ofT • Tw(I&#13;
Aco~ llClllY· h1chcd Two- Way pc L.cr Sy,1cm • Full&#13;
,\udtu Con1roh W11h T,.JIC and&#13;
Phono F11cil,1in&#13;
Hammond Organ&#13;
Studios of Kenosha&#13;
3215 60th t. 658-1801&#13;
SPECIAL INCLUDES&#13;
100 FREE RECORDS&#13;
up of groups of workers who have decided Bordens the Saint-Laurents, the&#13;
to take steps toward the revolution-. the Dupless~: They were the men who had&#13;
only real way for the workers to ~chie~e no choice but to be massacred at&#13;
and exercise power. This revolution will Dieppe having been forced to serve as the&#13;
not be made by a hundred peopl~, as the inea-'pigs of cheap labour: thf:!Y ~ere the&#13;
authorities want" evei,:one to believe, but ~en nightsticked at Murdochv1lle a~d&#13;
by the whole popul_ation. The o~y true elsewhere for wanting to defend their&#13;
power of the people 1s power exercised by simple right to exist. Our brothers today&#13;
the people and for the people. The FLQ are not the Trudeaus, the Bourassa, the&#13;
leave coup d'etat to the three govern- Drapeaus they are the "gars de&#13;
LaPalme': _ the people that Bill 38 :,vm&#13;
assassinate tomorrow: all the exploited Equestrian 's Club people of Quebec.&#13;
Being Formed&#13;
A new club is being formed on campus&#13;
for all tudents interested in horses. The&#13;
organization is the Parkside Equestrians'&#13;
Club, and its purpose will be to provide an&#13;
opportunity to learn, enjoy, and compete&#13;
in all fields connected with the horse.&#13;
Th e are.as include showing, care, riding,&#13;
training, and management.&#13;
The club plans to hold clinics in order to&#13;
acquaint the non-owner with the horse. For&#13;
the more accompli hed horsemen and&#13;
women, the organization plans to have&#13;
competition with other colleges in events&#13;
from barrel racing to saddle seat equition.&#13;
Already the club has drawn some top&#13;
rid rs. For instance Cathy Moper, who has&#13;
placed con istanUy in class A shows, an&#13;
and has been champion or reserve in state&#13;
competition for the last three years.&#13;
Amy Fulmer is another equestrian who&#13;
has hown since she's been eight, does all&#13;
her own training and has won several High&#13;
Point trophies. Amy is at Parkside for pr~&#13;
veterinary study. Both Cathy and Amy&#13;
perform difficult self-taught dressage&#13;
routines.&#13;
1auine Stauder is another member with an admirable record. She was instrumental&#13;
in starting the 4-H Horse&#13;
Science Project in Kenosha County, and&#13;
she also places consistantly in class A&#13;
shows. There are others, some wilh the&#13;
same great abilities, some just beginning&#13;
to show their talents. We need everyone, so please join. Watch for the date and attend&#13;
the club's first meeting.&#13;
Six Named to&#13;
All-Star Team&#13;
The FLQ is made up of groups of&#13;
workers who have given themselves the&#13;
objectives of fighting against the daily acts&#13;
of terrorism perpetrated by the state. The&#13;
crime of the FLQ in the eyes of the&#13;
authorities in power is not so much ~at we used violence but that we use violence&#13;
against the establishment. This a~ve all&#13;
is unpardonable. This above all fnghtens&#13;
them.&#13;
It is in the interests of the establishment&#13;
to transmit this fear to the population.&#13;
Primarily to justify an armed intervention&#13;
into Quebec, which, they think, will give&#13;
them a certain degree of protection. But&#13;
also, to make it clear to the people of&#13;
Quebec that thex_ had better forget about&#13;
any ideas aboutliberation.&#13;
But the Front de Liberation du Quebec&#13;
knows the population is not duped by such&#13;
games (tricks), even if the different&#13;
governments are doing their best to make&#13;
it look otherwise. This is what they tried in&#13;
the case of the same results in the&#13;
municipal election in Montreal.&#13;
We want to briefly point out some conclusive&#13;
facts concerning that: the high&#13;
anglophone turnout, the great percentage&#13;
of abstentions in the "quartiers&#13;
populaires" and the percentage of votes&#13;
accorded to workers' candidates in those&#13;
same areas. After making those observations&#13;
it's easy to see that the Civic&#13;
Party (sic) was elected with the concurrence&#13;
of scarcely ten per cent of the&#13;
population. And this they dare call&#13;
democracy.&#13;
Quebecois, the time for dupery is&#13;
finished.&#13;
Quebecois, the hautes bourgeoisies,&#13;
English and French, has spoken: Now is&#13;
the time to act.&#13;
Liberation, Chenier, and&#13;
Dieppe Cells&#13;
Nous Vaincrons&#13;
Front de Liberation du Quebec&#13;
Anchor Inn&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
ADULTS $2.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 10 $1.50&#13;
CHILDREN UNDER 5 FREE&#13;
Prices include first&#13;
dinner beverage.&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken wl&amp;b&#13;
Biscuits and _.:avy&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sat. 5 p.m. - 11 p.m.&#13;
Mon. - Thurs. 5 p.m. - 10 p.m.&#13;
Sun. 12 Noon 9 p.m.&#13;
9006 Sherjdan Rd- · • Phone 694-1733 Six members of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside soccer team have&#13;
been named to the NAIA District 14&#13;
(Wisconsin) All-Star team.&#13;
Fullback Joe Orr of Milwaukee and&#13;
forwards Dale Nickel, Waukesha, and Stan&#13;
Markovic, Racine, were named to the first&#13;
team, while defensivemen Kari Liekowski,&#13;
Kingston, N.Y., Doug Beveridge,&#13;
Milwaukee, and goalie Charlie Lees, Kearny, N.J., were picked on the five-man&#13;
reserve squad.&#13;
&amp;i.ppl.t Sn.o.lr.t Otl.flr/J~&#13;
Nine UW-Green Bay players and one&#13;
from Platteville State University completed&#13;
the two teams. They are Torleiv&#13;
Bilstad of Platteville and Chris&#13;
Arrowsmith, Horst Stemke, Bill Scheller,&#13;
Ken Hess, Peter Stratton, Zach&#13;
Papanikolaou and Fred Justin of Green&#13;
Bay on the first team, and Erich Dietrich&#13;
and Ray Gumpert of Green Bay on the&#13;
reserve team.&#13;
A senior from Plymouth, Dennis M.&#13;
Chaplin, was the 1970 winner of the Minneapolis-Honeywell&#13;
Co. award of $200 and&#13;
a silver tray presented to the outstanding&#13;
University of Wisconsin engineering&#13;
student.&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
2704 lalltrop ,he., Aocine, Wi1con1in&#13;
Students eet red carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone else!)&#13;
proudly announces the long awaited&#13;
revival of ...&#13;
HARDMAN'S&#13;
Hard Rock Cafe&#13;
2519-60th ST&#13;
Sin City&#13;
(I t.Y1, ~ ,. (fa~ JJ&#13;
PEACE • • • &#13;
Audience Grooved To Gregor J&#13;
An evenIng . f 0&#13;
S·uperror entertainment . Y aIlles&#13;
as enjoyed by Bill and Jody Parkside at&#13;
;eir first expo~ure to.3 ~ightclUb - at the&#13;
Student Activities BUIlding last Nov. 7.&#13;
After being assaulted at lbe door for&#13;
their money and I.D.s, they sat down at a&#13;
front table-for-four .. . and somehow&#13;
expected to be waited upon. But, as it was&#13;
at the dances, he had to purchase beer&#13;
tickets at one end and lben walk lbe total&#13;
diagonal to the olber end to get what he&#13;
wanted, only to walk the distance again to&#13;
return to their table.&#13;
candlelight and beer were on the menu&#13;
for Bill and Jody until lbe monlb-Iate&#13;
Gregory James group started their performance&#13;
(9:20), just as lbe popcorn was&#13;
being served and the singles gave up their&#13;
search for singles.&#13;
"A Little Help From My Friends",&#13;
"Working On A Groovy Thing", a little&#13;
"grass, booze, and sex ... " and feedback&#13;
caught the audience with their mouths&#13;
open. Jody didn't puff or pick up her beer&#13;
until the lbird number. Then lbe group&#13;
apologized for destroying Bill and Jody's&#13;
big date Oct. 3 when they cancelled.&#13;
The whole audience grooved to the&#13;
fantastically arranged versions of&#13;
"everybody's favorites" - with a sound&#13;
like Sergio and Brazil '66. The music&#13;
wasn't cerebral. And after the second act&#13;
everyone relaxed and grooved even more&#13;
to the music. DeBerges Raiders were&#13;
I'Iblically recognized as Parkside's official&#13;
fedoyan, and lbe band played on.&#13;
People danced, sang, clapped, and got&#13;
involved with olber people wilb a little&#13;
from the entourage of Gregory James.&#13;
After it was all over, and the lights went&#13;
on, Bill was heard still trying to convince&#13;
Jody that lbe female was NOT staring at&#13;
him. They drove home with clear heads,&#13;
open minds, and looking forward to THE&#13;
NEIGHBORHOOD.&#13;
AAU two-mile Women's Open. Parkside's&#13;
Judy Zimmerman was ninth in 12:53in the&#13;
event won by Pat Bagian in 11:55.5.Teams&#13;
from lbe Wolverine Ciub took the top three&#13;
places in the team event, followed by&#13;
Parkstde and the Terre Haute Track Club&#13;
of Indiana. Running with Miss Zimmerman&#13;
for UWP was Sandy Houston&#13;
usn», Mary Libal (27th), Michelle&#13;
Rosandich (28th) and Bev Crawford&#13;
(34lb) .&#13;
Hoffman's Chicago Track Club won lbe&#13;
other team event in the Midwest Open with&#13;
32 points. Parkside was second with 48, as&#13;
Lund was joined by Tim McGilsky (7th),&#13;
Jim McFadden (Bth), Gary Lance (trth)&#13;
and John Wagner (29lb). Track clubs from&#13;
Marquette (72), Loyola (80) and&#13;
University of Chicago (128) followed.&#13;
The USTFF Junior Open for ninlb grade&#13;
and under boys was won by Gary Harben,&#13;
also of the Wolverine Club, in 8:23.1 over&#13;
one and a half miles.&#13;
For All the&#13;
Latest Fashions,&#13;
By Leading Names&#13;
At - Realistic Prices&#13;
BLAZE A&#13;
TRAIL TO&#13;
ISERMANN'S&#13;
USTFF Championships&#13;
Tom Hoffman and Dick Seibold paced a&#13;
field of 400 runners who competed&#13;
saturday in United States Track and Field&#13;
Federation (USTFF) championships held&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Hoffman, current national AAU six-mile&#13;
chamipon and former Whitewater star,&#13;
wonthe USTFF six mile championship in&#13;
31:13, 42 seconds better than two of his&#13;
Chicago Track Club teammates, John&#13;
Lesch and Kevin Keogh. Parkside's Rick&#13;
Lund was fiflb in 32:29, and Tremper&#13;
Coach Chuck Bradley was 25lb in 34:53.&#13;
Seibold, who was third in last week's&#13;
state class A public school cross country&#13;
run, won Saturday over three miles&#13;
against a classy field of prep runners in the&#13;
USTFF t8 and Under Open.&#13;
The Madison Memorial runner beat&#13;
Racine St. Catherine's Chuck LeRose by&#13;
fiveseconds in 15:14.8.Rudy Alverez, state&#13;
I'Iblic school champion, was fifth, 42&#13;
seconds back, while Tremper's Dave&#13;
Merritt, fifth in the state meet, was eighth&#13;
saturday, 53 seconds back at 16:35.&#13;
The man who beat LeRose for the&#13;
private school championship last week,&#13;
John Beaumier of SI. Joseph, chose not to&#13;
compete but watched as a spectator. A&#13;
Detroit runner, Bob Hughes, and an Iowa&#13;
star from Des Moines Dick Conway. were&#13;
third and fourlb. '&#13;
The USTFF National Masters championship&#13;
for men over 40 was won by Ben&#13;
Almaguer of Evanston, Dl. Bob Kueny of&#13;
Kenosha was ninth in the three mile race&#13;
in 21:18compared to the winning time of&#13;
17:24.8for the best finish among Wisconsin&#13;
entrants.&#13;
Women from the Wolverine Track Club&#13;
ofDetroit took 14of lbe top 15 places in lbe&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
~ORTH &amp;-SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
fOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
RANCH&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
i202 . 56th Stroot&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 652-6904&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACKETS - Rog. 54S.00&#13;
Now $27.50&#13;
Prices to&#13;
Fit Your Pocket&#13;
3M&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NATIONRL. BANK&#13;
.,.......&#13;
614 56th ST.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
Audience Grooved To Gre J . . gory ames&#13;
An evening of superior entertainment Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear was enjoyed by Bill and Jody Parkside at&#13;
their first exposure to a nightclub - at the&#13;
Student Activities Building last Nov. 7.&#13;
After being assaulted at the door for&#13;
their money and I.D.s, they sat down at a&#13;
front table-for-four . . . and somehow&#13;
expected to be waited upon. But, as it was&#13;
at the dances, he had to purchase beer&#13;
tickets at one end and then walk the total&#13;
diagonal to the other end to get what he&#13;
wanted, only to walk the distance again tO'&#13;
return to their table.&#13;
Candlelight and beer were on the menu&#13;
for Bill and Jody until the month-late&#13;
Gregory James group started their performance&#13;
(9:20), just as the popcorn was&#13;
being served and the singles gave up their&#13;
search for singles.&#13;
"A Little Help From My Friends",&#13;
"Working On A Groovy Thing", a little&#13;
"grass, booze, and sex . . . " and feedback&#13;
caught the audience with their mouths&#13;
open. Jody didn't puff or pick up her beer&#13;
until the third number. Then the group&#13;
apologized for destroying Bill and Jody's&#13;
big date Oct. 3 when they cancelled&#13;
The whole audience grooved to the&#13;
fantastically arranged versions of&#13;
"everybody's favorites" - with a sound&#13;
like Sergio and Brazil '66. The music&#13;
wasn't cerebral. And after the second act&#13;
everyone relaxed and grooved even more&#13;
to the music. DeBerges Raiders were&#13;
publically recognized as Parkside's official&#13;
fedoyan, and the band played on.&#13;
People danced, sang, clapped, and got&#13;
involved with other people with a little&#13;
from the entourage of Gregory James.&#13;
After it was all over, and the lights went&#13;
on, Bill was heard still trying to convince&#13;
Jody that the female was NOT staring at&#13;
him. They drove home with clear heads,&#13;
open minds, and looking forward to THE&#13;
NEIGHBORHOOD.&#13;
USTFF Championships&#13;
Tom Hoffman and Dick Seibold paced a&#13;
field of 400 runners who competed&#13;
Saturday in United States Track and Field&#13;
Federation (USTFF) championships held&#13;
at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Hoffman, current national AAU six-mile&#13;
chamipon and former Whitewater star,&#13;
won the USTFF six mile championship in&#13;
31: 13, 42 seconds better than two of his&#13;
Chicago Track Club teammates, John&#13;
Lesch and Kevin Keogh. Parkside's Rick&#13;
Lund was fifth in 32:29, and Tremper&#13;
Coach Chuck Bradley was 25th in 34: 53.&#13;
Seibold, who was third in last week's&#13;
state class A public school cross country&#13;
run, won Saturday over three miles&#13;
against a classy field of prep runners in the&#13;
USTFF 18 and Under Open.&#13;
The Madison Memorial runner beat&#13;
Racine St. Catherine's Chuck LeRose by&#13;
fivesecondsinlS:14.8. Rudy Alverez, state&#13;
public school champion, was fifth, 42&#13;
seconds back, while Tremper's Dave&#13;
Merritt, fifth in the state meet, was eighth&#13;
Saturday, 53 seconds back at 16:35.&#13;
The man who beat LeRose for the&#13;
private school championship last week,&#13;
John Beaumier of St. Joseph, chose not to&#13;
compete but watched as a spectator. A&#13;
Detroit runner, Bob Hughes, and an Iowa&#13;
s~r from Des Moines, Dick Conway, were third and fourth.&#13;
The USTFF National Masters championship&#13;
for men over 40 was won by Ben&#13;
Almaguer of Evanston, Ill. Bob Kueny of&#13;
Kenosha was ninth in the three mile race&#13;
in 21: 18 compared to the winning time of&#13;
17:24.8 for the best finish among Wisconsin&#13;
entrants.&#13;
Women from the Wolverine Track Club&#13;
ofDetroit took 14 of the top 15 places in the&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
RANCH&#13;
NORTH &amp;.SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
AAU two-mile Women's Open. Parkside's&#13;
Judy Zimmerman was ninth in 12:53 in the&#13;
event won by Pat Bagian in 11 :55.5. Teams&#13;
from the Wolverine Club took the top three&#13;
places in the team event, followed by&#13;
Parkside and the Terre Haute Track Club&#13;
of Indiana. Running with Miss Zimmerman&#13;
for UWP was Sandy Houston&#13;
(19th), Mary Libal (27th) , Michelle&#13;
Rosandich (28th) and Bev Crawford&#13;
(34th).&#13;
Hoffman's Chicago Track Club won the&#13;
other team event in the Midwest Open with&#13;
32 points. Parkside was second with 48, as&#13;
Lund was joined by Tim McGilsky (7th),&#13;
Jim McFadden (8th), Gary Lance (11th)&#13;
and John Wagner (29th). Track clubs from&#13;
Marquette (72), Loyola (80) and&#13;
University of Chicago (128) followed.&#13;
The USTFF Junior Open for ninth grade&#13;
and under boys was won by Gary Harben,&#13;
also of the Wolverine Club, in 8:23.1 over&#13;
one and a half miles.&#13;
1202 - 56th Str .. t&#13;
Kenosha, Wis. 652-6904&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACKETS - Reg. $45.00&#13;
Now $27 .50&#13;
Prices to&#13;
Fit Your Pocket&#13;
3M&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
WIHOIN&#13;
BLAZE A&#13;
TRAIL TO&#13;
ISERMANN'S&#13;
For All the&#13;
Latest Fashions,&#13;
By Leading Names&#13;
At - Realistic Prices&#13;
614 56th ST.&#13;
KENOSHA &#13;
Top row. Coach Chuck Dettman, Mike Dewitt, John Wagner, Tim McGilsky, Rick Lund. Front&#13;
row Keith Merrilt, Marc Conrad, Gary Lance, Jim Bark, Jim McFadden.&#13;
Kathy Doherty I Miss Wrestling at Parkside, is all smiles as she is flanked by two of&#13;
Parkslde's finest wrestlers, lelt, Paul Paricha and, right, Jeff Jenkins. Kathy was&#13;
chosen to represent the wrestling team in the SportsCest Queen Contest. She is also a _Ii"" Mal aid.&#13;
Bill Benkstein, Parkside Caplain, seems to be enjoying himself as he is backed by&#13;
three lovely Parkside Co-eds. The three, left lo righl, are Sally Hewitt, Nancy Michaels&#13;
and Cns Vlahakis, all members of the elite group of girls called Mat Maids.&#13;
·Prof. Valencia N.. Prock wh&#13;
professional career began as' hOi ?Be&#13;
nurse, is the new dean of the Universf'lal&#13;
Wisconsin School of Nursing in Ma~&#13;
3200 60th ~t,&#13;
6 u.m. till 11 p.m. 7 doy,&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657 -97 47&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~w&#13;
glalian~&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or banquet,&#13;
no party too small.&#13;
Call 654-9123&#13;
Sludies conducted by University of&#13;
Wisconsin geographer G. H. Dury indicate&#13;
that Wisconsin was in a tropical chmate&#13;
thousands of years ago.&#13;
BARDEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
MON. and Fri. - 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.1IIo&#13;
TUES. thru THURS. - 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.&#13;
SAT. - 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN and WOMEN&#13;
fREE DELIVERY&#13;
ALCOA subsidiary has immediate openings for&#13;
parttime employment&#13;
3 evenings plus Saturdays $57.50&#13;
Scholarships available&#13;
Young Democrats&#13;
Elect Officers&#13;
Rm. 110&#13;
AMBITIOUS?&#13;
The newly formed University of&#13;
Wisconsln·ParKside Young Democrats&#13;
held an election meeting Sunday&#13;
November 8, 1970. The newly elected of~&#13;
fleers include Gregory Barrette, chairman.&#13;
Michael Beam, vice chairman;&#13;
Doris Dubenewicz, secretary; and Frank&#13;
lurrey, treasurer The three members at&#13;
large elected to the executive board inelude;&#13;
James Chesick, Donald MarjaJa&#13;
and Henry Heinisch.&#13;
It was decided that the next meeting&#13;
would be held on Tuesday, November 17,&#13;
1970,In Greenquist HaJJ, at 11;45 a.m. The&#13;
room il yet to be decided.&#13;
D£UCATESSEN-lEVERAGES&#13;
3203 PlfTY-SKOHO STlfn&#13;
UHOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
(The Newscope printed the following od incorrectly lost week. We are sotJ'f&#13;
jf any students we're inconvenienced by our mistake. (ed.))&#13;
see Mr. Otteson for an interview on Tuesday, NoV. 11&#13;
at Greenquist Hall&#13;
at 3 p.mYoung&#13;
Democrats&#13;
Elect Officers&#13;
DEUCA TESSEN -BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 flnY.SfCOND STHfT&#13;
UNOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
AMBITIOUS?&#13;
Studies conducted by University of&#13;
Wisconsin geographer G. H. D~y in~cate&#13;
that Wisconsin was in a tropical climate&#13;
thousands of years ago.&#13;
Prof. Valencia N. Prock wh&#13;
professional career began as ' hos ?Se&#13;
nurse, is the new dean of the Univers·f&#13;
1&#13;
lal&#13;
Wisconsin School of Nursing in MaJi~~&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phon, .657-97 47&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~wglafimn~&#13;
&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or banquet,&#13;
no party too small&#13;
Call 654-9123&#13;
BARDEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
MON. and Fri. - 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.&#13;
TUES. thru THU RS. - 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.&#13;
SAT. - 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
LA TEST FASH IONS&#13;
FOR MEN and WOMEN&#13;
FREE DELIVERY&#13;
(The Newscope printed the following ad incorrectly last week. We are sorrt&#13;
if any students w~re inconvenienced by our mistake. (ed.))&#13;
ALCOA subsidiary has immediate openings for&#13;
parttime employment&#13;
3 evenings plus Saturdays $5 7 .50&#13;
Scholarships available&#13;
see Mr. Otteson for an interview on Tuesday, Nov. 17&#13;
at Greenquist Hall&#13;
Rm. 110 at 3 p.m. </text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61624">
                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 2, Issue 8, November 16, 1970</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="41">
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                <text>1970-11-16</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61628">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="61629">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="61630">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="42">
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                <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61633">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Coverage</name>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61634">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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              <elementText elementTextId="61636">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61637">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="97">
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          <elementTextContainer>
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61616">
              <text>Administration to Blame: Faculty Morale Low</text>
            </elementText>
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              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="89845">
              <text>Administration To Blame&#13;
Faculty Morale Low&#13;
~he Social Science Division of the&#13;
Umv.erslly of Wiscansin.Parkside held a&#13;
special meeting Oct. 30 and strongly&#13;
blamed the Administration for low faculty&#13;
~o~ale and for indifference toward indivIdual&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
The. Division approved a statement&#13;
submitted by Mr. Phillip Simpson (Pol&#13;
Sc.).. The statement follows: .&#13;
Resolution presented to the Social&#13;
Science DiVisi?n, October 28, 1970,by P~il&#13;
SImpson, political science.&#13;
Th~~ocial Science Division asks that the&#13;
admml~trallve leadership of the&#13;
Um:,~rslty of Wisconsin-Parkside take&#13;
POSItiveand prompt action to alleviate the&#13;
atmosphere of hostility, fear, mistrust,&#13;
and low faculty morale which has built up&#13;
durin~ the course of the last few months.&#13;
The climate of opinion among both faculty&#13;
and students IS hardly conducive to&#13;
teaching, scholarship, or education&#13;
generally. Whether accurate or not,&#13;
faculty preceptions of reality at Parkside&#13;
generally seem to be painting a very; grim&#13;
picture indeed. .&#13;
These perceptions of reality appear to&#13;
have the following common elements:&#13;
(a) that the faculty is not respected and&#13;
has no vital role to play in setting policy or&#13;
establishing the long-range goals of the&#13;
university;&#13;
(b) that the administration is bent on&#13;
"instant greatness". which translates into&#13;
an immediate purge of junior faculty and&#13;
punishment of senior faculty without&#13;
giving these groups a fair chance to prove&#13;
themselves as being worthy of a quality&#13;
institution;&#13;
(c) that the administration, independent&#13;
of the faculty, has established a severe&#13;
"publish or perish" attitude which translates&#13;
into a near complete de-emphasis of&#13;
Financial Aid Doubled&#13;
Financial aid available to students at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside this&#13;
schoolyear is double that of last year and&#13;
nearly seven times greater. than that&#13;
avaUabIe during UWP's firsf year of&#13;
operation in 1968-69.&#13;
Some $379,000has been distributed to&#13;
students this year and the total will climb'&#13;
to about $400,000,according to Jan Ocker,&#13;
UWP's Director of Financial Aids. That&#13;
compares to $201,000in 1969-70and $58,000&#13;
duringParkside's first year of operation in&#13;
1968-69.&#13;
This dramatic increase in financial aids&#13;
is viewedby University officials as a vote&#13;
of cmfidence in the accomplishments and&#13;
potential of Parkside on the part of the,&#13;
federal, state and private agencies which&#13;
Il"Ovidethe funds.&#13;
MacKinney Elected&#13;
Arthur C. MacKinney, dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, has&#13;
been elected a Fellow of the American&#13;
Psychological Association, effective Jan.&#13;
1, by the APA Council of Representatives.&#13;
Election as an APA Fellow is in&#13;
recognition of scientific achievement&#13;
influential in the advancement of&#13;
P6ychologyas a profession, particularly in&#13;
the area of research.&#13;
Fellows are selected on the basis of a&#13;
series of complex screening processes&#13;
eValuating the candidate's scholarly and&#13;
professional accomplishment.&#13;
Before coming to his Parkside post on&#13;
July I, MacKinney headed the psychology&#13;
department at Iowa State University,&#13;
":here he had been a psychology professor&#13;
SUlCe1957.He also has held visiting lecturer&#13;
and professor appointments at life·&#13;
Uruversity of Michigan, University of&#13;
Minnesota and University of CaliforniaBerkeley&#13;
and consultant posts with major&#13;
industries.&#13;
MacKinney's major interest as an industrial&#13;
psychologist is in the improvement&#13;
of human performance,&#13;
especially of managers, and in the&#13;
measurement of performance.&#13;
MacKinney currently is serving a three&#13;
year term as an elected member of the&#13;
APA's Committee on Advisory Services&#13;
for Education and ·Training. He previously&#13;
was chairman of its Commission on Accreditation&#13;
and of the committees that&#13;
prepared the APA guidelines for the Ph.D.&#13;
IIld M.A.degrees in industrial psychology.&#13;
Federal fundTng, for example, for the.&#13;
work-study program, national defense&#13;
student loans and educational opportunity&#13;
grants has increased 120 per cent, from&#13;
$58,000to $127,000,at a time when many&#13;
colleges and universities throughout the&#13;
country face federal leveling off or even&#13;
cutbacks. Ocker, who prepares Parkside&#13;
applications, said federal officials were&#13;
impressed. with UWP's rapid enrollment&#13;
growth, which is the highest among&#13;
Wisconsin's 13 public four-year campuses.&#13;
Other categories of student aid also show&#13;
sharp increases from last year. State&#13;
scholarships and loans went from $120,000&#13;
&lt;0 ~198000 (65 per cent), while guaranteed&#13;
student loans from banks and savings and&#13;
·loan associations, mostly in Kenosha and&#13;
.Racine, jumped from $23,000to $53,000(129&#13;
per cenll. .&#13;
Financial aid for Parkslde students has&#13;
increased. at an even faster rate than&#13;
enrollment. On a per capita basis, the aid&#13;
available to Parkside's 1,796 students in&#13;
1968-69 averaged $32 per student. Last&#13;
year, with 2,911 students, the ave~age was&#13;
$69 per student. This year, WIth 4,100&#13;
students, the average went up to $98.&#13;
The number of students actually&#13;
receiving financial aid has increas~&#13;
signUicantly, as has the average amo~&#13;
of aid each receives. The 193 students&#13;
receiving aid in 1968-69 averaged $302&#13;
each the 393 last year averaged $512,and&#13;
the ~timated 650who will receive aid this&#13;
school year will average about $630.&#13;
Ocker's office also coordmales student&#13;
on-campus employment a.s well as&#13;
maintaining a placement .~rvlce for ~rt.&#13;
time jobs in the commumties. In addition&#13;
to the 650 students who receive loans,&#13;
scholarships, grants and ,work-study&#13;
funds, another 750 students will he placed&#13;
this year in jobs in Kenosha, Racrne Of.on&#13;
campus. That brings to 1,400, or one-~rd&#13;
of the student body, the number recelvmg&#13;
financial aid or job placement through&#13;
Ocker's office.&#13;
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!!&#13;
Six weeks grades for all students who&#13;
have received a "0" or uF" will be mailed&#13;
out Monday, November 9, 1970. Those&#13;
students are encouraged to contact their&#13;
instructors or an Academic Adviser in the&#13;
Office of Student Affairs located on the&#13;
Racine and Kenosha campuses or an&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
Students who wish to DROP a course&#13;
have until Friday. November J3, 197•.&#13;
teaching and the use of students as objects&#13;
of an elaborate public relations and&#13;
"numbers game";&#13;
(d) and finally that democracy is dead at&#13;
Parkside. This translates into a feeling&#13;
that faculty-student committees and&#13;
organs are fronts, are "listened to" as long&#13;
as the administration agrees with them&#13;
and that communication and power at&#13;
Parkside runs in only one direction - from&#13;
top 10 bottom.&#13;
Whether these perceptions accurately&#13;
describe the actual situation at Parkside&#13;
seems to be a question of some concern. If&#13;
not accurate, certain officers of the&#13;
university have at least contributed to the&#13;
perceptions of the hostile and hateful&#13;
climate at Parkside. Rather than having&#13;
-developed "instant greatness", this institution&#13;
seems to have developed instant&#13;
rumor, instant division, and instant and&#13;
Dear total destruction of morale and institutional&#13;
commitment&#13;
In conclusion, the members of this&#13;
division feel that the administration should&#13;
know that these perceptions of reality are&#13;
widespread and that, if untrue, actions&#13;
should be forthcoming to create a climate&#13;
for their correction. We ask nothing more&#13;
than to be trea ted as honora ble people in&#13;
an honorable endeavor.&#13;
Research Receiving&#13;
Overemphasis&#13;
Madison, Wis. - (!.P.l- Research may&#13;
be getting overemphasis at expense of&#13;
undergraduate teaching, according to a&#13;
recent report on campus tensions at U.S.&#13;
universities.&#13;
Prof. George Bunn of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Law School, a member of the&#13;
special study committee, said the uwMadison&#13;
campus is an example of how the&#13;
need for increased attention to teaching&#13;
has been recently re-evaluated.&#13;
"We recommend a better balance by&#13;
giving ~ood teaching greater recognition&#13;
in hiring and promotion. The report also&#13;
suggests that students be consulted on&#13;
faculty teaching competence before&#13;
decisions on tenure or promotion are&#13;
.made. And to improve the teaching quality&#13;
of teaching assistants, we urged greater&#13;
supervision by the professors."&#13;
Colloquium Here&#13;
Thursday&#13;
Two major contemporary panish&#13;
novelists will be among participants In a&#13;
coHoquium on .. e« Trends 10 the'&#13;
ovelists or the Generation oll950" which&#13;
wiU he held under sponsorshIp of th&#13;
faculty d the University d WisconsIn&#13;
Parkslde Thursday, Nov. 12.&#13;
o reservations are required for ~ fref'&#13;
program at 7 p m. on Greenqurst Hall&#13;
Participating in the discussion WIll be&#13;
Juan Goyusolo and AntoniO Ferres. two&#13;
major writers of the period. and Jose&#13;
Ortega, an associate professor at liWP&#13;
and organizer of the colloquium&#13;
Born in Barcelona in 1931, GoyLisoloha&#13;
lived in Paris since 1956with occasional&#13;
visits to his native Spain and to Morocco.&#13;
Cuha and the Umted States He presently&#13;
is a writer in residence at BOl!tCMl&#13;
University.&#13;
The influence of the Spani h CiVilWar IS&#13;
evident in all or Goylisolo's novels,&#13;
especially "Duelo en eI Paraiso". and 10&#13;
his most recent works, "Senas de identidad"&#13;
and "Relvindicacion del Conde Don&#13;
Julian". His books have been translated&#13;
into more than 20 languages,&#13;
Ferres, presently a visiting prole 'or at&#13;
'orthern Illinois niveraity, was born 10&#13;
Madrid in 1924 and spent the Civil War&#13;
years there. In 1956he left a career as an&#13;
engineer and three years tater pubh hed&#13;
the award-winning novel- "La Prqueta"&#13;
Some of his novels. including "Los vencidos",&#13;
have been banned bY the Franco&#13;
regime and were subsequently pubh hed&#13;
abroad. His most recent work. "En et&#13;
Segundo Hemisferio", is an account of hts&#13;
observalions of the American scene.&#13;
Ortega. a widely-pubhshed teacher.&#13;
lecturer and critic. joined the Park id&#13;
Spanish faculty in July after peevrously&#13;
teaching at Case Western Reserve&#13;
University and Smith College He&#13;
currently is writing a book tilled&#13;
"Alienation in the Modern Span! h Nove'"&#13;
which includes studies of several work by&#13;
Goytisolo and Ferres. Ortega. 36. also is a&#13;
native of. Spain and taught at several&#13;
Spanish institutions before coming lo the&#13;
U.S. in 1960.&#13;
Robert Goldstein, prdessor of communicative&#13;
disorders and rehabilitalton&#13;
medicine at the University of Wisconsin,&#13;
Madison, is the new president~elect of the&#13;
American Speech and Hearing&#13;
Association.&#13;
Members of the CCC met Friday to discuss the&#13;
ratification of the Student Government Constitution.&#13;
Although two major problems concerning policy setting for&#13;
student concessionshamper progress, there is an expected&#13;
preliminary OK set for next week.&#13;
Administration To Blame&#13;
Faculty Morale Low&#13;
1:}ie ~ial Science Division of the&#13;
Uruv_ersity of Wisconsin-Parkside held a&#13;
special meetin~ _Oct. 30 and strongly&#13;
blamed the Administration for low faculty&#13;
~o~ale and for indifference toward individual&#13;
faculty members.&#13;
Th~ Division approved a statement&#13;
submitted by Mr. Phillip Simpson (Pol. Sc.)_. The statement follows:&#13;
~esolu~o~ . presented to the Social&#13;
~1ence Division, October 28, 1970, by Phil&#13;
Simpson, political science.&#13;
Th~ ~ocial ~ience Division asks that the&#13;
ad~m1~trahve leadership of the&#13;
Uru~~rsity of Wisconsin-Parkside take&#13;
positive and prompt action to alleviate the&#13;
atmosphere of hostility, fear, mistrust,&#13;
and_ low faculty morale which has built up&#13;
durm~ the course of the last few months.&#13;
The climate of opinion among both faculty&#13;
and students 1s hardly conducive to&#13;
teaching, scholarship, or education&#13;
generally. Whether accurate or not&#13;
faculty preceptions of reality at Parksid;&#13;
generally seem to be painting a very grim picture indeed.&#13;
These perceptions of reality appear to&#13;
have the following common elements:&#13;
(a) that the faculty is not respected and&#13;
has no vital role to play in setting policy or&#13;
establishing the long-range goals of the&#13;
university;&#13;
(b) that the administration is bent on&#13;
"instant greatness", which translates into&#13;
an immediate purge of junior faculty and&#13;
punishment of senior faculty without&#13;
giving these groups a fair chance to prove&#13;
themselves as being worthy of a quality institution;&#13;
(c) that the administration, independent&#13;
of the faculty, has established a severe&#13;
"publish or perish" attitude which translates&#13;
into a near complete de-emphasis of&#13;
teaching and the use of students a objects&#13;
of an elaborate public relations and&#13;
"numbers game" ;&#13;
&lt; di and finally that democracy is dead at&#13;
Parkside. This translates mto a feeling&#13;
that faculty-student committees and&#13;
organs are fronts, are "Ii tened to" a long&#13;
as the admini tration agrees with them&#13;
and that communication and power al&#13;
Parkside runs in only one direction - from&#13;
top to bottom.&#13;
Whether these perceptions accurately&#13;
describe the actual ituation at Park de&#13;
seems to be a question ol. some concern. If&#13;
not accurate, certain officers of the&#13;
university have at least contributed to the&#13;
perceptions or the hostile and hateful&#13;
climate at Parkside. Rather than having&#13;
•developed "instant greatn " , th institution&#13;
seems to have developed instant&#13;
rumor, instant division, and instan and&#13;
near total destruction of morale and institutional&#13;
commitment&#13;
In conclusion, the members of this&#13;
division feel that the admini !ration should&#13;
know that these perceptions of reality are&#13;
widespread and that, if untrue, actions&#13;
should be forthcoming to create a climate&#13;
for their correction. We ask nothing more&#13;
than to be treated as honorable people in&#13;
an honorable endeavor.&#13;
Research Receiving&#13;
Overemphasis&#13;
Madison, Wis. - (l.P.&gt; - Research may&#13;
be getting overemphasis at expense of&#13;
undergraduate teaching, according to a&#13;
recent report on campus tensions at U.S. universities.&#13;
Colloquium Here&#13;
Thursday&#13;
financial Aid Doubled&#13;
Prof. George Bunn of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Law School, a member of the&#13;
special study committee, said the UWMadison&#13;
campus is an example of how the&#13;
need for increased attention to teaching&#13;
has been recently re-evaluated Financial aid available to students at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside this&#13;
school year is double that of last year and&#13;
nearly seven times greater. than that&#13;
available during UWP's first year of&#13;
operation in 1968-69.&#13;
Some $379,000 has been distributed to&#13;
students this year and the total will climb ·&#13;
to about $400,000, according to Jan Ocker,&#13;
DWP's Director of Financial Aids. That&#13;
compares to $201,000 in 1969-70 and $58,000&#13;
during Parkside's first year of operation in&#13;
1968~9.&#13;
This dramatic increase in financial aids&#13;
is viewed by University officials as a vote&#13;
of confidence in the accomplishments and&#13;
potential of Parkside on the part of the,&#13;
federal, state and private agencies which&#13;
provide the funds.&#13;
MacKinney Elected&#13;
Arthur C. MacKinney, dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, has&#13;
been elected a Fellow of the American&#13;
