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                  <text>University of Wisconsin - Parkside Ranger News</text>
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              <text>Weaver Elected University President</text>
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              <text>B ©&#13;
is&#13;
•SH&#13;
2}&#13;
J&#13;
Weaver Elected U niversity P resident&#13;
takf» nwt^lic' ,^.®a v®r&gt; new University of Wisconsin president, will&#13;
nointfvl L«f dutie&#13;
?,&#13;
m Madison by Feb. 1, 1971. Weaver, 55, was apferpno^&#13;
r&gt;oii J* P&#13;
re^ ency ^&#13;
ast Monday afternoon during a press conNmf&#13;
? Bernard Ziegler, president of UW Board of R egents.&#13;
«rAawor n serving as the president of the University of Missouri,&#13;
"Mv ^"J^ented that Madison had been his home until he was 25.&#13;
My heart tells me to return," he said.&#13;
Tm, The new president will receive an annual salary of $45,000. The&#13;
UW president is the state's highest paid official.&#13;
_... a d v i s o r y c o m m i t t e e f o r t h e s e l e c t i o n o f a p e r s o n t o f i l l t h e&#13;
posmon vacated by Fred W. Harrington, who resigned Oct. 1, had&#13;
omitted 195 possible candidates to the Board of Regnets. Seventeen&#13;
names were then given to a special regent's committee which interviewed&#13;
candidates.&#13;
Campus unrest was a subject of the interviews. Ziegler said control&#13;
of violence was in mind when choosing Weaver, but went on: "You're&#13;
not getting a hard nosed stereo-typed person." In Missouri, Weaver felt&#13;
great confidence that the university will overcome its problems. I am&#13;
sure that there can be accommodation for both freedom and discipline.&#13;
The heartbeat of this university deserves protection from destructive&#13;
forces within and forces of repression from without."&#13;
John Weaver will be the fifteenth president of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin. He previously earned his bachelor's, master's, and doctor's&#13;
degrees in geography from UW-Madison. He has held administrative&#13;
posts at Kansas State University, the University of Nebraska, the&#13;
University of Iowa, and Ohio State University.&#13;
New University Budget&#13;
Totals $6.2 5Million&#13;
Boost Our Teams&#13;
Plans are under way for the first&#13;
PARKS IDE BOOSTER CLUB.&#13;
Wednesday, Nov. 11, is the first meeting.&#13;
It will be held in Room 101 — Greenquist at&#13;
4 p.m. All interested students are invited to&#13;
attend.&#13;
Co-ed is the word, since both male and&#13;
female students are eligible for membership.&#13;
&#13;
Besides helping with Sportsfest (Dec. 4-&#13;
5), Booster Club will also help to select a&#13;
fight song, an alma mater, and a school&#13;
mascot. Other activities would include&#13;
organizing a "bleacher bum" section for&#13;
basketball games and sponsoring bus trips&#13;
to some of the road games.&#13;
As a recognized club under Student&#13;
Activities, the Booster Club also will work&#13;
with the cheerleaders and the Rangerettes&#13;
in promoting school spirit and attendance&#13;
at other athletic events. Miss Doreen&#13;
Christjanson is the advisor. For further&#13;
information contact Kathy Mauer&#13;
Parkside's budget figures for the 70-71&#13;
year were recently made available to the&#13;
Newscope staff. Although a complete&#13;
breakdown of the budget is impossible in&#13;
the space allotted here, there are certain&#13;
facets which should be of special interest&#13;
to students.&#13;
The total operating budget of the school&#13;
this year is slightly more than six and a&#13;
quarter million dollars, of which less than&#13;
one-fifth is paid by student tuition. The&#13;
bulk of the remaining four-fifths is paid by&#13;
taxpayers.&#13;
Of perennial interest to students are the&#13;
funds allotted for student activities. From&#13;
the total operating budget, $335,521 are&#13;
funneled back to the students through&#13;
various student programs, services, and&#13;
activities. This fund is supported in part by&#13;
the profits from such things as the vending&#13;
machines and by the sale of tickets to&#13;
student events, and in part by a "student&#13;
segregated fee' which is taken from the&#13;
tuition we pay.&#13;
The student segregated fee is roughly&#13;
equivalent to the student activity fees&#13;
which are paid at other colleges. This fee&#13;
of $39 per semester is included in tuition,&#13;
and is broken down as follows:&#13;
-—$19.25 goes toward funding a permanent&#13;
student union;&#13;
—$4.40 goes to athletics;&#13;
—$9.25 goes for maintenance of the&#13;
shuttle busses;&#13;
—$1.75 is allotted for student health;&#13;
—$2.50 goes to the intramural program;&#13;
—$1.75 goes to the Lecture and Fine Arts&#13;
Program.&#13;
It must be noted that last year after the&#13;
budget was prepared, a group of students&#13;
appointed by Dean Darborn were asked to&#13;
make suggestions concerning the breakdown&#13;
of the student segregated fee. These&#13;
students approved of the budget as it&#13;
stood.&#13;
Awa r d ed GM Gr a nt&#13;
A Racine freshman, Bernard R. Vash, is&#13;
the first University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
student to be awarded a General Motors&#13;
Corporation grant.&#13;
A total of five GM grants were awarded&#13;
UW students for the 1970-71 school year&#13;
including two each at the Madison and&#13;
Milwaukee campuses. Each grant is for&#13;
$600 renewable for four years on the basis&#13;
of academic performance.&#13;
Vash, who ranked in the top ten per cent&#13;
of his class at William Horlick high school,&#13;
is majoring in engineering science in&#13;
Parkside's School of Modern Industry. He&#13;
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Vash&#13;
of 2501 St. Rita's Road.&#13;
Standing room only crowd for Fifth Dimension concert. Review on page three.&#13;
John C. Weaver, the new president of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin, will be "good for&#13;
the university and good for Wisconsin" in&#13;
the opinion of UW-Parkside Chancellor&#13;
Irvin G. Wyllie.&#13;
Wyllie was one of a 16-member&#13;
presidential search and screen committee&#13;
which aided the University Board of&#13;
Regents in choosing the new president.&#13;
"Because of my personal ties to both the&#13;
University of Missouri and the University&#13;
of Wisconsin, I am pleased that John&#13;
Weaver will be Wisconsin's next&#13;
president," Wyllie said. "I taught nine&#13;
years at Missouri, my three children were&#13;
born there, and I still have many friends in&#13;
Columbia (Mo.). The fact that my son&#13;
(Gordon) is enrolled at Wisconsin and my&#13;
daughter (Kay Ann) at Missouri says&#13;
something about our devotion as a family&#13;
to both institutions."&#13;
"My good friends at Columbia tell me&#13;
that John Weaver accomplished a great&#13;
deal there in a very short time," Wyllie&#13;
continued. "His record at several land&#13;
grant universities marks him as a topflight&#13;
professional. As a new campus chancellor,&#13;
I am particularly pleased that he has had&#13;
experience in administering a multicampus&#13;
system such as ours."&#13;
At Missouri, Weaver headed a system&#13;
which included four degree-granting&#13;
campuses at St. Louis, Kansas City, Roll&#13;
and Columbia. At Wisconsin, he takes over&#13;
a system which includes degree-granting&#13;
campuses at Madison, Milwaukee, Green&#13;
Bay and Parkside, as well as the two-year&#13;
Center System and University Extension.&#13;
Each of the six Wisconsin units is headed&#13;
by a chancellor who will report to Weaver.&#13;
Busses Fueled&#13;
With L P Gas&#13;
Intercampus busses fueled with LP gas&#13;
rather than conventional fuel now are in&#13;
service on runs linking the three campuses.&#13;
&#13;
Use of LP gas (liquified petroleum) or&#13;
other non-leaded gases reduces the particulate&#13;
matter in exhaust materials.&#13;
Some research indicates it reduces&#13;
hydrocarbon emissions as well. Use of nonleaded&#13;
gases also makes possible the use&#13;
of catalytic mufflers capable of converting&#13;
exhaust materials into carbon dixide and&#13;
water with fewer combustion deposits&#13;
resulting.&#13;
The busses are fueled from tank trucks&#13;
each day before beginning their runs and&#13;
carry enough liquified petroleum to&#13;
complete their day's schedule.&#13;
The busses have specially equipped&#13;
engines and fuel tanks.&#13;
The bus system of transportation is a&#13;
key concept in the master development&#13;
plan for the new Wood Road campus where&#13;
private vehicle parking is limited to&#13;
perimeter lots linked to various campus&#13;
buildings by the shuttle bus service. The&#13;
limitation of vehicles in the central&#13;
campus is aimed at its preservation as a&#13;
natural area and as a pedestrian area as&#13;
free as possible from the noise and air&#13;
contaminants &#13;
LETTERS to t he e ditors&#13;
To the Editors:&#13;
Upon reading the article in the Oct. 26&#13;
paper about student enrollment, we&#13;
noticed that ten per cent of the male&#13;
students here are veterans. That means&#13;
there are 252 of us waiting for, not&#13;
receiving, veterans benefits. During&#13;
registration, Sept. 16 to 18. our Certificates&#13;
of Eligibility were turned in to the administration&#13;
Not until the end of this&#13;
month (October) did we receive notice&#13;
that they were sent to the V A.&#13;
Although it's too late to do anything&#13;
about the unwarranted delay this year,&#13;
maybe we can awake the administration to&#13;
the fact that we are waiting for. and in&#13;
need of. the money. V.A. officials say that&#13;
it will take at least a month for the checks&#13;
to be sent, from the time they receive the&#13;
paperwork, which means that we 11 m ost&#13;
probably have to wait until December to&#13;
get these G.I. benefits.&#13;
It seems as though the Student Affairs&#13;
Office is uninterested in our monetary&#13;
needs, although we all are assessed from&#13;
five to twenty-five dollars for late tuition&#13;
payment. Since the paperwork is very&#13;
simple and brief to complete, let s hope&#13;
that next year something will be done to&#13;
expedite this process so that this important&#13;
form is sent in much earlier. We&#13;
don't need this delay.&#13;
Hank Mate&#13;
Ted Sternbach&#13;
Disgruntled Vets.&#13;
Dear Editors:&#13;
I with to comment on the speech that&#13;
Doctor MacKinney gave to the faculty. If&#13;
Newscope's Marc Eisen is a reputable&#13;
reporter, as I believe he is, then the&#13;
students of this university should expect&#13;
the teaching quality of th e various Ph.D. s,&#13;
instructors, etc. to plummet from its&#13;
previous heights of e xcellence to a future&#13;
chasm of mediocrity.&#13;
It seems to me that this university is in&#13;
the irreversible process of pushing the&#13;
student into the background in order to&#13;
coddle the non-teacher type Ph.D. who is&#13;
either an ineffectual instructor or one who&#13;
has divorced himself from the very entity&#13;
that produced him, the student-instructor&#13;
relationship.&#13;
One can predict that, in the near future.&#13;
aza&amp;s&amp;si&#13;
"Tteadministration will argue that this is&#13;
oroaress as it will enable the un.vers.ty to&#13;
receive more notoriety via increased&#13;
research and publication Buh wdM*»&#13;
provide a better education for the studenh&#13;
As I feel that the average teaching&#13;
assistant is not qualified t° teach an U y&#13;
dergraduate course, which is what many&#13;
of them are actually doing a&#13;
universities; my answer to this question is&#13;
N] for one, mourn the death of this&#13;
university as an institution of undergraduate&#13;
learning and damn its birth&#13;
as a non-personal factory for selfgratification.&#13;
Thomas W. Yore&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
I would like to applaud you on your&#13;
editorial of October 5, 1970 in the Parkside&#13;
Newscope in which you stated:&#13;
One instance that is particularly&#13;
disturbing is the excessive authority used&#13;
by the coordinators of Student Activities&#13;
on film festival, completely disregarding&#13;
and over-powering a faculty member who&#13;
happened to have made arrangements on&#13;
the same night, same time, and same&#13;
building for his film society.&#13;
When all the student body sees is the&#13;
accomplished fact of two film series at&#13;
Parkside where only one existed before,&#13;
they cannot fully appreciate the underhandedness&#13;
of the administration.&#13;
The facts as stated in the editorial were&#13;
correct. The administration successfully&#13;
upset an already firmly established slate&#13;
of films for the Parkside Film Society.&#13;
I am happy to hear that although the&#13;
Film Society was forced to change their&#13;
night of film-screening for the Student&#13;
Activities' films, their first two films have&#13;
met with considerable success.&#13;
Congratulations and best luck to the Film&#13;
Society.&#13;
Patricia Dudley&#13;
Ex-Co-Chairman&#13;
Parkside Film Society&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
"VARSITY. VARSITY!"&#13;
1 wonder how many of us realize that our&#13;
presence here at Parkside has given each&#13;
of u s an Alma Mater . . . and I had to look&#13;
it up . . . "Alma Mater" means, "The&#13;
institution of learning where one has been&#13;
educated. Latin: Fostering Mother."&#13;
Chills run up and down my spine&#13;
whenever I hear the University of&#13;
Wisconsin band, joined by thousands of&#13;
voices fervently proclaiming, "Hail to&#13;
The, Wis-connn-sin! Wis-connn-sin!"&#13;
I g uess it was the distance from here to&#13;
the Madison Campus which made it&#13;
necessary for me to think hard in order to&#13;
grasp and accept the fact that we are just&#13;
as much a part of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin as are those students who attend&#13;
classes in Bascomb Hall.&#13;
Here we are . . on a campus of rolling&#13;
hills and a couple of buildings. Four&#13;
thousand of us, for the time being, scattered&#13;
on three different sites. And we're&#13;
especially important because we are&#13;
pioneers. We're creating our own environment,&#13;
our own traditions. The sounds&#13;
of bulldozers seep into our lecture rooms.&#13;
We know that great creative forces are at&#13;
work intellectual, technological and&#13;
financial.&#13;
As we walk the path from Greenquist to&#13;
Tallent Halls, what do you see? In later&#13;
years, some of you will see your children&#13;
walk on this campus. Physical facilities&#13;
worth tens of millions of dollars will be&#13;
here then. Your parents paid for (are&#13;
paying for) this installation . . . this institution.&#13;
And your turn will come to help&#13;
foot the bill.&#13;
I'd like to be around when the last&#13;
building has been built on the campus of&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside. But I&#13;
know such tenure is out of t he question. By&#13;
the time the building program has been&#13;
completed I will be lucky if I h ave a seat up&#13;
on a cloud . . . there I will be applauding&#13;
what has been accomplished. And I will&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 6&#13;
November 2, 1970&#13;
bill rolbiecki&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
SvenTaffs&#13;
Carroll Smolinsky&#13;
Mike Gogola&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Potente&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Business Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photography Staff&#13;
Advisor&#13;
IS&#13;
«5&#13;
-So P 5 STAFF&#13;
1^ Terrv Houston, D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
m \ Marc Eisen, Paul Lomartire, Arthur Gruhl, Jim Jams, Walter Breach&#13;
D wi chPd weekly by the students of the University of Wisconsin-&#13;
. a" ipnosha Wisconsin, 53140. Mailing address is Parkside's Newscope&#13;
SS)'washingto RA. Kenosha. Business and editoriai telephone number is a&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
POETRY C O R NE R&#13;
pick up my harp and play my own&#13;
arrangement of "Varsity". So now I will&#13;
make the most of the present and just be&#13;
thankful for the fact that I have had the&#13;
privilege of being here at the beginning.&#13;
And in the meantime there is more&#13;
building going on here than just brick and&#13;
mortar. There are the invisible gems of.&#13;
knowledge garnered by each of us; the&#13;
treasures of friendships made; a college&#13;
newspaper coming to life; the tradition of&#13;
academic integrity being established; and&#13;
the inner satisfaction of k nowing that each&#13;
of u s now has an Alma Mater . . . because&#13;
we are here.&#13;
"Varsity, Varsity!" . . . I'm just a&#13;
sophomore in credits. In years I am a -&#13;
"senior citizen". And in both relationships&#13;
I want to be a credit to you. "Hail to Thee,&#13;
Wisconsin!"&#13;
$3000 So Fa r&#13;
For Kent-2 5&#13;
KENT, OHIO (CPS) — A total of $3 ,000&#13;
has been collected so far for the legal&#13;
defense of the 25 students and faculty&#13;
members indicted by a special Ohio grand&#13;
jury, according to the Kent Stater, the&#13;
student newspaper. $1,000 has already&#13;
been spent on bail money.&#13;
William Kunstler, the lawver who&#13;
defended the Chicago Eight, has offered to&#13;
defend the Kent State 25. Counsel has not&#13;
announced whether the students indicted&#13;
will seek a special federal grand jury&#13;
investigation. Nine of t he 25 still remain to&#13;
be arrested.&#13;
The money, collected during the first&#13;
week following the indictments, was&#13;
funneled through two organizations that&#13;
were immediately set up. They have since&#13;
merged into one fund. The Kent Legal&#13;
Defense Pund&amp;^whichi incorporates the&#13;
THE UNIVERSAL INCENDIARY&#13;
T&gt;m&#13;
with fire raging throughout my being.&#13;
The ashes corrode my soul,&#13;
and it wants out:&#13;
Out of the furnace,&#13;
this conflagration of hate.&#13;
The cooling breeze of friendship sits in the past,&#13;
and somehow I feel it will never return.&#13;
The walls fall down&#13;
and with them&#13;
the strength to quench the flame&#13;
burning the heart from my every fiber.&#13;
Springs and streams are envisioned before me&#13;
but they outreach my grasp&#13;
and I don't care.&#13;
I!&#13;
WANT!&#13;
FLOODS!&#13;
to encompass and overwhelm&#13;
those which ignite me into a bonfire&#13;
which once contained the warmth of&#13;
love,&#13;
but&#13;
now&#13;
finds&#13;
destruction&#13;
its&#13;
only goal.&#13;
Burning, looting, pillaging the citadels of immaturity,&#13;
the brothels of persecution,&#13;
eliminating the entire universe of sick value,&#13;
entrenching snipers within their own snares,&#13;
having the sluts of dependency made impotent&#13;
with such cruel torment with no spark of life&#13;
remaining to instigate their urethral gaze;&#13;
Nothing left to crush me; nothing around to trap me;&#13;
nothing! Nothing! NOTHING!&#13;
. . . save me, my dog, and a bunch of daisies&#13;
with only the sun to give us warmth.&#13;
Peoples Defense Fund created by members&#13;
of the Youth International Party, is&#13;
still receiving donations through P.O. Box&#13;
116, Kent, Ohio, 44240.&#13;
Meanwhile, a whole series of notables&#13;
have released plans to come to Kent, some&#13;
for fund-raising, others for appearances:&#13;
— Judy Collins held a benefit last week&#13;
and raised more than $2,000, which she will&#13;
give to the fund;&#13;
— Jane Fonda, who is involved in GI&#13;
organizing, will appear Nov. 9, sponsored&#13;
by the KSU Veterans Against the War;&#13;
Dr. Benjamin Spock, who is involved&#13;
in campaigns right now, has agreed to&#13;
speak at Kent following the elections;&#13;
Joan Baez and Ira Sandperl from the&#13;
California Institute for the Study of&#13;
Nonviolence will hold workshops on Nov.&#13;
13 to discuss non-violent politics. A concert&#13;
will not be given.&#13;
Thrifty Threads&#13;
For Your BackFar&#13;
Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet!&#13;
MULLEN/5&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA^&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
32 00 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 day s&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Ph on e 65 7-9 74 7&#13;
Nickie's&#13;
Sporfswea'&#13;
1 2 0 2 ;&#13;
5 6 , h S"%-6W&#13;
Keno sha, Wis.&#13;
LATEST FASHI ONS&#13;
FOR&#13;
SKI JACKETS -&#13;
R e 9&#13;
'1 5 0&#13;
Now V"&#13;
Prices to&#13;
pocket Fit Your &#13;
Fifth D imension A Soul Exnerience ByWALTBREACH Thp u,,, a. . »A|#d ICIIIC&#13;
THE&#13;
By WALT BREACH&#13;
Length, width and depth; three&#13;
dimensions. Time-space; four dimensions.&#13;
Sound; five dimensions. Sound-art, sensual&#13;
fantasy, and communication; the 5th&#13;
Dimension.&#13;
Monday night the crowd poured in to fill&#13;
the cracker jack box Case Field House like&#13;
a sardine can. They came to be entertained.&#13;
They waited for jingle music&#13;
like "Up, Up and Away", and "Aquarius".&#13;
They c ame away with the experience of&#13;
"The Declaration of Independence",&#13;
"Come On People", "Papercup", and&#13;
"People Got to be Free".&#13;
And they did come to be entertained. An&#13;
audience waiting for a big name group&#13;
doesn't usually have much appreciation&#13;
for an hour-long presentation of interpretative&#13;
dancing. Byron and Lorraine&#13;
were appreciated. They received applause&#13;
well deserved, more than any warm-up act&#13;
normally would expect.&#13;
The sound was off on the first number.&#13;
The audience didn't hear. They were&#13;
getting what they wanted; the 5th&#13;
Dimension medleying "Spinning Wheel"&#13;
and "Windmills of Your Mind". Marilyn&#13;
MCCQO was loved.&#13;
numhpr^it aIm°&#13;
St dropped on the second&#13;
mirnl ,&#13;
tt_&#13;
was a shallow sound. Then a&#13;
"Come On p&#13;
3Ur1 -&#13;
yr&#13;
° sonS&#13;
s&#13;
-&#13;
endin8 w&gt;th&#13;
thl ?r People&#13;
. was turned loose and&#13;
the audience turned on and got into it. Jim&#13;
ha nH T**-&#13;
g0t the audience up to a little&#13;
traK nf a&#13;
PP1&#13;
"&#13;
8 and Papercu&#13;
p" reached tons of grey matter.&#13;
Showmanship and the stage routine, a&#13;
little humor and a little "soul stew" for the&#13;
black-eyed pea section" the band and&#13;
musicians were introduced. Then the real&#13;
music began.&#13;
Heavy songs communicating the&#13;
feelings of the young, liberal, love and&#13;
brotherhood people. The "Declaration of&#13;
Independence", word for word,&#13;
highlighted, accented and interpreted with&#13;
music. Did the message get across? The&#13;
audience was entranced, spellbound, it&#13;
reached, and reached deep. "People Got&#13;
To Be Free" was the perfect follow-up&#13;
number. The audience missed half of it&#13;
before they woke up, and loved the rest.&#13;
The spirit was moved in many. The last&#13;
number, "Aquarius-Sunshine" launched&#13;
the crowd into final orbit; they stayed and&#13;
sang, hands clapping. The evening's entertainment&#13;
was complete and completed.&#13;
OT&#13;
si&#13;
MUSIC FRI.-SAT&#13;
9 - 12 M I D N I T E&#13;
75C&#13;
COFFEE&#13;
HER&#13;
DE&#13;
HOUSE&#13;
3 2 8 MA I N - R A C I N E&#13;
Use Classifieds&#13;
Jim&#13;
ten&#13;
BARBER STUDIO&#13;
" It's Not How Long You Wear It,&#13;
B u t How You Wear It L o n g "&#13;
Hair Styling - Hair Cutting - Hair Pieces&#13;
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
7509 45TH AVE 694-4603&#13;
Jose Ortega, associate professor of&#13;
Spanish at the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
will present an invited paper on&#13;
"Marks of Identity" in the works of&#13;
Spanish novelist Juan Goytisolo at the&#13;
Midwest Modern Language Association's&#13;
annual meeting Oct. 30 in Milwaukee.&#13;
Ortega came to Parkside this fall from&#13;
Case Western Reserve University where&#13;
he also was an associate professor. He has&#13;
written widely on Spanish literature for&#13;
scholarly publications and received two&#13;
grants supporting his research from the&#13;
American Philosophical Society.&#13;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Dis count&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Fa culty&#13;
(Must Show I.D.)&#13;
CHINA&#13;
Wedgwood - Spode&#13;
Minion - Royal Worcester&#13;
Adams - Bavarian&#13;
Bel leek&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
DIAMOND CONSULTANTS&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
excepted.&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
Guest Conductor&#13;
Harry Lantz, associate professor of&#13;
u&#13;
sic at the University of Wisconsinarkside,&#13;
has been invited to act as guest&#13;
on due tor of the Tennessee All-State&#13;
fenestra at the Tennessee Music&#13;
Association annual convention&#13;
Get. 28 through 30 i n Knoxville. Lantz&#13;
so will serve as a clinician at the convention.&#13;
&#13;
crwf&#13;
tZ' an internationally known cellist,&#13;
sun -&#13;
tor and music educator, was&#13;
Pervisor of instrumental music for the&#13;
theij00 Schools and conductor of&#13;
loin' uston All-City Orchestra before&#13;
tauS the Park&#13;
side faculty. He also has&#13;
g 1 at the university of Houston where&#13;
was chairman of the instrumental&#13;
Iin;&#13;
IC depar&#13;
tment and conductor of the&#13;
versity Symphony.&#13;
ISO* - '7"&#13;
1o^ r &#13;
Sculptures By Jansky&#13;
On Exhibit&#13;
Twelve recent sculptures by Kollin&#13;
Jansky, an assistant professor of art at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, will be&#13;
on display from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Nov. 9&#13;
through 13 in the Greenquist Hall Concourse&#13;
at Parkside's Wood Road Campus.&#13;
The sculptures, comprised of polyester&#13;
impregnated fiberglass castings, illustrate&#13;
Jansky's increasing attention of&#13;
pigmenting of resin finishes in his&#13;
sculptures.&#13;
Jansky recently has been experimenting&#13;
with methods of incorporating pigments&#13;
directly into the gel coat of the resin, in&#13;
some cases using methods developed by&#13;
industry and in others seeking out new&#13;
processes which may possibly have industrial&#13;
as well as artistic applications.&#13;
In future work. Jansky plans research&#13;
aimed at metalizing the surfaces of his&#13;
work.&#13;
The pieces in the current show range in&#13;
size from an 18-inch rounded cube to a&#13;
massive work more than seven feet high.&#13;
Much of the work in the show is part of a&#13;
series based on interconnections of three&#13;
basic modules which take the shapes of&#13;
circles and ellipses. In some cases the&#13;
modules suggest anatomical references to&#13;
the human form and in other cases suggest&#13;
purely mechanical forms, depending on&#13;
the manner in which they are connected.&#13;
Jansky, who received his undergraduate&#13;
and graduate degrees in art from UWMadison,&#13;
has won three Milwaukee&#13;
Journal purchase awards for the&#13;
Wisconsin Union Collection and three cash&#13;
awards from the Madison Art Association.&#13;
One of his major sculptures was recently&#13;
purchased for the permanent collection at&#13;
UW-Green Bay.&#13;
During the past year, he has had oneman&#13;
shows at UW-Green Bay and its&#13;
Manitowoc Campus and has participated&#13;
in the Young Faculty Artists Exhibit at the&#13;
Eighth Avenue Gallery.&#13;
Gregory Jomes Group&#13;
Here Saturday&#13;
This coming Saturday night. Nov. 7. will&#13;
mark the first in a series of weekend&#13;
nightclubs and the coffee houses to be&#13;
presented in the new student activities&#13;
building during the coming year. Live&#13;
entertainment will be featured from 9 p.m.&#13;
to 1 a m.&#13;
The building will be set up in typical&#13;
nightclub-coffeehouse manner with small&#13;
tables, checkered tableclothes and candlelight.&#13;
In addition to the refreshments&#13;
normally available in the building, such&#13;
things as cappuccino, coffee borgia,&#13;
chocolaccino, etc., will be added to the&#13;
menu for the evening&#13;
The feature act for this opening weekend&#13;
will be one of Wisconsin's top nightclub&#13;
attractions. "The Gregory James Group".&#13;
Originally scheduled to appear at&#13;
Parkside Oct. 2, the group was forced to&#13;
cancel at the last minute due to a serious&#13;
health problem in one of the member's&#13;
families. This seven-member group of two&#13;
girls and five men aims its performance at&#13;
college aged and young adult audiences,&#13;
SAB, Carthage College, Kenosha, presents in concert: Ticketj ^&#13;
MASON PROFFIT&#13;
AND _&#13;
THE NEIGHBORHOOD&#13;
Playing hit song, "BIG YELLOW TAXI"&#13;
Saturday, November 7th, 8:00 P.M. — CARTHAGE FIELDHOllSE&#13;
Tickets available: Cook-Gere Co., 209 6th, Racine&#13;
College Center Office, Carthage College, Kenosha&#13;
and, at the door&#13;
l/ALEO'S PIZZA „&#13;
KITCHEN ;&#13;
ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE B OMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.m. pREE DEL1VERY 4;00 PM T0 ]2 oq ^&#13;
appearing in both clubs and on college&#13;
campuses throughout the state. Recent&#13;
engagements include new student week&#13;
programs at WSU-Whitewater&#13;
Homecoming, along with performances at&#13;
Summerfest and an extended engagement&#13;
at Milwaukee s "Someplace Else". Their&#13;
program includes hit numbers from many&#13;
top recording groups including The Fifth&#13;
R™T,!°Vril00d&#13;
' Sweat and Tears&#13;
I Bealles&#13;
' The Letterraen' Chicago and many others.&#13;
Admission, covercharge will be Si &lt;yi&#13;
w,.h Parkside and Wisconsin state D&#13;
and will be good for all four shows. ' '&#13;
Canton. N.Y. _ (IP) .&#13;
notTea? tt&#13;
b I!"&#13;
1 n&#13;
°&#13;
W in " E&#13;
solving the pr^lemf „fre&#13;
,e&#13;
SUCh&#13;
CeSsfully&#13;
learning, the president of St I a&#13;
"&#13;
d&#13;
University declared here. Lawren&#13;
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president "emphasized thaT'7 '&#13;
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11:00-1:30&#13;
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French pries or Onion Rings&#13;
or Potat o Salad&#13;
and&#13;
IfjjW or Bottle or G|ass „f Beer ^' ^i.5 or Bee r n.&#13;
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on ay thru Friday 7 p.m. to&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20&lt;&#13;
In-1 i. Avai lable For Parties&#13;
l n 9 Frater nity and Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-I2&#13;
^ BRAT-STOP&#13;
^Northwest Corner 1-94 and Highwa y 50 &#13;
THORN&#13;
By Ken Konkoi&#13;
nr MacKinney has instituted Friday&#13;
fternoon coffee hours in the Kenosha&#13;
31 hers lounge for faculty members in his&#13;
ULrtment. I asked Dr. MacKinney if&#13;
t iden t representatives would be allowed&#13;
f attend. Through a third party I learned&#13;
hat the answer to that was no. However,&#13;
® MacKinney said sometime in the&#13;
^ ' mur ho nnnnrfi 1 n 1 f&lt;"/&gt;«&#13;
^dministrative discussion. I hope it won't&#13;
Jg too far in the future and open to the&#13;
public and press.&#13;
v + + +&#13;
Sometime in December a list will come&#13;
out informing certain teachers that they&#13;
are not going to be retained. Through&#13;
administrative censorship, that list will&#13;
not be m ade public. However, I hope individual&#13;
faculty members will let their&#13;
individual situations be made known. If we&#13;
are victims of administrative supression,&#13;
then students and faculty must stick&#13;
together.&#13;
My faith in my fellow student has been&#13;
partially restored. Last week I actually&#13;
received a letter from someone in regard&#13;
to this column. The following is an explanation&#13;
of my purposes — and also my&#13;
answer to that letter.&#13;
The reason my style is somewhat&#13;
arrogant is that I am in true life more than&#13;
somewhat arrogant — just ask my editors.&#13;
This arrogance has resulted from nearly&#13;
22 years of human experience in which I&#13;
have learned to trust my own judgement —&#13;
that quite a bit more often than not, such&#13;
judgement has proved superior to the&#13;
superior judgement of others (or so they&#13;
thought that their judgement was so). If a&#13;
rephrasal will help some of the readers to&#13;
better understand, I will repeat my&#13;
position.&#13;
The purpose of an academic institution&#13;
is to teach, NOT to provide a secure&#13;
resting place for doting faculty and administrators&#13;
in their old age. Anything&#13;
which interferes with the process of&#13;
competent teaching should be abolished. If&#13;
this includes firing administrators who&#13;
hold more weight on research than&#13;
teaching — so be it. If this should include&#13;
firing of incompetent instructors, tenured&#13;
or not, so be it. If this should include&#13;
abolishing some administrator's pet&#13;
program in order to retain competent&#13;
teachers — so be it, at the same time&#13;
getting rid of the program and and administrator&#13;
if necessary. Anything,&#13;
ANYTHING, whether it be man, program,&#13;
or policy which interferes with a person&#13;
getting the best education possible, should&#13;
be done a way with.&#13;
Teaching: the act, practice or profession&#13;
of teach ing.&#13;
Teach: 1. show, guide, direct 2. to cause&#13;
to know a subject 4. to impart the&#13;
knowledge of.&#13;
Research: 2. a studious inquiry or experimentation;&#13;
esp.: critical and&#13;
exhaustive investigation or experimentation&#13;
having for its aim the&#13;
discovery of new facts and their correct&#13;
interpretation, the revision of accepted&#13;
conclusions, theories, or laws in the light of&#13;
newly discovered facts, or the practical&#13;
applications of such new or revised conclusions,&#13;
theories, or laws. (2): a&#13;
presentation (as an article or book) incorporating&#13;
the findings of a particular&#13;
research.&#13;
Effective: capable of bringing about an&#13;
effect, productive of results.&#13;
Teacher: one who teaches.&#13;
Above excerpts from "Webster's Third&#13;
New International Dictionary",&#13;
Unabridged.&#13;
I hope you are pleased that I have&#13;
escaped generalities and gotten down to&#13;
specifics, such as accusing individuals of&#13;
•mcompetence. Could a non-arrogant&#13;
there may be opportunities for&#13;
%C//&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NORTH &amp;.SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
KENOSHA —&#13;
FAMOUS FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
RI S ANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
_ STEAKS&#13;
Person make such charges?&#13;
taUWsvsS ? g"' a+neW president m&#13;
me had 1 personally wish the old&#13;
one naa stayed. From the things I hear&#13;
wto saiftelk r&#13;
berS&#13;
°&#13;
f the Adrainis«-ation&#13;
no still talk to me, our new president was tt"rxr:&#13;
,h™&#13;
BWSWFCSRAF&#13;
Inn d&#13;
m»LanS 55 P6r 0601 of the d^ftees&#13;
^°&#13;
men and alim°ny will be&#13;
abolished. Not so many of o ur boys will be&#13;
d&#13;
2 » Vi&#13;
etnam - 55 per cent of them&#13;
would be women. We would be the third&#13;
country in the world to establish such&#13;
equality, right after Communist Russia&#13;
and Israel.&#13;
+ H- +&#13;
Those veterans who are waiting for their&#13;
first checks due them from the GI bill will&#13;
have to wait a month longer than the usual&#13;
long time because the Office of Student&#13;
Records held up the forms for four weeks&#13;
rather than go through the trouble of&#13;
initialing and sending them out on the day&#13;
they were submitted. However, through&#13;
the efforts of the Financial Aids Department,&#13;
short term loans have been awarded&#13;
to some Vets who couldn't wait for Student&#13;
Records to get off their duffs. For these&#13;
actions Financial Aids getsfan A plus and&#13;
Student Records gets an F.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
It has come to my attention that the&#13;
Administration is not responsible for the&#13;
hiring of teachers, a special faculty&#13;
committee does that, a committee whose&#13;
members' names are not allowed to be&#13;
made public knowledge through administrative&#13;
censorship. While the Administration&#13;
may not choose those to be&#13;
hired, they certainly decide who is to be&#13;
retained and they set the false standards&#13;
for hiring in the first place.&#13;
A poll was conducted this past week&#13;
among some 95 students at this school, the&#13;
first 95 I spoke to on the bus and in the&#13;
lounge. Thirty-three students voted to fire&#13;
certain of our administrators immediately,&#13;
ten voted for their retention,&#13;
and 52 voted to give them another chance&#13;
or were undecided. Three others also voted&#13;
to burn down Tallent Hall.&#13;
Film Presentation&#13;
The Parkside Film Society will present&#13;
its third film, "The Cabinet of Dr.&#13;
Caligari", on Nov. 4 at 8 p.m. in Room 103&#13;
at Greenquist Hall. The second part of the&#13;
Flash Gordon series also will be shown.&#13;
"The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari" is an early&#13;
German expressionist film (1919) which&#13;
seeks to depict the inner emotions an artist&#13;
has toward objects and events. Directed&#13;
by Robert Wine, it uses canvas with&#13;
pointed shapes as background for the film.&#13;
It is one of the many FREE thrillers to be&#13;
presented this year thanks to the charity of&#13;
the Film Society.&#13;
Win Golf Honors&#13;
Steve Stephens, Walt Shirer, Dan&#13;
Leissner and Lofton Harris, Jr., came&#13;
away with top honors at the recent UWP&#13;
Snowflake Open golf tournament.&#13;
Stephens and Shirer took the top two&#13;
places in the faculty-staff division.&#13;
Stephens, UWP golf and basketball coach,&#13;
fired an 83, while Shirer, Parkside news&#13;
service coordinator, was three strokes&#13;
back at 86. (Shirer is seeking to have&#13;
Stephens disqualified on the ground that as&#13;
golf coach he is a professional.)&#13;
Leissner paced the students with a oneover&#13;
par 72 on the Petrifying Springs&#13;
course which was the tournament site.&#13;
Harris was next with a 79.&#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.-l p.m.&#13;
SAT. 6 a .m.-2 p.m.&#13;
21 Variety&#13;
of Pancakes&#13;
L U N C H - D I N N E RS.&#13;
Draft L aw&#13;
Quirk Aids&#13;
In Deferment&#13;
WASHINGTON (CPS) — A ny man who&#13;
is now deferred, and who would be in the&#13;
lottery selection pool for induction if he&#13;
were not deferred, now has a method to&#13;
take advantage of his high lottery number&#13;
and use it to escape the draft now.&#13;
Under an advisory memorandum sent&#13;
by National Selective Service Director&#13;
Curtis Tarr to all local draft boards&#13;
recently, such men may voluntarily&#13;
relinquish their deferments and enter the&#13;
1-A pool. Prior to this time, this matter had&#13;
been open to debate, and draft boards were&#13;
supposed to maintain all registrants in&#13;
their deferments as long as they continued&#13;
to qualify for them.&#13;
System spokesmen are quite confident&#13;
that no registrant with a lottery number&#13;
higher than 195 will be called this year,&#13;
unless there is a declaration of war or a&#13;
national emergency which requires&#13;
massive mobilization. At the end of the&#13;
year, those men whose numbers have not&#13;
been reached by their local boards and&#13;
who are classified 1-A, 1-A-O or 1-0 are&#13;
moved to a second priority pool. Men have&#13;
not been called from this second priority&#13;
pool or its equivalent under the old system&#13;
since the Korean War.&#13;
Registrants with high numbers who wish&#13;
to take advantage of this opportunity to&#13;
take the draft off their backs may write a&#13;
brief letter to their draft board asking to be&#13;
reclassified 1-A immediately. Any&#13;
registrant who does so is taking a slight&#13;
chance that the system might suddenly&#13;
decide that it needs many more men than&#13;
it is presently planning to take, and should&#13;
think carefully about this possibility,&#13;
however slight. It does appear, from all&#13;
indications presently available, that the&#13;
ceiling of 195 will be valid.&#13;
This rule, of course, only effects men&#13;
who turned 19 or older during calendar&#13;
year 1969. Those turning 19 this year were&#13;
not in the first priority pool and therefore&#13;
will be placed in it on January 1, 1971.&#13;
Therefore, this escape route is&#13;
dangerously uncertain for men not yet in&#13;
this year's pool who are under 20 years old.&#13;
Next year's lottery ceiling number could&#13;
be any number at all, and no one can make&#13;
any predictions about it.&#13;
Women Want Out&#13;
(CPS) — Women want out of the home,&#13;
according to a survey conducted in&#13;
February by Gilbert Youth Research, a&#13;
division of Gilbert Marketing Group.&#13;
Surveying thousands of young women&#13;
between the ages of 14 and 25, the opinionresearch&#13;
organization found that fewer&#13;
than one per cent of the college women&#13;
polled selected "house-wife-homemaker"&#13;
as their main career choice. Only four per&#13;
cent of all young women chose it.-&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU T HURS.&#13;
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FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24&lt;&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55&lt;&#13;
WASHINGTON (CPS) - Total&#13;
American deaths from the Indochinese&#13;
War have climbed to 52,480, according to&#13;
the most recent death count from the U.S.&#13;
Department of Defense. This figure includes&#13;
43,821 deaths "resulting from action&#13;
from hostile forces", and 8,659 from "other&#13;
causes", which include aircraft accidents&#13;
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Looking Up, Down, And Around&#13;
the Academic Totem Pole&#13;
• • • ^ „,hn vou ar&#13;
By ARTHUR GRUHL&#13;
The October 19th issue of NEWSCOPE&#13;
contained two very informative and&#13;
thought-provoking articles. The front page&#13;
feature was headed "Publish of Perish&#13;
and a related article was "Faculty&#13;
Respnds to Speech." Both were written by&#13;
Marc Eisen. He did a fine job of reporting.&#13;
I don't see how anyone can be fully informed&#13;
about what is going on at Parkside&#13;
without reading NEWSCOPE regularly.&#13;
Each new issue is better than the one&#13;
before.&#13;
I was impressed by Dean MacKinney s&#13;
straight-from-the-shoulder remarks. You&#13;
know where he stands. 1 was also interested&#13;
in the comments made by&#13;
members of the faculty .... thoughtful,&#13;
cautious and, in some cases, apprehensive.&#13;
Those nearest the throne gave&#13;
the loudest applause. Those in the gallery&#13;
didn't have much to say ... . or want to&#13;
be quoted.&#13;
Reading the articles by Marc Eisen&#13;
made me do some thinking, too. I did so&#13;
with the perspective of almost fifty years&#13;
of association with college-level people.&#13;
These thoughts I will now share with you.&#13;
F i r s t . . . . I begin with the premise that&#13;
the people who are n i the upper eschelon of&#13;
Parkside are very intelligent, resourceful&#13;
and honorable human beings. They were&#13;
hired to do their respective jobs through a&#13;
competitive screening process. Each must&#13;
have a lot on the ball.&#13;
Secondly, I am sure that our administrators&#13;
and Deans are united in a&#13;
dedication to make Parkside a great&#13;
university. There are many areas for&#13;
greatness and the administrators are the&#13;
ones who will determine the priorities.&#13;
However, the things I consider "great"&#13;
cannot be built in a day. Therefore, I didn't&#13;
buy the "instant greatness' propounded by&#13;
Dean MacKinney. A Charles Lindbergh or&#13;
a Niel Armstrong might become instantly&#13;
great historically, but when it comes to&#13;
institutions, "greatness" takes time. And,&#13;
I sadly recall that the image of greatness&#13;
of an institution can be shattered in an&#13;
instant by the violent and evil act of an&#13;
individual. Then the long and slow process&#13;
of building a new greatness must begin all&#13;
over again.&#13;
I have never stood in awe of people with&#13;
c o l l e g e d e g r e e s . R e s p e c t, of c o u r s e . . . .&#13;
plus a little envy, maybe. And I've seen a&#13;
doctor's degree spoifsome people. I recall&#13;
a fellow who, after he got his PhD became&#13;
a pain in the neck to his friends. One of the&#13;
idiosyncracies he acquired with the degree&#13;
was that he would remind his friends that&#13;
he was now to always be called "Doctor"&#13;
. . . . after we had been calling him "Bill"&#13;
for thirty years. We compromised and&#13;
called him "William". Some of us thought&#13;
that his wife deserved the degree more&#13;
than he did.&#13;
Last June I was at the 45th reunion of the&#13;
Class of '25 at Lawrence College. I was&#13;
with them only one year but they still let&#13;
me tag along. At our table of eight there&#13;
were five PhDs . . . retired school&#13;
superintendents, a couple of retired&#13;
college professors . . . fine, successful&#13;
people.&#13;
I told them that I was planning on&#13;
returning to college .... that I wanted a&#13;
degree.... that it was a goal I hadn't yet&#13;
made and maybe there was still time. At&#13;
least I was going to try. I got an unexpected-type&#13;
of reply from across the table.&#13;
"Arthur", said my classmate of 1921,&#13;
"Your die has been cast and it turned out&#13;
to be a good one. At your age and with your&#13;
background you need a degree like a hole&#13;
in the head. A Degree", he continued, "Is&#13;
like the tail on a pig. It doesn't make the&#13;
pork taste any better, it just tickles the&#13;
ham." I was a little shocked at his&#13;
irreverance. He had a PhD for over forty&#13;
years. And through all of those years, I had&#13;
wanted one.&#13;
Now let me tell you some things that I&#13;
know about people who have earned "a&#13;
doctorate". Believe, me — they have&#13;
traveled a long road since leaving high&#13;
school. They have spent years of time,&#13;
money and effort to gain a goal. Many&#13;
times it called for the combined effort of a&#13;
family.&#13;
Getting a doctorate must give the&#13;
achievers the feeling that at last they are&#13;
in a major league. They quickly find out&#13;
that staying there is something else again.&#13;
Their recently acquired teaching position&#13;
also has a built-in probationary period of&#13;
indeterminate length which hangs over the&#13;
head like Damocles' sword. It's a flexible&#13;
arrangement,&#13;
deP^&#13;
d&#13;
^°considerationspast&#13;
experience and ?&#13;
ns&#13;
stalldable.&#13;
the same thing. The new teacher&#13;
watched by his peers . . • • _ . j g in&#13;
peers. He might need a lot of coaenihg^,&#13;
rr^ofd—:£*. *&#13;
teach, gels sometWng pubhs ed and&#13;
avoids making waves, he (or^she)&#13;
eventually gf™*b security,TWs is&#13;
all a tried and proved process. BuUt mu&#13;
be hard on the probationers and. I ve been&#13;
told, the pay is something less than that&#13;
d Teacherseare really quitehumanwhen&#13;
you get to talk with them. There was one&#13;
for example, who admitted that it wasso&#13;
of a relief to give grades instead of being&#13;
on the receiving end as was the cas&#13;
many years. Listen . . . . we are all&#13;
"graded" every hour of the day . . • • a&#13;
long as we live. When you meet a person&#13;
you are appraising that person .... ana&#13;
visa versa. . , T&#13;
I grade my teachers. I really do. And&#13;
do so in a way that it counts. If I think a&#13;
teacher has done a superior job in a course&#13;
I've taken, I write a letter to the Gnancellor&#13;
and tell him about it. I know that&#13;
that note of mine changes hands a couple&#13;
of times and in a few days I receive an&#13;
acknowledgement thanking me for having&#13;
taken the time to write.&#13;
And, if I feel that I've had a course that&#13;
was something of a bore .... or one in&#13;
which I didn't learn much (for nothing is&#13;
taught unless something is learned) then,&#13;
instead of writing a letter, I wait until the&#13;
course is over and in a quiet and nice way&#13;
tell the instructor how I feel. The last time&#13;
I did this I got a "C" in the subject. I had&#13;
given the professor a "B". I don't wait to&#13;
get my grade first. I know within a month&#13;
after starting a course if I'm on a slow&#13;
freight or in for an exciting ride.&#13;
At the top of the academic totem pole are&#13;
the top-flight, big-campus administrators.&#13;
They are an elite corps who know their&#13;
business and would like to go about doing it&#13;
without having to take the time out to&#13;
listen to the advice on how to run a&#13;
university from people who have not yet&#13;
had the experience of running a Cub Pack.&#13;
Yet these men do listen because they know&#13;
that it s i the way of today. And, I think that&#13;
they are really sorry when they find it&#13;
necessary to say "No" to what someone&#13;
thought was a good idea.&#13;
Incidentally, I had a friend once who was&#13;
really a Square .... an M.D. He had the&#13;
idea that if God wanted kids to tell their&#13;
parents how to run things, he would have&#13;
made them first .... which, I thought,&#13;
was a p retty wild idea, coming as it did&#13;
from an obstetrician.&#13;
"Publish or Perish?"&#13;
"Publish or Perish" brings back theecho,&#13;
"To be or not to be". It sounds like a&#13;
hard-nosed manifesto. Nevertheless, it is&#13;
the best way scholars have found to date&#13;
by which to measure the continual intellectual&#13;
growth of a person with a doctor's&#13;
degree, who, if let alone, could sit up&#13;
there under the protection of tenure and&#13;
stagnate. Maybe the need of a creative&#13;
effort worthy of publication will be onerous&#13;
to some .... but it also serves as&#13;
stagnation insurance. If you know of a&#13;
better way to motivate and evaluate the&#13;
academic development of a PhD, let Dean&#13;
MacKinney know about it.&#13;
Parenthetically, it is probably reasonable&#13;
to assume that those who prescribe&#13;
the publish or perish program are practicing&#13;
what they preach. They must be&#13;
very busy people.&#13;
After a recent class I stopped a minute to&#13;
thank the instructor for a very interesting&#13;
lecture. I had a copy of NEWSCOPE in my&#13;
hand .... For the want of something&#13;
better to say, I asked the instructor,&#13;
"Where are you on the academic totem&#13;
pole?" His reply: "At the very bottom.&#13;
The research I'm doing for my dissertation&#13;
is found mostly in Russian language&#13;
nprin^ifolc Tt'o r.1n&gt;.. . .. &gt; „&#13;
. a man who&#13;
headofa terrificiteacM • become a tophas&#13;
everything ^ ... except a&#13;
flight man in nis&#13;
doctor's de&#13;
.^fD graph I mentioned the&#13;
In an earlier parag V the top adfact&#13;
that I *&#13;
as&#13;
n(&#13;
ce&#13;
^s;Se are highly&#13;
ministrators of J&#13;
a intelligent&#13;
competent, ^°f.&#13;
ce hopeful that some&#13;
people. Theretore am nop^ wj„ be&#13;
sort of a sabatica (his man t0&#13;
made to make it possi ^ work for hia&#13;
accelerate and co P d, several&#13;
PhD. There a« tmdou^ y&#13;
other junior facui y Jd have similar*&#13;
boat. They, &gt; MacKinney referred&#13;
consideration. h "knowledge&#13;
t0&#13;
^&#13;
P3&#13;
t&#13;
r v" Well industry mows how to&#13;
industry - t^p 'training of its junior&#13;
executives and Dr MacKinney fme&#13;
^ufsome&#13;
bof hfs°know.how to work in this&#13;
are3&#13;
' "Ring of the Hill" .&#13;
TMspubUshorperish^usmessremmds&#13;
me of a gamew&lt;spy ^ ^ m y , T h e&#13;
kids. We called Qf §ome vantage&#13;
sisssss&#13;
p Kibe. Someone always wanted to&#13;
be had to be m&#13;
PhDs are good at Playing 5&#13;
argeHill".&#13;
They should be ng °f the&#13;
smarter than most people "in f S'r*&#13;
game is played in more&#13;
sophisticated ways in every Sftoi , K&#13;
.... from labor unions m °^r&#13;
faculties A social organization&#13;
Co%&#13;
pyramid (I ve been calling it a tot ls a&#13;
of power, status, respect m Pole)&#13;
sometimes, resentment. That's tU ^&#13;
life is.&#13;
he Way&#13;
In the business world they piav th&#13;
g a m e u n d e r a d i f f e r e n t n a m e . i t &gt; ^&#13;
"Produce or Else". Instead of nuhv^®"1&#13;
the young executive had better be t ^&#13;
civic affairs, join a country club be ^&#13;
in a convention program, be'sp '&#13;
Ve&#13;
heard in a TV panel discussion aVnd&#13;
name had better appear in a new his&#13;
item once in a while. He does thoS^&#13;
. . . . "Or else". Seth%&#13;
The writer is a real estate broker&#13;
Realtor. I'm still working mv wav S "&#13;
a&#13;
college. I'm a "loner" . . ^Hh&#13;
office. I'm as close as a person conk?&#13;
311&#13;
being one's own boss. ^ lo&#13;
Yet, I too, am involved in this pern*&#13;
king of the hill game only in my bl£&#13;
Ual&#13;
we call it "Sell or Starve". Maintaining ?&#13;
position at or near the top of the hir&#13;
subject to the pushing and puii}ng !&#13;
1 ls&#13;
conscience, to the use of my knowleri&#13;
about real estate, to the activities of&#13;
competitors and to the whims and ripe?&#13;
of my clients.&#13;
j ... iawgu&lt;&#13;
periodicals. It's slow-going and none of my&#13;
work has been published. As things stand&#13;
now there is considerable doubt of my&#13;
being here next year' .&#13;
That reply really jolted me. He was the&#13;
p e r s o n to w h om I d gh ai v e n an " A "&#13;
was g&#13;
en I w;&#13;
major. I saw that old sword of&#13;
Do Wall Street&#13;
Tycoons need&#13;
the Newscope?&#13;
NO!&#13;
Do Nuns need&#13;
the Newscope?&#13;
NO!&#13;
"&#13;
U6"«'au n earlier&#13;
this year. I was going to ask him to be mv&#13;
Advisor when I was a little farther along&#13;
my major. I - saw that niH c,—*&#13;
Damocles suspended by a hair over the&#13;
Do You need the&#13;
Newscope?&#13;
of COUMB you&#13;
do, to find out what'&#13;
happening around&#13;
our Campus!! Because&#13;
we "tell it as it i s." &#13;
\\&#13;
\&#13;
I&#13;
f&#13;
I&#13;
G r e g o r y J ame s&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
SHORTS&#13;
Rangers Defeated&#13;
Holy Redeemer&#13;
The Ranger soccer team defeated the&#13;
Holy Redemer College in a scrimmage last&#13;
Wednesday, 8-1.&#13;
In the first quarter Kari Liekowski&#13;
scored the first goal with 19:40 left to play&#13;
in the quarter. Kiefer scored on a long shot&#13;
in the middle. In the second quarter Joe&#13;
Orr boasted the only goal. The Ranger&#13;
offense went into action in the last quarter,&#13;
started off by Wolf-Dieter-Kiefer, with a&#13;
goal with 9:30 remaining. Kiefer led the&#13;
attack. Then Stan Markavic punched one&#13;
in with 4:45 to go. Dieter then trounced&#13;
another goal at 2:50 left and Joe Orr hit&#13;
with .45 seconds remaining. To follow up,&#13;
the fourth quarter out burst Dale Nickle hit&#13;
the last goal with 2 seconds to go. HR&#13;
scored their only goal in the third quarter.&#13;
The field conditions were very slippery&#13;
and the-weather cold.&#13;
JUDO and KARATE clubs have already&#13;
met and are in full swing. If you missed the&#13;
first meeting, the Judo Club will meet&#13;
every Thursday night at 7:30 till 9:30 p.m.&#13;
There are 11 members in the club so far.&#13;
Bob Clark is the president. The Karate&#13;
Club meets on Thursday morning from 8-&#13;
10 a.m. Mr. Byano Suh is the instructor..&#13;
+ + +&#13;
BOWLING in Racine is at J &amp; W Lanes. So&#13;
far the Racine Campus has six teams;&#13;
coach Dick Frecka is in charge. There is&#13;
still time for more bowlers to join.&#13;
+ 4-4 -&#13;
The SHOOTING CLUB, one of Parkside's&#13;
newest clubs, is being organized by Dave&#13;
Dworak. Trap, pistol and high power rifles&#13;
will be used at the local ranges. We hope&#13;
enough interest will be shown to form a&#13;
Parkside league. All interested students,&#13;
faculty and staff should contact the Office&#13;
of Athletics at Wood Road.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
EQUESTRIAN CLUB is being formed.&#13;
Any interest shown in horses or riding will&#13;
make you eligible for this new club. For&#13;
more information see Vic Godfrey at the&#13;
Athletic office or Linda Welsh.&#13;
Ames, Iowa-(I.P.) — "Commitments for&#13;
the '70s: A Livable Environment" will be&#13;
the theme of the year for the current 1970-&#13;
71 academic year at Iowa State University.&#13;
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A typical touch football game at Parkside - or "Kill the&#13;
guy with the ball!"&#13;
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PHONE 658-3551&#13;
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relaxed, f riendly a tmosphere&#13;
Hope t o see y ou ... soon'&#13;
MARGURITTE'S&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
Coming . .THIS SAT., NOV. 7TH&#13;
"WISCONSIN'S MOST POPULAR AND&#13;
EXCITING COLLEGE NIGHTCLUB&#13;
ATTRACTION&#13;
Hoc key Club Makes Debut&#13;
^oT^eZfnTt T °r&#13;
s its first&#13;
Marquette UniveSSr Th?* rS&#13;
°&#13;
f&#13;
a fairlv strnna tl. • he Rangers boast&#13;
The Rangers will h" i" P&#13;
ract,ce sessions.&#13;
win angers will be hoping for their first&#13;
sklte^nL31&#13;
^&#13;
1&#13;
"&#13;
686&#13;
"&#13;
1 has more than 20&#13;
A&#13;
So far this season, the team members&#13;
have shown much enthusiasm. The&#13;
president of the club, Bill Westerlund, has&#13;
expressed great hopes for the future of the&#13;
club. Brian Murray, club advisor, has&#13;
contributed much through encouragement&#13;
of the members.&#13;
To be a successful team, though, we&#13;
need support from the students. You can&#13;
help by coming to the games. The match&#13;
with Marquette will be on Tuesday, Nov. 3,&#13;
at 10 p.m. Wilson Park in Milwaukee&#13;
Rangers Took Carthage&#13;
In S crimmage&#13;
rtiUf 5&#13;
a&#13;
,?&#13;
ger soccer team took on Carthage&#13;
College Wednesday, Oct. 21 in a&#13;
scrimmage game here. Parkside&#13;
wholloped Carthage 14-1.&#13;
Chris Andacht scored the first Ranger&#13;
goal with 17 minutes gone in the first&#13;
TTWD U i&#13;
6 NiCkel then 3dded&#13;
°" t0 P"t&#13;
UWP ahead 2-0 at the end of the first&#13;
quarter.&#13;
Nickels then started off the second&#13;
quarter with a goal from the center with 21&#13;
minutes left to play. Seven goals were&#13;
scored in the second quarter by Parkside.&#13;
Five in the third quarter and one in the&#13;
fourth quarter were scored by UWP.&#13;
Carthage made its only goal in the latter&#13;
part of the fourth quarter. John Powell of&#13;
Carthage made the shot.&#13;
Dale Nickel and Wolf-Dieken each had&#13;
four goals while Chris Andacht and Kari&#13;
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Adm. $1.50 with Parkside &amp; Wisconsin ID. &#13;
Marquette&#13;
4 - Tim Drewek&#13;
9 - Bruce Jankowski&#13;
10-JimSalasek&#13;
12-Jim Walsh&#13;
13 - Tom Poulson&#13;
Total Team Points&#13;
Three Parkside coeds have been making news in ^ Jeft) Sandy Houston,&#13;
identified with males - long distance running. They a , dvZimmerman,WestAllis,&#13;
Kenosha, sophomore; Mary Libal, Green Bay, junior ai y rg Jn the" cougar&#13;
freshman. Miss Zimmerman recently placed second am g^ UniversityCollegiate&#13;
Cross Country Championship for women at 5ehind the winner.&#13;
Edwardsville. She was timed in 13:21 for the two mile run, 3 ^ i4th jn&#13;
Miss Houston was fifth in 15:02, while Miss Li&#13;
baI&#13;
-i&#13;
amP&#13;
e&#13;
^fh Tnvitationil one and a half&#13;
17:21. Miss Zimmerman also won the Milwaukee TradjCtaMiss&#13;
mile title last weekend in a new course record of 8.12.Miis championship at SIULibal&#13;
15th in the field of 31. In a four mile relay at the &lt;Cougar Champ P ^&#13;
Edwardsville, the Misses Zimmerman and Houston took third, as eac&#13;
nate 440 yard dashes.&#13;
Gymnastics Gets Booming Start&#13;
"What are a gymnast?"&#13;
"What is a gymnastics?"&#13;
"Show me a gymnastic."&#13;
These are but a few of the comments to&#13;
be heard around campus these days. Many&#13;
people want to know just what a gymnast&#13;
is, what gymnasts do and what is a&#13;
gymnastics team. We went to the source,&#13;
Parkside's new gymnastics coach Bill&#13;
Ballester, for some of the answers.&#13;
Gymnastics is many things to many&#13;
people; to Ballester it is a way of life, a&#13;
means of liv elihood, a way to contribute to&#13;
young people and a source of constant&#13;
challenge and inspiration. To a dedicated&#13;
gymnast it is also a way of life demanding:&#13;
hours (3 to 4 hours daily, all year) of hard&#13;
work, sore hands, aching muscles and a&#13;
great deal of self-satisfaction for his efforts&#13;
and discipline.&#13;
To a physical education student it is fun,&#13;
recreational, and a means to develop&#13;
strength, poise, coordination and physical&#13;
habits that can be carried on for years&#13;
after. Gymnastics also affords an excellent&#13;
way of obtaining a teaching&#13;
position. "There are literally hundreds of&#13;
job openings anywhere in the United&#13;
States for people who are interested in and&#13;
trained in gymnastics."&#13;
For the student at Parkside it is a new&#13;
sport for intercollegiate competition; it is&#13;
a physical education class at the Y; it is&#13;
Parkside's new gymnastics club sport.&#13;
Coger Season&#13;
Promising&#13;
The Ranger basketball season opened&#13;
Oct. 15 when 20 men turned out for the&#13;
opening practice session.&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens is sure of a much&#13;
better season with his team. "I think our&#13;
new scheduling of the morning practices at&#13;
10:00 till noon at Memorial Hall in Racine&#13;
will better the players." This way the&#13;
players start off fresh at practice and not&#13;
fatigued as they would be after a day of&#13;
classes.&#13;
There seem to be a number of promising&#13;
players out this season, along with last&#13;
year's players. Mike Madsen, 6'8"&#13;
sophomore, looks improved this season,&#13;
backed up by last year's experience.&#13;
Captain Ken Rick is also back up to par&#13;
this season. Hogan and Eli Slaughter are&#13;
back, bringing with them their 24 point&#13;
averages. Their quick shots should be the&#13;
backbone of the cagers' attack. Nick&#13;
Perrine is playing his best, far over last&#13;
year's season. This also will be Steve&#13;
Hagenow's first full year of basketball.&#13;
Tom Fendring, a transfer student from&#13;
"the University of Maryland, is doing a&#13;
good job in practice. The same holds true&#13;
for Dennis Fechelm, 6'2" freshman. One of&#13;
the more pleasant surprises for Coach&#13;
Stephens was Mike Jackson from Kenosha&#13;
Bradford.&#13;
Coach Stephens is pleased with the&#13;
team's attitude and desire to win.&#13;
The Ranger backers will have eleven&#13;
home games to watch. Five will be played&#13;
in Kenosha at St. Joseph high school; four&#13;
games at Racine Case; one at Salem&#13;
Central; and one at Union Grove.&#13;
Coach Ballester is interested in involving&#13;
everyone in gymnastics activity, it&#13;
not actively then through association.&#13;
Intercollegiate Team&#13;
As an intercollegiate sport, Parkside's&#13;
team will be built around a nucleus of five&#13;
boys. Parkside's schedule, which will be&#13;
released very shortly, will include some of&#13;
the top teams in the country. "We are&#13;
actively seeking young men who want to&#13;
be gymnasts and become a part of our&#13;
select group of competitors."&#13;
Club Sport&#13;
There is presently an active movement&#13;
among a group of students to develop a coeducational&#13;
club sport in gymnastics. We&#13;
will have our first organized meeting&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 27, at 8 p.m. at Washington&#13;
Park high school. There will be a meeting&#13;
every Tuesday thereafter at 8 p.m. at Park&#13;
high school.&#13;
To become involved'in this club sport&#13;
you need only interest. Everyone is invited&#13;
to participate in this informal activity. If&#13;
you are interested in socializing, working&#13;
out, taking trips to gymnastic meets,&#13;
supporting Parkside's gymnastics team,&#13;
and learning about physical conditioning,&#13;
you will enjoy being a part of this&#13;
organization.&#13;
Start looking for posters, see Coach&#13;
Ballester, or ask any gymnast: these are&#13;
the ways to become involved. Hecome a&#13;
part of Parkside's new student movement&#13;
— f un through gymnastics.&#13;
Cross Country Team Undefeated&#13;
r cross country team a.m. on the Wood Road Cam&#13;
The Ran&#13;
^&#13;
e&#13;
f ted in dual competition Team Scoring&#13;
remained un&#13;
^*tte 17.38 on the five- Parkside&#13;
bv drubbing Marquette rday Coach place&#13;
mile Wood Road cou ^ ag # unit {. chuck Dettman&#13;
Vic Godfrey said the t 1qss tQ. l. Rlck Lund&#13;
and this avenged the team i - Jim McFadden&#13;
Marquette last y&#13;
ear&#13;
h , f. f first six 5 - Tim McGilsky&#13;
The Rangers f^^&#13;
VRick Lund and 6 - Gary Lance&#13;
places, as Chuck De , ^ in a Total team points&#13;
Jim McFadden broke tape J in&#13;
27:31. Tim McGil y ^) ^ ieading&#13;
Marquette man was Tim Drewek who was&#13;
fourth. now 4-0 will host&#13;
Loras'coUegeof Iowa on Saturday at 11:30&#13;
UWP Site of&#13;
Championships&#13;
annual Mid-America Cross Country&#13;
Championships Saturday, Nov. 7.&#13;
Five events will be run, four sponsored&#13;
by the USTFF and one by the Wisconsin&#13;
Amateur Athletic Association.&#13;
The main event, however, will be the&#13;
men's six-mile open at 12:30 p.m. with&#13;
entries from throughout the midwest&#13;
expected to compete both as teams and as&#13;
individuals.&#13;
Other USTFF events will be the&#13;
Wisconsin Junior High Boys (9th grade&#13;
and under) one and a half milts, at 10:30;&#13;
the Wisconsin State Federation Championships&#13;
for those 18 and over, three&#13;
miles, at 11; and the National Masters&#13;
Championship for those 40 and over, three&#13;
miles, at 11:30.&#13;
The Wisconsin AAU Women's Open&#13;
Championship over two miles will be run&#13;
at 10.&#13;
Parkside is one of three universities&#13;
hosting USTFF championships this fall.&#13;
The first annual Western Championship&#13;
will be held Nov. 21 at Fresno (Calif.) State&#13;
University, and the Ninth Annual National&#13;
Championships Nov. 25 at Penn State.&#13;
USTFF Executive Director Carl W.&#13;
Cooper will be at Parkside for the midwest&#13;
meet. The races will be run over the scenic&#13;
new course which traverses the rolling 700-&#13;
acre Parkside campus.&#13;
Use the Classifieds&#13;
time&#13;
27:3)&#13;
27:31&#13;
27:31&#13;
CALL!&#13;
After this week W e&#13;
must return all remain.&#13;
ing te xts to the pub.&#13;
Ushers . . . If f | , ere&#13;
are any te xts you s t ill&#13;
ne ed or want, come i n&#13;
and buy them&#13;
while th ey are&#13;
availabl e.&#13;
n ow,&#13;
s ti ll&#13;
USE&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
T H E&#13;
OT&#13;
SI&#13;
COFFEE&#13;
MUSI C F RI.- S A T.&#13;
9-1 2 Ml D N I T E&#13;
75J&#13;
HER&#13;
DE&#13;
HOUSE&#13;
3 2 8 M AIN - R A C I NE&#13;
Tewtta*&#13;
,&#13;
DELICATESSEN - BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 FIFTY-SECOND STREET&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 tfoyt&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657-9747&#13;
1&#13;
don't just Sit tkere;&#13;
Gn/e L/s Vouv&#13;
Tt« JwSWs&lt;efe&#13;
" Yoir'&#13;
.&#13;
I </text>
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              <text>2170 Return to Campus</text>
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              <text>Pollution&#13;
Symposium&#13;
Here F riday&#13;
2170 Return to Campus&#13;
A marked increase in the&#13;
refuSgftudSs386 ^ ^ pere,Wa«&#13;
e of&#13;
^£pSfedXs,udeMsi"&#13;
pro£Si lhal&#13;
tv, exceeded.&#13;
finalpnrnif am.°ug 016 h'gW'ghts of the •&amp;TSSS£^t7, °' "* 4102&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside this fall "&#13;
1Versity of&#13;
from2mner&#13;
t&#13;
Cent enrollmen&#13;
t increase -&#13;
1a™1! l3St&#13;
/&#13;
ear ~&#13;
is highest among the&#13;
3 public State University and UW campuses&#13;
an d the b reakdiwn sh ows Zt&#13;
reasons retentlon 1S amon6 th&#13;
e prime&#13;
^n™2&#13;
,!70 continuing students returned&#13;
' about 75 cent of the&#13;
all, 1969, student body. Last year, 1152&#13;
students returned from 1968, a percentage&#13;
of 64 per cent.&#13;
"Those who were with us in 1969 liked us&#13;
well enough to return, and that is a very&#13;
good sign," said Chancellor Irvin G&#13;
Wyllie.&#13;
University officials also are pleased with&#13;
the doubling of e nrollment — fr om 426 to&#13;
894 students — in the School of Modern&#13;
Industry, which was established to focus&#13;
on Parkside's special mission of urbanindustrial&#13;
oriented studies in its divisions&#13;
of management science, engineering&#13;
science and labor economics.&#13;
The breakdown shows that Parkside&#13;
exceeded its state projection for "full-time&#13;
equivalency" (FTE) by 202 students.&#13;
Parkside was projected at 3007 FTE&#13;
students, but enrolled the equivalent of&#13;
3209 full-timers (based on a formula which&#13;
assumes 15 credit hours per semester is a&#13;
full schedule).&#13;
The number of students transferring to&#13;
Parkside from other schools also increased&#13;
strikingly, from 433 to 624, up 44&#13;
per cent!&#13;
Included in a total freshman class of 1873&#13;
are 1113 new frosh. This compares to 1831&#13;
freshmen last year, including 1001 new&#13;
ones.&#13;
The increase in the other classes is&#13;
dramatic. Sophomores are up from 597 to&#13;
1017, ju nimrs from 274 to 622, and seniors&#13;
from 85 to 212.&#13;
Nearly 50 per cent of t he new freshmen,&#13;
553, are from Racine County, while 43 p er&#13;
cent, 474, are from Kenosha County. Of th e&#13;
total enrollment of 4102, 47 per cent are&#13;
from Racine County (1915), 45 per cent&#13;
from Kenosha County (1864).&#13;
The remiaining eight per cent, or 323&#13;
students, are from 38 different counties in&#13;
Wisconsin, 14 states and four foreign&#13;
countries. Parkside nearly tripled its&#13;
enrollment from Milwaukee, Walworth,&#13;
Waukesha and Rock counties, moving&#13;
from 69 to 182 students. The out-of-state&#13;
enrollment is 78 students, compares to 50&#13;
last year, with 55 c oming from Illinois.&#13;
Men outnuumber women, 2402 to 1700.&#13;
Ten per cent of the men (252) are receieing&#13;
veterans' benefits, as are 13 women.&#13;
Don't Hunt&#13;
Near Campus&#13;
Kenosha County Sheriff William P.&#13;
Schmitt has warned that anyone caught&#13;
hunting on or within 1700 fe et of the new&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside campus&#13;
will have his firearms confiscated, be&#13;
taken into immediate custody and&#13;
prosecuted.&#13;
Schmitt said his department now is&#13;
paying particular attention to the 700-acre&#13;
Parkside campus in northern Kenosha&#13;
county because of the thousands of&#13;
students, staff and workmen there.&#13;
Schmitt cited the state statute which&#13;
prohibits hunting on or within 1700 feet of&#13;
any hospital, sanitarium or school&#13;
property, and the Wisconsin Administrative&#13;
Coade which, under state&#13;
statute, provides for the confiscation and&#13;
Too Many Myths About Women&#13;
Says Women's Lib Speaker&#13;
Asked humanistic approach.&#13;
To PRESENT PAPER&#13;
Jose Ortega, associate professor of&#13;
Spanish, will present an invited paper on&#13;
"Marks of Identity" in the works of&#13;
Spanish novelist Juan Goytisolo at the&#13;
•Midwest Modern Language Association's&#13;
annual meeting Oct. 30 in Milwaukee.&#13;
Ortega came to Parkside this fall from&#13;
Case Western Reserve University where&#13;
e also was an associate professor. He has&#13;
itten widely on Spanish literature for&#13;
scholarly publications and received two&#13;
grants supporting his research from the&#13;
American Philosophical Society.&#13;
Gloria Steinem, women's liberation&#13;
advocate, spoke here last Tuesday to an&#13;
audience of more than four hundred.&#13;
Dorothy Pittman was to have appeared&#13;
with Miss Steinem, but was ill.&#13;
Contrary to most of what is heard or said&#13;
about women's liberation, Gloria Steinem&#13;
is neither out-spoken nor without make-up.&#13;
Born and raised among the working&#13;
classes of Toledo, Ohio, she called for a&#13;
humanistic approach by both men and&#13;
women to the movement. Miss Steinem&#13;
cited numerous myths as the cause of&#13;
women's suppression — myths so "deep in&#13;
our heads" we don't know they're there.&#13;
The idea that women are biologically&#13;
inferior was the first of th e myths to be put&#13;
doiWn. Our bodily functions are almost&#13;
identical and the female is less subject to&#13;
the diseases of stress than the male.&#13;
Sexism in history was the second myth&#13;
listed by Miss Steinem. Historians are&#13;
guilty of writing as though the male is&#13;
superior. True, the men did the hunting,&#13;
the tracking, the wage-earning, etc. But it&#13;
must be remembered that women built the&#13;
houses, farmed, and formed the bases for&#13;
languages. "I don't want to prove the&#13;
superiority of women," Miss Steinem said,&#13;
"that would be repeating the mistake&#13;
made by men." She went on to say, "Make&#13;
life styles according to the individual and&#13;
not to the circumstances of birth."&#13;
Religion also promoted a myth about&#13;
women. As priests became more elevated,&#13;
the state of women became lower. The&#13;
reason is that priests taught people to see&#13;
women as unclean, as a temptation. That&#13;
myth is dissolving, however, as women are&#13;
ascending to the pulpit, and given the right&#13;
to vote in the church (the Episcopalian&#13;
church women recently won that right).&#13;
Freud and his theory of 'penis envy'' was&#13;
the fourth. myth detailed by Gloria&#13;
Steinem. She stated that it's only natural&#13;
that the second class group envy the&#13;
powers and rights of the first class group.&#13;
Miss Steinem referred to the penis as "the&#13;
most chauvinistic male emblem".&#13;
College was listed as a myth contributing&#13;
to women's suppression. Miss&#13;
Steinem said that of those persons earning&#13;