Psychological Association, effective Jan.&#13;
1, by the APA Council of Representatives.&#13;
Election as an AP A Fellow is in&#13;
recognition of scientific achievement&#13;
influential in the advancement of&#13;
psychology as a profession, particularly in&#13;
the area of research.&#13;
Fellows are selected on the basis of a&#13;
series of complex screening processes&#13;
evaluating the candidate's scholarly and&#13;
professional accomplishment.&#13;
Before coming to his Parkside post on&#13;
July 1, MacKinney headed the psychology&#13;
department at Iowa State University,&#13;
~here he had been a psychology professor&#13;
smce 1957. He also has held visiting lectur~r&#13;
and professor appointments at tlfe·&#13;
U~versity of Michigan, University of&#13;
Mmnesota and University of California-&#13;
~rkeley and consultant posts with major industries.&#13;
MacKinney's major interest as an industrial&#13;
psychologist is in the im·&#13;
provement of human performance,&#13;
especially of managers, and in the&#13;
measurement of performance.&#13;
MacKinney currently is serving a three&#13;
Year term as an elected member of the&#13;
APA's Committee on Advisory Services&#13;
for Education and Training. He previously&#13;
was chairman of its Commission on Accreditation&#13;
and of the committees that&#13;
prepared the AP A guidelines for the Ph.D.&#13;
and M.A. degrees in industrial psychology·&#13;
Federal fundrng, for example, for the&#13;
work-study program, national defense&#13;
student loans and educational opportunity&#13;
grants has increased 120 per cent, from&#13;
$58,000 to $127,000, at a time when many&#13;
colleges and universities throughout the&#13;
country face federal leveling off or even&#13;
cutbacks. Ocker, who prepares Parkside&#13;
applications, said federal officials were&#13;
impressed with UWP's rapid enrollment&#13;
growth, which is the highest among&#13;
Wisconsin's 13 public four-year campuses.&#13;
Other categories of student aid also show&#13;
sharp increases from last year. State&#13;
scholarships and loans went from $120,000&#13;
co ,198 000 ( 65 per cent), while guaranteed&#13;
student loans from banks and savings and&#13;
loan associations, mostly in Kenosha and&#13;
Racine, jumped from $23,000 to $53,000 &lt; 129&#13;
per cent).&#13;
Financial aid for Parkside students has&#13;
increased at an even faster rate than&#13;
enrollment. On a per capita basis, the aid&#13;
available to Parkside's 1,796 students in&#13;
1968-69 averaged $32 per student. Last&#13;
year, with 2,911 stude~ts, the ave~age was&#13;
$69 per student. This year, with 4,100&#13;
students, the average went up to $98.&#13;
The number of students actually&#13;
receiving financial aid has increased&#13;
significantly, as has the average amo~&#13;
of aid each receives. The 193 students&#13;
receiving aid in 1968-69 averaged $302&#13;
each, the 393 last year averag~ $51~, a~d&#13;
the estimated 650 who will receive aid this&#13;
school year will average a~ut $630.&#13;
Ocker's office also coordinates student&#13;
on-campus employment as well as&#13;
maintaining a placement service for l?~rttime&#13;
jobs in the communities. I~ addition&#13;
to the 650 students who receive loans,&#13;
scholarships, grants and _work-study&#13;
funds, another 750 students will b_e placed&#13;
this year in jobs in Kenosha, Racine or_on&#13;
campus. That brings to 1,400, or one-~~rd&#13;
of the student body, the number receiving&#13;
financial aid or job placement through&#13;
Ocker's office.&#13;
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!!&#13;
Six weeks grades for all s~dents ~ho&#13;
have received a "D" or "F" will be mailed&#13;
out Monday, November 9, 1970. T~&#13;
students are encouraged to contact their&#13;
instructors or an Academic Adviser in the&#13;
Office of Student Affairs located on ~e Racine and Kenosha Campuses or m&#13;
Tallent Hall.&#13;
Students who wish to DROP a course&#13;
have until Friday, November 13, 1970.&#13;
"We recommend a better balance by&#13;
giving -good teaching greater recognition&#13;
in hiring and promotion. The report also&#13;
suggests that students be consulted on&#13;
faculty teaching competence before&#13;
decisions on tenure or promotion are&#13;
.made. And to improve the teaching quality&#13;
of teaching assistants, we urged greater&#13;
supervision by the professors."&#13;
Robert Goldstein, prof&#13;
municative di orders&#13;
medicme at the niv&#13;
. tad1 on, ~ the new pr&#13;
American pee ch&#13;
Assoc1allon.&#13;
Members&#13;
ratification&#13;
of&#13;
of&#13;
the&#13;
the&#13;
CCC met Friday to discuss the&#13;
Student Government Constitution.&#13;
Although two major problems concerning policy setting for&#13;
student concessions hamper progress, there is an expected&#13;
preliminary OK set for next week. &#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
Apathy&#13;
Oh! It's been said many times - student apathy. It is particularly&#13;
disturbing when working for a student organization, as we&#13;
are, to look down upon uncommited, static students. The reason we say&#13;
"look down upon" is that we, too, were once in the same boat - and&#13;
bored tiff.&#13;
In a recent editorial board meeting we discussed the problem of&#13;
apathy among Parkside students and have arrived at some interesting&#13;
conclusions. l.l Since many Parkside students have recently joined the&#13;
university from Kenosha and Racine high schools, the main problem&#13;
might lie in that area. The idea in high school was NOT to join a club or&#13;
orgaruzation. A high rate of freshmen not involved or even caring what&#13;
happens show us that the phenomenon has carried over to events at&#13;
this university. 2'&gt; A "who cares" attitude among the Kenosha-Racine&#13;
iety or the American society as a whole. How many times have you&#13;
heard someone say "Who cares about this club or the administration of&#13;
thl school ... who is the dean anyway?" And how about this one:&#13;
"Oh. we've got a student union now." You probably don't hear&#13;
anything at all, just the sight of bowed heads of busy 'ants' on their&#13;
daily routines of school, class, home.&#13;
Aman addressed us once when we were freshmen and said, "I'll&#13;
at I a t li ten to anything the students want and try to fulfill their&#13;
wi hes." (Referring to student organizations.) 0 one can give us the&#13;
argument that the administration isn't at least superficially trying to&#13;
help u .&#13;
The whole point of this editorial is that apathy is your own fault.&#13;
All organizations on this campus need and depend on you for survival.&#13;
'ote: if you ever do get involved you'll notice a change in yourselfwalt.&#13;
omeday YOU'll "see".&#13;
Again .. Lost In Red Tope?&#13;
Let' see - we have a newspaper, we have an activities building,&#13;
..... have numerou student organizations. But 0 student government.&#13;
ince last spring a group of elected students have been working&#13;
on the .....riting of a proposed constitution. To our knowledge, that&#13;
document wa completed about seven weeks ago. This is the eighth&#13;
.....eek - and still 0 student government.&#13;
We of the NEWSCOPE feel such delay and lack of information on&#13;
uch an i ue as student government is inexcusable. Once the Campus&#13;
Concerns Committee votes on the proposed constitution, who sees it&#13;
next? Or don't the students have a right to know what exactly is happening?"&#13;
Who's At Fault?&#13;
Hello, Maintenance Department.&#13;
"Who's in charge of clearing debris such as broken bottles from&#13;
the parking lots?"&#13;
We are.&#13;
"Oh. Do you have some sort of schedule for checking the lots for&#13;
broken glass?"&#13;
o. If someone sees a broken bottle they come in and tell us and&#13;
.....e go and clean it up.&#13;
The above phone conversation took place after a student came&#13;
mto the EWSCOPE office and asked us to write something about the&#13;
glas in the parking lots. The reason? His hand was bleeding because&#13;
he had had to clear broken glass away from his car in order to drive it&#13;
from the lot. Enough said.&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
ceere Ion 01 a Frnhman raise the difference so that we could bail&#13;
out our president It was slow-going&#13;
because I averaged about two-bits a room.&#13;
The the last thing I remember about that&#13;
evening is that J wound up in a bun-session&#13;
on the third floor and the subject under&#13;
discussion was "Girls" ... and what to-do&#13;
aboot the brazen coeds who had raised the&#13;
hems of their dresses so that they were&#13;
half-way between the ankle and knee. You&#13;
could actuaUy see most of the calf (please&#13;
pardon the expression&gt;. Our decision as I&#13;
recaU. was that we would he helpful. : . we&#13;
would all pitch in and help the girls raise&#13;
their hemlines.&#13;
Having settled that problem, the other&#13;
subject on the evening's agenda was&#13;
"Girls' Dormitories" ... ,and what they&#13;
were like inside. For good. and sufficient&#13;
rea~ I was the class authority on that&#13;
subJeCt so I had to slick around. My major&#13;
dorm was Ormsby Hall and its environs&#13;
The !elJ0'4'S were pwnping me for in:&#13;
formation as to how come I knew so rnu~&#13;
I gave them some bum steers about easy&#13;
access to Ormsby Vla a certain downspout&#13;
I learned later that one of the guys took th~&#13;
baIt and got caught on the back ledge of&#13;
Ormsby later that night. He retreated in&#13;
A recent letter from a )'oung friend of&#13;
mIne ha Ju,t brought back a nnod of&#13;
nost.algl memOl"lf. He's a freshman at&#13;
La ....rtnc~ nl\'erslt) at Appleton&#13;
WI c:on~tn The school "'..as caUed&#13;
"La"ren« CoUege" "hen I was up there&#13;
for one lear&#13;
I auess I'U ne"er forget the cham ol&#13;
...... ts wtuch began aboot seven· thirty one&#13;
Fnda)' t'Venlrti tn October. 1921, I was m&#13;
my room ,n Brokn Hall. on the second&#13;
noor undor the porIlCO. I was busy planfUnl&#13;
the night's fora)' and pondering o\'er&#13;
my .. al OPIJOOS"hen a couple of my&#13;
c1Jl mat came IOto my room and&#13;
repor1ed thai the sophomores had kid·&#13;
napped our cl pres"l..,t ..•• a feUow&#13;
named Ceorge Maxon&#13;
WeU, thole coNvmg sophs reall)' had&#13;
MaxQIt and were holding him incommunicado&#13;
for $2500 ransom Our first&#13;
ruClJon w that that wa a pretty steep&#13;
pnce lor )l8llon. but the real problem was&#13;
nomic W't only had $6 30 10 the class&#13;
Ir sur) and I wa Ttea ur .. of the Class&#13;
ol'2S&#13;
I began knocking on doors. tryIng to&#13;
NewsEditor&#13;
Feature Edit&#13;
B&#13;
. or&#13;
usmessEdit&#13;
Advertising Mana or&#13;
ger&#13;
Sports Edit&#13;
Photography sta':;&#13;
AdvISor&#13;
~~&#13;
~O&#13;
•...rn J~J.i r..,&#13;
~&#13;
.-., STAFFJerry&#13;
Houston, D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol ;Z;.Marc Eisen, P~uI Lomarlire, Arthur Grubl, Jim Janis, Walters.....&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the U~iversily. of Wiscolllil&gt;&#13;
Parkside Kenosba Wisconsin. 53140. Mailing address is Parkside's Newseope,&#13;
3700wast'ungton Rd., Kenosha. Business and editoriai telephone numberis_&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 6524177.&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 1&#13;
November 9. 1970&#13;
BILL itOLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors.. .&#13;
sven Taffs&#13;
CarroU Smolinsky&#13;
Mike Gogola&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Potente&#13;
John pesta&#13;
Notes From Other Campuses&#13;
Chicago, Ill.. (J.P.) - Universities that&#13;
encourage and arrange for faculty and&#13;
students to engage in political activities&#13;
are in danger of destroying academic&#13;
freedom declares Philip B. Kurland,&#13;
Professor of Law at the University of&#13;
Chicago, editor of "The Supreme Court&#13;
Review", and a constitutional law expert.&#13;
"A university," he said, "C3IUlotbe both&#13;
a political force and an institution&#13;
dedicated to the search for knowledge and&#13;
its dissemination, As a university makes a&#13;
political commitment, it destroys its claim&#13;
to academic freedom. And without&#13;
academic freedom, the search for and&#13;
dissemination of knowledge becomes more&#13;
shadow than substance."&#13;
Kurland also criticized universities for&#13;
allowing students to receive credit for&#13;
courses they did not allend, for paying&#13;
faculties for not teaching while they are&#13;
engaged in political activities, and for&#13;
allowing campus facilities tobe used for&#13;
those purposes,&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Palo Alto, Calif. . (J.P.) - Starling this&#13;
fall, the sole penalty for failure to complete&#13;
an undergraduate course satisfactorily&#13;
at Stanford University will he loss of&#13;
credit toward graduation, Following more&#13;
than three years of study, the Faculty&#13;
Senate has approved a comprehensive&#13;
overhaul of the university's grading&#13;
system for undergraduates.&#13;
The only grades recorded will be "A" for&#13;
exceptional performance "B" for&#13;
superior performance, "C" 'for satisfactory&#13;
performance, and "pass" for nonletter-graded&#13;
work equivalent to a "C" or&#13;
better.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
such a. hurry that he sprained an ankle"&#13;
when he hit the ground. Unfortunately:&#13;
he was the only good kicker on the football&#13;
team and he did a lousy job during&#13;
our game with Ripon the following after-&#13;
~oon. His average punt was about&#13;
fifteen yards,&#13;
. Now .thatl am protected by the statue of&#13;
limitations, I will really tell you how it was&#13;
that I was so well-informed about Ormsby&#13;
Hall. Very.simple .... all you have 10&#13;
have IS an inside accomplice. Mine was a&#13;
doll named Virginia. She not only lived in&#13;
Orms?y but she worked 'as a waitress in&#13;
the kitchen. And there was a basement&#13;
door around the back of Ormsby to which&#13;
very few people paid any attention&#13;
or even kne~ about. At a predeter~i'n~&#13;
:;;:~ of the mght I would go down the fire&#13;
pe outs,de the second noor washroom'&#13;
at Brokaw cross the foot b 'dg th ba' - n eandgoto&#13;
e ck door of Ormsby. There I would&#13;
scratch the door thr ti&#13;
I&#13;
'k ee. mes make a. no,'se lealom t . , open the dca i . . . and guess who would&#13;
oor.&#13;
So here I sit aI . later wo d . . . .. most f,fly years&#13;
v' .'. .n ermg . . . . I wonder what&#13;
lrgm,a 's doing tonight And h t • hap d . W a ever&#13;
rais:'~ to Maxon. I know that we never&#13;
hearing ~~malll'h~rnand I d?n't recall ever&#13;
1m or seemg hi . Maybe he's still in ad' m agam.&#13;
someplace I wond . ungeon m Appleton&#13;
inidentified bod er If they ever found an&#13;
of '24 put h' . Y up there. Maybe the class&#13;
1mm a weIghted ba&#13;
tum into the Fox River g and threw&#13;
hecame of tbat six dOli' And I wo~der what ars and th,rty cents.&#13;
tZt4411.,.ft,ua&#13;
II Traveling,&#13;
Must Give Notice&#13;
The facully has heen informed..&#13;
henceforth any faculty member I.....&#13;
the state during weeks when classes .&#13;
regular session must give writtel&#13;
notification to his divisional chail1Dla.&#13;
Asst. Chancellor Brockman two........&#13;
advance. -&#13;
A faculty member travelling orf.....&#13;
within the state must give three ...&#13;
advance notice. These rules applyIIIII&#13;
facully members whether they ..&#13;
travelling" on university or pri,*&#13;
business, even if travelling at their •&#13;
expense.&#13;
Sunml'iJe [JlorlJb&#13;
&amp; (jremhowes&#13;
R_II- ""H...... - Il1o&#13;
Phone: 64Hl00 •&#13;
Viand FRANK WEINSTIlCK I&#13;
3021· 7!1THIT.&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN "140&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHO&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 e.m, till 11 p.m. 7 do,"&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 651-9747&#13;
THE&#13;
OT&#13;
51&#13;
COFFEE_&#13;
HER&#13;
DE&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
VI......&#13;
2704 LDthrop ,A" ...•• cI".,&#13;
I" t •• I't&#13;
Students Ret red cafpe&#13;
,II,H&#13;
(SO does everyone&#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
Apathy&#13;
it ri I board meeting we discussed the problem of&#13;
i tud ts and have arrived at some interesting&#13;
tudents have recently joined the&#13;
Th&#13;
• Lost In Red Tape?&#13;
Who's At Fault?&#13;
ome sort of schedule for checking the lots for&#13;
a broken bottle they come in and tell us and&#13;
a Fr man&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An A ware Square&#13;
rai e the difference so that we could bail&#13;
out our pr ident. It was slow-going&#13;
caus I averaged about two-bits a room.&#13;
Th the la t thing I remember about that&#13;
evening i that I wound up in a bull-session&#13;
on th third floor and the subject under&#13;
cw ion wa " Girls'' ... and what to-do&#13;
about the brazen coeds who had raised the&#13;
ms their dre o that they were&#13;
lf-wa) between the ankle and knee. you&#13;
could actually e most of the calf (please&#13;
pardon thee pr ionl. Our decision as I&#13;
r 11, ·.-.a !hat ~ewould be helpful . _'. we&#13;
\I.OUld all pitch m and help the girls raise&#13;
their hemline .&#13;
Ha, ing settled that problem, the other&#13;
u~ject on the evening's agenda was&#13;
"Girl ' Dormitorie " . ... and what they&#13;
"er hke inside. For good and sufficient&#13;
r son I wa the class authority on that&#13;
ub:,ect o I had to tick around. ty major&#13;
dorm wa Orm by Hall and its environs.&#13;
The ~ellow ·ere pumping me for ini&#13;
rmalion as to how come I knew so much&#13;
I ga ·e them ome ~um steers about easy&#13;
to Orm by via a certain downspout&#13;
I l~amed later that one of the guys took th~&#13;
blut and got caught on the back ledge f&#13;
m by later that night. He retreated fn&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 7&#13;
Dil November 9, 1970&#13;
~~ BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOEil&#13;
Co-Editors. .&#13;
.! 0 Sven Taffs&#13;
• W Carroll Smolinsky&#13;
•iii Pl\ Mike Gogola&#13;
PA VJ. Jim Hanlon&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Edit B . or usmessEdito&#13;
Advertising Mana r ger&#13;
VA ~ Bill Jacoby, John Potente - Mark Barnhill Sports Editor&#13;
Photography Slaff&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
J.i r ... , . . .... STAFF -&#13;
Advisor&#13;
I, . Jerry Houston, D. !f· Post, Becky Ec~und, K~n Konkol&#13;
~ Marc Eisen, Paul Lomartire, Arthur Gruhl, Jim Jarus, Walter Brea&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the University of Wiseo .&#13;
Parkside Kenosha Wisconsin, 53140. Mailing address is Parkside's Newsc ~in3700&#13;
Washington Rd., Kenosha. Business and editoriat teleph9ne number is t'.&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
Notes From Other Campuses&#13;
Chicago, Ill. - (I.P.) - Universities that&#13;
encourage and arrange for faculty and&#13;
students to engage in political activities&#13;
are in danger of destroying academic&#13;
freedom, declares Philip B. Kurland,&#13;
Professor of Law at the University of&#13;
Olicago, editor of "The Supreme Court&#13;
Review", and a constitutional law expert.&#13;
"A university," he said, "cannot be both&#13;
a political force and an institution&#13;
dedicated to the search for knowledge and&#13;
its dissemination. As a university makes a&#13;
political commitment, it destroys its claim&#13;
to academic freedom. And without&#13;
academic freedom, the search for and&#13;
dissemination of knowledge becomes more&#13;
shadow than substance."&#13;
Kurland also criticized universities for&#13;
allowing students to receive credit for&#13;
courses they did not attend, for paying&#13;
faculties for not teaching while they are&#13;