more than $10,000 per year, only five&#13;
percent were women. Women comprise&#13;
fifty-three per cent of the population.&#13;
Women seldom get equal rights or equal&#13;
pay _ even if identically qualified with a&#13;
man. Women have the power to vote and to&#13;
be consumers, but they have no influence&#13;
over the choices before them.&#13;
"The only place where we've gained&#13;
equality is on the top of the FBI list."&#13;
Women, Miss Steinem went on to say,&#13;
often receive longer sentences because of&#13;
supposedly being of higher morals and so&#13;
are more dangerous than men.&#13;
Gloria Steinem listed marriage as the&#13;
sixth of the myths concerning women.&#13;
Many of the civil rights a woman is entitled&#13;
to are taken away by the marriage&#13;
contract. Depending on the state, the right&#13;
to use your own name, the right to sign a&#13;
credit agreement, the right to start a&#13;
business, and the right to build a house are&#13;
civil rights, among others, taken away by&#13;
the marriage contract. As the marriage&#13;
laws are now, even the husband suffers&#13;
because he is responsible for any debts&#13;
incurred by his wife. The women's&#13;
liberation movement is studying the&#13;
marriage laws in order to effect some&#13;
changes.&#13;
Miss Steinem went on to say there is the&#13;
myth of women not liking other women —&#13;
which is true in so far as those of the&#13;
second class will compete among themselves&#13;
for the favors of the first class. The&#13;
liberation movement is showing the&#13;
A symposium on air pollution, focusing&#13;
on problems of urban, industrial&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin, will be held at&#13;
7:30 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 30, in Greenquist&#13;
Hall at the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside Wood Road Campus.&#13;
The symposium, which is free and open&#13;
to the public, will be sponsored by&#13;
Parkside's lecture and Fine Arts Committee&#13;
and the Kenosha Rotary Club.&#13;
Speakers will be Carl Burke. Detroit,&#13;
assistant chief automotive engineer for&#13;
American Motors Corp.; Brooks Becker.&#13;
Madison, director of the Bureau of Air&#13;
Pollution Control and Solid Waste Disposal&#13;
of the Wisconsin Department of Natural&#13;
Resources; and Dr. H. M. Miles.&#13;
Milwaukee, assistant professor of biology&#13;
at Marquette University.&#13;
A question and answer period will follow&#13;
the speaker's presentations.&#13;
The symposium is one in a series of four&#13;
informational programs on various&#13;
aspects of environmental pollution being&#13;
sponsored by Kenosha Rotarians in observance&#13;
of the club's Fiftieth Anniversary&#13;
year.&#13;
disposal of firearms carried or used on&#13;
University of Wisconsin property by&#13;
unauthorized persons.&#13;
State statutes and UW rules and&#13;
regulations also prohibit unauthorized&#13;
snomobiling, horseback riding, motorcycling&#13;
and the building of f ires on the&#13;
campus, Schmitt said, and added that pets&#13;
on the campus must be on leash.&#13;
common problems of women and trying to&#13;
bring women to work together. Gloria&#13;
Steinem further explained the myth that&#13;
regards working women as bad wives.&#13;
The last two myths dispelled by Miss&#13;
Steinem concerned the ideas that the&#13;
liberation movement is against men and&#13;
that the movement is frivolous. She&#13;
pointed out that men have something to&#13;
gain in that there will be fewer child-like&#13;
and over-dependent women in marriage.&#13;
Men can help the movement by helping in&#13;
the social orientation of their daughters.&#13;
Miss Steinem cited the parallel between&#13;
blacks and women as the deepest truth in&#13;
nature. Myths are suffered by all in the&#13;
second class groups. However, women&#13;
were the first to be oppressed.&#13;
Regarding the future success of the&#13;
women's liberation movement, "we all&#13;
have to do it together or it's not going to&#13;
work." To the idea of women permeating&#13;
the political realm, Miss Steinem said, "I&#13;
personally would rather have had&#13;
Margaret Mead in the White House than&#13;
either Johnson or Nixon — at least she&#13;
wouldn't have to prove her masculinity."&#13;
Masculinity, she went on, doesn't depend&#13;
on the submission of other people and real&#13;
manhood - do esn't depend on the subjugation&#13;
of anybody.&#13;
Audience numbered more than 400. &#13;
COMMENTS o n the news&#13;
Lost In Red Tape i it ... Whatever happened to the student government issue? en wi&#13;
the constitutional committee elected last spring for the p po&#13;
constructing the student constitution have that documen r&#13;
student vote? Who or what is holding up the process.&#13;
Students must be made aware of their specific rig fnrlim&#13;
individuals and as a body. Right now we students hay^ ,&#13;
established for the sole purpose of dealing with one another,&#13;
ministration, the faculty, etc., etc. mntin„p&#13;
We of the Newscope feel we cannot effectively continue5 t&#13;
operate as the only viable organization on campus for the exPress&#13;
'&#13;
student rights. We can print campus news, national campus new ,&#13;
coming events, special features, student opinion. What we canNOT do&#13;
is specifically advise students as to their rights as students. We student&#13;
editors are not entirely sure about the specific rights we have&#13;
stu en^fore the first faU isgue Qf thig paper was printed, we heard that&#13;
the constitution devised by the constitutional committee would be put&#13;
to student vote before the end of the third week of c lasses. It w as no .&#13;
Are we soon to see a proposed constitution or has the issue been lost in&#13;
the channels of red tape and communication?&#13;
STEELE&#13;
America&#13;
went&#13;
looking for'&#13;
a man.&#13;
And&#13;
got a&#13;
president...&#13;
SLE3ZH RidER&#13;
•• w2&lt;&#13;
*, . i ; • :• .&#13;
l» • ' &gt; J, •»&#13;
- V. " ' ' « A , * .• ' • V; '&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
MINI-SKIRTS ARK DANGEROUS&#13;
The pedestrian traffic flow was in the&#13;
direction of Lake Hall on the Racine&#13;
campus. Classes would begin in ten&#13;
minutes. Everyone was on the move.&#13;
1 was headed east on the sidewalk. A&#13;
couple of spectacular creatures in miniskirts&#13;
were ahead of m e. (1 had politely let&#13;
them pass since the eyes in the back of my&#13;
head are much less efficient than those in&#13;
front.) There was a fellow short-cutting&#13;
across the lawn to my right. He was&#13;
watching these girls, too. And he walked&#13;
smack into a tree! ... he really hit it. His&#13;
glasses fell off . . . his books fell to the&#13;
ground. He was all shook-up.&#13;
One girl nudged the other. They knew&#13;
what had happened. I could see that they&#13;
were pretty pleased with themselves.&#13;
Now Girls! 1 don't care how exotically&#13;
you dress . . . just so your get-up is&#13;
feminine (i.e., sexy) and neat. But when&#13;
you wear minis so short that a fellow&#13;
collides with a tree when you pass by, then,&#13;
as a conservationist, 1 suggest that we&#13;
study this situation which, in its acute&#13;
stages, can create the hazard of fellows&#13;
crashing into trees. It's simply not fair to&#13;
trees.&#13;
1 probably sound like a throw-back to the&#13;
Victorian Age when skirts were ankle&#13;
length. Now I ask myself, "What is&#13;
modesty?" Is there anything "virtuous"&#13;
about modesty? (You tell me.)&#13;
I'll say this for the girls at Parkside . . .&#13;
They are really an eye-pleasing bunch of&#13;
young women. I've only seen one or two on&#13;
campus who remind me of some of the&#13;
pictures I take — underdeveloped and&#13;
over-exposed. But most of our girls are&#13;
terrific.&#13;
The other end of the length-of-skirt&#13;
spectrum is what the girls wear in the Far&#13;
East — the Orient. In Thailand, for instance,&#13;
they wear the skin-tight sheath&#13;
that ripples with each movement of the&#13;
body. Incidentally, it's against the law in&#13;
Volume 2 - Number 5&#13;
October 26,1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Carroll Smolinsky&#13;
Mike Gogola&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Potente&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Business Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
•SB •So ||&#13;
d&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin, 53140. Mailing address is Parkside's Newscope&#13;
3700 Washington Rd„ Kenosha. Business and editorial telephone number is 658-&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photography Staff&#13;
Advisor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Jerry Houston, D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Paul Lomartire, Arthur Gruhl, Jim Janis, Walter Breach&#13;
LETTERS to the editors&#13;
Bangkok for girls to wear a mini. The&#13;
authorities say that it's conducive to rape.&#13;
That's understandable.&#13;
And the Chinese women! . . . Oh, boy!&#13;
. . . Do I enjoy watching those tight-fitting&#13;
shifts with slits up the side. Just stand in&#13;
front of the Mandarin Hotel in Hong Kong&#13;
and you'll see what I mean. And the silk&#13;
kimonos are still being worn by many&#13;
women in Japan. They are really&#13;
beautiful.&#13;
Why even the Hawaiian muu-muu is an&#13;
attention-arrester because it keeps so&#13;
many secrets. You don't know what a&#13;
muu-muu is? Well, it's sort of an anklelength,&#13;
technicolored flour bag, airconditioned&#13;
from the bottom up and the&#13;
woman's head comes out on top.&#13;
Oriental women have the answers when&#13;
it comes to the business of how-to-attracta-man.&#13;
Their long dresses are the sexiest&#13;
lures in their entire bag of tricks. They can&#13;
make a man climb a wall. I get a bigger&#13;
charge out of wa tching a long slinky dress&#13;
pass by than I do when I stand right next to&#13;
a Bunny at a Playboy Club.&#13;
As far as I'm concerned, a mini gives&#13;
away too many secrets. The girl shortchanges&#13;
herself. A garment covering a fair&#13;
amount of the female body will generate&#13;
more romantic ideas than a mini-skirt will&#13;
ever do. I see a girl in a mini and hope that&#13;
she doesn't get a cold on her chest.&#13;
Girls in mini-skirts, I love you! And now&#13;
that you've proven beyond a reasonable&#13;
doubt (again) that you do have shapely&#13;
legs, how about giving the trees a break by&#13;
keeping the hemlines of those tutus you're&#13;
wearing sort of i n the temperate zone&#13;
say about half-way between the hip and&#13;
knee. You get them any higher than that&#13;
and you'll have me walking into a tree.&#13;
I can just hear myself explaining to Mrs&#13;
Gruhl about how I got a dent in my&#13;
forehead. "Serves you right," she'd say&#13;
. and then she'd add, "How's the tree?"&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
We of the dramatic bent have been&#13;
chided by certain members of the faculty&#13;
for giving up our efforts to form a&#13;
dramatic society here at Parkside. Now,&#13;
don't get us wrong, we admire and respect&#13;
these instructors very much and are not&#13;
upset because of their chidings. But, after&#13;
several discussions on the point, we have&#13;
finally become incensed and have decided&#13;
once more to tangle with the red tape of&#13;
this institution's bureaucracy.&#13;
In other words, there will be a meeting&#13;
SOON of the Parkside Players for all interested&#13;
persons. As of no w, a night of oneact&#13;
plays is planned for December. These&#13;
will be student directed and try-outs for&#13;
them will be announced, hopefully, at the&#13;
first meeting.&#13;
However, we, like the Newscope, need&#13;
your support. For further information,&#13;
contact me by letter at 9432 C addy Lane,&#13;
Caledonia, Wisconsin 53108, or by&#13;
telephone at (1) 762-4744.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
Lucy Catlett, President&#13;
Parkside Players&#13;
Letter From&#13;
A Friend&#13;
By SVEN TAFFS&#13;
I got a letter last week from a friend of&#13;
mine in the Marine Corps who is now&#13;
stationed at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba.&#13;
Maybe it isn't particularly relevant in the&#13;
Parkside environment, but I thought it was&#13;
kind of amusing; if it's funny, it doesn't&#13;
have to be relevant.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Hey Sven,&#13;
I got your letter a couple days ago. It&#13;
was a surprise to hear from you after so&#13;
long. I know how busy you are with school&#13;
and all, and it makes me glad that you can&#13;
find a minute to write once every five&#13;
years or so.&#13;
No kidding, it is nice to hear from you&#13;
guys at home. The only other contact we&#13;
have with the mainland is we get week old&#13;
newspapers, and you know how much&#13;
they're worth.&#13;
I see by these papers that somebody&#13;
named Agnew, who seems to be America's&#13;
most popular TV show, has been touring&#13;
Asia. I think he is wasting his time touring&#13;
the sticks with such a sure-fire dynamite&#13;
act — it loses so much in translation. He&#13;
ought to come to Cuba, where the people&#13;
appreciate American humor&#13;
According to these newspapers,&#13;
Washington, D.C., has been plagued with a&#13;
29 per cent increase in serious crime this&#13;
^nni T j&#13;
S mflux of amateu&#13;
rs upsets&#13;
people like me who think thievery and&#13;
thT^t688 SlTld 1)6 left in hands of the professionals. Congress&#13;
You can see what the American press is&#13;
thi'nesha kV' S comforting to know that&#13;
l inn are just like 1 left them.&#13;
fripnH g&#13;
° n&#13;
°&#13;
W' Sven&#13;
' 1 Promised this&#13;
MmfhS TC 0131 rd g0 sw'&#13;
mming with him this afternoon. If the weather holds&#13;
K aim? pr,,vidrf sharks leave&#13;
fS'Oen'tWhowa.es'^S™;1&#13;
.&#13;
Swite&#13;
sh™'?W&lt;!&gt; &lt;"™ Tile&#13;
shoot tnck-or-treaters on sight.&#13;
Sirs:&#13;
October 21&#13;
Re your banner headline in the O ct 1 9&#13;
1970 issue — INSTRUCTOR quit&#13;
BECAUSE OF CLASS SIZE - I urge you&#13;
to investigate the situation further.&#13;
This teacher was called on the carpet by&#13;
Vice Chancellor Harris after one student&#13;
went before Harris and totally&#13;
misrepresented the situation in class&#13;
namely the way the teacher was con&#13;
ducting the class. Harris gave this teacher&#13;
a "conform-to-Parksides' criterion-orelse"&#13;
ultimatium; in response, this&#13;
"education teacher" told Mr. Harris that&#13;
under such conditions, he could not e ffectively&#13;
conduct the class.&#13;
I believe you owe the student body a n&#13;
explanation, and this teacher an ap ology&#13;
Michael S. O'Brien&#13;
720 GooldSt.&#13;
Racine, Wis. 53402&#13;
Forum To Honor&#13;
Exiled P oet&#13;
The first meeting of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Poetry Forum at /&#13;
p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 27, in Ro om 221 of&#13;
Greenquist Hall on the Wood Road campus&#13;
will feature a birthday tribute to e xiled&#13;
poet Ezra Pound, who is 85 this m onth&#13;
The purpose of the Poetry Forum is to&#13;
promote interest in poetry and to g utstudents,&#13;
faculty and residents 0&#13;
community an opportunity to rea&#13;
poems, according to Andrew Mcbe ,&#13;
assistant professor of English at UW&#13;
faculty adviser to the forum. ,&#13;
At the initial meeting poems b y r&#13;
will be read by Clark Anderson, a stud (&#13;
and James Dean, an assistant pro&#13;
English at Parkside and a published p&#13;
Planetarium Open&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Pa^&#13;
Planetarium will be open to sc&#13;
community groups by appw ^&#13;
throughout the remainder 01&#13;
y&#13;
ear&#13;
- vieW flif&#13;
About 3,000 area residents vi&#13;
various planetarium programs e&#13;
to see the stars and planets proje ,eneo&#13;
overhead dome screen in the&#13;
planetarium. piectron^'&#13;
The projector is operated e ^cW the&#13;
from a master console and c (r0®&#13;
positions of celestial bo&#13;
anywhere on earth at any tim j^je's&#13;
The planetarium, located at Roa(j.&#13;
Kenosha Campus, 3700 Was 1 6 ^&#13;
is equipped to show virtually ^0&#13;
constellations including t e ^Hpticconstellations&#13;
which lie along ^ various&#13;
or imaginary, path of the sun.&#13;
phases of the moon also ca&#13;
Groups of 15 or more person the&#13;
The Lost and Found isl # c&#13;
at the information Cent'&#13;
Tallent Hall, 2 0 &#13;
Library Services Explained&#13;
The main main lihrarv of thp „r library of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside is located on the first&#13;
floor of Tallent Hall. There are also branch&#13;
libraries on the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
Campuses. Students may withdraw&#13;
materials from any of the libraries by&#13;
showing their student identification card&#13;
or fee card. Other persons may borrow&#13;
materials by presenting a driver's license&#13;
or other identification. Library hours are&#13;
as follows:&#13;
Monday - Thursday: 7:15 - 10:30, All&#13;
campuses.&#13;
Friday: 7:15 - 5:00, All Campuses.&#13;
Saturday: 9:00 - 5:00, Tallent Hall; 9:00 -&#13;
3:00, Kenosha and Racine.&#13;
Sunday: 2:30 - 10:30, Tallent Hall;&#13;
Closed all day, Kenosha and Racine.&#13;
Special hours will be posted for&#13;
examination and vacation periods.&#13;
Books and Pamphlets&#13;
Books and pamphlets in the general&#13;
collection may be withdrawn from the&#13;
library for a period of two weeks. They&#13;
may be renewed for additional two-week&#13;
periods if they have not been requested by&#13;
another person.&#13;
Faculty may retain books as long as they&#13;
are needed. If a book is requested by&#13;
someone else, it is subject to recall after&#13;
two weeks. If a book is recalled, the&#13;
original faculty member may put a hold on&#13;
the book, for delivery to him when the&#13;
second patron has returned it. In order&#13;
that books borrowed may not inadvertently&#13;
be overlooked, the library will&#13;
request that books charged to faculty be&#13;
returned to the library at the end of each&#13;
semester.&#13;
Reference books, many government&#13;
publications, and some other books will&#13;
normally not circulate. These may be&#13;
consulted in the library. See also&#13;
restrictions on Reserves (below).&#13;
Reserves&#13;
Books or other items on two-hour&#13;
reserve may be checked out during the day&#13;
for two hours, or overnight. Overnight&#13;
items may be checked out after 8:30 p.m.&#13;
iccKea at the Kenosha and Racine&#13;
Campuses on Saturday are due Mondav&#13;
morning. At Tallent Hall items checked&#13;
out on Saturday after 3:00 p.m are due&#13;
Sunday at3:00 p.m. Items placed on three&#13;
during theed&#13;
may ^ checked out a&#13;
"y time&#13;
thri a y and must ^ returned in&#13;
«&#13;
ayS&#13;
' Th&#13;
'&#13;
Se no, £&#13;
. Periodicals&#13;
eriodicals may be borrowed by faculty&#13;
members for three days. However, the&#13;
most recent issues of weekly and many&#13;
other periodicals will not be circulated&#13;
and other special circumstances may also&#13;
restrict circulation of periodicals to&#13;
faculty. Periodicals do not circulate to&#13;
students.&#13;
Phonograph Records&#13;
The circulation of phonograph records is&#13;
governed, for both students and faculty, by&#13;
the same provisions that govern the circulation&#13;
of books. Popular new records&#13;
will circulate for three days.&#13;
Newspapers and Microforms&#13;
Newspapers and microforms do not&#13;
circulate.&#13;
Overdue Notices&#13;
A library item is overdue when it has not&#13;
been returned within the circulation&#13;
period.&#13;
A book out on circulation to faculty is&#13;
overdue four days after the date of sending&#13;
of a recall notice.&#13;
If an item is overdue for approximately&#13;
two weeks, an overdue notice will be sent.&#13;
If the item is not returned, a bill for the lost&#13;
item will be sent after five weeks from the&#13;
date of the original loan. For reserve books&#13;
and periodicals, overdue notices and bills&#13;
will be sent appropriately earlier.&#13;
Overdue notices for all items will be sent&#13;
to both students and faculty. Such notices&#13;
are sent for the convenience of the&#13;
borrower. Failure to receive a notice does&#13;
Play Review Roar&#13;
By DAVE FOBART&#13;
Back in late 1968, a group of students&#13;
from the Kenosha and Racine areas formed&#13;
Newtheatre, Inc. in hopes of presenting&#13;
modern, imaginative theater in our area.&#13;
The group was then, and is now entirely&#13;
student-operated.&#13;
Since that time, Newtheatre has&#13;
presented five plays in the Kenosha area.&#13;
Its fifth, "The Roar of the Greasepaint, the&#13;
Smell of the Crowd", was performed on&#13;
Oct. 15, 16 and 17 at Kemper Hall, and it&#13;
characterizes the problems Newtheatre&#13;
has had in the past.&#13;
"The Roar of the Greasepaint, the Smell&#13;
of the Crowd" is a very difficult play to&#13;
perform from a simply technical standpoint.&#13;
The show contains many well-known&#13;
songs "Who Can I Turn To?", "Nothing&#13;
Can Stop Me Now", "On a Wonderful Day&#13;
Like Today", "The Joker", and "Feelin'&#13;
Good", to name a few. The music would be&#13;
a challenge to most adult actors in the&#13;
Kenosha area, but Newtheatre managed to&#13;
hnd the people to do these roles among&#13;
Kenosha youth.&#13;
Rick Ponzio, a Parkside student, plays&#13;
me lead role of Sir. Rick is a veteran of&#13;
several St. Joseph high school musicals,&#13;
New Gallery One&#13;
My father was very disappointed; I&#13;
ould have made a good barber", quotes&#13;
ugo Claus in his book about Karel Appel.&#13;
,&#13;
skou&#13;
J&#13;
d fee' fortunate indeed that&#13;
PPel rejected trimming in favor of&#13;
•"^feting an(j printmaking. The&#13;
1 °§raPhs of Appel can be viewed&#13;
ginning October 19 at the New Gallery&#13;
"&#13;
e located at 503 Main Street, Racine.&#13;
GaU Gallery One, formerly La Porte&#13;
n&#13;
ery&gt; is still owned and operated by&#13;
cha a 3C ^&#13;
ay&#13;
' Tlle 8&#13;
allery name was&#13;
nged for purely aesthetic reasons; its&#13;
shm?' kowever&gt; remains the same. The&#13;
anntv, °&#13;
f ApP&#13;
el&gt; and also Akechinsky,&#13;
grnim&#13;
er Prominent member of the Cobra&#13;
icu remain at the gallery until the&#13;
oner, November. The New Gallery One is&#13;
Mnna nday through Saturday and&#13;
nay and Friday evenings until nine.&#13;
and in his first performance with&#13;
Newtheatre, he does a creditable job with&#13;
a very big role. The part occasionally&#13;
tested his vocal capabilities and even his&#13;
memory, but Rick seemed at home on the&#13;
stage as well as with his role.&#13;
The other major part is that of Cocky,&#13;
the foil for the Wily Sir. Louis Mattiolo, a&#13;
Tremper student and Newtheatre veteran,&#13;
plays the part to the hilt. Louis masters the&#13;
most difficult part in the show and performs&#13;
with enviable vigor throughout. He&#13;
sings each song with great meaning and&#13;
steals the show with his reactions to Sir's&#13;
injustices. Louis is Cocky in this show and&#13;
few others could have handled the part as&#13;
well as he did.&#13;
Several other minor roles in the play&#13;
also have difficult songs. Kid, played by&#13;
Karen Willems, seems adequately bratty,&#13;
and is competently handled by the St.&#13;
Joseph student. Another bright spot in the&#13;
cast is Carl Spearce, a music major from&#13;
Carthage, who enlivens a lagging spot in&#13;
the show with a soulful rendition of&#13;
"Feeling Good".&#13;
The chorus members play Urchins,&#13;
requiring a somewhat ragged performance,&#13;
which is fortunate, for the&#13;
chorus lacked much in age and numbers.&#13;
The spirit is evident in their boisterous,&#13;
happy numbers.&#13;
Overall, the performance did reach the&#13;
technical skill necessary for such a difficult&#13;
show. The time necessary to learn&#13;
these tough parts is taken from time&#13;
usually spent polishing an easier show.&#13;
Except for Cocky, most of the parts&#13;
seemed to be missing the polish and pizzazz&#13;
to make this a first class show.&#13;
TwutaA&#13;
DELICATESSEN - BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 FIFTY-SECOND STREET&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
Use Classifieds&#13;
not change the borrower's responsibility&#13;
for the item.&#13;
Fines&#13;
There is a five-day grace period after&#13;
the due date of any item out on two-week&#13;
loan. On the sixth day a fine of 60 cents will&#13;
be charged; thereafter, 10 cents a day will&#13;
be charged. The fines for overdue two-hour&#13;
reserve books are 50 cents for the first&#13;
hour and 25 cents for each succeeding hour&#13;
that the library is open. One dollar per day&#13;
is charged for overdue three-day reserve&#13;
books.&#13;
When an overdue item is returned, the&#13;
fine will be cut in half if i t is paid then and&#13;
there at the library desk. If it is paid later,&#13;
or is billed through the Bursar, the full rate&#13;
will apply.&#13;
Faculty are excused from pavment of&#13;
fines.&#13;
Lost Itesm&#13;
A lost item will be charged for as&#13;
follows: (a) the cost of replacement&#13;
(where a book is available only in&#13;
paperback, the paperback price plus $1.50&#13;
for binding; where a book is out of print,&#13;
normally a flat charge of $10.00); plus (b)&#13;
a processing charge of $1.00. which&#13;
represents staff time required to order the&#13;
item and get in on the shelves; plus (c) the&#13;
fines accumulated to the date on which the&#13;
item was declared lost. So, if you lose a&#13;
library item, report the loss at once.&#13;
Charges for lost items (except for fines)&#13;
apply to faculty as well as to students.&#13;
If a lost item is found and returned after&#13;
it has been paid for, the patron will be&#13;
reinbursed for the cost of the item (but not&#13;
for the processing charge).&#13;
Restriction of Borrowing Privileges&#13;
The library may restrict borrowing&#13;
privileges in cases of persistent violations&#13;
of library regulations.&#13;
Students' grades and transcripts will be&#13;
withheld and new registration will not be&#13;
permitted until library bills have been&#13;
paid.&#13;
Services&#13;
There are typing areas in each library;&#13;
also areas for record playing. Photocopying&#13;
services are also available.&#13;
Lounge areas located near each library&#13;
are available for smoking and eating.&#13;
Each campus library front desk has a&#13;
place for making suggestions: to improve&#13;
service, to acquire books and other library&#13;
materials. Your suggestions will be&#13;
welcomed.&#13;
Return of Materials&#13;
Any library item, other than reserve&#13;
material, may be returned to any one pf&#13;
the three campuses or to such library&#13;
return box as may be established in&#13;
Greeriquist Hall.&#13;
Bank of&#13;
Elmwood&#13;
27Q4 Lathrop Avm., Racint, Wisconsin&#13;
Students get red carpet service&#13;
(So does everyone else,!)&#13;
j+nut£L4-&#13;
658-2233&#13;
CocJdaik- ^u/nctam^i/n/neu&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
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LATEST FA SHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN&#13;
SKI JACKETS - Reg. $45.00&#13;
Now $27.50&#13;
Prices to&#13;
Fit Your Pocket&#13;
CHAT&#13;
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SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI. &amp; SA T. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
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FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
with Almondine Sauce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIME RIB &#13;
National Policy&#13;
In H igher Ed?&#13;
ST. LOUIS {CPS) — The American&#13;
Council on Education has commended the&#13;
'Scranton Commission "for its fair and&#13;
factual, definition of the problem of&#13;
campus unrest.&#13;
The commendation was first announced&#13;
at ACE's 53rd annual meeting here OcR-K&#13;
NEWS&#13;
5713 7TH AVE&#13;
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5 that the Commission's&#13;
lull report should be widely and&#13;
thoughtfully read" and that "serious and&#13;
open-minded consideration be accorded&#13;
the r&#13;
eco&#13;
mmendations in the report.'&#13;
year's ACE convention was con- This&#13;
vened around the subject of open admissions&#13;
but resulted in no general endorsement&#13;
or plan of a ction on the themeHigher&#13;
Education for Everybody?"&#13;
In the wake of this spring's antigovernment&#13;
turmoil on the nation's&#13;
campuses, the Council held eight panel&#13;
discussions focusing on problems of&#13;
Higher Education" using background&#13;
papers from various sociologists, political&#13;
scientists and administrators. Student&#13;
representation on the panels was limited to&#13;
two students from Washington University&#13;
in St. Louis. None of t he demands or issues&#13;
of last spring's student strike were&#13;
discussed.&#13;
The main task confronting "Higher&#13;
Education," issued in pleas by two&#13;
separate keynote speakers, is the&#13;
development of national leadership in the&#13;
academic community in pressing for&#13;
legislation to establish universal higher&#13;
education.&#13;
Daniel P. Moynihan, special counsellor&#13;
to the President, suggested that college&#13;
and university administrators could begin&#13;
to solve problems on their campuses by&#13;
responding to the Nixon administration&#13;
proposals for higher education. He lauded&#13;
the Higher Education Opportunity Act&#13;
which would provide federal subsidies to&#13;
be "used in such a way that the resources&#13;
available to poor students are brought up&#13;
to the level of middle income students." It&#13;
would also provide loan funds for upperincome&#13;
students. Last year Moynihan&#13;
called for reforms in the secondary&#13;
education system which would emphasize&#13;
"vocational" training, particularly for&#13;
: "minority" groups, to help build "a stable&#13;
working class population."&#13;
Moynihan suggested that "the universities&#13;
are so preoccupied with internal&#13;
problems — the difficulty of managing&#13;
what now exists — that they cannot for the&#13;
moment give much thought to the larger&#13;
problems of expansion."&#13;
Noting that the Nixon administration is&#13;
addressing itself to this need to "expand"&#13;
access to colleges and universities to solve&#13;
their problems, Moynihan described the&#13;
proposal for creation of a National&#13;
Foundation for Higher Education, to be&#13;
administered by a semi-autonomous board&#13;
and director appointed by the President,&#13;
whose purpose it would be "to redress the&#13;
imbalances that earlier forms of federal&#13;
aid have wrought." The Foundation would&#13;
provide funds to support "excellence, new&#13;
ideas and reform in high education;"&#13;
\yould strengthen institutions which "play&#13;
a uniquely valuable role" or are "faced&#13;
with special difficulties;" and would&#13;
provide an organization concerned with&#13;
"the development of national policy in&#13;
higher education."&#13;
Arthur S. Flemming, last year's ACE&#13;
chairman and president of Macalester&#13;
College, echoed Moynihan's plea for&#13;
"expansion" and called for the development&#13;
of a plan "that will narrow&#13;
significantly the gap between the promise&#13;
our nation has made of equal opportunity&#13;
for higher education for all Americans and&#13;
the reality which confronts us today." He&#13;
added that he thought that "all-out&#13;
dedication to the cause of universal access&#13;
to post-secondary education will provide&#13;
new incentives for needed reforms in our&#13;
system of higher education."&#13;
In another speech at the convention,&#13;
Samuel B- Gould, who most recently&#13;
resigned as chancellor of the beleaguered&#13;
State University of New York, chided&#13;
administrators for forgetting that they are&#13;
educators as well. "There are four kinds of&#13;
presidents left," he said, " those in&#13;
transition, those in flight, those in&#13;
desperation, and those who are newly&#13;
anointed." SUNY has four university&#13;
centers.&#13;
Road Ralley&#13;
Startling&#13;
Success&#13;
The Ragtime Rangers (Ski-Rangers)&#13;
pulled off another one on Sunday. It&#13;
couldn't have been a better day. The sun&#13;
was out with a pleasant and best of all,&#13;
fifty-four cars showed. One-by-one they&#13;
took off to conquer the course and win one&#13;
of those trophies from the Jimmy Clark&#13;
Memorial Road Ralley.&#13;
They all finished except number 10.&#13;
Better luck next time, Mike and Tom.&#13;
Those who lost didn't mind because the&#13;
party helped them forget their sorrows.&#13;
After everyone was well-oiled and the&#13;
officials tabulated the results, the trophies&#13;
were awarded.&#13;
Bill Petit, driver, and Roger Clausen,&#13;
navigator, both of KTI, won first in a&#13;
Gremlin. Second place went to Garvin&#13;
Williams and Karen Badtke in an AustinHealy&#13;
sprite. They're both from Racine. A&#13;
team of pretty girls in a Mustang wrapped&#13;
up third. Leone Storlie of Kenosh and&#13;
Theresa Kempter of Racine were the lucky&#13;
girls. Booby prize was awarded to another&#13;
team of girls, Sue Verhaefre and Bev Ward&#13;
of Racine.&#13;
Weight-Training&#13;
Facilities Now At&#13;
Both Campuses&#13;
In addition to the present weight room at&#13;
Kenosha Campus, a second weighttraining&#13;
room has been established on&#13;
Racine Campus. It is in the heated garage&#13;
adjoining Wadewitz Hall, which is located&#13;
south of the R-Campus.&#13;
According to the director of weighttraining,&#13;
Jim Koch, the hours during&#13;
which the facilities will be available are&#13;
greatly extended. They can be used by&#13;
Parkside students and faculty from 8:00&#13;
a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday,&#13;
and 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Friday.&#13;
Scheduled supervision has been confined&#13;
to the noon hours. However, anyone&#13;
wishing to receive instruction or advice on&#13;
weight-training is encouraged to contact&#13;
Mr. Koch in Room 144, Kenosha, or Mr.&#13;
Suh, Room 142, Kenosha. Mr. Koch does&#13;
advise that the inexperienced weighttrainser&#13;
confine their lifting to the&#13;
Universal Gym set which is relatively&#13;
safe. He also encourages any woman interested&#13;
in figure development to make&#13;
use of the facilities.&#13;
Conviction&#13;
Rate Declines&#13;
WASHINGTON (CPS) — Figures&#13;
released recently by Selective Service&#13;
officials reveal that the rate of conviction&#13;
for violations of the draft laws have fallen&#13;
to about one-third of the total number of&#13;
cases decided for the first nine months of&#13;
fiscal year 1970.&#13;
During fiscal year 1968 (J uly '67 - June&#13;
'68) the rate of convictions was 64.8 per&#13;
cent. Fiscal year 1969 sh owed a drop in&#13;
these figures to 47.2 per cent, and the&#13;
figures for the first three years of fiscal&#13;
1970 wo rk out to 33.6 per cent.&#13;
Due to the fact that the number of c ases&#13;
has been steadily increasing, from 1,153&#13;
decisions during fiscal 1968 to 2,069 du ring&#13;
the first three quarters of fiscal 1970, t he&#13;
actual number of convictions is increasing.&#13;
In 1965 there were 256 convictions;&#13;
in 1968, 747; in 1969, 884; and in&#13;
the first nine months of 1970, 615.&#13;
The decline in the rate of convictions can&#13;
be attributed to the growth of the number&#13;
of skilled draft lawyers, the far greater&#13;
frequency of errors at overworked local&#13;
boards, recent liberalization of the laws&#13;
through court decisions and the greater&#13;
preparedness of present draft law&#13;
violators for court fights.&#13;
Students To Study Pike River&#13;
A group of seven concerned students met&#13;
last Monday with Mr. Kugel, Mr. Ziemer&#13;
and Mr. Holzbog to discuss proposals to be&#13;
submitted to the National Science Foundation&#13;
for approval. The proposal, if accepted&#13;
by the NSF, will entitle the students&#13;
to Foundation financial backing for&#13;
research.&#13;
Although the proposal has not been&#13;
finalized, it will deal with the problem of&#13;
the Pike River. If the students receive NSF&#13;
backing, they will be paid for the research&#13;
they do.&#13;
It was emphasized by Mr. Kugel that&#13;
more students are needed for a more effective&#13;
research team. Interested students&#13;
should contact Mr. Kugel or Mr. Ziemer.&#13;
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How Does Silent Majority&#13;
Here's KK's Answer&#13;
Operate?&#13;
By KENKONKOL&#13;
A few of the less apathetic of you readers&#13;
have asked me how the Silent Majority&#13;
works. The answer is simplicity itself. The&#13;
opinions of the Silent Majority are those&#13;
opinions which are professed by no less&#13;
than 90 per cent of those people who talk to&#13;
me during the week. On the average I&#13;
discuss my past columns and ideas for&#13;
future columns with roughly ten people&#13;
each day. These persons range from&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie to first semester freshmen.&#13;
to janitors, librarians, and bus&#13;
drivers, to anyone I should accost in the&#13;
halls, such as the member of the Coordinated&#13;
Council for Higher Education in&#13;
Wisconsin that 1 cornered last week. This,&#13;
I feel, should make up a pretty&#13;
representative sample, and I can't be&#13;
accused of confining my interviews with&#13;
student radicals as some administrators&#13;
think&#13;
You remember how Dean MacKinney&#13;
stuck his opinions in his address to the&#13;
faculty. I found it amazing that he was&#13;
able to talk at all with his foot in his mouth&#13;
like that The members of the Silent&#13;
Majority were quick to realize that the&#13;
competence of our administrators is in&#13;
inverse relationship to how much they&#13;
agree with MacKinney's speech. We all&#13;
know (hat Dr. Gray, if not the most&#13;
competent administrator at this school, is&#13;
at least one of the best, disagreed with Mr.&#13;
MacKinney. and was not afraid to do so&#13;
because she has tenure. We also know that&#13;
Dr. Isenberg, one of our less competent&#13;
administrators (oneof a very large group)&#13;
agreed with the speech, but Dr. Isenberg is&#13;
just "nicing" Dean MacKinney. We knowthat&#13;
this writer talked and discussed the&#13;
speech with some 17 members of the&#13;
faculty and Administration this past week&#13;
and could not find one single person who&#13;
did not disagree with Mr. MacKinney.&#13;
Therefore, the Silent Majority and Thorn&#13;
feel this school could be run much better&#13;
should we call for the dismissal and-or&#13;
resignation of Dean MacKinney, Dr.&#13;
Isenberg, Vice Chancellor Harris, and any&#13;
and all other members of the Administration&#13;
who feel as they do, as long as&#13;
they continue to do so. Either that or shape&#13;
up&#13;
If anyone wishes to defend these persons&#13;
against the accusations I have advanced,&#13;
they have only to let it be known and this&#13;
person will interview them personally.&#13;
While I feel that nothing I say will ever&#13;
require retraction, unless forced upon me&#13;
against my will, some things might be&#13;
ammended if necessary to let the whole&#13;
truth be known.&#13;
My editors and I do not always see eye to&#13;
eye on every issue, but I feel it is evidence&#13;
of their fairness that some of my stuff gets&#13;
in at all. While I voted Democrat (for&#13;
LaFolletl) in the primary. I feel that&#13;
political ads appearing in this paper&#13;
should be paid for. I refer to those front&#13;
page insertions about students canvassing&#13;
for Aspin Also I feel that you, the reader,&#13;
should be made aware of how hard up for&#13;
money this paper really is, so perhaps you&#13;
could help us. While we are no longer&#13;
charging for this paper, containers are&#13;
available for donations in the bookstores&#13;
and libraries at all three campuses.&#13;
You will remember in my last column I&#13;
asked you if we had a competent&#13;
Psychology teacher at this school. As of&#13;
now, not a single person has offered the&#13;
name of a single one. I ask you again, "Do&#13;
we have a competent Psych teacher at this&#13;
school? If I do not receive any answer by&#13;
Wednesday, I will have to call for the&#13;
dismissal of the entire depertment; you&#13;
the members of the Silent Majority will&#13;
have requested it by your silence.&#13;
Who is responsible for the incompetent&#13;
instructors at this school? The fault is&#13;
certainly that of the instructors themselves;&#13;
often they cannot help it that they&#13;
are, often they may be trying their best as&#13;
instructors to become teachers, but&#13;
because they were hired 90 per cent to do&#13;
research and only ten per cent to teach,&#13;
they do no succeed. Don't blame your&#13;
instructors for being incompetent; dismiss&#13;
them yes, but don't blame them. Rather,&#13;
blame the administrators for hiring them&#13;
as instructors in the first place. Blame the&#13;
administrators, and then dismiss them&#13;
also so t his is not repeated.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Last Wednesday the Coordinated&#13;
Council for Higher Education in Wisconsin&#13;
had a meeting. According to Chancellor&#13;
Wyllie it was "a review by the staff of&#13;
parts of the ten year plan for the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside which&#13;
The Byrds&#13;
The price of it came&#13;
for your riches and fame,&#13;
Was it all a strange game&#13;
you're a little insane,&#13;
The money it came and the public acclaim,&#13;
Don't forget what you are&#13;
You're a rock 'n roll star.&#13;
The Byrds&#13;
+ + +&#13;
When I was in junior high I listened to&#13;
the radio at night when I did my&#13;
homework. Ron Riley, or whoever was&#13;
spinnin' the top forty would be an echo in&#13;
the back of my mind.&#13;
These days of my life weren't full of too&#13;
much excitement, until I listened to that&#13;
radio closely for about three minutes one&#13;
night.&#13;
I heard a song about a man who would&#13;
take me on a trip upon a magic swirling&#13;
ship, and that sounded like it could be&#13;
worth something.&#13;
Some five years later I was on that trip&#13;
in New York City, not knowing why or for&#13;
how long. I was just there.&#13;
My mind wandered in strawberry fields&#13;
as I sat in Fillmore East awaiting the next&#13;
group. The crowd was happy, restless, and&#13;
pretty well zapped. Most Fillmore patrons&#13;
had made the evening enjoyable with&#13;
everything from killer week to junk. I felt&#13;
right at home.&#13;
There was some problem with the light&#13;
show, so the second group on the three act&#13;
bill was delayed a bit. After about fifteen&#13;
minutes somebody walked onstage and&#13;
introduced the Byrds.&#13;
McGuinn lead the Byrds to their instruments&#13;
and the rest was like a dream.&#13;
Joshua's Lights provided a show for the&#13;
eyes, and the Byrds filled the mind. Mr.&#13;
Tambourine Man took everyone eight&#13;
miles high, and no return scheduled.&#13;
To me, the Byrds are about the best&#13;
thing to come out of American culture.&#13;
Their songs dissolved reality and provided&#13;
fantasy. Musical trips to take me away&#13;
from what I saw and lived everyday. From&#13;
that night in Fillmore East, I was&#13;
dedicated to Byrd philosophy.&#13;
I don't care that the group has gone&#13;
through many changes in personnel. The&#13;
changes have resulted in more good&#13;
music; Dillard and Clark, The Flying&#13;
Burritto Brothers, and Crosby, Stills, Nash&#13;
and Young.&#13;
Those individuals who like to get into the&#13;
politics and gossip of rock, can see that&#13;
this group has not worked together in a&#13;
Utopian atmosphere. Crosby was asked to&#13;
leave for political reasons, and other&#13;
hassles have resulted in juicy "rolling&#13;
Stone" type trash. Through all" t his, and&#13;
more, the Byrd legend has survived.&#13;
The band appeared here and there on&#13;
occasion and put out two or three albums a&#13;
few months after the New York show at&#13;
Fillmore. They seemed to be tiring, as&#13;
more changes and problems caused them&#13;
to rely on their previous hits during personal&#13;
appearances. They were gliding on&#13;
one wing. A slow, quiet, painful submission.&#13;
&#13;
A little more than a year later I was at&#13;
the Aragon to see A1 Kooper. The cavern&#13;
was full of people having a good time, on&#13;
everything from that same killer weed to&#13;
Ttalked to one member of the Council&#13;
iT- if thP Council was considering&#13;
disregarding the Sd of Regents' plan&#13;
for the University as being a stnctly un&#13;
dergraduate institution, and implementing&#13;
Kfrategems of&#13;
Dr Isenberg to make this a&#13;
School. His answer; "Wedo not disregar&#13;
entirely the possibility of Parksiae&#13;
becoming a Graduate School." Proving&#13;
once again that the wrong people swing a&#13;
lot of weight in the right places.&#13;
nsvchedelics, and on up. I was straight and&#13;
happy to be in that state of mind. A nice&#13;
feeling only to become'licer wherH[found&#13;
out that I was to run into the Byrds agam.&#13;
The audience was getting restle®®&#13;
because of one of the Aragon s famous&#13;
delays between groups. The Byrds were&#13;
introduced and received the Pollt® tyP®^&#13;
applause I suppose they expected. After&#13;
all they once were a fine group who turned&#13;
people on to good music. They did make&#13;
audiences feel good with that refined,&#13;
beautiful talent. They deserved respect&#13;
The group at the Aragon was composed&#13;
of Roger McGuinn, Clarence White, Gram&#13;
Parsons and Skip Battin. Clarence White&#13;
had a broken leg in a cast almost up to his&#13;
hip The symbolism in this bothered me. I&#13;
didn't think I could stand to see or hear the&#13;
Byrds do a bad set.&#13;
While I entertained thoughts of wandering&#13;
around and waiting for A1 Kooper,&#13;
that twelve string guitar summons me,&#13;
and like their music at Fillmore, they&#13;
made me deram. After a few songs I&#13;
realized that the tired Byrds were on their&#13;
way up again. That same full sound was&#13;
there, more alive than ever, right out of&#13;
my junior high radio.&#13;
The respectful applause blossomed into&#13;
genuine appreciation and shouts for more.&#13;
The Byrds obliged with their version of&#13;
"So You Want to Be A Rock 'n Roll Star".&#13;
The lyrics unfolded the life of today's rock&#13;
star, individuals who communicate on&#13;
"plastic ware".&#13;
The Byrds have weathered plenty in&#13;
their six years. Like everything shared by&#13;
the masses in America, they have come&#13;
under too much strain, but unlike America&#13;
herself, the individuals and their music&#13;
have come out ahead.&#13;
Now I can listen to their new double&#13;
album "Untitled", which has beauty that&#13;
is believable. One record is a live performance,&#13;
with a full side of "Eight Miles&#13;
High". The other album is two sides of new&#13;
Byrd music. The best comment I ever hope&#13;
to make about any record is that it is nice.&#13;
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What is your opinion on the rising personal&#13;
cost of education today? And would&#13;
you support a student co-op bookstore?&#13;
"I think it's awful, but what can we do&#13;
about that? The books are definitely&#13;
too costly. Yes, 1 would be in favor of a coop!"&#13;
Darlene Fitch&#13;
AND OTHER SELECTED SHO RTS &amp; SPECIAL ACTIVITIES&#13;
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31s t 10:00 P. M.&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
ADM. 50t WITH PARKSIDE &amp; WIS CONSIN ID. more on the bookstore question&#13;
"The thing that gripes me are the rising&#13;
cost of books. I would help to support a&#13;
student co-op." Steve Knutson&#13;
What is your opinion on the set-up of the&#13;
washrooms at the temporary Student&#13;
Activities Building?&#13;
"There are no curtains on the stalls,&#13;
which causes a lot of laughter and causes&#13;
grief at the movies because no one can&#13;
hear the movie over the laughter. Those&#13;
bathrooms will be the cause of extreme&#13;
constipation for the girls on campus. We&#13;
want curtains!" Robin Strangberg&#13;
^fcSlDE STUDENT ACT/wfJ^&#13;
Cemci RECORDING ARTISTS&#13;
•&#13;
,5W/I1VS«S'&#13;
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30th&#13;
DANCE 8:30-12:30 P.M.&#13;
Activities Building&#13;
Adm. $1.50 with . in&#13;
__ Parksjde • Wisconsin i.u&#13;
"Having to pay for the use of the&#13;
building seems reasonable because&#13;
someone has to pay for the lights and&#13;
janitors. Undesirables stay out." Michael&#13;
Fieramosca&#13;
PARKSIDE FEATURE FILM SERIES&#13;
Presents:&#13;
Coming Friday A Unitea Art ist Theatre&#13;
What do you think of the Student Activities&#13;
Building?&#13;
"It's better than nothing. I don't goto the&#13;
dances, but they should be cheaper." Steve&#13;
Preston.&#13;
Revolutions&#13;
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ACTIVITIES&#13;
NOV. 6TH,&#13;
STUDENT&#13;
FRIDAY "I think free juke boxes would work if&#13;
the students would contribute their own&#13;
records." Amy Cundari&#13;
Wisconsin&#13;
COMING . • • SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7TH &#13;
A college-credit course in hunter safety?&#13;
"For this area, it's a natural," says Tom&#13;
Rosandich, athletic director at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha. Rosandich bases his comment on&#13;
a recent survey of 3,000 prospective&#13;
students. T he survey indicated that the&#13;
hunter safety course, which began its&#13;
second year at UW-Parkside September&#13;
22, is among the top R. E. courses judged&#13;
by college-bound students as the "most&#13;
likely to be interesting." It has had a turn&#13;
away enrollment.&#13;
Initiated at UW-Parkside at Rosandich's&#13;
urging, and with the support of the&#13;
Department of Natural Resources (DNR),&#13;
the course is designed to qualify instructors&#13;
to teach hunter safety programs.&#13;
The Curriculum of Physical Education 401,&#13;
as it is called, consists of 16 weekly night&#13;
sessions on a rchery and firearm use and&#13;
safety, plus advanced techniques in&#13;
teaching the subject to others. The onecredit&#13;
course is conducted by university&#13;
faculty members, DNR personnel, and&#13;
volunteers from the Kenosha County&#13;
Conservation club, the P&amp;H Trap club, and&#13;
the National Rifle association. The class&#13;
will utilize the Southport Gun club rifle&#13;
range and the Kenosha County Conservation&#13;
club trap range.&#13;
Rosandich maintains that the course is&#13;
in keeping with the university's&#13;
philosophy of teaching "lifetime sports":&#13;
activities such as golf or tennis, which can&#13;
be enjoyed by an individual as lifelong&#13;
interests.&#13;
"The possibility of playing football or&#13;
basketball the rest of your life is limited,"&#13;
Rosandich explains. "Besides, only five&#13;
per cent of our students get involved in&#13;
intercollegiate athletics, while 95 per cent&#13;
of them participate in our lifetime sports&#13;
program. We even have some faculty&#13;
members taking the hunter safety&#13;
course."&#13;
Rosandich hopes to build a cadre of&#13;
certified instructors from among the UWParkside&#13;
faculty members who enroll so&#13;
that the university can be more selfsufficient&#13;
in conducting the course".&#13;
Ultimately, the objective is to reach&#13;
Hein, Fencing Mag's&#13;
Fencer of Month&#13;
By ED SAMPON&#13;
of FENCING MAGAZINE&#13;
Loran Hein could well be considered the&#13;
,&#13;
mbar(&#13;
Ii of fencing in Wisconsin. He&#13;
rted teaching fencing at Parkside four&#13;
:p&#13;
e&#13;
a&#13;
ars a§&#13;
0 and this past season ranked the&#13;
tP It '&#13;
n ^e Midwest, an area exn&#13;
ing from Canada to Missouri and from&#13;
'° to the Rocky Mountains.&#13;
with"^ tlleir first y&#13;
ear of competition&#13;
an Jour year schools, UWP startled&#13;
ryone by placing fourth in the Great&#13;
J?, invitational Meet. The highlights of&#13;
Sto. seasan included victories over Wayne&#13;
cant? an&#13;
f uw"Madison. His students have&#13;
WiL such hon&#13;
°rs as the 1970&#13;
sernnaSI&#13;
i&#13;
n ^&#13;
en s Foh Championships, a&#13;
Cham .&#13;
ace&#13;
'&#13;
n Ihe '70 Midwest Men's Foil Championships.&#13;
•horn'ins mvffCS • Mathematics in the&#13;
evpnm,, D, fencing in the afternoon and&#13;
season 21-4 team win record last&#13;
minatin '&#13;
S, ^e result of Hein's deterbest&#13;
eff n f ,&#13;
exPect nothing short of the&#13;
°rts in each and every bout from&#13;
each man on the team. He is interested in&#13;
wins not excuses and the boys know it.&#13;
This ability to develop such a powerful&#13;
team from a school with an enrollment of&#13;
only 4,100 reflects well on the ability and&#13;
dedication of the coach to our sport of&#13;
fencing and incidentally, he is doing it with&#13;
Wisconsin boys so the Wisconsin Division&#13;
will be the gainers in the years ahead.&#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;
10%&#13;
Courtesy Discount&#13;
to Students and&#13;
Faculty&#13;
(Must Show I.D.)&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
•olax &gt; A ccutron&#13;
Ultrachron - Longin*&#13;
Bui ova - IWovado&#13;
Caravallo - Tim ex&#13;
LeCoultr*&#13;
Wedgwood - Spode&#13;
Minton - Royal Worcester&#13;
Adam. -&#13;
B. II,-.k&#13;
REPAIR DEPT.&#13;
Watches - Jewelry&#13;
Diamond Setting&#13;
Complete Repair&#13;
Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
BRIDAL&#13;
REGISTRY&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
COHSULTANTS&#13;
Fairtrade&#13;
excepted ft does mate a difference where you shop!&#13;
Cheer&#13;
Getting instruction from "Swede" Erlandson of the Department of NaturT&#13;
Resources and one of the nation's top shots, is Dave Dworak oreanizer nt Zp ! ?&#13;
shooting club. Looking on are club members, Russ Coley, faculty f dvisor of the Hnh a&#13;
A College Credit&#13;
Course in Hunter Safety?&#13;
Would you like to become an active or&#13;
involved student at UW-Parkside? This is&#13;
your chance to rid yourself of the feeling&#13;
that you ".don't feel a part of things here;&#13;
you just go to classes and go home."&#13;
Because the publicity got out so late,&#13;
cheer-leading and Rangerettes tryouts&#13;
have been postponed for two weeks, to give&#13;
all interested girls a chance.&#13;
Practices will be held on Wednesday,&#13;
Oct. 28, f rom 4 t o 6 p.m., and on Friday,&#13;
Oct. 30, from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Racine&#13;
Campus Badger Room. Tryouts will be&#13;
held Tuesday, Nov. 3, from 4 to 7 p.m. in&#13;
the Badger Room. Don't say it's too hard,&#13;
without trying it first!&#13;
Cheerleading tryouts will consist of a&#13;
few short cheers, some jumps, and two&#13;
optional stunts. Rangerettes tryouts will&#13;
include a short pom-pom routine and a&#13;
short kicking routine.&#13;
Both groups have a new advisor. She is&#13;
Miss Doren Kristjanson, a 1969 graduate&#13;
of the University of North Dakota, where&#13;
she was a cheerleader. This is her second&#13;
year of teaching at Washington Park high&#13;
school in Racine, where she also advises&#13;
their pom-pom girls. Her hobbies include&#13;
sewing, corcheting, water-skiing, and&#13;
bowling.&#13;
Don't worry if you don't think you have&#13;
any experience. The practices will give it&#13;
to you! Come in and see what it's like. v&#13;
teenagers through hunter safety training&#13;
conducted by "graduates" of P.E. 401.&#13;
Rosandich notes that hunting is a major&#13;
sports activity in the populous Kenosha&#13;
area, and that qualified instructors are&#13;
badly needed for the Wisconsin hunter&#13;
safety program.&#13;
The statewide program headed by DNR&#13;
prepares boys and girls for the safe use of&#13;
firearms and archery equipment for sport.&#13;
By completing the program a youngster&#13;
can obtain a special permit which allows&#13;
him to hunt between the ages of 14 and 16&#13;
without adult supervision. State law&#13;
normally prohibits such youthful hunters&#13;
from going afield without an accompanying&#13;
adult.&#13;
Sunny side 0loris Is&#13;
&amp; Qreenkouses&#13;
Fl«nn- Fratt Bstifc - tifh&#13;
Phone: 649-6700&#13;
VI end FRANK WEINST0CK I&#13;
3021 - 75TH ST&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53KO&#13;
Anchorlnn&#13;
All You Can Eat&#13;
m&#13;
Fish—Shrimp&#13;
Chicken—Ham&#13;
Monday-Thursday $1.95&#13;
Friday-Sunday $2.25&#13;
Children $1.10&#13;
NUS TA X AN D BIVHAM&#13;
LADIES NITE&#13;
Mon. &amp; Tues - 8:30 to 10:30&#13;
Buy the first drink, second drink for 10c&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits and gravy&#13;
USE&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
SERVING: Frt. &amp; S»L S p.m.-ll p.m.&#13;
RoD.-Thnrt. S p.m.-io p.m.&#13;
Son. 12 Noon-B p.m.;&#13;
9006 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Phons 694-1733&#13;
n r&gt; A T " The BRi AT ,s&#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 Ringsor&#13;
Potato Salad&#13;
Schooner or Bottle or Glass of Beer&#13;
HAPPY HOUR&#13;
Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.&#13;
PITCHERS $1.00 GLASS 20&lt;&#13;
Including Fraternity and Sorority Parties&#13;
Open Daily 9 A.M.-12 P.M.&#13;
^ BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and Highway 50 &#13;
Excerpts From the&#13;
President's Commission&#13;
on C ampus U nrest&#13;
THE PEOPLE&#13;
The crisis on American campuses has no&#13;
parallel in the history of the nation. This&#13;
crisis has roots in divisions of American&#13;
society as deep as any since the Civil War.&#13;
The divisions are reflected in violent acts&#13;
and harsh rhetoric, and in the enmity of&#13;
.those Americans who see themselves as&#13;
occupying opposing camps. Campus&#13;
unrest reflects and increases a more&#13;
profound crisis in the nation as a whole.&#13;
This crisis has two components: A crisis&#13;
of violence and a crisis of understanding.&#13;
We fear new violence and growing enmity.&#13;
ON VIOLENCE&#13;
Too many Americans have begun to&#13;
justify as a means of effecting change or&#13;
safeguarding traditions. Too many have&#13;
forgotten the values and sense of shared&#13;
humanity that unite us. Campus violence&#13;
reflects this national condition.&#13;
Much of the nation is so polarized that on&#13;
many campuses a major domestic conflict&#13;
or an unpopular initiative in foreign policy&#13;
could trigger further violence protest and,&#13;
in its wake, counter-violence and&#13;
repression.&#13;
Crimes committed by one do not justify&#13;
crimes committed by another. We condemn&#13;
brutality and excessive force used&#13;
by officers and troops called to maintain&#13;
order.&#13;
Violence must stop because the sounds&#13;
of vi olence drown out all words of reason.&#13;
When students and officials resort to force&#13;
and violence, no one can hear the nation. It&#13;
must stop because no nation will long&#13;
tolerate violence without repression.&#13;
History offers grim proof that repression&#13;
once started is almost impossible to&#13;
contain.&#13;
ON UNDERSTANDING&#13;
Campus protest has been focused on&#13;
three major questions: war. racial injustice,&#13;
and the university itself.&#13;
Behind the student protest on these&#13;
issues and the crises of violence to which&#13;
they have contributed lies the more basic&#13;
crisis of understanding.&#13;
Americans have never shared a single&#13;
culture, a single philosophy or a single&#13;
religion. But in most periods in our history,&#13;
we have shared many common values,&#13;
common sympathies, and a common&#13;
dedication to a system of government&#13;
which protects our diversity.&#13;
We are now in grave danger of losing&#13;
what is common among us through&#13;
growing intolerance of opposing views on&#13;
issues and of diversity itself.&#13;
If this trend continues, if this crisis of&#13;
understanding endures, the very survival&#13;
of the nation will be threatened. A nation&#13;
driven to use the weapon of war upon its&#13;
youth is a nation on the edge of chaos. A&#13;
nation that has lost the allegiance of part&#13;
of its youth is a nation that has lost part of&#13;
its future. A nation whose young have&#13;
become intolerant of diversity, intolerant&#13;
of the rest of its citizenry, and intolerant&#13;
of all traditional values simply because&#13;
they are traditional has no generation&#13;
worthy or capable of assuming leadership&#13;
in the years to come.&#13;
RECOMMENDATIONS&#13;
Far more important than the particular&#13;
recommendations of this commission are&#13;
the underlying themes that are common to&#13;
all:&#13;
Most student protesters are neither&#13;
violent nor extremist. But a small&#13;
minority of politically extreme students&#13;
and faculty members and a small group of&#13;
dedicated agitators are bent on destruction&#13;
of the university to gain their own&#13;
political ends.&#13;
Perpetrators of violence must be&#13;
Cfiiny i&#13;
3)en&#13;
BARBER STUDIQ&#13;
ooo&#13;
"It's Not How Long You Wear It&#13;
But How You Wear It Long"&#13;
Hait Styling - Hair Cutting - Hair Pieces&#13;
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
7509 45TH AVE. 694-4603&#13;
identified, removed from the university as&#13;
swiftly as possible, and prosecuted&#13;
vigorously by the appropriate agencies of&#13;
law enforcement.&#13;
Dissent and peaceful protest are a&#13;
valued part of this nation's way of&#13;
governing itself. Violence and disorder are&#13;
the antithesis of democratic processes and&#13;
cannot be tolerated either on the nation s&#13;
campuses or anywhere else.&#13;
The roots of student activism lie in&#13;
unresolved conflicts in our national life,&#13;
but the many defects of the universities&#13;
have also fueled the campus unrest.&#13;
Too many students have acted&#13;
irresponsibly and even dangerously in&#13;
pursuing their stated goals and expressing&#13;
their dissent. Too many law enforcement&#13;
officers have responded with unwarranted&#13;
harshness and force in seeking to control&#13;
disorder.&#13;
All of us must act to prevent violence, to&#13;
create understanding and to reduce the&#13;
bitterness and hostility that divide both the&#13;
campus and the country.&#13;
Just as the President must offer&#13;
reconciling leadership to reunite the&#13;
nation, so all levels must work to bring&#13;
hostile factions together.&#13;
We recommend that the Federal&#13;
Government review all its current policies&#13;
affecting students and universities to&#13;
assure that neither the policies nor administration&#13;
of them threatens the independence&#13;
or quality of A merican higher&#13;
education. At the same time Government&#13;
should increase its financial support of&#13;
higher education.&#13;
We support the continuing efforts of&#13;
formerly all-white universities to recruit&#13;
blacks, Mexican-Americans, Puerto&#13;
Ricans, and other minority students, and&#13;
we urge that adequate Governmentsponsored&#13;
student aid be made available&#13;
to them. We recommend that in the&#13;
process of becoming more representative&#13;
of the society at large, universities make&#13;
the adjustments necessary to permit those&#13;
from minority backgrounds to take&#13;
maximum advantage of their university&#13;
experience.&#13;
ON LAW ENFORCEMENT&#13;
We urge that peace officers be trained&#13;
and equipped to deal with campus&#13;
disorders, firmly, justly, and humanely.&#13;
They must avoid both uncontrolled and&#13;
excessive response.&#13;
We recommend that national guardsmen&#13;
receive much more training in&#13;
controlling civil disturbances. During the&#13;
last three years, the guard has played&#13;
almost no role in Southeast Asia but has&#13;
been called to intervene in civil disorders&#13;
at home&#13;
Universities must become true com-&#13;
""students must accept the responsibility&#13;
omH nprsu3sivc msnncr. lncy&#13;
recognize that they are citizens of a nation&#13;
S was founded on tolerance and&#13;
diversity and they must become more&#13;
understanding of those with whom they&#13;
^Students should be reminded that&#13;
language that offends wiB seldom persuade.&#13;
Their words have sometimes been&#13;
as offensive to many Americans as the&#13;
words of some public officials have been to&#13;
' The commission has been impressed and&#13;
moved by the idealism and committment&#13;
of A merican youth. But this extraordinary&#13;
commitment brings with it extraordinary&#13;
obligations: to learn from our nation s past&#13;
experience, to recognize the humanity of&#13;
those with whom they disagree and to&#13;
maintain their respect for the rule of the&#13;
law.&#13;
GUEST CONDUCTOR&#13;
Harry Lantz, associate professor of&#13;
music, has been invited to act as guest&#13;
conductor of the Tennessee All-State&#13;
Orchestra at the Tennesses Music&#13;
Educators' Association annual convention&#13;
on Oct. 28 through 30 in Knoxville. Lantz&#13;
also will serve as a clinician at the convention.&#13;
Lantz, an internationally known&#13;
cellist, conductor and music educator, was&#13;
supervisor of instrumental music for the&#13;
Houston Public Schools and conductor of&#13;
the Houston All-City Orche^&#13;
joining the Parkside faculty u H,&#13;
taught at the University of Housl?0 *as&#13;
he was chairman of the i™r°&#13;
n%&#13;
music department and condi.n,&#13;
University Symphony. Uctor of...&#13;
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              <text>Gloria Steinem Women's Liberation Leader Here Tuesday</text>
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              <text>s&#13;
&lt;$s&#13;
•So&#13;
P&#13;
C\&#13;
C\&#13;
Gloria Steinem Women's&#13;
Lib. Leader Here Tuesday&#13;
A leading advocate of women's&#13;
liberation, "new journalist" Gloria&#13;
Steinem, will speak on the history and&#13;
goals of the movement at 8 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 20, in Greenquist Hall at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside Wood&#13;
Road Campus.&#13;
Her talk, which is free and open to the&#13;
public, is sponsored by Parkside's Lecture&#13;
and Fine Arts Committee.&#13;
Miss Steinem's articles on politics,&#13;
urban problems, current lifestyles and&#13;
other aspects of 20th century social issues&#13;
have appeared in major publications&#13;
ranging from McCalls and Glamour to&#13;
Life, Look, Esquire and The New York&#13;
Times.&#13;
She is a contributing editor of New York&#13;
Magazine in which she has a regular&#13;
column, "The City Politic".&#13;
Miss Steinem has been active in the&#13;
political campaigns of Adlai Stevenson,&#13;
John Kennedy, Eugene McCarthy, Robert&#13;
Kennedy and George McGovern.&#13;
She was one of the organizers of Writers&#13;
and Editors Against the War in Vietnam&#13;
and of boycott and fund-raising support for&#13;
Cesar Chavez and the United Farm&#13;
Workers. She was recently appointed to&#13;
the Democratic Policy Committee of the&#13;
Democratic National Committee. -&#13;
An alumnus of Smith College, she&#13;
received a degree in government magna&#13;
cum laude, was elected to Phi Beta Kappa&#13;
and was awarded a Chester Bowles Asian&#13;
Fellowship for a year's study in India.&#13;
Poetry Forum Meets Oct. 27&#13;
The Parkside Poetry Forum gets under&#13;
way Tuesday evening, Oct. 27, at 7:00 p.m.&#13;
The meeting in Greenquist Hall 221 on the&#13;
main campus of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside will last one hour.&#13;
the purpose of the Poetry Forum is to&#13;
promote interest in poetry and to give&#13;
students, faculty and townspeople an&#13;
opportunity to read their poems. No formal&#13;
criticism or lectures on poetry are&#13;
allowed. Poetry should be heard, not just&#13;
talked about, the meeting's organizers&#13;
contend, and that is the main reason the&#13;
'Parkside Poetry Forum was formed.&#13;
The first meeting will contain a birthday&#13;
tribute to exiled poet Ezra Pound,&#13;
who is 85 this month. Several of his poems&#13;
will be read and "Happy Birthday Ezra"&#13;
will be sung. No birthday cake is planned.&#13;
Parkside student poet Clark Anderson of&#13;
Kenosha will read several of his poems,&#13;
along with other student poets. James&#13;
Dean, an assistant professor at Parkisde&#13;
and a published poet, also will read some&#13;
of his poems.&#13;
The Parkside Poetry Forum will meet&#13;
regularly every third Tuesday evening of&#13;
the month. The reason for meeting in the&#13;
evening is to give townspeople a chance to&#13;
participate. Anyone who is interested in&#13;
reading or listening at the Forum or would&#13;
like to know more about it should contact&#13;
the Poetry Forum's advisor Andrew&#13;
McLean, at the Kenosha campus, ext. 76.&#13;
Future programs of the Poetry Forum&#13;
will include several exciting young poets&#13;
who will give special readings of their&#13;
poetry. An evening with Alan Shucard is&#13;
planned for November. Mr. Shucard's first&#13;
book of poems, "The Gorgon Bag", was&#13;
just released by the Ladysmith Press in&#13;
Ontario, Canada. Shucard is an assistant&#13;
professor at Parkside and teaches creative&#13;
writing.&#13;
"Poetry is fun," Prof. McLean said,&#13;
"and we plan to have as varied a Poetry*&#13;
Forum as possible." Future forums will&#13;
include evenings of poetry set to music,&#13;
lyric poetry, political poetry, choral&#13;
readings and happenings. The Forum is&#13;
concerned with what poetry is, has been,&#13;
and might be. The emphasis, however, will&#13;
always be on having as many local poets&#13;
reading their poetry as is possible.&#13;
Everyone is encouraged to come to the&#13;
Parkside Poetry Forum and have fun with&#13;
poetry. One "game" which is planned for a&#13;
future meeting is "Blind Man's Bluff'.&#13;
Several distinguished members of the&#13;
community are given "anonymous"&#13;
poems to read and criticize. I The idpa&#13;
is to get a person's honest and immediate&#13;
reaction to the poem.&#13;
Mac Kinney T o Faculty:&#13;
PUBLISH OR PERISH&#13;
By MARC EISEN&#13;
In a major address before the faculty,&#13;
Dean Arthur MacKinney of the College of&#13;
Science and Society said:&#13;
- those instructors who do no original&#13;
research ha ve little role to play at a&#13;
university,&#13;
-students will have to "earn" influence&#13;
in the u niversity through being, among&#13;
other things, "dependable and trustworthy",&#13;
&#13;
— "major surgery" will be required to&#13;
remove those faculty members whose&#13;
goals don't mesh with Parkside's objectives,&#13;
&#13;
~ that Parkside's aim is "instant&#13;
greatness."&#13;
Denying t hat the speech was a policy&#13;
statement, he described it as a "direct&#13;
statement of where I stand on certain&#13;
•ssues." His remarks were made in the&#13;
context of the focus of his speech,&#13;
rganizing for Change in Higher&#13;
Education".&#13;
faculty response to the speech was&#13;
'&#13;
xed and generally negative. Though&#13;
s&#13;
ceJ&#13;
n&#13;
.&#13;
over the implications of the&#13;
sepm 1S great&#13;
' much of 016 faculty, it&#13;
l ms&gt; is withholding final judgement&#13;
attif&#13;
u&#13;
f&#13;
e of ihe vagueness of it. The general&#13;
"WeMi&#13;
6 seems to be, as one member put it,&#13;
develo t0 wait and see what&#13;
Of&#13;
MaoR§reatest concern ^ the faculty was&#13;
Duhli lT&#13;
ey&#13;
'&#13;
S emPhasis on research and&#13;
con 1 on&#13;
-&#13;
Reaction was both pro and&#13;
teaph- Dean said that the concept that&#13;
was 'k8 ?&#13;
nd resea&#13;
rch were incompatible&#13;
"teaoK* Ute nonsense, but instead that&#13;
Positi and research skills are&#13;
correiS correlated, not negatively&#13;
He ui 3S so many seem 10 assume."&#13;
teaChin&#13;
ent on 10 say, "If publishing and&#13;
gene ? are both aspects of the same&#13;
dissem objective, namely the&#13;
for mp !&#13;
natl0n of knowledge, then it is hard&#13;
learnina lmagine someone who is part of a&#13;
not be iented university who would&#13;
c&#13;
ritioaieager to Present his work for the&#13;
"Dea SCL&#13;
UUny °* bis peers.&#13;
Florida? nson (of the University of&#13;
upset u,KSays d this way: 'Students geten&#13;
there is any indication that a&#13;
teacher has any obligation other than&#13;
putting on a good academic performance&#13;
in the classroom. But I am just voicing a&#13;
pragmatic law.&#13;
" 'It is not likely that I am going to&#13;
destroy the man who does not publish . . .&#13;
that man kills himself. He kills himself&#13;
a c a d e m i c a l l y , i n t e l l e c t u a l l y,&#13;
professionally ... If a man does no&#13;
original work, he has little role to play at a&#13;
university&#13;
He says of the many phrases that&#13;
describe the purposes of the universities,&#13;
"My favorite is the statement that&#13;
universities are in the business of creating&#13;
and disseminating knowledge. Clark Kerr&#13;
and others have said it well by labelling&#13;
our endeavor the knowledge industry —&#13;
manufacturing and distributing&#13;
knowledge."&#13;
MacKinney's concept of the student s&#13;
role in the university changed as his&#13;
speech went on. He began by giving a&#13;
qualified endorsement to st&#13;
"&#13;
dent&#13;
nower". Student power was soon modified&#13;
to "influence", and finally he said the&#13;
influence would have to be earned .&#13;
He said ". • • students should be involved&#13;
in the making of those decisions&#13;
that affect them. Traditional student&#13;
government has not typically accomplished&#13;
this aim • • • . .,,&#13;
"I am an advocate of student power if y&#13;
that phrase we mean that students sho&#13;
have the opportunity to influence decisions&#13;
that affect them ...&#13;
"The power I refer to here is the&#13;
authority of moral suasion and it could,&#13;
perhaps, better be termed influence rather&#13;
depcndablea^ti^twOTthy^are^htngs&#13;
that influence."&#13;
foe university&#13;
Shsf sr&#13;
venture.&#13;
He says, "I want to state that the notion&#13;
of the university as an oligarchy ruled&#13;
exclusively by the faculty is not only rigid&#13;
but unworkable today. Alternatively, the&#13;
university as an oligarchy ruled by the&#13;
students is a form of anarchy and absolutely&#13;
nothing gets done under anarchy.&#13;
"So we are forced back to the notion of a&#13;
university as a democracy . . . I see it as&#13;
axiomatic that the university is to be&#13;
organized as a cooperative venture with&#13;
each side contributing to the decision&#13;
making as he is qualified and as he is interested."&#13;
&#13;
He makes no mention of the results of&#13;
the university ruled as an oligarchy by the&#13;
administration.&#13;
In regard to instances where an instructor's&#13;
goals and the university's goals&#13;
vary, he speaks euphemistically of&#13;
"person-organization mismatches" and&#13;
"major surgery".&#13;
He says, ". . . reasoned maturity&#13;
requires us to acknowledge that personorganization&#13;
mismatches will occur and&#13;
when they do they have to be rectified. In&#13;
some instances, the only cure will be&#13;
major surgery . . .&#13;
"In other instances, there is an alternative&#13;
which I will label faculty&#13;
development. The term faculty&#13;
development includes not only performance&#13;
change but better personnel&#13;
utilization . . .&#13;
"Lest you over interpret my comments&#13;
on development," he stated, "let me state&#13;
unequivocally that we can expect occasions&#13;
to arise in which an individual's&#13;
personal goals simply do not mesh with the&#13;
institutional objectives.&#13;
"When this happens," he said, "I see no&#13;
ready alternative to a parting of the ways,&#13;
.hopefully amicable, but none-the-less&#13;
'final."&#13;
In the conclusion of the speech, the Dean&#13;
outlined what the school was aiming for.&#13;
"In most general terms, our overriding&#13;
goal throughout all our attempts at innovation&#13;
is to produce a great university.&#13;
We cannot be intimidated by the stale&#13;
claim that instant greatness is impossible.&#13;
The facts will not support the claim! This&#13;
country's educational history is liberally&#13;
sprinkled with examples of near instant&#13;
greatness among universities."&#13;
He then named Stanford, Clark, Stony&#13;
Brook, Rice, the University of Illinois&#13;
Circle Campus, and the University of&#13;
California at San Diego.&#13;
He concluded by saying, "So I hold that&#13;
it is patently obvious that greatness as a&#13;
university is within our grasp. This is our&#13;
goal. I for one dedicate myself to it, and I&#13;
seek your commitment to this same goal."&#13;
J ?&#13;
fiigp 1&#13;
11&#13;
Arthur C. MacKinney&#13;
Dean, College of&#13;
Science and Society&#13;
Relevant Things&#13;
A one-of-a-kind map of the United States&#13;
featuring examples of petrified wood from&#13;
the various states was among gifts accepted&#13;
for the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
Friday by the University&#13;
Regents. &#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
Note These Suggestions&#13;
Is the Student Activities Building for, by,&#13;
and /organise&#13;
No! That reality is in the far-distant future when situ lir:es for&#13;
their own union. Now, it's up to the administration to decide pol ^&#13;
the building. We students can enjoy the pool tables, th g »&#13;
beer, the popcorn —and we do, to an extent. nosted&#13;
However, we students still complain. Why isn t nnJ^until&#13;
sign telling the hours the building is open? And why isn P® about&#13;
midnight? Why isn't there a posted sign giving' l&#13;
° words&gt;&#13;
students using the space for organization meetmgs. . j a&#13;
why haven't any students been consulted about the twlicies&#13;
building that was built for their own enjoyment. Here sa&#13;
suggestion: how about having a stool and mike availa j&#13;
someone wants to "loosen-up"? hppr —&#13;
The main attraction of the Student Activities B"^&#13;
ng&#13;
.7^&#13;
e®r&#13;
hflt&#13;
will lose some of its audience appeal after awhile. Theni w •&#13;
else does the availability of the building offer? All we students.know&#13;
that the temporary structure exists and that there is beer with&#13;
that there are dances or films held on weekends. ,, t&#13;
Was the Activities Building put up for us or as a ploy to attra&#13;
students of the future. We realize that in the planning of a university,&#13;
planning and construction play a large role. However that construction&#13;
is a bit over-emphasized. Remember the 4,000 students w&#13;
need attention. Show confidence in our actions, our suggestions, even&#13;
our demands. Don't be so outwardly concerned with planning ana&#13;
construction. We think that with more students, mo5&#13;
e&#13;
students, Parkside will practically build itself. Listen to the bias&#13;
from students once in a while.&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
SvenTaffs&#13;
Carroll Smolinsky&#13;
Mike Gogola&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Potente&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
News Edit, or&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Business Edit,&#13;
. * .. Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Sports Edit. iMntor&#13;
Photography staff&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Marc Eisen&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Terry Houston, D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konk.&#13;
'isen Paul Lomartire, Arthur Gruhl, Jim Janis, Walte&#13;
;ol&#13;
'reach&#13;
STOWashington Rd., Kenosha! Business and editorial telephone number is &amp;&#13;
4861, ext. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
LETTERS to the editors&#13;
An Open Letter&#13;
WSU Regents Control Publications&#13;
The following editorial relates some information about the&#13;
running of a student newspaper. While the subject of the editorial does&#13;
not concern us directly because it is about a ruling passed by the WSUBoard&#13;
of Regents, the complaint is valid and worth repeating. The&#13;
editorial appeared in the "Peptomist", the student newspaper at WSUSuperior.&#13;
&#13;
"A STUDENT NEWSPAPER?&#13;
"No, not quite.&#13;
"Recently the WSU Board of Regents met and passed resolution&#13;
3629 which reads: Resolved, that on each campus the administration&#13;
shall be given the authority and shall assume responsibilities for all&#13;
publications paid for by state monies. (The resolution passed&#13;
unanimously.)&#13;
"However, the students will still play their minor roles with our&#13;
weekly publication and write articles, take photos, edit the material,&#13;
make up the paper, pick up, deliver and, of course, read it.&#13;
"To simplify somewhat, it means that the money given to our&#13;
university from the state which helps to support and publish our&#13;
campus newspaper makes this publication a university item and not&#13;
one of the students.&#13;
"Is this good or bad? And for whom?&#13;
"It is hard to say, as the resolution is new and its working ability&#13;
has not yet been established. Some of the hard core left wingers with&#13;
their huge mouths and flapping tongues will have to stop writing or&#13;
write readable material instead of some of their present rubbish.&#13;
However, on the other hand, the students who write strong and justified&#13;
opinions, which in some way may be taken with an offensive air by the&#13;
administration, may not be able to get their articles printed.&#13;
"The reason for this action by the state?&#13;
"To curb some of the non-journalistic practices of student&#13;
newspapers, as a couple of incidents involving other state university&#13;
student publications last year had to be strongly dealt with. But,&#13;
looking at it realistically; the majority of students working with the&#13;
publication are in the field of journalism and this serves as a lab and&#13;
practical learning period.&#13;
"These might be reasons to some but not to others. Who can say&#13;
whether these are truly valid or not, but time may tell and show a&#13;
better picture of the result.&#13;
"Students may protest it or condone it, I'll wait to see the effect it&#13;
has on all concerned.&#13;
"Ending note: You can't fight city hall, can you??????????"&#13;
Patented&#13;
Some of you may recall that I wrote an&#13;
open letter last summer. Because many o&#13;
you now reading this letter were not in&#13;
Lhool this past summer, I want now to&#13;
convey my thoughts to you again. My&#13;
letter comes from a desire to insure a&#13;
continued high quality in the Federal work&#13;
force.&#13;
Many high school students will be going&#13;
to college and upon graduation from&#13;
college will seek employment in State, city&#13;
and Federal governments as well as in&#13;
private industry. We want people who are&#13;
physically and mentally able to hold jobs&#13;
no matter what sector they choose and to&#13;
be the caliber of individual who would be&#13;
an asset to any employer.&#13;
Fifteen years ago, I would not have&#13;
written this kind of letter. I say this not&#13;
only because this problem did not exist&#13;
then, but also because the college&#13;
generation of fifteen years ago did not&#13;
appear to share to the same degree an&#13;
immediate, personal concern for the&#13;
welfare of his fellow man that today's&#13;
college student feels. I am writing this&#13;
open letter to you because I am very much&#13;
concerned about the persistent growth of&#13;
illicit drug traffic among our high school&#13;
students and I am convinced that today's&#13;
college student can be our key in putting&#13;
an end to the lure of drug use.&#13;
College students have always been&#13;
looked up to by their younger companions&#13;
in high school. You set the pace in fashion,&#13;
in music, and more importantly, in ideas&#13;
for the entire teen-age community.&#13;
It is with this thought in mind that I&#13;
urgently encourage you to carry the truth&#13;
"about the effects of drugs back to the high&#13;
school students in your home communities&#13;
and in the community where you now live&#13;
Yours is a voice that will be listened to&#13;
Your message about what you have seen&#13;
and about what you know of the eroding&#13;
effects of drugs car. be the single most&#13;
effective deterrent to drug ex&#13;
perimentation among our high school&#13;
students.&#13;
This is an effort you can undertake on&#13;
your own initiative. All that is needed is&#13;
your own desire to help protect our hi gh&#13;
school students from the damaging effects&#13;
of drugs which you have seen or kn ow&#13;
about.&#13;
So it is my earnest hope that you will go&#13;
out of your way to talk with high s chool&#13;
students about this. Talk to individuals and&#13;
groups as opportunities arise. Seek ou t&#13;
youth recreation associations and urge the&#13;
director to get the facts to the young&#13;
people.&#13;
This is one area where I know a nd you&#13;
know that you will be listened to. It is a n&#13;
area where you as an individual can do so&#13;
much to save our high school students&#13;
from the bitter experiences which so often&#13;
result from drug use. Please try this approach,&#13;
and when you do, I would a ppreciate&#13;
hearing from you.&#13;
Sincerely yours,&#13;
Nicholas J. Oganovic&#13;
Executive Director&#13;
U.S. Civil Service Commission&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
Peace Symbol&#13;
WASHINGTON (CPS) — The U.S.&#13;
Patent Office has given the go-ahead to a&#13;
competition for commercial trademark&#13;
rights to the peace symbol. Two companies,&#13;
the Intercontinent Shoe corporation&#13;
of New York and LUV, Inc., are&#13;
bidding for exclusive rights to the internationally&#13;
used symbol, the upsidedown&#13;
"Y" in a circle with a bar extending&#13;
through the fork of the "Y". The sign&#13;
originated from the semaphore code for&#13;
Nuclear Disarmament — ND — an d was&#13;
first used in Britain during the ban-thebomb&#13;
demonstrations in the late fifties.&#13;
The sign is now widely used as an antiwar&#13;
protest here and abroad, and has been&#13;
attacked as the "anti-Christ" by rightwing&#13;
fundamentalists. Intercontinent Shoe&#13;
corporation, manufactures leather goods&#13;
with the peace sign inscribed. LUV, Inc.,&#13;
which has already officially co-opted&#13;
"luv" in its corporate name, manufactures&#13;
"boutique-type high-fashion clothing&#13;
for the junior customer", according to a&#13;
company spokesman.&#13;
The trademark would not prohibit use of&#13;
the peace sign, except in a brandname for&#13;
marketable goods.&#13;
SAIGON'S HAIRY HAZARD&#13;
SAIGON (CPS) - The South Vietnamese&#13;
government has decreed that it&#13;
will bar all long-haired foreign men from&#13;
entering the country because it would "be&#13;
a bad example for our boys", according to&#13;
a spokesman.&#13;
"Those who are already here will soon&#13;
receive advice not to be such an example&#13;
to our younger boys,"&#13;
GIRLFRIEND IN MADRID&#13;
(Continued)&#13;
From last week . . . Where was I? . . .&#13;
Oh yes. "At that moment" ... I must&#13;
have blacked-out. Instead of it being fourthirty&#13;
it was now five-fifteen!&#13;
I picked up my tape recorder, slammed&#13;
my beret on my head and dashed down the&#13;
stairs to the street. Not a taxi in sight. It&#13;
was at least a mile back to the museum. I&#13;
jogged all the way back and got there just&#13;
in time to be locked out. It was five-thirty.&#13;
A custodian was at the door letting people&#13;
out but not in.&#13;
I explained to the man that I was-to meet&#13;
my wife inside and he said, "No use,&#13;
Senor. All of the guided tours go out the&#13;
back door and there is no tour group in the&#13;
building. The last one left an hour ago."&#13;
So I had no choice but to go down the&#13;
steps to think things over. At this point I&#13;
want to make it clear that I was not "lost"&#13;
• • . I always know exactly where I am&#13;
Somehmes maybe, I get separated or&#13;
my grouPbut&#13;
rm not&#13;
dropped into the beret.&#13;
An elderly man about my height an&#13;
wearing a military uniform stood in iron&#13;
of me. I got to my feet like I had sat on&#13;
tack and said, "Gee, thanks Gener&#13;
Franco, I don't need the money, I b eg™&#13;
you, Sir, give it to your favorite charity&#13;
Then I explained to him that my par y&#13;
taken off without me and I was J&#13;
ust s&#13;
'&#13;
here watching the senoritas&#13;
watching the world go by. j&#13;
He was very congenial.&#13;
said, "I see what you mean. The" ik&#13;
me that he was pretty sure that it ,&#13;
group which he had seen an&#13;
prowling around the royal palace aw &gt;&#13;
hour ago. It was then, he said, th&#13;
decided to take a walk in order to g ^&#13;
from tourists. We shook hands &lt;in ^&#13;
giving each other a smart mihta&#13;
... me saluting first, of cours&#13;
f„ioCk. No&#13;
Well, it was now about six o ^&#13;
R u t h no CIA came to retmve . . . no c a n iv w - - v S g i&#13;
hotel was in sight just a block aw y&#13;
^ a bushed from my long run so I&#13;
decided to stay put and do a little people&#13;
dthS M8&#13;
'&#13;
1 WOrried&#13;
"&#13;
1 was sure&#13;
^at&#13;
anri finH FS 0r the CIA would come&#13;
and find me eventually. So I sat there on&#13;
wKmv&#13;
6 With my beret in my hanS&#13;
my surprise, a couple of coins&#13;
noiei was in signi juaia&#13;
up and headed for the martinis.&#13;
the hotel. ., tn myself.&#13;
As I strolled along I said ^ j„&#13;
"Jeepers! What an adventure| ,geetl)e&#13;
Madrid! And I'll betcha thatwje t hap.&#13;
group at dinner and tell the 0f the"&#13;
1&#13;
pened to me this afternoon^ no&#13;
will believe a word of it.&#13;
/I J AM JfaJ* &#13;
Faculty Responds to Speech&#13;
By MARC EISEN&#13;
comity response to Dean MacKinney's&#13;
Lh was mixed, but generally negative.&#13;
SP nnint of m ost criticism was his emTJeJs&#13;
on research and publication.&#13;
p -rh!&gt; reaction of the divisional chairmen&#13;
n indicatio n of this. Professor Gray&#13;
f nrl herself disagreeing on points.&#13;
Xsor Isenberg indicated an apparent&#13;
jffipd agreement with it. Professor&#13;
snlebaum refused to evaluate it till he&#13;
3 a chance to read it.&#13;
Mrs Gray chairman of the Humanities&#13;
division, said, " Personally, I would have&#13;
id to see primary emphasis on quality&#13;
caching for a first class undergraduate&#13;
rhool for the present time, with research&#13;
and publication as an important and a&#13;
constantly developing secondary&#13;
^Professor Isenberg, chairman of the&#13;
science division, said, "On the speech&#13;
itself the facts a nd content of it, I would&#13;
refer you to Dean MacKinney. I don't want&#13;
to put words into his mouth. I would concur&#13;
wholeheartedly with him that Parkside&#13;
has a tremendous opportunity and a&#13;
tremendous challenge to develop into a top&#13;
rate institution."&#13;
He agreed with MacKinney's statement&#13;
that there is a positive correlation between&#13;
teaching and research.&#13;
Professor Applebaum, chairman of the&#13;
social science division, spoke only in&#13;
generalities about the speech, and refused&#13;
to make specific comment on it till he had&#13;
a chance to rea d it.&#13;
James Shae, chairman of the University&#13;
Committee, which is considered the most&#13;
powerful faculty committee, said, "I have&#13;
some rese rvations about Dean MacKinney's&#13;
speech. I think it's really a question&#13;
of em phasis. We really won't know what&#13;
the administration has in mind until they&#13;
begin to act . . .&#13;
"I detect some indication," he said,&#13;
"that the administration wants to adapt a&#13;
policy of really strong emphasis on&#13;
research, and I also see some indications&#13;
they will not give what I regard a proper&#13;
emphasis t o teaching, and to university&#13;
and community service.&#13;
"I think there's real danger here," he&#13;
continued, "because one of the things&#13;
students have been trying to tell us in&#13;
recent years is that they don't like being&#13;
placed in a role of least importance in the&#13;
universities; that is they don't like coming&#13;
second to an overwhelming emphasis on&#13;
research.&#13;
"I think one of the things Parkside has&#13;
offered to students up to his t point has been&#13;
a chance for good faculty-student contact.&#13;
"If the overwhelming emphasis is&#13;
placed on research," he said, "then I fear&#13;
we'll lose some of this contact, and I think&#13;
from the students' point of view, Parkside&#13;
won't be as g ood a school."&#13;
"I personally feel that our job now is to&#13;
provide the best fundamental undergraduate&#13;
education we can," he said.&#13;
The rea ction from junior faculty was&#13;
generally harsh and pointed. Their&#13;
comments were usually made off the&#13;
record, or else they were interviewed with&#13;
the understanding their names wouldn't be&#13;
used. One n oted that if he said what he&#13;
thought, and was quoted, it would be&#13;
tantamount of "putting my neck in a&#13;
noose".&#13;
The comments varied from "It's pure&#13;
bullshit — an insult to my intelligence," to&#13;
"relative denigration of the importance of&#13;
the speech.&#13;
One member of the junior faculty said,&#13;
"It contradicts ev~ erything uthamt i was waa cvever ci&#13;
written by Paul Goodman in "Growing Up&#13;
Absurd". It perpetuates the myth of&#13;
education as being valid in the way it is&#13;
handled now. It's compulsory&#13;
miseducation. It made me feel like I was&#13;
working in a factory. It's the University&#13;
seen as the corporation."&#13;
He refers to MacKinney's use of phrases&#13;
like "quality control", "universities are in&#13;
the business of creating and disseminating&#13;
knowledge", "the knowledge industry".&#13;
MacKinney worked for two years as a&#13;
psychological consultant to General&#13;
Motors. His major interest as an industrial&#13;
is in the improvement of human performance,&#13;
especially of managers, and in&#13;
the measurement of performance.&#13;
The instructor went on by saying, "He's&#13;
a real industrial psychologist. His business&#13;
here is the analyzing of faculty resources,&#13;
and increasing the production based on&#13;
these resources. It's like making more and&#13;
more cars out of less and less steel.&#13;
"It's the type of speech," he said, "that&#13;
Clark Kerr would have made in the middle&#13;
sixties before Berkeley blew up. He went&#13;
as far as to quote Clark Kerr . . . They're&#13;
making the same mistakes here that were&#13;
made throughout the country in the middle&#13;
sixties.&#13;
"He read that speech to us like we were&#13;
a bunch of fifth graders. That's the kind of&#13;
paper that if it was submitted to a&#13;
graduate seminar in a major university&#13;
he'd be laughed out of the room."&#13;
Opposing this reaction are the views of&#13;
•Thomas Reeves, an associate professor of&#13;
History. Professor Reeves was hired this&#13;
summer with full tenure. He is an example&#13;
of the senior level faculty that Parkside is&#13;
actively recruiting.&#13;
He said, "I felt it was a very good&#13;
speech, and I felt it was good for one major&#13;
reason; that was, that he made it very&#13;
clear that the administration was determined&#13;
to make Parkside a first rate&#13;
educational institution.&#13;
"He interprets first rate," Reeves said,&#13;
"at least in part, the way I do, that is to&#13;
create a body of scholars who are creative&#13;
and producing teaching scholars. . . I was&#13;
very encouraged. I came here from the&#13;
University of Colorado with the understanding&#13;
Parkside would be made a&#13;
first rate school."&#13;
In regards to the guidelines on teacher&#13;
evaluation, Reeygs said, "I certainly&#13;
would agree with them. I thought it was a&#13;
very powerful arid cogent statement . . .&#13;
Unfortunately students do not understand&#13;
this. Regretfully, students tend to find&#13;
popular the professors who are invariably&#13;
the most fraudulent, who are performers&#13;
and entertainers. .&#13;
"My experience," he said, which is t&#13;
years of teaching, has shown that students&#13;
are utterly naive about quality scholars&#13;
and teachers, that they'll accept the phony&#13;
virtually everytime over the scholar . . .&#13;
"To be an extremely pop-popular&#13;
teacher is the easiest thing. Most scholars&#13;
do not want to be scholars The easier way&#13;
out is to be a teacher, just a teacher,&#13;
thirds of the historians in this; countryjwit&#13;
phDs write nothing, and teac&#13;
Whitewater . . . H the jumor faculty&#13;
does™ want to meet Madison standards&#13;
that the administration is putting out, let&#13;
them teach at Whitewater," Reeve^&#13;
MacKinney's assumption that teaching&#13;
and research are positively correlated are&#13;
not shared by all the faculty.&#13;
Professor Shea said, "I have known in&#13;
my career too many teachers who weren't&#13;
top notch researchers, and too many top&#13;
notch researchers who were really bad&#13;
teachers, indeed."&#13;
Michael Holmes of the History department&#13;
said, "I agree with MacKinney when&#13;
he says that research and teaching go&#13;
together. The man who is constantly&#13;
learning and delving back into what's&#13;
being done in his field, I think is most&#13;
likely a better teacher. I also think, but to a&#13;
lesser extent, that the man who is doing&#13;
'primary research is probably a better&#13;
teacher.&#13;
"What I disagree about," Holmes said,&#13;
"and I think this is the crucial point, is the&#13;
emphasis on publishing. Publishing has&#13;
nothing to do with teaching. It involves&#13;
something completely different, the&#13;
ability to write. It involves facility with the&#13;
pen, rather than oral facility.&#13;
"I don't care what he says," Holmes&#13;
continued, "but I have found very few&#13;
people in my career as graduate and post&#13;
graduate student where a man who was a&#13;
top notch scholar was also a top notch&#13;
speaker . . .&#13;
"Also in my field the problem of&#13;
publication is not even a problem of&#13;
writing," he said, "— it's the problem of&#13;
who you know. Look at the last ten years of&#13;
the American Historical Review, and you&#13;
see the same names repeated over and&#13;
over again. . . Publication may have little&#13;
to do with one's teaching ability."&#13;
Holmes questioned too MacKinney's&#13;
statement that "major surgery" will be&#13;
required to remove those faculty members&#13;
whose individual goals do not mesh with&#13;
the institutional objectives.&#13;
He said, "What he says is, if you don't&#13;
agree with the mission then you have no&#13;
business in being here. I simply say, What&#13;
are the goals of the University? Who sets&#13;
them? If they're set by the administration,&#13;
and the administration changes and new&#13;
goals are established, does that mean that&#13;
everybody who disagrees with the new&#13;
people will be kicked out? In other words,&#13;
do the goals of the University transcend&#13;
anyone here?"&#13;
A number of faculty members raised the&#13;
question why there was no question and&#13;
answer period after the speech.&#13;
Professor Gray said, "Many of us were&#13;
disappointed that there was no time for&#13;
discussion and questions after the speech.&#13;
That was the time it was fresh in our&#13;
minds. However, I do think I understand&#13;
why the decision was made."&#13;
Dean MacKinney's explanation is: "The&#13;
main reason was that there was a&#13;
tremendous amount of physical effort&#13;
involved in giving it. It was a grueling&#13;
experience, and, frankly, I just didn t want&#13;
to tackle the additional stress and strain&#13;
that would be part of it at that moment.&#13;
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658-1X01 &#13;
Harris D enies T hat Guidelines&#13;
Kept F rom Junior Faculty&#13;
According to faculty sources, the junior&#13;
faculty (the untenured instructors) were&#13;
not allowed to see guidelines that would&#13;
evaluate their teaching performance until&#13;
at least a week after they were given to the&#13;
senior faculty.&#13;
John Harris, the Vice Chancellor for&#13;
Academic Affairs, denied there was any&#13;
attempt to keep the guidelines out of the&#13;
hands of the junior faculty.&#13;
The guidelines were developed in his&#13;
office with the assistance of Dean&#13;
MacKinney and are the basis on which&#13;
divisional executive committees, made up&#13;
of tenured faculty, make recommendations&#13;
on the retention of junior&#13;
faculty.&#13;
The ultimate decision, however, on&#13;
retention or release of junior faculty is&#13;
made by the administration.&#13;
The guidelines echo Dean MacKinney's&#13;
speech, particularly in the need for&#13;
published research and for faculty to mesh&#13;
with the institution's goals.&#13;
These guidelines were not seen by the&#13;
junior faculty for at least a week after they&#13;
were formulated and given to the&#13;
executive committees. Finally on Oct. 13,&#13;
they were notified they could see the&#13;
criteria in their respective divisional&#13;
chairmen's office, along with faculty&#13;
evaluation categories, and a copy of a&#13;
letter from Chancellor Wyllie to Harris&#13;
authorizing faculty evaluations.&#13;
They would not get their own copies of it.&#13;
Vice Chancellor Harris denied any attempts&#13;
at secrecy. Faculty responses&#13;
would seem to deny this.&#13;
He made this denial to this reporter in an&#13;
interview, that he didn't allow to be taped.&#13;
"I don't want to be trapped into saying&#13;
anything outside of the substantive issue,"&#13;
he said. He discussed the criteria point by&#13;
point, but didn't give this reporter a copy&#13;
of them. He said he feared distortion.&#13;
It was pointed out to him a copy would&#13;
eliminate any chance of distortion; that at&#13;
least a tape recording of him describing&#13;
the criteria would limit the distortion — heturned&#13;
down the request.&#13;
In regard to the distribution of the&#13;
guidelines to junior faculty, a tenured&#13;
member said a day before the Oct. 13&#13;
memo that he would give the paper a copy&#13;
of the guidelines if they were not given to&#13;
the junior faculty within a few days.&#13;
James Shea, an associate professor of&#13;
Earth Science, said early last week, "It's&#13;
my understanding the junior faculty was*&#13;
told they could go to the divisional&#13;
chairmen's offices and see them . . . I'm&#13;
sure that most junior faculty members&#13;
have not seen these. I, myself, think this is&#13;
unfortunate. I feel they should be sent to&#13;
the junior faculty as an indication of the&#13;
feeling of the administration ... I think&#13;
it's unfortunate for them to be judged by&#13;
criteria they don't fully understand."&#13;
Mrs. Stella Grey, an associate professor&#13;
of English, while not saying the junior&#13;
faculty could not see the guidelines, said,&#13;
"There should be criteria established and&#13;
circulation of the criteria is of vital importance.&#13;
If faculty members don't agree&#13;
with all the criteria, at least they should&#13;
know by what standards they are being&#13;
judged."&#13;
She continued, "I would consider it an&#13;
area of great faculty interest and concern,&#13;
and I hope, input . . . I'm all for having&#13;
them circulated freely."&#13;
Other faculty members, particularly&#13;
junior faculty who didn't wish to be quoted,&#13;
substantiated the clain the guidelines&#13;
weren't available to junior faculty when&#13;
they were first released to executive&#13;
committees.&#13;
The guidelines that follow are a composite&#13;
of Vice Chancellor Harris&#13;
description of them and of faculty&#13;
description. They are at best rough&#13;
outlines and probably have the distortions&#13;
the Vice Chancellor feared so greatly, and&#13;
yet caused by himself.&#13;
— Teaching: it will be assumed to De&#13;
adequate unless questioned; .&#13;
— Research and Publication: working&#13;
on faculty committees, etc. — it's not a&#13;
substitute for research;&#13;
— Community service: it must aid in the&#13;
mission of Parkside, and must be relevant&#13;
to your field;&#13;
— Overlapping in departments: it a&#13;
department has many members with the&#13;
same rank, the weakest would be&#13;
"removed". Seemingly, a likely place for&#13;
this to happen would be in Geography and&#13;
Political Science because none of the&#13;
people there have tenure;&#13;
— If you take more than five years after&#13;
getting a BA to get a PhD you would&#13;
probably not reach "academic distinction";&#13;
&#13;
— Prospects for the future: age would be&#13;
a primary consideration.&#13;
The criteria are seemingly not too different&#13;
from those of any other institution&#13;
whose goal is academic excellence. The&#13;
question is how closely are they going to be&#13;
enforced. They are, overall, still only&#13;
guidelines, and not dictates, and the&#13;
executive committees apparently do not&#13;
have to toe tightly to them.&#13;
Dean MacKinney said in a taped interview&#13;
with this reporter, "The executive&#13;
committees are going to undertake a&#13;
person by person detailed review of the&#13;
records and arrive at individual&#13;
judgments. This is very carefully done. I&#13;
think that all anyone can say is you have to&#13;
assume goodwill. You have to assume the&#13;
essential humanity of everybody involved."&#13;
&#13;
Vice Chancellor Harris said, "It's a&#13;
matter of how vigorously the divisions&#13;
want to follow the guidelines. I want to&#13;
emphasize I'm not rigidly judging junior&#13;
faculty. But this doesn't mean I don't have&#13;
any tentative judgments."&#13;
A faculty member says, "Although the&#13;
university regulations quite clearly state&#13;
that it's the administration which will do&#13;
the hiring and firingfat least up to recently&#13;
in Madison, it's been extremely rare for&#13;
the administration to do anything but&#13;
rubber-stamp decisions by executive&#13;
committees of the faculty. The Chancellor&#13;
had done more than to intimate that such&#13;
will not be the case at Parkside."&#13;
The possible effect of the guidelines on&#13;
the faculty could be enormous. Just two&#13;
criteria, the need of a PhD, and the&#13;
obligation to publish, make at least half&#13;
the faculty vulnerable to being eventually&#13;
dismissed.&#13;
Of the 144 full-time faculty members,&#13;
only 78 or 79 have PhDs, and a smaller&#13;
number than that have been published.&#13;
Overall, the faculty response to the&#13;
Harris guidelines is typified by Michael&#13;
Holmes, an assistant professor of History,&#13;
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terested in high quality research and&#13;
PU"f he ^administration," he said, "does&#13;
have a role to. play here. If you take the&#13;
Madison Campus the faculty is very strong&#13;
indeed, and the administration only plays&#13;
a limited role in evaluating research, and&#13;
really, in evaluation of the faculty. They&#13;
rely on the judgment of their faculty.&#13;
"Here it's a question of balance, he&#13;
said. "Is the administration going to rely&#13;
on its faculty's judgment, or is it going to&#13;
exert its own judgment? At this point we&#13;
really don't know."&#13;
Interested in&#13;
Cheerleading?&#13;
Today is the last practice you can attend&#13;
if you are interested in trying out for either&#13;
cheerleading or Rangerettes (pom-pom&#13;
squad). Many girls seem to be holding&#13;
back because they are afraid it's too difficult.&#13;
&#13;
The two groups are trying to convince&#13;
girls that it isn't difficult and that, in fact,&#13;
they would probably have a better chance&#13;
now than they would have had in high&#13;
school — fewer girls try out for the&#13;
respective squads. If it's experience&#13;
you're worried about, the girls say, "We'll&#13;
give it to you."&#13;
Cheerleading try outs will consist of a&#13;
few short cheers done in groups, some&#13;
jumps, splits, cartwheels, and two optional&#13;
stunts. The girls will be judged mainly on&#13;
coordination, pep and enthusiasm, voice,&#13;
and general appearance.&#13;
Rangerette tryouts will consist of a short&#13;
routine with the pom-poms, done twice,&#13;
and a short kicking routine, also done&#13;
twice. These girls will be primarily judged&#13;
on coordination, keeping with the music,&#13;
use of pom-poms, kicks, and general appearance.&#13;
&#13;
No number has been set as to how many&#13;
girls will be on each squad, since the&#13;
athletic department would rather wait and&#13;
see how many try out and how many are&#13;
good. Girls may try out for both groups or&#13;
for one.&#13;
Today's practice will run from 4:00 to&#13;
7:00 in the Racine Campus Badger Room.&#13;
If you are interested, the groups urge you&#13;
to come and see what it's all about.&#13;
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PARKSIDE FEATURE FILM SERIES&#13;
presents:&#13;
SEX and THE SINGLE GIRL&#13;
STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING&#13;
Friday, Oct. 23, 8:00 P.M.&#13;
Admission 75( with Parkside &amp; Wisconsin L&amp; &#13;
THORN&#13;
B y K e n K o n k o l&#13;
desirable change. It means moving toward&#13;
the understanding, the cooperation, and&#13;
the reforms that we need today and will&#13;
need tomorrow.&#13;
I am optimistic about the future of our&#13;
University, in large part because of my&#13;
The Year The Cubs Lost&#13;
By John K olo en&#13;
There have been mixed reactions in&#13;
ard to the 'column' of mine which&#13;
Seared in the last issue. In general, the&#13;
reactionaries on campus praised it as a&#13;
hlow against the administration, while our&#13;
administrators felt I had overstepped the&#13;
bounds of propriety and ventured into&#13;
areas that had heretofore been considered&#13;
taboo The silent majority, of which I&#13;
consider myself a vocal member, opened&#13;
their eyes, yawned, asked themselves if I&#13;
was f or real, and went back to sleep.&#13;
1 also received a few suggestions on how&#13;
to 'improve', many of which can't be&#13;
minted because they are down right&#13;
slanderous, such as: "How about printing&#13;
that Prof X is a Pinko?" I know he is after&#13;
talking to people in his class that felt he&#13;
had leanings in that direction, but that is a&#13;
part of his personal life and does not&#13;
concern the operation of this school? If it&#13;
doesn't concern the school, administration,&#13;
or teaching, it won't be seen&#13;
here Certain administrators felt I should&#13;
be 'restrained' from writing any more&#13;
articles, while faculty members were*&#13;
divided. The younger ones, who have no&#13;
hopes of having their contracts renewed,&#13;
praised me privately but said not to let it&#13;
get around. Those working for tenure said&#13;
I should tone it down, and those with&#13;
tenure didn't give a damn (unless they&#13;
were also administrators, of course).&#13;
You will remember in my last column I&#13;
offered to personally interview any administrator&#13;
who felt I had said anything&#13;
that was untrue. Not one single person&#13;
objected enough to what I said to be able to&#13;
prove I was wrong. I suppose this could be&#13;
construed as an admission of guilt, that the&#13;
administration agrees it is incompetent,&#13;
certain administrators in particular. I&#13;
would ca ll that a minor victory.&#13;
In regard to the evaluation of the Science&#13;
Division, I received only one comment,&#13;
proving once again that the student body is&#13;
too ap athetic to do anything about their&#13;
apathy.&#13;
One minor retraction requested by Dr.&#13;
Cacs: Dr. MacKinney does not read&#13;
German, it was Chancellor Wylie who&#13;
accused Dr. Cacs of being a pretender to&#13;
his Doctorate. Dr. MacKinney said that his&#13;
policy for retaining teachers was ten per&#13;
cent teaching and 90 per cent research. So&#13;
the reporting in the last column was in&#13;
error. To Dr. Cacs. I apologize.&#13;
(Due to insufficient room in the last&#13;
paper, part 2 was deleted. Therefore parts&#13;
2 and 3 appear in the same issue.)&#13;
You, my reader, are apathetic. You are&#13;
going to be swallowed in a sea of y our own&#13;
indecisiveness if you don't awaken. In my&#13;
first two columns I advanced certain ideas&#13;
of my own as spokesman for the silent&#13;
majority on campus. It seems that I was&#13;
more correct than I anticipated in&#13;
choosing the title 'A vocal member of the&#13;
silent majority'. I find the majority silent&#13;
indeed. I find the opposition non-existent,&#13;
even on such controversial topics to which&#13;
I choose to address myself. Doesn't one&#13;
person out there disagree with me? If not,&#13;
this column is liable to get very boring and&#13;
very one-sided. I invite rebuttal, I thrive&#13;
on it. So far the only person to offer constructive&#13;
criticism have been Mr. Keehn of&#13;
economics and Mr. Greenbaum of physics&#13;
— and the librarians.&#13;
-+- + +&#13;
October 1,1970&#13;
TO FACULTY MEMBERS&#13;
ON ALL CAMPUSES&#13;
In leaving the presidency, I want to say&#13;
two th ings to my faculty colleagues:&#13;
First, a word of appreciation. You, more&#13;
than any one else, are responsible for the&#13;
excellence and prestige of our university,&#13;
as a research and teaching and extension&#13;
("Involvement") institution. Because of&#13;
you the University's national reputation is&#13;
greater than ever before.&#13;
Second, a thought on the immediate&#13;
future. In this difficult year, I hope that&#13;
faculty members will find some extra time&#13;
to work with undergraduates. This does&#13;
not mean neglecting advanced students or&#13;
research or national professional&#13;
responsibilities. Far from it; all our&#13;
^sential activities must be continued. But&#13;
right now a close faculty-student&#13;
relationship is the real key to a better&#13;
future on our campuses.&#13;
Working with undergraduates involves&#13;
opposing violence and destruction, but it&#13;
does not mean "holding students down .&#13;
Quite the contrary. It means joining&#13;
students in effecting necessary ana&#13;
confidence in you.&#13;
Fred Harvey Harrington&#13;
+ + +&#13;
My personal feelings on the matter of&#13;
research versus teaching are that for each&#13;
bit of time spent on research is one less bit&#13;
of time spent on teaching. The instructor&#13;
who is hired mainly to do research is&#13;
conversely not an effective teacher. Noneffective&#13;
teachers should not be allowed to&#13;
teach.&#13;
You will remember that in my first&#13;
article I entered a sly dig at our&#13;
psychology department. That was because&#13;
I have yet to hear from anyone taking any&#13;
psychology course that they have a&#13;
competent teacher. I would like to be&#13;
proved incorrect. Do we have a competent&#13;
psych instructor at this school?&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Announcing the formation of a nonteacher&#13;
of th e year award, to be presented&#13;
to the most non-effective, incompetent&#13;
teacher at the end of e ach semester. Your&#13;
votes may be cast with this writer. I will&#13;
print the names of the leaders from time to&#13;
time. Of course, the winner will probably&#13;
be granted tenure at this university, but&#13;
hopefully we can keep his class load down&#13;
to zero so'he can spend more time on his&#13;
research.&#13;
Breakdown of the&#13;
Textbook Dollar&#13;
For most students the major expense of&#13;
book buying is over for this semester. But&#13;
many students still wonder, where does all&#13;
the money go? Contrary to popular belief,&#13;
the bookstore is not getting rich at&#13;
students' expense.&#13;
,The following chart, based on a 1967&#13;
survey, gives the breakdown of the textbook&#13;
dollar:&#13;
12.3 cents — Author, this is the average&#13;
royalty payment in 1967.&#13;
7.8 cents — Publisher, income to provide&#13;
author advances, reinvestment, market&#13;
research, new product development, etc.&#13;
3 cents — College Bookstore.&#13;
5.5 cents — Publishers services, the&#13;
storage, shipping and handling of the&#13;
books.&#13;
7 cents — Bookstore expenses, from the&#13;
cost of physical facilities through accounting&#13;
and record keeping.&#13;
6.3 cents — Other publisher expenses:&#13;
employee welfare, rent, heat and salaries.&#13;
27.1 cents — P ublishers production and&#13;
editorial expenses: the cost of making&#13;
arrangements for the books to be written,&#13;
editing manuscript, printing, and delivery&#13;
of finished book.&#13;
10 cents — Bookstore salaries.&#13;
8 cents — Taxes.&#13;
13 cents — Publishers sales and&#13;
promotional expenses; this covers the&#13;
advertising expenses and the free books&#13;
given to professors.&#13;
Film Festival&#13;
To Tour&#13;
The Fifth National Student Film&#13;
Festival, largest of its kind in history, will&#13;
tour colleges and universities across the&#13;
country and will be available to student&#13;
organizations for sponsorship, it was&#13;
recently announced.&#13;
The festival, sponsored by the Joseph&#13;
Schlitz Brewing Company,&#13;
Mllwaukee, the&#13;
American Film Institute, the Motion&#13;
Picture Association of America, and th&#13;
National Student Association, earned the&#13;
distinction of being the largest as a result&#13;
nf attracting a record 347 e ntries in this&#13;
vear's film competition. The films came&#13;
from 84 colleges and universities nation-&#13;
^Following a World Premiere at Lincoln&#13;
Center in New York on Oct. 13, a package&#13;
rf award-winning films can be sponsored&#13;
££ Ly^!so&#13;
0b&#13;
n&#13;
e&#13;
,S&#13;
ren&#13;
Cted&#13;
g&#13;
for £&#13;
^"Information concerning sponsorship&#13;
or telephone 212-595-8080.&#13;
In the year of o ur lord nineteen-hundred&#13;
and sixty nine the most relevant issues&#13;
concerning P-side students and other nondescript&#13;
teenagers referred to whether or&#13;
not students would be allowed to drink&#13;
beer on campus and whether or not the&#13;
Cubs would win the pennant. And then&#13;
came the moratorium and on the day after&#13;
the earth was created and through the&#13;
world words of peace flashed on talk shows&#13;
and even Rocky Graciano displayed a&#13;
chybby symbol for Merve Griffin. It&#13;
seemed almost like the pre-democratic&#13;
convention days when pigs were behind&#13;
fences and draft boards were places to&#13;
avoid and marijuana was viewed as a&#13;
delicacy. It was a let's pretend show and&#13;
tell and see what happens kind of atmosphere&#13;
and people began to say what&#13;
the hell it can't be all that bad. And then&#13;
after the sixty-eight odessey with its&#13;
hilarious footnotes and comic characters&#13;
was over and the newspapers made a&#13;
bundle and life magazine became a&#13;
crusader for the youth culture it became&#13;
evident that exploitation was the first&#13;
words of the senile industry called politics.&#13;
The democrats seeing the light of the&#13;
lord in the dilated eyes of the happy&#13;
millions jumped at the opportunity of&#13;
fulfilling their tortered idealism and at the&#13;
same time buy their way into the youthful&#13;
crowds. Sure, the democrats are relevant&#13;
was the cry and though at first they didn't&#13;
succeed they gained some respect. Don&#13;
Peterson told Daley off in the auditorium&#13;
and ninety of the more clownish delegates&#13;
ran out during a commercial to State&#13;
street to march with the protestors. The&#13;
fantasy of civil disobediance was re-run&#13;
and though in the past it had been assumed&#13;
disobedience meant non-violence a new&#13;
generation of idealists came to school.&#13;
Like their fathers they talked of s ocialism&#13;
and welfare, condemning the government&#13;
grabbing the graffiti of Thoreau; and all&#13;
over the bathrooms of middle america's&#13;
universities the words "That government&#13;
which governs least . . . . " sprung up. It&#13;
was springtime in the college political&#13;
activists cycle and the song Aquarius&#13;
came along and everyone knew "fixin' to&#13;
die rag."&#13;
It was a happy time. Absurdity reigned&#13;
as the prime weapon against the puritan&#13;
reasoning of a government and all its&#13;
subsidiaries — c ommonly referred to as&#13;
the middle class. Abbie Hoffman hung&#13;
himself in effigy on California Avenue&#13;
outside the Cook County asylum and SDS&#13;
printed the picture of marion delegate&#13;
derailing a train in France. But, unfortunately,&#13;
the antics of Hoffman were&#13;
filmed and seen by horrified republican&#13;
senators who took it so seriously as to call&#13;
their sons and daughters tools of communism&#13;
and then retired to homes to pray&#13;
for a shower of bombs and the old days.&#13;
And the SDS, after Columbia, began to&#13;
take itself seriously and the situation&#13;
rambled and boiled and soon buildings&#13;
began to disappear and scorecards were&#13;
sold at political rallies. And the real people&#13;
watched and thumbs on their lips said,&#13;
"Isn't he cute."&#13;
And the password to reform was involvement&#13;
and everyone carried a card.&#13;
Democrats felt they trounced the&#13;
republicans in the political arena. They&#13;
pointed at the masses marching down&#13;
Easter Sunday Chicago streets and called&#13;
for peace and collected among the more&#13;
moderate slaves to knock at doors and&#13;
otherwise perform useless functions. It&#13;
became a happy hunting ground where the&#13;
politicians walked in shirt sleeves and&#13;
spoke the dialect of the young .... They&#13;
could swear with the best of them. The&#13;
democrats envisioned the idealism of&#13;
prophets detailing the meaningless&#13;
bloodshed of hot barreled police and used&#13;
the pictures of their unfortunate sons to&#13;
pollute their political advertisements and&#13;
appeal to the voters for an end to violence .&#13;
. . . which of course only the democrats&#13;
could guarantee.&#13;
And then the SDS tromped the&#13;
democrats. Every rally every march it&#13;
seemed tasted of blood and somehow it&#13;
was only the innocent who were found on&#13;
the streets or in the allies bleeding. And it&#13;
was then that disobediance meant not nonviolence&#13;
(Thoreau never said that) and&#13;
idealism meant revolution and revolution&#13;
meant by any means necessary.&#13;
And the war erupted between the&#13;
pacifists and the revolutionaries. And it&#13;
was the revolutionaries who convinced the&#13;
pacifists to, if not participate in the&#13;
scheduled comedy called revolution, at&#13;
least turn their eyes the other way. And the&#13;
pacifices did just that and it became&#13;
evident after the first Moratorium that&#13;
nothing would be changed except through&#13;
revolution and everyone was freed from&#13;
the binding oath or maybe illusion of right&#13;
over might and left to choose their own&#13;
creative way of dealing with reality.&#13;
And sides were drawn up. Cadres were&#13;
formed and moved into basements while&#13;
their gullible brothets went to work for&#13;
anti-war democrats flying high on the&#13;
Woodstock dove. And shorn of their long&#13;
hair because they had to meet the public&#13;
they sat in musty cold coffee offices calling&#13;
phone book names and saying vote for the&#13;
candidate of your choice.... but vote, and&#13;
then they were their wore their feet out on&#13;
sidewalks marching ceaselessly to strange&#13;
doors with matchbooks and leaflets only to&#13;
return at night worn out and disgusted and&#13;
ready to get drunk.&#13;
While their brothers in the khaki pants&#13;
and beards had all the fun of blowing up&#13;
buildings and attempting to bomb a&#13;
munition plant in what turned out to be an&#13;
episode from a Marx brothers flick. But&#13;
they in their creative bent of mind&#13;
developed phrases that Madison Avenue&#13;
would have given its bell bottoms for;&#13;
Conti nued p . 6&#13;
B U&#13;
FABRICS FOR C&#13;
ALL OCCASIONS&#13;
- 658-8612 -&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
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Sportswear&#13;
1202 - 56th Stree t&#13;
Keno sha, Wis. 652-69 04&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
F O R M E N&#13;
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Now $27.50&#13;
Prices to&#13;
Fit Your Pocket&#13;
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PIZZA&#13;
KITCHEN Success Natural for l/ALEO'S&#13;
Fifth Dimension ALSO&#13;
CHICKEN DINNERS and&#13;
ITALIAN SAUSAGE BOMBERS&#13;
Open 6 Days a Week From 4 p.n&#13;
Closed Mondays&#13;
5021 30th Ave.&#13;
Success is something that comes&#13;
naturally to the 5th Dimension because&#13;
they have caught the vibrations of their&#13;
generation, and beat to its rhythm.&#13;
The Grammy Award-winning group will&#13;
bring those "vibes" to Racine's J. I. Case&#13;
Field House when they present a concert&#13;
under sponsorship of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside Student Activities&#13;
Office at 8 p.m. Monday. Oct. 26. Tickets&#13;
are available at the Student Activities&#13;
Office on the Wood Road Campus;&#13;
Bidinger's Music House. Kenosha; and&#13;
Cooke-Gere Company, Racine.&#13;
The 5th Dimension ushered in the new&#13;
decade of the '70s with their hit record.&#13;
"The Age of Aquarius" - "Let the Sun&#13;
Shine In", winning Garmmy Awards for&#13;
best arrangement and best engineered&#13;
recording.&#13;
Their "Aquarius" album also was&#13;
nominated as Album of the Year. And no&#13;
wonder. The single hit No. 1 on the charts&#13;
FREE DELIVERY 4:00 P.M. TO 12:00&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
C o n ' t. from p . 4&#13;
right on. live like they do; rip-off and other&#13;
Stimulating* lyrics from the epicrevolution.&#13;
And it didn't make any difference&#13;
if you destroyed a train carrying&#13;
the working class home from work. It was&#13;
do your thing and I'm not your brothers&#13;
keeper and so what if some guy died in a&#13;
building which we blew up it cost the&#13;
state a couple of million dollars. Man,&#13;
that's where the revolution is and wouldn't&#13;
you like to live like them. Help us bring the&#13;
world to its knees kill anyone for the&#13;
revolution kill two and you get a feather&#13;
for your bonnet. And it isn't explained until&#13;
later that you are responsible for your&#13;
actions — or is it all insane. I know, there&#13;
is no such thing as insanity but you gotta&#13;
make your quota.&#13;
It makes for interesting characters.&#13;
But the cave dwellers were not the only&#13;
ones involved. A basketball coach runs for&#13;
the senate his biggest success is Lew&#13;
Alcinder and it becomes apparent that&#13;
basketball is the nations' most popular&#13;
game. And everyone is having fun but the&#13;
poor side-walking frustrated lad who&#13;
comes home every night to get drunk.&#13;
And inevitably "history leads to today.&#13;
Paranoia runs amuck in Madison and the&#13;
police carry guns. September nineteenseventy&#13;
in which Sybil Leek had predicted&#13;
nothing but added that in October and&#13;
November bloodbaths will inundate the&#13;
countryside and the flowers will wilt. And&#13;
while politicians predict grotesque&#13;
violence while on the road toward election&#13;
and the revolutionaries run around&#13;
fulfilling the predictions and the peer and&#13;
culturally misrepresented freaks and&#13;
blacks and whites suffer from&#13;
harrassment and encroaching chains of&#13;
government and law and the police crack&#13;
your door on a hunch ask yourself if the&#13;
cubs will win the pennant.&#13;
Ladies night&#13;
Tues.-Thurs.&#13;
Drinks Yi price&#13;
SOUR HOUR&#13;
BEER BLAST&#13;
Beer 10$&#13;
Sour mixes 25$&#13;
Between 8 &amp; 9&#13;
Our shirts and ties are&#13;
getting together for a great&#13;
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UNICORNS&#13;
NEVER A COVER CHARGE&#13;
"Why pay more at the door"&#13;
Heavy Bands&#13;
Every Wed., Thurs., Fri. &amp; Sat.&#13;
1210 SHERIDAN ROAD BRAT Anchorlnn&#13;
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%&#13;
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Chicken—H am&#13;
Monday-Thursday $1.95&#13;
Friday-Sunday $2.25&#13;
Children $1.10&#13;
PLUS TAX AND IIVHAOI&#13;
LADIES NITE&#13;
Mon. &amp; Tues- 8:30 to 10:30&#13;
Buy the first drink, second drink for 10c&#13;
Where It Is At!&#13;
LUNCHEONS&#13;
CHAT&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
Brat or Steak or Beefburger&#13;
and&#13;
French Fries or Onion Rings&#13;
or Potato Salad&#13;
and&#13;
looner or Bottle or Glass of&#13;
SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
Roast Chicken with&#13;
Biscuits and gravy&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS.&#13;
U 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;
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SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sat 5&#13;
flon.-Thnrs. 5 p.m&gt;,&#13;
San. 12 Noon-9&#13;
55&lt; 9006 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Phone 694-1733 BRAT-STOP&#13;
Northwest Corner 1-94 and Highway 50 &#13;
Instructor Quit&#13;
Because of Class Size&#13;
"I intend, personally, to do whatever I&#13;
an to influence a student concern for&#13;
teaching," Dean Arthur MacKinney told&#13;
L Newscope. "It's unfortunate I seemed&#13;
to be misread. I don't in any sense mean to&#13;
undervalue good teaching, and student&#13;
contacts with teachers."&#13;
The Newscope has obtained a&#13;
memorandum from his office 10 the&#13;
divisional chairmen concerning second&#13;
semester t imetables.&#13;
Hesaysin it: "Apparently there is, shall&#13;
we say, some disagreement about the&#13;
matter of enrollment limits on courses.&#13;
Please n ote, however, that we are in a&#13;
numbers game and we have to accommodate&#13;
large numbers of students.&#13;
We simply can't afford to pay too much&#13;
attention," he says, "to this business about&#13;
not being able to teach more than so many&#13;
students at a crack. We will have to be&#13;
tough about this and everyone can expect&#13;
to get exceptionally critical scrutiny of any&#13;
such limits.&#13;
"In fact," he continues, "you can inform&#13;
your people that in virtually every case we&#13;
will use the facilities limits, but not&#13;
preferential limits. Otherwise, limits will&#13;
have to be justified to the hilt!"&#13;
Last Wednesday an education teacher&#13;
quit because he felt he couldn't adequately&#13;
teach the size of the class he had.&#13;
POETRY CORNER . . .&#13;
MADONNA OF THE EARTH&#13;
Within me I see&#13;
a universe&#13;
with raging seas and&#13;
calm deserts . . .&#13;
warm sunshine . . .&#13;
turbulent storms&#13;
Yet here I be atop a hill,&#13;
surveying all I find;&#13;
seeking out men,&#13;
retrieving lambs,&#13;
and no one perceives&#13;
the strength&#13;
I&#13;
need.&#13;
Still I am beautiful,&#13;
the world loves me;&#13;
and I can see my worth,&#13;
I&#13;
$&#13;
am&#13;
Madonna of the Earth.&#13;
BRING US TOGETHER&#13;
It's a free country said the man swinging&#13;
an ax-handle at his neighbor&#13;
You can say that again said the neighbor&#13;
swung against and swinging back&#13;
And the great thing about US said the&#13;
woman swinging her handbag&#13;
Is everybody can express theirself said the&#13;
woman smacked in the eye by the&#13;
handbag and&#13;
Swinging back at the student carrying a&#13;
placard for peace and&#13;
Being swung along by the shouts of&#13;
End the war Burn the war down Smash the&#13;
windows of the war&#13;
From THE NIXON POEMS&#13;
by Eve Merriam&#13;
Antheneum Publishers -1970&#13;
Regents Accept&#13;
Gifts For UW-P&#13;
A second grant from American Motors&#13;
Corporation for a Parkside study of environmental&#13;
quality in southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin was among gifts and grants&#13;
totaling $49,393 accepted by the University&#13;
Regents on behplf of UWP last Friday.&#13;
The AMC grant of $5,000 follows an&#13;
initial grant of $10,000 which the company&#13;
presented to Parkside last May to&#13;
inaugurate the project, which is titled "A&#13;
Wisconsin Regional Study of Environmental&#13;
Quality".&#13;
The initial emphasis of the project,&#13;
currently underway, is assembling an&#13;
information and data base on environmental&#13;
problems in this area of the&#13;
state. Although the two initial grants will&#13;
not provide for either basic scientific&#13;
research on solutions or the mounting of&#13;
anti-pollutions, future support would&#13;
enable Parkside to engage in more ambitious&#13;
and comprehensive environmental&#13;
management programs. Both UWP and&#13;
AMC officials have expressed strong interest&#13;
in continuing support of the project,&#13;
which involves a multi-discipline approach&#13;
using engineers, chemists, economists,&#13;
statisticians, political scientists and other&#13;
specialists.&#13;
+ 4- +&#13;
In other actions affecting Parkside, the&#13;
Regents accepted: A U.S. Government&#13;
grant of National Defence Student Loan&#13;
Program funds totaling $38,808 for UWP&#13;
students during the 1971 fiscal year; gifts&#13;
totaling $3,810 to be used for Kenneth L.&#13;
Greenquist Memorial Scholarships; a gift&#13;
of 103 Ge rman language books valued at&#13;
$775 presented to the UWP library by Mrs.&#13;
Otto Weiss of Racine; and a gift of a U.S.&#13;
map including samples of petrified wood,&#13;
from each state valued at $1,000 and&#13;
presented by Mrs. Alex Pezdir of Kenosha.&#13;
Sunnysiie florists&#13;
Qreenhouscs&#13;
Flown - Fruit Bofctts - Cifts&#13;
Phone: 649-6700&#13;
VI end FRANK WEINSTOCKi&#13;
30 21 • 73TH ST.&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 33140&#13;
' Banquet&#13;
Rooms Available&#13;
Students! Support the Newscope.&#13;
supports you.&#13;
It&#13;
Course In Identity&#13;
Crisis Now Offered&#13;
"Investigation into Identity" is the title&#13;
of a University Extension course which&#13;
will meet on UW-Parkside's Wood Road&#13;
Campus on five Tuesdays, beginning Oct.&#13;
20 at 7 p.m.&#13;
Questions such as "Why do people lose&#13;
themselves?" "How can they find&#13;
themselves?" and "What is an 'identity&#13;
crisis?' " will be considered. Role playing&#13;
and group interactions will be used to help&#13;
the participants learn how to handle&#13;
identity problems.&#13;
Dr. Walter McDonald of the UWParkside&#13;
staff, who is a clinical&#13;
Psychologist with the Bacon Clinic, will&#13;
instruct the class.&#13;
Advance registration is requested. For&#13;
information call Kim Baugrud, University&#13;
Extension, 658-4861.&#13;
Parksid e's N e w scop e&#13;
K e n o sha C a m p us 104&#13;
I Newscope classifieds 50 cents a line&#13;
fuse them!&#13;
famous for&#13;
CARL'S PIZZA&#13;
In Four Sires 9" - 12" - 14" - 16"&#13;
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657-9843 or 658-4922&#13;
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8040&#13;
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Supper Club ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR ITS FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
with Almondine Sauce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRI ME RIB&#13;
Tha Place To Buy&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
Largast Salaction&#13;
Lawast Pricaa&#13;
UM&#13;
626 56th St. Ken osh a &#13;
Warren McGillivray. Warren Vogel, Dan Boswein,, Doug Anderson and Fred&#13;
Wolnerman exhibit their skill in gymnastics at the Racine campus.&#13;
Gymnastics Newest Sport Here&#13;
730 a . m . from W a u k e g a n a nd g e ts t o&#13;
Racine before 8:00 a.m. The team then&#13;
stays until 8:30 p.m. Their day includes&#13;
classes and a rough workout at the FarK&#13;
High School in the evening.&#13;
Each student is self-supporting and the&#13;
team is in the process of acquiring an&#13;
apartment in Racine.&#13;
Coach Ballester would like any other&#13;
male students interested in becoming a&#13;
gymnast to contact him in Racine at Room&#13;
11. There also will be a gymnastic club.&#13;
The Ranger gymnast team is the newest&#13;
addition in varsity sports. There has been&#13;
only one main problem so far for the&#13;
gymnasts. Since the nucleus of the team is&#13;
from out of state, Coach Bill Ballester has&#13;
had the team living with him and his&#13;
family. Coach Ballester states, "The guys&#13;
are really terrific. They have been living&#13;
with my family for a month now, and they&#13;
have been helping out with all the chores&#13;
around our home."&#13;
The whole team leaves with the coach at&#13;
UW-P Ha rriers Down Platteville&#13;
Parkside defeated the top-rated State&#13;
University Conference team, Platteville,&#13;
26-31 Tuesday afternoon in the first&#13;
competition held on UWP's new course&#13;
which crosses the 700-acre Wood Road&#13;
campus.&#13;
Ranger freshmen runners captured four&#13;
of the top six places as they evened the&#13;
score with the Pioneers who had beaten&#13;
them in a five-team meet which opened the&#13;
season and in the 12-team Platteville Invitational&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
Parkside's Chuck Dettman, from&#13;
Marinette, won the five-mile event in&#13;
26:32, a new Parkside record. Rick Lund,&#13;
also from Marinette, was third (26:56),&#13;
Rangers&#13;
Downed 3-1&#13;
According to Coach Jim Gibson, the&#13;
Purdue vs. Parkside Ranger soccer game&#13;
was very disappointing. Purdue was not in&#13;
the same class as the UWP players.&#13;
Gibson went on stating that Parkside&#13;
continued to play the same kind of kickand-run&#13;
ball as Purdue. The Rangers&#13;
fielded miserably in the effort. Gibson&#13;
added, with the ability and talent the&#13;
Rangers have, they just failed to use it&#13;
against Purdue. Purdue scored their first&#13;
goal in the first quarter on a cross from the&#13;
right wing. In the fourth quarter they&#13;
made the same type of shot for a goal off a&#13;
penalty kick.&#13;
Parkside scored later in the fourth&#13;
quarter on a penalty kick taken by Tony&#13;
Kriedle. Purdue then scored their last goal&#13;
to add insult with injury to the Ranger&#13;
team, resulting in a 3-1 victory for Purdue.&#13;
Gibson is looking forward to a much&#13;
more improved game against Platteville&#13;
on Saturday, Oct. 17, a t 2 p.m.&#13;
Home Season Closes&#13;
Next Saturday&#13;
Parkside's soccer team, fresh from its&#13;
victory over Platteville Saturday, will&#13;
close its home season next Saturday (Oct.&#13;
24) ag ainst the Wisconsin Junior All Stars&#13;
in an exhibition match on the Wood Road,&#13;
field at 2 p.m. UWP, now 3-5-1, concludes&#13;
its season at UW-Green Bay Oct. 31.&#13;
Attended Meeting&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie attended the annual&#13;
meeting of the American Council on&#13;
Education and the fall meeting of the&#13;
North Central Association of Colleges and&#13;
Secondary Schools.&#13;
Folk Music 75&lt;&#13;
THE OTHER SIDE&#13;
COFFEEHOUSE&#13;
EVERY FRI. &amp; SAT.&#13;
8-12 Mid. 328 Main&#13;
658-2233&#13;
Cocfcfoik- ^[wnclimA^dime^&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTH CITY LIMITS&#13;
^KSefeated Platteville&#13;
26-31.&#13;
ORPHEUM&#13;
Racine's Tim McGilsky was fourth (27:01)|&#13;
and Waterford's Jim McFadden was sixth&#13;
(27:05). The fifth Parkside runner to score&#13;
was Gary Lance, 12th, in 27:56.&#13;
Platteville's scorers were Ian&#13;
Dziubinski, second (26:47) Gregj&#13;
Hageman, fifth (27:02), A1 Russel, seventh&#13;
(27:13), Pat Stemper, eighth (27:19) and&#13;
Mike Seigle ninth (17:21).&#13;
Parkside, now 3-0 in dual competition,&#13;
will host Marquette Oct. 24 a t 11 a.m.&#13;
An All-Comers meet, set up to acquaint&#13;
UWP students and staff and the general&#13;
public with the new course, followed the&#13;
varsity race and attracted nearly 100&#13;
competitors.&#13;
lilt tilkt&#13;
iru&#13;
irn&#13;
widivi'olua&#13;
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6207 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
presents:&#13;
IN&#13;
CONCERT&#13;
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 8:00 p.m.&#13;
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OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. - 6 P.M.... FRIDAY 'Til , p.M. .. . SUNDAY 10A.M.-2 </text>
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              <text>Final Enrollment Now is 4,102</text>
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              <text>B ©&#13;
"SH&#13;
?u&#13;
CN&#13;
&lt;N&#13;
Final Enrollment Now Is 4,102&#13;
Les Aspin&#13;
Canvassing&#13;
Between 350 and 400 volunteers began a&#13;
canvassing of the First District for&#13;
Democratic congressional candidate Les&#13;
Aspin, Saturday, Oct. 10. It is an attempt to&#13;
poll the opinions of the district voters.&#13;
Students are asked to join the effort now,&#13;
as polling will continue on Saturdays Oct.&#13;
17 and 24. Canvassing is also tentatively&#13;
scheduled for Saturday, Oct. 31.&#13;
Canvassers will go door-to-door with a&#13;
questionnaire which will include queries&#13;
about opinions on federal spending for&#13;
pollution control, the economy, national&#13;
priorities, and the incumbent Schadeberg.&#13;
The objective is not to the force the&#13;
opinions of Aspin on the voters, but to&#13;
impartially record the voters' opinions.&#13;
The canvassers are instructed to be&#13;
friendly, polite, and to have a neat apThe&#13;
final fall' enrollment of 4,102 announced&#13;
by the University of WisconsinParkside&#13;
is 41 per cent higher than last&#13;
year, the greatest such increase among&#13;
the 13 public institutions in the UW and&#13;
State University systems.&#13;
The official enrollment also shows that&#13;
UWP's absolute increase of 1191 students&#13;
more than the 2911 enrolled last fall is the&#13;
second greatest total increase in the two&#13;
systems, exceeded only by UWMilwaukee,&#13;
which increased by slightly&#13;
more than 2,000.&#13;
This marks the third straight year —&#13;
since its beginning in 1968 — that Parkside&#13;
has led all state schools in percentage&#13;
growth.&#13;
Although enrollment figures from all the&#13;
public universities have not yet been&#13;
processed, UWP's 41 per cent increase is&#13;
easily the leader. The next highest&#13;
enrollment hike is UW-Green Bay's 22 per&#13;
cent. UWM is up about 12 per cent, the&#13;
seven-unit Center System will stay about&#13;
the same, and the Madison campus is&#13;
down slightly from 1969. Stevens Point&#13;
leads the State Universities with an 800, or&#13;
11 per cent, increase.&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie&#13;
said, "It is significant that Parkside&#13;
achieved its enrollment success in the face&#13;
of higher tuition costs, a general downturn&#13;
in the economy, and a shortage of financial&#13;
aids and summer jobs for students. At a&#13;
time when other institutions across the&#13;
country are stabilizing or falling off,&#13;
Parkside is moving ahead," he said.&#13;
Wyllie said he viewed enrollment as "a&#13;
Let's hear it for Parkside's little helpers" ... service with a smile.&#13;
measure of success in the educational&#13;
marketplace. Every registration," he&#13;
said, "is an expression of institutional&#13;
preference. Parkside's spectacular&#13;
growth indicates that we are meeting the&#13;
educational needs of ou r region, and that&#13;
we are the right track in ou r i nstitutional&#13;
development."&#13;
The chancellor said two things in the&#13;
enrollment picture bode well for the&#13;
future. "First, by enrolling more full-time&#13;
students we exceeded the official state&#13;
projections for full-time eouivalent&#13;
students (determined by averaging the&#13;
part-timers). Second, we expect analysis&#13;
will show that our retention rate for&#13;
continuing students improved substantially.&#13;
That means that those who&#13;
were with us in 1969 liked us well enough to&#13;
return, which is a very good sign.".&#13;
Wyllie said he was encouraged by the&#13;
number of Racine students in Parkside's&#13;
freshmen class. Although exact figures&#13;
aren't yet available, about 55 percent of&#13;
the new frosh from Racine and Kenosha&#13;
counties are expected to be from Racine.&#13;
Last year the class was equally divided&#13;
between the two counties, and in 1968&#13;
nearly 60 per cent were from Kenosha&#13;
County.&#13;
"This does not mean that fewer Kenosha&#13;
County students are attending Parkside,"&#13;
Wyllie said. "Parkside was strong from&#13;
the beginning in Kenosha, and students&#13;
from that county are increasing every&#13;
year. What it does mean is that Racine&#13;
County students also are turning to&#13;
Parkside in great numbers."&#13;
nr&#13;
Midnight L ibrary Hours P roposed&#13;
A proposal to extend library hours at&#13;
Tallent Hall to twelve midnight, five nights&#13;
a week is now under consideration. Tight&#13;
personnel budget costs, however, give it&#13;
only a slight chance according to Head&#13;
Librarian Philip Burnett.&#13;
The proposal is the result of a petition&#13;
submitted by junior John Werwie and a&#13;
letter by Dr. Anna Williams sympathizing&#13;
with the students' need for more&#13;
study and research time. The petition,&#13;
asking for an extension of hours to midnight,&#13;
Sunday through Thursday, instead&#13;
pearance. The canvassers are also to be&#13;
impartial, not arguing or offering any of&#13;
their own opinions.&#13;
After recording the responses to the&#13;
short questionnaire, the volunteers will&#13;
leave Aspin's brochure with the voter. But&#13;
the purpose is primarily to gather information&#13;
for the opinion poll.&#13;
Anyone interested in helping with the&#13;
canvass should call the Racine Aspin&#13;
headquarters at 632-4487 or the Kenosha&#13;
headquarters at 654-7900. Interested&#13;
persons may also go to 226 Main St. in&#13;
Racine on Oct. 17 or Oct. 24 at 8:30 a.m.&#13;
of 10:30, was signed by 26 students and&#13;
submitted to David Streeter, head of&#13;
circulation and references, on September&#13;
28.&#13;
According to John, a pre-med student,&#13;
the present library hours do not allow&#13;
'enough study time for students in such&#13;
fields as engineering or medicine.&#13;
Burnett said the library is sympathetic&#13;
to the student's request and upon receipt of&#13;
the petition a head-count was started to&#13;
determine library attendance. It was&#13;
found that definitely more students are&#13;
using the library than last year and about&#13;
five or six students use the library past ten&#13;
o'clock.&#13;
The added cost of remaining open one&#13;
and a half hours longer five nights a week,&#13;
if started in November, would be between&#13;
400 and 500 dollars, utilizing one staff&#13;
member.&#13;
"We will remain open if we can but&#13;
because of the personnel bind we may not&#13;
be able to," he said. "The people here are&#13;
taking a very pessimistic view."&#13;
Students having late-night classes that&#13;
end around ten o'clock may be encouraged&#13;
to study in the library if it remained open&#13;
longer, said Burnett. He noted that&#13;
campus libraries at Madison and&#13;
Milwaukee remain open past midnight and&#13;
some libraries are maintained 24 ho urs a&#13;
day.&#13;
The proposal is Burnett's decision, and if&#13;
passed it w ould probably go into effect in&#13;
November. If not this year, then most&#13;
possibly next year.&#13;
A number of students last year were&#13;
given permission to remain at Kenosha&#13;
campus library after closing time. But&#13;
library help was on a "voluntary basis"&#13;
and custodial problems necessitated it&#13;
being a temporary arrangement, said&#13;
Burnett.&#13;
Deadline Coming&#13;
Indications, Parkside's literary&#13;
magazine, has set the deadline for the&#13;
second edition. All materials must be&#13;
submitted to Pat Nelson or to the&#13;
Newscope office on or before Oct. 25.&#13;
Sales of the second edition will take&#13;
place at the bookstores on all three&#13;
campuses. The price of Indications is fifty&#13;
cents.&#13;
Predicts Bright Sports Future for Parkside&#13;
Last year John Hanzalik finished&#13;
number one in epee at the National Finals&#13;
of the United States Sports Council, and&#13;
was one of 15 fencers to represent the U.S.&#13;