engaged in political activities, and for&#13;
allowing campus facilities to be used for&#13;
those purposes.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Palo Alto, Calif. - (I.P.) - Starting this&#13;
fall, the sole penalty for failure to complete&#13;
an undergraduate course satisfactorily&#13;
at Stanford University will be loss of&#13;
credit toward graduation. Following more&#13;
than three years of study, the Faculty&#13;
Senate has approved a comprehensive&#13;
overhaul of the university's grading&#13;
system for undergraduates.&#13;
The only grades recorded will be "A" for&#13;
exceptional performance "B" for&#13;
superior performance, "C" 'for satisfactory&#13;
performance, and "pass" for nonletter-graded&#13;
work equivalent to a "C" or&#13;
better.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
such a . hurry that he sprained an ankle·&#13;
wnen he hit the g·round. Unfortunately .&#13;
he was the only good kicker on the foot~&#13;
ball team a?d h~ did a lousy job during&#13;
our gam~ with Ripon the following afternoon.&#13;
His average punt was about&#13;
fifteen yards.&#13;
. N_ow .that I am protected by the statue of&#13;
hmilabons, I will really tell you how it was&#13;
that I was so_well-informed about Ormsby&#13;
Hall. _Yery. siI?ple · · · . all you have to&#13;
have 1s an 1ns1de accomplice M'&#13;
d 11 . . me was a o named Virginia. She not only lived in&#13;
Orms?y but she worked ·as a waitress in&#13;
the kitchen. And there was a basement&#13;
door around the back of Ormsby to which&#13;
very few people paid any attention&#13;
: even kne~ about. At a predeter~in~&#13;
ur of the ?ight I would go down the fire&#13;
:;pek outside the second floor washroom .&#13;
the baro akwd, cross the foot-bridge and go to c oor of Ormsby Th 1 scratch the doo . · ere would&#13;
l.k r three_ times make a noise&#13;
1 e a tomcat d '&#13;
open the doo i . . . an guess who would&#13;
r.&#13;
So here I sit al . later, wonderin. . . . most fifty years&#13;
Virginia is doin~ to~igt/ Awnodndehr twhat&#13;
happe d t · w a ever . ne o Maxon. I know that w raised the ransom and , e never&#13;
hearing from h' I don t recall ever&#13;
Maybe he's still i: ;~ seeing ~im again.&#13;
someplace. I wonder if ~geon m Appleton&#13;
inidentified bod ey ever found an of '24 put h" · Yup t~re. Maybe the class&#13;
im m a weighted ba&#13;
him into the Fox River. g and threw&#13;
became of that six doll And I wo?der what&#13;
ars and thirty cents.&#13;
~411.~&#13;
If Traveling,&#13;
Must Give Notice&#13;
The faculty has been informed&#13;
henceforth any faculty member lea,&#13;
the state durin~ weeks when classes arr&#13;
regular sess10n must give writ&#13;
notification to his divisional chainnan&#13;
Asst. Chancellor Brockman two weets m&#13;
advance.&#13;
_A ~aculty member travelling off camiwithm&#13;
the state must give three&#13;
advance notice. These rules apply to&#13;
faculty members whether they&#13;
travelling · on university or prin&#13;
business, even if travelling at their&#13;
expense.&#13;
SUlZnlfside gfo,Ms&#13;
&amp; Grunhoum&#13;
R-11 - Frtit Well - Cilll&#13;
Phone: 649-6700 I&#13;
VI and FRANK WEINSTOCK I&#13;
3021 • 75TH ST.&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7dayi&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone i,51-9141&#13;
THE&#13;
OT&#13;
SI&#13;
HER&#13;
DE&#13;
COFFEE •&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood · Wi,...,,. 2704 Lothrop ,he., ••••n•,&#13;
cl&#13;
et ser&#13;
Students get red carp&#13;
else 'l&#13;
(So does everyone &#13;
By.KEN KONKOL&#13;
In the last issue Mr. Gruhl had a long&#13;
article called "The Academic Totem&#13;
polell in which he advanced the theory&#13;
that the Administration at this institution&#13;
knew what they were doing since they&#13;
were hired through a competitive&#13;
screening process. Now, just because an&#13;
administrator is hired doesn't mean he is&#13;
competent, it justmeans that ~e may have&#13;
been hired to carryon the Incompetent&#13;
policies of those who hired him as in the&#13;
case of Vice Chancellor Harris and Dean&#13;
MacKinney, who by their own words ha ve&#13;
proved their own worl?1essness. As for&#13;
respecting someone with an academic&#13;
degree and standing in awe of them, I have&#13;
yet to respect an idiot and the ~n.ly awe I&#13;
have is that most of OUf adminIstrators&#13;
weren't dismissed already. Having a PhD&#13;
doesn't make a .man competent, it just&#13;
makes him more able to carry out any&#13;
incompetent policies he might have, I&#13;
make no pretentions of telling anyone how&#13;
to run things, I just say dismiss the present&#13;
crop of wrong-doers and hire some people&#13;
who can do the job right. Being a teacher&#13;
and a PhD do not necessarily go hand-inhand,&#13;
in fact I find those instructors who&#13;
are sweating at getting their doctorates&#13;
are often poorer teachers than those who&#13;
put their students first. The student is the&#13;
ONLY reason this school exists, either&#13;
serve him or leave. One of the finest&#13;
researchers at this school also holds the&#13;
undisputed title of worst teacher, (He no&#13;
doubt will soon be granted tenure.)&#13;
+ + +&#13;
About two weeks ago I turned in a news&#13;
story about the Sergeant Shriver visit to&#13;
Aspin headquarters, but due to some foulup&#13;
it was not printed then or last ~week.&#13;
Following are a few excerpts from his&#13;
speech:&#13;
"The President's aides are those&#13;
responsible for bringing those outside&#13;
agitators to disrupt his speeches. Nixon&#13;
must run against something."&#13;
IIw&#13;
LEADER&#13;
.dow&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/RACINE&#13;
ll\;&#13;
1I(~&#13;
wdivi~uu~&#13;
... and make it our business&#13;
to know what our individual&#13;
customers want and need&#13;
We specialize in fashions&#13;
geared to modern living&#13;
hand·picked for style, qual·&#13;
ity and value. And, most&#13;
importallt. :you can' count on&#13;
prompt. courteous. personal&#13;
serviGe at all times C,ome&#13;
In and browse .. see how much&#13;
more fun it is to shop in a&#13;
relaxed. friendly atmosphere ..&#13;
Hope to see you ... soonl&#13;
MAaCURITIE'S&#13;
6207 • nnd Avenue&#13;
kenosha, Wisconsin 531 AO&#13;
Phone: 652·2681&#13;
"Th Ke ent State indictments should b&#13;
handled bv rd' e&#13;
od . e er-a! IOvestigalion&#13;
m w~rated by an ou.tside thir-d party:' .&#13;
b en asked by this writer how he felt&#13;
a oo.t . faculty supression by university&#13;
ad,~tnlstrators in our colleges. be replied'&#13;
Teachers and students should form an&#13;
atmosphere where faculty and students&#13;
can :~eate progress. As in football the&#13;
~d~T1Intstration should help the player~. As&#13;
It IS, Our faculties are weighted with the&#13;
bureaucracy of administration. We have&#13;
freel.oade~s administering things. Buck.&#13;
pa.s~tng IS a good definition for adminIstration&#13;
.':&#13;
I later asked Mr. Aspin (Soon&#13;
Cong,ressman Aspin) how he felt about the&#13;
Pubhsh or Perish philosophy nurtured bv&#13;
Dean MacKinney in the paper I gave hi~.&#13;
He answered:&#13;
"Publish or Perish in our universities&#13;
has gone too far. Teachers should be hired&#13;
to teach and only to teach. Administration&#13;
should krep their hands off:'&#13;
So you see. even our politicians who&#13;
usu~lly side with the establishment. at£&gt;&#13;
agamst the lousey way our administralors&#13;
are handling things.&#13;
There have been a number of students&#13;
indicted at Kent State. Instead of persecuting&#13;
the student. let's make those&#13;
balistics tests public and find out which&#13;
National Guardsmen murdered who. try&#13;
them for Murder 1, and settle this Ihing&#13;
one way or the other.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Some of those students who have&#13;
received parking tickets have found out&#13;
that they cannot appeal. Tickets are&#13;
handled by the Board of Regents, and if&#13;
you feel they are unjust and refuse to pay.&#13;
your records are held up until you do. Also,&#13;
a parking ticket on campus can cost five&#13;
times what you would pay on the city&#13;
streets. Where does this money go?&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The names of the Tenure and&#13;
Curriculum Committee have been&#13;
released, If you have a beef about your&#13;
favorite instructor being canned, write one&#13;
or all of the following: Leon Applebaum,&#13;
Stella Gray, Jim Shea, Anna Williams.&#13;
Eric Forrest, Harry Lantz, John Vozza.&#13;
I am compiling a list of those instructors&#13;
and administrators this school would be.&#13;
better off without to be printed in the local&#13;
newspapers before the committee makes&#13;
their final decisions for this year. Any&#13;
suggestions for or against, write to me&#13;
care of Newscope.&#13;
So far only three Psychology instructors&#13;
have received a total of six votes as&#13;
competent, while two others have received&#13;
23 votes as most incompetenl teacher at&#13;
this school. Does anyone else wish to vote?&#13;
Results will be published in my first&#13;
December column,&#13;
USE&#13;
NEWSCOPE'&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Murphy&#13;
Exhibiting Ceramics&#13;
NEW UW PRESIDE:\T&#13;
JOHN WEAVER '.\\'S:&#13;
"TIle Un~verslty of WI. on. 10 I. 00(' (If&#13;
the great centers 01 learnmg and of un&#13;
fettered InqUIr) In the world II fanwd&#13;
Iradlllons call In these troobled and fa I&#13;
movulg days not alone for preservation.&#13;
bul for readaptaticn and enhan('( mont u&#13;
well"&#13;
Dr Weaver adds" "The hcarllwal ollhl&#13;
vital In tnuuon deserv . pretecnon. both&#13;
from rbose destructive rorco that (.·.HI&#13;
bnng dlsruphon from wrthm and from&#13;
those potenuatly crippling fnrc.Ts of&#13;
repression that may bear down UpOIl 11&#13;
from wuheut."&#13;
Ceramist John Satre Murphy. a member&#13;
of the art faculty. IS represented by foor&#13;
works in two Current shews&#13;
Murphy is exhibiting a stoneware drip&#13;
pot and a procelam wall hanging at the Art&#13;
National Round Up. presently on display in&#13;
Las Vegas.&#13;
Two of his stoneware bowls with&#13;
platinum and gold lusters Will be included&#13;
in the Craft Committment Show which&#13;
opens Dec. 7 at the Rochesler Minn.I Arl&#13;
Center. The invitational show Will Ir3n'I&#13;
for two years to various galleries around&#13;
the country.&#13;
Murphy's ceramics have been widelv&#13;
exhibited and were included 10 last wi~-&#13;
tee's l\lontana Crafstmen Exhibit at theSmithsonian&#13;
Institution. :\Iurphy. who&#13;
received his graduate degree from the&#13;
University of .10ntana, joined the&#13;
Parkside faculty lasl year.&#13;
658-2233&#13;
UW ENROLLMENT&#13;
P 4 PER CENT&#13;
University of Wisconsin enrollment has&#13;
reached a neY.·high of 67,874 students. an&#13;
increase of four per cenl o"er 1969-70 for&#13;
the campuses.&#13;
All of the net additional students are&#13;
Wisconsin residents and nearly all of them&#13;
are undergraduates.&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTl1 CITY LIMITS&#13;
1040 as1ers .Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Supper Club Ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
with Almandine- Sauce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIME RIB&#13;
•&#13;
By. KEN KONKOL&#13;
In the last issue Mr. Gruhl had a long&#13;
article called "The Academic Totem&#13;
Pole" in which he advanced the theory&#13;
that the Administration at this institution&#13;
knew what they were doing since they&#13;
were hired through a competitive&#13;
screening process. Now, just because an&#13;
administrator is hired doesn't mean he is&#13;
competent, it just;neans that he may have&#13;
t,een hired to carry on the incompetent&#13;
policies of those who hired him as in the&#13;
case of Vice Chancellor Harris and Dean&#13;
MacKinney, who by their own words have&#13;
proved their own wort~essness. As for&#13;
respecting someone with an academic&#13;
degree and standing in awe of them, I have&#13;
vet to respect an idiot and the only awe I&#13;
iiave is that most of our administrators&#13;
• weren't dismissed already. Having a PhD&#13;
doesn;t make a man competent, it just&#13;
makes him more able to carry out any&#13;
incompetent policies he might have. I&#13;
make no pretentions of telling anyone how&#13;
to run things, I just say dismiss the present&#13;
crop of wrong-doers and hire some people&#13;
who can do the job right. Being a teacher&#13;
and a PhD do not necessarily go hand-inhand,&#13;
in fact I find those instructors who&#13;
are sweating at getting their doctorates&#13;
are often poorer teachers than those who&#13;
put their students first. The student is the&#13;
ONLY reason this school exists, either&#13;
serve him or leave. One of the finest&#13;
researchers at this school also holds the&#13;
undisputed title of worst teacher. (He no&#13;
doubt will soon be granted tenure.)&#13;
+ + +&#13;
About two weeks ago I turned in a news&#13;
story about the Sergeant Shriver visit to&#13;
Aspin headquarters, but due to som~ foulup&#13;
it was not printed then or last week.&#13;
Following are a few excerpts from his&#13;
speech:&#13;
"The President's aides are those&#13;
responsible for bringing those outside&#13;
agitators to disrupt his speeches. Nixon&#13;
must run against something."&#13;
/lie&#13;
LEADER&#13;
dou&#13;
lr\;&#13;
DOWNTOWN /KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/RACINE&#13;
1ftr&#13;
uuliv,'clua~&#13;
... and make it our business&#13;
to know what our individual&#13;
customers want and need&#13;
We specialize in fashions&#13;
geared to modern living&#13;
hand-picked for style. quality&#13;
and value. And, most&#13;
important. you can count on&#13;
prompt. courteous. personal&#13;
service at all times. C_ome&#13;
in and browse .. see how much&#13;
more fun 1! is to shop in a&#13;
relaxed. friendly atmosphere.&#13;
Hope to see you . _ . soon'&#13;
MARGURI'ITE'S&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
"Th K&#13;
h e ent State indictment. hould b andled bv f d . e - e eral investigation m~erated by an outside third partv:· .&#13;
b hen asked by this writer how tie felt a ou_t . faculty supression by university administrators in our colleges h 1&#13;
.ed "T h . e rep 1 · t eac ers and student should form a~&#13;
a mosphere where faculty and tudent can _c~eate progress. As m football the&#13;
~d~m1stration ~hould help the player'. As&#13;
it is, our faculties are weighted with the&#13;
bureaucracy of administration. We ha\'e&#13;
freel_oade:s administering things. Buckpa_s~mg&#13;
is a good definition for ad- m1mstration ...&#13;
I later asked !\lr. Aspin I oon&#13;
Cong_ressman Aspinl how he felt about the&#13;
Pubhsh or Perish philosophy nurtured bv&#13;
Dean MacKinney in the paper 1 gaH~ ht~&#13;
He answered:&#13;
"Publish or Perish in our universities&#13;
has gone too far. Teachers should be hired&#13;
to teach and only to teach. Administration&#13;
should kfep their hands off."&#13;
So you see, e\·en our politicians who&#13;
usu~lly side with the E&gt;stabli hment. are&#13;
against the lousey way our administrator· are handling things.&#13;
_ T_here have been a number of students&#13;
md1cted at Kent State. Instead of persecuting&#13;
the student, let's make tho e&#13;
balistics tests public and find out which&#13;
National Guardsmen murdered who. tr\'&#13;
them for Murder 1, and settle this thing one way or the other.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Some of those students who have&#13;
received parking tickets have found out&#13;
that they cannot appeal. Tickets are&#13;
handled by the Board of Regents, and if&#13;
you feel they are unjust and refuse to pay.&#13;
your records are held up until you do. Also.&#13;
a parking ticket on campus can cost five&#13;
times what you would pay on the city&#13;
streets. Where does this money go?&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The names of the Tenure and&#13;
Curriculum Committee have been&#13;
released. If you have a beef about your&#13;
favorite instructor being canned, write one&#13;
or all of the following : Leon Applebaum,&#13;
Stella Gray, Jim Shea, Anna Williams.&#13;
Eric Forrest, Harry Lantz, John Vozza.&#13;
I am compiling a list of those instructors&#13;
and administrators this school would be&#13;
better off without to be printed in the local&#13;
newspapers before the committee makes&#13;
their final decisions for this year. Any&#13;
suggestions for or against, write to me&#13;
care of Newscope.&#13;
So far only three Psychology instructors&#13;
have received a total of six votes as&#13;
competent, while two others have received&#13;
23 votes as most incompetent teacher at&#13;
this school. Does anyone else wish to vote?&#13;
Results will be published in my first&#13;
December column.&#13;
USE&#13;
NEWSCOPE·&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Murphy&#13;
Exhibiting Ceramics&#13;
Cerami t John a re Murphy. a m mber&#13;
of the art facult) _ r pr ented by four&#13;
work in two curr nt :hO\\ .-&#13;
. turphy i exhibiting a tonewar drip&#13;
pot and a procelain wall hanging at the rt&#13;
'ational Round p. pres ntly on di. play in&#13;
Las Vega .&#13;
Two of hi toneware bowl "ith&#13;
platinum and gold lu .. ters "ill be iocluded&#13;
in the Craft Committmenl hO\\ \\"hich&#13;
open Dec. 7 at the Roch _ ter (. Jinn.) rl&#13;
Center. The in\'itational how will tra\· I&#13;
for two years to \"3nou gallen&#13;
the countrv.&#13;
:\lurphy·· ceramic ha\ e n \\id h&#13;
exhibited and \\ ere included m la, t "i~-&#13;
ter·s . lontana Craf. tm n E. h1b1t at th&#13;
Smithsonian ln:titution_ • lurphy. \\ho&#13;
recei\'ed hi graduate dt r('(' fr m th&#13;
lini\'er ity of . lonlana . join d the&#13;
Park ide faculty la:t year.&#13;
U\\' E:'\R LLl\lE. "T&#13;
UP 4 PER E. "T&#13;
ni\'er ity or Wi con in enrollment ha.&#13;
reached a new high of 67,874 .-1udenl.. an&#13;
increase of four per cent O\·er I ;o for&#13;
the campu es.&#13;
All or the net additional tudents are&#13;
Wiscon in residents and nearlv all or th m&#13;
are undergraduates. ·&#13;
65&amp;-2233&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTli CITY L MITS&#13;
asters 8040&#13;
.Sheridan Rd.&#13;
•&#13;
Supper Club Ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
with Almondine Souce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIME RIB &#13;
Example Of New Breed Of police&#13;
and more people within the i\lStitution will&#13;
progress, be disSatisfied."&#13;
As for confrontations on C~PUSt he&#13;
contended that "in urban Amenca, 1.97~1a&#13;
great many students, probably a maJorIty,&#13;
bring with them to the c~pus a&#13;
tremendous hostility to the police. The&#13;
hostility is not restricted to those who are&#13;
black and poor." . . .&#13;
'This reservoir of hostihty. he said,&#13;
"provides a ready tool for thos~ who would&#13;
use it. If a police over:r~~tlOn ~an. be&#13;
provoked. radical actIVIties win Immediate&#13;
converts among the ~called&#13;
silent majority. Previously uncommitted&#13;
students are 'radicalized'. The pollee are&#13;
the common enemy and 'gelling the pigs&#13;
off campus' becomes the common goal.&#13;
"We in Madison," said Hanson, "have&#13;
learned that just the appearance of the&#13;
police on campus in some circumstances&#13;
and under some conditions can turn a calm&#13;
meeting into an angry confrontation. But&#13;
there is no fail-safe formula for use by&#13;
Wliversity and police officials in determining&#13;
when the appearance of police on&#13;
campus quells or incites mobs.&#13;
"And while student anger at the&#13;
presence of police on campus is predictable/'&#13;
he pointed out, "the fact remains&#13;
that college campuses are particularly&#13;
vulnerable and, against the threat of open&#13;