at the World University at Turin, Italy.&#13;
This p-happened remarkably only a little&#13;
more than a year and a half after he began&#13;
fencing.&#13;
Extraordinary as this sounds, John said&#13;
that as a freshman "I came out just to see&#13;
what it was like. Once I gave it a chance, it&#13;
worked on me. I had to practice hard at it.&#13;
To some people it comes easily, though. It&#13;
didn't for me."&#13;
He was a .500 fencer as a freshman, but&#13;
improved as the season went on. At the end&#13;
of it he knew he had a faint chance for&#13;
making the U.S. team the following year.&#13;
He set his goal at that, and after a year&#13;
of continuous practice, he had achieved it&#13;
by winning 92 per cent of his matches, and&#13;
by winning the National Finals at Notre&#13;
Dame in epee to qualify for the team.&#13;
He went to Italy and in the pressure of&#13;
international competition he lost his first&#13;
two matches to an Englishman and a&#13;
Russian.&#13;
He rebounded then and beat an Indonesian&#13;
and a Cuban. But he lost to an&#13;
Italian in the fifth match by one touch after&#13;
tying 4-4 after four minutes, and was thus&#13;
eliminated in the first round. The Italian&#13;
eventually finished in a three way tie for&#13;
the gold medal.&#13;
Overall, counting individual and team&#13;
matches, John finished with a 5-8 record.&#13;
Considering the U.S. has never won any&#13;
medals at the Games, his showing was a&#13;
good one.&#13;
He said the best fencers in the world are&#13;
in Europe, and that they were superior to&#13;
American fencers in technique. But it's not&#13;
because they have more talent than&#13;
Americans do. It's that they have more&#13;
opportunity to compete.&#13;
This success of John's was mirrored by&#13;
the success of the entire team last year.&#13;
His talent was only part of the reason for&#13;
the good showing Parkside fencing enjoyed.&#13;
Clark Anderson, Grant Anderson&#13;
(who has transferred to Madison), Keith&#13;
Herbrechsmeir, John Zanotti and captain&#13;
Bruce Bosman also were key components&#13;
in Parkside's 21 and 4 record in dual meets&#13;
last year.&#13;
The team last year ranked fourth in the&#13;
Midwest. Ahead, to the pride of the team,&#13;
of Madison, which finished fifth and which&#13;
was beaten by the Parkside team.&#13;
John feels three things contribute to the&#13;
unusual success of the team, the skill and&#13;
dedication of Loren Hein as a coach, the&#13;
degree of commitment to the sport the&#13;
fencers have, and inherent ability of the&#13;
team.&#13;
He says of Hein, "He's instilled some of&#13;
his incentive into the individual fencers.&#13;
Plus, which is very important, he went out&#13;
and fought to get our schedule. If we had&#13;
stayed fencing teams like the University of&#13;
Chicago every year, I don't think we would&#13;
be as good as we are. In order to get better&#13;
you have to play somebody as good or&#13;
better than you are."&#13;
A few years ago the meet with the&#13;
University of Chicago was the highlight of&#13;
the season; now the Jay Vees play them.&#13;
But the attitude of the team itself may&#13;
have made the crucial difference last&#13;
year. "I think, mainly, it was that individually&#13;
Clark, myself, Keith and all the&#13;
other lettermen committed ourselves to do&#13;
something, and because we wanted to&#13;
accomplish this something we worked&#13;
hard, and we gave ourselves to the sport.&#13;
That's the big thing."&#13;
Commitment may be the key word for&#13;
Parkside's fencers. The season runs over&#13;
six months, and the first meet doesn't&#13;
occur till December 5, more than nine&#13;
weeks after practice begins. The fencers&#13;
practice five days a week for two to three&#13;
hours a day.&#13;
And if the fencer wants to compete&#13;
outside of school as John did, it requires&#13;
year round practice.&#13;
The result is that "we weed out the&#13;
people who don't want to fence. If you want&#13;
to fence on the team, you're going to do it&#13;
because you really want to. I think that's&#13;
one of the reasons for our success. We&#13;
weed out those who aren't serious."&#13;
Fencing requires a physical agility as&#13;
well as mental agility. John describes it as&#13;
"The coordination of your mind and body&#13;
into one action. That's one way in which&#13;
fencing is unique. When you combine these&#13;
two things they have to be done naturally.&#13;
It has to be second nature. You react instinctively.&#13;
It's like a game of physical&#13;
chess."&#13;
John feels this year's team may be the&#13;
school's best ever. Where 20 people were&#13;
out for the nine varsity positions last year&#13;
(foil, epee and sabre each have three&#13;
starting positions), 35 are out this year.&#13;
Most of last year's starters are back, too.&#13;
But this year the schedule is tougher,,&#13;
too. Some of the opponents will be the&#13;
University of Ohio, last year's Big Ten&#13;
champions, Notre Dame, the University of&#13;
Illinois, Purdue, and on December 5 at&#13;
Parkside, the University of Minnesota&#13;
With opposition the caliber of that, John&#13;
said, the team would appreciate if more&#13;
fans would come out to the home meets. He&#13;
noted the typical turnout for home meets&#13;
last year was about ten people. &#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
It's Your Paper&#13;
You will notice the legend "five cents" on the front page of this&#13;
periodical. That means exactly what it ways, this paper costs money&#13;
now. People say that it didn't cost money last year. This paper wasn't&#13;
printed last year. That was an administration-oriented paper almost&#13;
fully funded by the administration. This is a student-oriented paper&#13;
funded by the students. We have to break even in advertising and&#13;
circulation versus expenses to stay in print. This is your paper —&#13;
DON'T LET IT FAIL! This is your paper, you have the opportunity to&#13;
give your views on anything you want. DON'T LOSE THAT! Help us.&#13;
We are in need of advertisers, people to sell the paper, and articles.&#13;
Which can you do! Both ad-people and distributors get a commission,&#13;
so you can help yourself a little by helping us a lot!!&#13;
If you wish to sell ads to help us out — contact Jim Hanlon! If y ou&#13;
wish to sell papers to help us out — contact Ken Konkol! If you want to&#13;
do some writing — contact the editors!!&#13;
Book Problems&#13;
Last week, our news editor suggested that we students organize&#13;
a co-op bookstore. Not meaning to expound on the apathy of students,&#13;
but don't you care about the outrageous prices you pay for texts? With&#13;
the formation of a co-operative, students would have a viable place for&#13;
selling and buying books from other students — at reasonable prices.&#13;
But even a co-operative may not be the answer: some instructors&#13;
change texts every semester, thereby cutting the market for used&#13;
books.&#13;
e&#13;
•gs&#13;
•So P&#13;
Volume 2, Number 3&#13;
October 12. 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Carroll Smolinsky .&#13;
Mike Gogola&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Mark Barnhill&#13;
Bill Jacoby, John Potente&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Business Editor&#13;
Advertising Manager&#13;
Sports Editor&#13;
Photography Staff&#13;
Advisor&#13;
STAFF&#13;
Jerry Houston, D. H. Post, Becky Ecklund, Ken Konkol&#13;
Marc Eisen, Paul Lomartire, Arthur Gruhl, Jim Janis, Walter Breach&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin, 53140. Mailing address is Parkside s Newscope,&#13;
3700 Washington Rd., Kenosha. Business and editorial telephone number is 658-&#13;
4861, e xt. 36, and 652-4177.&#13;
LETTERS the edito ors&#13;
A Visit With&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
GIRLFRIEND IN MADRID&#13;
The other day I was reading an article&#13;
about Spain. It reminded me of an experience&#13;
I had in Madrid a year ago. Mrs.&#13;
Gruhl and I were there with a Lawrence&#13;
University Alumni tour group. (They call&#13;
it a "continuing education program" . . .&#13;
actually it is a gimmick to give affluent&#13;
alumni an easy excuse to get out of town.)&#13;
Well, anyway, our group was being&#13;
guided ("herded" would be more accurate&#13;
terminology) through the famous Prado&#13;
National Museum. It really is a tremendous&#13;
place. Ask Dr. Burnett, our librarian .&#13;
. . he was there recently. Well, we were&#13;
going through the place and I was getting a&#13;
little bored with too-long discourses. When&#13;
that happens I drop out and sit down some&#13;
place and engage in one of my favorite&#13;
past-times — p eople watching. I've got to&#13;
get my culture in small doses. I'd rather&#13;
remember five things well than wind up&#13;
the day with a blur.&#13;
1 always carry a small tape recorder&#13;
with me on such trips ... a fantastic&#13;
miniature Sony which I can carry in the&#13;
palm of my hand. I tell the recorder&#13;
everything I want to remember. For me&#13;
taking written notes on a trip is for the.&#13;
birds. My phonetic shorthand becomes&#13;
meaningless.&#13;
On this particular afternoon I told Mrs.&#13;
Gruhl to go ahead with the group ... I'd&#13;
wait for her in the foyer of the museum. So&#13;
she went on to another pari of t he museum&#13;
and I sa t in the foyer watching people and&#13;
talking to the tape recorder.&#13;
While I was sitting there, a very attractive&#13;
young woman walked up to me.&#13;
She was wearing a black outfit with a red&#13;
sash and red accessories. Very chic. She&#13;
smiled and said, "Pardon me, Sir, you&#13;
must be a gentleman and a scholar to be so&#13;
interested in our museum to record so&#13;
many notes about what you have seen."&#13;
I kind of choked a little, removed my&#13;
beret, stood up, of c ourse, and said, "Yes,&#13;
I'm probably a little of each . . . I'm&#13;
recording some of the things I want to be&#13;
sure to remember."&#13;
She said, "I'm an artist, too . . . &gt;. ould&#13;
you like to see some of my work?"&#13;
I ex plained that I h ad better stay in the&#13;
foyer . . . that my wife would be back&#13;
shortly. Then she assured me that the&#13;
group wouldn't get back here for half an&#13;
hour . . . that she knew the route they&#13;
would take. She also assured me that her&#13;
studio was just around the corner and not&#13;
wanting to be impolite, I agreed to go with&#13;
her.&#13;
When we got out in the street she said we&#13;
would save time if we took a taxi. We did so&#13;
and her "right around the corner" studio&#13;
was at least a mile away up on Case Del&#13;
Goja street. As we drove I asked wnere she&#13;
had learned to speak such good English&#13;
and she said, "In a convent."&#13;
We got out of the cab. I paid the driver.&#13;
We went up a flight of stairs to her studio.&#13;
She turned on the light. So help me! . .. she&#13;
did have a studio ... all of the sketches&#13;
were painted right on the wall . . . they&#13;
were all nudes!&#13;
Well, I wasn't born yesterday and I&#13;
usually have an appropriate remark for&#13;
any situation but before I could open my&#13;
mouth she had slipped off her blouse . . .&#13;
she was tatooed from horizon to horizon! . .&#13;
. and as I stood there spellbound she&#13;
started unzipping something and said, "I&#13;
have even prettier pictures on my&#13;
stomach.&#13;
At that moment . . . Sorry, folks, I've&#13;
used up all of the column inches I'm&#13;
allowed. You'll just have to wait for the&#13;
next issue of the Newscope.&#13;
Students! Support the Newscope. It&#13;
supports you.&#13;
Newscope classifieds 50 c ents a line —&#13;
use them!&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
An editorial in last week's NEWSCOPE&#13;
complained that, the Coordinator of&#13;
Student Activities, Mr. Bill Niebuhr, who&#13;
this year is sponsoring a series of popular&#13;
feature films, "completely disregarded&#13;
and over-powered a faculty member who&#13;
happened to have made arrangements on&#13;
the same night, same time, and same&#13;
building for his film society." Now, it is&#13;
true that the Parkside Film Society, in&#13;
which I serve as one of two faculty advisors,&#13;
did originally wish to show it's&#13;
films on Friday nights in the new Student&#13;
Activities Building. And it is true that we&#13;
were prevented from doing this when Mr.&#13;
Niebuhr belatedly informed us that he had&#13;
signed a contract with Warner Brothers&#13;
to show his own films on Friday nights&#13;
and already made arrangements to use the&#13;
new building. However, as I explained to&#13;
you, our differences with Mr. Niebuhr on&#13;
this point were settled when we decided to&#13;
show our films on Wednesday nights,&#13;
rather than to compete and thus deprive&#13;
persons of the chance to attend both series.&#13;
We are disappointed that our films&#13;
cannot be shown under the pleasant&#13;
conditions of the Activities Building, but&#13;
instead must be screened in a formal&#13;
lecture hall; but Mr. Niebuhr should not be&#13;
blamed for this. As I understand, Mr.&#13;
Lavern Martinez, the Director of Auxiliary&#13;
Enterprises, decided to allow special&#13;
events to take place in the new building&#13;
only on Friday nights and weekends,&#13;
leaving it open to the general public on&#13;
other nights. Under this ruling, the&#13;
feature-film series does seem to be getting&#13;
preferred treatment, and this is unfortunate&#13;
because our society is a&#13;
recognized campus organization of&#13;
students and faculty. Personally I believe&#13;
that the Student Activities Building should&#13;
be open to all students as often as possible.&#13;
America&#13;
,l A use. it once...&#13;
throuj it aujay...&#13;
America'S&#13;
//jWSCf&gt;£_&#13;
.mr&#13;
Other facilities for the showing of films&#13;
exist on campus, and the feature films&#13;
could be shown elsewhere. The Activities&#13;
Building should approach a genuine&#13;
student union.&#13;
One point in your editorial caused be&#13;
great grief: the repeated statement that&#13;
the Parkside Film Society is "my"&#13;
society. As I've already said, I am simply&#13;
an advisor, along with Harold Stern. The&#13;
co-chairmen, Evelyn Milich and Mary&#13;
Geraets, and other students, do all the&#13;
work.&#13;
The Coordinator of Student Activities&#13;
could have coordinated things a little&#13;
better by communicating to us his intention&#13;
to show nineteen feature films. But&#13;
the editorial contains certain&#13;
misrepresentations, and I wish you would&#13;
follow your own advice and communicate&#13;
better with your faculty advisor.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
On Wednesday night, Oct. 7, Parkside's&#13;
Convention made all the changes they&#13;
wanted in the final copy. On Thursday of&#13;
the previous week three members of our&#13;
committee, Tom Kreul, Rich Polansky and&#13;
myself, met with Dean Dearborn and two&#13;
other administrators to discuss the&#13;
document and find out what they would&#13;
object to. I must also explain that during&#13;
the week before we met with a lawyer to&#13;
have the wording and its legality checked.&#13;
We were told that certain of the rights&#13;
were guaranteed to us in the U.S. Constitution,&#13;
and that we need not say&#13;
anything more to explain or qualify them.&#13;
It is these rights that became some of the&#13;
most heated issues in our discussion with&#13;
the dean.&#13;
We listed, as a student right, that&#13;
"Students shall have the right to distribute&#13;
or sell information of a printed nature."&#13;
There are restrictions in this in the&#13;
Regents Rules which say that only student&#13;
organizations can do this and they must&#13;
have permission from the Dean of&#13;
Students and must make a written&#13;
statement saying they will pick up any&#13;
discarded copies. The lawyer told us that&#13;
this was ridiculous and that they can only&#13;
punish the person who discards the paper;&#13;
not the person who distributes it. There&#13;
were other rights listed which were&#13;
covered in a booklet published by the&#13;
American Civil Liberties Union on student&#13;
rights on university and college campuses.&#13;
We expressed our viewpoint and they&#13;
expressed theirs.&#13;
Before the administration had heard our&#13;
arguments it accused us of b eing catalysts&#13;
and passively trying to start someting with&#13;
the students. This made me very angry&#13;
and insulted. We had been asking for help&#13;
from both a lawyer and from the administration&#13;
in trying to find if there were&#13;
any statements that could be taken in a&#13;
way that was against our original idea. I&#13;
told them that if we were indeed trying to&#13;
use this document as an instrument for&#13;
radical rebellion, we would not have gone&#13;
to a lawyer and we certainly would not&#13;
have been sitting in the offices of the administration.&#13;
They later conceded that&#13;
perhaps we of the constitutional convention&#13;
would not use the document as&#13;
such, but that later there might develop a&#13;
radical organization that may try to&#13;
misuse it. My thoughts were that the fear&#13;
(Continued on Page 5) &#13;
Killer Dogs on Campus, Police C arrying&#13;
Cattle Prods, and Other Absurd Rumors&#13;
By D. H. POST&#13;
It's really unfortunate that the pseudoradicals&#13;
on campus (yes! It's true,&#13;
Parkside is part of the Movement) are&#13;
wasting their time starting ill-founded&#13;
rumors. The latest rumors are concerned&#13;
with the night watchmen who are driving&#13;
around in that ridiculous station wagon&#13;
with "Security" stenciled in block letters&#13;
on the side with dry markers. These oppressive&#13;
fascists have irritated a number&#13;
of freedom-loving students, so this&#13;
newspaper decided on a confrontation. I&#13;
was sent to talk to the chief of the Tough&#13;
Police. The following is an account of the&#13;
first, but far from the last, episode of&#13;
guerrilla theater at Parkside, and the&#13;
beginning of radical politics initiated by&#13;
Newscope in the interest of reform.&#13;
Newscope's student vanguard&#13;
discovered that the man responsible for&#13;
the oppression held the official title of&#13;
Chief of the Physical Plant (which once&#13;
more exposes the assbackwards values of&#13;
this bourgeoisie administration in that&#13;
they have yet to appoint someone in&#13;
charge of the spiritual plant), and had the&#13;
unofficial title of Mr. Simkus. The office&#13;
was discovered in Tallent Hall, and an&#13;
attack was coordinated, and one of the&#13;
Student Vanguard politely kicked open the&#13;
door and screamed, "May I please talk to&#13;
you, sir? I'll only take a moment."&#13;
Our tactics took him completely by&#13;
surprise, and he was forced to lose face by&#13;
offering us a chair and politely replying,&#13;
"Certainly, come and sit down."&#13;
We immediately took advantage of our&#13;
initiative by confronting him with the&#13;
question of the presence of first aid&#13;
equipment in the station wagon. He was&#13;
uneasily forced into an admission there&#13;
was not only a stretcher in the station&#13;
wagon, but OXYGEN AS WELL! Further&#13;
probing led to the additional admission&#13;
that ALL SIX SECURITY MEN HAVE&#13;
RECENTLY HAD EXTRA TRAINING IN&#13;
FIRST AID! This was not the least of the&#13;
facts revealed! On the third shift one of the&#13;
watchmen has an enormous German&#13;
Shepherd! The implications are here clear&#13;
to any thinking member of this university,&#13;
and the feeble justification given is not&#13;
fooling anyone. The Chief of the Physical&#13;
Plant actually believes we're going to&#13;
swallow a story about the watchman not&#13;
having any place to keep his pet. Poppycock!&#13;
It's just part of the continuing&#13;
psychological warfare of the administration&#13;
to keep its students niggers.&#13;
The fact that the dog is only present during&#13;
the late night and early hours when no&#13;
students are around is just one more proof&#13;
of the administration's intent. WHY ARE&#13;
THEY AFRAID TO LET US PET THE&#13;
DOG!&#13;
I will let the administration damn&#13;
themselves with their own words. Mr.&#13;
Simkus (Chief of the Physical Plant) said,&#13;
"We now have stretchers in some area in&#13;
both buildings. We have a protection patrol&#13;
car equipped with oxygen and first aid&#13;
equipment. First aid, if anything happens,&#13;
is handled like this. All someone has to do&#13;
is call the operator. The operator notifies&#13;
us and the emergency squad from the&#13;
Kenosha Sheriff's department. We have&#13;
had very good response from them in the&#13;
past. In the near future, possibly&#13;
December, a new patrol car will be on&#13;
campus, equipped with more elaborate&#13;
POET RY COR N ER . .&#13;
FRIEND&#13;
Silent thunder&#13;
and within my eyes&#13;
I perceive the gladdened sighs&#13;
of happy-together-feeling&#13;
and seek the silent thunder&#13;
of your soul.&#13;
Beautiful storms can be heard&#13;
within you&#13;
as you immerse the landscape&#13;
with your mind.&#13;
One looks&#13;
and&#13;
wants&#13;
to&#13;
travel&#13;
with&#13;
you.&#13;
STREETQUEEN&#13;
I watched her overflowing&#13;
into the arms of faceless men&#13;
leading them into a countlessly trod path&#13;
seeking continuity into a journey&#13;
that never ends . . .&#13;
The constantly fading light of&#13;
her face:&#13;
awakening the hidden dreams&#13;
of those who dare not possess them&#13;
and yet she annoints them&#13;
with a salve she keeps in a safe,&#13;
incessantly open for any wanderer;&#13;
encased in smoke, yet apparent&#13;
to all, a dim light burning&#13;
brightly proclaiming to all:&#13;
"Bring your burdens here and maybe the darkness&#13;
will clear away!"&#13;
Swaying, she falls&#13;
standing atop the minds of men,&#13;
Omnipresent goddess of delights&#13;
offering graces to those who implore —&#13;
standing at the door of her nocturnal&#13;
temple,&#13;
keeping vigil,&#13;
awaits the dead seed&#13;
of a passion.&#13;
TO PRESENT PAPER&#13;
John W. Harbeson, an assistant&#13;
professor of political science at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, has&#13;
been invited to present a paper before the&#13;
annual meeting of the African Studies&#13;
Association, the principal professional&#13;
organization for U.S. and Canadian&#13;
Africanists from all academic disciplines.&#13;
The association will meet Oct. 21 through&#13;
24 i n Boston. Prof. Harbeson's paper is&#13;
titled "Ethnic Integration and Political&#13;
Modernization of East Africa: Model for&#13;
Southern Africa?".&#13;
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BRIDAL&#13;
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DIAMOND CONSULTANTS&#13;
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Facu11 y Graduate Gemologist-Certified Diamontologist&#13;
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excepted It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Elect MacKinney&#13;
To Special Group&#13;
Arthur C. MacKinney, dean of the&#13;
College of Science and Society at The&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, has&#13;
been elected to the American&#13;
Psychological Association Committee on&#13;
Advisory Services for Education and&#13;
Training for a three year term.&#13;
His selection was announced by the&#13;
association's Council of Representatives&#13;
at the group's annual meeting in&#13;
Washington, D.C., this week.&#13;
MacKinney assumed the deanship of&#13;
Parkside's larger academic unit on July 1.&#13;
He previously headed the psychology&#13;
department at Iowa State University,&#13;
where he had been a psychology professor&#13;
since 1957.&#13;
He also has held visiting lectures and&#13;
professor appointments at the University&#13;
of Michigan, University of Minnesota and&#13;
University of California-Berkeley and&#13;
consultant posts with major industries.&#13;
Prior to his newly-announced American&#13;
Psychological Association post, he served&#13;
as chairman of its Commission on Accreditation&#13;
and of the committees that&#13;
prepared the APA guidelines for the Ph.D.&#13;
and M.A.' degrees in industrial&#13;
psychology.&#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;
Rock Concert&#13;
"Intake!" is a special rock concert to be&#13;
sponsored by the Metro Milwaukee Activities&#13;
Staffs on Friday, Oct. 23, in Uihlein&#13;
Hall, the Performing Arts Center. The&#13;
New York Electric String Ensemble will&#13;
join the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra&#13;
in presenting the multimedia peace&#13;
concert. Reserve your tickets now.&#13;
first aid equipment. We are remodelling a&#13;
room at Greenquist to be equipped with&#13;
stretcher and cots and other first aid&#13;
equipment. The security men have just&#13;
completed training at a special Red Cross&#13;
seminar in Racine, so we will be protected&#13;
in case of accidents . . ."&#13;
Sunnyside florists&#13;
Qreenhouses&#13;
FIOMIS - Fruit Batktb - Cifb&#13;
Phone: 649-6700&#13;
Viand FRANK WEINSTOCK&#13;
3021 - 7 STH ST.&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN S3I40&#13;
Thrifty Threads&#13;
For Your Back...&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet!&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN K ENOSHA&#13;
FOR SALE — Stereo (Hi Fi) $40. Inquire&#13;
at Newscope office or contact Jim Hanlon&#13;
694-5823.&#13;
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to know w hat ou r ind ividual&#13;
customers w ant an d n eed.&#13;
We s pecialize in f ashions&#13;
geared to m odern livin g&#13;
hand-picked fo r sty le, qu ality&#13;
and value. And, most&#13;
important, y ou can c ount on&#13;
prompt, cou rteous, per sonal&#13;
service a t all tim es. Come&#13;
in and browse.. see how much&#13;
more fun it is to sh op in a&#13;
relaxed, frie ndly atm osphere.&#13;
Hope to se e yo u ... soon'&#13;
MARGURITTE'S&#13;
6207 - 22nd Avenue&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
City Sandal, pow-powered in potent Patent, $22.00&#13;
513 57th Street&#13;
Kenosha &#13;
Concert Series Parkside M a y Grow a Lake&#13;
Begins Sunday&#13;
In its first University Artists Series, the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside will&#13;
present 13 Sunday afternoon concerts&#13;
during the 1970-71 season beginning Oct.&#13;
18. The concerts will feature both members&#13;
or Parkside's outstanding music staff&#13;
and guest artists.&#13;
The varied series will include both instrumental&#13;
and vocal programs and solo&#13;
and ensemble performances.&#13;
Season tickets may be obtained by&#13;
writing Parkside's Public Information&#13;
Office at the Wood Road Campus,&#13;
Kenosha. Adult season tickets are $10 and&#13;
student season tickets are $5. Single admission&#13;
tickets are $1 and 50 cents&#13;
respectively. Children 12 and under will be&#13;
admitted free.&#13;
Parkside musicians participating will be&#13;
Carmen Vila, the Spanish-born pianist&#13;
currently beginning her third season as&#13;
artist-in-residence at the campus; Annie&#13;
Petit, a French-born pianist who joined the&#13;
staff this fall as an affiliate artist; Keiko&#13;
Furiyoshi, a Japanese violinist also new to&#13;
Parkside and an affiliate artist; and Harry&#13;
Lantz, a distinguished cellist and an&#13;
associate professor of music at UWP.&#13;
Guest artists will be Ilona Kombrink,&#13;
soprano, of the UW-Madison music&#13;
faculty; James Yoghourtjian, classical&#13;
guitarist of the Wisconsin College Conservatory;&#13;
Edward Druzinsky, Chicago&#13;
Symphony harpist; Gary Kendall,&#13;
baritone, of Indiana University; and the&#13;
David Baker Jazz Quintet, also of Indiana&#13;
U.&#13;
Concert dates and participating artists&#13;
are Oct. 18, Misses Petit and Furiyoshi;&#13;
Nov. 1, Miss Vila; Nov. 15, Miss Kombrink&#13;
and Vila (lieder); Nov. 22, Miss Furiyoshi;&#13;
Dec. 13, Miss Petit; Jan. 10, Yoghourtjian;&#13;
Feb. 14, Druzinsky; Feb. 28, Miss Petit;&#13;
March 14, Kendall (operatic selections);&#13;
March 28, Misses Petit and Furiyoshi;&#13;
April 25, Baker quintet; May 2, Miss Vila;&#13;
and May 16, Lantz and Misses Petit and&#13;
Furiyoshi.&#13;
All concerts will be at 4 p.m. in the&#13;
Greenquist Hall Concourse on the Wood&#13;
Road Campus. Shuttle bus service will be&#13;
available from the Tallent Hall parking&#13;
lot.&#13;
Piano Teachers&#13;
Study Jazz&#13;
Piano teachers can study jazz and pop&#13;
music with a professional jazz musician in&#13;
a four-session workshop Wednesday from&#13;
9-11:30 a.m. on the Universtiy of Wisconsin&#13;
Waukesha County campus beginning Oct.&#13;
21.&#13;
Presented by University Extension, the&#13;
course will feature Gerald Borsuk, wellknown&#13;
Madison jazz pianist.&#13;
The sessions are intended to give private&#13;
piano teachers a review or introduction to&#13;
jazz piano as a supplement to the standard&#13;
keyboard repertoire and methods. Emphasis&#13;
will be on the total concept of jazz,&#13;
chording, and jazz patterns and structures&#13;
as an introduction to improvisation.&#13;
Borsuk, who holds a bachelor of music&#13;
degree from the UW, has been a piano&#13;
soloist, band leader and teacher and a staff&#13;
musician for commercial radio and&#13;
television. He has played professionally&#13;
for such celebrities as Patti Page, Vaughn&#13;
Monroe, and the Bob Hope Show.&#13;
Information on fees and registration is&#13;
available from University Extension Arts,&#13;
DN 404-600 West Kilbourn Ave., Milwaukee&#13;
53203, phone (414) 228-4791.&#13;
^pAcunJt,&#13;
j-emutaA658-2233&#13;
&#13;
wn&#13;
Cocfctoik' lfumcWrun)inyneU&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTH CITY LIMITS&#13;
At some unmentionable time the&#13;
University plans to build a lake. The plan&#13;
seems to be most dependent on whether or&#13;
not the Pike River gets cleared&#13;
up. In other words, Parkside officials are&#13;
not rushing out with their shovels to dig it.&#13;
The proposed lake is to be situated by the&#13;
corner of Wood Road to the Highway A.&#13;
The first concern in building the lake is&#13;
to include biological study areas. The plan&#13;
also calls for the possible use of the south&#13;
shore as a recreational area.&#13;
One premise for making the lake would&#13;
be that it would not flood valuable&#13;
ecological areas. Another premise would&#13;
be to flood it for the maximum use of&#13;
shoreline. The study also must decide how&#13;
to make the lake in such a way that sailing&#13;
and other activities would not interfere&#13;
with the scientific study areas^ Thei lake&#13;
would be a park-like environment in which&#13;
^AUhe presesent Parkside has a number&#13;
of ponds. About five of them are located&#13;
around the campus. Contrary to the Ibeli&#13;
of many people, UW-P personnel did not&#13;
make these ponds. The ponds were created&#13;
by farmers of the area to water the apple&#13;
trees that formerly occupied our campus^&#13;
Some ponds were created by the farmers&#13;
by the use of a dragging divice. The soil is&#13;
naturally fine and so holds water very&#13;
well. Most of the ponds are maintained by&#13;
rainwater. Some of the ponds contain fish.&#13;
Parkside presently uses these ponds only&#13;
for scientific study. The ponds will most&#13;
likely be used in the master plan to&#13;
enhance the campus.&#13;
Carthage Players Revive&#13;
Broadway Hit Produ ction&#13;
When Carthage College's Theater&#13;
Department presents its first play of the&#13;
season, "George Washington Slept Here",&#13;
Oct. 15-17 in Warburg Auditorium, it will&#13;
be a "revival" of the original Broadway&#13;
play. The show will be produced exactly as&#13;
it was on Broadway in 1940.&#13;
The problems that this poses for play&#13;
director Greg Olson and technical director&#13;
William Ruyle are numerous. Stage sets,&#13;
musical recordings, slang and fashions&#13;
must be recreated in the 1940 mode. Few&#13;
people realize, however, the painstaking&#13;
work that is involved in costuming a show&#13;
of that period, which was a scant 30 years&#13;
ago.&#13;
Students of drama find it easy to&#13;
recognize costumes of the Greek or&#13;
Shakespearian theatre because they study&#13;
a great deal about those particular eras.&#13;
The 1940s present a different problem.&#13;
Since it was such a recent period, there is&#13;
not much "teaching" done in the area of&#13;
1940-era costumes. The student not only&#13;
has been unable to study that period in the&#13;
detailed way he studies Shakespeare, but&#13;
few of Carthage's present students can&#13;
remember what clothing looked like in&#13;
1940, making it very difficult to costume&#13;
the play.&#13;
Play director Olson has had to engage in&#13;
considerable research himself as he&#13;
wasn't born until 1947. Most of the cast&#13;
members were born between 1949 and&#13;
1952.&#13;
Olson adopted a sort of "search and&#13;
seizure" type of attitude towards costumes&#13;
for the G.W.S.H. production. First, Olson&#13;
and the cast members researched the&#13;
period in detail. They noted the various!&#13;
trends in clothing styles — such as padded&#13;
shoulders, midi-length dresses, doublebreasted&#13;
suits, etc. After isolating&#13;
distinctive details in the fashions of that&#13;
day, they searched out and impounded any&#13;
article of clothing from 1940. The customer&#13;
who received the clothes discussed each&#13;
article in turn with the director and&#13;
designed the costumes accordingly.&#13;
Some of the clothes were found in&#13;
Carthage's own costume department. Cast&#13;
members went home and rummaged&#13;
through their attics and closets. Many&#13;
parents were shocked to find out they had&#13;
clothes in their closets dating back to 1940.&#13;
Olson and his thespians also visited all&#13;
the Goodwill, Salvation Army and St.&#13;
Vincent de Paul stores in Racine, Kenosha&#13;
and the surrounding area communities.&#13;
Even the theatre department's secretary&#13;
showed up for work one morning with an&#13;
old dress to contribute.&#13;
One Carthage teacher's husband is&#13;
minus his old work clothes, and a Kenosha&#13;
father lost his coveralls. Despite all the&#13;
items collected, the cast members still&#13;
came up short as there are several&#13;
costume changes in the play which has a&#13;
17-member cast. So, theater department&#13;
sewing machines went to work and the&#13;
costumers skillfully sewed together&#13;
everything from skirts and slacks to&#13;
swimming suits.&#13;
"George Washington Slept Here" is a&#13;
three-act comedy, written by the late Moss&#13;
Hart and George S. Kaufman. The plot&#13;
revolves around members of the Fuller&#13;
family who purchase an American&#13;
Revolution Era farmhouse in Bucks&#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.-l p.m.&#13;
SAT. 6 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
21 Variety&#13;
of Pancakes&#13;
LUNCH - DINNERS&#13;
PIPE SMOKER'S ...&#13;
Come to Andrea's&#13;
In K enosha Tobacconist&#13;
• Expert counselling service SinCC 1911&#13;
• Finest briars including Savinelli's hand&#13;
carved $100 autographed rare grain pipe&#13;
• Tobacco humidors . . . pipe racks Including&#13;
our expertly crafted floor cabinet for $125.00&#13;
. . . leather pouches .., pipe tools&#13;
• Turkish water pipes&#13;
• Genuine Andrea Bauer Meerschaums&#13;
• Consul, Ronson, Bentley, Z'ippo Lighters&#13;
• Garcia Vega, Bering, Wm. Allen, Cuesta Reg,&#13;
Creme de Jamaica, Don Diego, Uhle and Domestic&#13;
Cigars fresh from our Humidor Room&#13;
• Chess Sets ... Talbett Silk Ties ,.. 3-M Games&#13;
Toiletries by Dunhill, English Leather&#13;
HALLMARK C ARDS&#13;
FANNIE M AY&#13;
RUSSELL S TOVER C ANDIES&#13;
County, Pennsylvania. The Fullers subsequently&#13;
discover that it wasn't General&#13;
Washington but the infamous Benedict&#13;
Arnold who stayed overnight at the&#13;
dilapidated old farmhouse which eventually&#13;
costs the Fullers a fortune to&#13;
renovate. Curtain times are 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Thursday (Oct. 15) and 8:15 p.m. Friday&#13;
and Saturday (Oct. 16-17).&#13;
the Ice Age National Scientific Reserve&#13;
is a program set up in a bill passed by the&#13;
U.S. Senate on Oct. 7. The bill, if signed by&#13;
Nixon, calls for a 32,500 acre outdoor&#13;
preservation site in nine Wisconsin&#13;
counties.&#13;
R-K NEWS&#13;
FRUIT BASKETS AND CANDY&#13;
Deliver Across Town or Across the World&#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 MIDNITE&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 2 4&lt;&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
55{&#13;
fo fit cw^itadterjt&#13;
•TOUtcas&#13;
mm&#13;
OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. - 6 P.M.... FRIDAY 'TIL 9 P.M. . . . SUNDAY 10 A.M. 2 P.M. &#13;
Public Splits on Time Off for Politics&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
CARTHAGE&#13;
Play — Wartburg Auditorium&#13;
"George Washington Slept Here".&#13;
October 15-16-17. Thursday night at&#13;
7:30 p.m. and Friday and Saturday&#13;
nights at 8:15 p.m. Admission - Adults&#13;
$1.75 a nd Students $1.25.&#13;
Football — October 17 a t Decatur,&#13;
Illinois, Millikin College. Game starts&#13;
at 1:30 p.m.&#13;
October 20 — J V football, Wheaton&#13;
College here.&#13;
Fine Arts — October 21, The Eleo&#13;
Pomaro Dance Company. Performance&#13;
at 8:30 p.m. in the Field&#13;
House. Admission $2.50.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
KENOSHA and RACINE&#13;
Jimmy Clark Memorial Road Rally&#13;
— October 18. Tickets $5.00 per car.&#13;
Registration 11:30 at Tallent Hall.&#13;
Rally starts at 1:00. Party at Chapparal&#13;
following. Free beer and food.&#13;
Parkside University League&#13;
presents "Fall Fashion Show" —&#13;
October 13 at Holleb's in Kenosha.&#13;
Social hour, 7:00 p.m., Show time,&#13;
8:00 p.m. Limited tickets, $1.50.&#13;
Contact Mrs. J. Sokow, UWP X211.&#13;
UWP Film Offerings — The next upcoming&#13;
film brought to you by the&#13;
Film Society Series is the flick&#13;
"Sabotage" scheduled for October 14&#13;
at 8:00 p.m. This is a free special.&#13;
The Intercollegiate Film Council —&#13;
presents "Teorema", to be shown on&#13;
November 8 a 17:00 p. m. at the Golden&#13;
Rondell in Racine. Tickets available&#13;
at the Greenquist Hall Concourse&#13;
near the main entrance during&#13;
Thursday and Friday noon hours.&#13;
Limit Two' per student. Tickets&#13;
are free.&#13;
CONCERTS COMING UP&#13;
FROM CHICAGO&#13;
October 16 — Laura Nyro,&#13;
Auditorium Theatre, tickets from&#13;
$3.50 to $6.50.&#13;
October 17 — The Guess Who,&#13;
Auditorium Theatre, tickets from&#13;
$3.50 to $6.50.&#13;
October 24 — WCFL presents Leon&#13;
Russell in concert at the Auditorium&#13;
Theatre, tickets from $3.50 to $6.50.&#13;
On the question of whether or not&#13;
students should take time out from their&#13;
classes to join in political campaigning, a&#13;
recent Gallup Poll found public opinion&#13;
split down the middle on the question.&#13;
Forty-seven per cent of those polled&#13;
favor giving students a two-week ess&#13;
this fall for the purpose of campaiging for&#13;
congressional candidates. Forty-five per&#13;
cent opposed the idea.&#13;
This is the question asked in the Sept. 11-&#13;
14 survey conducted in more than 300&#13;
selected localities across the nation:&#13;
"Many college students are being given a&#13;
two-week recess — to be made up at some&#13;
point during the school year — to give&#13;
them a chance to campaign for&#13;
congressional candidates. How do you feel&#13;
about this — do you approve or disapprove?"&#13;
&#13;
After interviews with 1,513 adults 21 and&#13;
over, the national results are the&#13;
following: Approve — 47 per cent;&#13;
Disapprove — 45 per cent; No opinion — 8&#13;
per cent.&#13;
As a result of the poll, it was found that&#13;
as many as two out of three young adults&#13;
(21-29) approved of the prior-election plan.&#13;
However, some political leaders predict&#13;
campaign efforts by students will be&#13;
counter-productive.-&#13;
Another Gallup Poll revealed that many&#13;
young Americans would be willing to&#13;
listening to the students. To the question&#13;
"Would you like to have one of the students&#13;
come to talk to you about his views, or&#13;
not?", 38 per cent answered yes and 62 per&#13;
cent gave a negative reply.&#13;
Whiskey&#13;
Facts&#13;
LETTER&#13;
.(Continued from Page 2)&#13;
of having any trouble oh this campus has&#13;
led to a mistrust and suspicion of students&#13;
in general, which is disappointing if not&#13;
disgusting.&#13;
Speaking for myself, I did not spend all&#13;
of my time at the pom-pom squad practice,&#13;
basketball games, planning bus trips hnd&#13;
working on other activities just so that I&#13;
could come back this year and be accused&#13;
of trying to start some radical student&#13;
movement. I believe I speak for the group&#13;
in saying that many of our members were&#13;
also active in student organizations, and&#13;
that they did not spend one night a week&#13;
spring, summer, and now, fall, to plan&#13;
against the school.&#13;
The meeting ended with the administration&#13;
members reminiscing about&#13;
the good old days. Now we are supposed to&#13;
meet with a faculty committee. The&#13;
Faculty Senate will then get the proposed&#13;
copy of the constitution — then the C.C.C.&#13;
of the Board of Regents will review it.&#13;
Bev Noble&#13;
By JIM JANIS&#13;
It is said that the first Burbon Whiskey,&#13;
"genuine, old fashioned, homemade, sour&#13;
mash Bourbon", was made in 1789 in&#13;
Georgetown in Scott county, Kentucky. At&#13;
that time, Scott county was a part of&#13;
Bourbon county, thus the whiskey was&#13;
first known as Bourbon county whiskey,&#13;
and now Bourbon.&#13;
Today, more than half of all Bourbon is&#13;
distilled and bottled in Kentucky. The&#13;
Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee region is&#13;
traditional Burbon country. Illinois has&#13;
been a Bourbon center for years.&#13;
In order for a whiskey to be called&#13;
Bourbon, Goverment regulations state&#13;
that: 1) The mashing formula (grain&#13;
proportions) must have at least 51 per cent&#13;
corn grain; 2) Be distilled at a proof no&#13;
higher than 160 and no lower than 80 ; 3) To&#13;
be further identified as a straight Bourbon&#13;
whiskey, a distillate must be stored in new&#13;
charred oak barrels between 80 and 125&#13;
proof for at least two years. Most Bourbons&#13;
on the market today are at least four&#13;
years old.&#13;
Sour Mash Whiskey is made from a&#13;
yeast mash soured with lactic culture for a&#13;
minimum of six hours; the fermenter&#13;
mash must contain at least 25 per cent of&#13;
the screened residue from the base of the&#13;
whiskey still and the fermenting time must&#13;
be at least 72 hours.&#13;
Bottled-in Bond bourbon is not a&#13;
separate type of whiskey. It is produced&#13;
and bottled in accordance with the bottling-in&#13;
bond act, a federal law dating back&#13;
to 1897. Bottle-in Bond whiskey must be at&#13;
least four years old (most are older); it&#13;
must be bottled at 100 proof; and the&#13;
whiskey in the bottle must be produced in a&#13;
single distillery, by the same distiller, and&#13;
be the product of a single season and year.&#13;
Tennessee Whiskey: The production&#13;
begins with the sour mash process similar&#13;
to the method described under bourbon.&#13;
Although some parts of the Tennessee&#13;
whiskey production process are related to&#13;
that of bourbon, it is not bourbon. It differs&#13;
primarily in the extra steps that take place&#13;
immediately after distilling. At that point&#13;
the whiskey is seeped slowly, very slowly,&#13;
through vats packed with charcoal.&#13;
Charcoal is important. Charcoal used in&#13;
the production of Tennessee whiskey&#13;
comes from the Tennessee highlands hard&#13;
maple region.&#13;
Whiskey in America:&#13;
1811: Kentucky had 2,000 distilleries.&#13;
1848: First appearance of the word&#13;
Bourbon on the label of a bottle.&#13;
Any questions pertaining to the subjects&#13;
of these articles or your entertaining&#13;
needs, write to: Jim Janis care of&#13;
Newscope.&#13;
Next week: Scotch, Canadian and Irish&#13;
Whiskies.&#13;
8040&#13;
Sheridan Rd.&#13;
Supper Club ph. 654-1375&#13;
FAMOUS FOR IT S FLORIDARED SNAPPER&#13;
with Almondine Sauce&#13;
Also OUR DELICIOUS PRIME RIB&#13;
WLS HIT&#13;
PARADE&#13;
October 4,1970&#13;
1. Cracklin' Rosie, Neil Diamond - Uni&#13;
2. All Right Now, Free - A&amp;M&#13;
3." I'll Be There, Jackson Five - Motown&#13;
4. Indiana Wants Me, R. Dean Taylor -&#13;
Rare Earth&#13;
5. Candida, Dawn - Bell&#13;
6. Do What You Want To Do, Five Flights&#13;
Up - Bell&#13;
7. Out In The Country, Three Dog Night -&#13;
Dunhill&#13;
8. Looking Out My Back Door, Creedence&#13;
Clearwater Revival - Fantasy&#13;
9. I Know (I'm Losing You), Rare Earth -&#13;
Rare Earth&#13;
10. Julie, Do Ya' Love Me, Bobby Sherman&#13;
- Metromedia&#13;
11. Green-Eyed Lady, Sugarloaf - Liberty&#13;
12. We've Only Just Begun, Carpenters -&#13;
A&amp;M&#13;
13. That's Where I Went Wrong, Poppy&#13;
Family - London&#13;
14. Lola, Kinks - Reprise&#13;
15. War, Edwin Star- Gordy&#13;
16. We Can Make Music, Tommy Roe -&#13;
A.B.C.&#13;
17. Joanne, Michael Nesmith - R.C.A.&#13;
18. I (Who Have Nothing), Tom Jones -&#13;
Parrot&#13;
19. Ain't No Mountain High Enough,&#13;
Diana Ross - Motown&#13;
20. Groovy Situation, Gene Chandler -&#13;
Mercury&#13;
21. L ook What They've Done To My Song,&#13;
Ma, Seekers - Electa&#13;
22. De eper &amp; Deeper, Freda Payne - Invictus&#13;
&#13;
23. P atches, Clarence Carter - Atlantic&#13;
24. Somebody's Been Sleeping, 100 Proof -&#13;
Buddah&#13;
25. It Don't Matter To Me, Bread - Electra&#13;
26. I Just Can't Help Beleiving, B. J.&#13;
Thomas - Scepter&#13;
27. N eanderthal Man, Hotlegs - Capitol&#13;
28. Snowbird, Anne Murray - Capitol&#13;
29. Fire &amp; Rain, James Taylor - Warner&#13;
Brothers&#13;
30. S olitary Man, Neil Diamond - Bang&#13;
WLS Hit Parade Bound&#13;
Lucretia MacEvil, Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears -&#13;
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CARRY-OUTS - DELIVERY&#13;
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R A C I NE&#13;
OCT. 14-20 - Nitely at 7 &amp; 8:45&#13;
IS A RIP-SNORTER. A TRIUMPH!"&#13;
—Judith Crist&#13;
" •••,,* BRILLIANTLY CONCEIVED,&#13;
BRILLIANTLY DONE! DEVASTATINGLY FUNNY!"&#13;
— Kathleen Carroll. New York Daily News&#13;
COLOR A CANNON RELEASE O R &#13;
Pre-Med Group&#13;
Meets Tuesday&#13;
Parkside Pre-Med Group will hold its&#13;
first meeting at 7:30 p.m. October 20 at&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Dr. Richard Holmes of the admissions&#13;
staff of Wisconsin School of Medicine will&#13;
be guest speaker. Election of new officers&#13;
will also be held.&#13;
The group's plans for this year include a&#13;
field trip to the Wisconsin School of&#13;
Medicine, witnessing of a live operation,,&#13;
and a talk by Doug Devan, last year's&#13;
group president and currently a medical&#13;
student at Madison.&#13;
Pre-Med group began last year as an&#13;
interest group under faculty adviser Dr.&#13;
Anna Williams. Vice president John&#13;
Werwie is the group's only returning officer.&#13;
&#13;
Membership in the group is open to all&#13;
students with pre-medical interest. The&#13;
number of pre-medical students enrolled&#13;
at Parkside currently is more than 35.&#13;
Will Perform&#13;
With Symphony&#13;
Bruce Gordon, Administrative Assistant&#13;
for the Center for Afro-American Culture&#13;
at UW-M, will perform dramatic poetry&#13;
readings with the Milwaukee Symphony in&#13;
the "Intake" program. The Harlem-bornand-raised&#13;
poet-photographer-actor-film&#13;
director refers to himself as an "experimenter&#13;
in the arts". He is currently&#13;
completing a small volume of verse and&#13;
rewriting "Sarah and Sax" for dramatic&#13;
reading in which he will take the role of&#13;
Sax.&#13;
Bruce Gordon's present arts experimentation&#13;
deals with still-life&#13;
photography in both black-and-white and&#13;
color, and he has been making tape&#13;
recordings that incorporate poetry and&#13;
sonic effects designed to illustrate&#13;
progressions of abstractions.&#13;
USE&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Ranger Runners Take First&#13;
So you're looking for places to go. Well,&#13;
look no further.&#13;
Remember the Fog-Cutter? Well, it's the&#13;
Fog-Cutter no more, it's the Unicorn. Open&#13;
to Parkside students, everyone is&#13;
welcome. Listen to these specials: Ladies&#13;
night Tuesday and Thursday — Drinks Vz&#13;
price, Sour Hour and Beer Blast — Beer 10&#13;
cents and sour mixed drinks 25 cents&#13;
between 8 and 9 o'clock.&#13;
On Saturday nights go through their&#13;
maze of mystery and see things you never&#13;
saw before.&#13;
You can't affort to miss it. Come one and&#13;
all and listen to the live music as you indulge.&#13;
&#13;
Grapplers Point&#13;
For Win Year&#13;
The new wrestling coach at Parkside,&#13;
Jim Koch (pronounced cook) has set&#13;
Monday, October 19 as the opening day of&#13;
wrestling practice. He invites anyone who&#13;
is interested in wrestling to try out for the&#13;
team. His office is Room 144 at the&#13;
Kenosha campus.&#13;
The Parkside wrestlers had a 3-8 record&#13;
last year and are aiming to improve on&#13;
The Ranger cross country team beat&#13;
UWM 19-38 and Milwaukee Tech 19-42 in a&#13;
triple dual meet at Milwaukee last week.&#13;
Freshmen Rick Lund and Chuck Dittman,&#13;
both from Marinette, held hands across&#13;
the finish line to take the first two places in&#13;
20:29.6 over the four mile course, but Lund&#13;
was declared the winner. This time was&#13;
also a new school record.&#13;
The Rangers also took a fourth with Tim&#13;
McGilskz from Racine (20:54), fifth Jim&#13;
McFadden (20:56) from Waterford, John&#13;
Wagner seventh from Elmhurst (21:16)&#13;
that. Coach Koch says that they have put&#13;
together a very stiff schedule of 13 duals&#13;
and four tournaments, but he is very&#13;
encouraged with the fine looking group of&#13;
prospects for this year's team. There&#13;
appear to be a couple of boys for each&#13;
weight class except heavyweight. Koch&#13;
says if there are any big fellows who want&#13;
to put in a lot of hard work, and probably&#13;
receive a fair share of bumps and bruises,&#13;
they are welcome to come out for&#13;
wrestling.&#13;
Parkside's first match will be on Friday,&#13;
December 4, when Michigan Technical&#13;
University and Wisconsin State University-Stevens&#13;
Point are here to challenge&#13;
the Parkside Rangers.&#13;
and Gary Lance tenth place and Mike&#13;
Dewitt 11th place.&#13;
The 1970 Ranger XCC team will dedicate&#13;
their new three-mile cross-country trail&#13;
against the top rated WSU-Platteville and&#13;
Dominican College in a five-mile double&#13;
dual. -We hope to have many Ranger&#13;
backers there watching the freshman&#13;
dominated squad&#13;
SOUR HOUR&#13;
&amp;&#13;
BEER BLAST&#13;
Beer 10$&#13;
Sour mixes 25$&#13;
Between 8 &amp; 9&#13;
Ladies night&#13;
Tues.-Thurs.&#13;
Drinks Yi price&#13;
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NEVER A COVER CHARGE&#13;
"Why pay more at the door"&#13;
Heavy Bands&#13;
Every Wed., Thurs., Fri. &amp; Sat.&#13;
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But How You Wear It Long"&#13;
Hair Styling - Hair Cutting - Hair Pieces&#13;
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY SHOPPING CENTER&#13;
7509 45TH AVE. 694-4603&#13;
Anchor Inn All You&#13;
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SUNDAY SPECIAL&#13;
ROAST CHICKEN with B ISCUITS &amp; GRAVY&#13;
MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY 8 :30 - 10:30&#13;
LADIES NITE - Buy 1 drink g et 2nd for 10$&#13;
YOUR CHOICE - BAKED POTATO or&#13;
POTATO SALAD&#13;
Cocktails - Sherbet at extra charge&#13;
Monday-Thursday $1.95&#13;
Friday-Sunday $2.25&#13;
Children $1.10&#13;
PLUS TAX AND BIVERAOI&#13;
SERVING: Fri. &amp; Sat. 5 p.m. ll p.m.&#13;
Son. 12 Noon-9 p.m.; Mon.-Thurs. 5 p.m.10 p.m.&#13;
ASK ABOUT OUR CARRY-OUTS&#13;
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Parksidels&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
* Complete news coverage of campus events&#13;
* Photos of events and personalities&#13;
* Advertising of interest to all students&#13;
* Coverage of national news of student interest &#13;
Rangers Bow to I.C.C.&#13;
University of Illinois Circle Campus&#13;
finally cracked Parkside's defense in the&#13;
second half and the Midwest's fourthranked&#13;
soccer team went on to a 3-0 victory&#13;
on UWP's field Wednesday.&#13;
For Jim Gibson's Rangers, who are now&#13;
2-4-1 against some of the best competition&#13;
in the Midwest, it was the same old story —&#13;
no offense to take the pressure off a stout&#13;
but constantly beleaguered defense. The&#13;
closest Parkside came to scoring was in&#13;
the second quarter when a goal by Chris&#13;
Andacht was nullified because of an offside&#13;
penalty.&#13;
Parkside got off only one less shot on&#13;
goal than the Chikas during the scoreless&#13;
first half — seven attempts to six — but the&#13;
winners were on target eight times during&#13;
the second half while their goalie had to&#13;
awaken just once to stop a UWP shot. Even&#13;
so, the third period was nearly over before&#13;
Adam Guzik kicked a short one into an&#13;
open net after Goalie Charlie Lees had&#13;
been drawn out. The final period was all&#13;
Circle as Iby Adel and Stan Forys added&#13;
the clinchers.&#13;
Parkside will travel to Purdue Saturday,&#13;
and if the Rangers can get by the&#13;
Boilermakers they should be able to&#13;
square their record the following Saturday&#13;
when they host Platteville. Platteville lost&#13;
to Illinois Circle 13-0.&#13;
Kari Liekowski makes everyone move when he gets mad. The Rangers lost to&#13;
Illinois Circle Campus 3-0.&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
SHORTS&#13;
By MARK BARNHILL&#13;
There will be an All-Comers cross&#13;
country meet at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct.&#13;
13, on Parkside's new cross country&#13;
course. The race will be 2V&amp; m iles and is&#13;
open to everyone. Coach Vic Godfrey said&#13;
the All-Comers meet will follow the varsity&#13;
meet against Platteville State University&#13;
and will give Parkside students and staff,&#13;
as well as interested townspeople, the&#13;
chance to sample the new UWP layout.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Anyone interested in learning more&#13;
about a bike or wishing to get in with the&#13;
cycling club, contact Vic Godfrey.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The Ranger Sailing club competed in&#13;
three races on October 3. Seven colleges&#13;
took part in this event. The University of&#13;
Michigan won the contest. Sailing for&#13;
Parkside were Jerry Ruffalo, Mike Pobar&#13;
and Carl Kisline. Parkside took fourth&#13;
place.&#13;
+ -F +&#13;
At the Illinois Technical College handicap&#13;
five-mile race at Champaign,&#13;
Parkside's Women's division did an outstanding&#13;
job with Judy Zimmerman, West&#13;
Allis frosh, finishing third with a time of 34&#13;
minutes. Sandy Houston, sophomore of&#13;
Kenosha, had her best time with a 42&#13;
minutes run for five miles. Michelle&#13;
Rosandich, eight-years old daughter of&#13;
Athletic Director Tom Rosandich, finished&#13;
second in the handicap division.&#13;
Intramurals&#13;
By COACH JIM KOCH&#13;
Intramurals at Parkside are in full&#13;
swing after the first three weeks of s chool.&#13;
The big activity in the fall of the year is&#13;
touch football.&#13;
At the Kenosha campus ten teams are in&#13;
competition, each playing at least twice a&#13;
week. At present both Steve Wick's&#13;
Schooners and Tim Alfredson's House&#13;
Apes are undefeated after three games.&#13;
At the Racine campus there are eight&#13;
teams competing in touch football. The&#13;
winner of their league will meet the&#13;
Kenosha champs for the University&#13;
Championships.&#13;
At Parkside the girls also play football.&#13;
Both the Kenosha and Racine girls have&#13;
powder puff football teams which are&#13;
practicing in anticipation of a confrontation&#13;
between the two teams. The&#13;
Dominican College and KTI girls also have&#13;
challenged the Parkside girls in powder&#13;
puff football.&#13;
Other intramural activities which are in&#13;
operation include: a tennis tournament,&#13;
and a golf gournament. A bowling league&#13;
for Parkside students now is in progress at&#13;
Sheridan Lanes in Kenosha. It's at 9:00&#13;
p.m. on Tuesday nights. Any boy or girl&#13;
interested in bowling only needs to come&#13;
and they can get into the league.&#13;
In the coming weeks many more activities&#13;
will be starting. For instance a&#13;
volleyball team made up of any interested&#13;
Parkside students will be playing in the&#13;
Racine City Recreational League.&#13;
The Judo-Karate club will be having a&#13;
meeting this week, Tuesday, Oct. 13, at&#13;
12:15 in the Kenosha Judo room to&#13;
organize their club.&#13;
V. •; ' *.y$rg&lt;W, • jgfo.gl&#13;
O-' -X \ .&#13;
v- .&#13;
f e f S r JL&#13;
m iSte # /&#13;
mm . . • • » i&gt;&#13;
Oi"&#13;
Ballester Joins&#13;
Coaching Staff&#13;
Bill Ballester, 32, the current president&#13;
of the National High School Gymnastics&#13;
Coaches Association, is an assistant&#13;
professor at Parkside.&#13;
In addition to his instructional duties,&#13;
Ballester will organize and coach the first&#13;
UWP gymnastics team beginning this fall.&#13;
In eight years at Waukegan, Ballester's&#13;
teams Were 63-13 and were ranked in the&#13;
top ten in Illinois each year. Coaching in&#13;
the Suburban conference, considered by&#13;
many to be the top prep gymnastics league&#13;
in the country, Ballester developed four&#13;
gymnasts who went on to All-American&#13;
honors, including national All-Around&#13;
champion and Olympic alternate Fred&#13;
Dennis of Southern Illinois.&#13;
As intramural director and physical&#13;
education instructor at Waukegan high&#13;
school, Ballester coordinated fitness and&#13;
recreation programs both in the school and&#13;
within the community which involved&#13;
hundreds of participants ranging from&#13;
children through adults.&#13;
"Bill Ballester's dedication to physical&#13;
fitness and lifetime athletic interests,&#13;
which range far beyond gymnastics,&#13;
relates directly to our philosophy at&#13;
Parkside," Athletic Director Tom&#13;
Rosandich said.&#13;
Ballester received his B.S. degree in&#13;
physical education from Southern Illinois&#13;
University at Carbondale, where he lettered&#13;
in gymnastics under well-known&#13;
coach Bill Meade. He took his M.A. in&#13;
educational administration at Roosevelt&#13;
University in Chicago.&#13;
He also has served as president of the&#13;
Illinois High School Gymnastics Coaches&#13;
Association, and is on the advisory committee&#13;
of the Midwest Gymnastics&#13;
Association.&#13;
Charle Lees lakes lo the air to keep up his reputation as stellar goalie from New&#13;
——&#13;
'&#13;
I -v.',"&#13;
PMK&#13;
1 ' Markovic pufs the drop on ire her^st^ng the kick.&#13;
Wm&#13;
Stan &#13;
RECORD REVIEW&#13;
RECORD: PROFILE . .. NITTY GRITTY DIRT BAND&#13;
ALBUM ... UNCLE CHARLIE and his DOG TEDDY&#13;
By CAROL A. AMOLINSKI&#13;
For those of you who fancy the down home, earthy type of&#13;
songs, I suggest you add this album to your country-rock&#13;
collection. Listening to a record such as this, you can picture, if&#13;
you will, in your mind, the image of Mr. Greenjeans sitting on&#13;
his farmyard fence with his banjo on his knee. The banjo&#13;
techniques displayed on this record are very exceptional and it's&#13;
accompanied by some heavy harmonica.&#13;
It's just a regular ole knee-slappin', toe-tappin', hillbillie&#13;
hoe-down direct from the hills of McCoy Country.&#13;
Many of the songs have the old home-type flavor to them,&#13;
but a couple cuts show traits of good rock.&#13;
Most of the lyrics written show some good meaning set&#13;
along with the music behind the songs. Parts of the album&#13;
remind me of the James Gang similar to that of little verbal&#13;
comments thrown in here and through-out the album. Then of&#13;
course what country band would be complete without a washboard.&#13;
I ugge s st you buy this album I'm sure you'll enjoy it.&#13;
'Roar' Opens Friday Night&#13;
Book ReviewHesse's&#13;
'Demian'&#13;
By AMY CUNDARI&#13;
The Bookstores, at both the Greenquist&#13;
and Kenosha campuses, are poorly supplied,&#13;
but nevertheless contain some excellent&#13;
reading material. If you have failed&#13;
to take an interest in the classics or in the&#13;
contemporary works of literary genuis, I&#13;
urge you to acquaint yourself with some of&#13;
the available books.&#13;
The book in review for this week is&#13;
Demian by Hermann Hesse. Beside the&#13;
fact that Hesse is an unusually sensitive&#13;
writer, the reader will note that his&#13;
philosophy of each man's individual and&#13;
psychological control over self and environment&#13;
is of present day relevance.&#13;
Particular attention should be given to the&#13;
way in which Hesse reveals his characters'&#13;
spiritual motives and search for inner&#13;
peace.&#13;
The characters, themselves, transgress&#13;
time and place, exhibiting the&#13;
author's knowledge of man's eternal&#13;
dimensions. The main characters are&#13;
Demian and Sinclair, two impressionable&#13;
and extraordinary youths drawn to each&#13;
other .in their private searches for their&#13;
own destinies.&#13;
The setting is the first World War, the&#13;
place Germany. Young Sinclair meets&#13;
Demian in school and is terrified by the&#13;
power he senses in him. Sinclair's fear is&#13;
not unfounded. Through a series of&#13;
unexplainable performances, Demian&#13;
shows his ability to control and manipulate&#13;
the actions of other by regulating their&#13;
thoughts.&#13;
When Demian realizes that Sinclair's&#13;
world is composed of fear of the unkown&#13;
and those things he cannot fully understand,&#13;
he befriends him. Sinclair,&#13;
however, never fully comprehends the&#13;
influence Demian exercises until they are&#13;
separated. Then it becomes apparent that&#13;
he is now quite alone, and facing an oncoming&#13;
identity crisis. During their&#13;
seperation, a variety of substitutes appear&#13;
proving nothing or no one can fill the void&#13;
left by Demian's absence.&#13;
In desperation Sinclair mails a letter,&#13;
writing only his friend's name on the envolop;&#13;
Somehow, the letter reaches its&#13;
destination. They reunite, Demian is now a&#13;
young officer and Sinclair a newly enlisted&#13;
soldier. The story ends with a promise of&#13;
an eternal relationship.&#13;
In Demaian, Hesse dramatizes the&#13;
dilemma of the marked man, the deviate,&#13;
the quasi-criminal hero whose god is&#13;
Abraxas, and whose goal is the conquest of&#13;
self and the world he created.&#13;
Book of the Week: The Tin Drum By&#13;
Gunter Grass.&#13;
Beauty and the Books&#13;
By AMY CUNDARI&#13;
DAVE FOBART&#13;
If you have lost all faith in mankind and&#13;
believe no one cares enough to help you,&#13;
then you haven't been in the library.&#13;
The library staff is dedicated to making&#13;
college life just a little easier, and how do&#13;
they do this? By assisting anyone who&#13;
needs help with term papers, or research&#13;
material on a variety of topics. For public&#13;
service the library has three librarians&#13;
and one clerk who will help any student&#13;
find subject material in the more than&#13;
100,000 volumes and periodicals presently&#13;
available.&#13;
The library is already faced with a space&#13;
problem. Since the intake of books is about&#13;
30.000 a year, storage is of the utmost&#13;
importance to making books and other&#13;
reference material within the students&#13;
reach. If there is any book in print that the&#13;
library doesn't have, the student need only&#13;
request a copy of the book and it will either&#13;
be purchased or borrowed from Madison.&#13;
The library also has an excellent Microfilm&#13;
service, which contains vast copies of&#13;
periodic literature some dating as far back&#13;
as 1776.&#13;
Students are urged to ask questions&#13;
about the library materials, since many&#13;
volumes, special services and information&#13;
is not visible or listed in the card catolog.&#13;
Problems with these types of materials&#13;
are extensive. Many items such as the&#13;
Opening its second season in the&#13;
Kenosha area, under the new direction of&#13;
Lorrie La ken, New Theatre Productions&#13;
present "The Roar of the Greasepaint and&#13;
the Smell of the Crowd" at Kemper Hall&#13;
October 16, 17 an d 18.&#13;
Literally coming in with a "roar", the&#13;
play deals with a "game of life" and&#13;
presents many interesting views of life in a&#13;
"theatre of the round" atmosphere. While&#13;
playing this game, Sir (Rick Ponzio) and&#13;
Cockyo (Louis Mattioli) backed by interesting&#13;
lesser leads and a chorus of&#13;
pathetic, perceptive, ragged urchins,&#13;
continue in the New Theatre method of&#13;
presenting a different and exciting&#13;
evening of theatre. Many of -the songs will&#13;
be quite familiar; the lively "Wonderful&#13;
Day Like Today", the beautiful ballad,&#13;
"Who Can I Turn To", and the sad&#13;
philosophical "The Joker".&#13;
New Theatre, which began its career in&#13;
Kenosha last year with "The Apple Tree",&#13;
also has presented "Stop The World I Want&#13;
To Get Off" (written by the same creators&#13;
of "The Roar and the Smell" — Newley&#13;
and Bricusse), "Celebration", and "Your&#13;
Own Thing". A branch of New Theatre&#13;
productions, Little Epic Co., created to&#13;
continue theatre in the summer, presented&#13;
Bertold Brecht's "Mother Courage" this&#13;
Government Document Collection and the&#13;
Foreign Relations Series are virtually&#13;
unkown to the student body. The staff has&#13;
also made known the availability of&#13;
library tours to any student or student&#13;
group who wishes to acquaint themselves&#13;
with the facilities.&#13;
What's the future look like? A new&#13;
building, hopefully by "72" and the addition&#13;
of over 300,000 volumes and 2,000&#13;
periodic titles, and students with&#13;
Microform readers. Sound interesting?&#13;
Well, then why don't you get into the action&#13;
going on at the library and visit those&#13;
beautiful people whose first concern is&#13;
YOU, the student.&#13;
last summer. The group will travel with&#13;
the play to Wayland Academy in Beaver&#13;
Dam after its engagement here.&#13;
On the 16th and 17th of October, performances&#13;
will begin at 8:00 p.m. in the&#13;
Kemper Hall auditorium, but a special&#13;
performance can be viewed Thursday,&#13;
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 2, Issue 3, October 12, 1970</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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              <text>Students in Aspin's Campaign</text>
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              <text>filil&#13;
~&#13;
.~&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
0&#13;
,....&#13;
~&#13;
PO&#13;
&lt;:l\&#13;
~&#13;
or\'&#13;
-=rn&#13;
~&#13;
~&#13;
....&#13;
0&#13;
:s&#13;
rn&#13;
~riIi1&#13;
~;z:&#13;
semesr:n;,~r~T~~:~ngl?:teJ; \scheduJed to open for the 1971 fall&#13;
master plan to be comPlet:~. e t lrd bUilding of the Parkside campus&#13;
Foundation Sponsors&#13;
Environment Program&#13;
Parkside students may now have an&#13;
opportunity to do something about envl~onmental&#13;
problems. The National&#13;
SCIence ~oundation is sponsoring a&#13;
stu~ent-dIrected program aimed at&#13;
solving certain national problems.&#13;
Student projects are intended to deal&#13;
with a problem or set of problems related&#13;
to the physical, biological or social enviromnenl.&#13;
The National 'Science Foundation&#13;
is offering financial support for&#13;
Students in Aspin's Campaign&#13;
A group of Parkside students announced possible.&#13;
tha~ they are formi~g a committee to Marjala said that Congressman&#13;
assist in the campaign of Les Aspin, Schadeberg is one of the most reactionary&#13;
Democratic candidate for Congress. members of Congress and has called for a&#13;
Don, M.arjala, a spokesman for the military victory in Vietnam. Schadeberg&#13;
gro~, said that he fell the race between was recently listed by a national enAspm&#13;
and the incumbent Republican vironment group, "Environmental Ac·&#13;
Congressman Henry Schadeberg tion", as one of the twelve worst&#13;
presented a clear choice for students Congressmen in supplying anti-pollution&#13;
concerned about the war in Indo-China, legislation,&#13;
ecoiOllY'and the economy. The central tasks of tbe Aspin group will&#13;
.Aspm, who is 3?, is a former White House be canvassing distributing literature, and&#13;
aIde. to President Kennedy and an doing headquarters work.&#13;
assistant to Senator Proxinire. He has Anyone interested in working for Aspin&#13;
called for the removal of U.S. troops from should call the Racine headquarters at 632-&#13;
Indo-China as quickly as is physically 4487 or tbe Kenosha headquarters at 654-&#13;
7900.&#13;
selected projects. All projects will be&#13;
student-originated and student-managed,&#13;
and are to be carried out for the most part&#13;
by an interdisciplinary group under&#13;
student leadership.&#13;
Projects are to be planned to occupy&#13;
fully the time of the student investigators&#13;
o~er a 10 to 12week period, and therefore&#13;
Will be conducted during the summer.&#13;
Academic credit may be granted for&#13;
participation in this program.&#13;
There is to be a meeting of concerned&#13;
students Tuesday, Oct. 6, at 2:30 p.m. in&#13;
Room 21OA,Greenquist. Students unable&#13;
to attend ought to contact Mr. Gordon&#13;
Ziemer in Room 279, Tallent Hall.&#13;
COMING EVENTS&#13;
Oct. 9-11 - Sister Bay Fall Festival.&#13;
Fish boil, carnival, street auction, farm&#13;
market, brat fry, ping pong ball drop,&#13;
parade, Sister Bay,&#13;
Oct. 13-18 - Ringling Brothers Circus.&#13;
Arena, Milwaukee.&#13;
Sept. 16-0ct. 11 - New zealand&#13;
Trading Co., London House, $10.75-9,75&#13;
Oct. 16 - Laura Nyro, Auditorium, $6,50-&#13;
3.50&#13;
Oct. 17 - The Guess Who, Auditorium,&#13;
$6.50-3.50&#13;
Security Force&#13;
Not Armed&#13;
" The security men on campus this year&#13;
are not armed, have no authoritation to&#13;
be armed. and w ill nol be armed." according&#13;
to ASSistant Chancellor Clar("oc&#13;
Brockman. There will be IX men on&#13;
campus who will be In uniform while lhl'\&#13;
are working. Eventually. as total campu'&#13;
p~otection and secunry builds up. tberc&#13;
Will be both poll e and sl'cural) offrcer&#13;
"No one should be offended by euber th,·&#13;
security men or even the pohce when thl'\&#13;
become a reality They are here for th'l'&#13;
protection of students and equrpm -nt."&#13;
Brockman Slated lie went on to sa", that&#13;
the other universities had a long history of&#13;
usmg watchmen and police. but "a." far 3.&#13;
Iknow. they have never drawn any gun.&#13;
either in Madison or '1I1waukec."&#13;
,The prtrnary duties of the S('CUflt)pohcc&#13;
Will be to give first ard and to transport&#13;
injured students to hospitals, direct&#13;
traffic. and prevent vandalism and theft&#13;
The Assostant Chancellor POlOted out&#13;
there IS close to eight million dollars in&#13;
vested in buildings alone. plus a srzeabl&#13;
amount that students mav not be aware of&#13;
Invested tn equipment. He pomted out that&#13;
there had been mcidents of vandalism and&#13;
theft on many of the out buildings. Also.&#13;
the campus is not protected by any&#13;
metropolitan police force. "The herirrs&#13;
department has always cooperated with&#13;
us, but are limited because of their size:'&#13;
There will also be a security vehicle&#13;
equipped to patrol the campus.&#13;
The aims of the security force and long.&#13;
term goals were stated in a letter 10 Sgl&#13;
McCerrity which Brockman quoted for the&#13;
Newscope. The intent of the force "IS not In&#13;
establish a conventional police force. bUI a&#13;
compassionate protective service.'&#13;
Academy Honors&#13;
Chemistry Lecturer&#13;
Mary A. Doherty. lecturer 10 chemlSlr)&#13;
at the University of wtsconstn-Parkside.&#13;
was one of four slate educators who wert'&#13;
honored Saturday with life membership.&#13;
in the Wisconsin Academy of Sciene "&#13;
Arts and Letters,&#13;
Miss Doherty was cited for more than 25&#13;
years of service to the academy at the&#13;
academy's centennial banquet at thc&#13;
Wisconsin Club in Milwaukee.&#13;
Miss Doherty has taught pari-lime at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin for the past fi\"('&#13;
years after a distinguished car r as a&#13;
science teacher in Kenosha high schools .&#13;
where she was active 10 the Junior&#13;
Academy of SCience, an officer in science&#13;
teachers' organizations, director of the&#13;
Kenosha County High School SClcnce Fair.&#13;
and recipient of an "oulstandlOg t acher"&#13;
award&#13;
FACTS REVEALED&#13;
By MARC EISEN&#13;
It's not the real Union, and Student&#13;
Government apparently won't have a&#13;
significant hand in the running of it (if the&#13;
Administration's intransigence is to be&#13;
belieVed, but it is the Student Activities&#13;
BUilding, and there is beer there, and&#13;
considering the prolonged difficulty in&#13;
getting the two of them, it is a limited&#13;
VIctOry in itself for the students.&#13;
The rapid construction of tbe building as&#13;
had been hoped by the administration was&#13;
hampered, according to James Galbraith&#13;
of Planning and Construction, by a series&#13;
of roadblocks concerning the availability&#13;
of adequate funds the wisdom of constructing&#13;
a tempor;"'y Activities Building&#13;
when the Union was.tentatively to be buill&#13;
m two or three years, and a report by the&#13;
Slate Bureau of Engineering which saId&#13;
the building would cost $110,000, and not&#13;
the $93,000 the Administration had&#13;
estimated.&#13;
The infighting that marked these areas&#13;
or disagreement was resolved after a&#13;
Coupleof months of maneuvering when the&#13;
Board was convinced adequate funding&#13;
Was available after opposition in the State&#13;
BU dmg Commission over the temporary il . '&#13;
~peets of the building was overcome, and&#13;
nall when cuts were made in the budget&#13;
:~pa~ed by the Bureau of Engineering to&#13;
mg.t within the $93,000 allocated for the&#13;
construction of the building.&#13;
~ fact, part of Bureau's overblown&#13;
estimate budget was due to its own extravagant&#13;
desire to charge Parksid~ $6,000&#13;
for slightly redesigning the plans to make&#13;
them more exact, and for supervising the&#13;
construction of the building. The Bureau&#13;
finally settled for $3,383, and a little less&#13;
, detailed redesigning.&#13;
The charge, however, was unexpected&#13;
by some Parkside people involved in the&#13;
planning, and the money will be taken out&#13;
from furnishing the building, Folding&#13;
partitions, and possibly air conditioning,&#13;
are casualties.&#13;
In fairness to the Bureau, though,&#13;
Galbraith stated the redesigned plans&#13;
assured Parkside a more functionally safe&#13;
building than it would have gollen without&#13;
the plan changes,&#13;
OveraH it was a gruelling few months,&#13;
and Galbraith said, HWe were running&#13;
scared .. , but after it was over Ifell good.&#13;
We had to take some money out to stay&#13;
within our budget, but I think we actually&#13;
made it a better building by doing so."&#13;
The building itself is run by Larvern&#13;
Martinez, the director of Auxiliary Enterprises.&#13;
The supervisor is Karen Bayer&#13;
of his office,&#13;
The building will be open 8:00 a,m. till&#13;
10:00 p,m. Tuesdays through Thursdays,&#13;
and 8:00 a.m. till 1:00 a,m. Fridays. Beer&#13;
will be served 11:00 a,m. till 1:30 p.m" and&#13;
4:00 p.m, till 10:00 p.m: during nights,&#13;
except on Fridays when It will be served&#13;
till closing. .&#13;
Martinez is operating on a contmgency&#13;
fund that was cut sbarply to fit the budgel&#13;
He describes the situation as "tight". He&#13;
smiles when he says it. As a resull of the&#13;
cut he is limited on the extent he can&#13;
furnish the Activities Building,&#13;
Yet be feels the building is adequate, and&#13;
sees the return of beer on campus as an&#13;
example of how the "system" can be made&#13;
.to work.&#13;
It had been Regent policy for the age&#13;
requirement for beer drinking on the&#13;
campuses to be the same as that of the&#13;
townships they were in. And when Somers&#13;
township under the prodding of the Bar&#13;
interests raised its age to 21 a year and a&#13;
half ago, sales of beer at the Brick Factory&#13;
stopped.&#13;
Following that a long process of&#13;
agitation for beer on campus began by&#13;
members of the administration. It&#13;
culminated in an opinion of the state Attorney&#13;
General that said each campus&#13;
could legally set its own age requirement.&#13;
Martinez sees no problem with beer on&#13;
campus, and thinks students will police&#13;
themselves. However, at the present beer&#13;
is being "eased" in. That is the reason for&#13;
the restricted beer drinking hours and why&#13;
advertisement for activities say "refresh·&#13;
ments" and not beer.&#13;
The programming of most special&#13;
events at the building will be coordinated&#13;
by Bill Niebuhr and the Student Activities&#13;
Board. Tbe Board and its subcommittees&#13;
make recommendations on films dances&#13;
and recreation schedules. Its ';'ember~&#13;
this year will be made up mostly of&#13;
About&#13;
Activities&#13;
Building. • •&#13;
students who worked last year on it. They&#13;
are chosen by Niebuhr on the basis of&#13;
interviews, and usually one can assume&#13;
they pretty much mirrOr Ni buhr's&#13;
thoughts,&#13;
He hopes eventually to only IOtervlew&#13;
and choose prospecllve Chairmen, and to&#13;
leave the choosing of the other members of&#13;
the subcommittees to the chairmen&#13;
themselves.&#13;
He does acknowledge that at present&#13;
"whatever we do, it won't be a good&#13;
method of selecting members."&#13;
Eventually when the Union is&#13;
established the Student Activities Board&#13;
will become the Union Programming&#13;
Board. The Union itself then will be run by&#13;
the Union Board, which will be made up of&#13;
students, faculty, administrators, and&#13;
alumni.&#13;
The ·Union win be a private enterprise&#13;
supported from Union fees, money raised&#13;
at the Union, and by Union sponsored&#13;
activities. At the present, however, there&#13;
is no Union fee at Parkside, and the Activities&#13;
Building is not supported by it&#13;
"A streamlined study of successful&#13;
credit practices" is a good description of a&#13;
Consumer Credit CoW'Seto be offered to&#13;
Kenoshans on Monday, October 12. The&#13;
course will be presented by Sterling S.&#13;
Speake, Credit specialist and field lecturer&#13;
for the International Consumer Credit&#13;
Association, and will be held at Howard&#13;
Johnson's Motor Lodge from 7 to 10 p.m.&#13;
Jail-&#13;
~ -~&#13;
·~&#13;
~&#13;
~ C ··"" ."-.&#13;
0&#13;
"' 0 C\&#13;
-&#13;
V'\&#13;
Im ~ ~ ~&#13;
C&#13;
:s&#13;
rll The Library-Learni g c te · semester. The L-L Cente/ .&#13;
11 : J: is ~ched~~ to open for the 1971 fall&#13;
master plan to be complet:. e lbird building of the Park ide campu&#13;
~ Jail&#13;
t~&#13;
Foundation Sponsors&#13;
Environment Program&#13;
Parkside students may now have an&#13;
o~portunity to do something about env1~onmental&#13;
problems. The National&#13;
Science ~oundation is sponsoring a&#13;
student-directed program aimed at&#13;
solving certain national problems.&#13;
. Student projects are intended to deal&#13;
with a problem or set of problems related&#13;
t~ the physical, biological, or social environment.&#13;
The National Science Foundation&#13;
is offering financial support for&#13;
Students in Aspin's Campaign&#13;
A group of Parkside students announced possible.&#13;
tha~ th~y are formi~g a committee to Marjala said that Congressman&#13;
assist m the campaign of Les Aspin, Schadeberg is one of the most reactionary&#13;
Democratic _candidate for Congress. members of Congress and has called for a&#13;
Don M_arJala, a spokesman for the military victory in Vietnam. Schadeberg .&#13;
gro~p, said that he felt the race between was recently listed by a national enAspm&#13;
and the incumbent Republican vironment group, "Environmental AcCongressman&#13;
Henry Schadeberg tion", as one of the twelve worst&#13;
presented a clear choice for students Congressmen in supplying anti-pollution&#13;
concerned about the war in Indo-China, legislation.&#13;
ecol~y, and _the ~onomy. The central tasks of the Aspin group will&#13;
. Aspm, who 1s 32, 1s a former White House be canvassing distributing literature, and&#13;
aide. to President Kennedy and an doing headquarters work.&#13;
assistant to Senator Proxmire. He has Anyone interested in working for Aspin&#13;
called for the-removal of U.S. troops from should call the Racine headquarters at 632·&#13;
Indo-China as quickly as is physically 4487 or the Kenosha headquarters at 654·&#13;
7900.&#13;
selected projects. All projects will b&#13;
student-originated and student-managed,&#13;
and are lo be carried out for the most part&#13;
by an interdisciplinary group under&#13;
student leadership.&#13;
Projects are lo be planned to occupy&#13;
fully the time of the student investigator&#13;
over a 10 lo 12 week period, and therefore&#13;
will be conducted during the summer.&#13;
Academic credit may be granted for&#13;
participation in this program.&#13;
There is to be a meeting of concerned&#13;
students Tuesday, Oct 6, al 2:30 p.m. in&#13;
Room 210A, Greenquist. Students unable&#13;
to attend ought to contact Mr. Gordon&#13;
Ziemer in Room 279, Tallent Hall.&#13;
COMING EVENTS&#13;
Oct. 9-11 - Sister Bay Fall Festival.&#13;
Fish boil, carnival, street auction, farm&#13;
market, brat fry, ping pong ball drop,&#13;
parade. Sister Bay.&#13;
Oct. 13-18 - Ringling Brothers Circu .&#13;
Arena, Milwaukee.&#13;
Sept. 16-Oct. 11 - New Zealand&#13;
Trading Co., London House, $10.75-9.75&#13;
Oct. 16 - Laura Nyro, Auditorium, $6.50·&#13;
3.50&#13;
Oct. 17 - The Guess Who, Auditorium,&#13;
$6.50-3.50&#13;
Security Force&#13;
Not Armed&#13;
Academy Honors&#13;
Chemistry lecturer&#13;
Mary A. Dohcrt\', lecturer m chtm1 In&#13;
at the niv r 1ly· or I co, m,P rk.1d •.&#13;
wa one of four ·talc edu ·a tors who \H n ·&#13;
honored Saturday with hf m •mbc htp&#13;
in the Wiscon. in A ad my f&#13;
Arl and Letters.&#13;
Mi s Dohert wa II d for mor lh n 25&#13;
year of . rvice to th academy t lh&#13;
academy' cent nni I banqu l at th&#13;
Wi con in lub in , 11lw ukt .&#13;
Mi s D h rty ha tau •ht part-11m t th&#13;
Univ r ity of Wi on m for th p t fin•&#13;
years after a d1 llngui h ar r&#13;
science t acher in K no h, hi h . hool ,&#13;
wh re sh wa act1v m th• Jun101&#13;
Acad my of Sci n , an fftc r in&#13;
teach r ' organization , dir tor&#13;
Ken ha County High chool I r&#13;
and r ipi nt of n ''out nchng t&#13;
award.&#13;
FACTS REVEALED About&#13;
Activities&#13;
Building . • •&#13;
By MARC EISEN&#13;
It's not the real Union, and Student&#13;
Government apparently won't have a&#13;
significant hand in the running of it (if the&#13;
Ad~inistration's intransigence is to be&#13;
believed, but it is the Student Activities&#13;
Building, and there is beer there, and&#13;
con~idering the prolonged difficulty in&#13;
g~tting the two of them, it is a limited&#13;
victory in itself for the students.&#13;
The rapid construction of the building as&#13;
had been hoped by the administration was&#13;
hampered, according to James Galbraith&#13;
of Planning and Construction, by a series&#13;
of roadblocks concerning the availability&#13;
of adequate funds the wisdom of constructing&#13;
a tempor~ry Activities Building&#13;
:,Vhen the Union was.tentatively to be built&#13;
m two or three years, and a report by ~e&#13;
State Bureau of Engineering which said&#13;
the building would cost $110,000, and not&#13;
the $93,000 the Administration had&#13;
estimated.&#13;
The infighting that marked these areas&#13;
of disagreement was resolved after a&#13;
couple of months of maneuvering when the&#13;
Board was convinced adequate funding&#13;
Was available, after opposition in the State&#13;
Building Commission over the temporary&#13;
~pects of the building was overcome, and&#13;
finaU when cuts were made in the budget&#13;
r~pa~ed by the Bureau of Engineering to&#13;
ring it within the $93,000 allocated for the&#13;
construction of the building.&#13;
1~ fact, part of Bureau's overblown&#13;
estimate budget was due to its own extravagant&#13;
desire to charge Parkside $6,000&#13;
for slightly redesigning the plans to make&#13;
them more exact, and for supervising the&#13;
construction of the building. The Bureau&#13;
finally settled for $3,383, and a little less&#13;
• detailed redesigning.&#13;
The charge, however, was unexpected&#13;
by some Parkside people involved in the&#13;
planning, and the money will be taken out&#13;
from furnishing the building. Folding&#13;
partitions, and possibly air conditioning,&#13;
are casualties.&#13;
In fairness to the Bureau, though,&#13;
Galbraith stated the redesigned plans&#13;
assured Parkside a more functionally safe&#13;
building than it would have gotten without&#13;
the plan changes. OveraH it was a gruelling few months,&#13;
and Galbraith said, "We were running&#13;
scared ... but after it was over I felt good.&#13;
We had to take some money out to stay&#13;
within our budget, but I think we actually&#13;
made it a better building by doing so."&#13;
The building itself is run by Larvern&#13;
Martinez, the director of Auxiliary Enterprises.&#13;
The supervisor is Karen Bayer&#13;
of his office. The building will be open 8:00 a.m. till&#13;
10:00 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays,&#13;
and 8:00 a.m. till 1:00 a.m. Fridays. Beer&#13;
will be served 11:00 a.m. till 1:30 p.m., and&#13;
4:00 p.m. till 10:00 p.m: d~ing nights,&#13;
except on Fridays when 1t will be served&#13;
till closing.&#13;
Martinez is operating on a contingency&#13;
fund that was cut sharply to fit the budgel&#13;
He describes the situation as "tight". He&#13;
smiles when he says it. As a result of the&#13;
cut he is limited on the extent he can&#13;
furnish the Activities Building.&#13;
Yet he feels the building is adequate, and&#13;
sees the return of beer on campu a an&#13;
example of how the "system" can be made&#13;
to work. It had been Regent policy for the age&#13;
requirement for beer drinking on the&#13;
campuses to be the same as that of the&#13;
townships they were in. And when Som r&#13;
township under the prodding of the Bar&#13;
interests raised its age to 21 a year and a half ago, sales of beer at the Brick Factory&#13;
stopped.&#13;
Following that a long proc of&#13;
agitation for beer on campus began by&#13;
members of the administration. It&#13;
culminated in an opinion of the state Attorney&#13;
General that said each campus&#13;
could legally set its own age requirement.&#13;
Martinez sees no problem with beer on&#13;
campus, and thinks students will police&#13;
themselves. However, at the present beer&#13;
is being "eased" in. That is the reason for&#13;
the restricted beer drinking hours and why&#13;
advertisement for activities say "refreshments"&#13;
and not beer.&#13;
The programming of most special&#13;
events at the building will be coordinated&#13;
by Bill Niebuhr and the Student Activities&#13;
Board. The Board and its subcommittees&#13;
make recommendations on films dances&#13;
and recreation schedules. Its :nember~&#13;
this year will be made up mostly of&#13;
pr nt&#13;
a good&#13;
"A streamlined study of successful&#13;
credit practices" is a good de cription of a&#13;
Consumer Credit Course lo be offered to&#13;
Kenoshans on Monday, October 12. The&#13;
course will be presented by Sterling S&#13;
Speake, Credit specialist and field lecturer&#13;
for the International Consumer Credit&#13;
Association, and will be held at Howard&#13;
Johnson's Motor Lodge from 7 to 10 p.m. &#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
CommunicationBest&#13;
For The Three Of Us&#13;
Developing a gelding campus, one constantly on the grow, is a&#13;
task which would probably put gray hair on the best of men. The administration&#13;
should be and is commended for the diligent work and&#13;
spontaneous effort put forth in bringing Parkside to a category_in&#13;
which we stand 4,000 strong and sti1l growing.&#13;
But in your efforts to deliver Parkside's status to a step beyond&#13;
Yale, to a force mightier than Harvard, let's not forget the tiny feet of&#13;
staff and student alike. Let's not forget the Number One asset to your&#13;
almighty regime, Public Relations.&#13;
It is an alarming position as editor to realize all the staff and&#13;
student unrest not yet active as a result of overlooking the rights or&#13;
feelings of others. One instance that is particularly disturbing is the&#13;
excessive authority used by the coordinators of Student Activities on&#13;
Iilm festival, completely disregarding and over-powering a faculty&#13;
member who happened to have made arrangements on the same night,&#13;
same time, and same building for his film society. More the&#13;
irresponsible behavior of the kindergarten student.&#13;
Needless to say, based on first come, first served, the faculty&#13;
member had made arrangements before the administration had - the&#13;
time and place for film society activities were changed.&#13;
Now this is not too disturbing in itself if it were directed through&#13;
the proper channels, but the coordinator never once approached the&#13;
faculty member. This abortive behavior is to be pitied by all, for these&#13;
men are helping to run your school.&#13;
Parkside administrators, throw aside your inhuman airs of&#13;
indifference and be a slight bit different. Try with all your supreme&#13;
effort to establish a network of communications among administrators,&#13;
faculty, and students. Itwould be the best for the three of&#13;
us.&#13;
WARWe're&#13;
Brought Up To Love It&#13;
Uncle Sam and his warmongers have finally reached us on our&#13;
remote island campus of Parkside. The weapons they wield are not the&#13;
recognizable warfare types, but rather the underhanded propaganda&#13;
techniques of Cold War Modern America.&#13;
War Enculturation is their weapon and they sling their unknown&#13;
devastation stone, many men fall.&#13;
Enculturation is the process by which we teach new recruits&#13;
about our society. The germ was planted early in our childhoods and&#13;
began to spread like terminal cancer. We were small, innocent, maybe&#13;
three or four years old, and didn't realize what was right, or wrong.&#13;
Uncle Sam showed us a strange looking pointed object. Uncle Sam&#13;
placed it in our tiny hands and with his 200years of American mightyAmerican&#13;
culture behind him, said "TAKE THIS GUN ANn KI..,&#13;
KIL .., I MEAN (clear throat) AND SHOOT, BANG-BANG AND PLAY&#13;
DEAD." '&#13;
Well now, Uncle Sam, this baby has made his way through&#13;
cowboys and Indians, past Army soldiers and ray-guns. Now Uncle&#13;
~m, this kid ~seighteen and has been taught to love war. Lo~es the&#13;
slicing, stab~mg, and murdering of human lives. But this time,&#13;
America, let It be on your soul, on your conscience. For now we realize&#13;
the game IS real - real bullet~ and real death. We finally realize why&#13;
we are the. way w~ are. But still the war remains here in the form of&#13;
enculturation behind our backs. Student activities war machines -&#13;
JUst a game?&#13;
New Death Statistics&#13;
WASHINGTON - (CPS) - Total U.S.&#13;
deaths 10 the Indochina war have Climbed&#13;
1052.061. according 10 latesl ligures from&#13;
Ihe U.S Department of Defense. This&#13;
Includes 43.568 deaths "resulting from&#13;
action from hostile forces", and 8.493 from&#13;
other causes, such as helicopter accidents.&#13;
114,096. Saigon government troops ha '&#13;
been killed, along with 4 060 th ve,&#13;
allies. The Defense De' 0 er U.S.&#13;
668,874 North Vietna~rtment claims&#13;
soldiers have lost their r ese band NLF&#13;
death lotal for the war ~~e:J9 rlngmg the&#13;
eluding c1vilians and ,091, not m·&#13;
Laos and Cam bod' numerous troops in la.&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
BILLROLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven Taffs News Editor&#13;
Connie Petersen Fealure Editor&#13;
Mike Gogola Business Manage&#13;
Jim Hanlon Advertising Manage:&#13;
Bill Jacoby Photographer&#13;
John Pesta Advisor&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the University' of Wiscons]&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 531.40.Mailing address is Parkside's Newsco:-&#13;
UW-Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsm, 53140. Business and Editorial telephon~&#13;
number is 658-4861, Ext. 24.&#13;
Oc~..5, 1970&#13;
A Visit With'&#13;
An Aware Square&#13;
LETTERS to the editors&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Like when will some people grow up? I&#13;
had my car parked atTallent Hall parking&#13;
lot for the "Night of Shorts". When I&#13;
returned I found what appeared to be a&#13;
ticket. I was mystified at first, thinking&#13;
that some mistake was made. Then I&#13;
looked more closely and saw that the ticket&#13;
was not really a ticket but a message. It&#13;
read as follows: "A lot of people think I'm&#13;
writing you a message, but I'm not. I&#13;
lambasled your car. So Get Screwed."&#13;
The message was not exactly what I&#13;
would call a meaningful one. I checked my&#13;
car over, but found that it was not&#13;
damaged. They did leave another message&#13;
which I read in my rear view mirror as I&#13;
drove home. The words Get F---ed.&#13;
"OR, PALESTINE,&#13;
I GRIEVE FOR TREE!"&#13;
There is an expanse of sand-duned land&#13;
along the eastern shore of the&#13;
Mediterranean Sea which has special&#13;
significance for millions of people, In&#13;
biblical history it is known as Palestine,:&#13;
homeland of the Philistines. Today, with&#13;
some awe and reverence, many call this&#13;
part of our globe "The Holy Land".&#13;
Geographically it is also being referred&#13;
to as being the "Near East" or the "Middle&#13;
East". In the modern political world of&#13;
today this general area comprises Israel&#13;
Lebanon, Syria and the Heshemit~&#13;
Kingdom of Jordon.&#13;
It was the good fortune of Mrs. Gruhl&#13;
and I to visit this part of the world in the .&#13;
year just preceding the lightening war&#13;
between Israel and the Arab countries.&#13;
Pla~e.s so much in the news today are&#13;
familiar to us ... Cairo, Egypt ... Beirut&#13;
m Lebanon . . . Damascus, Syria . , .&#13;
Amman, the capital of Jordon ... Tel Aviv&#13;
Jerusalem, and many other places i~&#13;
Israel.&#13;
Itis about Palestine - The Holy Land&#13;
· the land chosen by God as the place for&#13;
prophetic rev~lations about which I write.&#13;
· . and for which I grieve. It must be the&#13;
newscasts report,jng on what is happening&#13;
there today which have induced these&#13;
mtrospective thoughts.&#13;
I Mrs. Gruhl and I were on the right waveength&#13;
when we visited places in The Holy&#13;
Land ... Jerusalem, Bethany, Nazareth&#13;
:'th~ehe~, the Jordon River. I remembe;&#13;
C n 109 10 the ruins of the synagogue at&#13;
Gaalpe1rnaumon the shore of the Sea of&#13;
1 ee. Centuries ag trembled the bl 0 an. earthquake&#13;
tubble. I tou hedOCksof stone Into a pile of&#13;
..J c one of the stones&#13;
esus, were you here?" Ad' : .&#13;
answered "Ye I ' n a VOice , s, was here."&#13;
We went to the Ch&#13;
::::,~c~~~h~~f~~dinT l:f:ge~d ~d ~~:h&#13;
great church lca c~nhrmation, the&#13;
the same v spans the sIte of Calvary and&#13;
. Glce said "1 Magna Mysterium' was here, too."&#13;
So, in campus .&#13;
"hang-up" ... w~~acular, here is my&#13;
places should Palesti' . 'thYes, why or all&#13;
·four great religi ne, e motherland of&#13;
.. Why must ~:- each professing love.&#13;
perpetual plagu a~d desolahon be a&#13;
holy soil? e on w at we look upon as&#13;
I am sIlocked that Parkside has an bo&#13;
that .could stupe to such childish :tun~&#13;
Tal,king to my fellow students about th;&#13;
incident, I learned that my car was notth&#13;
only one that had been messed a~&#13;
WIth.&#13;
I have two theori~s about why they lroj&#13;
out my car. One is that I've got a ta&#13;
player and they were mad because th""&#13;
couldn't steal the tapes. Another theory'Y&#13;
that they waited in the lounge to see u&#13;
r~action. However, they had not ::&#13;
ticipated that I was not coming to mycar&#13;
till 10:30.&#13;
Parkside students,let's not be viclimsol&#13;
car freaks. Yell at them, they'll probably&#13;
run. Perhaps if you do Parkside's&#13;
Children will grow up! '&#13;
D.M.&#13;
We read first of the Hebrews andtbOr&#13;
exodus out of Egypt about 1200 B.C....&#13;
their concept of One God ... Moses andthe&#13;
Ten "Commandments.&#13;
Then, after a procession of propbell&#13;
came Jesus Christ. John Knox called&#13;
Christ's coming "The Great Event" iD&#13;
history.&#13;
And in the sixth century, Mohammed.&#13;
the Prophet of Allah and founder of the&#13;
Islamic religion, was born in Mecca,&#13;
Parenthetically, King HusseinofJordoo&#13;
has reason to believe that he is a blood&#13;
relative of the Prophet Mohammed.The&#13;
latter had a daughter. Hussein, the&#13;
modern man, is from her long lin. 01&#13;
descendents.&#13;
. And the fourth world religion to emerle&#13;
from that area is the Bahai Faith.l~&#13;
center is just out of Haifa on the weslelll&#13;
slope of Mount Carmel. From he!'&#13;
emotiorial wave-lengths of love qUIetly&#13;
encompass the world. .&#13;
Now each of these religions."&#13;
monotheistic. nr India there is a sa:&#13;
which says that "There is only one&#13;
and a thousand and one ways in which~&#13;
worship Him." I accept that idea.~ ...&#13;
IS Love. Call Him '''Our Father,&#13;
said.&#13;
I wish that you could hear m~&#13;
recorder repeat some of the lnt 111&#13;
(visits, really) that I had WIthfrl~&#13;
made in Jordon and Israel. TheIl' t tbeI'&#13;
are so strong . . . so deep ... tha ~&#13;
seems to be no possible room ~ not&#13;
ciliation. To live and let live ISa 'allY d1'&#13;
known to many of them ... espeel dieJlI&#13;
Arabs. And an eye for an eye"&#13;
rooted in Judaism. te cJllIfINevertheless,&#13;
I believe that lin thel!lll&#13;
possibly last forever. SometimePalesti'"&#13;
Spirit will look down on b1eeddngcom~&#13;
and in a compassionate an lIDs1...&#13;
voice will say, "Silence your gput y&lt;'JI&#13;
Ground your airplanes! .. ' YoII or&lt;&#13;
swords in your scabbards! . ' 'eel"&#13;
brothers! ... Let there be peaI.' IL&#13;
/l,tk4ll~&#13;
Use C/asSifteJs&#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
CommunicationBest&#13;
For The Three Of Us&#13;
D veloping a gelding campus, one constantly on the grow, is a&#13;
ta k which would probably put gray hair on the best of men. The administration&#13;
should be and is commended for the diligent work and&#13;
pontaneous effort put forth in bringing Parkside to a category ~in&#13;
which we tand 4,000 strong and still growing.&#13;
But in your efforts to deliver Parkside's status to a step beyond&#13;
Yale, to a force mightier than Harvard, let's not forget the tiny feet of&#13;
taff and student alike. Let's not forget the Number One asset to your&#13;
almighty r gime, Public Relations. It i an alarming position as editor to realize all the staff and&#13;
tud nt unre t not yet active as a result of overlooking the rights or&#13;
r ting ·· of other . One instance that is particularly disturbing is the&#13;
xc ive authority used by the coordinators of Student Activities on&#13;
film f tival, completely disregarding and over-powering a faculty&#13;
m mb r who happened to have made arrangements on the same night,&#13;
. nme time, and same building for his film society. More the&#13;
irr p n ·ible behavior of the kindergarten student.&#13;
eedle to say, based on first come, first served, the faculty&#13;
m mb r had made arrangements before the administration had - the&#13;
time and place for film society activities were changed.&#13;
ow thi · is not too disturbing in itself if it were directed through&#13;
th proper channels, but the coordinator never once approached the&#13;
faculty member. This abortive behavior is to be pitied by all, for these&#13;
men ar helping to run your school.&#13;
Park ide administrators, throw aside your inhuman airs of&#13;
indiffer nee and be a slight bit different. Try with all your supreme&#13;
ff rt to establish a network of communications among admini&#13;
·trator ·, faculty, and students. It would be the best for the three of&#13;
u .&#13;
WARWe're&#13;
Brought Up To Love It&#13;
Uncle Sam and his warmongers have finally reached us on our&#13;
remote island campus of Parkside. The weapons they wield are not the&#13;
recognizable warfare types, but rather the underhanded propaganda&#13;
techniques of Cold War Modern America.&#13;
War Enculturation is their weapon and they sling their unknown&#13;
devastation stone, many men fall.&#13;
Enculturation is the process by which we teach new recruits&#13;
about our society. The germ was planted early in our childhoods and&#13;
began to spread like terminal cancer. We were small, innocent, maybe&#13;
three or four years old, and didn't realize what was right, or wrong.&#13;
Uncle Sam showed us a strange looking pointed object. Uncle Sam&#13;
placed it in our tiny bands and with his 200 years of American, mightyAmerican&#13;
culture behind him, said "TAKE THIS GUN AND KI..,&#13;
KIL .. , I MEAN (clear throat) AND SHOOT, BANG-BANG AND PLA y&#13;
DEAD." '&#13;
Well now, Uncle Sam, this baby bas made bis way through&#13;
cowboys and Indians, past Army soldiers and ray-guns. Now Uncle&#13;
~":· this kid !s eighteen and has been taught to love war. Lo~es the&#13;
shcm~, stab~mg, and murdering of human lives. But this time,&#13;
America, !et It be on your soul, on your conscience. For now we realize&#13;
the game IS real - real bulle~ and real death. We finally realize why&#13;
we are the_ way w~ are. But still the war remains here in the form of&#13;
~nculturation behind our backs. Student activities war machines _ Just a game?&#13;
WA.&lt;;J:iINGTON - &lt;CPS&gt; - Total U.S.&#13;
I IO th Indochina war have climbed&#13;
•1, ac ordmg to latest figures from&#13;
~ D partment of Defense. This&#13;
lllC!ud 43,568 death. "resulting from&#13;
hon from hostile forces" . and 8,493 from&#13;
oth r ca e .. uch as helicopter accidents.&#13;
114,096 Saigon government troo&#13;
been killed, along with 4 060 ps have, allies. The Defense D • other U.S.&#13;
668,874 North Vietnaepartment claims&#13;
soldiers have lost their l~ese b ~nd_ NLF&#13;
deat~ total for the war to e:39 rmgmg 1?e&#13;
eluding civilians and ,091, not m- Laos and Cambod' numerous troops in 1a.&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
Vol. 2, No,_2 oc~.- 5, 1-970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Connie Petersen&#13;
MikeGogola&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Bill Jacoby&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
1:'eature Editor&#13;
Business Manage&#13;
Advertising Manage~&#13;
Photographer&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Published weekly by_ the stude~~ of the U~iversity: of Wisconsin.&#13;
Parkside Kenosha Wisconsin 53140. Maihng address 1s Parks1de's Newsco&#13;
uw-Parkside, Ken~sha, Wisconsin, 53140. Business and Editorial telephi:~&#13;
number is 658-4861, Ext. 24.&#13;
LETTERS to the editors&#13;
Dear Editor:&#13;
Like when will some people grow up? I&#13;
had my car parked at Tallent Hall parking&#13;
lot for the "Night of Shorts". When I&#13;
returned I found what appeared to be a&#13;
ticket. I was mystified at first, thinking&#13;
that some mistake was made. Then I&#13;
looked more closely and saw that the ticket&#13;
was not really a ticket but a message. It&#13;
read as follows: "A lot of people think I'm&#13;
writing you a message, but I'm not. I&#13;
lambasted your car. So Get Screwed."&#13;
The message was not exactly what I&#13;
would call a meaningful one. I checked my&#13;
car over, but found that it was not&#13;
damaged. They did leave another message&#13;
which I read in my rear view mirror as I&#13;
drove home. The words Get F--ed . .&#13;
"OH, PALESTINE,&#13;
I GRIEVE FOR THEE!"&#13;
There is an expanse of sand-duned land&#13;
along the eastern shore of the&#13;
Mediterranean Sea which has special&#13;
significance for millions of people. In&#13;
biblical history it is known as Palestine,:&#13;
homeland of the Philistines. Today, with&#13;
some awe and reverence, many call this&#13;
part of our globe "The Holy Land".&#13;
Geographically it is also being referred&#13;
to as being the "Near East" or the "Middle&#13;
East". In the modern political world of&#13;
today this general area comprises Israel&#13;
Lebanon, Syria and the Heshemit~&#13;
Kingdom of Jordon. ·&#13;
It was the good fortune of Mrs. Gruhl&#13;
and I to visit this part of the world in the&#13;
year just preceding the lightening war&#13;
between Israel and the Arab countries.&#13;
Pla~e_s so much in the news today are&#13;
~am1har to us . .. Cairo, Egypt . .. Beirut&#13;
10 Lebanon · · . Damascus, Syria . . .&#13;
Amman, the capital of Jordon ... Tel Aviv&#13;
Jerusalem, and many other places i~&#13;
Israel.&#13;
It is about Palestine - The Holy Land . .&#13;
. the la~d chosen by God as the place for&#13;
prophetic rev~lations about which I write .&#13;
.. and for which I grieve. It must be the&#13;
newscasts reporting on what is happening&#13;
~ere tod~y which have induced these&#13;
introspective thoughts.&#13;
Mrs. Gruhl and I were on the right wave-&#13;
~gth when we visited places in The Holy&#13;
Bend .. . Jerusalem, Bethany, Nazareth,&#13;
sta thl~he~, the Jordon River. I remember&#13;
C n mg m the ruins of the synagogue at&#13;
GTirnaum on ~he shore of the Sea of&#13;
tre~~f ~ ~;~~nes ago an. earthquake&#13;
tubble I t hocks of stone mto a pile of&#13;
"J . ouc ed one of the stones&#13;
esus, were you here?,. A d . : . answered "Ye 1 · n a v01ce • s, was here."&#13;
We went to th Ch&#13;
:~~c!~e. Accor;ng t:~hge~d ~:d !~:h&#13;
great chu~~~olog1cal c~nfirmation, the&#13;
the same voi~r:i~he,~;ie of Calvary and&#13;
Magna Mysterium • was here, too."&#13;
So, in campus · "hang-up" .. . w~,nacular, here is my&#13;
places should Pale f . . . . Yes, why of all . four great religio s me, the motherland of&#13;
wh ns, each professing love&#13;
· · Y must war a d d . · perpetual pla e n esolatton be a&#13;
holy soil? gu on what we look upon as&#13;
I am shocked that Parkside has an bo&#13;
that _could stupe to such childish skn~&#13;
Talking to my fellow students about th·&#13;
incident, I learned that my car was not th:&#13;
only one that had been messed a d&#13;
with. roun&#13;
I have two theor~es about why they tried&#13;
out my car. One 1s that I've got a ta&#13;
player and they were mad because thpe&#13;
couldn't steal the tapes. Another theory ~Y&#13;
that ~hey waited in the lounge to see m~&#13;
r_~cbon. However, they had not an.&#13;
bc1pated that I was not coming to my ca&#13;
till 10:30. r&#13;
Parkside students, let's not be victims of&#13;
car fr~aks. Yell ~t them, they'll probably&#13;
run. Perhaps if you do, Parkside's&#13;
Children will grow up!&#13;
A Visit With '&#13;
An A ware Square&#13;
D.M.&#13;
We read first of the Hebrews and their&#13;
exodus out of Egypt about 1200 B.C ....&#13;
their concept of One God ... Moses and the&#13;
Ten Commandments.&#13;
Then, after a procession of prophets&#13;
came Jesus Christ. John Knox called&#13;
Christ's coming "The Great Event" in&#13;
history.&#13;
And in the sixth century, Mohammed,&#13;
the Prophet of Allah and founder of the&#13;
Islamic religion, was born in Mecca.&#13;
Parenthetically, King Hussein of Jordon&#13;
has reason to believe that he is a olood&#13;
relative of the Prophet Mohammed. The&#13;
latter had a daughter. Hussein, the&#13;
modern man, is from her long line of&#13;
descendents. And the fourth world religion to emerge&#13;
from that area is the Bahai Faith. Its&#13;
center is just out of Haifa on the western&#13;
slope of Mount Carmel. From ~~ emotional wave-lengths of love qmetly&#13;
encompass the world. . Now each of these religions . 15&#13;
monotheistic. In--India there is a sa:&#13;
which says that "There is only one_ 1;&#13;
and a thousand and one ways in which&#13;
worship Him." I accept that idea. And Gt1d&#13;
is Love. Call Him '"Our Father", Jesus&#13;
said. tape&#13;
I wish that you could hear mY ·e11~&#13;
recorder repeat some of t?e i~te~ we&#13;
(visits, really) that I had with ~ri~~liogs&#13;
made in Jordon and Israel. Their t there&#13;
are so strong . . . so deep .. · tha r conseems&#13;
to be no possibl~ ro?rn !ie nol&#13;
ciliation. To live and let hve is a . Uy the&#13;
known to many of them . · · esp~iadeePY&#13;
Arabs. And an eye for an eye 15&#13;
rooted in Judaism. . te cannol&#13;
Nevertheless, I beheve tha~ ha the Jjob&#13;
possibly last forever. Somet~rne paJestine&#13;
Spirit will look dow!l on b~~.edd~0rnpelling&#13;
and in a compassionate an uns! ..&#13;
voice will say, "Silence your g put yl)llf&#13;
Ground your airplanes! · · · you are&#13;
swords in your scabbards! · · · el " be peac · brothers! . . . Let there - I, IL&#13;
"~&#13;
Use Ctassifteds &#13;
Student Questions&#13;
Retention of Teachers Policy&#13;
ministration has no say in such mallers. J&#13;
refer to the intolerable situation in regard&#13;
to student rights. This college exists for the&#13;
soul purpose of education, not as a cushy&#13;
job for incompetant administrators and&#13;
'instructors' that are too busy working on&#13;
their own projects to be able to do an&#13;
adequate job of teaching. Rather than&#13;
hiring and retaining such teachers for the&#13;
purpose or making the administration look&#13;
in the eyes of the Board of Regents and&#13;
stuffing the school with Phds who can't&#13;
teach, we should keep these people out of&#13;
teaching and put them somewhere where&#13;
they can't hurt the students. Teachers&#13;
should be able to teach, they should be&#13;
retained for this reason and released if&#13;
they are unable to.&#13;
How wouJd you evaluate your instructors&#13;
and administrators'? 1 would like&#13;
to feature such evaluations in this paper. If&#13;
you have an opinion you would like to have&#13;
aired about any instructor or administrator&#13;
at UWP, just turn it into the&#13;
office or to this writer personally and it&#13;
will be printed along with all other&#13;
opinions concerning that same person.&#13;
Opinions may be either pro or eon but,lU\I$~&#13;
be signed, signatures to be held cOn,&#13;
fidential if you _h. Individuals to 00&#13;
featured in the next edition will be fro",&#13;
the Science Division of the College of&#13;
Science and Society. If you have any&#13;
comments to make on anyone in this&#13;
department from Dr. Isenberg on down to&#13;
a first year math instructor, let us know.&#13;
Suggestions include competence, ability,&#13;
degree of knowledge, and personality.&#13;
'ILa member Qf the administration oo-&#13;
.jects to this article, call the Newscope and&#13;
this writer will personally interview you&#13;
for rebuttal.&#13;
Elvq In&#13;
Activities Building?&#13;
By WALTBREACII&#13;
Little people commg out of the wood&#13;
work unrecognized, unrewarded (that&#13;
means they're not paid) and for the most&#13;
part unthanked, brought Butch Cassidy&#13;
and the Sundance KId to Parkaide.&#13;
Working through, by, and With Mr&#13;
Neibuhr and the Studenl Activities Office,&#13;
they stole or somehow got hold of thrs&#13;
movie. Working late, after making shoes&#13;
all day, they set up chairs and projecuon&#13;
equipment in the New Student Acuvrues&#13;
BUilding. Unnoticed In the crowd of four&#13;
hundred they removed seventy-Jive cents&#13;
from the pockets of all in attendance and&#13;
placed a magical elfin sign on their wrists&#13;
When the juice freaks had all gone home&#13;
they tirelessly cleaned up the debris,&#13;
pumped out the spilled beer and generally&#13;
got the building all ship-shape and Bristol&#13;
fashion (which means neat l. All the While&#13;
they were working they were merrily&#13;
singing songs about all the movies to come&#13;
and the upcoming concerts, dances, leetures&#13;
and coffee houses.&#13;
However, and now comes the pitch.&#13;
Uncle Elf wants you. So, if you would lik&#13;
to be..an unrecognized, unrewarded and&#13;
unthanked elf (volunteer) just stand on&#13;
any giant toadstool at midnight and in the&#13;
light of a full moon or talk to Dan Dearborn,&#13;
Karl Stomner, Gene Cooper, Diane&#13;
Thomas or that Niebuhr guy.&#13;
BJ Ken Konkol,&#13;
I consider myself as a vocal member of&#13;
the silent majority. Many people I am&#13;
associated with consider me a war;&#13;
mongering member of the righl,wing&#13;
while no doubt certain members of the&#13;
administration feel I lean more towards&#13;
radical left-wingism,&#13;
Ideny both these charges, but I will say,&#13;
a middle-of·the-roacter I'm not.&#13;
Writing for this paper has given me the&#13;
opportunity to vent some of my present&#13;
antagonism against the misruling rulers&#13;
(the establishment is sucha trite phrase)&#13;
by bringing out into the open certain things&#13;
that have been heretofor kept concealed&#13;
from view. His my intention to stir at least&#13;
a portion of the readers out of lhe&#13;
doldrums of apathy, and hopefully to have&#13;
this establishment, if not improved, at&#13;
least awakened.&#13;
I! any of you readers out there in this&#13;
vast sea of learning wish to refute&#13;
anything I say, you will have the opportunity&#13;
to do so. If any wish to come to&#13;
the support of such a platform, you are&#13;
welcomed to do so. If any have something&#13;
to advance, it shall be advanced. Rise,&#13;
loose the shackies of apathy, and stride&#13;
forth in enlightenment.&#13;
Those students who attended UWP last&#13;
semester may remember the furor caused.&#13;
by an issue of this paper which had its&#13;
headline: INSTRUCTOR FIRED. This&#13;
banner referred to the case of Dr.&#13;
Salirnons Cacs who was not be retained&#13;
due to. personal antagonism to certain&#13;
members in administrative positions in&#13;
the College of Science and Society. Not to&#13;
mention any names, but his initials might&#13;
be N. I. .Personal antagonism was not the&#13;
reason given, rather a trumped up excuse&#13;
that Dr. Cacs was not working toward his&#13;
PhD was, and by terms of his contract he&#13;
was not fulfilling the requirement tha l all&#13;
instructors must work towards the PhD.&#13;
Dr. Cacs explained to these certain administrators&#13;
tha t he already had the&#13;
terminal degree in his field and 'even&#13;
provided them with a photostat of this&#13;
document, but since this document IS&#13;
written in a foreign language, these administrators&#13;
would not recognize it.&#13;
Immediately, upon reading of the&#13;
situation, this writer commenced a&#13;
campaign in opposition to the administration&#13;
on this point. Petitions were&#13;
circulated and a campaign waged to&#13;
"Keep Cacs", this last being done almost&#13;
soley through the efforts of John Krumpos&#13;
and Richard Zuffa.&#13;
During the ensuing weeks I attempted to&#13;
talk with the Chancellor in regard to the:&#13;
rash action of those certain administrators.&#13;
I finally got to bjlk lo him&#13;
after seeing his secretary about six times.&#13;
We talked for about two hours during&#13;
which I presented the petitions that had&#13;
been circulated and he said a great deal on&#13;
unrelated subjects which added up to: Dr.&#13;
Isenberg doesn't like Dr. Cacs and I&#13;
(Chancellor Wylie) don't fool around WIth&#13;
people wbo have tenure and why don't you&#13;
go bother somebody else, I've got my&#13;
bands tied. If Prof. Cacs does have hIS&#13;
Doctorate then we" fire him _because he&#13;
isn't: publishing anything, retention of&#13;
tea0ers here ~s based. upon 80 per cent&#13;
PU?~Ish or perIsh, 10 per cent teaching&#13;
ability, and Ifyour Chairman likes you you&#13;
get another 10 per cent, if he doesn't you&#13;
get zero. It doesn't matter if you are the&#13;
?est teacher in your department, you&#13;
mgrattate yourself with the head cheese or&#13;
vour not here anymore. For every student&#13;
mat thinks your competent take five points&#13;
off, students don't count around here&#13;
~nyway, I've got a nice secure position so&#13;
It don't bother me none if we fire every&#13;
.decent teacher in the school.&#13;
. Regardless of the opinion of the administration,&#13;
or perhaps in spite of it, Dr.&#13;
Cacs was voted teacher of the year and&#13;
was presented. with that award at the&#13;
.commencement exercises. Those exercises&#13;
were attended by the President of the&#13;
.Untverstty, Fred Harvey Harrington who&#13;
.made the mistake of talking to this writer,&#13;
because in five minutes he had promised to&#13;
investigate the reasons behind the&#13;
dismissal of Dr. Cacs and the runner-up&#13;
for teacher of the year, Irene Kraemer&#13;
who was also not having here contract&#13;
renewed.. Mr. Harrington is no longer&#13;
President of this University and I haven't&#13;
heard anything regarding the promised.&#13;
investigation anyway.&#13;
This past summer Dr. Cacs had a talk&#13;
with the new Dean of Science and Society,&#13;
Arthur C. Mac Kinney who at first accused&#13;
him of being a pretender to the degree of&#13;
Doctorate, but Dr. MacKinney can read&#13;
German and switched tachs when Dr. Cacs&#13;
showed him the aforementioned photostat&#13;
and a letter from his old professor, who is&#13;
now living in the U.S. and is included in&#13;
Who's Who, who attested that Dr. Cacs did&#13;
indeed have the terminal degree (for those&#13;
in the administration that means PhD).&#13;
The upshol of all this backround is that&#13;
Dr. Cacs is still not being retained here,&#13;
but now is being transferred to the&#13;
University Center System upon the expiration&#13;
of his contract. What was the use?&#13;
Perhaps now the administration will look a&#13;
little further the next time they decide to&#13;
cancel another competent teacher. After&#13;
all, why get rid of the good teaChers while&#13;
plenty of bad teachers (Le. Psychology)&#13;
are being retained.?&#13;
I make no pretences at being an expert&#13;
in the field of education, yet it seems to me&#13;
that were some of my suggestions put into&#13;
effect we would have a more.cor,npelently&#13;
run school. If you think that this means I&#13;
am accusing the present administration of&#13;
incompetance you are m~~t correct: This&#13;
college is full of inequities and If the&#13;
present trend is allowed to go unchecked&#13;
don't be too surprised to find the more&#13;
radical student elements doing something&#13;
about it. Since the far great majority is too&#13;
apathetic to make the attempt and would&#13;
"" content, if also harboring vague&#13;
feelings of uneasyness, to let the present&#13;
situation continue in its oppressiveness.&#13;
I do not advocate use of radical methods&#13;
(i.e. violence) to improve an already poor&#13;
situation, that would serve to make&#13;
matters worse, but beware Board· _of&#13;
.Regeants, others might. I am not referring&#13;
'to special extracurricular p~ob}ems as the&#13;
Vietnam war or equal fights, the adUse&#13;
Classifteds&#13;
CARTHAGE COLLEGE&#13;
ARTS AND LECfURES COMMITI'EE&#13;
Presents Its 197~71Season&#13;
All Events at Carthage College Fieldhouse&#13;
Season Tickets $8.00 Per Person&#13;
Includes Reserved Sealing&#13;
Date Time Event SingleTickel&#13;
Eleo Pomare Dance&#13;
Company +&#13;
Vienna Choir Boya&#13;
from Au.trIII&#13;
Ralph Nador,&#13;
"EnvironmeDtal Haurd.:&#13;
Man Made and Man&#13;
Remedied"&#13;
Emlyn WOllam.&#13;
a. "Curies Dicken."&#13;
Munich Chamber&#13;
Orchestra&#13;
Oct. 21, 1970 8:30p.m. 2.50&#13;
Jan. Z7. 1971 8:00p.m. 3.5.&#13;
Feb. 17, 1971 8:00p.m. I.SO&#13;
Mar.8,1971 8:00p.m. 2.00&#13;
Mar. 17, 1971 8:00p.m. 3.00&#13;
VALUE 11%.:&gt;0&#13;
+ Date of Pomare Dance Co. performance has been changed from Nov. 23 to&#13;
Oct. 21.&#13;
Group Discounts a\laUable for .Ingle eveaU&#13;
Make Checks Payable to Carlbage College&#13;
Please Mail to:&#13;
Concert Manager, College Center Offlce&#13;
Carthage College, Kenosha, Wis. 53.40&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Just South 01&#13;
Talent Hall _.- W4\TCHfS&#13;
u......_·"_i...&#13;
...- ......... c._It. _Tim ••&#13;
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FRI. - 8 a.m.-1 a.m .&#13;
SAT. &amp; SUN. -&#13;
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S1. ~ '. -=-i:''=:- • IECtSTlY&#13;
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(MUST SHOWIDENTIFICATION)&#13;
STUDENT &amp; WIS. 10 REQUIRED&#13;
GAMES BANOS POPCORN&#13;
MUSIC FOOD DRINKS&#13;
CURRENT MOVIES&#13;
DIAMoND CONSULTANTS Friday Film&#13;
'Up the Down Staircaset&#13;
8 p.m. 75(&#13;
Saturday Dance&#13;
Twisting Harvey and the Seven Sounds&#13;
$1.50 9:00-1:00&#13;
FAIR TRADE ACCEPTED&#13;
Crad.... c.maiOll.,.CertlfiH - .......&#13;
~gg~ __ .1_ .."""'........ 1&#13;
II ._ .&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
-K~NOSHA&#13;
Student Questions&#13;
Retention of Teachers Policy&#13;
~Y Ken Konkol&#13;
J consider myself as a vocal member of&#13;
the silent majority. Many people I am&#13;
associated with consider me a war-·&#13;
mongering member of the right-wing&#13;
while no doubt certain members of the&#13;
administration feel I lean more towards&#13;
radical left-wingism.&#13;
I deny both these charges, but I will say,&#13;
a middle-of-the-roader I'm not.&#13;
Writing for this paper has given me the&#13;
opportunity to vent some of my present&#13;
antagonism against the rajsruling rulers&#13;
(the establishment is such ·a trite phrase)&#13;
by bringing out into the open certain things&#13;
that have been heretofor kept concealed&#13;
from view. It is my intention to stir at least&#13;
a portion of the readers out of the&#13;
doldrums of apathy, and hopefully to have&#13;
this establishment, if not improved, at&#13;
least awakened.&#13;
If any of you readers out there in this&#13;
vast sea of learning wish to refute&#13;
anything I say, you will have the opportunity&#13;
to do so. If any wish to come to&#13;
the support of such a platform, you are&#13;
welcomed to do so. If any have something&#13;
to advance, it shall be advanced. Rise,&#13;
loose the shackles of apathy, and stride&#13;
forth in enlightenment.&#13;
Those students who attended DWP last&#13;
semester may remember the furor caused.&#13;
by an issue of this paper which had its&#13;
headline: INSTRUCTOR FIRED. This&#13;
banner referred to the case of Dr.&#13;
Salimons Cacs who was not be retained&#13;
due to. personal antagonism to certain&#13;
members in administrative positions in&#13;
the College of Science and Society. Not to&#13;
mention any names, but his initials might&#13;
be N. I.. Personal antagonism was not the&#13;
reason given, rather a trumped up excuse&#13;
that Dr. Cacs was not working toward his&#13;
PhD was, and by terms of his contract he&#13;
was not fulfilling the requirement that all&#13;
instructors must work towards the PhD.&#13;
Dr. Cacs explained to these certain ad~&#13;
ministrators that he already had the&#13;
terminal degree in his field_ and · ev~n&#13;
provided them with a photostat of th!s&#13;
document, but since this docum~nt 1s&#13;
written in a foreign language, these administrators&#13;
would not recognize it.&#13;
Immediately, upon reading of the&#13;
situation, this writer commenced a&#13;
campaign in opposition to the administration&#13;
on this point. Petitions were&#13;
circulated and a campaign waged to&#13;
"Keep Cacs", this last being done almost&#13;
soley through the efforts of John Krumpos&#13;
and Richard Zuffa.&#13;
During the ensuing weeks I attempted to&#13;
talk with the Chancellor in regard to the·&#13;
rash action of those certain ad-_&#13;
ministrators. I finally got to h4lk to him&#13;
after seeing his secretary about six times.&#13;
We talked for about two hours during&#13;
which I presented the petitions that had&#13;
been circulated and he said a great deal on&#13;
unrelated subjects which added up to: Dr.&#13;
Isenberg doesn't like Dr. Cacs and_ I&#13;
(Chancellor Wylie) don't fool around with&#13;
people who have tenure and why don't you&#13;
go bother somebody else, I've got ~y&#13;
hands tied. If Prof. Cacs does have his&#13;
Doctorate then we" fire him _because he&#13;
isn't' publishing anything, retention of&#13;
teac~ers here is based upon 80 per cent&#13;
PU?!1sh or perish, 10 per cent teaching&#13;
ab1hty, and 1f your Chairman likes you you&#13;
get another 10 per cent, if he doesn't you&#13;
get zero. It doesn't matter if you are the&#13;
?Cst ~eacher in your department, you&#13;
ingratiate yourself with the head cheese or&#13;
vour not here anymore. For every student&#13;
mat ~inks your competent take five points&#13;
off, students don't count around here&#13;
anyway, I've got a nice secure position so&#13;
it don't bother me none if we fire every ,decent teacher in the school.&#13;
. Regardless of the opinion of the administration,&#13;
or perhaps in spite of it, Dr.&#13;
Cacs was voted teacher of the year and&#13;
was presented with that award at the&#13;
• commencement exercises. Those exercises&#13;
were attended by the President of the&#13;
:University, Fred Harvey Harrington who&#13;
. made the mistake of talking to this writer,&#13;
because in five minutes he had promised to&#13;
investigate the reasons behind the&#13;
dismissal of Dr. Cacs and the runner-up&#13;
for teacher of the year, Irene Kraemer&#13;
who was also not having here contract&#13;
renewed. Mr. Harrington is no longer&#13;
President of this University and I haven't&#13;
heard anything regarding the promised&#13;
investigation anyway.&#13;
This past summer Dr. Cacs had a talk&#13;
with the new Dean of Science and Society,&#13;
Arthur C. MacKinney who at first accused&#13;
him of being a pretender to the degree of&#13;
Doctorate, but Dr. MacKinney can read&#13;
German and switched tachs when Dr. Cacs&#13;
showed him the aforementioned photostat&#13;
and a letter from his old professor, who is&#13;
now living in the U.S. and is included in&#13;
Who's Who, who attested that Dr. Cacs did&#13;
indeed have the terminal degree (for those&#13;
in the administration that means PhD).&#13;
The upshot of all this backround is that&#13;
Dr. Cacs is still not being retained here,&#13;
but now is being transferred to the&#13;
University Center System upon the expiration&#13;
of his contract. What was the use?&#13;
Perhaps now the administration will look a&#13;
little further the next time they decide to&#13;
cancel another competent teacher. After&#13;
all, why get rid of the good teachers while&#13;
plenty of bad teachers (Le. Psychology)&#13;
are being retained.?&#13;
I make no pretences at being an expert&#13;
in the field of education, yet it seems to me&#13;
that were some of my suggestions put into&#13;
effect we would have a more.cor_npe~ently&#13;
run school. If you think that this means I&#13;
am accusing the present administration ~f&#13;
incompetance you are m?~t correct: This&#13;
college is full of ineqwties and 1f the&#13;
present trend is allowed to go unchecked&#13;
don't be too surprised to find the more&#13;
radical student elements doing something&#13;
about it. Since the far great majority is too&#13;
apathetic to make the attempt_ and would&#13;
lie content, if also harboring vague&#13;
feelings of uneasyness, to let the _present&#13;
situation continue in its oppressiveness.&#13;
I do not advocate use of radical methods&#13;
(i.e. violence) to improve an already poor&#13;
situation, that would serve to make&#13;
matters worse, but beware Board . of&#13;
Regeants, others mi~ht. I am not referring&#13;
'to special extracurricular p~oblems as the&#13;
Vietnam war or equal rights, the adWATCH£S&#13;
&#13;
..... • Acctlt...,_&#13;
uttractu•f'I • L-.iM&#13;
.. ,..,. . ..,,... ca,avell• • Tim••&#13;
LeCoultr•&#13;
I CHINA I&#13;
UPAll OlPT.I&#13;
___.. - lllOAL&#13;
C, ')_ --\ \ -e,;,..=.::..=-- ., lECISTlY&#13;
~~~ ~\.\. 10% "\ ~~~ 0&#13;
~~ Courtesy Discount&#13;
DIAMC&gt;NO CONSULTANTS&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
to&#13;
Students &amp; Faculty&#13;
(MUST SH OW IDENTIFICATION&gt;&#13;
FAIR TRADE ACCEPTED&#13;
C,a4iiare Cemoioglst-l!ef'tlfied Diam011tolocist&#13;
~ll8""1A&#13;
.. _.. • ,;He,wice where you sJto,! It - - .&#13;
ministration has no say in such matters. I&#13;
refer to the intolerable situation in regard&#13;
to student rights. This college exi ts for the&#13;
soul purpose of education, not as a cushy&#13;
job for incompetant administrator and&#13;
'instructors' that are too busy working on their own projects to be able lo do an&#13;
adequate job of teaching. Rather than&#13;
hiring and retaining such teachers for the&#13;
purpose of making the administration look&#13;
in the eyes of the Board of Regents and&#13;
stuffing the school with Phds who can't&#13;
teach, we should keep these people out of&#13;
teaching and put them somewhere where&#13;
they can't hurt the students. Teachers&#13;
should be able to teach, they should be&#13;
retained for this reason and released if&#13;
they are unable to.&#13;
How would you evaluate your instructors&#13;
and administrators? I would like&#13;
to feature such evaluations in this paper. If&#13;
you have an opinion you would like to have&#13;
aired about any instructor or administrator&#13;
at UWP, just turn it into the&#13;
office or lo this writer personally and it&#13;
will be printed along with all oth~&#13;
opinions concerning that same person.&#13;
Opinions may be either pro or con bul;n~t&#13;
be signed, signatures to be held l:Oni&#13;
fidential if you -.h. Individuals to be&#13;
featured in the next edition will be fro"l&#13;
the Science Division of the College of&#13;
Science and Society. IC you have any&#13;
comments to make on anyone in this&#13;
department from Dr. Isenberg on down to&#13;
a first year math instructor, let us know.&#13;
Suggestions include competence, ability,&#13;
degree of knowledge, and personality.&#13;
/"Jf_a member Qf the administration 01&gt;-&#13;
. jects to this article, call the Newscope and&#13;
this writer will personally interview you&#13;
for rebuttal.&#13;
Elve~ In&#13;
Activities Building?&#13;
8, \\,\l,T BREA( II&#13;
Lillie pcopl coming out or th woodwork&#13;
unreco niz. d, unr w rded c th t&#13;
means they're not p idl and for th mo t&#13;
part unthanked, brought Butch 1dy&#13;
and the undance Kid to P rk ad .&#13;
Working through, by, and with tr&#13;
, eibuhr and th tudcnt Acllv1ti m c,&#13;
they stole or omehow got hold or 1h1&#13;
movie. Working late, aft r makin ho&#13;
all day, they _ct up chair and projection&#13;
equipment m the . · w Stud nt Act1\·iti&#13;
Building. nnoticed m t crowd or four&#13;
hundred they removed . ev nt ·-fan! cent&#13;
from the pockets or all in all ndanc nd&#13;
placed a magical elfin ign on th •ir wri t .&#13;
When the juice freaks had all gon homt•&#13;
they tirele Jy clean d up the d bri ,&#13;
pumped out the spilled b r and g •n rail)&#13;
got the building all ship-shap and Bri tol&#13;
ra hion (which mean n al l. All th \\hilc&#13;
they were working they wer m rrily&#13;
singing ongs about all the movies to com and the upcoming concerts, dan , lectures&#13;
and coffee hou .&#13;
However, and now com the pitch.&#13;
Uncle Elf wants you. So, ,r you would hk •&#13;
to be.an unrecognized, unrewarded and&#13;
,unthanked elf (volunteer) just ~land on&#13;
any giant toad tool at midnight and in thl'&#13;
light of a full moon or talk to Dan D arborn,&#13;
Karl Stomner, Gen Cooper. Dian •&#13;
Thomas or that Niebuhr guy.&#13;
Use Classifieds&#13;
CARTHAGE COLLEGE&#13;
Date&#13;
Oct. 21, 1970&#13;
Jan. 27, 1971&#13;
Feb. 17, 1971&#13;
Mar. 8, 1971&#13;
Mar. 17, 1971&#13;
ARTS AND LECTURES COMMITTEE&#13;
Presents Its 1970-71 Sea on&#13;
All Events at Carthage College Fieldhouse&#13;
Season Tickets $8.00 Per Person&#13;
Includes Reserved Seating&#13;
Time&#13;
8:30p.m.&#13;
8:00p.m.&#13;
8:00p.m.&#13;
8:00p.m.&#13;
8:00p.m.&#13;
Event mgle Ticket&#13;
Eleo Pomare Dance 2.50&#13;
Company+&#13;
Vienna Cholr Bo s 3.SO&#13;
from Au trla&#13;
Ralph Nader, 1,50&#13;
"Environmental Huard&#13;
Man Made and Man&#13;
Remedied''&#13;
Emlyn William 2.00&#13;
as "Charles Dlcktn "&#13;
1unlch hambtr 3.&#13;
Orchestra&#13;
+ Date of Pomare Dance Co. performance has been changed from No . 23 to&#13;
Oct. 21.&#13;
Group Di counts av a liable for Ingle even&#13;
Make Checks Payable to Carthage ollege&#13;
Please Mail to:&#13;
Concert Manager, C liege enter OUlce&#13;
Carthage College, Ken ha. WI . 53140&#13;
Student Activities Building&#13;
Just South of&#13;
Talent Hall NOW OPEN!!!&#13;
MON.-THURS. - 8 a.m.-10 p.m.&#13;
FRI. - 8 a.m.-1 a.m.&#13;
SAT. &amp; SUN. -&#13;
SPECIAL EVENTS ONLY&#13;
STUDEHT &amp; WIS. ID REQUIRED&#13;
GAMES BANDS POPCORN&#13;
MUSIC FOOD DRINKS&#13;
CURRENT MOVIES&#13;
Friday Film&#13;
'Up the Down Staircase' 8 p.m. 7 S(&#13;
Saturday Dance&#13;
Twisting Harvey and the Seven Sounds&#13;
$1.50 9:00-1:00 &#13;
esearch&#13;
fI'Id 1IaIW7~~ OcLI&#13;
1fM term as pnsident of&#13;
C.. wenllI!-,,&lt;I W-_ HarriJlgtOn&#13;
..&#13;
...... ,PI :adem alIer lW'1\lIIll&#13;
10 bK&lt;lIDe the presidenl&#13;
:=:E;';~;&lt;IfUv,-au. lb~ iDiam Janz of '!be&#13;
tiDeI. HamnglOll bad this&#13;
I ~ 011 the Madison&#13;
h ... odaIisaIon of dof .. t. ..&#13;
....... _lbf1&lt;aU1d ",ermostofthe&#13;
=&#13;
=~aad dd!'1 make it. The)' feel aad tnatrat.od aad tlJtoy turn to&#13;
is a &lt;I dol.. t, tt ts the&#13;
rnoIutlODary It IS not a sign&#13;
=&#13;
:.;~rhboUlltJI is ealal'\itlOlS and ... ID mODey anf "iril."&#13;
Ip"'k'" of tb.. V1&lt;Itenc:e at&#13;
Madlioaa aad dol .. 1 bt spoke of was&#13;
_end by radicals. ~=:_ oee of the major&#13;
... aDd dloappointmenLs of&#13;
_rloortaa', ~ He understood&#13;
• it coucemed lhe ,,-ar, ':=~ vaupa, and other&#13;
• ""' ..... .-.., HarnJWlOn found it&#13;
thai a mo", workable&#13;
~&#13;
~~~E~ program _as never peapIe WIth the ..xving&#13;
l' bt Id,' We're "'&lt;Irking&#13;
but 're not surreePOWER&#13;
...... • tlv. &amp; Spood Sh.p&#13;
2012 52.d&#13;
"First and Finest&#13;
In Speed"&#13;
OSHA'S LARCEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
OCSCOO T I'tl1CES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
's • • •&#13;
drea's&#13;
Tob««nIisl&#13;
i.u 1911&#13;
"'LW, ..,. ••• y ,,.......&#13;
countries. Harrington also&#13;
his study of adult education IlIaJa to&#13;
States. The Carnegie F lit tbt&#13;
financing that study. He p1a.:'::u..&#13;
011 a book concerning the to&#13;
auna policy of the United ~':i&lt;I&#13;
Eventually, Harrington rna&#13;
teaching - but for the y l'OllIna&#13;
concentrate on research. JII"esent bt&#13;
R-K NEWS&#13;
/&#13;
n&#13;
c&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN IlOAD&#13;
NORTH CITY UIlITS&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
CHEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
S2nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN, THRU THUIIS.&#13;
~ A.M. TILL ItIDIITE&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL Z A.&#13;
HAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPERCHEW&#13;
(triple decker)&#13;
SS(&#13;
\&#13;
AY 10 A.M.. 2 ,.&#13;
OWER&#13;
•• otivo &amp; SpHcl Shop&#13;
2012 52nd&#13;
' a d Finest&#13;
In Speed"&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
PfttCES&#13;
'S&#13;
• • •&#13;
countries. Hanington also .,._ tu study of adult education in to&#13;
States. The Carnegie Foan::&#13;
financing that study. He p1a19 ._&#13;
on a book concerning the .h;.. __ ID&#13;
Cllina policy of the United s-;-1' Of&#13;
E\-entually, Harri~ton may&#13;
teaching - but for the ~t&#13;
concentrate on research. be&#13;
R-K NE&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN 110AD&#13;
NORTH CITY LIIIT1&#13;
CHA&#13;
N&#13;
CHE&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSH&#13;
SUN. THRU THUi&#13;
~1 A.M. TILL MID ITE&#13;
FRI. &amp; SAT. TILL Z A.&#13;
HAMBURGE&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHE&#13;
{triple deck r)&#13;
55(&#13;
·2, &#13;
Book Prices Are Too H· h&#13;
By SYen Taffs bo k 19&#13;
d&#13;
- 0 expenses A&#13;
other semester awns at Parkside students h . great number of these tonce again students are shocked hy bookstore i~~~e applIed for jobs at the&#13;
an cost of books. And as always, there is employee di hope of being eligible for&#13;
::usual griping, but nobody actually does dismaYed at ~cournts. Another student,&#13;
thIDg about the costs ... except raise exorbita t bo P Ice which she deemed anY n, rrowed a co f h them from the librar py 0 t e book&#13;
YOU''re not going to believe this, but one book for t y - she xeroxed the whole&#13;
f hen cents a pag d of JOYfriends, a res man, tearfully ex- save $1 47' I dl . e an managed to&#13;
inOOto me that after spending $254 for Perh~p" m~t~ mg tax. !:kS she could only afford to carry five suggestionsnel er of these money·saving&#13;
credits. I did my best to console her by Maybe the a appeal to you: Cheer up!&#13;
tellingher about the good 01' days when a book rent ~mlmstratlOn will mstitute a&#13;
dent could hope to afford tuition and professors f~ system. Maybe your&#13;
~s, prOVidedhe got a decentfellowship. books you ~I~:~ se,::ester will choose&#13;
All seriousness aside, there IS only one bookstore will' y wn. Maybe the&#13;
rson I've met bere at Parkside who for your used bglV:SYOUa haU-decent price&#13;
di~dn'thave something nasty to say about will snow on t: F' Whthoknows? Maybe it&#13;
it B kst . Thi our of July the Universl Y 00 ore prices. IS Or maybe somewh ..&#13;
individualpurchased all his books over at there is a group of e~e o~ this campus&#13;
Carthage You should hear what be says are attempting t ra rca students who&#13;
', k t 0 orgamze a kmd of&#13;
about th~U" boo sore" .. . Cooperative bookstore. The kind of store&#13;
However,as we begin the. third week of where used books would b Id t&#13;
the fall semester, most of the requisite Maybe instead of griping y~USOh aId~os~&#13;
texts have already been procured, and the into this book store deal. if the ~d: ca:-&#13;
gripes tjIerefore seem less and less es on, it could save an awful lot of Ie&#13;
relevant.B~t in ease you missed the notice an awful lot of money. peop&#13;
in our preVIOUSIssue, next semester has If you're interested, come talk to me,&#13;
not heen eancelled, so we ~an all look Sven Taffs, in the Newseope office at Kforward&#13;
to another semester s book bIll. campus.&#13;
Consequently, ~any students have gone Or maybe you like spending $70 on books&#13;
to great lengths In theIr effort.s to reduce every semester.&#13;
Selective Service System&#13;
Under Tarr: Old Wine&#13;
In New Sottles&#13;
By BRUCE LOVET1'&#13;
College Press Service&#13;
WASHINGTON- (CPS) - For the last&#13;
fivemonths Curtis Tarr, the new director&#13;
of the Selective -Service System, has been&#13;
engineering a full-scale drive to convert&#13;
theimage of the draft machine from one of&#13;
the inept, unfair, discriminatory&#13;
bureaucracy it was under Gen. Lewis B.&#13;
Hershey, to an eff.icient, modern,&#13;
benevolent agency whicb is seeking to&#13;
meetthe needs of the military while being&#13;
as fair to everybody as it possibly can.&#13;
The image is a good one, with a facelifting&#13;
on every level. Tbe new itrllIge&#13;
doesn't change the fact that the Selective&#13;
Service System is in the business .of&#13;
deciding whieb young lads are going to&#13;
beeome cannon-fodder or peneil-pushers&#13;
for the armed forces.&#13;
But Tarr bas eliminated the most obviousand&#13;
blatant inequities and rhetoric&#13;
that used to anger liberals about Gen.&#13;
Hershey's operation.&#13;
One area in which this is especially clear&#13;
is the respect wbich the new director has&#13;
shownfor the unfavorable rulings recently&#13;
handeddown against the Selective Service&#13;
System by the Supreme Court. In June,&#13;
whentbe Supreme Court ruled that conscientious&#13;
objectors need not base their&#13;
claims on religious grounds, Tarr swiftly&#13;
responded by drafting the first interpretation&#13;
of the law and regulations&#13;
everdoneby the Selective Service System,&#13;
embodying the spirit, and indeed, in&#13;
several instances, the actual words of the.&#13;
Supreme Court decision. ._'"&#13;
In contrast, when, in 1965, the high cQurt&#13;
!""ed that church membership and ·belief&#13;
IDaSupreme Being were not prerequisites&#13;
for CO status, Gen. Hersbey's only&#13;
response was to issue, unexplained, three&#13;
Years later, a new version of the CO form&#13;
Which eliminated references to church&#13;
m~mbership and belief in a Supreme&#13;
Being.&#13;
. The system's new "liberal and modern"&#13;
nnage is also reflected by cbanges wbich&#13;
have been made in tbe system's house&#13;
:gan, ~.elective Service _~~ws, Gen.&#13;
• eragh ber s amusing but grisly fr?nt page,&#13;
nt-WIng editorials have been elimInated&#13;
~d tbe news has taken on a totally new&#13;
fr:*: The format has cbanged fron an oldshioned,&#13;
four-column letterpress job to a&#13;
m?re fluid three-column offset forma ~&#13;
PI1nIed in dark blue ink on pastel blue&#13;
Paper. Tarr has moved his eolumn to the&#13;
:'de pages, and the copy bas lost its&#13;
morous nature. The News used to be&#13;
Packed with wonderful trivialities wbich&#13;
~d like a Ripley's Believe It or Not for&#13;
ha war machine. ~his fascinating copy&#13;
S been dropped and the News now&#13;
:"",:nt~ates on hard news about the&#13;
tiOlling of this system. Tarr also&#13;
lIlakes sure tha t tbe articles mention&#13;
'::t COUrtdecisions whicb bave come&#13;
against tbe system wbenever they&#13;
are relevant. another irmovation for the&#13;
News. ~&#13;
These changes, however, are merely&#13;
deceptive shirts of the system's image.&#13;
Under all the new, liberal rhetoric, the&#13;
system still continues to concentrate on its&#13;
dual role of charmeling the lives of young&#13;
men and providing the military with men&#13;
to be converted into killers.&#13;
Tarr's response to the Supreme Court's&#13;
action in January, which eliminated&#13;
punitive induction of violators of draft&#13;
rules, became clear in late June, when the&#13;
Selective Service regulations were&#13;
amended to allow induction of men whose&#13;
numbers had been reached but who had&#13;
failed to report to a Pre-induction physical&#13;
when ordered to. Confronted with the large&#13;
number of men who fail to report to&#13;
physicals, and the unwillingness of the&#13;
Justice Department to prosecute these&#13;
men for violation of the draft law, Tarr&#13;
amended the regulations in such a way&#13;
that serious resistors could be weeded out&#13;
from procrastinators and men who are not&#13;
certain that they are willing to face prison.&#13;
Under the new regulation, men who fail&#13;
to report for the physical will be ordered to&#13;
report for inducti?n, an~ given ~ complete&#13;
physical at the mduehon stahon. Those&#13;
who fail to show up, or who refuse to step&#13;
forward when their name is called will&#13;
then be reported to the Justice Department&#13;
for refusal of induction. Many men&#13;
who skip the physical are apparently&#13;
expected to report for induction, thereby&#13;
accomplishing the system's purpose&#13;
without the expense and ~assle of a&#13;
criminal prosecution. In this way the&#13;
number of draft law trials is kept low,&#13;
which was the function of the mo~e&#13;
blatantly oppressive delinquency r~es m&#13;
the first place, and yet the ~ystem IS able&#13;
to efficiently deal with the failure of men to&#13;
report for physicals. ,&#13;
While tbe new Supreme Coort rulIng,&#13;
and Tarr's guidelines for Judgmg CO cases&#13;
have doubled the number of new alternative&#13;
service registrants per month over&#13;
the summer and have caused several draft&#13;
board members to resign, the overall&#13;
effect of these actions on the effiCIent&#13;
functioning of tbe system has been mt&#13;
Less tban one per eent of the .eurrent&#13;
registrant pool is involved 10 the ISSue of&#13;
conscientious objection, These few h~~&#13;
easily ignored by tbe systef&#13;
m'tW 'of&#13;
·th 'ts maIO unc Ion carries on WI I '11' . ulating the lives of 22 mI Ion&#13;
manlp . 'ali useful channels. registrants IOto SOCI Y&#13;
The Lost and Found Is IOCited&#13;
at the Informatln ceator&#13;
Talloat Hall. Rm. III&#13;
Report On Convention&#13;
attendance. Without a quorum no busin&#13;
was conducted. It was very similar to the&#13;
previous meetings.&#13;
Thirteen delegales straggled mto the&#13;
fillh meeting 10 hear the reports of commiltees&#13;
lhat had not met Tom R ko&#13;
walked out on the groop after speakIng on&#13;
.financial autonomy Dean Loumoa and&#13;
Tom Kruel presented a rough draft of the&#13;
preamble and student rights section Th.&#13;
session adjourned to consider these brave&#13;
documents.&#13;
Al the sixth meettng seven people ealled&#13;
four on the phone to lower the quorum to&#13;
five: The delegates adopted a chewed up&#13;
version of Loumos' preamble. Marc Eisen&#13;
dared to show us a rough draft of the body.&#13;
Eisen was the structure committee&#13;
menlioned earlier&#13;
The seventh had seven, They managed&#13;
to extensively damage Marc's ego, Elghtyeight&#13;
minor changes were made in the&#13;
body. No new paragraph for the eighth&#13;
session.&#13;
The nmth session was experienced by&#13;
seven, Bev oble passed oot a new rough&#13;
draft of lhe constitulion to insult. The body&#13;
was looking healtluer, altho"llh oor mind,.&#13;
weren't.&#13;
Shot down. Our local wisemen In Tallent&#13;
Hall found a few little loopholes and&#13;
contradictions of Regents Rules In the&#13;
constitution. We patChed, rewrole and.&#13;
made insertions as best our failing minds&#13;
________________ ....!Ocou2!i!l!!d.2ml!&gt;!.a!lna~ge. You'll see&#13;
ByWATER BREACH&#13;
Of the twenty-one students elected by the&#13;
student body last spring, seventeen attended&#13;
the first session of the constitu~onal&#13;
convention. May 15 was a&#13;
meelmg of much animated discussion&#13;
some. heated arguments, and low ac:&#13;
complishment ... a quorwn of eleven was&#13;
set.&#13;
The second meeting had an attendance&#13;
of three less than the first Karyn Carter&#13;
was elected recording secretary for her&#13;
faithful atteodance of the first two&#13;
sessions. Three committees were also&#13;
formed for division of labor. One was to&#13;
deal with Student Government structure,&#13;
the second with a preamble, amendment&#13;
procedure and membership and the third&#13;
committee was to handle student rights&#13;
and responsibilities.&#13;
The third session again showed a&#13;
decrease of three from the previous&#13;
session. Bev Noble was elected chairman.&#13;
"General Aims" were the main topics of&#13;
discussion. Mary Terselic expounded on&#13;
the need for a Clearing House. Student&#13;
Rightist Tom Fesko addressed the group&#13;
about student voice in curriculum and in&#13;
faculty hiring and firing (selection and&#13;
release?). Walter Breach prattled on&#13;
about financial autonomy and com·&#13;
munication,&#13;
The fourth meeting had nine delegates in&#13;
Head,&#13;
sUTvey aU you see,&#13;
sink into the heaviness of it all&#13;
and&#13;
retrieve a synthetic,&#13;
sending yoo mto shneks,&#13;
soaked in loss&#13;
inViting only to take another look&#13;
until you&#13;
find the real thing.&#13;
Poetry Cornet&#13;
Soul Sister,&#13;
ebony brightness in the shadows of my life,&#13;
dancing your beauty along the way,&#13;
singing your love into the world's soul,&#13;
caress my mind&#13;
with the darkness of your brighl eyes,&#13;