force, university officials have no choice&#13;
but to use their own police and to call in&#13;
outside police whenever the threat is&#13;
heyond the capacity of the campus police&#13;
forces. "&#13;
The Progressive was founded in 1909at&#13;
Madison by Senator Robert ("Fighting&#13;
Bob") LaFollette, the famous anti-war&#13;
dissenter who years earlier was a student&#13;
on the University of Wisconsin campus at&#13;
Madison. The magazine now circulates in&#13;
all 50 states and 120 foreign countries.&#13;
The pnme causes for student disturbances.&#13;
id Ralph E Hanson. head of&#13;
campus securit)' forces at the Uruversity&#13;
oi W,scon 10. are "the .bihty, social&#13;
con .crence. political sensitivity. and&#13;
hone t reall 10 of tnday's students&#13;
"I believe that . tudents toda)" take&#13;
IOUI) the .deal Iaught in schools and&#13;
churche , .nd oiten .t home, but "hen&#13;
th y g I ""tsld ,. 10 a college or&#13;
uOlvenllly. the)· a system lhat denies&#13;
Its .de I rn re.l hre ..&#13;
H n'lOf\. hose .nalysi or campus&#13;
vteteoce ppears In the tcvember i ue of&#13;
Pro~ he m swne, i w.rector of&#13;
prut 'lion nd secunt) on the Madison&#13;
c mpU&#13;
In bnri prela to hts article. "&#13;
. onhng It" on Camp ", TIle ProtlT h·e&#13;
nbed 1\ n_,.nd' H.,·en PolICe&#13;
tlu f J.m Ahern, "ho rved on the&#13;
Pr Id nt' Comm, ,on on Campus&#13;
'or I, .. mpl 01 ". n"" breed 01&#13;
puli , till tr. IC II) limIted ,n number,"&#13;
thatl I' m t'lI"I from th riot-torn c,tles&#13;
ndeRl of ron .,&#13;
1\ nson "I atr lned police oificer," the&#13;
m 4&amp;1100 .d, """00 ha ,,"on many&#13;
fn lOon prot'StlOg tudents because&#13;
he h lrequ II) expr concern to gel&#13;
I th c. 01 conn,ct rather lhan to&#13;
empha lie th club .nd gun "&#13;
Th U II" police chI I cited these areas&#13;
requiring prompt attentton to a..-ert&#13;
(urtht'f "'1Olence on campus'&#13;
'·Ont.' - Un,..er ',lles and colleges must&#13;
'cum mor rrIr"ant to current 1 uesII&#13;
AVY ou o&#13;
125&#13;
AM-FM Stereo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
Here lS ,J. eood WilY to dis·&#13;
cover \lrh:u 'Fisher sound'&#13;
1\ liLe PI.J) J.record on the&#13;
Fisher 125. Play the same&#13;
rC\;ord on .lnolher make&#13;
I ,tcn tor lhe: difference.&#13;
,,""\pc~ull) In the ...ery low&#13;
J.nd vcr} high rrequcncie&#13;
A fuht, Jim1'ly JOlmds&#13;
"""u. And the Fisher 125&#13;
I the firsl complete AMfM&#13;
lerN MUSIC Center&#13;
101Ot.lL:l arc.u 3J 11'\Ouods&#13;
.... ndH •••&#13;
Fl_rSI.,eo'&#13;
40 W~lll u( M~ P\J_CI&#13;
IIHH • \\ Iik' R..ne-t At.&#13;
'oJr" kl:lnl:" 1 ..nd FM&#13;
)lcrN ""lib FET ..no! Ie" In&#13;
hl'n~ etW ~tOJ If slqn .....&#13;
\pulJ AUlomatl" Turntablt&#13;
_,11'1 Cut Cunltol. Anli-Sl..:ll&#13;
'''1 \ th'tn-llto.: ,h"l·ofT • T .. -n&#13;
n" sllUtly.MilllChtd TwoW;I)&#13;
rub, S&gt;",ICIM• Full&#13;
,\ud-.. ConHoh Wllh T ~pt and&#13;
~h,clhllot1o&#13;
Hammond Orton&#13;
Stud_ofK_&#13;
J2/5 60111SI.&#13;
658-/80/&#13;
SPIOIAL '.OLUDES&#13;
SIM filII llleOIlDS&#13;
ALCOA subs·d· h· . . • I ,Iary as Immediate openings for&#13;
parttlme employment .&#13;
3 evttnings plus Satu.rdays $57.50&#13;
Scholarships available·&#13;
see Mr. OHeson for an interview on T~esday Nov. 10&#13;
at Greenquist Hall '&#13;
social peace, war,&#13;
discrimination.&#13;
"Two _ A much larger segment of our&#13;
society must be brought into our colleges&#13;
and universities.&#13;
"Three - The vast. uncommitted, silent&#13;
majority of our student and faculty&#13;
populations must become- more involved.&#13;
"Four _ More faculty, staff, and&#13;
students must be involved in decisionmaking&#13;
processes within the university. 10&#13;
other words, the democratic process&#13;
should be applied to our institutions of&#13;
higher learning.&#13;
"Five _ Minorities should be prevented&#13;
from manipulating the campuses and&#13;
uni....ersltles for their own private purposes&#13;
"SiX _ The administrative processes of&#13;
universities and campuses have got to be&#13;
streamlined and made more responsive to&#13;
a rapidly changing and volatile social&#13;
atmosphere and climate. It&#13;
Pointing up the conflict that students see&#13;
between society'S stated ideals and its&#13;
practices, Hanson said:&#13;
"Racial injustice and the war in Vietnam&#13;
stand out as prime illustrations of our&#13;
society's deviation from professed ideals&#13;
and of the slowness with which the system&#13;
relorms itself. That they seemingly can do&#13;
little to correct the wrongs through conventional&#13;
political machinery tends--to&#13;
produce in the most idealistic and&#13;
energetic students a strong sense of&#13;
frustration. It&#13;
II lany of these idealists/' Hanson&#13;
continued, "have developed the idea that&#13;
these: flaws are end~mic in the workings of&#13;
our democracy. They argue that their&#13;
form of pressure - direct action, sit-ins,&#13;
and in some cases, physical violence - is a&#13;
legitimate tool comparable to other forms&#13;
of pressure such as large political contributions,&#13;
lobbying, and the like.&#13;
"For some of these students," Hanson&#13;
writes, "their universities have become&#13;
slD"rogates for society. The university&#13;
adminlslralion is close at hand. One can&#13;
easily bedevil and strike out at it. U thE&#13;
frustrated activist cannot beat the system,&#13;
he can at least insist that the university nol&#13;
lend itsell to the system."&#13;
He asked, "May not the fault lie with us&#13;
of the older generation?&#13;
"Must we not acknowledge that we have&#13;
somehow failed to transmit to many of the&#13;
ablest young men and women a sense of&#13;
values, of reason, order and moderation,&#13;
or an appreciation of the fact that freedom&#13;
depends upon voluntary restraint?"&#13;
Universities contribute to student&#13;
unrest, he said, because they have not&#13;
made the "radical changes" needed to&#13;
meet "the demands of a rapidly changing&#13;
and dynamic society," and they "still tend&#13;
to be authoritarian, formal, and paternalistic&#13;
toward students."&#13;
&lt;lIt seems clear eveD to a casual observer,"&#13;
Hanson said, "that most of the&#13;
important campus decisions are made&#13;
largely on tbe basis of who has the most&#13;
power. When power is concentrated in&#13;
formal, authoritarian structures, more&#13;
Rm. 110&#13;
AMBITIOUS?&#13;
M!Jdern Language C/t,b&#13;
A meeting Was h~ld Oct. 29in r&#13;
Greenqwst to dISCUss plans00rn10l1t&#13;
Parkside Modern Language Clubfor IIle&#13;
Several tdeas were tossed ar .&#13;
film, Thomas Mann's "Herr ~ 8Ilda&#13;
(Man and Dog) will he prese~ !IQ",t&#13;
club on Tuesday, Nov. 24, at the by IIle&#13;
lure Hall at Greenquist; the u l~ '-&#13;
p.m. une "I",&#13;
Representatives from th&#13;
languages were elected to act e virioooa&#13;
representatives from their res as ........&#13;
of i~terest. They were: Di~ti"lldd&#13;
Spamsh; Dana Williams F ne Kaae,&#13;
Rick Beiser, German. M.:oy ~ IIId&#13;
other mterested students also- lad&#13;
attendance and plansfor fUluref~ II&#13;
plays were discussed. lad&#13;
Anyone Wishing membershi or&#13;
ideas of what they would like ~ d _till&#13;
the club may contact an 0 WitIIil&#13;
representatives or the H~ l1.Ibt&#13;
Department. mlmu..&#13;
4437 - 22nd Aven.1&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
-Free Delivery&#13;
654.Q774&#13;
~..MP"&#13;
~.&#13;
10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.&#13;
Example Of New Breed Of Police Mpdern Language Clztb&#13;
A meeting was held Oct. 29 i&#13;
Greenquist to discuss pla~oom 104 a&#13;
Parkside ~odern Language Club for the&#13;
125&#13;
AM-FM Stereo&#13;
Music Center&#13;
S.. and Hear&#13;
Fisher Stereo!&#13;
cnlcr&#13;
•nd&#13;
PECIAL INCLUDES&#13;
$It FIIE1&#13;
E RECORDS&#13;
0&#13;
pe ce, war, ocial and more people within the institution will&#13;
progress, be dissatisfied." · rimination.&#13;
"T\\o - A much larger segment of our&#13;
iety must be brought into our colleges&#13;
d unh ties.&#13;
"Three - The va t, uncommitted, silent&#13;
m j ity or our tudent and faculty&#13;
pul lions must become- more involved.&#13;
''Four - lore faculty, staff, and&#13;
uden mu t be involved in decisionm&#13;
in pr within the university. In&#13;
oth \\Or , the democratic process&#13;
uld be applied to our institutions of&#13;
high r learning.&#13;
"Fl\ e - . tinorities hould be prevented&#13;
fr m manipulating the campuses and&#13;
LD'liv itie for their own priyate pur-&#13;
" i · - The administrative processes of&#13;
un ver"itie and campuses have got to be&#13;
tr amlined and made more re ponsive to&#13;
a rapidly changing and volatile social&#13;
atm p re and climate."&#13;
Pointing up the conflict that students see&#13;
tween society's stated ideals and its&#13;
pract ·, Hanson said:&#13;
"Racial inju lice and the war in Vietnam&#13;
tand out a prime illustrations of our&#13;
iety' _ d viation from professed ideals&#13;
and of the lowness with which the system&#13;
reform.:. it If. That they seemingly can do&#13;
htUe to correct the \\Tongs through con-&#13;
\ ntional political machinery tends to&#13;
produce in the most idealistic and&#13;
en rgetic llldents a strong sense of&#13;
fru tration."&#13;
" Ian} of these idealists," Hanson&#13;
continued, "have developed the idea that&#13;
th e flaw are endillllic in the workings of&#13;
our democracy. They argue that their&#13;
form of pressure - direct action, sit-ins.&#13;
and in some cases, physical violence - is a&#13;
legitimate tool comparable to other forms&#13;
of pressure such as large political contributions,&#13;
lobbying, and the like.&#13;
"For some of these students," Hanson&#13;
·writes, "their universities have become&#13;
urrogates for society. The university&#13;
administration is close at hand. One can&#13;
easily bedevil and strike out at it. ff the&#13;
frustrated activist cannot beat the system,&#13;
he can at least insist that the university not&#13;
lend itself to the system."&#13;
He asked, " fay not the fault lie with us&#13;
of the older generation?&#13;
"Must we not acknowledge that we have&#13;
somehow failed to transmit to many of the&#13;
ablest young men and women a sense of&#13;
values, of reason, order and moderation,&#13;
or an appreciation of the fact that freedom&#13;
depends upon voluntary restraint?"&#13;
Universities contribute to student&#13;
unrest, he said, because they have not&#13;
made the "radical changes" needed to&#13;
meet "the demands of a rapidly changing&#13;
and dynamic society," and they "still tend&#13;
to be authoritarian, formal, and paternalistic&#13;
toward students."&#13;
"It seems clear even to a casual observer,"&#13;
Hanson said, " that most of the&#13;
important campus decisions are made&#13;
largely on the basis of who has the most&#13;
power. When power is concentrated in&#13;
formal, authoritarian structures, more&#13;
AMBITIOUS?&#13;
As for confrontations on c~m~us, he&#13;
contended that "in urban Amenca, ~97~, a&#13;
great many students, probably a maJonty,&#13;
bring with them to the c~pus a&#13;
tremendous hostility to the police. The&#13;
hostility is not restricted to those who are&#13;
black and poor." . . . This reservoir of hostility, he said,&#13;
"provides a ready tool for thos~ who would&#13;
use it. If a police over-reaction ~an. be&#13;
provoked, radical activities wm immediate&#13;
converts among the so-called&#13;
silent majority. Previously unco~mitted&#13;
students are 'radicalized'. The pohce are&#13;
the common enemy and 'getting the pigs&#13;
off campus' becomes the common goal.&#13;
"We in Madison," said Hanson, "have&#13;
learned that just the appearance of the&#13;
police on campus in some circumstances&#13;
and under some conditions can turn a calm&#13;
meeting into an angry confrontation. But&#13;
there is no fail-safe formula for use by&#13;
university and police officials in determining&#13;
when the appearance of police on&#13;
campus quells or incites mobs.&#13;
"And while student anger at the&#13;
presence of police on campus is predictable,"&#13;
he pointed out, "the fact remains&#13;
that college campuses are particularly&#13;
vulnerable and, against the threat of open&#13;
force, university officials have no choice&#13;
but to use their own police and to call in&#13;
outside police whenever the threat is&#13;
beyond the capacity of the campus police&#13;
forces."&#13;
The Progressive was founded in 1909 at&#13;
Madison by Senator Robert ("Fighting&#13;
Bob") LaFollette, the famous anti-war&#13;
dissenter who years earlier was a student&#13;
on the University of Wisconsin campus at&#13;
Madison. The magazine now circulates in&#13;
all 50 states and 120 foreign countries.&#13;
Several ideas were tossed ar ·&#13;
film, Thomas Mann's "Herr 0&#13;
1lnd a'-1 1&#13;
(Man and Dog) will be prese:~ }{II'-!&#13;
club on Tuesday, Nov. 24, at the by the&#13;
ture Hall at Greenquist; the r 1&#13;
~ ~ p.m. une 18 8·11&#13;
Representatives from the . languages were elected to act va110lla&#13;
representatives from their res~sti 5&#13;
ludeiii&#13;
of i~terest. They were: Dia ve fteJd&#13;
Spamsh; Dana Williams Fr: ~ Rick Beiser, German. M~y fa:; ~ other interested students also ty ~ attendance and plans for future r~':' 111&#13;
plays were discussed. hu11 ~&#13;
Anyone wishing membership&#13;
ideas of what they would like to : 0&#13;
ha.~ the club may contact an Willia&#13;
representatives or the H~ ci. !ht&#13;
Department. man,u&#13;
4437 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53!4Q&#13;
Free Delivery •&#13;
654-0774 ..&#13;
ALCOA subs·d· h · . . •&#13;
1 1ary as 1mmed1ate openings for&#13;
parthme employment ·&#13;
3 evenings plus Satu.rdays $57.50&#13;
Scholarships available ·&#13;
see Mr. Otteson for an interview on TUesday, Nov. 10&#13;
at Greenquist Hall&#13;
Rm. 110 10:00 a.m. to 2:00. p.m. &#13;
Drink to that&#13;
major cereal grains - corn, rye, wheat&#13;
and barley malt - and contain no distilled&#13;
spirits less than two years old. They are&#13;
generally bottled at six years of age or&#13;
more, Uless than four years old, it's age&#13;
'must be listed on the label.&#13;
Although the U.s. definition of Canadian&#13;
whiskey does not mention proof, a&#13;
111 .covering U.S. regulation requires that all&#13;
_~.~IY -'- whiskies on the American market must be&#13;
- U'f/V"1I'd at least 80 proof or higher. Canadian&#13;
, " t71I. ..,N&gt;_ whiskey is bottled at 70 degrees proof&#13;
bf)u,O' under the Sykes method. However, the&#13;
Canadian 70 degrees proof is exactly the&#13;
BARBER STUDIO same as the U,S. 80 proof.&#13;
, Irish whiskey is a distinctive product of&#13;
SPECIAl.IZEINMENSHAIR Ireland, produced either in the Irish&#13;
STYLING Republic or in Northern Ireland, in&#13;
STYl.ECUTTING&amp; SHAPING compliance with the laws regulating the&#13;
HAIRPEKES production of Irish whiskey, and conAPPOINTMENTS&#13;
taining no distilled spirits less than three&#13;
1&#13;
..:7.:::SO~9..:4:::5TH.:.:.;.:.:A::.V::E,-...:6::9c:.4-_46=03~years old.&#13;
. As for aging, Irish distillers helieve in&#13;
long maturation to bring out the full flavor&#13;
and bouquet of their products. As the Irish&#13;
say, in the making of whiskey, it takes&#13;
seven days of a man's time and seven&#13;
years of the whiskey's time.&#13;
Whiskey in America: 1903, Michael&#13;
Joseph Owens invented the automatic&#13;
hottlemaking machine; 1909, President&#13;
William Howard Taft issued a legal&#13;
decision defining whiskey types .&#13;
•Recipe for the week: ZOrbas Dance, 1\2&#13;
jigger of Metaxa Brandy and \2 jigger&#13;
Metaxa Ouzo, over cracked ice packed in&#13;
an old fashion glass, ·add a twist of lemon&#13;
and sip and away you go, Esygian.&#13;
Any questions pertaining to the subjects&#13;
By JIM JANIS&#13;
Today's Subject: Scotch, Canadian and&#13;
Irish Whiskies.&#13;
SCotch whiskies are a product of&#13;
SCotland, produced in Scotland in compliance&#13;
with the laws of Great Britain&#13;
regulating the production of Scotch&#13;
whiskey.&#13;
Most SCotch brands are blends of grain&#13;
whiskies and malt whiskies, produced by,&#13;
more than 100 distilleries, among which&#13;
there are four distinct types, each coming&#13;
from a different part of Scotland. There&#13;
are many reasons why Scotch from one&#13;
area of SCotland differs from Scotches of&#13;
other areas.&#13;
Local conditions - water, peat and&#13;
climate and traditional distilling practices&#13;
of individual distilleries are all factors.&#13;
SCotch sales in the U.S. have been&#13;
fantastic. Since 1952 sales have almost&#13;
quadrupled.&#13;
canadian whiskies are whiskey blends.&#13;
canadian whiskies are made from the&#13;
.&#13;
DELICA lESSEN - BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 flm-SECOND STIfET&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Last week thIS writer was fortunate&#13;
enough to he invited to the Holiday Trade&#13;
Presentation of the Schenley Affiliated&#13;
Brands Corp. to witness some of the new&#13;
holiday packaging for .the coming&#13;
hohdays. Let me tell you, it was very&#13;
i~t:Jressive and it solved a lot of my giftgrving&#13;
problems.&#13;
Above is a photo taken at the showing.&#13;
Along with your writer are the salesmen&#13;
who represent the Schenley line-In this&#13;
area from Metro R-K, from left to right,&#13;
Mik~ Zicarelli, yours truly, Diek&#13;
Cuminskey, Sales Manager Nate Rudman&#13;
and Arvin Weeks.&#13;
BLAZE A&#13;
TRAIL JO&#13;
ISERMANN'S&#13;
For All the&#13;
Latest Fashions,&#13;
By Leading Names&#13;
At - Realistic Prices&#13;
ISERMANH'S&#13;
614 56th ST.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
THE UNIVERSAL PEACE;&#13;
(my answer to "Universal Incendiary")&#13;
I'm well,&#13;
With love pervading my being.&#13;
His Holy Spirit inflames my soul,&#13;
It expands and wants out:&#13;
Out of my heart,&#13;
This feeling of brotherhood!&#13;
(The conflagration of hate is in the past,&#13;
And somehow I feel it will never return.)&#13;
The walls of hate fell -&#13;
And with- it&#13;
A chain reaction of love&#13;
Explodes from .my every fiber!&#13;
Springs of living water are before me&#13;
It soothes my outstretched band,&#13;
And I care!&#13;
I&#13;
.want&#13;
all to&#13;
love.&#13;
his&#13;
know&#13;
SPORTSFEST&#13;
Sportslest will be on December 4-S lhil&#13;
year. This will be a weekend III varsity&#13;
sports and exhibitions. Every varsity team&#13;
will show its skilts all throughout this two&#13;
day period.&#13;
This year there is going to be a conlest&#13;
involved with SPORTSFEST, the queens&#13;
contesl This will be a kind III Parltaide&#13;
homecoming for the faU.&#13;
Each varsity sport and athletic club wOJ&#13;
sponsor one girl. The way she becomes a&#13;
queen is decided on how many Ranger&#13;
buttons and Ranger stickers each club&#13;
sells. At Sportsfest the school mascot allo&#13;
will be decided,&#13;
Burnings and lootings were my immaturity,&#13;
No longer am I persecuted,&#13;
I bave eliminated bate and fear!&#13;
I can work within the system&#13;
To create new values of life!&#13;
The blessings of Peace enfold me;&#13;
And I have everything!&#13;
Everything is mine!&#13;
I'm saved! with my dog&#13;
and my daisies,&#13;
and God's eternal son for warmth.&#13;
Amen&#13;
Eileen Jenkins&#13;
of these articles or your entertaining&#13;
needs, write to Jim Janis care of&#13;
Newscope.&#13;
Next week: Brandy, Imported and&#13;
Domestic.&#13;
KENOSHA'Sl.ARGESTSEl.ECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNTPRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTSCENTER&#13;
t4TH AVE.AT 62NDST&#13;
Anchorlnn&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shri mp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
Mon•• y.Ttlunciay $1.95&#13;
friday-Sunday $2.25&#13;
Chll...... $1.10&#13;
LADIESNITE&#13;