snatching the passion from within,&#13;
holding up yoor loveliness,&#13;
seducing the life within me,&#13;
staod up with pride,&#13;
possessing reservoirs of gifts,&#13;
bestowed upon yoor being by some dark goodness.&#13;
FALL SEMESTER LIBRARY HED LE&#13;
September 21, 1970- February 7, 1971&#13;
Monday-Thursday 7:15-10:30 Ali eampuses&#13;
Friday 715 - 5:00&#13;
Saturday 9:00 - 5:00&#13;
9:00· 3:00&#13;
Sunday 2:30 -10:30&#13;
Thanksgiving:&#13;
November 26 Closed&#13;
27 8:00- 430&#13;
28 9:00 - 5:00&#13;
9:00 . 3:00&#13;
Christmas:&#13;
December 19 9:00 - 5:00&#13;
9:00 - 3:00&#13;
20 2:30 -10:30&#13;
21-23 8:00 -10:30&#13;
24 8:00 - 12 noon&#13;
2S Closed&#13;
26 9:00 - 5:00&#13;
9:00 - 3:00&#13;
27 2:30 -10:30&#13;
28-30 8:00 -10:30&#13;
31 8:00 - 12 noon&#13;
January 1 Closed&#13;
2 9:00 - 5:00&#13;
9:00- 3:00&#13;
20-22 7: 15 - 12midnight&#13;
23 7:15- 7:00&#13;
7:15- 3:00&#13;
24 2:30 -12 midnight&#13;
25-29 7:15 -12 midnight&#13;
30 7: 15- 5:00&#13;
7:15 - 3:00&#13;
31 Closed&#13;
February 1-5 8:00· 4:30&#13;
6 9:00- 5:00&#13;
7 Closed&#13;
All campus&#13;
IParkslde)&#13;
lR and K)&#13;
Parkslde only&#13;
All campus&#13;
All camp .....&#13;
(Parks,del&#13;
lR and KI&#13;
IParks,de)&#13;
(R and Kl&#13;
Parkslde only&#13;
All campuse&#13;
(Parksidel&#13;
&lt;R and Kl&#13;
Parkside only&#13;
All eampuses&#13;
All campuses&#13;
(Parksidel&#13;
IR and Kl&#13;
All campuses&#13;
(Parkside)&#13;
&lt;R and Kl&#13;
Parkside only&#13;
All eampuses&#13;
(Parksidel&#13;
(R and Kl&#13;
All campuses&#13;
All campuses&#13;
Parkside only&#13;
Book Prices Are T 00 H· h&#13;
BY Sven Taffs bo k I 9&#13;
d - o expenses A&#13;
Another semester awns at Parkside students have· ap;~:t rum~r of these&#13;
d once again students are shocked by bookstore in the h o~ Jobs at the&#13;
an cost of books. And as always, there is employee di ope of bemg eligible for :e usual griping, but nobody actually does dismayed at scou~ts. Another student&#13;
e thing about the costs ... except raise exorbitant boa price which she deemed&#13;
anY ' rrowed a copy f th boo&#13;
them, . t b 1· th" from the library - h o e k&#13;
You're not gomg o e 1eve 1s, but one book for t s e xeroxed the whole&#13;
f h en cents a page d&#13;
f my friends, a res man, tearfully ex- save $l 47 . 1 d" an managed to&#13;
o th t ft . di $ . , me u mg tax. lained to me a a er spen ng 254 for Perhaps neither of th . ~ ks she could only afford to carry five suggestions a al ese money-savmg&#13;
cr~its. I did my best to console her by Maybe the ad P~_ to_ you: Cheer up!&#13;
telll·ng her about the good ol' days when a book mimstration will institute a&#13;
uld h t ff d t · · ren~al syStem. Maybe your&#13;
student co ope o a or whon and professors tor next semester will choose&#13;
books, provided he g~t a decent _fellowship. books you already own. Maybe the&#13;
All seriousness aside, there 1s only one ?°okstore will give you a half-decent price&#13;
rson I've met here at Parkside who 1or your used b ks&#13;
di ~dn't have som_ething nasty to say about ·1 00 · Who knows? Maybe it w1 I snow on the Fourth of July. the University Bookstore prices. This Or ~aybe somewhere on this campus&#13;
individual purchased all his books over at there 1s a group of radical students who&#13;
Carthage. You should hear what he says are atte~pting to organize a kind of&#13;
about their bookstore. . cooperative bookstore. The kind of store&#13;
However, as we begin th&lt;: third week of where ~ed books would be sold at cost.&#13;
the fall semester, most of the requisite ~ayb~ instead of griping, you should look&#13;
texts have already been procured, and the mto th~s book store deal. If the idea catchgripes&#13;
tperefore seem less and less es on, 1t could save an awful lot of people&#13;
relevant. But in case you missed the notice an awful lot of money.&#13;
in our previous issue, next semester has If you're interested, come talk to me,&#13;
not been cancelled, so we can all look Sven Taffs, in the Newscope office at Kforward&#13;
to another semester's book bill. campus.&#13;
Consequently, many students have gone 9-r maybe you like spending $70 on books&#13;
to great lengths in their effort.s to reduce every semester.&#13;
Selective Service System&#13;
Under Tarr: Old Wine&#13;
In New Bottles&#13;
By BRUCE LOVET1'&#13;
College Press Service&#13;
WASHINGTON - (CPS) - For the last&#13;
five months Curtis Tarr, the new director&#13;
of the Selective ·Service System, has been&#13;
engineering a full-scale drive to convert&#13;
the image of the draft machine from one of&#13;
the inept, unfair, discriminatory&#13;
bureaucracy it was under Gen. Lewis B.&#13;
Hershey, to an efficient, modern,&#13;
benevolent agency which is seeking to&#13;
meet the needs of the military whif e being&#13;
as fair to everybody· as it possibly can.&#13;
The image is a good one, with a facelifting&#13;
on every level. The new irrthge&#13;
doesn't change the fact that the Selective&#13;
Service System is in the business .of&#13;
deciding which young lads are going to&#13;
become cannon-fodder or pencil-pushers&#13;
for the armed forces.&#13;
But Tarr has eliminated the most obvious&#13;
and blatant inequities and rhetoric&#13;
that used to anger liberals about Gen.&#13;
Hershey's operation.&#13;
. One area in which this is especially clear&#13;
IS the respect which the new director has&#13;
shown for the unfavorable rulings recently&#13;
handed down against the Selective Service&#13;
System by the Supreme Court. In June,&#13;
when the Supreme Court ruled that conscientious&#13;
objectors need not base their&#13;
claims on religious grounds, Tarr swiftly&#13;
responded by drafting the first interpretation&#13;
of the law and regulations&#13;
ever done by the Selective Service System,&#13;
embodying the spirit, and indeed, in&#13;
several instances, the actual words of the&#13;
Supreme Court decision. ··-&#13;
In contrast, when in 1965 the high court&#13;
:med that church ~ember~hip and belief&#13;
in a Supreme Being were not prerequisites&#13;
for CO status, Gen. Hershey's only&#13;
response was to issue, unexplained, three&#13;
ye~rs later, a new version of the CO form&#13;
Which eliminated references to church&#13;
m~mbership and belief in a Supreme Being,&#13;
. The system's new "liberal and modern"&#13;
;:age is also reflected by changes which&#13;
ve been made in the system's house&#13;
organ, Selective Service News, Gen.&#13;
~~~bets a~usi~g but grislyfr~nt_page,&#13;
n6ut-wmg editorials have been ehmmated fnd the news has taken on a totally new&#13;
f~k: The format has changed fron an oldshioned,&#13;
four-column letterpress job to a&#13;
m?re fluid three-column offset format,&#13;
Pl'mted in dark blue ink on pastel blue&#13;
~r. Tarr has moved his column to the&#13;
h ide pages, and the copy has lost its&#13;
umorous nature. The News used to be&#13;
llacked with wonderful trivialities which read lik · th e a Ripley's Believe It or Not for&#13;
hae ~ar machine. 1'his fascinating copy&#13;
s een dropped and the News now&#13;
conct ' · func ~n ~ates on hard news about the&#13;
rn tionmg of this system. Tarr also r akes sure that the articles mention&#13;
:ent court decisions which have come&#13;
wn against the system whenever they&#13;
are relevant, another innovation for the&#13;
News.&#13;
These changes, however, are merely&#13;
deceptive shirts of the system's image.&#13;
Under all the new, liberal rhetoric, the&#13;
system still continues to concentrate on its&#13;
dual role of channeling the lives of young&#13;
men and providing the military with men&#13;
to be converted into killers.&#13;
Tarr's response to the Supreme Court's&#13;
action in January, which eliminated&#13;
punitive induction of violators of draft&#13;
rules, became clear in late June, when the&#13;
Selective Service regulations were&#13;
amended to allow induction of men whose&#13;
numbers had been reached but who had&#13;
failed to report to a Pre-induction physical&#13;
when ordered to. Confronted with the large&#13;
number of men who fail to report to&#13;
physicals, and the unwillingness of the&#13;
Justice Department to prosecute these&#13;
men for violation of the draft law, Tarr&#13;
amended the regulations in such a way&#13;
that serious resistors could be weeded out&#13;
from procrastinators and men who are not&#13;
certain that they are willing to face prison.&#13;
Under the new regulation, men who fail&#13;
to report for the physical will be ordered to&#13;
report for inducti?n, an~ given ~ complete&#13;
physical at the mduct10n station. Those&#13;
who fail to show up, or who refuse to step&#13;
forward when their name is called will&#13;
then be reported to the Justice Department&#13;
for refusal of induction. Many men&#13;
who skip the physical are apparently&#13;
expected to report for induction, thereby&#13;
accomplishing the system's purpos e&#13;
without the expense and hassle of a&#13;
criminal prosecution. In this way the&#13;
number of draft law trials is kept low,&#13;
which was the function of the mo~e&#13;
blatantly oppressive delinquency r~es m&#13;
the first place, and yet the ~ystem is able&#13;
to efficiently deal with the failure of men to&#13;
report for physicals. . While the new Supren_ie ~ourt ruling,&#13;
and Tarr's guidelines for Judging CO cases&#13;
have doubled the number of new alternative&#13;
service registrants per month over&#13;
the summer ahd have caused several draft&#13;
board members to resign, the o~':all&#13;
effect of these actions on the efflc1~t&#13;
functioning of the system has been m\&#13;
Less than one per cent ~f the _curren&#13;
re istrant pool is inv_olved m the issue of&#13;
co~scientious objection. These few h~~ easily ignored by the system, . w l&#13;
. on wi·th its main function of carries illi&#13;
manipulating the _lives of 22 m on&#13;
registrants into socially useful channels.&#13;
The LOst and Found is located&#13;
at the Information-center&#13;
Tallent Hall, Rm. zot&#13;
Report On Convention&#13;
B_y WATER BRE ACH&#13;
Of the twenty-one student elect d by th v.&#13;
student body last spring, eventeen attended&#13;
the first se · ion of the constitu~onal&#13;
convention. . tay 15 wa a&#13;
meeting of much animated di cw ion,&#13;
some heated argwnents, and low accomplishment&#13;
... a quorwn of eleven was&#13;
set.&#13;
The second meeting had an attendanc&#13;
of three less than the first. Karyn Carter&#13;
was elected recording secret.an· for h r&#13;
fa ithful attendance of the first two&#13;
sessions. Three committee were also&#13;
formed for division of labor. One w to&#13;
deal with Student Government tructure,&#13;
the second with a preamble, amendment&#13;
procedure and membership and the third&#13;
committee was to handle student rights&#13;
and responsibilities.&#13;
The third session again showed a&#13;
decrease of three from the previou&#13;
session. Bev Noble was elected chairman.&#13;
"General Aims" were the main topic of&#13;
discussi_pn. 1ary Terselic expounded on&#13;
the need for a Clearing House Student&#13;
Rightist Tom Fesko addressed the group&#13;
about student voice in curriculum and in&#13;
faculty hiring and firing ( election and&#13;
release?). Walter Breach prattled on&#13;
about financial autonomy and com- munication.&#13;
The fourth meeting had nine delegate in&#13;
Head,&#13;
Poetry Corner survey all you&#13;
mk into th h avm of it II&#13;
and&#13;
retrieve a ynth tic,&#13;
ending you into hri&#13;
oaked in lo&#13;
im·iUng only to tak anoth r lo&#13;
until you&#13;
find the real lh1 .&#13;
Soul Sister,&#13;
ebony brightness in the hadow of my lif ,&#13;
dancing your beauty along the way,&#13;
singing your love into the world'. oul,&#13;
caress my mind&#13;
with the darkness of your bright eyes, snatching the passion from within,&#13;
holding up your loveliness, seducing the life within me,&#13;
stand up with pride,&#13;
possessing reservoir of gifts,&#13;
bestowed upon your being by ~ome dark goodn&#13;
F ALL EME TE R LIBR R \' S II "D LE&#13;
September 21, I970-February7, 1 il&#13;
Monday-Thursday 7: 15 - 10:&#13;
Friday&#13;
Saturday&#13;
Sunday&#13;
Thanksgiving:&#13;
November26&#13;
'l:l&#13;
28&#13;
Christmas:&#13;
December 19&#13;
20&#13;
21-23&#13;
24&#13;
25&#13;
26&#13;
'l:l&#13;
28-30&#13;
31&#13;
January 1&#13;
2&#13;
20-22&#13;
23&#13;
24&#13;
25-29&#13;
30&#13;
31&#13;
February 1-5&#13;
6&#13;
7&#13;
7: 15 • 5:00&#13;
9:00 - 5: 00&#13;
9: · 3:00&#13;
2:30 • 10:30&#13;
I ed&#13;
8:00 - 4:30&#13;
9: · 5:00&#13;
9:00 - 3:00&#13;
9:00 - 5:00&#13;
9:00 • 3:00&#13;
2:30 • 10:30&#13;
8:00 • 10:30&#13;
8:00 • 12 noon&#13;
Cl .ed&#13;
9:00- 5:00&#13;
9:00- 3:00&#13;
2:30-10:30&#13;
8:00-10 :30&#13;
8:00 - 12 noon&#13;
Cl ed&#13;
9:00- 5:00&#13;
9:00- 3:00&#13;
7: 15 • 12 midnight&#13;
7:15- 7:00&#13;
7:15- 3:00&#13;
2:30-12 midnight&#13;
7: 15 - 12 midnight&#13;
7:15- 5:00&#13;
7:15 • 3:00&#13;
Closed&#13;
8:00 - 4:30&#13;
9:00 - 5:00&#13;
Closed&#13;
II mp&#13;
,\II c mp (&#13;
(Par id )&#13;
(Rand Kl&#13;
Park 1d onl)&#13;
All camp&#13;
All campuse&#13;
&lt;Pa r ide)&#13;
CR and Kl&#13;
All camp e&#13;
CPark idel&#13;
CR and Kl&#13;
Parkside only&#13;
All campuse&#13;
(Park ide)&#13;
CR and K&gt;&#13;
All campuses&#13;
All campuses&#13;
Parkside only &#13;
Ranger Soccer Defelse Rates High SPORTS SHORTS&#13;
Parksldl"sStan larko"'c 1111 batlles a Green Bay player for the ball and seems to&#13;
be 1000lngduring lhl. encounter at the match which UWGB won 2-1.&#13;
mv r. u y of WI consln·Parkside's year with 36 goals in 15 games.&#13;
'lin d f n ," luch ha held opponents UW-Green Bay averaged eight goals per&#13;
10 ltv g I. Inlour games, "as thoroughly game last year, and matched that scoring&#13;
t ted wedn esday when the nallon's pace in drubbing UWP twice, ro-t and 6-0.&#13;
hiJth 1 cnng r team 13 t season. Parkside coach Jim Gibson feels that kind&#13;
(;W Gr n Bay, met the Ranger&gt; at 3 p.m of dillerential between the two sister&#13;
on UY.P' fl ld on the new Wood Road schools no longer exists, and comparative&#13;
mpu~ scores bear him out. UWP tipped Northern&#13;
Park ,,,,,' . tellar Ir hman goahe from Ollnois 1-0, Green Bay won 3-1; Green Bay&#13;
ev. J r. oy, hu k Lee , wuh help from tied Ottawa University I-I, Parkside lost 3-&#13;
dl'f&lt;,"'" standouts Tony Krtedel. Joe Orr O.&#13;
nd Ka.. Ueko" k, ha turned In two Gibson feels his tooters should have&#13;
utout. In UWP' (If t four games. but three wins. Parkside dominated play&#13;
ha r wed IInle help from the otfense. against Notre Dame but settled for a&#13;
", R natn won their first game after scoreless tie, and were beaten 2-1 by&#13;
,,, 0 I and a lie aturday, blanking Marquette despite getting off 35 shots on&#13;
'orlh rn 1I1Inoi l.() on one of only two goal to only five for the winners.&#13;
goal. that they've scored all season During the UWGB game, Parkside once&#13;
Gr"" Bay, by contrast, has rung up 13 again showed their tough defense. The&#13;
oal "hll f hlonlng a 2-1-1 mark and is attack was led by Tony Kriedle and Dale&#13;
r rded a one of the MIdwest's best Nickel.&#13;
er club The Bay Badgers scored nine "Green Bay caught us at our most&#13;
um In wtuppmg Franklin and Marshall vulnerable time, and scored two goals,"&#13;
&amp;-2 nd 100lng 4·3 to Swarthmore last stated Coach Gibson. "The UWP team&#13;
.... {'nd wlthout their oHenslve ace, zach absolutely dominated the game and&#13;
P panlkol ou, a Greek student who was showed the highest scoring team in the&#13;
th nauon' leading collegiate scorer last nation that Parkside is as good, if not&#13;
better, than UWGB."&#13;
Even though the Parkside team&#13;
dominated most of the game, the offense&#13;
lacked goals. Gibson stated, "We hope to&#13;
have more success in goal scoring in the&#13;
roUowing games. All of my players did an&#13;
~tstan~ng job and their interest is very&#13;
high. I Just hope it stays that way."&#13;
"I couldn't believe the turn·out we had&#13;
{o~ our game. I was extremely pleased&#13;
WIththe support of the Parkside fans. I'm&#13;
glad the students do show an interest and&#13;
back up the ranger team," eommenled&#13;
Coach Gibson.&#13;
Orpheum&#13;
Unit" ArtlUI Thlltre&#13;
,~. 1S2-llll&#13;
•&#13;
~&#13;
.--..." .... ftYS&#13;
Xl AMl1CI.-asn UlIASl/. alOI&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~W"&#13;
910iian ~&#13;
Planning a party,&#13;
wedding or banquet,&#13;
no party too smaiL&#13;
Call 654-9123&#13;
4437·22nd Avenue&#13;
K&amp;nosho Wi1COn&lt;iin 53140&#13;
Fret Delivery&#13;
654.{)774&#13;
•&#13;
..&#13;
" &lt;. ~D~ ~ ...;&#13;
.~&#13;
Doug Beveridge makes an all-out attempt&#13;
as he drives in on UWGB's K&#13;
to intercept the ball. en Hess&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St&#13;
6 •. m'- till 11 pm' .. ays 7 d&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Ph.ne 657:9747&#13;
The Kenosha Bowlers will meet&#13;
at Sheridan Lanes at 9:00 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 6. This will be a fr.ee&#13;
night of bowling for all people 10-&#13;
terested. The new Parkside bowling&#13;
league will be formed that night.&#13;
The powderpuff Football Leag~e --:ill&#13;
start this Friday. For all you. girls 10-&#13;
terested in having a great tirne and&#13;
wanting to learn more about football,&#13;
please snow up for the games or contact&#13;
Bill Ballester at Racine or Coach Koch at&#13;
Kenosha. . h There is a schedule being made up whic&#13;
will include games against Carthage,&#13;
Dominican and KTl.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The whole staff urges all of you soccer&#13;
fans to make it to the rest of the soccer&#13;
matches. Last Wednesday's game showed&#13;
excitement, anger, and pride. The Sports&#13;
page would like to congratulate all soocer&#13;
players and Coach Jim Gibson for the allout&#13;
performance that was made.&#13;
Remember, the remaining home games&#13;
are: OCt. 7 against D. of I. Circle CampuS&#13;
at 3 p.m.: Oct. 17 against Platteville at 2&#13;
p.rn.; and Oct. 24 against Wisconsin Junior&#13;
All-Stars at 2 p.m.&#13;
All soccer games are played on the new&#13;
soccer field located on Wood Road right&#13;
next to the Athletic Building.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
WRESTLERS and any tough men interested&#13;
in engaging in this vigorous sport,&#13;
please contact Coach Koch. Mr. Koch&#13;
would like to see more heavyweights out.&#13;
So if you are around 167 or better, give&#13;
wrestling a try. Itwill make a man out of&#13;
you. Practice starts around Oct. 15.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Basketball players will slart their&#13;
practice on OCt. 15 according to Coach&#13;
Steve Stevens. So for all you tall frosh who&#13;
can handle a basketball, give the team a&#13;
break and make your debut.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The Parkside Intramural GOLF tourney&#13;
will be next week out at Pett's. Everyone is&#13;
eligible. There will be a Champion Flight&#13;
for the people who shoot in the 80s, an A&#13;
Flight for those who shoot in the 90s or&#13;
better, and a women's flight. You pay for&#13;
your own 18 holes and the winners will&#13;
receive certificates. Now let's get tbose&#13;
foursomes up and have a blast out at&#13;
Petrifying Springs.&#13;
N~:JH RANCH&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
~ORTH &amp; 50UTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS,&#13;
AIELLO&#13;
PHONE 6~-3551 e&#13;
Mid- TO'lKJfI&#13;
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With MoJel'n-De~l~n&#13;
2108 f'!f!Y 9EC()ND.STREIiT&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
3M&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NATI9NAL BANI&lt; .. &amp;1_.'"&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR and RESTAURAN&#13;
Italian-American Foods . ,&#13;
2114 52nd St,&#13;
20 hrs, a dayl7 days a week&#13;
Organ Music&#13;
Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
From 9 p.m. til 2 a,m.&#13;
There will be Naval Reserve Officers&#13;
at Greenquist, Wed. Oct. 7&#13;
in Rm. 111at 10 a.m. till 2 p.m.&#13;
They would like to talk to you about&#13;
being a candidate in their program&#13;
'So why not go ~o see what&#13;
they hay t .. e 0 say, " Interested?&#13;
anger So«er Defense Rates High -SPORTS sHbRTS&#13;
Orpheum&#13;
United Artists Theatre&#13;
ph. &amp;52-5111&#13;
Al/CO&#13;
OICIASSY&#13;
UPTOWN RESTAURANT&#13;
and LOUNGE&#13;
~,,,-eiican w&#13;
9ta6a!J'l&#13;
Planning&#13;
~&#13;
a party,&#13;
u dding or banquet,&#13;
no party too small&#13;
Call 654-9123&#13;
4 37 • 22nd Avenue&#13;
e os 0 , Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Pree Delivery&#13;
6 -0 74&#13;
y ar \\-ith 36 goals in 15 games.&#13;
W-Green Bay averaged eight goals per&#13;
game la t year, and matched that scoring&#13;
P'JC in drubbing U\\'P twice, 10-1 and 6-0.&#13;
Par id coach Jim Gibson feels that kind&#13;
of d1Her ntial between the two sister&#13;
. h I no longer exists, and comparative&#13;
cor · bear him out. UWP tipped Northern&#13;
Ulinoi. l·O, Green Bay won 3-1; Green Bay&#13;
tied Ottawa niversity 1-1, Parkside Jost 3-&#13;
0.&#13;
Gibson feels his hooters should have&#13;
thr win·. Parkside dominated play&#13;
gaul);t ·otre Dame but settled for a&#13;
core! tie, and were beaten 2-1 by&#13;
1arquette despite getting off 35 shots on&#13;
goal to only five for the winners.&#13;
During the UWGB game, Parkside once&#13;
again howed their tough defense. The&#13;
attack was led by Tony Kriedle and Dale&#13;
'ickel.&#13;
"Green Bay caught us at our most&#13;
vulnerable time, and scored two goals,"&#13;
stated Coach Gibson. "The UWP team&#13;
absolutely dominated the game and&#13;
howed the highest scoring team in the&#13;
nation that Parkside is as good, if not&#13;
better, than UWGB."&#13;
Even though the Parkside team&#13;
dominated most of the game, the offense&#13;
lacked goals. Gibson stated, "We hope to&#13;
have '!lore success in goal scoring in the&#13;
following games. All of my players did an&#13;
o~tstan~ng job and their interest is very&#13;
high. I Just hope it stays that way."&#13;
"I couldn't believe the turn-out we had&#13;
fo~ our game. I was extremely pleased&#13;
"-1th the support of the Parkside fans. I'm&#13;
glad the students do show an interest and&#13;
back up. the ranger team," commented&#13;
Coach Gibson.&#13;
Doug Beveridge makes an all-out t&#13;
tempt as he drives in on lJWGB' a · to intercept the ball s Ken Hess . .&#13;
SWWEST SIDE&#13;
EET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St&#13;
6 a.m." till 11 p.m. · 7 days&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phone 657:_9747&#13;
The Kenosha Bowlers will meet&#13;
at Sheridan Lanes at 9:00 p.m. on&#13;
Tuesday, Oct. 6. This will be a fr_ee&#13;
night of bowling for all people interested.&#13;
The new Parkside bowling&#13;
league will be formed that night.&#13;
The Powderpuff Football Leag~e ~ill&#13;
start this Friday. For all you girls interested&#13;
in having a great time and&#13;
wanting to learn more about football,&#13;
please show up for the games or contact&#13;
Bill Ballester at Racine or Coach Koch at&#13;
Kenosha. . h&#13;
There is a schedule being made up wh1c&#13;
will include games against Carthage,&#13;
Dominican and KTI.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The whole staff urges all of you soccer&#13;
fans to make it to the rest of the soccer&#13;
matches. Last Wednesday's game showed&#13;
excitement, anger, and pride. The Sports&#13;
page would like to congratulate all soccer&#13;
players and Coach Jim Gibson for the allout&#13;
perfol'mance that was made.&#13;
Remember, the remaining home games&#13;
are : Oct. 7 against U. of I. Circle Campus&#13;
at 3 p.m.; Oct. 17 against Platteville at 2&#13;
p.m.; and Oct. 24 against Wisconsin Junior&#13;
All-Stars at 2 p.m.&#13;
All soccer games are played on the new&#13;
soccer field located on Wood Road right&#13;
next to the Athletic Building.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
WRESTLERS and any tough men interested&#13;
in engaging in this vigorous sport,&#13;
please contact Coach Koch. Mr. Koch&#13;
would like to see more heavyweights out.&#13;
So if you are around 167 or better, give&#13;
wrestling a try. It will make a man out of&#13;
you. Practice starts around Oct. 15.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Basketball players will start their&#13;
practice on Oct. 15 according to Coach&#13;
Steve Stevens. So for all you tall frosh who&#13;
can handle a basketball, give the team a&#13;
break and make your debut.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The Parkside Intramural GOLF tourney&#13;
will be next week out at Pett's. Everyone is&#13;
eligible. There will be a Champion Flight&#13;
for the people who shoot in the 80s, an A&#13;
Flight for those who shoot in the 90s or&#13;
better, and a women's flight. You pay for&#13;
your own 18 holes and the winners will&#13;
receive certificates. Now let's get those&#13;
foursomes up and have a blast out at&#13;
Petrifying Springs.&#13;
N~:JH RANCH&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NORTH &amp; SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAIJ&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS.&#13;
AIELLO .&#13;
PHONE658-3551 •&#13;
. fJvfid-To'udn '&#13;
FLORIST&#13;
_A C~.mplete"'floral S.eFVice&#13;
W;th MaJern-Desiqn&#13;
2108 fJ!_':,!Y SEC&lt;&gt;IIID .STREU&#13;
KENOSHA, WllilCQIIISIN&#13;
QM&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NATIC?NAL BANK ., IIIOIM&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR and RESTAURANT&#13;
ltal_ian-American Foods&#13;
2114 52nd St.&#13;
20 hrs. a day/7 days a week&#13;
Organ Music&#13;
Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
From 9 p.m. til 2 a.m.&#13;
Th ere w1 "II b e Naval Reserve Officers&#13;
at Greenquist, Wed. Oct. 7&#13;
.&#13;
in Rm. 111 at 10 a~m. till 2 p.m.&#13;
They would lilce to tallc to you about&#13;
being a candidate in their program&#13;
'So why not go to see what&#13;
they hav t .. e O say, ,f interested? &#13;
Participation in recreationai activities which can be pursued throughout ill . th .&#13;
cornerstone of the ~ ath.le.tic philosophy, and these archers from a physical ed:c~tio:&#13;
course seem to be takmg It to heart. The archery range is located just south of the&#13;
athletic house on Wood Road.&#13;
Movie Review: BUTCH C,ASSIDY&#13;
By WALT BREACH continue will probably nauseate both of us.&#13;
So, let us just say it was a delightful&#13;
mixture of all of these.&#13;
Director George Roy Hill crea ted an&#13;
extremely entertaining cinematographical&#13;
(wow, hun?) portrait of two -fine,&#13;
healthy bandits. After the first couple&#13;
beers the critic was able to discern many.&#13;
'redeeming social values within the context&#13;
of the film. However, after the next couple&#13;
he forgot them.&#13;
Among the many' celebrities there for&#13;
the opening, the star of recording favorite&#13;
Barb Backlund shone the brightest,&#13;
although she was quoted as saying, "I&#13;
haven't recorded anything new in the past&#13;
six months." Others, besides ordinary&#13;
viewers, were three. bartenders,&#13;
Opening night for the Parkside Student&#13;
Activities Movie Series, P.S.A.M.S., was.&#13;
It just was. Friday, Sept. 25 at8 p.m., as&#13;
a matter of fact. It was also over four&#13;
hundred and Butch Cassity and the Sundance&#13;
Kid. Four hundred what you ask?&#13;
Four hundred fans slobbering over Paul&#13;
Newman, Katherine Ross and Robert&#13;
Redford depending of course on the sex of&#13;
the star and in all but a few cases upon the&#13;
sex of the viewer.&#13;
The movie couldn't be called. the typical,&#13;
run of the mill documentary. To continue,&#13;
it also couldn't be called the typical run of&#13;
the mill western, drama, suspense story,&#13;
comedy, biographical flic or adventure. To&#13;
STUDENT RESEARCHERS NEEDED&#13;
for&#13;
ENVIRONMENTAL&#13;
QUALITY STUDY&#13;
Description of Position:&#13;
Assist Faculty in a project to collect, study,&#13;
analyze, and index all previous researches d~ne&#13;
on environmental problems affecting&#13;
SoutheasternWisconsin. Valuable experience will&#13;
be gained in library research, familiarization&#13;
with the broad problem areas in envir?nmental&#13;
quality, and practical use of comput~rlzed d~ta&#13;
lndexlnq and retrieval systems. Starting salaries&#13;
are $1.75per hour.&#13;
Requirements for Position:&#13;
1. You must be a Sophomore or above.&#13;
2. Your average grade must be B or higher.&#13;
3. You should be available 10-15hours per week for&#13;
the Project (preferably including Saturdays).&#13;
4. It is highly desirable that you. have so~e&#13;
background in science,or courses In the SOCial&#13;
science relevant to environmental problems.&#13;
If rt and are interested in the project, 5. you qua I y • F Egerton M please contact Professors. ,.&#13;
Firebaugh, G. Goodman or C. Holzbog.&#13;
USE&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
FOR SALE - 2 guitars. 1 - F'212GUild, 12&#13;
string, excellent condition; 2 • original&#13;
maple white neck Fender Telecast ....&#13;
Original case. Excellent condition. Con·&#13;
tact Fox, 654-3071.&#13;
Thrifty Threads&#13;
For Your Back. ..&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet!&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
-&#13;
The University Artists Series&#13;
annoonces&#13;
13 Sunday afternoon concerts&#13;
featuring:&#13;
carmen Vila, artist in residence, piano&#13;
Annie Petit, affiliate artist, piano&#13;
Keiko Furiyoshi, affiliate artist, violin&#13;
Harry Lantz, associate professor, cello&#13;
~nd guest artists:&#13;
Dona Kombrink, soprano&#13;
James Yc&gt;ghourtjian, classical guitar&#13;
Edward Druzinsky, harp&#13;
David Baker Jazz Quintet&#13;
Gary Kendall, baritone&#13;
Concertdates: Oct. 18,Nov. 1-15-22,Dec. 13,Jan. 10.Feb, 14-28,&#13;
'Mar. 28, Apr. 25, May 2-16&#13;
All Concerts: 4 p.m. Greenquist Hall Concourse&#13;
Season tickets: Adults $tO, Students $5&#13;
Children 12 and under free&#13;
PUblic Information Office&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140&#13;
Please send me __ adult season tickets - $10&#13;
-_ student season tickets - $5&#13;
Name _&#13;
Address, -:-:-:7""-;-;--:-----::--:-:-:-;:---:--:::--:--,-;--:-&#13;
(Make checks to the University of Wisconsin-Parksidel&#13;
Tickets also available at Public Information Office, Wood Road&#13;
Participation in recreationai activities which can be pursued throughout life · th&#13;
cornerstone of the~ ath_letic philosophy, and these archers from a physical edu;!tio~&#13;
cours~ seem to be takmg 1t to heart. The archery range is located just south of the&#13;
athletic house on Wood Road.&#13;
Movie Review: BUTCH CASSIDY . ByWALTBREACH&#13;
Opening night for the Parkside Student&#13;
Activities Movie Series, P .S.A.M.S., was.&#13;
contmuewill probably nauseate both of us.&#13;
So, let us just say it was a delightful&#13;
mixture of all of these.&#13;
Director George Roy Hill created an&#13;
extremely entertaining cinematographical&#13;
(wow, bun?) portrait of two -fine,&#13;
healthy bandits. After the first couple&#13;
beers the critic was able to discern many&#13;
redeeming social values within the context&#13;
of the film. However, after the next couple&#13;
he forgot them.&#13;
It just was. Friday, Sept. 25 at8 p.m., as&#13;
a matter of fact. It was also over four&#13;
hundred and Butch Cassity and the Sundance&#13;
Kid. Four hundred what you ask?&#13;
Four hundred fans slobbering over Paul&#13;
Newman, Katherine Ross and Robert&#13;
Redford depending of course on the sex of&#13;
the star and in all but a few cases upon the&#13;
sex of the viewer. Among the many· celebrities there for&#13;
the opening, the star of recording favorite&#13;
Barb Backlund shone the brightest,&#13;
although she was quoted as saying, "f&#13;
haven't recorded anything new in the past&#13;
six months." Others, besides ordinary&#13;
viewers, were three bartende~&#13;
The movie couldn't be called the typical,&#13;
run of the mill documentary. To continue,&#13;
it also couldn't be called the typical run of&#13;
the mill western, drama, suspense story,&#13;
comedy, biographical flic or adventure. To&#13;
STUDENT RESEARCHERS NEEDED&#13;
L .&#13;
for&#13;
ENVIRONMENT AL&#13;
QUALITY STUDY&#13;
Description of Position:&#13;
Assist Faculty in a project to collect, study,&#13;
analyze, and index all previous researches d?ne&#13;
on environmental problems affecting&#13;
Southeastern Wisconsin. Valuable experience will&#13;
be gained in library research, familiarization&#13;
with the broad problem areas in envir~nmental&#13;
quality, and practical use of comput:nzed d~ta&#13;
indexing and retrieval systems. Starting salaries&#13;
are $1.75 per hour.&#13;
Requirements for Position:&#13;
1. You must be a Sophomore or above.&#13;
2. Your average grade must be B or higher.&#13;
3. You should be available 10-15 h~urs per week for&#13;
the Project (preferably including Saturdays).&#13;
4. It is highly desirable that you . have so'!1e&#13;
b k d ·n science or courses in the social&#13;
ac groun , . t I problems science relevant to env,ronmen a ·&#13;
s. If you qualify and are inter~st;d inE the t~~oje~,&#13;
please contact Professors · ger ' ·&#13;
Firebaugh, G. Goodman or C. Holzbog.&#13;
USE&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
FOR ALE - 2 guita . 1 • r'212 Guild, 12&#13;
string, excellent condition; 2 • orl inal&#13;
maple white ned r-·ender Tel t •&#13;
Original ca e. Excellent condition. Con·&#13;
tact Fox, 654-3071 .&#13;
Thrifty Threads&#13;
For Your Back. ..&#13;
Far Out Fittings&#13;
For Your Feet.'&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
---~-~ ..&#13;
The University Artists Series announces&#13;
13 Sunday afternoon concerts&#13;
featuring:&#13;
Carmen Vila, artist in residence, piano&#13;
Annie Petit, affiliate artist, piano&#13;
Keiko Furiyoshi, affiliate artist, violin&#13;
Harry Lantz, associate professor, cello&#13;
~nd guest artists:&#13;
Ilona Kombrink, soprano&#13;
James Yoghourtjian, classical guitar&#13;
Edward Druzinsky, harp&#13;
David Baker Jazz Quintet&#13;
Gary Kendall, baritone&#13;
Concert dates: Oct. 18, Nov. 1-15-22, Dec, 13, Jan. 10. Feb. 14·28,&#13;
I Mar. 28, Apr. 25, fay 2-16&#13;
All Concerts: 4 p.m.&#13;
Season tickets: Adults $10, Students $5&#13;
Children 12 and under free&#13;
Public Information Office&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Kenosha, WI 53140&#13;
Please send me __ adult season tickets - $10&#13;
__ student season tickets -$5&#13;
Greenqui t Hall Con ours&#13;
Name _______________ _&#13;
Address ----------------- (Make checks to the University of Wisconsin-Parkside)&#13;
Tickets also available at Public Information Office, Wood Road &#13;
· warm and hearty welcome to the Philippine&#13;
Weight Club members give a . .ght lifting demonstration. Pictured here&#13;
representatrves after Salvador Del R~FI~:~hiJiPPine WeighUifting Federa~ion. Tom&#13;
are Eldld,o Dorotheo, coach and hea 0 Salvador Del Rosano, worlds&#13;
Yore, Parkside's Weight Club pres~:~t ~r::;':k~:;:o~~tramurals, Joe Seilski, Jim&#13;
nywelght champ, VIC Godfrdaey&#13;
,. the General Secrelary of the federation. huemateandSalvadorAven mo.&#13;
Salvador Del·Rosario, r,:"enUy crowned&#13;
world's flyweight weight-lilting champion&#13;
from the PhihpplOes, prese~ted a tree&#13;
public demonstration at Parkslde on Sept.&#13;
28The demonstration was held in the UWP&#13;
Kenosha Fine Arts room at 12:30.and was&#13;
n to the public. Following the&#13;
~onSlralion Salvador gave instruc.ti~ns&#13;
in the Kenosha Campus weight-trammg&#13;
room to Parkside students,&#13;
Del-Rosario won the title t:va weeks ago&#13;
in Columbus, Ohio, by equaling the world&#13;
record for his weight class, 114pounds. He&#13;
lifted 7l0lfz pounds on a press of ~14%, a&#13;
snatch of 209, and a clean-and-jerk of&#13;
296V,. The two latter efforts earned him&#13;
gold medals. . .&#13;
Del-Rosario was accompanied by. hIS&#13;
coach and head of the Philippine weight&#13;
Lifting Federation, Eldidio Dorotheo, ~nd&#13;
the General Secrelary of the Federation,&#13;
Salvador Avendanio. All three were&#13;
guests of the UWP Athletic Director Tom&#13;
Rosandich, who this summer was .~a~~&#13;
Advisor of Sports to the Philippine&#13;
Republic by President Ferdinand Marcos.&#13;
Review: HAIR&#13;
By CAROL A SMOLINSKI&#13;
Last Wednesday, Sept. 30, I had the&#13;
great pleasure to go to Chicago and see the&#13;
current "tribal rock" musi~al, I:JAIR, (I&#13;
must confess that it was the fifth time I ve&#13;
seen it). J' t uI I recommend it to everyone. t IS a r y&#13;
different experience that I'm sur~ you&#13;
would never forget. It has a very SImple&#13;
plot, but the way the cOj( presents It&#13;
LaCrosse, and the host, Platteville.&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
OCt. 3 - UW·Milwaukee at MilwaukeeEsterbrook&#13;
Park, 10 a.m. . ,&#13;
OCt. 10 • Platteville Invitational at&#13;
Platteville, 11 :30 a.m.&#13;
OCt. 13 • Platteville, Dominican, at&#13;
home, 4 p.m.&#13;
OCt. 17 • Open&#13;
OCt. 20 • Open&#13;
Oct. 24- Marquette - 5 miles, at home, 11&#13;
a.rn,&#13;
OCt. 31 - Loras . 4 miles, at home, 11 :30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Nov. 7 - Mid-American - 6 miles, at&#13;
home, 8 a.m.&#13;
NoV.14 - Central Collegiates at Southern&#13;
Illinois, Carhondale&#13;
Nov. 21 - NAIA - 5 miles, at Kansas City,&#13;
Mo.&#13;
Nov. 27· National AAU- 6miles, Chicago&#13;
proves to be very effective.&#13;
The story tells of a young man, ClaUd&#13;
Bukowski, who, Instead of foUOWingh"&#13;
friends at .. draft-card burning ritual a~&#13;
burning his card, decides to turn aw&#13;
from it all and accept the army a~&#13;
Vietnam. In my mind he was very e&#13;
fused as to which would be better, ~&#13;
vagabond type of hfe he was leading \IIith&#13;
his friends, or the army life of reRUlations&#13;
and guns. Throughout the play there \IIer,&#13;
many digs directed at the war, Tricky&#13;
Dick and our overall eslablishment.&#13;
The play made me feel alive and left "Ie&#13;
thinking after Ileft the theatre. The mUsic&#13;
and lyrics generated many. different&#13;
feelings throughout the aUd,ence. A&#13;
woman sitting in front of us didn't corn&#13;
back for the second act. She is obViOUSly:&#13;
very narrow minded person and Was&#13;
needlessly appalled by the nude SCene.I&#13;
consider myself to be someWhat olJen&#13;
minded. You really have to be if YOU see&#13;
HAIR. Jf you go to see it with dOUbtsalld&#13;
expecting the worst, you probably \IIOll't&#13;
get the message or the whole idea behind&#13;
the play. I think I'd rate this play H ...&#13;
Honest.&#13;
If you get a chance and have the money&#13;
I suggest you go and see for yourself '&#13;
Sunmpide glorisll&#13;
&amp; greenhoUJel&#13;
Flowers - Fruit Baskets - Gifts&#13;
Phone: 649·6700 •&#13;
VI and FRANK WEINSTOCK I&#13;
3021- 75TH ST.&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
(,UQ bQI;eVf tV\; ::","&#13;
ill inaivi~t(U(."&#13;
and make It our business&#13;
10 know what our mdtvrdual&#13;
customers want and need.&#13;
We speciahze In fashions&#13;
geared to modern hving&#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 It IS to shop in a&#13;
rela~ed. lrlendly atmosphere&#13;
Hope 10 see you soonl&#13;
Harriers In Meet&#13;
Saturday Morning&#13;
Parkside's cross country team ran&#13;
below expectation with the exception of&#13;
freshman Chuck Dettman. Dettman&#13;
finished third, his time was 1:1 min., 10sec.&#13;
The track was a rough rive mile course&#13;
at Whitewater. There were some muddy&#13;
spots which held up many of our runners.&#13;
Jim McGilsky was the second-best rwmer.&#13;
for Parkside. He finished twelfth with a&#13;
time of 'n min., 48 sec.&#13;
On Saturday, OCt.13, the Pai-kside cross&#13;
country men will bave their hands full with&#13;
the tough Platteville lnvilational. Fifteen&#13;
teams will complete, including Mankato&#13;
State, Northern Illinois, Cartbage, WSU.&#13;
DELICATESSEN - BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 fIFTY·SECOND STREET&#13;
KENOSHA. WISCONSIN&#13;
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kenosho. Wisconsin 531.40&#13;
Phone, 652-2681&#13;
VILLAGE INN&#13;
and&#13;
P-ancake House&#13;
3619 30th Ave.&#13;
SUN. 6a.m.-12 a.m&#13;
FRJ. 6 a.m.-lp.m.&#13;
SAT. 6 a.m.,-2 p.m,&#13;
21 Variety&#13;
of Pancakes&#13;
LUNCH - DINNERS&#13;
eQUALITY&#13;
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For YOli and Yourear&#13;
SILL'S DEEP ROCK SERVICE STATION&#13;
2305 RaCine 634-9328&#13;
YourCompl.t. "On Campus" Book an~ Supply center&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES&#13;
~ Now Open Nights - 6:30-8:00 Monday thru Thursday rJlJm&#13;
Stop in at our conveniently located store on each Campus.&#13;
j ,&#13;
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nd ma e 1t our business&#13;
to no hat our ind1 1dual&#13;
customers liant and need.&#13;
e ec1ahze in fashions&#13;
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hand-pie ed for style, qual1&#13;
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ser nee at all times. Cpme&#13;
m and bro se .. see how much&#13;
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Hop to see you ... soon'&#13;
. 1 RGURIITE'S&#13;
6207 . 22nd Avenue&#13;
enosho, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Phone: 652-2681&#13;
28The demonstration was held in the UWP&#13;
Kenosha Fine Arts room at 12:30 _and was&#13;
n to the public. Following . the&#13;
rroonstration Salvador gave instruc_ti~ns&#13;
in the Kenosha Campus weight-training&#13;
room to Parkside students.&#13;
Del-Rosario won the title t~o weeks ago&#13;
in Columbus, Ohio, by equaling the world&#13;
record for his weight class, 114 pounds. He&#13;
lifted 7101 2 pounds on a press of ~14¼, a&#13;
snatch of 209, and a clean-and-Jerk . of&#13;
29614 . The two latter efforts earned him&#13;
gold medals. h.&#13;
Del-Rosario was accompaID;ed by. is&#13;
coach and head of the Philippine Weight&#13;
Lifting Federation, Eldidio Dorothea, ~nd&#13;
the General Secretary of the Federation,&#13;
Salvador Avendanio. All three were&#13;
guests of the UWP_ Athletic Director_ Tom&#13;
Rosandich, who this summer was. ~a~ed&#13;
Advisor of Sports to the Philippine&#13;
Republic by President Ferdinand Marcos.&#13;
Harriers In Meet&#13;
Saturday Morning&#13;
Parkside's cross country team ran&#13;
below expectation with the exception of&#13;
freshman Chuck Dettman. Dettman&#13;
finished third, his time was '1:7 min., 10 sec.&#13;
The track was a rough five mile course&#13;
at Whitewater. There were some muddy&#13;
spots which held up many of our runners.&#13;
Jim McGilsky was the second-best runner&#13;
for Parkside. He finished twelfth with a&#13;
time of '1:7 min., 48 sec. .&#13;
On Saturday, Oct. 13, the Parkside cross&#13;
country men will have their hands full with&#13;
the tough Platteville Invitational. Fifteen&#13;
teams will complete, including Mankato&#13;
State, Northern Illinois, Carthage, WSUReview:&#13;
HAIR&#13;
By CAROL A SMOLINSKI&#13;
Last Wednesday, Sept. 30, I had the&#13;
great pleasure to go to Chicago and see the&#13;
current "tribal rock" musi~al, f,IAIR' (I&#13;
must confess that it was the fifth time I ve&#13;
seen it). · trul&#13;
I recommend it to everyone. It ts a y&#13;
different experience that rm sur~ you&#13;
would never forget. It has a very s1mpl_e&#13;
plot, but the way the cajt presents it&#13;
Lacrosse, and the host, Platteville.&#13;
SCHEDULE&#13;
Oct. 3 • UW-Milwaukee at MilwaukeeEsterbrook&#13;
Park, 10 a .m. . ,&#13;
Oct. 10 - Platteville lnvttahonal at&#13;
Platteville, 11:30 a.m. . .&#13;
Oct. 13 _ Platteville, Domm1can, at&#13;
home, 4 p.m.&#13;
Oct. 17 - Open&#13;
Oct. 20 - Open&#13;
Oct. 24 - Marquette - 5 miles, at home, 11&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Oct. 31 - Loras - 4 miles, at home, 11:30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Nov. 7 - Mid-American - 6 miles, at&#13;
home, 8 a.m.&#13;
Nov. 14 - Central Collegiates at Southern&#13;
lliinois, Carbondale&#13;
Nov. 21- NAIA- 5 miles, at Kansas City,&#13;
Mo.&#13;
Nov. '1:l - National AAU - 6 miles, Chicago&#13;
• QUALITY&#13;
• SATIS.F ACTION&#13;
• ·SAVINGS&#13;
ALWAY$&#13;
proves to be very effective.&#13;
The story tells ?f a young man, Claude&#13;
Bukowski, who, instead of . following his&#13;
friends at a draft-card _burrung ritual alld&#13;
burning his card, decides to turn away&#13;
from it all and a~cept the arm, and&#13;
Vietnam. In my mmd he was very co&#13;
fused as to whic~ would be better, th~&#13;
vagabond type of hfe he ~as leading With&#13;
his friends, or the army hfe of regulations&#13;
and guns. Throughout the play there Were&#13;
many digs directed at the war, Tricky&#13;
Dick and our overall establishment.&#13;
. The play made me feel alive and left me&#13;
thinking after I left the theatre. The music&#13;
and lyrics generated many different&#13;
feelings t~ro~ghout the au?ie~ce. A&#13;
woman sittmg m front of u~ didn t come&#13;
back for the secm:id act. She 1s obviously a&#13;
very narrow mmded person and Was&#13;
needlessly appalled by the nude scene, I&#13;
consider myself to be somewhat open&#13;
minded. You really have to be if you see&#13;
HAIR. If you go to see it with doubts and&#13;
expecting the worst, you pro~bly won't&#13;
get the message or the whole idea behind&#13;
the play. I think I'd rate this play H ...&#13;
Honest.&#13;
If you get a chance and have the money,&#13;
I sug~est you go and see for yourself&#13;
SunmpiJe gforisls&#13;
&amp; (}reenhouses&#13;
Flowers - Fruit Baskets - Gilts&#13;
VI and&#13;
Phone:&#13;
&#13;
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              <text>First Nightclub Next Weekend</text>
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              <text>Parkside's&#13;
NE SCOPE&#13;
first Nightclub Next Weekind&#13;
This coming Friday and Saturday&#13;
nights, Oct. 2 and 3, will mark the first in a&#13;
series of weekend nightclubs and coffee&#13;
houses to be presented in the new student&#13;
activities building during the coming year.&#13;
Live entertainment will be featured from 9&#13;
p.m. to 1 a.m. and refreshments will be&#13;
served.&#13;
The featured act for this opening&#13;
weekend will be one of Wisconsin's top&#13;
nightclub attractions, "The Gregory&#13;
James Group". This seven-member group&#13;
of two girls and five men, aims its performance&#13;
at college aged and young adult&#13;
audiences, appearing in both clubs and on&#13;
college campuses throughout the state.&#13;
Recent engagements include new student&#13;
week programs at UW-Milwaukee and&#13;
Marquette universities, along with per.&#13;
Iorrnances at Summerfest and an ex.&#13;
tended engagement at Milwaukee's&#13;
"Someplace Else". Their program includes&#13;
hit numbers from many top&#13;
recording groups including The Fifth&#13;
Dimension, Blood, Sweat and Tears,&#13;
Brazil 66, The Beattles, The Letterman,&#13;
Chicago, and many others.&#13;
AdJTlission on both evenings will be $1.50&#13;
with Parkside and Wisconsin State LD.&#13;
Lecture Series&#13;
Opens Oct. 16&#13;
A Pulitzer Prize-winning ecologist, two&#13;
outspoken advocates of Women's&#13;
Liberation and an Australian actor&#13;
comprise the first three programs&#13;
scheduled for the fall Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts series atThe University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
The series will open on Oct. 16 with a.&#13;
one-man performance of Chaucer's&#13;
Canterbury Tales by Robert Inglis, an&#13;
Australian actor who is presently on a U.S.&#13;
TOUR. Site for the 8 p.m. performance is&#13;
to be announced.&#13;
On Oct. 20, "new journalist" Gloria&#13;
Steinem and Dorothy Pitman, who has&#13;
been reCerred to by the press as "the&#13;
black, beautiful Saul Alinsky," wiil join in&#13;
a discussion of "Women's Liberation."&#13;
Both are leading advocates of the women's&#13;
lib movement. Their discussion, which will&#13;
include a question and answer period, will&#13;
beat8 p.m. in Greenquist Hall on the Wood&#13;
Road Campus.&#13;
On Nov. 17 Pulitzer Prize-winning&#13;
ecologist Rene Dubos will lecture on&#13;
campus. A mOVing force behind last year's&#13;
EnVironmental Teach-Ins, Dr. Dubos won&#13;
the 1969 Pulitzer for his book on man. and&#13;
the environment, "So Human an AnimaL"&#13;
A proCessor of environmental biomedicine&#13;
at The Rockefeller University in New&#13;
York, Dr. Dubos will speak at 8 p.m, in&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Additional programs in the 1970-71&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Series are to be&#13;
announced.&#13;
Prof. Reeves&#13;
Edits New Book&#13;
A selection Crom writings of major&#13;
critics and supporters of billion-dollar laxexempt&#13;
founda tions is offered in a new&#13;
book, "Foundations Under Fire", edited&#13;
by Dr. Thomas C. Reeves, new University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside associate professor&#13;
of history.&#13;
Recently published by the Cornell&#13;
University Press, "Foundations Under&#13;
Fire" has. a 37-page int:--oduction ~y Dr&#13;
Reeves, who joins the Parks ide faculty&#13;
this month after four years at the&#13;
University of Colorado. Reeves selected 24&#13;
writings representing a wide variety of&#13;
views.&#13;
In his introduction, Reeves examines the&#13;
role of foundations in society, discussing&#13;
their strengths and weaknesses and&#13;
pointing out the major issues surrounding&#13;
them. The 235-page book includes an extensive&#13;
bibliography.&#13;
The readings are grouped according to&#13;
four central themes: public responsibility,&#13;
venture capital, propaganda and politics,&#13;
and business and taxes. They include Ute&#13;
views of founda tion officials, civil rights&#13;
leaders, labor leaders, educators, jour·&#13;
nalisls, and members of Congress. The&#13;
selections treat such questions as why&#13;
multibillion-dollar institutions exist,&#13;
whether they are primarily a means oC&#13;
evading taxes, whether they are bearers of&#13;
anti-American ideology, their ties with the&#13;
CIA, and how they affect small business.&#13;
UW-Parkside Enrollment Now 4,030&#13;
Dr. Williams to serve&#13;
on UW CommiHee&#13;
A member of (he Divrsron of .cience&#13;
faculty at the University oC \\'iSCO~IO'&#13;
Parkside has been named to an an-tw&#13;
committee to study the slate's needs (or&#13;
alJied health professionals and ho\\ the&#13;
university can help meet the needs.&#13;
Anna Marie Williams, L'WP associate&#13;
professor of life sciences, will sene on thecommittee&#13;
with eight representatives&#13;
from other UW campuses. The comrmttee&#13;
is headed by wtnram L. Blcckstem,&#13;
professor of pharmacy at the . ladlson&#13;
campus.&#13;
INTAKE To Be&#13;
At Performing&#13;
Arts Center&#13;
A multi-media concert. fealuring a :'\t.'\\&#13;
York rock group, the .\lilwaukt"t' ~01-&#13;
phony Orchestra and a local poet \\ ill be&#13;
staged in ,Iilwaukee at the Performmg&#13;
Arts Center Friday, October 23, 1970. Thl.·&#13;
will be a special one-night event oJX'n onl~&#13;
10 area colJege sluden~.&#13;
This exciting explosion of sounds. hghl'i&#13;
and smells with commcnts on war&#13;
martydom and environment \I, ill be a&#13;
brand new departure for the :\Iih\3ukN'&#13;
Symphony Orchestra. under the dir(&gt;('hon&#13;
of Kenneth Shermerhorn. Accompanying&#13;
the orchestra will be poet Bruce Gordon.&#13;
Assistant Director of the Center for AfroAmerican&#13;
Culture. and the eastern basoo&#13;
rock group "The :o.:ewYork Electric String&#13;
Ensemble". The latter will ap~ar in&#13;
concert with the Milwaukee Symphony for&#13;
fh'" ~vep'in:;'s fin~l~ S~'3] mu&lt;,;'c~l&#13;
composition written for the occasion.&#13;
The program, entilled I:\TAKE lh&lt;&#13;
first of its kind in this area - is being&#13;
sponsored by local college and Vni\ersily&#13;
Student Activities representatives from&#13;
AJverno College, Cardinal SLritch College,&#13;
Concordia College. Carroll College.&#13;
Milwaukee Area Technical College,&#13;
Marquette University, Mount ~lary&#13;
College, The Uni\'ersity o( Wisconsin.&#13;
Milwaukee, The University of Wiscol'bin.&#13;
Parkside and The Uni\,ersity oC WiSCOruioJnWaukesha&#13;
County Campus.&#13;
Tickets are available now to college&#13;
students with current J.D. cards for $200&#13;
at the UW-Parkside Studenl AffaIrs Office.&#13;
Tallent Hall, Main Campus. Sales are&#13;
limited to four tickets per student due to&#13;
limited sealing.&#13;
Carthage and Dominican students arl?'&#13;
eligible to purchase tickets from ParkSlde&#13;
for this event.&#13;
Teaches New Course&#13;
Parkside has a new listing for its mu ·IC&#13;
department. Music 499, applied music for&#13;
the non-major, will now be offered every&#13;
Wednesday from 3:30 to 430 p.m The&#13;
course is available for one credit and will&#13;
be held in GR 0131&#13;
Carmen Vila, Parkside's artist-Inresidence,&#13;
will teach the course She will&#13;
show mO\'ies, pia) records and gl\'e her&#13;
own interpretations of great composers.&#13;
Registralion for the course will continue&#13;
Sc per cop,&#13;
UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSI'o&#13;
Parkside Campus&#13;
Kenosha. WiKoniln&#13;
Sopl.m~r 29,"'0&#13;
CONSTITUTION&#13;
SEEKS MORE&#13;
STUDENT VOICE&#13;
The con~llIu1101J.a1 COI1lIlI1IIl...• c.It't It'd&#13;
last. pnng. met 1hrolJ.t;!llUut Ila' Uml1WI&#13;
draw 109 up a consutunon for Ih{" Park Id,'&#13;
Iudent gO\ ernmem Thc.' document Yo a&#13;
esr enually completed om- \\l'('k h,,'furt.'&#13;
regtstratron&#13;
The consllluhon prO\ Idt lor a Sl"l,.1 '&#13;
compos ed 01 t.'\ enn-cn 111 vmber&#13;
Provisions ror t'1Jr!hf landmJ{ t.·onHllIllu&#13;
also were made ont.' nl whrch I ll.·ludl·n'&#13;
t.mon Commute 10 ()t, mad« up 01 1"o&#13;
senators and SI~ elected rudcnn 'I'lu dUI\&#13;
of the ~'tud('nl l mon Comllllth."l' would 1.('&#13;
10 S('( POhCR~ for Iht· USt' and Opt'l.llulfl of&#13;
the student UOloU Tlk' ccuon ("O\('nn,.:&#13;
student nghls prcvtd, for lUd"1I1c:ooltol&#13;
or the '·00(:, .101 wluch arc IJo:llroolllod&#13;
pl'lmarll~ b) .Iuck-Ilt 1 ilL'" Jlu.:h.ld(&#13;
\('ndlO~ madunc. h,otr ~It· l'I ·ltn&#13;
prO\ ISIO" IS d,rt.'(·I('d ul bnnglO~ '''-1''&#13;
und('r conlrol and .11c:nlilrollll~ lilt" Ust' 01&#13;
lhe r('H'nut.' gt'IM:ruh'd 1)\ th&lt;.' l (Ull&#13;
("{&gt;$SIQllS&#13;
111t.,Park Idt'.uimlOi Ir tlon. \\lll('h nCt,",&#13;
ha. a mOltClpul~ un Jlrodue.·1 ilnd ..no l:l&#13;
prO\ IJt"CI h~ the \('IKhn~ madufK's hOI&#13;
obJl·c.:ltodto ludc:ll( ,'onlm! (I\,'r Ihl' UlUun&#13;
and the: \('ndulg: m.u'hlt S ,lOt'c' hUKt&#13;
\\ hleh an..' ~("nt'rlll('(t b\ 11 f' '0111&#13;
dln'c.·ll:- from thc ludtllt I' CillS&#13;
reasonable. lhal ludc'lll hould nol tll~&#13;
Ix n(,rlt rrom lh("St, fund: hUI d("1 rmlllt'&#13;
hc.J\\ IIK'\ art&gt; u c'd&#13;
Thl&gt;C.·~l.llIUhon" lillie.' ul~nlth'Cf to lilt'&#13;
studt'ot bod~ fur r.lllflt.alloli&#13;
Symphony&#13;
Organizing&#13;
All rw p .tudl'nl ~ hu pl.n un III&#13;
. trumt&gt;nl art· ('IIKlhll- and 1m ih'd 10&#13;
!x&gt;comf' m('mlx'rs of tlic.· P ..rk Idc' S~ m&#13;
phon, (Jrch _Ira 11t'1"',rsal "'III boo ti,.ld&#13;
Wcd.k,~}!\ (rom 700 to 900 f) m In lh,&#13;
Kt'nosha fo'me ,\rlS Hool1l T t.' \101hill'&#13;
to partlClpat(' Ilf:t'd not be.' mu It maJo&#13;
ThrouKh IOdt·pt"tdUll IUd~ lud(,111 Inay&#13;
earn on cr&lt;'dJl (or pIa) IOJl In 1Il4-' } nI&#13;
phony&#13;
Get Your Fifth&#13;
Dimension Tickets&#13;
TI ket. no\\, an&gt; a\'allithll' 10 tht· public&#13;
for a concert by pol)u!al rc'cilrdml( group,&#13;
The fo'lflh DlITlNlSlon. al K pm da).&#13;
O&lt;t 26. al Hacm,'. J I ( ". r...ld 11011'&lt;'&#13;
on hl~h"'ay 20&#13;
Ticket. at I, 5and$4, mOl) Ix' uhlalncod&#13;
by mall or 10 p('rsof'I at the !'itUdt'lit .\&#13;
liVltl Offlct, on lht, LWP WOOff Hoad&#13;
Campus Bt'RlOnlllg ..·aturda~ II "Wi al 0&#13;
\\ III Ix&gt; 3vallabh: 8t Cook Gt.'r • COI1lI~n) In&#13;
RaC':lOe and BldlO,H'r lu 1(' 1100 C' III&#13;
Kenosha \0 I1ckt, y.11I bt: sold al&#13;
Park Ide'· Rat Int' and }\t'nosha Cam&#13;
pu.s~&#13;
The Studt"t /\f(atn. Offll:(.' :lId IlC,:kt:(s&#13;
remam 3\31Iabl' 10 all pnn ~nd Inall&#13;
orders recC'IH'd 10 dalt· tla\'e ht n&#13;
pr~sed&#13;
"f" f eshmen and transCer students&#13;
..... teDUring&#13;
one eight-hour period,. some 1~I~ew e~ the Tallent Hall parking lot to U~1S red for UW-P classes, and their cars Spl ov&#13;
Wood Road for half a mile.&#13;
First District Needs Representation&#13;
The Racine-Kenosha .\lovement for a&#13;
New Congress is holding a meeting for all&#13;
Parkside students and faculty interesled&#13;
in becoming invoh'ed in the upcoming&#13;
Congressional elections. The lime and&#13;
place of the meeting will be announced&#13;
The national :\lo\'ement for a :\'ew&#13;
Congress is a campus~based organization&#13;
operation within the American political&#13;
tradition to mobilize massive grass ..rools&#13;
volunteer efforts.&#13;
President Nixon's announcement of&#13;
American involvement in Cambodia&#13;
touched off spontaneous student demonstrations&#13;
around the country. The Racine.&#13;
Kenosha M.N.C., which organized in the&#13;
aftermath of last May's Parkside stUdent&#13;
strike, has been aClive all summer, encouraging&#13;
partlclpalloo In the- prill ,lr~&#13;
congressional elections Wt.&gt;ft."C1thai tht&gt;&#13;
differences b&lt;'lween thl' VI('\\ of lh • In.&#13;
cumbent and those of the challenger&#13;
provide the \'olers of thl' Flr!otl&#13;
Congressional Di~trici V,llh a ch:ar cho]{'l'&#13;
that of continuIng With an&#13;
unimaginative, well-programrnl"CI ··Yt.'.&#13;
:'\lan", or elecling a SeOSIU\'e, responSive,&#13;
new congressman,&#13;
What effect student \'olunteers ha\'e had&#13;
in election was proved by the Kenned~ and&#13;
:'\lcCarthy campaigns of 1968. and now,"&#13;
Congressional elections around the&#13;
country. Through hard work and our time.&#13;
we can give the First District the&#13;
representation we desperately need&#13;
Parkside's Sc r C J&#13;
NEWSCOPE UNIVERSITYOF ISCO SI&#13;
Id Campu&#13;
first Nightclub Next Weekend&#13;
This coming Friday and Saturday&#13;
nights, Oct. 2 and 3, will mark the first in a&#13;
series of weekend nightclubs and coffee houses to be presented in the new student&#13;
activities building during the coming year.&#13;
Live entertainment will be featured from 9&#13;
p.m. to 1 a.m. and refreshments will be&#13;
served. The featured act for this opening&#13;
weekend will be one of Wisconsin's top&#13;
nightclub attractions, "The Gregory&#13;
James Group". This seven-member group&#13;
of two girls and five men, aims its per- formance at college aged and young adult&#13;
audiences, appearing in both clubs and on&#13;
college campuses throughout the state. Recent engagements include new student&#13;
week programs at UW-Milwaukee and&#13;
Marquette universities, along with performances&#13;
at Surnmerfest and an extended&#13;
engagement at Milwaukee's "Someplace Else". Their program includes&#13;
hit numbers from many top&#13;
recording groups including The Fifth&#13;
Dimension, Blood, Sweat and Tears,&#13;
Brazil 66, The Beattles, The Letterman, Chicago, and many others.&#13;
Admission on both evenings will be $1.50&#13;
with Parkside and Wisconsin Sta te I.D.&#13;
Lecture Series&#13;
Opens Oct. 16&#13;
A Pulitzer Prize-winning ecologist, two&#13;
outspoken advocates of Women's&#13;
Liberation and an Australia n a c tor&#13;
comprise the first three programs&#13;
scheduled for the fall Lecture and Fine&#13;
Arts series at The University of WisconsinParkside.&#13;
&#13;
The series will open on Oct. 16 with a&#13;
one-man performance of Chaucer's&#13;
Canterbury Tales by Robert Inglis, an&#13;
Australian actor who is presently on a U.S. TOUR. Site for the 8 p.m. performance is&#13;
to be announced.&#13;
On Oct. 20, "new journalist" Gloria&#13;
Steinem and Dorothy Pitman, who has&#13;
been referred to by the press as " the&#13;
black, beautiful Saul Alinsky," will join in&#13;
a discussion of "Women's Liberation."&#13;
Both are leading advocates of the women's&#13;
lib movement. Their discussion, which will&#13;
include a question and answer period, will&#13;
beats p.m. in Greenquist Hall on the Wood&#13;
Road Campus. On Nov. 17 Pulitzer Prize-winning&#13;
ecologist Rene Dubos will lecture on&#13;
campus. A moving force behind last year's&#13;
Environmental Teach-Ins, Dr. Dubos won&#13;
the 1969 Pulitzer for his book on man and&#13;
the environment "So Human an Animal."&#13;
A professor of e~vironmental biomedicine&#13;
at The Rockefeller University in New&#13;
York, Dr. Dubos will speak at 8 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Additional programs in the 1970-71&#13;
Lecture and Fine Arts Series are to be announced.&#13;
Prof. Reeves&#13;
Edits New Book&#13;
A selection from writings of major&#13;
critics and supporters of billion-dollar taxexempt&#13;
foundations is offered in a new book, '·Foundations Under Fire", edited&#13;
by Dr. Thomas C. Reeves, new niYersity&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside associate profe sor&#13;
of history. Recently published by the Cornell&#13;
University Press, ·'Foundations Under Fire" •1as :i 37- age int-odt•ction •,_ Dr&#13;
Reeves, who joins the Parkside faculty&#13;
this month after four years at the University of Colorado. Reeves selected 24&#13;
writings representing a wide variety of&#13;
views. In his introduction, Reeves examines the role of foundations in society, discussing&#13;
their strengths a nd weaknesses a.nd&#13;
pointing out the major issues surrounding&#13;
them. The 235-page book includes an extensive&#13;
bibliography. .&#13;
The readings are grouped accor~~~ to four central themes: public respons1b1hty,&#13;
venture capital, propaganda a?d politic ,&#13;
and business and taxes. They include the views of foundation officials, civil rights&#13;
leaders, labor leaders, educators, journalists&#13;
and members of Congress. The&#13;
selecti~ns treat such questions as ~ hy multibillion-dollar institutions ex1 t,&#13;
whether they are primarily a means of&#13;
evading taxes, whether they.ar: bea~ers of anti-American ideology, their ties with the CIA, and how they affect small business.&#13;
UW-Parkside Enrollment N&lt;:&gt;w 4 ,o3o&#13;
Dr. Williams to serve&#13;
on UW Committee&#13;
INTAKE To Be&#13;
At Performing&#13;
Arts Center&#13;
CONSTITUTION&#13;
SEEKS MORE&#13;
STUDENT VOICE&#13;
Sym hony&#13;
Organizing&#13;
Get Your Fifth&#13;
Dimension Tickets&#13;
First District Needs Representation The Racine-Keno ha l\lo\'emen for a :-,;ew Congre i holding am ling for all&#13;
Park ide ;'tudenls and facul y inter led&#13;
in becoming im·olved m th upcomi&#13;
Congre: -ional election Th time and&#13;
place of the rneetin will be announced.&#13;
The nallonal :\Iovemenl for a 'cw&#13;
Congre s i a campu_-ba ·ed organization&#13;
operation \\ ithin the American political&#13;
tradition to mobilize ma ive ra &gt;roots&#13;
\·olunteer efforts&#13;
President . ·ixon's announcement of&#13;
American invokement in Cambodia&#13;
touched off spontaneou student demonstrations&#13;
around the country. The RacineKenosha&#13;
. 1.. ·.c . which organized in the&#13;
aftermath of last . tay·s Parkside student&#13;
strike, has been active all ummer. en-&#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
Work for Cooperation&#13;
tudent editors are faced with this critical question - what&#13;
"news" is "fit" to print? Are we working to present a newssheet of the&#13;
adrnini tration or are we working to present students with what reallY,&#13;
interests them? It's a difficult question to answer when you reahz~ that&#13;
we editors are operating on university property· And we're trymg to&#13;
represent student interests. The Scope is going to work for cooperation between students,&#13;
pre , and administration. We hope to build channels of communication&#13;
for the exchange of information and ideas between&#13;
tudent .press, and administration. Who knows? Wemay promote and&#13;
ac mph h the impossible. .' The U. ' Student Press Association stated the whole SituatIOn&#13;
beautifully: "As the campuses have gotten more po~it.ical, and as&#13;
college papers have reflected that politicalization, admlm.strato~s and&#13;
trust have adopted the Agnew thesis: you can stop dissent If you&#13;
ilen the media of dissent. And whereas Agnew'S attacks stop at a&#13;
th atrical albeit dangerous level of intimidation, the actions now being&#13;
openIy used or discussed by nervous college administra.tors and&#13;
electioneering officials pick up where he leaves off: editors are&#13;
suspended, funds are cut off, offices are locked up. -,&#13;
. "We can say It Can't Happen Here and continue to publish on&#13;
blind faith in friendly liberal administrators or at the expense of our&#13;
new and editorial relevance, but whether we like it or not, co-called&#13;
freedom of the student press, which was always so openly advocated&#13;
even If privately disregarded, is now - thanks to the legitimacy of Mr.&#13;
Agnew's views, aired ironically enough by that same media he&#13;
criticizes _ publicly criticized as a luxury of the past, or at least only&#13;
r rved for the good niggers of the present.&#13;
"The college environment was traditionally seen as a protected&#13;
environment, but, as the notion of in loco parentis was shouted down in&#13;
the early '60's and shot down in the early '71'S, the protection was seen&#13;
for what it really is: control, protecting not students' interests, but&#13;
those Interests which exploit most people in this country and the rest of&#13;
the world. Thus, the protection of offices and printing presses and&#13;
flnancial support for college papers has also become seen for what it&#13;
really is: a mechanism of control just like those parietal hours. Student&#13;
joum~lists .are being bound and gagged clamoring for their constitutional&#13;
rights, not only at the college level but in the high schools as&#13;
well. And each voice silenced brings one step closer the demise of the&#13;
still-"protected" papers. This is the perspective from which we must&#13;
all operate.&#13;
, "It is also one which most student newspapers are woefully&#13;
Incapable of confronting, because of lack of technical ability lack of&#13;
funds',\ack of n.erve, lack of confidence, and lack of vision. '&#13;
There IS hope. The g~owth of underground and community&#13;
papers have shown us there IS a readership and financial base untaP~&#13;
by existing media. The development of new technologies has&#13;
ma e printing cheaper and simpler each year. Experiments in staff&#13;
~lect~ves and cooperative publishing, advertising and newsgathering&#13;
a&#13;
vdes 0f~dthat new ways of working together provide the knowledge&#13;
n con I ence to face the future."&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NOER&#13;
Co-Editors '&#13;
NewsEditor&#13;
Feature Edi&#13;
Business Mana tor&#13;
Advertising M ger&#13;
anager&#13;
Photographer&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the Univ~rsit .&#13;
Parkslde, Kenosha, wisconsm 53140. Mailing address is P kYd&#13;
O&#13;
!WISCOnsin.&#13;
UW.Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin, 53140. Business and a~d~~ e.s Newscope&#13;
number is 658-4861, Ext. 24. 1 rial telephon~&#13;
volime 2 - No. 1&#13;
Sept. 29, 1970&#13;
~~•.~&#13;
Pree CouRSf'Uing ser~ice on&#13;
II... ,. Goo/·OII&#13;
H an) of )0\1 h;;-ve registered here at&#13;
I'ark"de for the purpose 01 gcofing-otf&#13;
then you might as well get some advice&#13;
from an expert. Me.&#13;
1)' credentials Ito modestly name just a&#13;
r ~} arc that I am a drop-out from thre&#13;
~nl\ ersrues 'way back in 1921, '22 a~&#13;
~ , Lawrence at Appleton. Milwaukee&#13;
Stale Teachen' College (now UWMl and&#13;
Marquette Law School.&#13;
Well. anyway, last Spring. at the age of&#13;
loll, 1100« an ,nventory of my life and found&#13;
Ihal one dlhe few goals I haven't allained&#13;
\A a. a college degree.&#13;
So I did some leIter 'writing and even&#13;
tually got three transcripts back in th~&#13;
mall I showed lhem to Mr EI&#13;
O&#13;
AI· • more&#13;
lrector VI AdmiSSions "You ha lh' '&#13;
...&#13;
-hl ~ t" . ve Irty·&#13;
r- cr ..-ul s said he. That's a heck&#13;
lonlr:ways from 120. said I to myself uva&#13;
My daughlcr IMagna Cum '&#13;
Lawrence '531 said, ..It's never t La,Ude,&#13;
f) d'" 00 ale&#13;
a 0 now .. With that affectionat'&#13;
nudlr:e,and at a hme m hfe when I need :&#13;
degree probably 1&lt;'&gt;5 than any enroll&#13;
the rampu , I'm back an college Wi: s~~&#13;
ummcr school credits added t&#13;
ongu\31 thlTty.elght and' 0 my&#13;
hatchmg in this Fall term. mne more&#13;
So nOW',ha\"lng learned the ha d&#13;
Ihat I couldn't lick 'em {i.e the r lr&#13;
ay&#13;
graduatf establtshmenll I've de ,cdo_..Iege&#13;
l- t • CI C\.I to&#13;
./ 0 JOm E'm And at the rate I'm .&#13;
oujtht 10 qualify for a degree iustg~,:}&#13;
fIr,) yea ... afler g01l11( oulthe back d t&#13;
. 'arqueHe OOrof&#13;
My trouble back 111the early da&#13;
Ihat I had allowed myself to ~ was&#13;
df't'pl) eovol\"('d In certain °lme ex ra-&#13;
~urricular activities. To begin with Iwas&#13;
In. love and that alone is enough to comr~~:a~~:~y&#13;
a~ad~mic career. On top of my&#13;
Ford an~r~'ha~r~~h~dsj~or\~ model-T&#13;
time jobs to take care ofwr:: ree partexpenses&#13;
of $1375 y over-head&#13;
~ent okeh but my stu~ii~e~~. Eve,ryth~ng&#13;
It. My envolvements got the ~~dnf t swing&#13;
1 became a dro Some and&#13;
'elling lhat rut. Ireally goofed-off by&#13;
services wehav:iP:&#13;
n&#13;
.. The counselling&#13;
invented yet in thOay ~lmplYhadn't been&#13;
What followod de ear y twenties,&#13;
years is another sturmg the next forty-five&#13;
successful careersO? ....a~d I've got two&#13;
around to reportin~ p:ove It. I mighl get&#13;
chapters if this column ~ a few of those&#13;
Now I must get baCkastslong enough,&#13;
counselling services 0 to. my offer of&#13;
bave a hang-up on t~ goofIng·off. If you&#13;
college life and ups and downs of&#13;
Iislener: nag me dow~eel~ a sympathetic&#13;
~d who knows'? . m a ~oodlistener.&#13;
listening to some of;; you might wind up&#13;
May~ we can swa y own problems ....&#13;
of thmgs bugging ~ , , , there are a couple&#13;
very well do Withou~ With w.hich I could&#13;
But let me - ' . warn you I'll&#13;
m odgewise. too, And ("Il d' get a few words&#13;
01 the "goof'" ISCUSSboth 'd '1 com. Havi' Sl es&#13;
WI I also point out th ng tned one side I&#13;
other. e pros and cons of the&#13;
!t seems that wh&#13;
to get into mUch e~ a ~ellowgets too 01&#13;
~:eri~ to give :::;~~c~e~hl~develops ~&#13;
A w 0 are willin 1 e .... only to&#13;
nd you don't h g 0 read and r&#13;
ave to fOllow't Isten, I,&#13;
tki...11f.~&#13;
NOW OPEN!!!&#13;
S MON.-THURS. - 8 a.m.-10 p."'.&#13;
T FRI. i 8 a.m.-l a.m.&#13;
U SAT. &amp; SUN. - '&#13;
, SPECIAL EVENTS ONLY&#13;
o STUDENT &amp; WIS. 10 REQUIRED E GAMES BANDS' POPCORN&#13;
MUSIC FOOD DRINKS N CURRENT MOVIES&#13;
T THIS WEEK GREGORY JAMES1 SHO~&#13;
L,FRi. &amp; Sat. j ACTIVITIES I 8:0&#13;
0&#13;
-&#13;
1&#13;
..:.:.-&#13;
svenTaffs&#13;
Connie Petersen&#13;
Mike Gogola&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Bill Jacoby&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
Poetry Corner&#13;
Dawn sets forth from within,&#13;
instigated even by a loss;&#13;
Within me Isee a. burst of brightness,&#13;
for all the world to behold.&#13;
Not me, A beautiful force within&gt;&#13;
droplets of love giving birth&#13;
to smiles,&#13;
satisfaction&#13;
_ for all to seek,&#13;
to understand and become aware,&#13;
to eat and participate&#13;
to live' and stand out,&#13;
within me and without me.&#13;
Freedom, at last,&#13;
- for all to be,&#13;
Growing in a dynamic reality&#13;
setting forth on a journey toward&#13;
newness,&#13;
a sea of love, (ALL THOSE DROPLETS)&#13;
a crystallizing of a bond&#13;
that creates&#13;
this community,&#13;
growing, touching the sun,&#13;
widening our sight,&#13;
opening a soul,&#13;
. children· laughing, caring,&#13;
crying:&#13;
Let it all be together:&#13;
within&#13;
me,&#13;
Istepped on a dead robin today&#13;
as I watched a butterfly flutter away.&#13;
Bothsat In the same sunlight,&#13;
both were beheld in my sight&#13;
One the symbol of sorrow '&#13;
the 'other, the joys of tomorrow&#13;
Life slips away and then '&#13;
we ,:",atch it creep back again,&#13;
Teachmg us, keeping us aware&#13;
of its burden we shrink to bare&#13;
finding in the desolation of today&#13;
tomorrow's better way, ., '&#13;
Fabric Savings For&#13;
Back-to-School&#13;
Wardrobe&#13;
THE SINGER CO.&#13;
5716 6th Ave,&#13;
Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
J'!.st South 01&#13;
Talent Hall,&#13;
-.&#13;
PHON E 658-3551&#13;
AIELLO •&#13;
8v1id- TO'lJd1t&#13;
FLORIST.&#13;
A Compl,t,'fl~,ol S, ' • PVlte&#13;
''\lith MoJep" Desiqn&#13;
2108 FIFTY SECON~~TREIT&#13;
KENOSHA, WIBCONIIN&#13;
Use Classifieds&#13;
MULLEN'S&#13;
Threads For&#13;
The Back&#13;
Fitti ngs For&#13;
The Feet&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
Next door to the Wis. Qas &amp;.Electrlc&#13;
R-K NEWS&#13;
Kenosha's&#13;
Finest Entertainment&#13;
Live Bands&#13;
Wed., Thurs., Fri" Sat·&#13;
Open Seven Days a If3931&#13;
45 St" Ph. 6;~&#13;
8&#13;
U&#13;
I&#13;
L&#13;
D&#13;
I&#13;
N&#13;
G&#13;
I&#13;
COMMENTS on the news&#13;
Work for ,Cooperation&#13;
ud nt itor are faced with this critical question - what&#13;
" n v. "i ' fit" to print? Are we working to present a newssheet of the&#13;
. dmini tration or ar we working to present students with wha~ really&#13;
mt t th m? It' difficult question to answer when you reallz~ that 't r o rating on university property. And we're trymg to&#13;
nt tudent intere ts. Th op i . oing to work for cooperation between students,&#13;
pr , nd dmini tr tion. \\'e hope to build channels of communi&#13;
ation for th exchange of information and ideas between&#13;
tu ·nt , pr , nd administration. Who knows? We may promote and&#13;
mpli h th impo ible. . . n1 · . ·. tudent Pre s Association stated the whole situation&#13;
utifully: '' th campuses have gotten more po~it_ical, and as&#13;
II r hav reflected that politicalization, adm1m.strato~s and&#13;