Mon. &amp; Tues- 8:30 to 10:30&#13;
Buy the first drink, second drlnk lor 10c&#13;
SUNDAYSPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits aod gravy&#13;
"VING: m. a lIat. I .... ·11, .•.&#13;
... -ftoIn. I ,.•.-11 , .• ,&#13;
"'II~"";&#13;
fOO6 She,1cI.tn !d_&#13;
,....,. 694-1733&#13;
The \IB RAT "Is&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
,&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 8 p.m,&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20~&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity and Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily' 9 A.M.-12 _P.M.&#13;
1~~BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and Highway 50&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
I' 11 o·rink to that&#13;
By JIM JANIS&#13;
Today's Subject: Scotch, Canadian and&#13;
Irish Whiskies.&#13;
Scotch whiskies are a product of&#13;
Scotland, produced in Scotland in compliance&#13;
with the laws of Great Britain&#13;
regulating the production of Scotch&#13;
whiskey.&#13;
Most Scotch brands are blends of grain&#13;
whiskies and malt whiskies, produced by&#13;
more than 100 distilleries, among which&#13;
there are four distinct types, each coming&#13;
from a different part of Scotland. There&#13;
are many reasons why Scotch from one&#13;
area of Scotland differs from Scotches of&#13;
other areas.&#13;
Local conditions - water, peat and&#13;
climate and traditional distilling practices&#13;
of individual distilleries are all factors.&#13;
Scotch sales in the U.S. have been&#13;
fantastic. Since 1952 sales have- almost&#13;
quadrupled.&#13;
Canadian whiskies are whiskey blends.&#13;
Canadian whiskies are made front the&#13;
• -~t&gt;&#13;
&lt;2/Jen&#13;
BARBER STUDIO&#13;
SPECIALIZE IN MENS HAIR&#13;
STYLING&#13;
STYLE CUTTING &amp; SHAPING&#13;
HAIR PEKES&#13;
7509 45TH AVE.&#13;
APPOINTMENTS&#13;
694-~03&#13;
DELICATESSEN - BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 FlnY-SECOND STIEET&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
Last week Uns wnter was fortunate&#13;
enough to be invited to the Holiday Trade&#13;
Presentation of the Schenley Affiliated&#13;
Brands Corp. to witness some of the new&#13;
hol_iday packaging for the coming&#13;
holidays. Let me tell you, it was very&#13;
impressive and it solved a lot of my gift- giving problems.&#13;
Above is a photo taken at the showing.&#13;
Along with your writer are the salesmen&#13;
who represent the Schenley line ·in this&#13;
area from Metro R-K, from left to right,&#13;
Mike Zicarelli, yours truly, Dick&#13;
Cuminskey, Sales Manager Nate Rudman&#13;
and Arvin Weeks.&#13;
major cereal grains - corn, rye, wheat&#13;
and barley malt- and contain no distilled&#13;
spirits less than two years old. They are&#13;
generally bottled at six years of age or&#13;
more: If less than four years old, Ws age 'must be listed on the label.&#13;
Although the U.S. definition of Canadian&#13;
whiskey does not mention proof, a&#13;
' covering U.S. regulation requires that all&#13;
whiskies on the American market must be&#13;
at least 80 proof or higher. Canadian&#13;
whiskey · is bottled at 70 degrees proof&#13;
under the Sykes method. However, the&#13;
Canadian 70 degrees proof is exactly the&#13;
same as the U.S. 80 proof.&#13;
, Irish whiskey is a distinctive product of&#13;
Ireland, produced either in the Irish&#13;
Republic or in Northern Ireland, in&#13;
compliance with the laws regulating the&#13;
production of Irish whiskey, and containing&#13;
no distilled spirits less than three&#13;
years old. As for aging, Irish distillers believe in&#13;
long maturation to bring out the full flavor&#13;
and bouquet of their products. As the Irish&#13;
say, in the making of whiskey, it takes&#13;
seven days of a man's time and seven&#13;
years of the whiskey's time.&#13;
Whiskey in America: 1903, Michael&#13;
Joseph Owens invented the automatic&#13;
bottlemaking machine; 1909, President&#13;
William Howard Taft issued a legal&#13;
decision defining whiskey types.&#13;
·Recipe for the week: Zorbas Dance, 1½&#13;
jigger of Metaxa Brandy and ½ jigger&#13;
Metaxa Ouzo, over cracked ice packed in&#13;
an old fashion glass, ·add a twist of lemon&#13;
and sip and away you go, Esygian.&#13;
Any questions pertaining to the subjects&#13;
BLAZE A&#13;
TRAIL JO&#13;
ISERMANN'S&#13;
For All the&#13;
Latest Fashions,&#13;
By Leading Names&#13;
At - Realistic Prices&#13;
ISERMANN'S&#13;
614 56th ST.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
THE UNIVERSAL PEACE&#13;
(my answer to "Universal Incendiary")&#13;
I'm well,&#13;
With love pervading my being.&#13;
His Holy Spirit inflames my soul,&#13;
It expands and wants out:&#13;
Out of my heart,&#13;
This feeling of brotherhood!&#13;
(The conflagration of hate is in the past,&#13;
And somehow I feel it will never return.)&#13;
The walls of bate fell -&#13;
And with it&#13;
A chain reaction of love&#13;
Explodes from my every fiber!&#13;
Springs of living water are before me&#13;
It soothes my outstretched hand, And I care!&#13;
I&#13;
want&#13;
all to&#13;
love.&#13;
his&#13;
know&#13;
Burnings and lootings were my im- maturity,&#13;
No longer am I persecuted,&#13;
I have eliminated hate and fear!&#13;
I can work within the system&#13;
To create new values of life!&#13;
The blessings of Peace enfold me;&#13;
And I have everything! ·&#13;
Everything is mine!&#13;
I'm saved! with my dog&#13;
and my daisies,&#13;
and God's eternal son for warmth.&#13;
Amen&#13;
Eileen Jenkins&#13;
of these articles or your entertaining&#13;
needs, write to Jim Janis care of&#13;
Newscope.&#13;
Next week: Brandy, Imported and&#13;
Domestic.&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62ND ST&#13;
SPORTSFEST&#13;
portsfest will be on December 4-5 th&#13;
year. Thi will be w end ol ty&#13;
sports and e.xhibitio . Every rsfty m&#13;
will show i ills U throughout thi&#13;
day period.&#13;
This year there goin to be a t t&#13;
involved ·ith SPORTSFEST, th qu&#13;
contest. This will be a kind of P&#13;
homecoming for the fall.&#13;
Each varsity sport and athletic club wfll&#13;
sponsor one girl. The way he becom&#13;
queen is decided on how many Rang&#13;
buttons and Ranger tickers each club&#13;
sells. At Sportsfe t the school ma c also&#13;
will be decided.&#13;
Anchor Inn&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
Fish-Shrimp&#13;
Chicken-Ham&#13;
Monclay-Thunday $1.95&#13;
Friday-Sunday $2,25&#13;
Children $1.10&#13;
PUii TAX AND llvnMI&#13;
LADIE • "ITE&#13;
Mon. &amp; Tu - :30 to 10:30&#13;
Buy the first drink, econd drink for 1 c&#13;
SU DAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits and grav&#13;
r -:---'\&#13;
Ancbor&#13;
INN&#13;
U.VING: l'rl. • SaL I J,a,•11 J.a.&#13;
.-..'nnln. I J.•.·11 p.a,&#13;
.... UN---• .... ;&#13;
9006 Sheridan Id.&#13;
Phone 694-1733&#13;
The\\ BRAT 1115&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
Tues., Thurs., Fri.&#13;
11:00-1:30&#13;
$1.15&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
pettck Fries or Onion Rings.&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
Schooner or ~ottle or Glass of Beer&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00&#13;
7 p.m. to&#13;
GLASS 20(&#13;
Available For Parties&#13;
Including Fraternity and Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily·9 A.M.-12 _P.M.&#13;
''"'t. BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and Highway 50&#13;
8 p.m. &#13;
LETTERS to the editors&#13;
To the Editors&#13;
.. Your recent .;ommenls concerning the&#13;
controversial Dr . tacKinney have&#13;
rorced lht part oC the silent maJOrlt)' to&#13;
,p&lt;'ak up 11 I read between the hnes&#13;
cwrectlv Or ~lacKmne\ 15 sav 109 that&#13;
th quaht) of the leachl~g . tal( IS determined&#13;
by It noter iery ef-tbrougb&#13;
r r('h This I. dtr ll~ related to the&#13;
qualll) of Ihf- students' educauon, \\hlch IS&#13;
dt'l rmmed .001b) \\oMI you learn from the&#13;
IIhIrUCII .... but bv ....hat th(" tud«&gt;nl can do&#13;
on hi ewu \10 Ilh onJ~ bavic know ledge from&#13;
ttl I~lruetor I mt('rl'l~believe that this&#13;
I unpcranv lO (or upper dl\ 1 Ion courses If&#13;
Ihl I not the (.' thf'n m)o tck'a or a&#13;
1;011.. I t.'t.iUl: hon Il'3 rnulg to thmk on&#13;
our 0"0 ""llh the minimum gUiding In&#13;
nu n'l' h bern &lt;om pi tl'l) :hall&lt;ml&#13;
Gefl(" Gnu.&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
, iml'~i('Qll ~.&#13;
,1lalia II (l(~ille&#13;
Planning a ptlnJ,&#13;
u·eddi1Jf!. or ba11quel,&#13;
110 parI) 100 mall&#13;
,11654-9/23&#13;
THE&#13;
DAISY&#13;
5713 7TH AVE&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
• CANDLES&#13;
/iJJ- i'lvP /JI'J,&#13;
•~P: il D" ..Jt't'If"))~ Banquet&#13;
DII Rooms Available&#13;
famous lor&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
I" Feu, Suu 9 . 12" - 1.- . 16M&#13;
'UO&#13;
• IllS· 5'AGHOll • CHICKIN&#13;
• COHOCCHI • RAVIOLI· L.A SAGH ...&#13;
• 5Ut '000 • SAHDWICHlS&#13;
CAIlY,OUrs • DRIVElY&#13;
YOU .,He WI •• 'NC·&#13;
657 -9843 or 658-4922&#13;
5140 "~ AV!&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
In the current debate over the just&#13;
proportion bel'oleen faculty research and&#13;
teaching. may I add some remarks to&#13;
those 01 Mr Konkol of Xovember 27 The&#13;
issue is. 1 think. the nature of teaching&#13;
excellence. I beheve that the (ollowing&#13;
elements are present in this subject, but in&#13;
an uncertain balance which makes difficult&#13;
a imple either-or dichotomy:&#13;
I The excellent teacher explains the&#13;
text and guides the student through it. He&#13;
explains the text both on its own merits&#13;
and within its intellectual context. But&#13;
"hat qualifies an instructor to do this'? Is a&#13;
B.A enough~ An :\1.A ..,Wh'ere do we stop~&#13;
1 a Ph. D desirable'? Clearly we are&#13;
ascending in teacher excellence; one step&#13;
(urlhC'r and \loe may say !.hat the best&#13;
teacher 15 the most learned, all other&#13;
thin" being equal How is learning&#13;
maOl(c~te(P For the student. grades will&#13;
do for sLarlel'5, For a teacher. one way his&#13;
I('armn~ I mamfested is by the books and&#13;
artld .- he has written and has had ac·&#13;
n.pted b) hi arbiters~ editors and the&#13;
leading . cholars who advise them. or&#13;
C'OU~e. books and articles are no&#13;
guarantee thai he i trul) learned. but as&#13;
m matters or the sort, we seek to make&#13;
. LalemenL that are mosU~ lrUe, not true&#13;
10 t\ f'r~ case.&#13;
2 !he .excellent leacher inspires. And&#13;
00" IS th,s done, pray tell? To begin with,&#13;
the good tea&lt;her will be enthusiastic about&#13;
his material and thereby try to explain&#13;
\loh) the \\-ark h~ been popular with so&#13;
many for so long, Yet. is not such en·&#13;
lhW&gt;ia m necessarily based on a deep&#13;
kno--ledge 01the work and the period that&#13;
brought It forth'll What if a gut·reaction is&#13;
\lorong. based on an inadequate knowledge&#13;
of the psychology of the writer and his&#13;
audience'?&#13;
SCC-ond. enthusia m can be cerebral as&#13;
well as emotional. The fact that a work has&#13;
depth and "resonance" and embodies the&#13;
behefs and emotional attitudes of an entire&#13;
age. hi cause enough for an enthusiastic&#13;
appreciation. Is not learning lhen - a Ph.·&#13;
D. and publication leadership - the best&#13;
support of enthusiasm. all other things&#13;
being ~ual?&#13;
Indeed. is not mtellectual profundity in&#13;
Itself msplrational') I always thooght so,&#13;
t:vcn If the possessor seemed personally&#13;
dull&#13;
3, A good teacher has the strength to&#13;
apply high standards of excellence. to&#13;
himself and. what is germane here to the&#13;
student's wo~k. listen to the re~ulting&#13;
complaints Without getling e.xcited. try to&#13;
s~mpathetlcally assess the student's&#13;
character and brains - and help him to&#13;
"U1'pass himself.&#13;
But who is to decide what standards are&#13;
10 prevail') Alas. only the teacher. I fear&#13;
that only the lonely and agonizing journey&#13;
through a Ph_D_ can mdicate what sland·&#13;
ards can pre\'aiL But why stop there? A&#13;
Ph.D. IS a degree that qualifies one for&#13;
research. and the standards the top-night&#13;
UOlY('rslt~ applies are set not only by Ph.-&#13;
D r1g.ors but by the far more difficult task&#13;
of \\ rtll~ for publication. Only one who&#13;
~s cham·smoked and groaned his way&#13;
through an mtellectual chaos with only a&#13;
recalcltranl bram to bring about a d&#13;
e&#13;
. r er,&#13;
'an appreciate what the standards can and&#13;
must be: If we are to strive for excellence.&#13;
('erl~mly. we do the student no service&#13;
to lei him remain peacefully on le\'els that&#13;
he can lra~scend. Again. I suggest that lhe&#13;
P~.D. an? Its extension. research. al1 other&#13;
Ihmgs bf'lIIg l"Quat. provide a solid base for&#13;
leachmg excellence .&#13;
As an inspirationalleacher once told me&#13;
yo~ should nol have more than three or&#13;
an~ Ihmg: beyond that. your thinking is&#13;
confused 0 I shall close. then. with two&#13;
("lements of leaching excellence not&#13;
releated to research. First. is the knack of&#13;
brmglng about an orgaruc re-creation of&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
WATCHES=-:J,&#13;
• -.. .... C'C-u.. ""rtr_ .._.~._ ..,_..-...&#13;
~._, ..·T;_,.&#13;
LorC_I_&#13;
REPAIR DEPT •&#13;
W.tthn . Jnrelry&#13;
D" .. olNf Setting&#13;
Complete Rep.n&#13;
Dept.&#13;
liftl Oesigftiftg&#13;
CHIMA I&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
lEGISTRY&#13;
To Bonnie&#13;
From Delaney&#13;
IIy JERRY SOCHA&#13;
Ipicked up the new Delaney &amp; Bonnie &amp;&#13;
Friends album by reflex action. I heard&#13;
them on TV a few times and liked their&#13;
music, so when Isaw the album I grabbed&#13;
it. After listening to it, I like them even&#13;
more. The first thing that struck me about the&#13;
album was the diversity in the voices and&#13;
style of both Bonnie and Delaney. At times&#13;
I thought I was listening to Laura Nyro&#13;
where the next cut would be pure Jerry&#13;
Lee Lewis. Backing up the vocals are the&#13;
"Friends" lull, gospel rock sound.&#13;
Among the Friends are Sneaky Pete&#13;
playing steel guitar on "God Knows I Love&#13;
You", Little Richard on piano in "Miss&#13;
Ann" and King Curtis playing tenor sax on&#13;
"They Call It Rock &amp; Roll Music". In the&#13;
past the Friends have included Eric&#13;
Clapton and George Harrison.&#13;
"They Call It Rock &amp; Roll Music" is an&#13;
autobiographical piece on their London&#13;
concert at Albert Hall. The Albert Hall&#13;
stopped booking rock and roll groups since&#13;
the place had been damaged by rock lans&#13;
excited by the music. Delaney &amp; Bonnie &amp;&#13;
Friends were booked there as a Gospel·&#13;
Soul group, For an encore they did a&#13;
medley 01 Little Richard hits which&#13;
brought the audience dancing into the&#13;
aisles. Fearing another riot the manager&#13;
threatened to cut the power unless they&#13;
stopped playing "rock and roll". The song&#13;
goes, "They call it rock and roll music but&#13;
there ain't nothin' we can do about that."&#13;
In his youth Delaney was greatly in·&#13;
nuenced by early country blues artist&#13;
Robert J ohoson. This influence is heard in&#13;
a medley of three songs on the first side.&#13;
!he work - be it literary or intellectualIn&#13;
the classroom i seeing to it by a push&#13;
there, a shove there, that the student is&#13;
abl~ to build it anew, step by logical step,&#13;
as It were by an appreciation of its har·&#13;
mony. and .in~vitability, with the sudden&#13;
daw~mg WIthin the mind of the student of&#13;
th~ tlll~el~s .values of the work. This, I&#13;
tlunk, IS Instinctive, of great value, and&#13;
unmeasurable and unpromotable by&#13;
research and publication.&#13;
Second, and last, the excellent teacher&#13;
should be good-looking. But I'm not&#13;
discouraged: four out of five isn't bad.&#13;
Sincerely.&#13;
Henry Kozicki&#13;
English Discipline&#13;
Humanities Division&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NORTH &amp;-SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
RANCH&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Delaney does a good Iik&#13;
Johnson's voice and his gUi~~ess or baa.&#13;
rattles With each not somethi . The1!IIi"r&#13;
sitar would sound. ng likea '-i&#13;
My lavorite song on the alb .&#13;
The People". You listen to t~rn IS "Frto&#13;
you'll swear it's the m IS so~ IIId&#13;
Salvation Army band vou'veost&#13;
[aM_&#13;
be&#13;
. ' h ,everh---"&#13;
gins Wit a short introduct· Olrd.lt&#13;
I&#13;
doi "R k 'on ,~. so 0 omg OC 01 Ages" N _ull1po(&#13;
tuba that you'll be bobbing ext colllea.&#13;
then Bonme JOInS in with v youlrhead I.&#13;
bo . "F oca and ...&#13;
nne. .ree the people fro laDl.&#13;
Pull the boa tout 01 the raginm&#13;
the fire_&#13;
the Devil he's a liar _ Com g Sea - Tell&#13;
lik I ," T e and save I es 0 me. oward the d the&#13;
almost hear coins rattling inet~t yoU CIa&#13;
Overall the album is very 0 he~.&#13;
worth $3.75 or the bother Ol~'od: It'swlIi IPPlng il c(f&#13;
~J&#13;
. FRUIT BASKETS AND CANDY&#13;
Deliver Across Town or • _ ••- """.......tbew-w&#13;
FABRICS FOR&#13;
ALL OCCASIOIlI&#13;
- 658~12_&#13;
pOWNTOWN K.ENOSHA&#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. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.Il.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55(&#13;
excepted&#13;
1~.&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Facult y&#13;
(Must Show I,D.) Cr.dure Gemololnt·Certifitd Oi.montolo&amp;ist&#13;
Y~gg&lt;mA,&#13;
DU.MOMD CONlt.llTAHU It Jon "",4e , Jilterence wll«e you sbo , p.&#13;
LETTERS to the editors&#13;
To th Edit&#13;
y r&#13;
UPTOW ES AURANT&#13;
and OUNGE&#13;
famous for&#13;
Banquet&#13;
ailable&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
I F Sizn r . 12" • I ... 16•&#13;
ALSO&#13;
' II S • SPAGH Tl • CHIC l&#13;
' G OCCHI • RAVIOLI , LA SAG A&#13;
' SIA fOCO • SAl&lt;OWICHU&#13;
CA 11.Y OUTS • OELIVUY&#13;
MOU I WE I c-·&#13;
657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
St• 6t A l&#13;
1 ()Ii&#13;
'lUTCl!!~I REPAIR DEPT. • •~ • •~ .c:re. ~ w--.:....:.:c.:.:..-=..::.:....:.:.__.l 111• - • .._ .,. •lthH • Jt•tlry&#13;
o ..... -- o .. rao,wl Sclhn9&#13;
c.,.,... • . T .,.. Co plttt Rep,,r&#13;
uc ... tN Dept. 1;.9 Du19n,n9&#13;
llllOAL&#13;
ECISTRY&#13;
Courtes Discount&#13;
o Students and DO TOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Fae ult y&#13;
( ust Sho I. D.) Cuduite ~molog,st Certified O,imontologist&#13;
V~cs&lt;mA, Falrtrade&#13;
e cepted It d~s ,uh • d;Jference wbere you s/, op. '&#13;
To Bonnie&#13;
From Delaney&#13;
By JERRY SOCHA&#13;
I picked up the new Delaney &amp; Bonnie &amp;&#13;
Friends album by reflex action. I heard&#13;
them on TV a few times and liked their&#13;
music, so when I saw the album I grabbed&#13;
it. After listening to it, I like them even&#13;
more. The first thing that struck me about the&#13;
album was the diversity in the voices and&#13;
style of both Bonnie and Delaney. At times&#13;
I thought I was listening to Laura Nyro&#13;
where the next cut would be pure Jerry&#13;
Lee Lewis. Backing up the vocals are the&#13;
"Friends" full, gospel rock sound.&#13;
Among the Friends are Sneaky Pete&#13;
playing steel guitar on "God Knows I Love&#13;
You", Little Richard on piano in "Miss&#13;
Ann" and King Curtis playing tenor sax on&#13;
"They Call It Rock &amp; Roll Music". In the&#13;
past the Friends have included Eric&#13;
Clapton and George Harrison.&#13;
"They Call It Rock &amp; Roll Music" is an&#13;
autobiographical piece on their London&#13;
concert at Albert Hall. The Albert Hall&#13;
stopped booking rock and roll groups since&#13;
the place had been damaged by rock fans&#13;
e.xcited by the music. Delaney &amp; Bonnie &amp;&#13;
Friends were booked there as a GospelSoul&#13;
group. For an encore they did a&#13;
medley of Little Richard hits which&#13;
brought the audience dancing into the&#13;
aisles. Fearing another riot the manager&#13;
threatened to cut the power unless they&#13;
topped playing "rock and roll". The song&#13;
goes, "They call it rock and roll music but&#13;
there ain't nothin' we can do about that."&#13;
In his youth Delaney was greatly influenced&#13;
by early country blues artist&#13;
Robert Johnson. This influence is heard in&#13;
a medley of three songs on the first side.&#13;
~e work - be it literary or intellectual -&#13;
m the classroom; seeing to it by a push&#13;
there, a shove there, that the student is&#13;
abl~ to build it anew, step by logical step,&#13;
as it were by an appreciation of its harmony&#13;
and inevitability, with the sudden&#13;
daw~mg within the mind of the student of&#13;
th~ tm~eless values of the work. This, 1&#13;
thmk, 1s instinctive, of great value and&#13;
unmeasurable and unpromotabl~ by&#13;
research and publication.&#13;
Second, and last, the excellent teacher&#13;
~ould be good-looking. But I'm not&#13;
discouraged: four out of five isn't bad.&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Henry Kozicki&#13;
English Discipline&#13;
Humanities Division&#13;
RANCH&#13;
NORTH &amp;.SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
Delaney does a good lik&#13;
Johnson'~ voice and his gui~;es; of both&#13;
rattles with each not somethi · _he guitar sitar would sound. ng hke a bass&#13;
My favorite song on the alb . The People". You listen to t:m 18 ''Free&#13;
you'll swear it's the m is song a1-1&#13;
Salvation Army band you've OSt fantasltc&#13;
begins with a short introduet~er heard.11&#13;
1 d . "R c ion tru so o omg ock of Ages" N lllPet&#13;
tuba that ~ou_'l~ be bobbing ~xt coines 1&#13;
then Bonme JOms in with vt ~r head lo&#13;
borine. "F:ree the people fro~a and ta&#13;
Pull the boat out of the rag· the fire_&#13;
the Devil he's a liar - Com~ng sea -Ten&#13;
likes of me." Toward the a~d save lhe&#13;
almost hear coins rattling i;t You can&#13;
Overall the album is very go~the ,pot,&#13;
worth $3. 75 or the bother of . : It 8 w r---------r..'.1&#13;
Pcr-P-mg it cxf&#13;
FRUIT BASKETS AND CAN&#13;
Deliver Across Town or Al:.r DY OU !ht W0&lt;14&#13;
VO&#13;
FA G&#13;
B UE&#13;
RI&#13;
FABRICS FOR cs&#13;
ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
- 658.:.8612 _&#13;
DOWNTOWN K_ENOSHA&#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, &amp; SAT, TILL 2 A,M,&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
{triple decker)&#13;
55( &#13;
Gymnasts usually are good when it comes to do" .&#13;
onewould think they all flipped for Diane Thomas th nng flips, but looking at this photo , elf queen candidate.&#13;
. The Track team and their queen candidate, Sandy Huston, all seem to have a&#13;
bright outlook on the coming of SPORTSFEST. The track team along ith th th&#13;
it t '11 t til' ' WI e 0 er varsi y spor 5, WI S ar. se 109 buttons for their queen candidate. Let's all back this new&#13;
event and make some girl a very happy queen.&#13;
Wrestling Clinic, Another First For UWP&#13;
A New Concept in Clinics&#13;
The Parkside clinic features a complete&#13;
new concept in wrestling clinics. It could&#13;
be called four clinics in one.&#13;
The concept was developed in order to&#13;
lake full advantage of the talent and&#13;
abilities of all five instructors. Each instructor&#13;
or pair of instructors will be&#13;
teaching their favorite area of wrestling on&#13;
separate mats. This will allow a maximum&#13;
~x~sure of the instructors to the participants&#13;
at all times.&#13;
. Four blocks of wrestling will be covered&#13;
In the morning and four blocks in the afUSE&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
VILLAGE INN&#13;
and&#13;
Pancake House&#13;
3619 30th Ave.&#13;
SUN. 6 a.m.-12 a.m&#13;
FRI.6 a.';'.-l p.m.&#13;
SAT. 6 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
21 Variety&#13;
of Pancake~&#13;
LUNCH - DINNERS&#13;
ternoon. There will be time allowed. for&#13;
each coach and wrestler to pick two blocks&#13;
in the morning and two blocks in the afternoon&#13;
which he would like to see&#13;
covered. This will eliminate the need. of&#13;
sitting through instruction which does not&#13;
particularly interest you. Each block of&#13;
wrestling will consist of approximately 50&#13;
per cent instruction and 50 per cent opportunity&#13;
for application.&#13;
Following the eight formal blocks of&#13;
instruction there will be an opportunity to&#13;
question and seek help from the instructors.&#13;
Areas To Be Covered&#13;
Block 1 - Jim Koch: Leg wrestlingcounters,&#13;
rides and pins.&#13;
Block 2 - Dan Koch-Don Trapp: Escapes&#13;
and reversals, emphasis on standup.&#13;
Block 3 - Gerry Barr: Breakdowns and&#13;
rides.&#13;
Block 4 - Stan Opp: International&#13;
technique, with application to high school&#13;
and college wrestling.&#13;
Block 5 - Jim Koch: Rolls, setups,&#13;
combinations and counters.&#13;
Block 6 - Dan Koch-Don Trapp:&#13;
Takedowns.&#13;
Block 7 - Gerry Barr: Pin combinations,&#13;
Block 8 - Stan Opp: International&#13;
technique.&#13;
Clinic Staff&#13;
Clinic Director Jim Koch: Wrestling&#13;
coach, the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
former outstanding wrestler&#13;
and captain of the perennial national top&#13;
ranked South Dakota State University;&#13;
assistant wrestling coach at SDSU prior lo&#13;
joining the Parkside staff; successfully&#13;
directed many outstanding wrestling&#13;
clinics. .&#13;
Clinic Host Gerry Barr: Wrestling&#13;
coach, Tremper high school, Kenosha,&#13;
former outstanding wrestler and twice&#13;
PHONE 658-3551 •&#13;
AIELLO&#13;
Mid- T O'Udn&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
A Complete flol'Ol SeP'Vic.e&#13;
With MoJe.n Deslqn&#13;
&amp;.108 ,.,trT" S'CONO ST.aIT&#13;
KllNOSHA. WI.CONSIN&#13;
Population To Double&#13;
The United States is the most densely&#13;
populated country on earth, a University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Madison professor said&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Reid A. Bryson, addressing the&#13;
president's luncheon at the annual&#13;
Community Newspaper Conference on the&#13;
UW Madison campus, noted that&#13;
population is too oflen mistaken to mean&#13;
only the number of people living in a given&#13;
area.&#13;
"While the United Slates has only about&#13;
60 people per square mile, each one of&#13;
those people has roughly 150 'energy&#13;
slav~' working for him - cars, washing&#13;
machines, electric lights - all of which&#13;
require food, in the form 0( fue~ and all of&#13;
which have metabolic wastes to he said&#13;
"In essence, our country is 'supporti~&#13;
an equivalent population closer to9 000 per&#13;
square mile - or nearly half the :"'orld's&#13;
total for tbe U.S. as a whole." •&#13;
With such a load, it is no surprise that we&#13;
are facing an environmental crisis&#13;
"There are sewers for human waste .':&#13;
Bryson remarked, "but where are the&#13;
sewers for our machine wastes?"&#13;
Bryson said that while the number of&#13;
people is doubling about every 50 years,&#13;
the nwnbe.r of energy slaves is doubling&#13;
every ten years. Thus, he estimated that&#13;
resulting problems of fuel supply and&#13;
waste disposal are going up by IOO-fold&#13;
every half cenbJry or so.&#13;
Bryson, director of Wisconsin's new&#13;
Institute for Environmental Studies&#13;
divided his talk to the group into tw~&#13;
general areas - the nature of environmental&#13;
problems, and what the&#13;
University is doing to help solve therit.&#13;
Bryson feels a major environmental&#13;
problem is the compounding effects of&#13;
pollution and overpopulation.&#13;
"In the next 20 to 30 years," he told the&#13;
newspapermen, "Wisconsin's human&#13;
population will double, which means the&#13;
circulations of your newspapers will&#13;
prohably double. But the number of your&#13;
advertisers will probably also double.&#13;
Thus, we will probably have twice as many&#13;
r~de~ .rea.ding papers twice as large."&#13;
.With twice as many readers reading&#13;
tWlc.e the .current size newspaper,&#13;
publtshers WIllneed four times the amount&#13;
or paper. So we will have to cut down Iour&#13;
times as many trees and dispose of four&#13;
times as much paper waste. In short, we&#13;
will be taxing the environment four times&#13;
as heavily even though there are only&#13;
twice tbe numher of people."&#13;
Bryson pointed. out that this geometric&#13;
progression is at the core of many environmental&#13;
problems. "It wouldn'l be&#13;
quite so bad if having twice the number or&#13;
people meant twice the amount of&#13;
pollution, but this is never the case. "&#13;
cap~in at ~Cro~se State University;&#13;
president wtsconsm wrestling Coaches&#13;
Association; coached Tremper high school&#13;
to Big 8 conference championship in 1970&#13;
and a fourth place finish in the 1970&#13;
Wisconsin State tournament; coached&#13;
three state place winners in 1970including&#13;
one champion.&#13;
Guest Instructors&#13;
Stan Opp: National AAU Greco Roman&#13;
champion 1970; National AAU Freestyle&#13;
runner-up 1970; National Wrestling&#13;
Fe~eration Freestyle champion 1970;&#13;
National Junior Olympic Trials Greco&#13;
Roman champion 1969; National Junior&#13;
Olympic Trials Freestyle third place 1969;&#13;
South Dakota Amateur Athlete of the year&#13;
1969; Memher of the U.S.A. team to tour&#13;
Europe summer 1970.&#13;
Dan Koch: Coached Stan Opp while in&#13;
high school and has developed Stan into a&#13;
leading contender for the 1972 Olympic&#13;
tea~. Consid,ered the foremost authority&#13;
on international wrestling in South&#13;
Dakota. Former outstanding collegiate&#13;
wrestler - now competing in open meets.&#13;
Don Trapp: NCAA I\ll American 1970'&#13;
NCAA College Division 171 lb. Nationai&#13;
champion 1970; recipient NCAA&#13;
Postgraduate scholarship.&#13;
Marquette&#13;
Crushes Ranger&#13;
Hockey Team&#13;
The Parkside hockey players really put&#13;
on a great show, according to Russ Cooley,&#13;
assistant AD of UWP. Every one played m&#13;
the game. Marquette did W10 with a score&#13;
0(11·3, but the Parkside club ratherd have&#13;
everyone play than bettenng their score&#13;
When the best players did go 1010 tbe game&#13;
two goals were scored The team could&#13;
have done much ~tler but since It was the&#13;
Ranger club's first game it was more&#13;
important to have the whole team play for&#13;
the experience.&#13;
Now, with the first game under their&#13;
bell, the team knows where to improve,&#13;
and how to hetter their defense. The game&#13;
did indicate the hockey talent that tbe club&#13;
has. All of the spectators enjoyed the&#13;
excitement which the players brought on&#13;
There is no question in anyone's mind that&#13;
this club sport will grow on this campus.&#13;
UWP did score the first goal, but it was&#13;
called back because of a penalty Glen&#13;
Carnahan and Tom Krimmel scored the&#13;
Rangers' goals. Krimmel had two goals&#13;
with the assistance of Rich Rosko and Bill&#13;
Westerlund. Kari Liekowki also assisted&#13;
Carnahan. Tbe team's defensive standout&#13;
was Dale Swenson.&#13;
Approximately 100 people attended this&#13;
event, and out of the hundred, 60 pepole&#13;
were Ranger backers. Since the Interest&#13;
was strong there is a possibility of having a&#13;
bus go down on the next meet&#13;
The Ranger dub will travel down to&#13;
Chicago to play at the Rainbow Arena on&#13;
ov, 21 at 10:30 p.m. Let's try and have a&#13;
good turn out for this club.&#13;
T~I PlICI TI .. ,&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
LIrIII'Sellctt ..&#13;
~;;;:p&#13;
626 56th St.&#13;
Thrifty Threads&#13;
For Your &amp;uk. ..&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet.'&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
OOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
1202 • 56th Street&#13;
Kenosho, Wis. 652·6904&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACKETS - Rev. $45.00&#13;
Now $27.50&#13;
Prices to&#13;
Fit Your Pocket&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
VAlEO'S&#13;
.' !.&#13;
FREE DEliVERY 4:00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
KENOSHA 657·5191&#13;
Gymnasts usually are good when it comes t d . . one would think they all flipped for Diane Thomas 0&#13;
th ~mg fhps, but looking at this photo • eir queen candidate.&#13;
The Track team and their queen candidate Sand H t II&#13;
bright outlook on the coming of SPORTSFEST The tracky teausmon,ala see~thttohhave a ·t t ill · · , ong w1 e other vars1 Y spor s, w star! selhng buttons for their queen candidate. Let's all back this new&#13;
event and make some girl a very happy queen.&#13;
Wrestling Clinic, Another First For UWP&#13;
A New Concept in Clinics&#13;
The Parkside clinic features a complete&#13;
new concept in wrestling clinics. It could&#13;
be called four clinics in one.&#13;
The concept was developed in order to&#13;
take full advantage of the talent and&#13;
abilities of all five instructors. Each instructor&#13;
or pair of instructors will be&#13;
teaching their favorite area of wrestling on&#13;
separate mats. This will allow a maximum&#13;
e_xpasure of the instructors to the participants&#13;
at all times.&#13;
. Four blocks of wrestling will be covered&#13;
m the morning and four blocks in the afUSE&#13;
&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
VILLAGE INN&#13;
and&#13;
Pancake House&#13;
3619 30th Ave.&#13;
SUN. 6 a.m.-12 a.m&#13;
FRI. 6 a.m.-1 p.m.&#13;
S.AT. 6 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
21 Variety&#13;
of Pancake~&#13;
LUNCH - DINNERS&#13;
ternoon. There will be time allowed for&#13;
each coach and wrestler to pick two blocks&#13;
in the morning and two blocks in the afternoon&#13;
which he would like to see&#13;
covered. This will eliminate the need of&#13;
sitting through instruction which does not&#13;
particularly interest you. Each Qlock of&#13;
wrestling will consist of approximately 50&#13;
per cent instruction and 50 per cent opportunity&#13;
for application.&#13;
Following the eight formal blocks of&#13;
instruction there will be an opportunity to&#13;
question and seek help from the instructors.&#13;
&#13;
Areas To Be Covered&#13;
Block 1 - Jim Koch: Leg wrestlingcounters,&#13;
rides and pins. Block 2 - Dan Koch-Don Trapp: Escapes&#13;
and reversals, emphasis on standup.&#13;
Block 3 - Gerry Barr: Breakdowns and&#13;
rides.&#13;
Block 4 - Stan Opp: International&#13;
technique, with application to high school&#13;
and college wrestling. Block 5 - Jim Koch : Rolls, setups,&#13;
combinations and counters. Block 6 - Dan Koch-Don Trapp:&#13;
Takedowns. Block 7 - Gerry Barr: Pin combinations.&#13;
Block 8 - Stan Opp: International&#13;
technique.&#13;
Clinic Staff&#13;
Clinic Director Jim Koch: Wrestling&#13;
coach, the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
former outstanding wrestler&#13;
and captain of the perennial national top&#13;
ranked South Dakota State University;&#13;
assistant wrestling coach at SDSU prior to&#13;
joining the Parkside staff; successfully&#13;
directed many outstanding wrestling&#13;
clinics.&#13;
Clinic Host Gerry Barr: Wrestling&#13;
coach, Tremper high school, Kenosha,&#13;
former outstanding wrestler and twice&#13;
PHONE 658-3551&#13;
AIELLO&#13;
9Yf id-T&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
&lt;Yudtt •&#13;
A Complete flo,ol Se,..,ice&#13;
W;fh MoJe,n Oesiqn&#13;
2_108 P"ll'TY 9£C:0N0 STIH&amp;T&#13;
KENOSHA. Wl9CON91N&#13;
Population To Double&#13;
The United Stat · the mo t d n.el)&#13;
populated country on earth a m it&#13;
of Wisconsin- tadi on profe or aid&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Marquette&#13;
Crushes Ranger&#13;
Hockey Team&#13;
Reid A. Bry on , addr ing the&#13;
president's luncheon at the annual&#13;
Community. ·ew paper Conferenc on the&#13;
W 1adison campu , noted that&#13;
population is too often mi taken to mean&#13;
only the number of people living in a given&#13;
area.&#13;
"While the United States has only about&#13;
60 people per squa-re mile, each one of&#13;
those ,peopl~ has r?'lghly 150 'energy&#13;
slav~ working for him - cars, wa hing&#13;
machines, electric lights - all of which&#13;
~uire food, in the form of fuel, and all of.&#13;
which have metabolic waste " he said&#13;
"In ~nee, our country is' upporhng&#13;
an eqwvalent population closer to 9 000 per&#13;
square mile - or nearly half the ~orld'&#13;
total for the U.S. as a whole." •&#13;
With s~ch a load, it is no surprise that we&#13;
are facing an environmental cri is&#13;
"There are sewers for human waste ,;&#13;
Bryson remarked, "but where are the sewers for our machine wastes?"&#13;
Bryson said that while the number of&#13;
people is doubling about every 50 years,&#13;
the nwnber of energy slaves is doubling&#13;
every ten years. Thus, he estimated that&#13;
resultin~ problems of fuel supply and&#13;
waste dtsposal are going up by 100-fold&#13;
every half century or so.&#13;
Br;Yson, director of \ isconsin's new&#13;
l~s_htute. for Environmental Studie ,&#13;
divided his talk to the group into two&#13;
g~neral areas - the nature of en- VJ.rorunental problems, and what the&#13;
University is doing to help solve the~.&#13;
Bryson feels a major environmental&#13;
problem is the compounding effects of&#13;
pollution and overpopulation.&#13;
"In the next 20 to 30 years," he told the&#13;
newspapermen, "Wisconsin's human&#13;
population will double, which means the&#13;
circulations of your newspapers will&#13;
probably double. But the number of your&#13;
advertisers will probably also double.&#13;
Thus, we will probably have twice as many&#13;
r~de~s. rea_ding papers twice as large."&#13;
_With twice as many readers reading&#13;
tw1c_e the . current size newspaper,&#13;
pubhshers will need four times the amount&#13;
of paper. owe will ve to cu do 'fl four&#13;
times as many trees and dispo e of four&#13;
times as much paper waste. In short we&#13;
will be taxing the environment four times&#13;
as heavily even though there are only&#13;
twice the number of people."&#13;
Bryson pointed out that this geometric&#13;
p~ogression is at the core of many enVJronmental&#13;
problems. "It wouldn't be&#13;
quite so bad if having twice the number of&#13;
peqple meant twice the amount of&#13;
pollution, but thi is never the case."&#13;
cap~in at ~Cro_ e State niversity;&#13;
president \ 1sconsm Wre tling Coach&#13;
Ass~iation ; coached Tremper high school&#13;
to Big 8 conference champion hip in 1970&#13;
and a fourth place finish in the 1970&#13;
Wisconsin State tournament; coached&#13;
three state place winn rs in 1970 including&#13;
one champion.&#13;
Gu t In tructo&#13;
Stan Opp: National AA Greco Roman&#13;
champion 1970; 'ational AA Free tvle&#13;
runner-~p 1970; ational Wrestlfng&#13;
Fed_erahon ~reestyle champion 1 70;&#13;
National Juruor Olympic Trial Greco&#13;
Roman champion 1969; 'ational Junior&#13;
Olympic Trials Freestyle third place 1 ,&#13;
South Dakota Amateur Athlete of they r&#13;
1969, 1ember of the .S.A. team to tour _&#13;
Europe summer 1970&#13;
Dan Koch: Coached Stan Opp while in&#13;
high school and has developed Stan into a&#13;
leading co~tender for the 1972 Olympic&#13;
tea~. Cons1d_ered the foremost authority&#13;
on mternallonal wrestling in South&#13;
Dakota. Form-er outstanding collegiate&#13;
wrestler - now competing in open meets.&#13;
Don Trapp: NCAA All American 1970·&#13;
NCAA College Division 177 lb. Nationai&#13;
champion 1970; recipient CAA&#13;
Postgraduate scholarship.&#13;
VAL.ED'S&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICK EM DIMMERS and&#13;
ITALIAM SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m.&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