u l hav adopt d the Agnew thesis: you can stop dissent 1f you&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
Volime 2 - No. 1 Sept. 29, 1970&#13;
BILL ROLBIECKI MARGIE NQER&#13;
Co-Editors&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Connie Petersen&#13;
MikeGogola&#13;
Jim Hanlon&#13;
Bill Jacoby&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Edit&#13;
Business Mana or Advertising M ger anager Photographer&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Published weekly by the students of the Unive.rs"t&#13;
Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140. Mailing address is Pa ~Y-/: WisconsinUW-Parkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin, 53140. Business and ~d~~ e_ s Newscope&#13;
number is 658-4861, Ext. 24. 1 orial telephon~&#13;
il n th m di of di enl. And whereas Agnew's attacks stop at a&#13;
th tri al lb it d ng rous level of intimidation, the ac.ti?ns now being&#13;
ly u d or di cus ed by nervous college adm1mstrators and&#13;
· n rin official pick up where he leaves off: editors are Poetry Corner PHONE 658-3551&#13;
, funds are cut off, offices are locked up. AIELLO •. " W can ay It Can't Happen Here and continue to publish on&#13;
Dawn sets forth from within,&#13;
instigated even by a loss;&#13;
Within me I see a. burst of brightness, fa ith in fri ndly liberal administrators or at the expense of our for all the world to behold.&#13;
ind itorial relevance, but whether we like it or not, co-called&#13;
fr m of th . tud nt press, which was always so openly advocated&#13;
v n if privat ly di regarded, is now- thanks to the legitimacy of Mr.&#13;
n w' vi ws, aired ironically enough by that same media he&#13;
"ti i1. - publicly criticized as a luxury of the past, or at least only&#13;
r rv d for th good niggers of the present.&#13;
Not me. A beautiful force within -&#13;
droplets of love giving birth&#13;
8Yfid-To1xJn&#13;
FLORIST,&#13;
to smiles,&#13;
satisfaction A Complefe"floral SePV·- • ace&#13;
- for all to seek, W;tl, MoJern Design to understand and become aware,&#13;
to eat and participate&#13;
to live· and stand out,&#13;
2108 FIFTY SECOl'iD.STREE&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN T "Th college environment was traditionally seen ~s _a protected&#13;
nvironment, but, as the notion of in loco parentis was shouted down in&#13;
th 'lrly '60' and shot down in the early '7l's, the protection was seen&#13;
fo r wh t it really is: control, protecting not students' interests, but&#13;
th int r ts which exploit most people in this country and the rest of&#13;
Ut world. Thus, the protection of offices and printing presses and&#13;
financial ·upport for college papers has also become seen for what it&#13;
r lly i : a mechanism of control just like those parietal hours. Student&#13;
j ~rn~lists _are being bound and gagged clamoring for their conwithin&#13;
me and without me.&#13;
Freedom, at last, Use Classifieds&#13;
titutional rights, not only at the college level but in the high schools as&#13;
w. ll. And each voice silenced brings one step closer the demise of the&#13;
till-"protected" papers. This is the perspective from which we must&#13;
n operate. . . " It is also one_ which most student newspapers are woefully&#13;
mc apable of confronting, because of lack of technical ability lack of&#13;
fu nd .. ~ack of ~erve, lack of confidence, and lack of vision. '&#13;
There is hope. The g:owth of underground and community&#13;
pap rs have ~h?wn us there 1s a readership and financial base untapped&#13;
by ~x1stmg media . The development of new technologies has&#13;
mad ~rmtmg cheaper ~nd simpler each year. Experiments in staff&#13;
~ollectives and cooperative publishing, advertising and newsgathering&#13;
ve sho~m that new ways of working together provide the knowledg&#13;
n confidence to face the future." e&#13;
curricular activities. To begin with I was&#13;
I~- love and that alone is enough t~ com- i icate any academic career. On top of my&#13;
F&#13;
ovedaffairs, I tried to support a model T or and I had t h I - lime 1·obs to tako o d down three part- e care of my h d&#13;
expenses of $13 75 over- ea went okeh but my. stu ad. weelk. Everything ·t ies. couldn't swi I -My envolvements got the best of ng I became a dropout I me and&#13;
letting that h · really goofed-off by&#13;
services we hav:ri:n. _The counselling&#13;
invented yet in the ay ~imply h~dn't been&#13;
What followed d ~ar y twenties.&#13;
years is another sturmg the next forty-five&#13;
successful careerso~~ · · · · a~d I've got two&#13;
around to report" prove it. I might get&#13;
chapters if this co\~'fn~~ a few of those&#13;
Now I must get backasts long enough.&#13;
counselling services on to_ my offer of&#13;
have a hang-up on th goofing-off. If you&#13;
college life and e ups and downs of&#13;
I. t - need a is ener' flag me down I' sympathetic ~d who knows? . ma ~ood listener.&#13;
listening to some of .. you might wind up&#13;
May~e we can swa my own problems ... .&#13;
of thmgs bugging ~~ -~~~re ~re a couple&#13;
very well do without which I could&#13;
. But let me warii o~ ' m edgewise, too A~ ·, I II_ get a few words&#13;
of the "goof" ·. d I II discuss both "d ·11 com. Havi t . s1 es w1 also point out th ng r1ed one side I&#13;
other. e pros and cons of the&#13;
It seems that wh&#13;
to get into much e~ a ~ellow gets too old&#13;
hank · 1111sch1ef h d . ermg to give ad . • e evelops those ·h vice Well a w o are willin · · · · . only to&#13;
And you don't h g to read and r t ave to follow it. is en.&#13;
Ut111.~&#13;
- for all to be.&#13;
Growing in a dynamic reality&#13;
setting forth on a journey toward&#13;
newness,&#13;
a sea of love, (ALL THOSE DROPLETS)&#13;
a crystallizing of a bond&#13;
that creates&#13;
this community,&#13;
growing, touching the sun,&#13;
widening our sight,&#13;
opening a soul,&#13;
. children - laughing, caring ,&#13;
crymg:&#13;
Let it all be together:&#13;
within&#13;
me.&#13;
I stepped on a dead robin today&#13;
as I watched a butterfly flutter away.&#13;
Both .sat in the same sunlight,&#13;
both were beheld in my sight,&#13;
One the symbol of sorrow&#13;
the other, the joys of tom~rrow&#13;
Life slips away and then ·&#13;
we "_Vatch it creep back again,&#13;
Teac~mg us, keeping us aware,&#13;
. of_ its _burden we shrink to bare&#13;
fmding m the desolation of today&#13;
tomorrow's better way. · · '&#13;
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MON.-THURS. - 8 a.m.-10 p.111.&#13;
FRI. - 8 a.m.-1 a.m.&#13;
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STUDENT &amp; WIS. ID REQUIRED&#13;
GAMES BANDS . POPCORN&#13;
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Experts Study Prairie Here&#13;
- .~ &lt; •••F:-&#13;
" :;:".&#13;
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~J~I\'~~k.f£~"l.\~ '" ~&#13;
Leading tours of the Chiwaukee Prairie during the Second Biennial Prairie- Can.&#13;
ference held at UW-P on Sept. 21were Parkside faculty members Eugene Gasiorliiewicz&#13;
associate professor of Life Science (far right) and Charles Holzbog, assistant professor&#13;
of art (center).&#13;
More than 100 experts on prairie&#13;
management and scientists whose&#13;
research centers on prairie life convened&#13;
at The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Sept. 20 for the final sessions of the second&#13;
biennial Prairie Conference. Initial&#13;
sessions of the three day conference were&#13;
held at UW-Madison.&#13;
Participants attended from throughout&#13;
the United States and from several&#13;
Canadian provinces.&#13;
The program at Parkside included&#13;
several talks and panel discussions, and an&#13;
afternoon field trip to the Chiwaukee&#13;
Prairie.&#13;
The morning session, devoted to&#13;
discussion of "Prairies and People" was&#13;
moderated by Prof. Eugene C.&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz of Parkside's life science&#13;
faculty and included presentations by&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie, Prof. Charles&#13;
Holzbog of the UWP art faculty, and&#13;
George P. Hanson, senior biologist at the&#13;
Los Angeles State and County Arboretum.&#13;
A second panel, on "Plans of Action,"&#13;
focused on economic and recreational&#13;
pressures on natural environments and&#13;
environmental design. Participants were&#13;
James Zimmerman, chief naturalist at the&#13;
UW-Madison Arboretum, Hanson, and&#13;
Holzbog.&#13;
The afternoon session began with a talk'&#13;
on the Chiwaukee Prairie by Phil Sander&#13;
of the Kenosha-Racine Chapter of Nature&#13;
Conservancy followed by a tour of the&#13;
prairie.&#13;
The Chi waukee Prairie tract was&#13;
acquired by 1&lt;ature Conservancy and&#13;
presented to Parkside as a - nature&#13;
preserve' for scientific, educational and&#13;
aesthetic purposes. More than 3()()species&#13;
of plants have been cataloged on the tract.&#13;
The Prairie Conference was jointly&#13;
sponsored by the UW Arboretum,&#13;
Madison, the Parkside Division of Science&#13;
and the Wisconsin Department of Natural&#13;
Resources. The first such conference was&#13;
held two years ago at Knox College,&#13;
Galesburg, ill.&#13;
Use the Classifieds&#13;
BLOW IT OUT YOUR REAR END!&#13;
BLOW IT OUT YOUR TOPSIDE&#13;
BLOW IT OUT YOUR SIDE!&#13;
FOREIGN&#13;
CARS DUALS&#13;
BRAKE SERVICE&#13;
WHILE-U-IAIT 20 MIN.&#13;
MUFFLER&#13;
INSTA LLA TI0 N~;;;;;I~I'!'R'W'I&#13;
BARDEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
MON. and Fri. - 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.&#13;
TUES. thru THURS. - 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
SAT. - 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN and WOMEN&#13;
fREE DELIVERY&#13;
More than 100 experts on prairie&#13;
management and scientists whose&#13;
research centers on prairie life convened&#13;
at The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Sept. 20 for the final sessions of the second&#13;
biennial Prairie Conference. Initial&#13;
sessions of the three day conference were&#13;
held at UW-Madison.&#13;
Participants attended from throughout&#13;
the United States and from several&#13;
Canadian provinces.&#13;
The program at Parkside included&#13;
several talks and panel discussions, and an&#13;
afternoon field trip to the Chiwaukee&#13;
Prairie.&#13;
The morning session, devoted to&#13;
discussion of "Prairies and People" was&#13;
moderated by Prof. Eugene C.&#13;
Gasiorkiewicz of Parkside's life science&#13;
faculty and included presentations by·&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie, Prof. Charles&#13;
Holzbog of the UWP art faculty, and&#13;
George P. Hanson, senior biologist at the&#13;
Los Angeles State and County Arboretum.&#13;
A second panel, on "Plans of Action,"&#13;
focused on economic and recreational&#13;
pressures on natural environments and&#13;
environmental design. Participants were&#13;
James Zimmerman, chief naturalist at the&#13;
UW-Madison Arboretum, Hanson, and&#13;
Holzbog.&#13;
The afternoon session began with a talk&#13;
on the Chiwaukee Prairie by Phil Sander&#13;
of the Kenosha-Racine Chapter of Nature&#13;
Conservancy followed by a tour of the&#13;
prairie.&#13;
The Chiwaukee Prairie tract was&#13;
acquired by '&amp;ature Conservancy and&#13;
presented to Parkside as a · nature&#13;
preserve· for scientific, educational and&#13;
aesthetic purposes. More than 300 species&#13;
of plants have been cataloged on the tract.&#13;
The Prairie Conference was jointly&#13;
sponsored by the UW Arboretum,&#13;
Madison, the Parkside Division of Science&#13;
aqd the Wisconsin Department of Natural&#13;
Resources. The first such conference was&#13;
held two years ago at Knox College,&#13;
Galesburg, Ill.&#13;
Use the Classifieds&#13;
BLOW IT OUT YOUR REAR END!&#13;
BLOW IT OUT YOUR TOPSIDE&#13;
BLOW IT OUT YOUR SIDE!&#13;
FOREIGN&#13;
CARS&#13;
20 MIN.&#13;
MUFFLER&#13;
INSTALLATION&#13;
DUALS&#13;
BRAKE SERVICE&#13;
WHILE-U-WAIT&#13;
-&#13;
BARDEN'S&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
MON. and Fri. - 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.&#13;
TUES. thru THURS. - 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
SAT. - 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.&#13;
LATEST FASHIONS&#13;
FOR MEN and WOMEN&#13;
FREE DELIVERY &#13;
Assistant Attorney General .&#13;
Kashiwa of the Justice Department' Shiro&#13;
and Natural Resources Division ha SLand&#13;
that "we can see no jUStifica~ stated.&#13;
allowing cour~ actions by individ °l'~or&#13;
In short, It seemed to saua&#13;
s.&#13;
vironmentalists that the NI' me en,&#13;
. . t ti d " xon Ad rrurus ra ron, espite Its strong h .&#13;
was hedging in favor of big bUSi~etorie,&#13;
industrial interests. ess and&#13;
Reaction from many sides w .&#13;
mediate and scathing: as un-&#13;
- .Stewart Udall, former Secr t&#13;
the Interior t sai.d, "Environmental~s~ry or&#13;
fear that the NIxon Administration' Who&#13;
pollution drive may be half rhetor' anti·&#13;
promises and half politics have i&#13;
C&#13;
' hall&#13;
strange new ally. The Justice Dep~~:Ua&#13;
(Continued on Page 5) t&#13;
. Ii statement enThe&#13;
prosecutIOn po ICy to use the 1899&#13;
d US Attorneys .' t&#13;
courage .: h or prevent sigmflcan&#13;
I~w "to P~~ch are either accidental or&#13;
discharges, hi h are not of a coninfrequent,&#13;
but w 11~ngfrom the ordinary&#13;
tinuing nature resu I nufacturing planl."&#13;
operations o~ a rna&#13;
(\laliCs supphed') t while J ti Departmen ,&#13;
The I dgusn:ethat industrial pollution.&#13;
acknow e I '6/ t t threat to -the' eo-&#13;
. ed" the grea es d&#13;
pos ,,' ed that the Nixon A -&#13;
vironmen~l claim d hard at work to&#13;
ministratlOn was airea Y from polluting.&#13;
stop large ma~ufa,J,t;:{:;S Quality AdThe&#13;
Federa . . . d had set up&#13;
ministration, J~s~lcem~slerc:eedures" to&#13;
"programs, pOliCies an. P t to the&#13;
which "we shall defer WIth res~c At"&#13;
bringing of actio.os under the Re use c.&#13;
Refuse Ad Allows Citizens&#13;
To Prosecute Water polluters r d polluter to&#13;
Basically, once you 10 a detailed&#13;
attack, you should prepare a notary&#13;
statement, sworn to before a&#13;
public, setting forth:. f material&#13;
• the nature of the re use&#13;
discharged; hod f discharge;&#13;
• the source and met 0 f the&#13;
• the location, name and address, 0 .&#13;
person or persons causing or contrIbutmg&#13;
tD the discharge; di harge&#13;
• each date on which the sc&#13;
occurred, f 11per&#13;
• the names and addresses 0 a .&#13;
sons known to you. including yourself, Wh~&#13;
saw or knows about the discharges an&#13;
could testify about them if necessa~Y;&#13;
• a statement that the discharge IS n~t 't 'f a permit authorized by Corps perml • Of! 1&#13;
was granted, state facts sh0v.:mg tJ.tat the&#13;
alleged \,jolater is not .complymg With any&#13;
condition of the permit;&#13;
• if the waterway into which the&#13;
discharge occurred is not, commonly&#13;
known as navigable. or as a trIbUtary of a&#13;
navigable waterway, stale facts to show&#13;
such status;&#13;
• where possible, photographs should h.&#13;
taken and samples of the poUutant .or&#13;
foreign substance collected in a clean Jar&#13;
which is then sealed. These should be&#13;
labeled with information showing who took&#13;
the photograph or sample, where, and&#13;
when. and how; and who retained custody&#13;
of the film jar, ,. '&#13;
This will be your basic ammumtion In&#13;
the suit and should bC filed in a U.S.&#13;
dIstrict' court. which apparently h~ve&#13;
exclusive jurisdiction to hear and deCIde&#13;
such suits, The Supreme Court has upheld&#13;
Qui Tam suits in the past on the basis that&#13;
the citizen·inIormer has a financial interest&#13;
in the fine and therefore can sue to&#13;
collect It. - . .&#13;
Actually. the 1899 Refuse Act eo~tams a&#13;
provision that suits against Violators&#13;
should be filed by lhe government, and the&#13;
U.S, Attorneys should "vigorously&#13;
prosecute all offenders". The U.S. Attorneys&#13;
are also authorized to seek injunctions&#13;
to stop pollution of navigable&#13;
waterways and to force the violators to&#13;
clean up. at their own expense.&#13;
However, recent actions by the Nixon&#13;
Administration. through the Justice&#13;
Department, have led many environmentalists&#13;
to question the likelihood&#13;
that U.S. Attorneys will fulfill their legal&#13;
obligations under the 1899 law. This doubt&#13;
has led to emphasis on Qui Tam.&#13;
In July, the Justice Department issued a&#13;
fascinating memorandum called&#13;
"Cuidelines for litigation Under the&#13;
Refuse Act" and set it out to all U.S. Attorneys.&#13;
B) JOII" II \\IER&#13;
tolt it Pr . s nice&#13;
E\l"r he rd of Qui Tam'!&#13;
,'0, )OU can't get It at a Chinese&#13;
taurant And it's not a village In South&#13;
\It''tnam&#13;
Qui Tam I a v nerablc old legal prmcrpt&#13;
'Ahi h alia"" you, the mdIndual&#13;
cun n. to hie Ull in the name of the&#13;
IOv('rruntnt agam t people who break&#13;
rertain IB'A. , and thrn collect half of the&#13;
fln Cor a COIl\lCliOO&#13;
Th" id ha been gellIng a lot of att&#13;
nil n lately coupled .. llh another crusty&#13;
old law called the Rcfu'. Act of t899... hich&#13;
rorbtd 3n)One or an~' group. Crom&#13;
thrm\ln~ pollutanLS IOl0 any navIgable&#13;
'Aal 10 the- OIllod ·tates Without a&#13;
pt.'rmll&#13;
'", 3\180 ht ""atf:rs" are, defined as&#13;
rl\ rs 13k ,. tr am~or their tributaries&#13;
Urrl(.'I~nt to n at a boat or log at high&#13;
Willer&#13;
Pt'rmlls af 1 sUfi! by the U. Army&#13;
( or o( 1':~ln('t·r.;,but . loce the Corps&#13;
ha tr~,dltlnn II)' conct:rned Itself chlcny&#13;
'Alth drt,,(~lnK, filling nnd con....truction,&#13;
rt'lallH'1) ft''A p4.·rmll .. ha\,(' ever b&lt;'cn&#13;
I lJ("d i\nd tho ""ho hov(" them I mostly&#13;
InliLAIn olH n vlnlatr p('rmlt provIsions&#13;
b) dumpln~untrt'at ·ddiS harges Into the&#13;
"alt.'r&#13;
What nil thl rnt'.m I that 00"" you can&#13;
pl"oc"('OC(t dlrt'(.'"tl) 10 your local ncighlOrhond&#13;
Indu trl,ll pnlluH·r. galht&gt;r some&#13;
Infornl ,hon and Implt .. and ttK'n filc a&#13;
tilt "lm"h l"Ulild hrml{ a hnl' of not more&#13;
th:an 2 ~IU nur II s than :,011 for each day&#13;
0( \lol.,lIon uf ....hu,:h )nu gt't hair It could&#13;
I 0 tott'tth" pollull'r lhrov,n In jail for not&#13;
I th.H) I da) nor mor(, th;,l11one ycar,&#13;
"lm'h I unhk'iv bul nlCl' to lhlllk about.&#13;
l (" ur t}x, tW;J Ht·rust' Acl and the Qui&#13;
Tilill CUlll'l'pt hi.J\(' b(.'{'n slron~l)" ad-&#13;
\IJC,',llrd rt.....:t·nth h, thc HOlL')£! Subt.'1U11IIIIttt.&#13;
on Consl',,\'ation and Natural&#13;
Itt (Jun:t.' • led by Hs chrurman. Rep&#13;
Ih'un H,l'U"s t t&gt; WIS) ReuS"c.;himself has&#13;
ht ...1. (~ui Tam achons against four&#13;
plUuhon c mpaOlcs In Milwaukee&#13;
Tht.'Subc:ommittCt' has Just completed a&#13;
fl.'porl 'lui TaUl A tlon. and the 1899&#13;
Rdust.' At:t CItizen Lawsuits Against&#13;
polluter. or the Nation's \\'atcrways",&#13;
\\.hlch will be released within two weeks&#13;
and "Ill be avaIlablc from the U.S.&#13;
CO\'l'rnm ot Printing Office. Washington,&#13;
[) 204112. lor 15cenlS It lells you exactly&#13;
how to ROabout colle&lt;:lInp: evidence. riling&#13;
SUit. and Clt('S Impressive legal precedent&#13;
to help you "to your case&#13;
8&lt;' ,dt"S the H.elL'; suits, two other Qui&#13;
TaRt 'lions have b&lt;'cn filed rccenlly, one&#13;
by a S altle altorn } and the other by an&#13;
org nl1.allon of bass fishermen in&#13;
Alabama \13ny rnvironmentalists are&#13;
hoPIOfr.ta lot more suits Will be filed this&#13;
f.11l&#13;
"This IS a tx&gt;uuliful prOject for college&#13;
. tuckols i.lOd ('Col~}' groups:' asserts&#13;
Clem I)msmorc, legal assistant to the&#13;
Con:t'r\'alion nd :\atural R('sources&#13;
.'ubt.'ommltll't'. y,ho b&lt;'lpcd research and&#13;
pr 'part.' th &gt; ft.'port. "U's i.l great way to go&#13;
~Ifll'rpullutt'rs t·&#13;
[)lfI.&lt;1,IIl0f(' f( 'omnwnds that student&#13;
t!roup (:ombml' the talt'nts of law schools&#13;
,lOd blUing) dt'partmcnts 10kl"Cp legal fees&#13;
ut mlmmum and qUilhty of endence at a&#13;
111~'Xlmum&#13;
V&#13;
. 't the Maze Of Mystery at lSI .&#13;
Live entertainment--&#13;
Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday&#13;
sour hour and beer blast nightly&#13;
8:00-9:00 p.m.&#13;
sour mixed drinks 25&lt; beer 10&lt;&#13;
Ladies nights Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
Free drink with this ad, u&#13;
67/· flU .• IW ~U/l'tUXJ/l/n 1210 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
one per customer.&#13;
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LIVE IN COLOR, CLOSED CIRCUIT TV, DIRECT FROM N.Y.'ST"GE&#13;
CHOICE SEATS NOW AVAILABLE AT BOX oFFiCE&#13;
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ny Upper Balcony $5.50&#13;
DOWNTOW~ "\®z . RACINE y'enetietn ~~~n~G~37~:~&#13;
MONDAY, OCTOBER 26 8·00 p&#13;
RACINE CASE H.S. FIELDHOUS~·&#13;
TICKETS $6 - $S - $4&#13;
ON SALE NOW: STUDENT AFF AIRS&#13;
OFFICE - TALENT HALL&#13;
THE THEATRE WITH A NE~ TRADITION&#13;
Refuse Act Allows Citizens&#13;
To Prosecute Water Polluters&#13;
r. d a polluter to&#13;
Ba. ically, once you 10 detailed&#13;
attack, you should preb~r~e a a notary&#13;
.tatement, sworn to eo&#13;
public, setting forth; r material • the nature of the re use&#13;
di charged; di h ge· e the source and method of SC ar th'&#13;
• the location. name and address_ o . e per on or persons causing or contr1butmg&#13;
ID the di charge: . • each date on which the discharge&#13;
'Curred; r 11 per • the names and addresses o a · ·on. ·nown to "OU including yourself, who • J ' ct· h rges and sa\\ or knows about the 1sc a&#13;
could testify about them if necessa~y;&#13;
• a statement that the discharge IS n~t . ·r permit authorized by Corps permit, or, 1 a&#13;
wa granted, state facts sho"'.ing tJ:iat the&#13;
all ged \'iolater is not complying with any&#13;
condition of the permit; . • if the waterway into which the&#13;
discharge occurred is not . commonly&#13;
knoY. n as navigable, or as a tributary of a&#13;
navigable waterway, state facts to show&#13;
such statu.; d h • where po sible, photographs shoul e&#13;
taken and samples of the pollutant . or&#13;
foreign ubstance co11ected in a clean Jar&#13;
which is then ealed. These should be&#13;
labeled with information showing who took&#13;
the photograph or sample, where, and&#13;
wh •n, and how: and who retained custody&#13;
of th film jar. . . This will be your basic ammunition m&#13;
th . uit, and should be filed in a U.S.&#13;
di. trict court, which apparently have&#13;
clu. ive jurisdiction to hear and decide&#13;
uch suits. The upreme Court has upheld&#13;
(lui Tam suits in the past on the basis that&#13;
the citizen-informer has a financial intere~t&#13;
111 the fine and therefore can sue to&#13;
coll&lt;'ct it. . . Actually. the 1899 Refuse Act eontams a&#13;
provision that uits against violators&#13;
should be filed by the government, and tl1e&#13;
. . Attorneys should "vigorously&#13;
prosecute all offenders". The U.S. Attorney&#13;
are also authorized to seek injunctions&#13;
to stop po11ution of navigable&#13;
waterways and to force the violators to&#13;
de n up, at their own expense.&#13;
However, recent actions by the Nixon&#13;
Administration, through the Justice&#13;
Department, have led many environmentalists&#13;
to question the likelihood&#13;
that .S. Attorneys will fulfill their legal&#13;
obligations under the 1899 law. This doubt&#13;
has led to emphasis on Qui Tam.&#13;
In July, the Justice Department issued a&#13;
fascinating memorandum called&#13;
··Guidelines for litigation Under the&#13;
Refuse Act" and set it out to all U.S. Attorneys.&#13;
&#13;
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. r statement en- The prosecution po icyt use the 1899&#13;
d us Attorneys O .• courage · : h prevent sigmf1cant&#13;
law "to pun~ h ~~e either accidental or discharges, w c h" h ar~ not of a coninfrequent,&#13;
but w :: g from the ordinary&#13;
tinuin~ nature resu :nufacturing plant."&#13;
opera t10ns of_ a m&#13;
(Italics supplied.) t t while r Depar men,&#13;
The Ju~ ice t industrial pollution.&#13;
acknow,l,edgmg; e:!st threat to the . enposed&#13;
the gr . d that the Nixon Advironmen~,"&#13;
claime hard at work to&#13;
ministration was already from polluting.&#13;
stop large manufacturers lit AdThe&#13;
Federal ~a~er_ Quahaf set up&#13;
ministration, J~s~1ce ms1sler~edures" to&#13;
" programs, policies an~ p t to the&#13;
h. h "we shall defer with respec "&#13;
;ri~ging of actio.ns under the Refuse Act.&#13;
Assistant Attorney General .&#13;
Kashiwa of the Justice Department' Shiro&#13;
and Natural Resources Division h s Land&#13;
that "we can see no justifica~~ statect&#13;
allowing cour~ actions by individu:Jn ,!or&#13;
In short, 1t seemed to so s.&#13;
vironmentalists that the Nixme en.&#13;
ministration, despite its strong in A_dwas&#13;
hedging in favor of big bus/ etor1c,&#13;
industrial interests. ness and&#13;
Reaction from many sides w . mediate and scathing: as 1rn.&#13;
- Stewart Udall, former Seer t&#13;
the Interior, sai_d, "EnvironmentaJ~s:Y of&#13;
fear that th~ Nixon Administration' Wh?&#13;
pollution drive may be half rhetor· 8 anti.&#13;
promises and half politics have t· half&#13;
strange new ally. The Justice Depi~nd a&#13;
(Continued on Page 5) rnent&#13;
V,s,&#13;
. ·t the Maze Of Mystery . at filte ~&#13;
live entertainment--&#13;
Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday&#13;
sour hour and beer blast nightly&#13;
8:00-9:00 p.m.&#13;
sour mixed drinks 25C beer 10(&#13;
ladies nights Tuesday and Thursday&#13;
Free drink with this ad, uTI . ff)1 . • u tie ...,Ufftu;o/tn 1210 Sheridan Rd.&#13;
one per customer.&#13;
WATCHES&#13;
Rolex - Ac:cutron&#13;
Ultrachron • l.ongine&#13;
8ulova • Movado&#13;
Caravelle • Timex&#13;
Lecoultre&#13;
CHINA&#13;
REPAIR DEPT. =i&#13;
Watches - Jewelry Diamond Setting Complete Repoir Dept.&#13;
Ring Designing&#13;
':, 'l_ ~ \ •~n:!:}f ~#~•••• BR~~~~TRY&#13;
~~~ ~\.\. . l O % '\ ~'\v~ . o ~ Courtesy Discount&#13;
to&#13;
o,AMoNDCONSULTANTS Students &amp; Faculty&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
(MUST SHOW IOFNTIFICATI0N)&#13;
FAIR TR CEPTED&#13;
Craduate Cemologist-Certffied Diamontologist&#13;
~ggo,,u&#13;
It does make a difference where you shop!&#13;
The ZAN I EST Spoof on SEX!&#13;
MONDAY&#13;
Sept. 28th - 8 p.m~&#13;
LIVE IN COLOR, CLOSED CIRCUIT TV, DIRECT FROM N.Y. Sf.AGE&#13;
CHOICE SEATS NOW AVAILABLE AT BOX Of~ICE&#13;
Orchestra $1 o M . •&#13;
Middle Bolco $7 oan Floor and Logse $8.50 . · '&#13;
ny Upper Balcony $5.50&#13;
DOWNTOWN&#13;
RACINE&#13;
Veneti0n&#13;
THE THEATRE WITH A NEW TRADITION&#13;
• Street&#13;
505 Main7•9618&#13;
Phone 63 &#13;
,I~~~~!i(~ation To Air Vets' Testimony&#13;
Veterans A . t 1 - Vietnam Johnson witnessed the burning and&#13;
are ti gains the War, in preparation destruction of villages, and has given . a n~ ronal commission on U S W Crimes In lat N '. ar testimony to that effect at a number of&#13;
all Indo hi eWovember, has called upon local-level war crimes commissions that&#13;
ward .~ Itnha&#13;
ar veterans to come for- the national Committee has helped&#13;
.. 1 ey have testimony about atrocities committed by Arne . . th organize in nine cities since March.&#13;
proce~s of waging war in ASr~~ansin e Veterans who have testimony that they&#13;
Thel.r purpose .is to show that U.S.- would like to give can call or write the&#13;
~ommltted war cnrnes like My Lai are not officers of the Winter Soldier InIsolated&#13;
aberrations by battle-crazed GIs vestigation, 156 Fifth Avenue, Suite 1003&#13;
but a logical outcome of U.S. policies lik~ New York, NY 10010(212) 533-2734. They&#13;
search-aDd-destroy "mad . 't" will also be glad to give any assistance in&#13;
". , mmu e, setting up campus or community veterans massive relocatton" (a euphemism for&#13;
C?Dce!11ratlOn camps), chemical. groups against the war. And speakers and&#13;
bIOlogical weaponry, "free fire zones" local commissions can be set up on&#13;
devices, - and. electrical wiring and other tortu~ec .=a=m~pu=s=es=--a=n:d:....:i~n_c~o:m=m~un=it:ie:s,---- l"&#13;
~==============~&#13;
"Individual soldiers should not be made&#13;
~apegoats for policies designed at the&#13;
highest levels of government. Instead&#13;
responsibility for War Crimes should b~&#13;
placed where it truly belongs - upon the&#13;
U.S. Government," said the Vets in the&#13;
call for the Winter Investigation.&#13;
. TheWinter Soldier Investigation, which&#13;
IS being coordinated by the National&#13;
Com~lllttee for .3 Citizens' Commission of&#13;
Inquiry on U.S. War Crimes in Vietnam&#13;
wi.ll be held in Detroit, Michigan, and&#13;
windsor, Ontario, Canada, Nov. 30- Dec. 2.&#13;
After an \introductory session with a&#13;
num.ber. of national anti-war figures, investigations&#13;
sessions will be held with&#13;
veterans and other experts giving specific&#13;
testimony concerning U.S. atrocities.&#13;
Under existing law, veterans who are no&#13;
longer on active duty cannot be prosecuted&#13;
for any war crimes they have participated&#13;
in and later admit to. The point of the&#13;
whole investigation is to show that the&#13;
individual GI in the field, while executing&#13;
war policy, has almost no choice but to&#13;
participate in acts which would be ruled as&#13;
war crimes by any existing international&#13;
standards - the Nuremburg Principles&#13;
and the Geneva Accords.&#13;
"Most of our operations are designed to&#13;
eliminate Vietnamese peasants," said&#13;
Robert Johnson, an ex-Army Captain, a&#13;
West Point graduate, and a Vietnam&#13;
veteran. "If we applied the Nuremburg&#13;
~inciples in Vietnam, Westmoreland,&#13;
Nixon, Johnson would be hung - plus key&#13;
people in corporations, foundations,&#13;
government and universities."&#13;
The Detroit site was chosen because of&#13;
the proximity to Canada, which will be&#13;
necessary for the testimony of Vietnamese&#13;
victims, intellectuals, and scientists who&#13;
are not allowed in lbe United States. The&#13;
hearings will be linked by electronic&#13;
transmissions.&#13;
"Almost every veteran has witnessed&#13;
atrocities," said Johnson. "But many&#13;
times they don't even realize that what&#13;
they're doing is a war crime, because its&#13;
an a'ccepted part of their jobs."&#13;
1899 Law&#13;
(Continued rrom Page 4)&#13;
is trying to prove they are right."&#13;
_ The Conservation Foundation a&#13;
respected, national .group, stated, "Our&#13;
basic difficulty ... IS with the underlying&#13;
policy. of the (Justice Department's)&#13;
Guidelmes . , . The policy you articulate&#13;
disregards the lbeory behind the Federal&#13;
Water pollution Control Act; federal&#13;
leverage is required to force states to&#13;
establish and implement water quality&#13;
standards."&#13;
_ And Henry Reuss, Wisconsin&#13;
Congressman, complained that the Justice&#13;
Department's "limited enforcement"&#13;
doctrine "favors the polluter over the&#13;
public'S interest in preventing the&#13;
poHution of our watersays."&#13;
In a speech in the House, Reuss charged&#13;
"total abdication" by Justice of its&#13;
"statutory duty" to enforce the 1899 act.&#13;
"The Attorney General," Reuss said,&#13;
"whose sworn duty is to enforce law and&#13;
order, is a scoff law where water pollution&#13;
is concerned."&#13;
Andin a statement tbat turned one of the&#13;
Nixon Administration's favorite tactics&#13;
back on itself, Reuss declared: "The&#13;
Justice Department is quite willing to&#13;
enforce the law against the occasional&#13;
polluter, but not against the big corporate,&#13;
polluters who continuously violate our&#13;
pollution laws. It is this type of ragged&#13;
enforcement that breeds contempt and&#13;
disrepsect for the law."&#13;
Reuss and the Subcommittee he heads&#13;
have also been active in forcing the Corps&#13;
of Engineers to revise its regulations&#13;
concerning issuance of permits. Perhaps&#13;
surprisingly to some, the Corps has shown&#13;
great improvement in the past few&#13;
months, at least on paper. And Reuss&#13;
seems confident that they will vigorously&#13;
enforce their new standards.&#13;
The basic problem in the entire area of&#13;
water pollution law enforcement and&#13;
prevention seems to be the underlying&#13;
difference of opinion between the Nixon&#13;
Administration and environmental activists&#13;
concerning individual citizen involvement.&#13;
Activists want to increase it;&#13;
the Administration tries to decrease it.&#13;
Wilb the widespread emergence of the&#13;
Qui Tam concept, the conflict may be&#13;
decided in favor of environmentalists.&#13;
Many believe this will be a vital gain. As&#13;
Ramsey Clark, former U.S. Attorney&#13;
General, said in recent Senate testimony:&#13;
" ... tbere isn't any single symptom that&#13;
better expresses the frustrations of&#13;
modern life. than the powerlessness of&#13;
people to affect things of vital importance&#13;
to them: You can't sue. You've just got to&#13;
livewith it. If the garbage isn't collected, if&#13;
the park you sit in is being leveled by&#13;
bulldozers, you can't do anything. We can't&#13;
go on like that. People have to have the&#13;
power through legal process to affect&#13;
things that are important to them."&#13;
658-2233&#13;
(fJ&#13;
~·t~~Wtnwt4-&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTH CITY LIMITS&#13;
NORTH&#13;
and RANCH&#13;
SOUTH&#13;
NDRTH &amp; SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICH ES '&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS&#13;
~\iI&#13;
~&#13;
2910 ROOSEVELT RD., KENOSHA&#13;
"THE LAh WORO IN&#13;
THRILLERS. TERRIFIC."&#13;
-Gene Shalit. L.ook Magazine&#13;
Nightly&#13;
thru&#13;
Thursday&#13;
3M&#13;
:- .&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NATIC?NFlL BANK&#13;
WIIiOIM&#13;
DELICATESSEN -BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 fl"Y·SECOND STUn&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
MIDTOWN BAR and RESTAURANT&#13;
Italian-American Foods&#13;
2114 52nd St.&#13;
20 hrs. a day/? days a week&#13;
Organ Music&#13;
Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Fram 9 p.rn. til 2 e.m.&#13;
ALCOA SUBSIDARY&#13;
Immediate Openings for&#13;
Porters&#13;
Part Time Work&#13;
20 hrs. a Week&#13;
3 Evenings &amp; Sat.&#13;
$50 a Week&#13;
INTERVIEWS TUESDAY, SEPT. 29&#13;
Racine Campus 9:30 a.m. Rm. 201&#13;
Greenquist 12:30 p.m. Rm. 231&#13;
Kenosha 2:30 p.m. Rm. 243&#13;
NOW SERVING&#13;
TACOS • ENCHILADAS • TAMALES&#13;
COMPLETE MENU OF • • •&#13;
~exkan (liood&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARRY OUT&#13;
"Mexican food is fun food • • .&#13;
so Taco Kings' are fun places"&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11&#13;
6829 39th Avenue&#13;
HAT THE SIGN OF THE CACTUS"&#13;
Phone 654-5717&#13;
1899 Law&#13;
(Continued frnm Page 4)&#13;
is trying to prove they are right." _ The Conservation Foundation a&#13;
respected_ national . gro~p, stated, "Our&#13;
basic difficulty .. . 1s with the underlying&#13;
policy of the (Justic_e Department's)&#13;
Guidelines . . . The pohcy you articulate&#13;
disregards the theory behind the Federal&#13;
water Pollution Control Act; federal&#13;
leverage is required to force states to&#13;
establish and implement water quality&#13;
standards.,,&#13;
_ And Henry Reuss, Wisconsin&#13;
Congressman, complained that the Justice&#13;
Department's "limited enforcement"&#13;
doctrine "favors the polluter over the&#13;
public's interest in preventing the&#13;
pollution of our watersays."&#13;
In a speech in the House, Reuss charged&#13;
"total abdication" by Justice of its&#13;
"statutory duty" to enforce the 1899 act.&#13;
"The Attorney Ge~eral," Reuss said,&#13;
"whose sworn duty is to enforce law and&#13;
order, is a scoff law where water pollution&#13;
is concerned."&#13;
And in a statement that turned one of the&#13;
Nixon Administration's favorite tactics&#13;
back on itself, Reuss declarl;ld: "The&#13;
Justice Department is quite willing to&#13;
enforce the law against the occasional&#13;
polluter, but not against the big corporate , polluters who continuously violate our&#13;
pollution laws. It is this type of ragged&#13;
enforcement that breeds contempt and&#13;
disrepsect for the law."&#13;
Reuss and the Subcommittee he heads&#13;
have also been active in forcing the Corps&#13;
of Engineers to revise its regulations&#13;
concerning issuance of permits. Perhaps&#13;
surprisingly to some, the Corps has shown&#13;
great improvement in the past few&#13;
months, at least on paper. And Reuss&#13;
seems confident that they will vigorously&#13;
enforce their new standards.&#13;
The basic problem in the entire area of&#13;
water pollution law enforcement and&#13;
prevention seems to be the underlying&#13;
difference of opinion between the Nixon&#13;
Administration and environmental activists&#13;
concerning individual citizen involvement.&#13;
Activists want to increase it;&#13;
the Administration tries to decrease it.&#13;
With the widespread emergence of the&#13;
Qui Tam concept, the conflict may be&#13;
decided in favor of environmentalists.&#13;
Many believe this will be a vital gain. As&#13;
Ramsey Clark, former U.S. Attorney&#13;
General, said in recent Senate testimony:&#13;
" ... there isn't any single symptom that&#13;
better expresses the frustrations of&#13;
modern life . !pl!n the powerlessness . of&#13;
people to affect things of vital importance&#13;
to them: You can't sue. You've just got to&#13;
live with it. If the garbage isn't collected, if&#13;
the park you sit in -is being leveled by&#13;
bulldozers, you can't do anything. We can't&#13;
go on like that. People have to have the&#13;
power through legal process to affect&#13;
things that are important to them."&#13;
F~ 658-2233&#13;
~ It&#13;
Town //;&#13;
(t)&#13;
~-iUJlU'hronb.:-0~&#13;
3322 SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
NORTH CITY LIMITS&#13;
NORTH &amp; SOUTH SHERIDAN ROAD&#13;
-KENOSHAFAMOUS&#13;
FOR&#13;
RANCH CREATED&#13;
SANDWICHES ,&#13;
CHARCOAL BROILED&#13;
STEAKS- -&#13;
1~Y,~s!i,~sation To Air Vets' Testimony&#13;
Veterans Against the W 1. - Vietn~m Johnson witnessed the burning and&#13;
are a national comm· a_r, m preparation destruction of village and ha given C . . 1ss1on on us War t r th • rimes m late Novembe h · · es 1mony to at effect at a number of&#13;
all Indochina War vet r, as called upon local-level war crimes commi · 10ns that&#13;
ward if they have ert~~t!0 come for- the ~ati?na! Co~mit~ee ha helped atrocities committed b Am _ony ~bout organize m nme cities smce !\larch. process of waging wa Y_ Ae~icans m the Veterans who have testimony that they&#13;
Their purpose is 1: mh s,a .th wo~ld like to give can call or write the&#13;
committed war crimes r: : ~t U.S.- off1~ers of the Winter Soldier In- isolated aberrations by ~ettl Y Lai are not veshgation, 156 Fifth Avenue, Suite 1003&#13;
but a logical outcome of US e-cr~z_ed ~Is, N~w York, NY 10010 (212 ) 533-2734. They&#13;
search-and-destroy .. ~~dohc~es, hk,~ w1ll _also be glad to give any a sist.ance in&#13;
"massive relocation,', ( h m~nute, setting up campus or community veteran&#13;
concentration cam a tup e~is~ for groups against the war. And speaker and&#13;
biological weaponry ·¼~ ' f c em,ca\: local commissi?ns can be set up on&#13;
DELICATESSEN-BEVERAGES&#13;
3203 FIFTY-SECOND STREET&#13;
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN&#13;
and electrical wirin'g ~ thire zones, campuses and m communities&#13;
d eVIces. . _ an o er torture , ,-------------------------------&#13;
"Individual soldiers should not be made&#13;
s~apegoats for policies designed at the&#13;
highest levels of government. Instead&#13;
responsibility for War Crimes should b~&#13;
placed where it truly belongs _ upon the&#13;
U.S. Government," said the Vets in the&#13;
call for the Winter Investigation.&#13;
. The_Winter Soldier Investigation, which&#13;
1s be1?g coordinated by the National&#13;
Committee for fl Citizens' Commission of&#13;
Inquiry on U.S. War Crimes in Vietnam&#13;
wi_ll be held in Detroit, Michigan, and&#13;
Wmdsor, Ontario, Canada, Nov. 30-Dec. 2.&#13;
After an introductory session with a&#13;
nunt_ber. ol national anti-war figures, investLgations&#13;
sessions will be held with&#13;
veterans and other experts giving specific&#13;
testimony concerning U.S. atrocities.&#13;
Under existing law, veterans who are no&#13;
longer on active duty cannot be prosecuted&#13;
~or any war crimes they have participated&#13;
m and later admit to. The J.)Oint of the&#13;
whole investigation is to &amp;how that the&#13;
individual GI in the field, while executing&#13;
war policy, has almost no choice but to&#13;
participate in acts which would be ruled as&#13;
war crimes by any existing international&#13;
standards - the Nuremburg Principles&#13;
and the Geneva Accords.&#13;
"Most of our operations are designed to&#13;
eliminate Vietnamese peasants," said&#13;
Robert Johnson, an ex-Army Captain, a&#13;
West Point graduate, and a Vietnam&#13;
veteran. "If we_ applied the Nuremburg&#13;
Principles in Vietnam, Westmoreland,&#13;
Nixon, Johnson would be hung - plus key&#13;
people in corporations, foundations,&#13;
government and universities."&#13;
The Detroit site was chosen because of&#13;
the proximity to Canada, which will be&#13;
necessary for the testimony of Vietnamese&#13;
victims, intellectuals, and scientists who&#13;
are not allowed in the United States. The&#13;
hearings will be linked by electronic&#13;
transmissions.&#13;
"Almost every veteran has witnessed&#13;
atr.ocities," said Johnson. "But many&#13;
times they don't even realize that what&#13;
they're doing is a war crime, because its&#13;
an accepted part of their jobs."&#13;
1;1:,}1¥!,~ie·M&#13;
2910 ROOSEVELT RD., KENOSHA&#13;
"THE LA~T WORD IN&#13;
THRILLERS, TERRIFIC."&#13;
-Gene Shalit, Look Magazine&#13;
Nightly&#13;
thru&#13;
Thursday&#13;
6:45 &amp; 9:00&#13;
3h&#13;
-&#13;
BROWN&#13;
NATIONAL BANK&#13;
'-,1HOIM&#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&#13;
Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
From 9 p.m. til 2 a.m.&#13;
ALCOA SUBSIDARY&#13;
Immediate Openings for&#13;
Porters&#13;
Part Time Work&#13;
20 hrs. a Week&#13;
3 Evenings &amp; Sat.&#13;
$50 a Week&#13;
INTERVIEWS TUESDAY, SEPT. 29&#13;
Racine Campus 9:30 a.m. Rm. 201&#13;
Greenquist 12:30 p.m. Rm. 231&#13;
Kenosha 2:30 p.m. Rm. 243&#13;
NOW SERVING&#13;
TACOS • ENCHILADAS • TAMALES&#13;
'COMPLETE MENU OF.&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARRY OUT&#13;
"Mexican food is fun food • • .&#13;
so Taco Kings' are fun places"&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11 a.m.&#13;
6829 39th Avenue&#13;
"AT THE SIGN OF THE CACTUS"&#13;
Phone 654-sn 7&#13;
. .&#13;
. &#13;
Kenosha's Own Prophet rttl "Yes it was a&#13;
Kenosha notoriOUS City on the Grow, The girl blus~ all ~h:~ould ~ay about&#13;
ha flnall'.:gr- ..sn enough to ment its own phonenumber, IS a Norm before that&#13;
~ v.... it. She had never seen&#13;
Prophet In Residence . lng&#13;
.oern : hmuck (a pseudonym to protect evening. I t of his time heipi&#13;
.. .. li" the occult Norm spends a 0 e of stolen articles he&#13;
hJs privacy) IS prac clng.. other people. He spok hosts exorcised from&#13;
sciences. clairvoyancy. ps}'hcoklOeSl~, had helped recover, g .' talked&#13;
and gtn('rally "doH\@, ESP" on anyone \\ 0 buildings. and potential sfUolrClad~wmore&#13;
needs. or wants It done .. the whole mess&#13;
The Prop~t 1 to his middle to late into facing . h even prevents ac-&#13;
, all recce- years. He claims e ouple of incidents&#13;
t.... nties, and lives m 8 sm Db' ts cidents, and gave us tabec co',nc'ldence. He structed garage. urrounded by jec no&#13;
d' rt r hgu)t.1. statutes and pamtmgs, that mayor may world affairs,&#13;
hrines dt-dJ ated to the Virgin Mother and has no influence ;;:ident Kennedy's&#13;
John F K-ool"!-', Con/.ed rate Ilags, and a though. He gave I&#13;
.../ b b ac assasination as an examh&#13;
P~~an Dixon or&#13;
proru 100 or uncla_ lraable ric-a· r r "No matter how mue ed him it still&#13;
Th hrtn p&lt;onde a .ort of, focus or body would have warn "11&#13;
orm v.ho IS both deepl)' rehglous anda any ed It was God's WI ,&#13;
rl h~al K noroy v.orshlpper, JF K.m would have happen . t I no one can&#13;
'arh ut r He can quottl verbatim and nobody, not you, 00 t d Sighs' then&#13;
P ge or, pe&lt;:tabll' lenglh from both change that" Norm sor ,&#13;
P'lh'. BIble and vartOUS Kennedy goes on hurriedly. Id edictions?"&#13;
" "How about some wor pr&#13;
baographle ed bout orm gave us ten or twenty.&#13;
~orm hrst realized h(' was gift ,a th Some examples: .' '72&#13;
r~r \ r ago "I .ort or gOl 10 With e . . going to WID 10 .&#13;
"r~·· ,·r-·d. \"00 knov.').. he . ays ....Ith a&#13;
l&#13;
Nixon I~ II '11 close their door~ ". ...,,, "'.... , h' h hoD Ten major co eges Wl&#13;
ehar.lel ",lie .lammer I1kea Ig .~, by 1987, due to lack of funds.&#13;
boy fumbling ....Ith a. new language, , l .....~ First man on Mars, 1987. d'&#13;
".. ding "hal you mIght ealla ",Id hfe No Red China will occupy the Holy Lan to&#13;
dop" or anylNng, but loISof beer, Any"ay&#13;
1h d om h me aft r a Wild beer party, I~ere will be an assasination attempt on&#13;
nd I\1,&gt;8 Sitting In my roo":,.......onderlng ixon's life in six or seven w~s.&#13;
what I v.as dOing With my life. and sud· Mr Agnew is going tobepresuientsome&#13;
elt·nly a vo,e . tarled to talk to me. Th~t day. (Dick will be t.oosick to carry on.)&#13;
" fOu' y'ears ago, The VOIcetold me 0 Marijuana legahzed, 1974. tho&#13;
ptay and r ad the Bible;, The VOicehas The worst winter in twenty years, IS&#13;
n ..uth m ever mce&#13;
w~n ked about other manirestations ye::~ can took forward to a Russo-Chinese&#13;
of thiS "girt"'. arm descnbed an ~ur~.&#13;
I ou see' Like war in 16 years. .&#13;
"\t. ort of electrlca , y. Noah's Ark will be found 10 1972.&#13;
IItr .. Norm potOledto one of several other Norm accepts no pay for his work, but&#13;
VCoPI 10 the room, a girl I have kn",,'n for asks every""e for a prayer. As Norml~tUtllSe&#13;
. • rat ve rs. "U' sort of green, S? I r and a 1&#13;
• , tg ng it "I can do more with a praye . a know. he 's a friendly, warm,.ou 01 ESP than anybody can do by poppmg&#13;
kmd or a person ." orm cont~nued for pill Listen to music, or read the Bible an?f&#13;
everat minutes more With the meditate. Anyone can do w~a~ I do, 1&#13;
b,ographlcal data you expect from a th . t take the time for It mstead of&#13;
rea_ably good side-show fortune teller. si::rn~~~ front of the TV all the time." .&#13;
He paused for a moment, as If he had When we left, Norm smiled a sby little&#13;
flDlshed, then adds ". and Isee a piece or smile and told us he would remember us m&#13;
paper youtJave taken the paper from your&#13;
W'9l1ft 1 see numbers on the paper. You his prayers.&#13;
I'll Drink to That&#13;
JIM JANIS&#13;
.BY. series of articles that&#13;
This is the first 10 a the subject of :&#13;
will appeaXI:;;':~% :'verages. Today's&#13;
Knowmg d Whiskey&#13;
subject: Blende meni defines and&#13;
The U.S, g~vfern t types of whiskies.&#13;
. 29 dif eren ith ven&#13;
recogOlzes . familiar WI se&#13;
The average J&gt;E:fSOnISBlended Whiskey,&#13;
types: An:encan enne~see Whiskey ~nd&#13;
• Burbon WhIskey, T 5 otch CanadIan&#13;
. ports are c, I t' Rye. The im . ke In this article e s&#13;
and Ir-ish wbis .y. Whiskey commonly&#13;
discUSSthe Amencan&#13;
known as the Ble~latiOnS specify that&#13;
Government reo t least 20 per cent of&#13;
blends must. contain aa roof gallon basis&#13;
straight whIskey on r ~n combination,&#13;
and, separately o. ilS and bottled not&#13;
Whiskey or neutral splr . ' n Whiskies are f Amenca .&#13;
less than 80 proo ' As many as 75 dlfmasterfully&#13;
ble~~f.kies and grain neutral&#13;
ferent StraIght mium blend brands.&#13;
spirits go I~to th~~r~hiskies and spirits&#13;
after blendmg, mingle together for a&#13;
are allowed Ito th of time known as the&#13;
considerable e~g" '&#13;
"marry!ng period " d f distilled&#13;
I&#13;
the leadmg bran 0 .&#13;
In. s~ es, d it dominates the lIst&#13;
spints ISa blend, an wide margin. In 1967&#13;
of brand sales bK a cases of spirit blends&#13;
J1.1orethf~~~rm..1~o:rket share of 22.6 perf&#13;
were so f' sta tes in the sale 0&#13;
nt The top Ive . Oh' ce . Y it Pennsylvama, 10, blends are New or.,.&#13;
New Jersey ~nd MIC~7~~g to alcoholic&#13;
Any questIOns per taO 'ng needs&#13;
beverages or your e..nter Inl ,&#13;
write in care of NewsbcopeWhiSkey and&#13;
Next Week: Bur on&#13;
Tennessee Whiskies.&#13;
To Present Paper&#13;
Erik Forrest, associate professor ?f a~t&#13;
t the University of Wisconsin-Parkslde, IS&#13;
aresenting a paper this wee~ before. the&#13;
p Id congress of the lnternalionaJ SocIety&#13;
,,;o~ducation Through Art in Lo,:,don.&#13;
o Forrest's paper is titled, "Art In a Ne.w&#13;
University: Theoretical Problems. m&#13;
Devising a New Art and Art EducatIon&#13;
Program".&#13;
film Society&#13;
Plans Season&#13;
Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, W, C&#13;
Fields and Peter Sellers star in five shori&#13;
comic films to be shown at 8 p.m. Wed.&#13;
nesday in Room 103, Greenquist Hall a&#13;
the Parkside Film Society opens its s":o~&#13;
season.&#13;
Chaplin appears in two films: "The&#13;
Rink" (1916), where he demonstrates his&#13;
agility a~ walter who spends his lunch&#13;
hour at a roller-skating rink, and "Th&#13;
Cure" (917), which shows what hap~&#13;
when Chaplin arrives at a spa to take&#13;
rest cure, accompanied by a lrunkful o~&#13;
liquor that gets dumped mto the resort's&#13;
restorative waters.&#13;
Keaton plays in "Cops" and Fields isin&#13;
"The Pharmacist". Peter Sellers stars in&#13;
"The Case of the Mukkinese Battle Horn"&#13;
a spoof of British detective stories. '&#13;
Admission to the films is 50 cents.&#13;
WEST SIDE&#13;
SWEET SHOP&#13;
3200 60th St.&#13;
6 a.m. till 11 p.m. 7 days'&#13;
COLD BEER&#13;
Phana 657 -9747&#13;
RENT8MMOLDTIME MOVIES&#13;
HOME MOVIt=S&#13;
LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
Silent and Sound ProJectors&#13;
CAIRO CAMERA SHOP&#13;
5815 -11TH AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA. WIS. 53140&#13;
dc~lroyed the paper"&#13;
i' Complete news coverage of campus events&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
* Photos of events and personalities&#13;
iC Advertising of interest to all students&#13;
* Coverage of national news of student interest&#13;
Coming Next Week: New Feature Page with Events&#13;
Calendar and listing of Area Things-to-Dol&#13;
Kenosha's Own Prophet rttle "Yes itwasa&#13;
The girl blus~d all ~he ~-ould ;ay about&#13;
phone number, is a Norm before that&#13;
it. he had never seen&#13;
C\"emng. 1 t of his time helping 'o m ""nds a O · I he&#13;
. r r k f stolen artic es other people. He spo ~~ts exorcised from&#13;
had helped recover. g . · ·des talked . . nd potentJal SUICI&#13;
bu1ldm~s, a . 1 mess for a few more&#13;
mto racing the _Y.ho e ven prevents acycar&#13;
He claims he e pie of incidents&#13;
cidents, and gav~ us: ~~oincidence. He&#13;
that may or ma)' no r world affairs,&#13;
ha no influence ive 'dent Kennedy's though. He gave res1&#13;
a ~ination as an exampl\an Dixon or&#13;
"• ·o matter how much J him it still&#13;
nybody would have warned God. 's will&#13;
h h =ned It was '&#13;
would ave ap,,_ · t I no one can&#13;
nd nobodv • not you, no ' . hs ' then&#13;
th -t .. 'orm sort of s1g , ch ng a · • 0 - on hurriedly. ed' lions?" " HoY. about some world pr ic .&#13;
• 'orm _gave us ten or twenty.&#13;
Some examples: . . ,&#13;
2 ·,xon is going to wm m 7 . .&#13;
1 en major colleges will close their door!&gt;&#13;
bv 1987, due to lack or funds.&#13;
. Fir ·t man on Mars, 1987. d . Red China will occupy the Holy Lan in&#13;
I Th re will be an assasina lion attempt on&#13;
"ixon's life in six or seven w~s.&#13;
• tr Agnew is going to be president some&#13;
day. &lt;Dick will be l~osick to carry on.)&#13;
1arijuana legalized, 1974. th'&#13;
The worst winter in twenty years, is&#13;
year · W~ can look forward to a Russo-Chinese&#13;
war in 16 years. . Noah's Ark will be found in 1972.&#13;
'orm accepts no pay for his work, but&#13;
ru k everyone for a prayer. As Norm ~uts&#13;
it "I can do more with a prayer and a_ httl!&#13;
ESP than anybody can do by popping&#13;
pill Listen to music, or read the Bible an~&#13;
meditate. Anyone can do w~a~ I do, I&#13;
they just take the time for it. mst~ad of&#13;
itting in front of the TV all the time. .&#13;
When we left, Norm smiled a shy htt~e&#13;
smile and told us he would remember us m&#13;
hi prayers.&#13;
I'll Drink to That&#13;
By JIM JANIS . l that . . . a series of art~c es . This is the first in the subJect of . weekly on Tod y's will a_ppear lcoholic Beverages. a Knowing A Whiskey.&#13;
subject: Blended nt defines and&#13;
The U.S. g?vern~1ypes of whiskies.&#13;
recognizes 29 differ~n familiar with seven&#13;
The average ix:rson isBlended Whiskey'&#13;
types: A~enca~ennessee Whiskey ~nd&#13;
Burbon Whiskey, S otch Canadian . rts are c ' I t'&#13;
Rye. The imIJ? In this article e s&#13;
and Irish Wh1sk~Y- Whiskey commonly&#13;
discuss the American&#13;
known as the Ble~~lations specify that&#13;
Government re_ at least 20 per cent ?f&#13;
blends must contain oof gallon basis . h'skey on a pr . . straight w I in combmat10n,&#13;
and, separately o~ ·ts and bottled not&#13;
Whiskey or neutral spm. ' n Whiskies are&#13;
f America . less than 80 proo . As many as 75 d1fmasterfull~&#13;
ble;~~kies and grain neutral&#13;
ferent Straight ·um blend brands .&#13;
spirits go i~to th~~r:i\skies and spirits&#13;
after blending, . gle together for a&#13;
are allowed to ;::inf time known as the&#13;
considerable le~g,, 0 '&#13;
"marryjng period] d.. g brand of distilled&#13;
I S the ea in 1· t&#13;
In s~ e ' d ·t dominates the is&#13;
spirits is a blend, an w:de margin. In 1967&#13;
of brand sales ~r a cases of spirit blends&#13;
more than 27 m1 io~ket share of 22.6 per&#13;
were sold for af_ma tales in the sale of&#13;
t The top ive s . h'&#13;
cen . y k Pennsylvania, 0 IO, blends are New or_ ' .&#13;
New Jersey ~nd Me1crhta1f!~g to alcoholic&#13;
Any questions P . . eed&#13;
beverages or your entertammg n s,&#13;
write in care of NewsbcopeWhiskey and&#13;
Next Week: Bur on&#13;
Tennessee Whiskies.&#13;
To Present Paper&#13;
Erik Forrest, associate p~ofessor _of a~t&#13;
t the University of Wisconsm-Parks1de, IS&#13;
a t· g a paper this week before the&#13;
presen m · I s · ty&#13;
Id congress of the Internabona oc1e&#13;
;o~ducation Through Art in Lo~don.&#13;
Forrest's paper is titled, "Art ma NE:w&#13;
University: Theoretical Problems. m&#13;
Devising a New Art and Art Education&#13;
Program".&#13;
film Society&#13;
Pia ns Season&#13;
Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, w. C&#13;
Fields and Peter Sellers star in five sho i&#13;
comic films to be shown at 8 p.m. W~.&#13;
nesday in Room 103, Greenquist Hall a&#13;
the Parkside Film Society opens its sec'on~&#13;
season.&#13;
Chaplin appears in two films: "The&#13;
Rink" (1916?, w~ere he demonstrates his&#13;
agility a~ waiter who spends his lunch&#13;
hour at a roller-skating rink, and "Th&#13;
Cure" (1917?, whi~h shows what happen:&#13;
when Chaplm arrives at a spa to take a&#13;
rest cure, accompanied ?Y a trunkful or&#13;
liquor that gets dumped mto the resort's&#13;
restorative waters.&#13;
Keaton plays in "Cops" and Fields is in&#13;
"The Pharmacist". Peter Sellers stars in&#13;
"The Case of the Mukkinese Battle Horn" a spoof of British detective stories. '&#13;
Admission to the films is 50 cents.&#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;
RENT BMM OLD TIME MOVIES&#13;
HOME MOVIES&#13;
LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SIient and Sound Projectors&#13;
CAI RO CAM ERA SHOP&#13;
5815 - llTH AVENUE&#13;
KENOSHA, WIS.53140&#13;
Parkside's&#13;
NEWSCOPE&#13;
1C Complete news coverage of campus events&#13;
* Photos of events and personalities&#13;
1C Advertising of interest to all students&#13;
* Coverage of national news of student intereSI&#13;
Coming Next Week: New Feature Page with Events&#13;
Calendar and listing of Area Things-to-Doi &#13;
PARKSIDE SOCCER&#13;
FULL OF MUSCLE&#13;
coach Jim Gibson predicts the Ranger ThParksideplayed Notre Dame on Sept. 20.&#13;
cef team will surprise most teams., e Parkside team did a fine job tying&#13;
s~ should be true in view of Parkside's 1- Notre .name O~Owith ten tough minutes of&#13;
T IScord in its first season. According to overtime. Coach Gibson stated that&#13;
~ rech Gibson this year's team should be Charles Lees did an outstanding job as&#13;
oatimes better. The main reason is this goal. keeper. Tony Kriedel also did ext:'r's&#13;
strong defence. But with the team ceptIonally well playing halfback. Ed St&#13;
~ing better the scheduled meets are also P~ter also started to come around in hi~&#13;
ch tougher than last year. third game of play. Gibson said he showed&#13;
m~ven though Parkside lost its first meet he. was capable of handling his own&#13;
gainst Ottawa, you must account for the posttton.&#13;
~ ct that Ottawa is one of the strongest Coach Gibson also wishes anyone in-&#13;
~ms in the nation. The game was played tere~ted in soccer or wishing to be on the&#13;
onUW·p's newfield on the main campus. varsity Would contact one of the Soccer&#13;
Frank Va)e~ine broke open the players or himself. Coach Gibson can be&#13;
careless 3..0 match 14 minutes into the contacted at the Athletics Office.&#13;
~'rst quarter with a 20-footer for Ottawa.&#13;
F&#13;
"'fteen minutes into th.e second half, S SOCCER&#13;
ed M k G n ept, 30 - UW Green Bay, 3 p.m. Valentine center to 18.0 rgas w 0 Oct. 3 - At Ohio State, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
headed it in from close to give the Kansas Oct. 7 - Illinois-Chicago, 3 p.m.&#13;
school a 2-6 halftime lead. After a Oct. 10 _ At Purdue, 10 a.m.&#13;
scoreless second half, Al Gomez tipped in a Oct. 17 _ Platteville, 2 p.m.&#13;
reboundsbot with two minutes left to play. Oct. 24 - Wisconsin Junior All Stars, 2&#13;
Ottawa got off 16 shots on goal to eight . PC p.m.&#13;
for the Rangers, prompting UW- oach Oct. 31 - At UW-Green Bay, 1:30 p.m.&#13;
Gibson to promise some changes in his&#13;
front four. "Dale Nickel and Stan&#13;
Markovic did all rigbt in the middle but&#13;
we're hadly in need of help on the two&#13;
outside forwards," Gibson said.&#13;
Hanzalik Finishes&#13;
5·8 In Italy&#13;
John Hanzalik showed a record of tbree&#13;
wins against five defeats in epee for the&#13;
United States team as the American&#13;
fencers were eliminated in the first round&#13;
of the World Collegiate Games which&#13;
concluded Sept. 14.&#13;
Hanzalik, a UW-P-junior, was 1-3against.&#13;
Great Britain, who defeated the five man&#13;
U.S. team 10-5, and was 2-2 against Portugal&#13;
as the U.S. beat Portugal 9-5. Hanzalik&#13;
did not fence in the Americans' 14-2&#13;
loss to Italy in the double elimination&#13;
tourney. Along with his 2-3 record in individual&#13;
competition, Hanzalik finished&#13;
with an overall 5-8 record in the games&#13;
which brought 2,000 athletes from 56&#13;
countries together for competition in nine&#13;
sports at Turin, Italy ..Hanzalik had earned&#13;
a berth on the U.S. team by winning the&#13;
national epee trials at Notre Dame last&#13;
spring.&#13;
Russia dominated fencing, winning the&#13;
overall team title and taking all tbree&#13;
individual weapon -championships.&#13;
Hungary and Italy were second and third&#13;
in team competition.&#13;
- World University&#13;
Games Held In Italy&#13;
By COACHLOREN HEIN&#13;
The World University games were held&#13;
inTurin, Italy, from Aug. 28 through Sept.&#13;
6, with 62 countries and 4,000 athletes and&#13;
officials taking part.&#13;
The events were basketball (with the&#13;
USAlosing by six points to Russia for the&#13;
GoldMedal), wa ter polo, volleyball, field&#13;
and track, swimming and diving, gymnastics,&#13;
and fencing. .&#13;
Itwas a great tbrill to represent the USA&#13;
in such an event, especially in the opening&#13;
day ceremonies, which are patterned after&#13;
the Olympics. There were about 50,000&#13;
people in the stadium.&#13;
John Hanzalik UWP student who&#13;
participated in fe~cing at the games, got&#13;
himself into a difficult pool at tbe beginning&#13;
ofthe epee individual competition and&#13;
he lost his first two bouts. Hanzalik won&#13;
the next two and lost the fifth to an Italian&#13;
hy a Score of 5-4 and thus lost the right to&#13;
goup to the next round. This same Italian&#13;
finished second in the epee event, so John&#13;
had lost to one of the best.&#13;
John felt as did the rest of the USA&#13;
fencers, th~t we could have done better if&#13;
we had the opportunity to do more international&#13;
fencing. We really are not as&#13;
bad as the Scores always show, but you&#13;
can't beat experience on the international&#13;
strips.&#13;
The fencers were the only group not to&#13;
have any sort of camp or national ex·&#13;
Perience before they went over. The other&#13;
sPorts had used the money. If we want&#13;
resUlts,we had better pay for it or not go,&#13;
~orthere is no need to look so poor. With&#13;
Justa little experience and national camps&#13;
we can do the job.&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
SHORTS&#13;
For all you hockey fans, this is the year.&#13;
The UW-P now has a hockey club. Last&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 20, the members met and&#13;
elected officers. They are: Bill&#13;
Westerlund, president; Mark Helfrich,&#13;
vice president-secretary; and Tom&#13;
Krimmel, treasurer, The club needs more&#13;
members. They started skating last week.&#13;
You can come out and watch them practice&#13;
at Wilson Park in Milwaukee (27th&#13;
street and Howard avenue) at 10 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday nights.&#13;
The club will be one of four competing in&#13;
the Wilson league this year. Marquette,&#13;
Whitewater and Milwaukee School of&#13;
Engineering are the other three hockey&#13;
teams ..&#13;
+ + +&#13;
In the line of intramurals, Parkside has&#13;
new members on the intramural staff. Jim&#13;
Kock will help run the Kenosha Intramurals&#13;
with Vic Godfrey. On the&#13;
Racine campus, Bill Ballester with Dick&#13;
Frecka. There are many things coming up&#13;
with the intramural program.&#13;
The Racine bowling league will start on&#13;
Sept. 30. Any other people interested&#13;
should contact Coach Frecka in Racine at&#13;
Rm. 303. The Kenosha Bowlers who wish to&#13;
start a bowling league should contact&#13;
Coach Koch in Rm. 44 at Kenosha or Vic&#13;
Godfrey at the Wood Road campus.&#13;
The Powder Puff Foothallieague, which&#13;
consists of two teams (one each from&#13;
Kenosha and Racine) will have games&#13;
scheduled to challenge each other and any&#13;
other girls wishing to join in the ~un of the&#13;
game. Contact the intramural director of&#13;
your campus. KTI has challenged the&#13;
Parkside All Star powder puff team to a&#13;
game which hasn't yet been scheduled.&#13;
INTERESTED? Then contact Coaches&#13;
Koch Batlester or Godfrey. There are&#13;
. many male volunteers to coach the teams.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Plans are underway to conduct an intramural&#13;
archery tourney at the Wood&#13;
Road campus. .&#13;
There will also be an open golf and tenms&#13;
tourney which will include participation by&#13;
students, faculty and staff.&#13;
Ranger Cage Season&#13;
features 26 Games&#13;
The University of Wisconsin+Parkside's&#13;
1970-71basketball schedule announced by&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens will find the&#13;
Rangers meeting 23 different opponents as&#13;
part of a as-game schedule which includes&#13;
two Christmas tournaments in Virginia&#13;
and South Dakota.&#13;
Eleven of the games will be played at&#13;
home, which means high school sites in&#13;
Kenosha and Racine counties since UWP's&#13;
physical education facility will not be&#13;
completed this season. Five contests will&#13;
'be played at St. Joseph's in Kenosha, four&#13;
at Case in Racine, and one each at Salem&#13;
Central and Union Grove.&#13;
Parkside, an independent which was 11·&#13;
10 in its first season of varisty play, will&#13;
meet 12 opponents for the first time, including&#13;
the Swedish national team which&#13;
will be touring the United States; Wayne&#13;
State University of Detroit; Northern&#13;
Michigan University, Marquette;&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee;&#13;
University of Missouri-St. Louis; Prudue&#13;
University-North Central, Westville, Ind.;&#13;
and Xavier College, Chicago.&#13;
Parkside will play three games in the&#13;
eight-team Quantico, Va., Marine Invitational&#13;
Tournament Dec. 17-19, and two&#13;
games in the Dakota Wesleyan Invitational&#13;
Dec. 30-31in the Mitchell, S.D.,&#13;
Corn Palace. Parkside's opening Quantico&#13;
game will be against New York Slate at&#13;
Old Westbury, followed by either North&#13;
Carolina A &amp; T or Greensboro or Marist&#13;
College, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Pairings are&#13;
incomplete for the Wesleyan Invitational,&#13;
which will include the host school,&#13;
LaCrosse (Wis.) State University and&#13;
Northwestern College, Orange City, Iowa.&#13;
Parkside will open at Xavier Dec, 1 and&#13;
at home Dec. 4 against Purdue-North&#13;
Central in Kenosha. Other Kenosha games&#13;
will be against UW·Green Bay, Southern&#13;
Bill Ballester - Parkside gymnastics&#13;
coach - Fred Dennis . national rings&#13;
champion from Waukegan, Illinois, and&#13;
Parkside coach in the Philippines and Col.&#13;
DeBorja - president of Philippine AAA and&#13;
undersecretary for Education.&#13;
Cross Country Opener Saturday&#13;
Tbe Ranger Cross Country team opens&#13;
the 1970 season Sept. 26 at WSUWhitewater&#13;
against the bost school, WSUPlatteville&#13;
WSU-Oshkosh and national&#13;
power Augustana of Illinois.&#13;
Freshmen will head this year's squad&#13;
with Mike DeWitt of Kenosha back from&#13;
last year's squad. To~ranked rearhngs&#13;
include Rick Lund and Chuck DIttman of&#13;
Marinette. Both ranked among the top&#13;
milers in the sta te last sprmg. .&#13;
St Catherine's heralded Tim McGllsky&#13;
and 'State B mile and X-C c~mplon Jim&#13;
M Fadden will also be on dIsplay.&#13;
~cFadden's running mate, Gary Lanc~,&#13;
n Wagner of York high ~chool m&#13;
~17~~~hare high school t:~:~~~~l~ur;e~&#13;
collegiate X·C runners&#13;
this well-balanced squad. k&#13;
Keith Merritt, a Tremper ru~er, Mar&#13;
C&#13;
d from Racine Case and Jim Bark of&#13;
onra h freshmen.&#13;
R~~i;r~ ~~~~i:~~, .= veteran ro~ddr:~&#13;
from Dayton, Ohl&#13;
t&#13;
0, I~ ' n~n:pe~peration.&#13;
this, fall due 0&#13;
Cross Country Schedule&#13;
Sept. 26 - Whitewaler, Oshkosh, Platteville,&#13;
Augustana, Parks Ide at&#13;
Whitewater, 11 a.m.&#13;
Oct. 3 - UW-Milwaukee at Milwaukee&#13;
Esterbrook Park, 10 a.m.&#13;
Oct. 10 - Platteville Invitational at&#13;
Platteville, 11:30 a.m.&#13;
Oct. 13 - Platteville, Dominican at home,&#13;
4 p.m.&#13;
Oct. 17 - Open&#13;
Oct. 20 - Open&#13;
Oct. 24· Marquette - 5 miles, at home, 11&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Oct. 31- Loras - 4 miles, at home, 11:30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Nov. 7 - Mid-American·6 miles, home, 8&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Nov. 14 - Central Collegiates, Southern&#13;
Illinois, Carbondale.&#13;
Nov. 21 - NAIA - 5 miles, Kansas City,&#13;
Mo.&#13;
Nov. 2:l - National AAU . 6 miles,&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Illinois-Edwardsville, Lakeland ollege of&#13;
Sheboygan and Northeastern Illmois State&#13;
of Chicago. Racine contests will include&#13;
the Swedish team, Xavier, Lakehead&#13;
University or Port Arthur, Ontario. and&#13;
Northland College of Ashland. UWP Will&#13;
meet Milton College at Union Grove and&#13;
Hope College of Holland. Mich, at Salem&#13;
Central.&#13;
Other opponents will be DOminican&#13;
College, Racine, Grand Valley State&#13;
College, Allendale. Mich.. and Lake Forest&#13;
(Ill.) College, all in road games.&#13;
Basketball Schedule&#13;
Dec. 1 • at Xavier (Chicago), 8 p.rn&#13;
Dec. 4 - Prudue-North Central, St.&#13;
Joseph's H.S.&#13;
Dec. 5 - Swedish National Team. Case&#13;
H.S.&#13;
Dec. 8 . at Northern Michigan. 8 p.m&#13;
Dec. 12 - UW-Green Bay, St. Joseph's&#13;
Dec. 17-19 - Quantico, Va., Invitational&#13;
Dec. 23 - Southern Illinois-Edwardsville,&#13;
St. Joseph's&#13;
Dec. 30-31 - Dakota Wesleyan lnvitational&#13;
at Mitchell, S.D.&#13;
Jan. 6 • Millon, Union Grove H.S.&#13;
Jan. 9 - Lakehead. Case&#13;
Jan. t2 - N.E. Illinois State, t. Joseph's&#13;
Jan. 16 - at Wayne State, 8 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 19 • at Dominican. 8 p.rn.&#13;
Jan. 30 - Hope, salem Central HS&#13;
Feb. 1 - at Grand Valley State (Mich.!. 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Feb. 6 - at Lake Forest, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 9 - at UW-Green Bay, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 13 - at UW-Milwaukee, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 16 . Xavier, Case&#13;
Feb. is - Lakeland, St. Joseph's&#13;
Feb. 23 - Northland, Case&#13;
Feb. 26 - at Missouri-St. Louis. 8 p.m&#13;
Feb. 27 • at Southern HhnoisEdwardsville.&#13;
8 p.m.&#13;
(All home games begin at8 p.rn.!&#13;
FENCING PRACTICE&#13;
For All&#13;
New Students&#13;
Start Immediately&#13;
See Cooch Hein in basement of&#13;
Kenosha Campus&#13;
Any Afternoon F,om 1:00 till 5:00&#13;
POWER&#13;
Automotive &amp; Speed Shop&#13;
201252nd&#13;
"First and Finest&#13;
In Speed"&#13;
O",en Saturdays&#13;
9 A.M. to Noon&#13;
fo:' Your Convenience&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FREE CHECKI NG&#13;
ACCOUNTS TO STUDENTS&#13;
ANO RETIREES&#13;
3928 Sixtieth StTe.,t&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
PARKSIDE SOCCER&#13;
FULL OF MUSCLE&#13;
coach Jim Gibson predicts the Ranger Parkside played Notre Dame on Sept 20 er team will surprise most teams.•. The Parkside team did a fine job tying&#13;
}~c should be true in view of Parkside's 1- Notre _Dame o-o with ten tough minutes of&#13;
15cord in its first season. According to overtime. Coach Gibson stated that&#13;
~ rech Gibson this year's team should be Charles Lees did an outstanding job as&#13;
oa times better. The main reason is this goal_ keeper. Tony Kriedel also did exte;r's&#13;
strong defence. But with the team ceptionally well playing halfback. Ed St.&#13;
~ing better the scheduled meets are also P~ter also started to come around in his&#13;
ch tougher than last year. third game of play. Gibson said he showed&#13;
m~ven though Parkside lost its first meet he . ~as capable of handling his own gainst Ottawa, you must account for the position. f ct that Ottawa is one of the strongest Coach _Gibson also wishes anyone int:ams&#13;
in the nation. The game was played tere~ted m soccer or wishing to be on the&#13;
0 UW-P's new field on the main campus. varsity would contact one of the soccer&#13;
°ሬ Frank Vale.!1,ine broke open the players or himself. Coach Gibson can be&#13;
coreless 3-0 match 14 minutes into the contacted at the Athletics Office.&#13;
:irst quarter with a 20-footer for Ottawa.&#13;
Fifteen minutes into the second half, Sept. 30 _ UW sg~~~:ay, 3 p.m.&#13;
Valentine centered to Misko Grgas who Oct. 3 - At Ohio State, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
headed it in from close to give the Kansas Oct. 7 - Illinois-Chicago, 3 p.m.&#13;
school a 2-0 halftime lead. After a Oct. 10 - At Purdue, 10 a.m.&#13;
scoreless second half, Al Gomez tipped in a Oct. 17 - Platteville, 2 p.m.&#13;
rebound shot with two minutes left to play. Oct. 24 - Wisconsin Junior All Stars 2&#13;
Ottawa got off 16 shots on goal to eight , . U C h p.m. for the Rangers, promptmg W-P oac Oct. 31 - At UW-Green Bay, 1:30 p.m. Gibson to promise some changes in his&#13;
front four. "Dale Nickel and Stan&#13;
Markovic did all right in the middle but&#13;
we're badly in need of help on the two&#13;
outside forwards," Gibson said.&#13;
Hanzalik Finishes&#13;
5-8 In Italy&#13;
John Hanzalik showed a record of three&#13;
wins against five defeats in epee for the&#13;
United States team as the American&#13;
fencers were eliminated in the first round&#13;
of the World Collegiate Games which&#13;
concluded Sept. 14.&#13;
Hanzalik, a UW-P-jonior, was 1-3 against -&#13;
Great Britain, who defeated the five man&#13;
U.S. team 10-5, and was 2-2 against Portugal&#13;
as the U.S. beat Portugal 9-5. Hanzalik&#13;
did not fence in the Americans' 14-2&#13;
loss to Italy in the double elimination&#13;
tourney. Along with his 2-3 record in individual&#13;
competition, Hanzalik finished&#13;
with an overall 5-8 record in the games&#13;
which brought 2,000 athletes from 56&#13;
countries together for competition in nine&#13;
sports at Turin, Italy. Hanzalik had earned&#13;
a berth on the U.S. team by winning the&#13;
national epee trials at Notre Dame last&#13;
spring.&#13;
Russia dominated fencing, winning the&#13;
overall team title and taking all three&#13;
individual weapon championships.&#13;
Hungary and Italy were second and third&#13;
in team competition.&#13;
, World University&#13;
Games Held In lta ly&#13;
By COACH LOREN HEIN&#13;
The World University games were held&#13;
in Turin, Italy, from Aug. 28 through Sept.&#13;
6, with 62 countries and 4,000 athletes and&#13;
officials taking part.&#13;
The events were basketball (with the&#13;
USA losing by six points to Russia for the&#13;
Gold Medal), water polo, volleyball, field&#13;
and track, swimming and diving, gymnastics,&#13;
and fencing. .&#13;
SPORTS&#13;
SHORTS&#13;
For all you hockey fans, this is the year.&#13;
The UW-P now has a hockey club. Last&#13;
Sunday, Sept. 20, the members met and&#13;
elected officers. They are: Bill&#13;
Westerlund, president; Mark Helfrich,&#13;
vice president-secretary; and Tom&#13;
Krimmel, tre·asurer. The club needs more&#13;
members. They started skating last week.&#13;
You can come out and watch them practice&#13;
at Wilson Park in Milwaukee (27th&#13;
street and Howard avenue) at 10 p.m.&#13;