T t Place Tt IIY&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
L•&amp;nt Sel1ctl111&#13;
626 56th St. Kenosha&#13;
Thrifty Threads&#13;
For Your Back. ..&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet.'&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sportswear&#13;
1202 - 56th Strut&#13;
Kenosho, Wis. 652-6904&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACKETS_ Reg. s45_00&#13;
Mow $27.50&#13;
Prices to&#13;
Fit Your Pocket&#13;
\ ,. I&#13;
FREE DalVERY .C :00 P.M. TO 12:00 P.M.&#13;
KENOSHA 657-5191 &#13;
I PLEASE PRINT I&#13;
Eligibility fa, thi$ ',ip ;$ limited to duden'$, $,aH ond foculty ond&#13;
the menlbel$ of ,hei, ilMledilote family of ,be:&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCOHSIN&#13;
classifieds ISPORTS&#13;
LF-O-R-A-LE--_-So-n-y-.m-S(lU-nd--&lt;&gt;n-_S(lU--nd-+--A:-~-IP-U-F-IE-R-F-O-R-SA-LE----S-=il::-v-er-t::-on-e S H 0 RTS&#13;
track teree Iape deck with accessories. amplifier, 4 channels, 1 speaker, Herald&#13;
Thi IS a $150 deck for only S3SO John Unidirectional microphone; 20 It. cable -&#13;
lurphy, 652.7433. plck·up and jack for folk guitar - $100.&#13;
CaD 694-2769.&#13;
FOR I\LE - Gibson Acousl1cal Electric&#13;
GUitar - beaul1/ul Instrument - double&#13;
po k-up, red fino h. top quality case included-&#13;
SJOO t no blckenngl. Call S3+WI2&#13;
aItr6pm&#13;
F R :\LE - H athlat Ouitar Amph/,er&#13;
lpoW.backl - Zo\O wens peak power. 3&#13;
ch nn I (gUll r, mike, ba t, mirumum&#13;
01'''0 InplJl5 per channel - bottom has Z&#13;
IZ" Jensen and I 12"lugh-frequency horn&#13;
_ $ II ~-e&amp;O:! arter 6 p.m&#13;
FOR LE - Vox Phantom tz-string&#13;
gu,lar - 3 pick-up, tear drop shape and&#13;
white, perfect. condition - $225. Call 31Z·&#13;
395-2309. Antioch, III., ask for Marty, Jr.&#13;
RIDE 'EEDED - to Beloit or Janesville&#13;
any Friday of t1ie present school year -&#13;
contact Barb at 658-8584.&#13;
RIDE WANTED - for Z to Pennsylvania&#13;
over Thanksgiving - call 658-8485 and ask&#13;
for Rosemary.&#13;
Student Honors Concert&#13;
nit: !\I\ snsrrv FWI&#13;
P,\RK IDE&#13;
m, OF. Til !\OR O!\ ERT&#13;
I'O\fmbtr It,It10- :MP.\I.&#13;
Ii I'tO\ha mpu. F"hw rts Room&#13;
PR R."I&#13;
I'T Iud,urn and Fugue, lozarl. Linda&#13;
l'r • viohn; J n t Ptttlk, violin; Arline&#13;
Dahlqui t. \1ohn. ntver Harcank,&#13;
viohn. n Dr xler. VIolin; Adrienne&#13;
Gerth, VIola W,lham Bradley. Viola,&#13;
~Tln Durocher, ceUo. Saurie Deming,&#13;
110&#13;
yrln' for Flute. Debu y: Lenee&#13;
Karo.. , nute&#13;
"Wldmuna". chumann:&#13;
p 1 n~meuo lOpe-ano&#13;
Con rt In A lalOr, 01' 1117. Rondo.&#13;
lourt Phdhp m.th. claronet.&#13;
Rhapsody In G IInor, 01'. 79, o. 1&#13;
Brahm Joyce Richards. piano.&#13;
Re&lt;:ltahve "And God Created Ian",&#13;
Ana "In '811\'e Worth" from The&#13;
Cr t,on. Haydn' Joe Gauchel, tenor.&#13;
Andante and Allegro, RoparlZ: George&#13;
Brlew•• trumpet&#13;
Sonata In 0 Major for Violin and Piano,&#13;
dalila-Allegro. Handel: Arline Dahlquist.&#13;
\'10110&#13;
Cantabde for Flute. Op. 25, OeMlchelis:&#13;
Sharron Lee Johnson, nute.&#13;
!\ IN&#13;
Belty&#13;
Two Trumpet Tunes, Purcell; Sonata for&#13;
Brass. Poulenc; lntrada for Brass. Jean&#13;
Berger: John Olisar, trumpet; George&#13;
Brrewa, trumpet; Dianne Chambers,&#13;
French horn; Douglas Johnson. trombone.&#13;
Accompanists: Kathleen Devine, Susan&#13;
Hay. Letha Wood.&#13;
Reception in lounge following concert,&#13;
sponsored by the niversity of Wisconsin·&#13;
Parkside Student Cnapter of M.E.N.C.&#13;
HALF OF UW STUDE TS&#13;
HOLD A PAYING JOB&#13;
Almost hall of University of Wisconsin·&#13;
Mawson students work at a paying job&#13;
while atlending school, according to a&#13;
study recently released by the UW Survey&#13;
Research Laboratory.&#13;
The survey also noted that two out ot&#13;
every five students on the Madison&#13;
campus recehte no financial help from&#13;
parents or other relatives.&#13;
ADULTS STILL LEARN&#13;
About one adult in five has indicated that&#13;
future enrollment in a University of&#13;
Wisconsin adult education program is&#13;
possible for them, according to a UW&#13;
Survey Research Laboratory study.&#13;
By MARK BARNHILL&#13;
Six Players Make&#13;
NAIA AU Star Team&#13;
Six members of the UWP soccer team&#13;
ed to the NAIA District 14 All&#13;
were narn tai Dale Star team. Joseph Orr, team cap In,&#13;
Nickle and Stan Markovic were named o~&#13;
the starting team, while Karl Llekowskl,&#13;
Doug Beveridge and Charles Lees are on&#13;
the reserve team.&#13;
Coach Jim Gibson is very pleased that&#13;
three of his players did make the starting&#13;
line-up and that the other three players&#13;
were named on the team. The soccer team&#13;
finished with a 4--6-1 record.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Skiing Most popular PE Course&#13;
The skiing and life fitness class has the&#13;
largest enrollment of a phy-ed course on&#13;
CamplJs. More than 200 people are in the&#13;
Monday and Tuesday night class. Next&#13;
semester will offer an advanced skiing&#13;
class (306). This course will include a~tual&#13;
skiing at the Wilmot slopes a.nd SkI It?-&#13;
strucuon. Coach Vic Godfrey wJ11run th,~&#13;
class with the assistance of Karl&#13;
Liekowski. Liekowski spent 2lh years on&#13;
the U.S. Olympic Biathlon tearn in Alaska.&#13;
He trained IZ months a year and annually&#13;
toured Europe and "'North American in&#13;
international competition. The biathlon&#13;
race is a crOSS country skiing and rifle&#13;
shooting contest over a 12.5 mile course.&#13;
The winner of this contest is judged by how&#13;
iast he skied and his ability to hit targets.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
NAIA District 14 Invitational at UWP&#13;
Friday, November 13, is the date set for&#13;
the NAJA District 14 Invitational crosscountry&#13;
run. Invitations to this meet are&#13;
limited to the 18 NAIA affiliated colleges.&#13;
All nine state universities plus Green Bay,&#13;
Carthage and most other colleg~ from&#13;
Wisconsin will attend. The favorites of this&#13;
meet will be UWP, Carthage and Platteville.&#13;
Following this meet the NAIA national&#13;
championship meet will be at Kansas City.&#13;
Rich Lund, XCC nmner, stated, "We want&#13;
very much to win the team title for Mr. Vic&#13;
SPEC~~ '*&#13;
_lU'aT ........ TO .. ARtS VIA sPACM)US AND C~A&amp;LI[ ....1....... ANCI[ N1 SUPDt ~&#13;
-..nt IN"'L~T liIO'Vll[.S. C&lt;*NIECTING lleII[DIATI[LY BY AI" TO Gl[NI[VA&#13;
_ITIUtLAH.O WITH THe: "l[TlMN FL~T FROW Gl[NI[VAi ...uus. PARIS T'O&#13;
OUCAOO.&#13;
'*&#13;
'*&#13;
-_ .&#13;
._.-n .&#13;
RETURN FEBRUARY 7 [)(PART JANUARY 29&#13;
From Chlago&#13;
... UP LUlLT "'.tel! UIII1m&#13;
10 DAYS&#13;
Oily $249 I'LUS SlUO&#13;
TAX &amp; S!ItTlCE CIWIGE&#13;
EIghth NIght In&#13;
PA R I S&#13;
,MDTElI.ClUDEDl&#13;
'* .- ..&#13;
'*&#13;
*&#13;
'*&#13;
'*&#13;
_·-.Tw ......&#13;
_ ,.. ••••.. •. .. ... .,.1: ONI: OAY Slot: TlIU" ~ .t.OVAHCI[QSKtPa. INCL"'","-&#13;
NtOTlClIt AM.L '''- LIFTS TO&#13;
IIMI •••••••.•..•...... A 0I1tKT SLA,LDW .. 1tCf. ,.e-, ..-..- _ '''- 'MTN A TATlON PARTY&#13;
COW"\.E'TI[ .. nt .... ZQ AND ~IU"'OfII nc u.s.&#13;
--.... •• •• • •• • • • •• TWO WUL TlLINGUAL GUIOI:S WILL -n YOUIll GftOUP IN GCHEV&#13;
_ AVAtLAaU TO AIIIST YOU AT ALL T.., UNTIL ot:PMlI~.""" wtu..&#13;
...................................&#13;
TNIS TlIl'" IS e-r,..IlMO BY THlE UNlVI[lItS'TY 0.. W1SCClH&amp;lN. "AfllICSlOl[&#13;
,.~ ........ ....,. '*.~oc.G.A.r.oek. .. AIWeric .. u...., ..lIi_.. ,......I . ..... (,&amp;111 -"'1. b.le ' _.11__&#13;
'.~s- ....... .su.&#13;
Godfrey. He has been an inspiration&#13;
whole team. We do feel that Wecan doto.~&#13;
we are all healthy." It if&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Coach Bill Ballester has been&#13;
president of Ihe Southeastern W. et..,'-I&#13;
Gymnastic Association. He will ~&#13;
compulsitory exercise program f te ~&#13;
group. Ballester now is wri~ lhi&#13;
national program. ~&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The fencing team has been acti&#13;
stirring inte~est in the comtnU:f tit&#13;
around Parkside, Loren Hein PUt Ueo&#13;
fencing demonstration at J. I. Case ~&#13;
school. Approxi':latel~ Z,OOO ~ .....&#13;
the fencers exhibit their skills at Case. ~&#13;
team also put on a demonstration at tile&#13;
Racine Teachers Association.&#13;
How The Hockey&#13;
Team Will Win&#13;
By WALTER BREACH&#13;
A brilliant exhibition of sports otratoo&#13;
took place last Tuesday t;elllac.&#13;
Milwaukee's Wilson Hockey Rink WOItIoe&#13;
sight of the action as the UWP club1Gok&#13;
Marquette. Interesting sidelines ~&#13;
much blowing, shooting and droppiog ..&#13;
The whistle, the puck, and backsidetlltloe&#13;
ice were the objects resp&lt;'ctively.&#13;
Back to the strategy, the main ide",.&#13;
to make Marquette and anyone waldolow&#13;
the game think that the HockeyClub 10M&#13;
not yet accepted Dean MacKillter'a&#13;
"instant greatness" idea. The ..&#13;
completely fooled all the advance ~&#13;
walching the game hy forcing the ...&#13;
not to show any of their natural gJ1Ct,&#13;
competitiveness, ability and tearowan..&#13;
was wIficult for them to allow Marqao!II&#13;
to score 11 times and the club slippedu(&#13;
accidentally trea ted themselves to I1nI&#13;
goals for compensation.&#13;
Soon, however, it will be time fer&#13;
club to stop playing Jack the Ripper"&#13;
day oll and make ils move. Look 0IIl,.&#13;
Chicago Blackhawks!&#13;
PLEASE READ AND RETAIN - RESPONSIBILITY AND CAHCELUTtOH&#13;
GROUPTRAVEL ASSOCIATES. INC. _ eOOf*atl" GIII_h 00.1only in ,to. e.. ity of ",. hr"" ,. 11&#13;
"I .... JIMf.Ini., to hotel ac--.dlltion ••• i...... i"" 'oun and " ... portation by"'~ ..&#13;
.... C•• a.r-Ihi, •• ,1_ ........ uc;h, th.., •• 11ftOIN!i.l. '- any Injury, ,...-.llljlrl ...&#13;
• e~, Hlerr •• irr.,ularity wfr.ieh.err N KCU,"'" .lllt. by ' .. Ion01 -.y .. fKt i•...,v.h!ea., • ......,&#13;
tile .u ar Ntault oI .. y e..,..,.,..._ M1gapt!in connyi", tM 'on ....... in c-"/i .. ..,,rile ........&#13;
.. ,. *-&lt;.l, • o!t.rwi .. In c-'iofI V.with. f.,.......tM right wiD.• withoutJIOtic. to .... cMIIH III&#13;
•• ..,ort.ioll.lodti"l ••• igMMc_ ._ ...." BtIftI. i. c_i'" at _'. riM'" ~ Ia _ •&#13;
... ....... and il r~. Airli.... c-...c! ".. JIOt to be hel4 r.IpOll ... I.for any lid, _inioll .....&#13;
clwi-. Ito. ti_ ,.$...... _ JlOt OllltoarollMir .ir.,.lIft. In tM _t of c .. cellolion, •• ofuncI will"" In"&#13;
.. t. 60 4..,. ,..i. 104"'., If h.1I,.-,-t • _ittan notice 01c_.llotion i. not rae.iv'" ~ GT,.,IM:. ••&#13;
w.. 60 "errl ,.i. to,.,., tho. ..... it will "- forfeit.... If. c..c.lloti ........ t i.recoiwocl~ GT,.,"&#13;
len"" 60 4..,. ,.i.to 4 I .. funol will be ,.. OO!lyII on .ligiba. .ub.tiluM i. \lY.il_a. "-,.. ..&#13;
II... I. til relunol will Ion omJlO ...,ic.I ... litho __ of oir I•• col1oct......... ' 61&#13;
,._ •• __ the .. cen will be reIvnoIooI, The tot.1 tow ,..ic. lnduol .. tho _ $3.00 U.s. ...,..&#13;
T,..,ertoliOl Tox (•• oI71V70) b'" F_ign Dep-t .... TCIlIII(pr ... ntly $1.25) _ eot i_lucIM, • .., ..&#13;
"'iect t. d.....&#13;
TJt~AT1ON ~ oUID TO ~N£VJt.. .$WITIEl'LANO VIA. OI[LUXI[&#13;
TOVItING BUSD tz HOIJIItS OF .AUTI"Ut.. SCIEHf:~.&#13;
AT ·GIIIAND IIOC". IN TMI[ AltGl[NTIUI[-CHItMQHIX VALLLY. F1ItANCI[.&#13;
AltGl[NTIUU IS A CHAIIIWING ALPIN![ VILLAGE: LOCATI[D A.L&lt;*GSIOE: TMI[&#13;
AIN'I: fltlVV' AT 'TMI[ BAS«: CW THE"'AMOUS °GlUoND MOHTETS· SKI .. uttS.&#13;
nus ~lt.lS F.-...ous "(MIl THt!: -WON'T BLANC". HIGH,£ST YOUNT AIN IN&#13;
t:\lfIIO~ 115.500 n.l. HVt!: SKJ IS I(ING WITH. Cltllu: CARS. 5 GOtolDOLItS.&#13;
J CHAIM,.Irn.. .6 PQotAS AHD • COG TlIlAIN. IN AAQEN'TII[RI[. '(00 WILL&#13;
JLLt: .. AT ".aDO Fen AND YOU CAH SKI ALL THE WAY UP TD .z.eoo FE£T.&#13;
HOY'CI. f1It"'("I[NICOIATE NtO ~.u. FIIIID...Nl,ME8QU:LTUlU&#13;
TO IUIT TNE.w.. ,..Oft I[XAMP1....C'. THE ~ lI"NCMJS 'Z MILt: L08G -V ...LLlEE&#13;
lM.AIfOC INN" AHO THI[ ~ WONTns· -.1[ItI[ ntl[ ltUNS WJtI[ QESIGNI[D&#13;
~ ~CH.-....oM JAMIts COUTTIET, DfoI ~SI[ fII:UNS DIlLE ALUISWDH&#13;
nc..otltLO eH ..... OASHI ... YOU WILL ,..IND 120 IN.5TltUCTOl'tS. Z SKATING&#13;
fit,.... otJCOTHl:.OUI:S. CItSlMO. C\MLING. £TC. ntl[ OLD ,..MHIDfoII[() MOUNT"&#13;
TO-- Of/' CHItMOHIX HAS KEN .".. CAPIT ....L Of: ....t...'NI[ SPOIItTS SINCE&#13;
TMC Vl$IT Of' ~ N ....JIIOC..EC* III IN tlR. CHAMONIX AHO ItRGIENTII[M.&#13;
..,. LOC:"TI[O QeIILY ..... UTU,....... BOTH swtTIEJltLANO AND IT AL Y.&#13;
I:k/IO'I" TNI: AOY""'A~ ..... 0 C~ QIr YOIM a.M ot:LUXI[ .~L&#13;
A"AlrTWNT wnH T'HI[ CONWNIIE...ce: QIr HOT&amp;L SEtWIC;e IN A Sl:ur&lt;:OM-&#13;
't.... D MIDR'T_ ALL UNtTS ItItl" 10VfT1CAL"T14 nt-.: SINGLE BEDS.&#13;
'.8.A.T1G., ,.ULLY I[CIU~ IUTClCN, ·OINWG04..MNG-1llOOM "1"~C&#13;
T~. T.V••JtAOtO.uIO P"ttCINE. LOOGINGI WILt.. _ J ~ TO AN 1[.&#13;
,., -""'CNT •&#13;
CUIIrMMT .. ATO: Il LLSIONSI'I.OO. IItI[N'TAU: ~AL IKIS AND ~&#13;
ROO"" DAY.&#13;
LAST NAME&#13;
o STUDENTS 0 ST AFF&#13;
FIRST NAM!:&#13;
OF .... CULTY OFAIolILY&#13;
MAIL.ING ADDRESS _&#13;
COTY STATI[&#13;
BU~PHONE _._--&#13;
OMALE OFEM Le OSlNGL£&#13;
IOCIMIM'In_,.,. ):&#13;
HOME PHONE _&#13;
OMARRIED AG!:_&#13;
I WANT TO ItOOM WITH: 2. _&#13;
•._---------&#13;
TWIN«c ionl: $20.00 11.... 1--' I*' ,. ...&#13;
o C_d: "- for TWIN «c--.elation ••&#13;
In'--ati. O!l c.~.1 -.d ,"i-,.n o,eion will bo&#13;
sent •• 1•• 4••.&#13;
Mob err..c" """11111&#13;
t:NOL,OSl:D IS MY CHECK FOR S '""'" T._l .....-·I •.&#13;
MMii_ 4epo.it $.SO.GO-In eo .. 01 40p0.it tho balonc. will M"'''- II&#13;
60 hi.,.,) ...,. bef.. cIet-t .....&#13;
,siGNATURE&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN. PAIKSIOE&#13;
SKI THE ALPS SPECIAL&#13;
PIICE: 124'.00 ,1 ... $11.(111 tOJ&lt;&#13;
APPUCATlOH&#13;
"'11 .. : 'ROU' TRAVEL ASSOCIATES INC.&#13;
53 W. JlICh_ II".,. •• Gin ... III. 6G604&#13;
~llc .._ III" _.,.a .. -., • _iJ.., '" "-, _ rece/"-&#13;
classifieds ] SPORTS&#13;
L----------------_-t_P_LI_F_I_E_R_F_O_R __ LE ___ S_ilv_er_to_n_e SH O RT S&#13;
amplifier, 4 channels, 1 speaker, Herald&#13;
Unidirectiona microphone; 20 ft. cable -&#13;
pie -up and jack for folk guitar - $100.&#13;
Call 694-27 .&#13;
F R LE - Vox Phantom 12-strin&amp;&#13;
guitar - 3 pick-up, tear drop shape and&#13;
~te, perfect. condition - $225. Call 312-&#13;
395-23119, Antioch. Ill., ask for ~iarty, Jr.&#13;
By MARK BARNHILL&#13;
Six Players Make&#13;
NAIA All Star Team&#13;
Six members of the UWP soccer team&#13;
ed to the NAIA District 14 All&#13;
;::rei:a_a:::. Joseph Orr, team captain, Dale&#13;
Nickle and Stan Markovic we~e ~med 0 ~&#13;
the starting team, while Kan L1ekowsk1,&#13;
Doug Beveridge and Charles Lees are on&#13;
the reserve team.&#13;
Coach Jim Gibson is very pleased ~at&#13;
three of his players did make the starting&#13;
line-up and that the other three players&#13;
were named on the team. The soccer team&#13;
finished with a 4-6-1 record.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Godfrey. He has been an inspiration to&#13;
whole team. We do feel that we ca d .the&#13;
we are all healthy." n °1tif&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Coach Bill Ballester has been&#13;
president of the Southeastern w· eiec~&#13;
Gymnastic Association. He will v:r~llSin&#13;
compulsitory exercise program r~~e ~ group. Ballester now is writin this&#13;
national program. g ~&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The fencing team has been acti&#13;
stirring interest in the comm v~ _by&#13;
d P k 'd unities&#13;
aroun ar s1 e. Loren Hein put&#13;
nt Honors Concert Skiing Most Popular PE Course&#13;
The skiing and life fitness class has th€&#13;
largest enrollment of a phy-ed course on&#13;
Campus. More than 200 people are in thE&#13;
Monday and Tuesday night class. ~~xt&#13;
semester will offer an advanced skung&#13;
class (306). This course will include actual&#13;
skiing at the Wilmot slopes a_nd ski i1_1-&#13;
struction. Coach Vic Godfrey will run ~ class with the assistance of Kart&#13;
Liekowski. Liekowski spent 2½ years on&#13;
the U.S. Olympic Biathlon team in Alaska.&#13;
He trained 12 months a year and annually&#13;
toured Europe and 'North American in&#13;
international competition. The biathlon&#13;
race is a cross country skiing and rifle&#13;
shooting contest over a 12.5 mile course.&#13;
The winner of this contest is judged by how&#13;
Iast he skied and his ability to hit targets.&#13;
fencing demonstration at J. I. Case~,!&#13;
school. Approximately 2,000 1 ""Ill&#13;
the fencers exhibit their skills a~~ ~ team also put on a demonstration t lht&#13;
Racine Teachers Association. a&#13;
W DE.'T&#13;
YI. G JOB&#13;
t half of University of Wisconsintadi&#13;
·tud n work at a paying job&#13;
·hile attending chool, according to a&#13;
· tudy r ently released by the UW Survey&#13;
R rch Laboratory. Th ur,;ey al ·o noted that two out ot&#13;
every five students on the fadison&#13;
campu · rec i,;e no financial help from&#13;
parents or other relatives.&#13;
DULT STILL LEAR,.&#13;
About one adult in five has indicated that&#13;
future enrollment in a University of&#13;
Wisconsin adult education program is&#13;
possible for them, according to a UW&#13;
Survey Research Laboratory study.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
NAIA District 14 Invitational at UWP&#13;
Friday, November 13, is the date set for&#13;
the NAIA District 14 Invitational crosscountry&#13;
run. Invitations to this meet are&#13;
limited to the 18 NAIA affiliated colleges.&#13;
All nine state universities plus Green Bay,&#13;
Carthage and most other colleges from&#13;
Wisconsin will attend. The favorites of this&#13;
meet will be UWP, Carthage and Platteville.&#13;
&#13;
Following this meet the NAIA national&#13;
championship meet will be at Kansas City.&#13;
Rich Lund, XCC runner, stated, "We want&#13;
very much to win the team title for Mr. Vic&#13;
How The Hockey&#13;
Team Will Win&#13;
By WALTER BREACH&#13;
A brilliant exhibition of sports ~tratqy&#13;
took place last Tuesday t,eni&#13;
Milwaukee's Wilson Hockey Rink was i&#13;
sight of the action as the UWP club took OIi&#13;
Marquette. Interesting sidelines inclucq&#13;
much blowing, shooting and dropping on.&#13;
The whistle, the puck, and backside to lht&#13;
ice were the objects respectively.&#13;
Back to the strategy, the main ideawu&#13;
to make Marquette and anyone watchq&#13;
the game think that the Hockey Club bad&#13;
not yet accepted Dean MacKinoey',&#13;
"instant greatness" idea. The team&#13;
completely fooled all the advance s«w&#13;
watching the game by forcing thernselvs&#13;
not to show any of their natural gract,&#13;
competitiveness, ability and teamwork It&#13;
was difficult for them to allow Marqueut&#13;
to score 11 times and the club slipped and&#13;
accidentally treated themselves to tint&#13;
goals for compensation.&#13;
Soon, however, it will be time for tbt&#13;
club to stop playing Jack the Ripper 1111111&#13;
day off and make its move. Look out )'GI&#13;
Chicago Blackhawks!&#13;
</text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 2, Issue 7, November 9, 1970</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="61610">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61611">
                <text>1970-11-09</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61613">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="61614">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="61615">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61617">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61618">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61619">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61620">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61621">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61622">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