Tuesday nights.&#13;
The club will be one of four competing in&#13;
the Wilson league this year. Marquette,&#13;
Whitewater and Milwaukee School of&#13;
Engineering are the other three hockey&#13;
teams . .&#13;
+ + +&#13;
In the line of intramurals, Parkside has&#13;
new members on the intramural staff. Jim&#13;
Kock will help run the Kenosha Intramurals&#13;
with Vic Godfrey. On the&#13;
Racine campus, Bill Ballester with Dick&#13;
Frecka. There are many things coming up&#13;
with the intramural program.&#13;
The Racine bowling league will start on&#13;
Sept. 30. Any other people interested&#13;
should contact Coach Frecka in Racine at&#13;
Rm. 303. The Kenosha Bowlers who wish to&#13;
start a bowling league should contact&#13;
Coach Koch in Rm. 44 at Kenosha or Vic&#13;
Godfrey at the Wood Road campus.&#13;
The Powder Puff Football league, which&#13;
consists of two teams (one ea~h from&#13;
Kenosha and Racine) will have games&#13;
scheduled to challenge each other and any&#13;
other girls wishing to join in the fun of the&#13;
game. Contact the intramural director of&#13;
your campus. KTI has challenged the&#13;
Parkside All Star powder puff team to a&#13;
game which hasn't yet been scheduled.&#13;
INTERESTED? Then contact Coaches&#13;
Koch, Ba1lester or Godfrey. There are&#13;
many male volunteers to coach the teams.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Plans are underway to conduct an intramural&#13;
archery tourney at the Wood&#13;
Road campus. . There will also be an open golf and tenms&#13;
tourney which will include participation by&#13;
students, faculty and staff.&#13;
Ranger Cage Season&#13;
features 26 Games&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside's&#13;
1970-71 basketball schedule announced by&#13;
Coach Steve Stephens will find the&#13;
Rangers meeting 23 different opponents as&#13;
part of a 26-game schedule which includes&#13;
two Christmas tournaments in Virginia&#13;
and South Dakota.&#13;
Eleven of the games will be played at&#13;
home, which means high school sites in&#13;
Kenosha and Racine counties since WP's&#13;
physical education facility will not be&#13;
completed this season. Five contests will&#13;
·be played at St. Joseph's in Kenosha, four&#13;
at Case in Racine, and one each at Salem&#13;
Central and Union Grove.&#13;
Parkside, an independent which was 11-&#13;
10 in its first season of varisty play, will&#13;
meet 12 opponents for the first time, including&#13;
the Swedish national team which&#13;
will be touring the United States; Wayne&#13;
State University of Detroit; Northern&#13;
Michigan University, Marquette :&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee :&#13;
Univershy of Missouri-St. Louis; Prudue&#13;
University-North Central, Westville, Ind.,&#13;
and Xavier College, Chicago.&#13;
Parkside will play three games in the&#13;
eight-team Quantico, Va., Marine Invitational&#13;
Tournament Dec. 17-19, and two&#13;
games in the Dakota Wesleyan Invitational&#13;
Dec. 30-31 in the Mitchell, S D .&#13;
Corn Palace. Parkside's opening Quantico&#13;
game will be against New York State at&#13;
Old Westbury, followed by either orth&#13;
Carolina A &amp; T or Greensboro or Marist&#13;
College, Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Pairings are&#13;
incomplete for the Wesleyan Invitational,&#13;
which will include the host school,&#13;
Lacrosse (Wis.) State University and&#13;
Northwestern College, Orange City, Iowa.&#13;
Parkside will open at Xavier Dec, l and&#13;
at home Dec. 4 against Purdue-North&#13;
Central in Kenosha. Other Kenosha games&#13;
will be against UW-Green Bay, Southern&#13;
Bill Ballester - Parkside gymnastics&#13;
coach - Fred Dennis - national rings&#13;
champion from Waukegan, Illi~ois, and&#13;
Parkside coach in the Philippines and Col.&#13;
DeBorja - president of Philippine AAA and&#13;
undersecretary for Education.&#13;
Ilhnoi ·-Edwardsville , Lake! nd Coll ' of&#13;
heboygan and :-:orthea t rn lllinoi t t&#13;
of Chicago. Racine cont t will includ&#13;
the wedish team, Xa,; r, Lak h • d&#13;
niver ·ity of Port Arthur, Ontario, and&#13;
• 'orthland Colleg of A hland WP ~,ll&#13;
meet Milton College at mon Grov • and&#13;
Hope College of Holland, :\1ich .. at al m&#13;
Central.&#13;
Other opponents will be Dominican&#13;
College, Racine, Grand Valley tat&#13;
College, Allendale, Mich., and Lak 1-'or t&#13;
&lt;Ill.&gt; Colle&amp;e, all m road gam .&#13;
Ba kelball ·chedule&#13;
Dec. 1 - al Xavier &lt;Chicago), 8 p.m.&#13;
Dec. 4 - Prudue- orth Central, t.&#13;
Joseph's H.S.&#13;
Dec 5 wedi h National Team, as&#13;
H.&#13;
Dec 8 - at orth rn Michigan. 8 p.m.&#13;
Dec. 12 - W-Green Ba . l. Jo cph'&#13;
Dec. 17-19 . Quantico, Va .. Invitational&#13;
Dec. 23 - outh rn Illinoi -Edward ·ville.&#13;
St. Joseph's&#13;
Dec. 30-31 - Dakota Wes! yan In·&#13;
vitational at :\1 itchell. D&#13;
Jan. 6 - Milton, ·mon Gro,e H ..&#13;
Jan. 9 - Lakehead.&#13;
Jan. 12 - .E. llhno1&#13;
Jan. 16 - at Wayne tale , 8 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 19 - at Dom1mcan, 8 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 30 - Hope, Salem Central H&#13;
F'eb. l - al Grand Valley late ( Mich ). 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
Feb. 6 - at Lake For ·t. 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 9 - at W-Green Bay, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 13 - at \\'-Milwaukee, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 16 - Xavier, Ca e&#13;
Feb. 19 - Lakeland, t. Jo eph' ·&#13;
Feb. 23 - orthland, Ca ·e&#13;
Feb. 26 - at Mi oun- t Loui , 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 27 - at ou them I II I noi&#13;
Edward ville, 8 p.m.&#13;
&lt;All home game begin at Sp m.l&#13;
FENCING PRACTICE&#13;
For All&#13;
New Students&#13;
Start Immediately&#13;
See Cooch Hein in ba sement of&#13;
Kenosha Campus&#13;
Any Afternoon From 1:00 till 5:00&#13;
POWER&#13;
Automotive &amp; Speed Shop&#13;
2012 52nd&#13;
"First and Finest&#13;
In Speed"&#13;
Oµen Saturdays&#13;
9 A.M. to Moon&#13;
It was a great thrill to represent the USA fo· Your Convenience&#13;
in such an event, especially in the opening&#13;
day ceremonies, which are patterned after&#13;
the Olympics. There were about 50,000&#13;
people in the stadium.&#13;
Cross Country Opener Saturday&#13;
John Hanzalik, UWP student who&#13;
~rticipated in fencing at the games, ~ot&#13;
himself into a difficult pool at the begmning&#13;
of the epee individual competition and&#13;
he lost his first two bouts. Hanzalik won&#13;
the next two and lost the fifth to an Italian&#13;
by a score of 5-4 and thus lost the right to&#13;
go up to the next round. This same Italian&#13;
finished second in the epee event, so John&#13;
had lost to one of the best.&#13;
John felt, as did the rest of the USA&#13;
fencers, that we could have done better_ if&#13;
we had the opportunity to do more mternational&#13;
fencing. We really are not as&#13;
bad as the scores always show, but you&#13;
can't beat experience on the international&#13;
strips.&#13;
The fencers were the only group not to&#13;
have any sort of camp or national experience&#13;
before they went over. The other&#13;
sports had used the money. If we want&#13;
results, we had better pay for it or not ~o,&#13;
~or there is no need to look so poor. With&#13;
JU5t a little experience and national camps&#13;
we can do the job.&#13;
The Ranger Cross Country team opens&#13;
the 1970 season Sept. 26 at WSUWhitewater&#13;
against the host school, ~SUPlatteville,&#13;
WSU-Oshk?sh_ and national&#13;
power Augustana of Illm01s.&#13;
Freshmen }Vill head this year's squad&#13;
with Mike DeWitt of Kenosha back f~om&#13;
last year's squad. Top-ranked rearhngs&#13;
include Rick Lund and Chuck Dittman of&#13;
Marinette. Both ranked a~ong the top&#13;
milers in the state last sprmg. .&#13;
St Catherine's heralded Tim M~G1ls~y&#13;
and ·state B mile and X-C c~amp1on Jim&#13;
M Fadden will also be on display.&#13;
~cFadden's running mate, Gary Lane~,&#13;
nd John Wagner of York hi~h school m&#13;
fmnois are high school tw~:~l~~~l~urh:~&#13;
collegiate X-C runners w&#13;
this well-balanced squad. k&#13;
Keith Merritt, ~ Trcempe;n~u.;¥1:\3::::f&#13;
Conrad from Racme ase . d ut the freshmen.&#13;
RaJcme ;'t~:1chi':ison, a veteran road runner erry . . not expected to run from Daytodn, Ohito, I~ knee operation. this fall ue 0&#13;
Cross Country Schedule&#13;
Sept. 26 - Whitewater, Oshkosh, Platteville,&#13;
Augustana, Parkside at&#13;
Whitewater, 11 a.m. Oct. 3 - UW-Milwaukee at Milwaukee&#13;
Esterbrook Park, 10 a.m. Oct. 10 - Platteville Invitational at&#13;
Platteville, 11 :30 a .m. Oct. 13 - Platteville, Dominican at home,&#13;
4 p.m.&#13;
Oct. 17 - Open&#13;
Oct. 20 - Open&#13;
Oct. 24 - Marquette - 5 miles, at home, 11&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Oct. 31 - Loras - 4 miles, at home, 11 :30&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Nov. 7 - Mid-American - 6 miles, home, 8&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Nov. 14 - Central Collegia tes, Southern&#13;
Illinois, Carbondale.&#13;
Nov. 21 - NAIA - 5 miles, Kansas City,&#13;
Mo.&#13;
Nov. 27 - National AAU - 6 miles,&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FREE CHECK/ NG&#13;
ACCOUNTS TO STUDENTS&#13;
AND RETIREES&#13;
8928 Sbtieth StTeet&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
-&#13;
Plans Made&#13;
For Counter&#13;
Demonstration&#13;
R) 'ICK Oe~1IRTI:-;O&#13;
Colle-gf'Press Sen iceII&#13;
ASHII"GTQN,(CPS. - Forces are&#13;
consobdanng here to plan some sort of&#13;
action against the scheduled appearance&#13;
of South vretnarocse Vice President&#13;
.\gu~ en Cue Kyat a pre-war rally in&#13;
\\ nshington on October 3&#13;
K~'s plans "ere first announced on Sept.&#13;
~ b\ Carl Mclntire. a right-wing funda~t.'nlalist&#13;
radio preacher from New&#13;
Jer- £'\ wno I. planning the Victory in&#13;
\'1{'tn~lm rally. similar to one he organized&#13;
1.1""/\prtl&#13;
Tht.' 1'\1'(00 Administration. as reported&#13;
b~ the \\ ashmgton commercial press. was&#13;
.111atlun-v wh n the announcement was&#13;
made I"oi only did they claim they knew&#13;
oolhlnJ{ about It, but they were pretty&#13;
much a~alJ~t It the event gives the anti-&#13;
'A.tf movement u ready- made organizing&#13;
IXIIIlt for C~lrly fall ..icuons.&#13;
Furth rmore. It may louse up Nixon's&#13;
(k'h(;uu'IMl~,n(.'(' be hope. to project in the&#13;
upcon\ln~ xovcmber Congrcssional&#13;
('It'(,'lltlll!') 11 ImlY be hard tor Nrxon to&#13;
tum llll"e.' people he.' IS really workmg Ior&#13;
IA',u:t' ITI Scuthenxt t\~la wuh :\1~lfshall Ky&#13;
~I\ lIlK war rally speeches on the&#13;
J~n':~m.lt'nl·sback sl eps&#13;
Both . lr lunre and Ky han' issued&#13;
t ..uenu-nts \('rlfyulg the ongll1ally anneuncvd&#13;
pluns. In spite nf reported Adtnllu~lr&#13;
..lIun prt' :-ourt'for Ky 10 c.Uleel out.&#13;
\\ ••shln~lon .lft'a anll·war ~roups have&#13;
l'Il()\j~h ('4.1011(.14.,'11(; • In lhl' ('venl to begin&#13;
pl.lns fClf ,ll'ounlt'r·drmonstral1on Durmg&#13;
Un' \.\.\'('k H( St'pl 14 ..It least five major&#13;
purllllils ul ani I \\ i.lr movcment held&#13;
nH'('lIn~s Tht, groups ranged from&#13;
Oloch:r&amp;.llt.·Iltwr••ls 10 radIcals, including&#13;
('11\\\.Idt, SllItlt'nl '!obilization Committee&#13;
illltl (lUH:r rl'pr('':''('lltatl\'es from D.C&#13;
,,;ollt,~{,s,' ('ontinulng Presence In&#13;
\\ ......hlll~lon la pcace lobbying coalition&gt;.&#13;
S.\:'\t-: and ttl&lt;.' BUSIIlCSS Executives Move&#13;
rorVlctllamPace,theViet~mVeterans&#13;
fur p(' •.1«':(', :md a group of local radicals&#13;
IIKlu(hng Chicago £lght defendant Rennie&#13;
DaVIS&#13;
Most of th('S(' groups want to coodinate&#13;
the plan~ that have already been made. A&#13;
mass meeting to clarify strategy was&#13;
schC'duled for Monday night (September&#13;
21l, after which the call will be made for&#13;
whatcver kind of action is chosen.&#13;
The most likely course of action will&#13;
probably include these features·&#13;
• As large an action as possible, but&#13;
. ta~ed to a\'oid the inevitable crowd&#13;
comparison with the right-wing demonstrahon&#13;
Mcintire mobilized only 15,000&#13;
Ill. I April, hUI that was without Ky's&#13;
presrnc{' And anti-war forces don't have&#13;
much time to coodlOate a national effort&#13;
• The major brunt of leadership would&#13;
have 10 come from the local D.C. people.&#13;
Thi~ tactic has been endorsed by two&#13;
nalionaJ anti-war co..1.litions, the alional&#13;
Pcae(' AcltOn Coalition operating out of&#13;
Cleveland, and the newly formed Coalition&#13;
AgalOst War. Racism and Repression,&#13;
'Ahich IS composed mostly of people from&#13;
Ih(' now-defunct New l\lobc.&#13;
• Th(' counter-dcmonstra lion should&#13;
avoid confrontation with the rightwlngen;&#13;
Thl~ waSll't a universally held&#13;
lx'hef. by an~' means, and will probably be&#13;
thr I1ltun issue that could prevent such&#13;
dl\'ers(' e}(~m('nts as the Youth International&#13;
Party and the Business&#13;
EXl'cull,,"~ :'\'01,'(' for Vjetru1m Peace from&#13;
.tppt'arlOg at n prC's.. conference to announ('e&#13;
jomt plans&#13;
VILLAGE INN&#13;
and&#13;
Pancake House&#13;
3619 30th Ave.&#13;
I SUN. 6 a.m.-12 a.m&#13;
FRI. 6 a.m.-1 p.m.&#13;
SAT. 6 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
21 Variety&#13;
of Pancakes&#13;
LUNCH - DINNERS&#13;
Research Institute in&#13;
20th Century History&#13;
"The Archives as a Research In~titutein&#13;
20th Century History" was the t.llIe of a&#13;
paper presented this week by Michael S.&#13;
Holmes, assistant professor of hls.lory at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin~Parkslde.&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT&#13;
OISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62NO ST,&#13;
h joined the Parkside faculty&#13;
Holmes, w 0 a er to the Arlast&#13;
year, delivered the p P onsored&#13;
h. Institute in Allanta, Ga., sp&#13;
~/~~: ~eorgia State Archives and Emory&#13;
UniversIty.&#13;
tIw&#13;
LEADER&#13;
~&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/RACINE&#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;
STEAKS&#13;
658-1966&#13;
1212, 58th ST. KENOSHA, WIS.&#13;
Coming ... This Fri. &amp; Sat.&#13;
October 2nd and 3rd&#13;
"Wisconsin's mot most Popular and&#13;
Exciting colleg'e nightclub attraction!"&#13;
The&#13;
GREGORY JAMES&#13;
Group&#13;
9:00-1:00&#13;
FDUR SHOWS NIGHTLY&#13;
NEW STUDENT ACTIVITIES BLDG.&#13;
REFRESHMENTSSERVEO --&#13;
ADMISSION: $1.50 WITH PARKSIDE AND WISCONSIN STATE 10&#13;
PIPE SMOKER'S&#13;
Come to Andrea's&#13;
In Kenosha&#13;
• Expert ~ounsetlin9 service'&#13;
• Finest briars including Savinelli's hand&#13;
carved $100 autographe'd rare grain pip"&#13;
• Tobacco humidors ••• pipe racks Including&#13;
our expertly crafted floor cabinet for $125.00&#13;
••• leather pouches •• , pipe tools&#13;
• Turkish water pipes&#13;
• Genuine Andrea Bauer Meerschaums&#13;
• Consul, Ronson, Bentley, Zippo lighters&#13;
• Garcia Vega, Bering, Wm. Allen, Cuesta Reg,&#13;
Cre~e ~e Jamaica, Don Diego, Uhle an'd DomestIc&#13;
CIgars fresh from Our Humidor Room&#13;
• Chess Sets ••• Talbett Silk Tie., •• 3-M Games&#13;
Toilet"es by Dunhill, English leather&#13;
HALLMARK CARDS&#13;
FANNIE MAY&#13;
RUSSELL STOVER CANDIES&#13;
OPENDAILY 9 A.M•• 6 P.M.". FRIDAY&#13;
• • •&#13;
Tobacconist&#13;
Since 1911&#13;
'TIL 9 P.M•••• SUNDAY 10 A.M.· 2 P."'·&#13;
Plans Made&#13;
For Counter&#13;
Demonstration&#13;
I , \ ' I&#13;
1 t of th • {' group: ,, ~mt lo t·oodinate&#13;
th plan that ha\'c already been made A&#13;
ma m t•ting to clarify strategy wa&#13;
chedulcd for '.\londay night &lt; 'eptember&#13;
21 l , aflrr which the call will b made for&#13;
whalc\'Cr kind of action b chosen.&#13;
·1 h m t hk ly t·ourse or action will&#13;
probably include tl1esr features:&#13;
• ,\ J, r •t• n action as posiible. but&#13;
I, ed to avoid the in •vitable crowd&#13;
comp n. on w1th th right-Wm!-( demonlr.&#13;
11011 t\lcl nlire mobilized only 15,000&#13;
la I pril, but that was without Ky's&#13;
pr• nc . ,\ncl anti-war forces don't have&#13;
much tune lo coodmate a national £'£fort&#13;
• Th major brunt or lcadrrship would&#13;
h. ,·c 10 rom from the local D.C. J){'ople.&#13;
Tiu t ctic ha. bl't'n endor ·pd by two&#13;
na&lt;aonal nli-w r co.1lihon.s. the • 'ational&#13;
P Acll n Coalition operating out of&#13;
I ,. I nd. nd !ht• n wlv formed Coalition&#13;
\ gam t \\'or, Hac1sm · and Repres. ion,&#13;
wluch 1. compo. cd most ly of J){'ople from&#13;
th now -d ru,wt :--:cw :\lobe.&#13;
• Thc&gt; t·ounter-d monslration should&#13;
\OICI confront, t10n with the rightw&#13;
11 •t&gt;r. ·1111. \\ a. n'I a umH•rsally held&#13;
h f. hy any nwan . and will probably be&#13;
th m 111 i u that could pren&gt;nl :uch&#13;
d.h clement a. th Youth Intern&#13;
lion, I Parl\· and the Bu. inc ·s&#13;
E Ull\' Mon! for Vat&gt;tnam Peace from&#13;
confcn•nce to anVILLAGE&#13;
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;
SAT. 6 a.m.-2 p.m.&#13;
21 Variety&#13;
of Pancakes&#13;
LUNCH - DINNERS&#13;
. . ed the Parkside faculty&#13;
Holmes, wh? 1omd the paper to the ArR&#13;
h I t·tute ., n last year, ?ehv~reAtlanta Ga., sponsored&#13;
esea re n s I chives Insht~te ~~te Arch,ives and Emory by the Georgia&#13;
20th Century History ,.:Um=·ve=rsi=ty. __ -:::;;-;---1&#13;
" The Archives as a Research In~titute in D aJrfl~iJ..- JID.Lt./JL&#13;
20th Century History" was the t_1tle of a UJ,&#13;
paper presented this week by 11~chael S.&#13;
Holmes. assistant professor of h1s_tory at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
STEAKS.&#13;
KENOSHA'S LARGEST SELECTION&#13;
SPORTING &amp;&#13;
SEA FOOD&#13;
658-1966&#13;
ATHELETIC&#13;
EQUIPMENT 1212 . 58th ST. KENOSHA, WI~~&#13;
DISCOUNT PRICES&#13;
TYSON'S&#13;
SPORTS CENTER&#13;
14TH AVE. AT 62ND ST.&#13;
Coming ... This Fri. &amp; Sat.&#13;
tlw&#13;
LEADER&#13;
Moie&#13;
October 2nd and '3rd&#13;
"Wisconsin's mot most Popular and&#13;
Exciting colleg·e nightclub attraction!"&#13;
DOWNTOWN/ KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/ RACINE&#13;
CHAT&#13;
N&#13;
Cl-iEW&#13;
40th Ave.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
52nd St.&#13;
KENOSHA&#13;
SUN. THRU THURS,&#13;
The&#13;
11 A.M. TILL MIDNITE&#13;
FRI, &amp; SAT. TILL 2 A.M. GREGORY JAMES&#13;
1:iAMBURGERS&#13;
40 &amp; 24(&#13;
SUPER CHEW&#13;
(triple decker}&#13;
55(&#13;
Group&#13;
9:00-1:00&#13;
FOUR SHOWS NIGHTLY&#13;
NEW STUDENT ACTIVITIES BLDG. .,,.&#13;
REFRESHMENTS SERVED&#13;
ADMISSION: $1,50 WITH PARKSIDE AND WISCONSIN STATE ID&#13;
PIPE SMOKER'S • • •&#13;
Come to Andrea's&#13;
In Kenosha&#13;
• Expert counselling serviceTobacconist&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                <text>Parkside's Newscope, Volume 2, Issue 1, September 29, 1970</text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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            <elementTextContainer>
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              <text>SPECIAL REGISTRATION ISSUE&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Sept. 25 - "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance&#13;
Kid" - feature Film&#13;
Sept. 26 - Opening Dance, Activities&#13;
Building&#13;
Sept. 30 - "5 Old-Tyme Classics" (including&#13;
Charlie Chaplin, W. C. Fields&#13;
and the Keystone Cops) - Film Society&#13;
Oct. 9 - "Up the Down Staircase"&#13;
Feature Film&#13;
Oct. 14 - "Sabotage" - Film Society&#13;
Oct. 17 - Multi-Media Symposium on&#13;
Foreign Language Teaching&#13;
Oct. 18- Annie Petit and Keiko Furiyoshi&#13;
- Concert of violin and piano sonatas&#13;
Oct. 23 - "Sex and the Single Girl"&#13;
Feature Film&#13;
Oct. 26 - The Fifth Dimension in concert,&#13;
Case Field House&#13;
Nov. 1 - Carmen Vila - piano concert&#13;
Nov. 4 - "Cahinet of Dr. Caligari" - Film&#13;
Society&#13;
Nov. 6 - "Petulia" - Feature Film&#13;
Nov.13- "None But the Brave" - Feature&#13;
Film&#13;
Nov. 15 - Carmen Vila and Ilona Kcmbrink&#13;
- Concert of international lieder&#13;
Nov. 18 - "Duck Soup" - Film Society&#13;
Nov. 20 - "The Heart is a Lonely Hunter":&#13;
- Feature Film&#13;
Nov. 22 - Keiko Furiyoshi - violin concert&#13;
Dec. 2 - "Ashes and Diamonds" - Film&#13;
Society&#13;
Dec. 6 - Annie Petit - piano concert&#13;
Dec. 11 - "The Ilirds, the Bees, and the&#13;
Italians" - Feature Film .&#13;
Dec. 18 - "You're a Big Boy Now" -&#13;
Feature Film .&#13;
Jan. 8 - "Rachel, Rachel" - Feature Film&#13;
Jan. 10 - James Yoghourtjian - guitar&#13;
concert&#13;
Jan. 13 - "Battle of Algiers" Ftlm&#13;
Soeietv&#13;
Jan. 15 - "Battle of Algiers" Film&#13;
Film&#13;
Jan. 31 - Carmen Vila- piano concert&#13;
Feb. 12 - "Bye, Bye Braverman"&#13;
Feature Film&#13;
Feb. 14 - Gary Kendall concert - opera&#13;
selections&#13;
Feb. 17- "Hiroshima Mon Amour" - Film&#13;
Society&#13;
Feb. 26 - "The Fox" - Feature Film&#13;
Feb. 28 - Annie Petit - piano concert&#13;
Mar. 3 - "400 Blows" - Film Society&#13;
Mar. 12 - "Who's Afraid of Virginia&#13;
Woolf?" - Feature Film&#13;
Mar. 17 - "Viridiana" - Film Society&#13;
Mar. 26 - "Bonnie and Clyde" - Feature&#13;
Film&#13;
Mar. 28 - Keiko Furiyoshi and Annie Petit&#13;
. violin and piano sonatas&#13;
Apr. 7 - "Finnegan's Wake" - Film&#13;
Society&#13;
Apr. 9 - "Bullitt" - Feature Film&#13;
Apr. 23 - "True Grit" . Feature Film&#13;
Apr. 25 - Annie Petit and Carmen Vila,&#13;
piano and percussfon concert - Bartok,&#13;
Brahms, ttachmaninoff '&#13;
Apr. 28 - "The Seventh Seal" - Film&#13;
Society&#13;
Apr. 30 - "Camelot" - Feature Film&#13;
May 7 - "Four for Texas" - Feature Film&#13;
May 11 - "Chicago" in concert, Case&#13;
Field House&#13;
May 24- "Goodbye Col~bus" - Feature&#13;
Film '&#13;
All feature and Film Society films will&#13;
be shown at 8 p.m, in the Activities&#13;
BUilding.&#13;
Vila, Petit Furiyoshi Kombrink,&#13;
Kendall and Y~ghourtjian c~ncerts will be&#13;
beld m Greenquist Hall Concourse&#13;
AUGUST, 1970&#13;
New Activities Building, south of&#13;
Tallent Hall. Workmen are readying the&#13;
pre-fab structure for mid-September&#13;
opening. The GO' x 120' building will house&#13;
grill facilities, lounge areas, pool tables,&#13;
ping-pong and other recreational features.&#13;
Campus film series will be held here, as&#13;
well as dances and coffee house performances&#13;
sponsored by the Student&#13;
Activities Office.&#13;
Incoming freshman listen to junior&#13;
Perry Michalos describe future uses of the&#13;
new Activities Building when they viewed&#13;
it during New Student Orientation activities&#13;
July 26-23 and July 27-30. Approximately&#13;
800 new freshman participated&#13;
in Parkside's first summer&#13;
orientation program.&#13;
Fifth Dimension and&#13;
Chicago 10 be Here&#13;
The Office of Student Activities has .. '..... "&#13;
announced the signing of two nationally&#13;
popular recording groups who will present&#13;
concerts for UW-Parkside during the&#13;
coming year. Appearing will be the Fifth&#13;
Dimension on Monday, October 26 and Chcago&#13;
(formerly: Chicago 'I'r-anait&#13;
Authority) on Tuesday, May 11, 1971.Both&#13;
concerts are scheduled to begin at 8 p.m.&#13;
and will be held at the Racine Case H. S.&#13;
Field House.&#13;
The appearance of The Fifth&#13;
Dimension will be their first in wtsconsin&#13;
since winning this past years top Gramr:ny&#13;
Award for song-of-the-year With&#13;
"Aquarius," They were also selected this&#13;
past year as "Vocal Group of Th.e Year"&#13;
by Billboard and Playboy magazines and FIFTH DIMENSION&#13;
through the Grammy Award selections.&#13;
This trend in winning top awards ~as&#13;
begun in 1967 when their first recording&#13;
"Up, Up and Away" was selected as. songof-the-year.&#13;
Other of their past hits ~-&#13;
elude: "Working on a Groovy ~l~g",&#13;
"Carpet Man", "Stone Soul P~~mc,&#13;
"Wedding Blues", "The Girls Song , and&#13;
"Save the Country" to name a ~ew. ,&#13;
Tickets for the Fifth DU!1ens:l.on&#13;
concerts will go on sale at fall. regl.stration&#13;
at $6.00, $5.00 and $4.00. ThIS Will be a&#13;
restricted sale for parkside students,&#13;
'faculty and staff only ..General sale of any&#13;
remaining tickes Will begm ~onday,&#13;
September 21. f&#13;
The Chicago concert booked or&#13;
second semester will see one of the&#13;
country's fastest rising rock groups ap- CHICAGO&#13;
pearing along with a second group&#13;
UWP Expects&#13;
4,000 Students&#13;
Since 1968, when Parkside "inherited"&#13;
its first students by assuming control of&#13;
the former two-year centers in Kenosha&#13;
and Racine, UWP has led all campuses&#13;
each semester in percentage enroUrnent&#13;
increase over the preceding year.&#13;
Parkside could very well do it again this&#13;
fall.&#13;
Despite the tight economic situation,&#13;
uncertainties regarding the war, higher&#13;
tuition, and other variables which have&#13;
confused the projection picture, Parkside&#13;
enrollment this fall should show another&#13;
wbopping increase - possibly as much as&#13;
30to 40 per cent above last fall when 2,911&#13;
students christened the new Wood Road&#13;
campus.&#13;
That would put the fall enrollment in the&#13;
neighborhood of 4,000 students and keep&#13;
Parkside ahead of original schedule in&#13;
attracting students.&#13;
Registration for the t97()..71school year&#13;
will be held Sept. 15-17in Greenquist Hall,&#13;
with classes beginning Sept. 21.&#13;
Those who have accumulated 48 or more&#13;
credits will register Sept. 15th, those who&#13;
have from 24 to 48 credits the 16th, and&#13;
those who have less than 24, all new freshmen&#13;
and all transfer students the 17th.&#13;
Hours of registration for these groups are&#13;
8:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
Part-time students will register the&#13;
evenings of the 15th and 16th from 6:30 to&#13;
8:30. There will be no evening registration&#13;
on tbe 17th.&#13;
Those registering during the day Sept.&#13;
15-17 should register in the following&#13;
alphabetical order: E-J, 8:30-9:30; K-M,&#13;
9:30-10:30; N-R, 10:30-11:30; S, 1-2; T-Z.2-&#13;
3; and A-D, H.&#13;
Alphabetical registration does not apply&#13;
to part-timers registering evenings.&#13;
Late registration, without penalty, will&#13;
be held Sept. 18 from 8-4 and during the&#13;
first week of classes, Sept. 21-24, from 8-&#13;
8: 30, in the registrar's office in TaUent&#13;
Hall.&#13;
French Ski Trip&#13;
Planned&#13;
An Alpine Ski Trip over semester&#13;
break will be available 10 all Parks ide&#13;
students through the Office of Athletics.&#13;
An Air France 747 charter will leave&#13;
Chicago on January 29, 1971, returning on&#13;
February 7. Price for the 10day lrip is $267&#13;
including tax and service charge. The fee&#13;
covers round-trip night Chicago - Paris -&#13;
Geneva ground transfers, seven nights at&#13;
"Grand Roc" hotel in the ArgenliereChamonix&#13;
Valley. France, one night in&#13;
Paris and multi-lingual guides.&#13;
Argentiere is an Alpine viUage located&#13;
along the Arve River at the base of the&#13;
famous "Grand Montets" ski runs. Only&#13;
munutes from Italy and Switzerland, the&#13;
area is famous for lhe "Monl Blanc",&#13;
highest mountain in Europe 05,500 It.),&#13;
Ski facilities at Argentiere include 8 cable&#13;
cars, 5 gondolas, 3 chairlifts, 16pomas and&#13;
1 cog train. There are trails for novice.&#13;
intermediate and expert skiers. The&#13;
highest run is at 12,600 feet.&#13;
For additional information contact' Vic&#13;
Godfrey at the Parkside Office of&#13;
Athletics. The tour is open to students,&#13;
staff and faculty and members of their&#13;
immediate fam..::i1",ies=-.__&#13;
Free Gift-Pax Kits of leading toilet&#13;
articles will be avallable to Parkside&#13;
students during registration, September&#13;
15-17.&#13;
SPECIAL REGISTRATION ISSUE&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
Sept. 25 - ·"Butch Cassidy and the Sundance&#13;
Kid" - feature Film&#13;
Sept. 26 - Opening Dance, Activities&#13;
Building&#13;
Sept. 30 - "5 Old-Tyme Classics" (including&#13;
Charlie Chaplin, W. C. Fields&#13;
and the Keystone Cops) - Film Society&#13;
Oct. 9 - "Up the Down Staircase" -&#13;
Feature Film&#13;
Oct. 14 - "Sabotage" - Film Society&#13;
Oct. 17 - Multi-Media Symposiwn on&#13;
Foreign Language Teaching&#13;
Oct. 18 - Annie Petit and Keiko Furiyoshi&#13;
- Concert of violin and piano sonatas&#13;
Oct. 23 - "Sex and the Single Girl"&#13;
Feature Film&#13;
Oct. 26 - The Fifth Dimension in concert,&#13;
Case Field House&#13;
Nov. 1 - Carmen Vila - piano concert&#13;
Nov. 4 - "Cabinet of Dr. Caligari" - Film&#13;
Society&#13;
Nov. 6 - "Petulia" - Feature Film&#13;
Nov.13- "None But the Brave" - Feature&#13;
Film&#13;
Nov. 15 - Carmen Vila and Ilona Kornbrink&#13;
- Concert of international lieder&#13;
Nov. 18 - "Duck Soup" - Film Society&#13;
Nov. 20- "The Heart is a Lonely Hunter"·&#13;
- Feature Film&#13;
Nov. 22 - Keiko Furiyoshi - violin concert&#13;
Dec. 2 - "Ashes and Diamonds" · Film&#13;
Society&#13;
Dec. 6 - Annie Petit - piano concert&#13;
Dec. 11 - "The Rirds, the Bees, and the&#13;
Italians" - Feature Film ·&#13;
Dec. 18 - "You're a Big Boy Now" ·&#13;
Feature Film ·&#13;
Jan. 8 - "Rachel, Rachel" - Feature Film&#13;
Jan. 10 - James Yoghourtjian · guitar&#13;
concert&#13;
Jan. 13 - "Battle of Algiers" · Fillf,&#13;
Societv&#13;
Jan. 15 - "Battle of Algiers" • Film&#13;
Film&#13;
Jan. 31 - Carmen Vila- piano concert&#13;
Feb. 12 - "Bye, Bye Braverman"&#13;
Feature Film&#13;
Feb. 14 - Gary Kendall concert - opera&#13;
selections&#13;
Feb. 17 - "Hiroshima Mon Amour" - Film&#13;
Society&#13;
Feb. 26 - "The Fox" - Feature Film&#13;
Feb. 28 - Annie Petit - piano concert&#13;
Mar. 3 - "400 Blows" - Film Society&#13;
Mar. 12 - "Who's Afraid of Virginia&#13;
Woolf?" - Feature Film&#13;
Mar. 17 - "Viridiana" - Film Society&#13;
Mar. 26 - "Bonnie and Clyde" - Feature&#13;
Film&#13;
Mar. 28-Keiko Furiydshi and Annie Petit&#13;
· violin and piano sonatas&#13;
Apr. 7 - "Finnegan's Wake" · Film&#13;
Society&#13;
Apr. 9 - "Bullitt" - Feature Film&#13;
Apr. 23 - "True Grit" - Feature Film&#13;
Apr. 25 - Annie Petit and Carmen Vila,&#13;
piano and percussfon concert - Bartok,&#13;
Brahms, t!.achmaninoff&#13;
Apr. 28 - "The Seventh Seal" · Film&#13;
Society&#13;
Apr. 30 - "Camelot" - Feature Film&#13;
May 7 - "Four for Texas" - Feature Film&#13;
May 11 - "Chicago" in concert, Case&#13;
Field House&#13;
May 24- "Goodbye Colwnbus" - Feature&#13;
Film '&#13;
All feature and Film Society films will&#13;
be shown at 8 p.m. in the Activities&#13;
Building.&#13;
Vila, Petit, Furiyoshi, Kombrink,&#13;
Kendall and Yoghourtjian concerts will be&#13;
held in Greenquist Hall Concourse&#13;
New Activities Building, south of&#13;
Tallent Hall. Workmen are readying the&#13;
pre-fab structure for mid-September&#13;
opening. The 60' x 120' building will house&#13;
grill facilities, lounge areas, pool tables,&#13;
Incoming freshman listen to junior&#13;
Perry Michalos describe future uses of the&#13;
new Activities Building when they viewed&#13;
it during New Student Orientation acAUGUST,&#13;
1970&#13;
ping-pong and other recreational features.&#13;
Campus film series will be held here, as&#13;
well as dances and coffee house performances&#13;
sponsored by the Student&#13;
Activities Office.&#13;
tivities July 20-23 and July 27-30. Approximately&#13;
800 new freshman participated&#13;
in Parkside's first summer&#13;
orientation program.&#13;
Fifth Dimension and&#13;
Chicago to be Here&#13;
The Office of Student Activities has '&#13;
announced the signing of two nationally&#13;
popular recording groups who will present&#13;
concerts for UW-Parkside during the&#13;
coming year. Appearing will be the Fifth&#13;
Dimension on Monday, October 26 and Chcago&#13;
(formerly : Chicago Transit&#13;
Authority) on Tuesday, May 11_, 1971. Both&#13;
concE!rts are scheduled to begm at 8 p.m.&#13;
and will be held at the Racine Case H. S.&#13;
Field House.&#13;
The appearance of The Fif~&#13;
Dimension will be their first in Wisconsm&#13;
since winning this past years top Grami:ny&#13;
Award for song-of-the-year w1t_h&#13;
"Aquarius." They were also selected this&#13;
past year as "Vocal Group of Th_e Year"&#13;
by Billboard and Playboy mag~nes and FIFTH DIMENSION&#13;
through the Grammy Award selections.&#13;
This trend in winning top awards ~as&#13;
begun in 1967 when their first recording&#13;
"Up, Up and Away" was s~lected as_ so~gof-the-year.&#13;
Other of their past hit:, 1;!·&#13;
elude: "Working on a Groovy 1'.h~g,,,&#13;
"Carpet Man", "Stone Soul P~7mc , "Wedding Blues", "The Girls Song , and&#13;
"Save the Country" to name a ~ew. . Tickets for the Fifth Du!1ens~on&#13;
ts will go on sale at fall registration concer . hi .&#13;
11 be at $6.00, $5.00 and $4.00. T_ s WI a restricted sale for Parkside students,&#13;
, faculty and staff only .. Gener3:1 sale of any&#13;
remaining tickes will begm }\1onday •&#13;
September 21.&#13;
The Chicago concert booked for&#13;
second semester will see one of the&#13;
country's fastest rising rock groups ap- CHICAGO&#13;
pearing along with a second group&#13;
UWP Expects&#13;
4,000 Students&#13;
Since 1968, wh n Park id " inherited"&#13;
its fir t tudent by a. wning control of&#13;
the former two-year center in K nosha&#13;
and Racine, UWP ha led all camp&#13;
each emester in perc ntage enrollment&#13;
increase over the preceding year.&#13;
Parkside could very well do it again thi&#13;
fall.&#13;
Despite the tight economic ituation,&#13;
tmcertainties regarding the war, higher&#13;
tuition, and other variable which have&#13;
confused the projection picture, Par ide&#13;
enrollment thi fall hould show another&#13;
whopping increase - po ibly a much a 30 to 40 per cent above la t fall when 2,911&#13;
tudents christened the new Wood Road&#13;
campus.&#13;
That would put the fall enrollm nt m the&#13;
neighborhood of 4,000 tud nts and keep&#13;
Park id ahead of original hedule in&#13;
attracting tud&#13;
Regi tration for th 1970-71 ool y r&#13;
will be held Sept. 15-17 in Gr nqui t Hall,&#13;
with cl e beginning pt. 21.&#13;
Th e who have accwnulated 48 or mor&#13;
credits will register pt. 15th, th who&#13;
have from 24 to 48 cred1 th 16th, and&#13;
th e who have 1 than 24, all n w fresh- men and all transfer tudents the 17th.&#13;
Hours of regi tration for these groups are&#13;
8:30 a.m. - 11 :30 a.m. and 1 p.m. - 4 p.m.&#13;
Part-time tuden will r i t th&#13;
evening of the 15th and 16th from 6:30 to&#13;
8:30. There will be no v rung r i tr tion&#13;
on the 17th. Th regi tering durin the d y pt.&#13;
15-17 hould regi t r in th following&#13;
alphabetical ord r: E·J, 8:30- : ; K·M,&#13;
9:30-10:30; N·R, 10:30-11 :30 ; , 1·2; T-Z, 2·&#13;
3; and A-D, 3-4 .&#13;
Alphabetical r gi tr ti n do n t apply&#13;
to part-time r i l rm v ning. , Late regi tration, without penalt , will&#13;
be held Sept. 18 from 8-4 and during th&#13;
fir t wPek of cl , pt. 21·24, fr m 8-&#13;
8:30, in th r gi trar' offic in Tallent&#13;
Hall.&#13;
French Ski Trip&#13;
Planned&#13;
Free Gift-Pax Kits of leading toilet&#13;
articles will be available to Parkside&#13;
students during registration, September&#13;
15-17. &#13;
Mitchell to&#13;
Washington&#13;
State U.&#13;
Stepnen R, Mitchell, Assistant&#13;
Q1ancellor for Institutional Plans, Policies&#13;
and Development at Parkside, will&#13;
become Dean 01 the College 01 Sciences&#13;
and Arts at Washington State University in&#13;
Pullman, il was announced Aug, 4,&#13;
The selection 01 Mitchell, whose appomtment&#13;
is eflective Sept, I, ends a&#13;
national search lor a dean to head&#13;
Wa hmgton State University's largest&#13;
academic unit. WSU Academic VicePresieent&#13;
Allan H, Smith said in Pullman&#13;
today that he was "very pleased that&#13;
Mllchell has accepted one 01 our most&#13;
Important administrative posts,"&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Irvin G, Wyllie&#13;
id he regretted Mitchell'~ departure but&#13;
said "It is a compliment to us when a&#13;
major umversity canvasses the country&#13;
and recruits a member of our staff for one&#13;
01 us top positions,"&#13;
Mitchell, whose new appointmen!"1llso&#13;
earn Iull professional rank with tenure&#13;
In political science said today that the&#13;
de ision to leave Parkside "was based&#13;
solely on my desire lor a dillerent kind 01&#13;
ndmmi trative experience,"&#13;
Mitchel], 39, quickly estabtished a&#13;
reputation as an usually able and dynamic'&#13;
dmini trator after his appointment as&#13;
Dean 01 the Kenosha Campus in 1967,&#13;
When he was promoted to assistant&#13;
chancellor last year Wyllie said it was in&#13;
recogruuon of his "aggressive leadership&#13;
III Ihe development of UWP's academic&#13;
pmwam, m starr recruiting and in in-&#13;
...ntuuonal planning."&#13;
An assistant chancellor. Mitchell&#13;
ccorctnated and~ implemented policies&#13;
which originated in actions of the&#13;
University Regents, the faculty, the&#13;
Coord mating Council for Higher&#13;
Education, the legislature and other such&#13;
bodies internally, he supervised the&#13;
directors who are responsible (or insututional&#13;
studies, admissions, registrar&#13;
functions, athletics, swnmer session and&#13;
extended day programs aod public information&#13;
and publications.&#13;
Mitchell is returning to the university&#13;
where he began his teaching career in&#13;
1959. He spent seven years at Washington&#13;
State, leaving in 1966 as an associate&#13;
professor in political science to join the&#13;
faculty 01 the University 01 Calgary,&#13;
Alberta, Canada, At Washington State he&#13;
also was affiliate director of the&#13;
Washington Center for Education in&#13;
Politics and directed a slate-wide laculty'&#13;
research project in politics, At Calgary, he&#13;
achieved national attention for his&#13;
analysis of the Canadian Supreme Court.&#13;
Mitchell, who was born in Alliance,&#13;
Ohio, obtained his B. A.. degree, Swnma&#13;
cum Laude, from Western Michigan&#13;
Umversity in 1956. He earned the M. S.&#13;
degree in 1957and the Ph, D, in 1961,both&#13;
in ponuca; science, from The University of&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
Two University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside faculty members, Harry A.&#13;
Walburck and Joseph B_Neville, Jr. have&#13;
written chapters lor a recently published&#13;
textbook titled Germany: Comparative&#13;
Culture and Government.&#13;
Walbruck, associate professor of&#13;
German, "authored a chapter on German&#13;
culture. He is a consulant and editor for&#13;
the National Textbook Co" publishers 01&#13;
the new book.&#13;
Open Letter from a Student&#13;
lew students; &lt;freshman is an idiotic instructors, and ask why. Do not be afraid&#13;
term) to speak your mind. Forget the standard&#13;
ow that you are ready to get down to explanations and make your professors&#13;
the nitty gritty, you will soon be asking teach. It is too easy for them to toss off a&#13;
yourself "Did 1 ever leave high school?" miserabley boring lecture. They have to go&#13;
One of the most disappointing feelings we to work when, because of your interest,&#13;
all gel in the course of our first exposure to they must explain and justify their&#13;
Parkside (rah rahl is that we are in the positions to you. Make them earn their pay&#13;
13th grade, rather than college. The next and you may be surprised to find that you&#13;
question, and the most serious one, is too are benefiting from this challenge.&#13;
"Whal lhe hell am I studying this for?", ,As I browse through the course ofThere&#13;
is a danger here that you may be Iering for the fall semester, I fail to find&#13;
tabeled 'trouble maker', 'lazy', 'un- the course 'Understand University Admotivated',&#13;
or 'immature' by hazarding ministration' offered. This is- loa bad,&#13;
this amount of individual thought. This because. from my observation of the way&#13;
question is guaranteed to come up before new students were treated (or' threatened)&#13;
exams, or at some other crisis in your on their orientation tours, I'm sure that&#13;
"adjustment' to lire in a diploma factory. there are more than a few wondering if big&#13;
The answer is simple. You are studying SO brother isn't already sharpening the axe&#13;
that you may become a workable, taxable for them, In particular, I observed a gro~p&#13;
cHiciency gnome with a white collar, ticky of students being shown the office of&#13;
tacky suburban 'life unit' (complete with student records. The sentiment in the&#13;
backyard barbecue) and a dictated gUide's voice was unmistakable. A rerun&#13;
reqUirement to pollute and consume. of a scene at Auschwitz - the beneficent&#13;
Eltcillng, Isn't it? There is however, a way guard showing the you the showers.&#13;
out. The big hangup is to forget your grand Anyway, you will SOOncome to realize that&#13;
d signs on success, and take each COUrse bureaucrats love to inflate ttreir self&#13;
as it come~. To do this, and derive images. If it is a trifle too expensive to do&#13;
sat isfaction Iand possibly" good grade&gt;, it among their peers in the administration,&#13;
be an Individual. Take issue with your there are all too many students available&#13;
to thrcaten and coerce.&#13;
Psychology professor James Brokaw&#13;
and Director 01 Parkside's gifted student&#13;
program Charles Kugel observe. progress&#13;
01 Oak Creek high school student .Gary&#13;
Heath in learning the operation 01&#13;
psychological study equipment. Heath was&#13;
participating in the Parkside Summer&#13;
Science Institute for high school stud""',&#13;
A 6-week seminar program, in Which&#13;
students. worked individually wilb participating&#13;
professors from their area of&#13;
interest, the institute attracted 46students&#13;
from Racine and Kenosha counties as well&#13;
as southern Milwaukee area.&#13;
Sport Season Opens With&#13;
Soccer Match&#13;
Even before students return to Parkside&#13;
this fall, the UWP sports scene will be off&#13;
and running. The freshly sodded Ranger&#13;
soccer field, complete with bleachers and&#13;
scoreboard, will be the scene of an opening&#13;
match Sept. 11 against Ottawa University&#13;
01 Kansas City,&#13;
The soccer match will open a sports&#13;
season which will see Parkside teams&#13;
meeting major schools from around the&#13;
country. Notre Dame, Purdue and Ohio&#13;
State, for example, are on Jim Gibson's&#13;
soccer team schedule, while Loran Heln's&#13;
fencers, acknowledged as one of the best&#13;
teams in the nation, will be meeting the&#13;
cou~lry's best, including home matches&#13;
against the likes of Wisconsin, Minnesota&#13;
Notre Dame, Missouri, Michigan State and&#13;
Case Western Reserve.&#13;
Sleve Stephens' basketball team will be&#13;
laclOg a tough schedule of top schools,&#13;
IOdudmg Wayne Stale, Northern&#13;
Mlc.hlgan, University of Missouri-St.&#13;
LoU1S, Southern Dlinois~Edwardsville and&#13;
the, SWedish National Olympic team&#13;
dunng "Sportslest" weekend Dec, 5-6, In&#13;
addltIon, the cagers will participate in&#13;
, That's it&#13;
gan~, WrIte us at the paper when you have&#13;
a gnpe or any old thing, we promise to&#13;
revive the yellow press.&#13;
Wily Toad&#13;
December Holiday tournaments in&#13;
Quantico, va. and Mitchell, S,D,&#13;
The wrestlers will be meeting such&#13;
Powers as Western Michigan, Northern&#13;
Michigan and Eastern Illinois, whilethe&#13;
cross country team includes Illinois and&#13;
Northwestern on its schedule.&#13;
Parkside also will host the UnitedStat:&#13;
Track and Field Federation MlAmerican&#13;
"cross country championshiPS&#13;
Nov, 7 on its new three-mile course en&#13;
campus. . a&#13;
The course traverses the campus m&#13;
giant He" from the Athletic House tonear&#13;
the Planning and Construction ollicen0.u;&#13;
of Greenquist Hall, passing west 0&#13;
Greenquist ..The course is never narrower&#13;
than 12feet, with the outward and inbo~&#13;
sections running approximately patallel as&#13;
a quarter-mile distance. Various rout~&#13;
make it a three five or six mile layOU~&#13;
suitable for jogging, hiking '/lIldskUng,a&#13;
well as cross country competition. dbe&#13;
Some 10 acres of playing fields shOu1&#13;
lha&#13;
ready lor Parkside ~tudehts lhis laUWIell&#13;
break from the weatherman. An aras&#13;
south and west 01 the Athletic Office;lO&#13;
seeded this summer and shoul.dsprout inlour&#13;
football-sized playing fIelds lorand&#13;
tram urals, physical education classes&#13;
recreation. lete&#13;
Athletic schedules are not yet co~Pand&#13;
in track, cross country, golf, tenniS&#13;
gymnastics, UWP'~ newest sport.&#13;
Mitchell to&#13;
Washington&#13;
State U.&#13;
Two University of Wisconsin -&#13;
Parkside faculty members, Harry A.&#13;
Walburck and Joseph B. Neville, Jr., have&#13;
written chapters for a recently published&#13;
textbook titled Germany: Comparative&#13;
Culture and Government.&#13;
Walbruck, associate professor of&#13;
German, -authored a chapter on German&#13;
culture. He is a consulant and editor for&#13;
the National Textbook Co., publishers of&#13;
the new book.&#13;
Open Letter from a Student . ·ew tudents: (freshman is an idiotic&#13;
term)&#13;
• ·ow that you are ready to get down to&#13;
th nitt) gritty, you will soon be asking&#13;
) our t'lf " Did I ever leave high school? "&#13;
&lt; 1 of th mo t disappointing feelings we&#13;
all ' t in th cour of our first exposure to&#13;
P rk id &lt; rah rah ) is that we are in the&#13;
I th gr d . rather than college. The next&#13;
qu . lion. and the most serious one, is&#13;
" What th h II am I studying this for?" . Th re 1s a danger h re that you may be&#13;
I b I d 'trouble maker', 'lazy ', 'un11101,vated'&#13;
, or 'immature' by hazarding&#13;
th, mo~nt of individual thought. This&#13;
&lt;1u t1on 1. guarani d to come up before&#13;
l' , rn. , r l some other crisis in your&#13;
· dJu tm nt ' lo life m a diploma factory.&#13;
Th n ~ r i imple. You are studying so&#13;
th:11 }OU may become a workable, taxable&#13;
ffic1 n y gnome with a white collar, ticky&#13;
I ky uburban 'life unit' &lt;complete with&#13;
bnt·kyard barbecue} and a dictated&#13;
r 1mr m nt to pollute and consume. f 111ng, 1. n't 1t? There is however, a way&#13;
out Th big hangup is to forget your grand&#13;
d 1 •n on succ . , and take each cour e&#13;
it come . To do thi . and derive&#13;
II f Clton tand po ibly :t good grade},&#13;
n 1ndi~1du 1. Take i ue with your&#13;
instructors, and ask why. Do not be afraid&#13;
lo speak your mind. Forget the standard&#13;
explanations and make your professors&#13;
teach. It is too easy for them to toss off a&#13;
miserabley boring lecture. They have to go&#13;
to work when, because of your interest,&#13;
they must explain and justify their&#13;
positions to you. Make them earn their pay&#13;
and you may be surprised to find that you&#13;
too are benefiting from this challenge.&#13;
As I browse through the course offering&#13;
for the fall semester, I fail to find&#13;
the course 'Under~tand University Administration'&#13;
offered. This is- too bad&#13;
because from my observation of the way&#13;
new students were treated (or' threatened)&#13;
on their orientation tours, I'm sure that&#13;
there are more than a few wondering if big&#13;
brother isn't already sharpening the axe for them, In particular, I observed a gro~p&#13;
of students being shown the office of&#13;
student records. The sentiment in the&#13;
guide's voice was unmistakable. A rerun&#13;
of a scene at Auschwitz - the beneficent&#13;
guard showing the you the showers.&#13;
Anyway. you will soon come to realize that&#13;
bureaucrats love to inflate their self&#13;
images. If it is a trifle too expensive to do&#13;
it among their peers in the administration&#13;
there are all too many students availabl~&#13;
to threaten and coerce.&#13;
Psychology professor James Brokaw&#13;
and Director of Parkside's gifted student&#13;
program Charles Kugel observe_ progress&#13;
of Oak Creek high school student Gary&#13;
Heath in learning the operation of&#13;
psychological study equipment. Heath was&#13;
participating in the Parkside Summer&#13;
Science Institute for high school students.&#13;
A 6-week seminar program. in which&#13;
students. worked individually with participating&#13;
professors from their area of&#13;
interest, the institute attracted 46 students&#13;
from Racine and Kenosha counties as well&#13;
as southern Milwaukee area.&#13;
Sport Season Opens With&#13;
Soccer Match&#13;
Even before students return to Parkside&#13;
this fall, the UWP sports scene will be off&#13;
and running. The freshly sodded Ranger&#13;
soccer field, complete with bleachers and&#13;
scoreboard, will be the scene of an opening&#13;
match Sept. 11 against Ottawa University&#13;
of Kansas City.&#13;
The socc_er m~tch will open a sports&#13;
season which will see Parkside teams&#13;
meeting major schools from around the&#13;
country. Notre Dame, Purdue and Ohio&#13;
State, for example, are on Jim Gibson's&#13;
soccer team schedule, while Loran Hein's&#13;
fencers, acknowledged as one of the best&#13;
teams in the nation, will be meeting the&#13;
country's best, including home matches&#13;
against the likes of Wisconsin, Minnesota&#13;
Notre Dame, Missouri, Michigan State and&#13;
Case Western Reserve.&#13;
S~eve Stephens' basketball team will be&#13;
~acmg . a tough schedule of top schools, .&#13;
m~lu~mg Wayne State, Northern&#13;
M1c_h1gan, University of Missouri-St.&#13;
Louis, Southern Illinois-Edwardsville and&#13;
the. S";~ish National Olympic team&#13;
dur~n_g Sportsfest" weekend Dec. S-6. In&#13;
addition, the cagers will participate in&#13;
. That's it&#13;
gan~, write us at the paper when you have&#13;
a g~1pe or any old thing, we promise to&#13;
revive the yellow press.&#13;
Wily Toad&#13;
December Holiday tournaments in&#13;
Quantico, Va., and Mitchell, S.D.&#13;
The wrestlers will be meeting such&#13;
powers as Western Michigan, Northern&#13;
Michigan and Eastern Illinois, while the&#13;
cross country team includes Illinois and&#13;
Northwestern on its schedule.&#13;
Parkside also will host the United States&#13;
Track and Field Federation Mid·&#13;
American -cross country championships&#13;
Nov. 7 on its new three-mile course on&#13;
campus.&#13;
The course traverses the campus in a&#13;
giant "C" from the Athletic House to near&#13;
the Planning and Construction office nor~&#13;
of Greenquist Hall, passing west 0&#13;
Greenquist. The course is never narrower&#13;
than 12 feet, with the outward and inbo~&#13;
sections running approximately pru'all~ a&#13;
a quarter-mile distance. Various routingt&#13;
make it a three five or six mile layou '&#13;
suitable for jogging, hiking •and skiing, as&#13;
well as cross country competition. be&#13;
Some 10 acres of playing fiel?5 shoul_d a&#13;
ready for Parkside students this faU wttb ea&#13;
break from the weatherman. An ar as&#13;
south and west of the Athletic Office ~ to&#13;
seeded this summer and should sprout ~nfour&#13;
football-sized playing fields for ~ tramurals, physical education classes a&#13;
recreation. Jete&#13;
Athletic schedules are not yet co~P and&#13;
in track, cross country, golf, tennis&#13;
gymnastics, UWP'~ riewest sport. &#13;
-&#13;
(on leave); Ian Fraser, visiting lecturer,&#13;
art, Homsey College of Art; Shirley&#13;
Fraser, instructor, chemistry, (on leave);&#13;
Karen FugUe, instructor, French,&#13;
Marquette University; Ronald Gatterdam,&#13;
asst. prof'., mathematics&#13;
University of California, Irvine; Alm~&#13;
~rge •.lecturer, life science, Marquette&#13;
.University; Carole Gottlieb instructor&#13;
English, University ofWa~gton; Pierr~&#13;
Goumarre, asst. prof., French, University&#13;
of Alabama; and Ben Greenebawn, asst.&#13;
prof., physics, Princeton University.&#13;
Others are Peter Hoff, asst. prof.,&#13;
English, Stanford University; Kenneth&#13;
Holsten, asst. prof., Spanish, University of&#13;
California, San Diego; Wayne Johnson,&#13;
asst. prof., philosophy, Carthage College;&#13;
Corwin King, asst. prof., communications,&#13;
Pennsylvania State University; Henry&#13;
Kozicki, asst. prof., English, Wayne State&#13;
University; Donald Kummings, instructor,&#13;
English, Indiana University;&#13;
Ming Kuo, asst. prof., engineering, Tulane&#13;
University; and Chelvadurai Manogaran,&#13;
asst. prof., geography, Southern Illinois&#13;
University.&#13;
Additions include Michael Marron, asst.&#13;
prof., Chemistry, UW-Madison; Andrew&#13;
McLean, asst. prof., English, University of&#13;
North Carolina; James Mehoke, asst.&#13;
prof., English, Wisconsin State UniversitySuperior;&#13;
Robert Moore, asst. prof., life&#13;
science, University of Pennsylvania;&#13;
William Morrow, professor, psychology,&#13;
University of Missouri; Thomas E.&#13;
Mueller, asst. prof., engineering,&#13;
University of Texas at Austin; William&#13;
Murin, instructor, political science,&#13;
University of Maryland; Michael&#13;
O'Rourke, lecturer, engineering science,&#13;
Northwestern University; and Nancy&#13;
Parlin, instructor, sociology, University of&#13;
Minnesota.&#13;
Also, Virginia Parsons, asst. prof.,&#13;
psychology, Carthage College; George&#13;
Perdikaris, asst. prof., engineering,&#13;
University of Maryland; Donald Piele,"&#13;
asst. prof., mathematics, University of&#13;
California, San Diego; Michael Rotenberg,&#13;
assoc. prof., mathematics, Southwestern&#13;
Tennessee at Memphis; Virginia Scherr,&#13;
asst. prof., chemistry, Louisiana State&#13;
University; DeUef Schied, asst. prof.,&#13;
German, -University of Kansas; Allan&#13;
Schneider, assoc. prof., earth science,&#13;
Indiana Geological Survey; Alan Shucard,&#13;
asst. prof., English, University of British&#13;
COlumbia; and Constantine Stathatos,&#13;
asst. prof., Spanish, University of Oregon.&#13;
Finally, Bernard Stiner, asst. prof.,&#13;
music, Waukegan School District; Sam&#13;
Tang, visiting assoc. prof., engineering&#13;
science, Lockheed Missiles; John Van&#13;
Willigen, asst. prof., anthropology,&#13;
University of Arizona; Alan Wallace, asst.,&#13;
prof., English, Kansas University; Kenneth&#13;
Weston, visiting assoc. prof.,&#13;
mathematics, Marquette University; John&#13;
Zarling, asst. prof., engineering science,&#13;
Michigan Tech. University; Mary Ellen&#13;
Johnson, asst. prof., philosophy, Western&#13;
Il1inois University; Harold Coppock,&#13;
professor, psychology, Temple Univer-&#13;
.sity; and Thomas Reeves, assoc. prof.,&#13;
history, University of Colorado.&#13;
UWP New Faculty Listed&#13;
Parkside students have come to expect a&#13;
continually expanding curriculum and&#13;
faculty and they will not be disappointed&#13;
this fall. New courses, more compact&#13;
scheduling and the addition of more than&#13;
60 new faculty drawn from major&#13;
tmiversities around the country await&#13;
students.&#13;
Part-time students, will find more&#13;
classes than ever before in UWP's Extended&#13;
Day Program of late afternoon and&#13;
evening classes. The entire program of&#13;
course offerings has been expanded,&#13;
however, so that more classes will be&#13;
offered days for the convenience of the&#13;
regular students. And selected once-aweek&#13;
Saturday classes have been added to&#13;
the schedule.&#13;
Information centers in Greenquist and&#13;
Tallent Halls will open in September to&#13;
keep students and visitors informed of up-&#13;
-to-the-minute campus activities and news.&#13;
It will be coordinated by Mrs. Verna B..&#13;
Zimmerman, who has joined the Parkside&#13;
staff under Mrs. Rita Tallent's Office of&#13;
Schnol and Campus Relations after 11&#13;
years as a teacher and counselor in&#13;
Kenosha schools.&#13;
Edward L. Knesting, who has experience&#13;
in public education at the&#13;
university and high school level in&#13;
Wisconsin, also has joined Mrs. Tallent's&#13;
staff as assistant director, while Philip M.&#13;
Coltart, formerly assistant to the Dean of&#13;
Students at Wittenberg College, has been&#13;
appointed Assistant Director of Admissions&#13;
under Jack Elmore.&#13;
Kenneth "Red" Oberbruner, who was&#13;
athletic director and basketball and&#13;
baseball coach at Milton College for more&#13;
than 20 years, has joined the Student Affairs&#13;
office as a counselor and also will&#13;
have duties in the recreational and intramural&#13;
area.&#13;
Key among the new.Parkside faces will&#13;
be the Vice-Chancellor for Academic&#13;
Affairs, John S. Harris, and the Dean of&#13;
the College of Science and Society, Arthur&#13;
C. MacKinney. Harris was Commonwealth&#13;
Professor of Government at the University&#13;
of Massachusetts and founded and headed&#13;
its department of government. MacKinney&#13;
was chairman of the department of&#13;
PSYchology at Iowa State University.&#13;
New- faculty include:&#13;
Bill Ballester, asst. prof., physical&#13;
education, Waukegan Township High&#13;
School; E. Scott .Baudhuin, asst. pror.,&#13;
communications, Bowling Green State&#13;
University; Emmett Gruner Bedford,&#13;
asst. prof., English, Southern Illinois&#13;
University; John D. Buenker, Assoc. prof.,.&#13;
history, Eastern Illinois University;'&#13;
Thomas P. Callanan, asst. prof., sociology,&#13;
University of Illinois; and John Campbell,&#13;
asst. prof., geography, University of&#13;
Washington.&#13;
Also, Robert H. Canary, visiting assoc.&#13;
prof., English, University of Hawaii;&#13;
Petra Chamberlain, instructor, German,&#13;
University of California, Davis; James&#13;
Dean, asst. prof., English; Wright State.&#13;
University; Frank N. Egerton, asst. prof.,&#13;
history, Carniegie-Mellon University;&#13;
Sam Filippone, asst. prof., mathematics,&#13;
•&#13;
O1ancellor Irvin G. Wyllie wishes star fenc.". John Hanzalik and his coach, Loran&#13;
Hein, good luck as the two prepare to depart for the World Collegiate Games in Turin,&#13;
Italy. Hanzalik will be fencing No.2 on tbe four-man epee squad which will represent the&#13;
United States, Eight other U.S. fencers will compete in sabre and foil. Both team and&#13;
individual competition will be held during the Aug. 24-sept. 8 games which will feature&#13;
competition in eight sports by college st~ts repreaenting countries around the world.&#13;
•&#13;
UWP New Faculty listed&#13;
Parkside students have come to expect a&#13;
continually expanding curriculum and&#13;
faculty and they will not be disappointed&#13;
this fall. New courses, more compact&#13;
scheduling and the addition of more than&#13;
60 new faculty drawn from major&#13;
universities around the country await&#13;
students.&#13;
Part-time students will find more&#13;
classes than ever before in UWP's Extended&#13;
Day Program of late afternoon and&#13;
evening classes. The entire program of&#13;
course offerings has been expanded,&#13;
however, so that more classes will be&#13;
offered days for the convenience of the&#13;
regular students. And selected once-aweek&#13;
Saturday classes have been added to&#13;
the schedule.&#13;
Information centers in Greenquist and&#13;
Tallent Halls will open in September to&#13;
keep students and visitors informed of up-&#13;
-to-the-minute campus activities and news.&#13;
It will be coordinated by Mrs. Verna B.-&#13;
Zimmerman, who has joined the Parkside&#13;
staff under Mrs. Rita Tallent's Office of&#13;
School and Campus Relations after 11&#13;
years as a teacher and counselor in&#13;
Kenosha schools.&#13;
Edward L. Knesting, who has experience&#13;
in public education at the&#13;
university and high school level in&#13;
Wisconsin, also has joined Mrs. Tallent's&#13;
staff as assistant director, while Philip M.&#13;
Coltart, formerly assistant to the Dean of&#13;
Students at Wittenberg College, has been&#13;
appointed Assistant Director of Admissions&#13;
under Jack Elmore. - Kenneth "Red" Oberbruner, who was&#13;
athletic director and basketball and&#13;
baseball coach at Milton College for more&#13;
than 20 years, has joined the Student Affairs&#13;
office as a counselor and also will&#13;
have duties in the recreational and intramural&#13;
area.&#13;
Key among the new .Parkside faces will&#13;
be the Vice-Chancellor for Academic&#13;
Affairs, John S. Harris, and the Dean of&#13;
the College of Science and Society, Arthur&#13;
C. MacKinney. Harris was Commonwealth&#13;
Professor of Government at the University&#13;
of Massachusetts and founded and headed&#13;
its department of government. MacKinney&#13;
was chairman of the department of&#13;
psychology at Iowa State University.&#13;
New faculty include:&#13;
Bill Ballester, asst. prof., physical&#13;
education, Waukegan Township High&#13;
School; E. Scott _Baudhuin, asst. prof.,&#13;
communications, Bowling Green State&#13;
University; Emmett Gruner Bedford,&#13;
asst. prof., English, Southern Illinois&#13;
University; John D. Buenker, Assoc. prof.,.&#13;
history, Eastern Illinois University;·&#13;
Thomas P. Callanan, asst. prof., sociology,&#13;
University of Illinois; and John Campbell,&#13;
asst. prof., geography, University of&#13;
Washington. Also, Robert H. Canary, visiting assoc.&#13;
prof., English, University of Hawaii;&#13;
Petra Chamberlain, instructor, German,&#13;
University of California, Davis; James&#13;
Dean, asst. prof., English,. Wright State. University; Frank N. Egerton, asst. prof.,&#13;
history, Carniegie-Mellon University;&#13;
Sam Filippone, asst. prof.1 mathematics,&#13;
(on leave); Ian Fraser, visiting lecturer,&#13;
art, Ho.rnsey College of Art; Shirley&#13;
Fraser, instructor, chemistry, (on leave)·&#13;
Karen Fuglie, instructor, French 1,&#13;
Marquette University; Ronald Gatterdam,&#13;
asst. prof., mathematics&#13;
University of California, Irvine; Alm~&#13;
~rge,. lecturer, life science, Marquette&#13;
Uruvers1ty; Carole Gottlieb, instructor&#13;
English, University of Washington; Pierr~&#13;
Goumarre, asst. prof., French, University&#13;
of Alabama; and Ben Greenebaum, asst.&#13;
prof., physics, Princeton University.&#13;
Ot~ers are Peter Hoff, asst. prof.,&#13;
Enghsh, Stanford University; Kenneth&#13;
Holsten, asst. prof., Spanish, University of&#13;
California, San Diego; Wayne Johnson,&#13;
asst. prof., philosophy, Carthage College·&#13;
Corwin King, asst. prof., communications:&#13;
Pennsylvania State University; Henry&#13;
Kozicki, asst. prof., English, Wayne State&#13;
University; Donald Kummings, ins~uctor,&#13;
English, Indiana University;&#13;
Ming Kuo, asst. prof., engineering, Tulane&#13;
University; and Chelvadurai Manogaran,&#13;
asst. prof., geography, Southern Illinois&#13;
University.&#13;
Additions include Michael Marron, asst.&#13;
prof., chemistry, UW-Madison; Andrew&#13;
McLean, asst. prof., English, University of&#13;
North Carolina; James Mehoke, asst.&#13;
prof., English, Wisconsin State UniversitySuperior;&#13;
Robert Moore, asst. prof., life&#13;
science, University of Pennsylvania ;&#13;
William Morrow, professor, psychology,&#13;
University of Missouri; Thomas E.&#13;
Mueller, asst. prof., engineering,&#13;
University of Texas at Austin; William&#13;
Murin, instructor, political science,&#13;
University of Maryland; Michael&#13;
O'Rourke, lecturer, engineering science,&#13;
Northwestern University; and Nancy&#13;
Parlin, instructor, sociology, University of&#13;
Minnesota.&#13;
Also, Virginia Parsons, asst. prof.,&#13;
psychology, Carthage College; George&#13;
Perdikaris, asst. prof., engineering,&#13;
University of Maryland; Donald Piele,&#13;
asst. prof., mathematics, University of&#13;
California, San Diego; Michael Rotenberg,&#13;
assoc. prof., mathematics, Southwestern&#13;
Tennessee at Memphis; Virginia Scherr,&#13;
asst. prof., chemistry, Louisiana State&#13;
University; Detlef Schied, asst. prof., German, -University of Kansas; Allan&#13;
Schneider, assoc. prof., earth science,&#13;
Indiana Geological Survey; Alan Shucard,&#13;
asst. prof., English, University of British&#13;
Columbia; and Constantine Stathatos,&#13;
asst. prof., Spanish, University of Oregon.&#13;
Finally, Bernard Stiner, asst. prof.,&#13;
music, Waukegan School District; Sam&#13;
Tang, visiting assoc. prof., engineering&#13;
science, Lockheed Missiles; John Van&#13;
Willigen, asst. prof., anthropology,&#13;
University of Arizona; Alan Wallace, asst..&#13;
prof., English, Kansas University; Kenneth&#13;
Weston, visiting assoc. prof.,&#13;
mathematics, Marquette University; John&#13;
Zarling, asst. prof., engineering science,&#13;
Michigan Tech. University; Mary Ellen&#13;
Johnson, asst. prof., philosophy, Western&#13;
Illinois University; Harold Coppock,&#13;
professor, psychology, Temple University;&#13;
and Thomas Reeves, assoc. prof.,&#13;
history, University of Colorado.&#13;
Oiancellor Irvin G. Wyllie wishes star fencer John Hanialik and hi coach, Loran&#13;
Hein, good luck as the two prepare to depart for the World Collegiate Games in Turin,&#13;
Italy. Hanzalik will be fencing No. 2 on the four-man epee squad which will represent th&#13;
United States, Eight other U.S. fencers will compete in sabre and foil. Both team and&#13;
individual competition will be held during the Aug. 24-Sept. 8 gam which will feature&#13;
competition in eight sports by college students representing countri around the world. &#13;
Folk singer John Newby provided&#13;
noon-tunc entertainment for incoming&#13;
freshmen during July orientation days.&#13;
'The program involved. acaoemic counseling,&#13;
and a presentation of student&#13;
services and outline of campus events.&#13;
,&#13;
ATHLETIC SCHEDULE&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
Dec. 1 _ Xavier (Chicago), 8 p.m.&#13;
Dec ... _ purdue-North Central, 8 p.m., St.&#13;
joseph'S H.5.&#13;
Dec. 5 _ Swedish National Team, 8 p.m., Case&#13;
H.S.&#13;
Dec. 8 - at Northern Michigan, 8 p.m.&#13;
Dec. 12 _ uw.oreen Bay, 8 p.rn., St. Joseph's&#13;
Dec. 17-19 - Quantico, ·Va., Invitational&#13;
Dec. 23-Southern Illinois·Edwardsville, 8 p.m..&#13;
St. Joseph'S&#13;
Dec. 30-31- South Dakota Wesleyan Invitational&#13;
at Mitchell, S.D.&#13;
Jan. 6-Milton, ap.m., Union Grove H.S.&#13;
Jan. 9 _ Lakehead (Ontario), 8 p.m., Case&#13;
Jan. 12 - N.E. illinois State, 8 p.m., St. Joseph's&#13;
Jan. 16 - at Wayne State, 8 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 19 - at Dominican, 8 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 30- Hope,8 p.rn., Salem Central H.5.&#13;
Feb. 1 _ at Grand Valley State (Mich.), 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 6 - at Lake Forest, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 9 - at uw.oreen Bay, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 13 - at UW-Milwaukee, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 16 - Xavier, 8 p.m., Case&#13;
Feb. 19 - Lakeland, 8 p.rn., St. Joseph's&#13;
Feb. 23 - Northland, 8 p.m., Case&#13;
Feb. 26 - at Missouri-5t. Louis, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 27 - at Southern Illinois-Edwardsville, 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
WRESTLING&#13;
Dec. A _ Michigan Tech, Stevens Point, 1p.m.&#13;
Dec. 12 - at Western Michigan&#13;
Dec. 17 - UW·Milwaukee, 7 p.m.&#13;
Dec. 29-30 - Midlands Tournament&#13;
Jan. 9 - Beloit, 1:30 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 16 - Eau Claire, Augustana&#13;
Feb. 6 - at Michigan Tech, 1 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 13 - at Ripon '&#13;
Indications&#13;
The first issue of the literary magazine&#13;
Indications came out June 29 - and was&#13;
successful! Indications will be published&#13;
again soon. The deadline for contributionss&#13;
to the second volume is Oct. 15,&#13;
Persons who have something they want&#13;
printed should send it to Indications, 1303&#13;
Chatham St., Racine. Be sure to include&#13;
your name, address, and telephone&#13;
number.&#13;
Feb. 20 - at Northern MIchigan&#13;
Feb. 26 - Illinois-Chicago, 5 p.rn.&#13;
Mar. 6 - at Eastern Illinois&#13;
Mar. 11-13 - NAIA Tournament at Boone N&#13;
SOCCER ' ·C.&#13;
sept. 11 - Ottawa, 2 p.m.&#13;
sept. 20 - at Notre Dame, 2 p.m.&#13;
sept. 24 - at Marquette, 7 p.m.&#13;
sept. 26 - at Northern Illinois, 2 p.m.&#13;
sept. 30 - uw.or een Bay, 3 c.m.&#13;
Oct. 3 - at Ohio State, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
OCt. 7 - IlIino,is.Chicago, 3 p.m.&#13;
Oct. 10:- at Purdue, 10 e.m.&#13;
oct. 17 - Platteville, 2 p.m.&#13;
oct. 24-Wisconsin Junior All Stars, 2P.m.&#13;
oct. 31 - at UW-Green Bay, 1:30 p.m.&#13;
FENCI~G&#13;
Dec, 5 - Wisconsin, Case Western Reser&#13;
Minnesota lie,&#13;
Dec. 12- illinois Collegiate Open at Cham .&#13;
J B M&#13;
· . K' palgn&#13;
an - rsscurr- ansas City, Milwaukee T&#13;
Jan. 16 - Air Force, Ohio State at Madison ech&#13;
Jan. 30 - Purdue, Indiana, Bowling Gr~&#13;
Purdue at&#13;
Feb. 6 - Notre Dame, Illinois·Chicago&#13;
Feb. 13 - Wisconsin, Michigan State&#13;
Feb. 19-Tri-State (Ind.), Indiana Tech atT'&#13;
State rl·&#13;
Feb. 20 - Detroit, Illinois, Wayne Stat at&#13;
Detroit e&#13;
Feb. 26 "" Notre Dame, Milwaukee Tech at&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Feb, 27 - Chicago, Ohio State at Chicago&#13;
Mar. 2 - Illinois, ultncte-chtceqc, Milwaukee&#13;
Tech at Milwaukee&#13;
Mar. 6 - Great Lakes Invitational at Tri.State&#13;
Mar. 1~.1~-20 - ~ational COllegiate Athletic&#13;
ASSOCiation at Air Force Academy&#13;
New Soccer&#13;
Field Ready&#13;
Soccer coach Jim Gibson checks the&#13;
turf on the new playing field south of the&#13;
Office ofAthletics along Wood Road. Heis&#13;
shown with several new team members as&#13;
workmen put finishing touches on the&#13;
field.&#13;
l''olk singer John Newby provided&#13;
noon-I inw enlcrtainment for incoming&#13;
lrcshnwn during July orientation days.&#13;
The program involvea acactem1c counseling,&#13;
and a presentation of student&#13;
ser:vic_e~ a_nsJ outli~e of campus events.&#13;
'&#13;
ATHLETIC SCHEDULE&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
Dec. 1 - Xavier (Chicago), 8 p.m.&#13;
Dec. , - Purdue-North Central, 8 p.m., St.&#13;
Joseph's H.S.&#13;
Dec. 5 - Swedish National Team, 8 p.m., Case&#13;
H.S.&#13;
Dec. 8 - at Northern Michigan, 8 p.m.&#13;
Dec. 12 - UW-Green Bay, 8 p.m., St. Jose·ph's&#13;
Dec. 17-19 - Quantico, Va., Invitational&#13;
Dec. 23-Southern Illinois-Edwardsville, 8 p.m.,&#13;
St. Joseph's&#13;
Dec. 30-31-South D11kot11 Wesleyan Invitational&#13;
at Mitchell, S.D.&#13;
Jan. 6-Milton, Sp.m., Union Grove H.S.&#13;
Jan. 9 - Lakehead (Ontario), 8 p.m., Case&#13;
Jan. 12 - N.E. Illinois State, 8 p.m., St. Joseph's&#13;
Jan. 16 - at Wayne State, 8 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 19 - at Dominican, 8 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 30- Hope, 8 p.m., Salem Central H.S.&#13;
Feb. 1 - at Grand Valley State (Mich.), 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 6 - at Lake Forest, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 9 - at UW-Green Bay, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 13 - at UW-Milwaukee, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 16 - Xavier, 8 p.m., Case&#13;
Feb. 19 - Lakeland, 8 p.m., St. Joseph's&#13;
Feb. 23 - Northland, 8 p.m., Case&#13;
Feb. 26 - at Missouri-St. Louis, 8 p.m.&#13;
Feb. 27 - at Southern Illinois-Edwardsville, 8&#13;
p.m.&#13;
WRESTLING&#13;
Dec. 4 - Michigan Tech, Stevens Point, 1 p.m.&#13;
Dec. 12 - at Western Michigan&#13;
Dec. 17 - UW-Milwaukee, 7 p.m.&#13;
Dec. 29-30 - Midlands Tournament&#13;
Jan. 9 - Beloit, 1:30 p.m.&#13;
Jan. 16 - Eau Claire, Augustana&#13;
Feb. 6 - at Michigan Tech, 1 p.m .&#13;
Feb. 13 - at Ripon •&#13;
Indications&#13;
The first issue of the literary magazine&#13;
Indications came out June 29 - and was&#13;
successful! Indications will be published&#13;
again soon. The deadline for contributionss&#13;
to the second volume is Oct. 15.&#13;
Persons who have something they want&#13;
printed should' send it to Indications, 1303&#13;
Chatham St., Racine. Be sure to include&#13;
your name, address, and telephone&#13;
number.&#13;
Feb. 20 - at Northern Michigan&#13;
Feb. 26 - Illinois-Chicago, 5 p.m.&#13;
Mar. 6 - at Eastern Illinois&#13;
Mar. 11-13 - NAIA Tournament at Boone N&#13;
SOCCER ' .c.&#13;
Sept. 11 - Ottawa, 2 p.m.&#13;
Sept. 20 - at Notre Dame, 2 p.m.&#13;
Sept. 24 - at Marquette, 7 p.m.&#13;
Sept. 26 - at Northern Illinois, 2 p.m.&#13;
Sept. 30 - UW-Green Bay, 3 p.m.&#13;
Oct. 3 - at Ohio State, 10:30 a.m.&#13;
Oct. 7 - Illinois-Chicago, 3 p.m.&#13;
Oct. 10 - at Purdue, 10 a.m.&#13;
Oct. 17 - Platteville, 2 p.m.&#13;
Oct. 24-Wisconsin Junior All Stars, 2 P.m.&#13;
Oct. 31 - at UW-Green Bay, 1 :30 p.m.&#13;
FENCING&#13;
Dec. 5 - Wisconsin, Case Western Reser&#13;
Minnesota ve,&#13;
Dec. 12 - l_llinoi~ Collegiate_ Open at Champaign&#13;
Jan 8 - M,ssour,-Kansas City, Milwaukee T&#13;
Jan. 16-Air Force, Ohio State at Madison ech&#13;
Jan. 30 - Purdue, Indiana, Bowling Green&#13;
Purdue at&#13;
Feb. 6 - Notre Dame, Illinois-Chicago&#13;
Feb. 13 - Wisconsin, Michigan State&#13;
Feb. 19 - Tri-State (Ind.), Indiana Tech at T . State r,.&#13;
Feb. 20 - Detroit, Illinois, Wayne Stat at&#13;
Detroit e&#13;
Feb. 26 .- Notre Dame, Milwaukee Tech at&#13;
Milwaukee&#13;
Feb. 27 - Chicago, Ohio State at Chicago&#13;
Mar. 2 - Illinois, Illinois-Chicago, Milwaukee&#13;
Tech at Milwaukee&#13;
Mar. 6 - Great Lakes Invitational at Tri-State&#13;
Mar. 1~-1~-20 - ~ational Collegiate Athletic&#13;
Assoc1at1on at Air Force Academy&#13;
New Soccer&#13;
Field Ready&#13;
Soccer coach Jim Gibson checks the&#13;
turf on the new playing field south of the&#13;
Office of_Athletics along Wood Road. He is&#13;
shown with several new team members as&#13;
workmen put finishing touches on the&#13;
field. </text>
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              <text>Parkside to Graduate Thirty-Eight</text>
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              <text>J JUNE 1970&#13;
Institutes for&#13;
-H.S. Students&#13;
Institutes in.science and the humanities&#13;
for high school students presently completing&#13;
their junior years are among&#13;
summer programs planned at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
The six-week institutes beginning June&#13;
29 are designed to offer a wide range of&#13;
opportunity for capable students to pursue&#13;
special interests in the sciences, performing&#13;
arts, visual arts and literature,&#13;
according to Charles Kugel, director of the&#13;
Gifted Student Program at Parkside,.&#13;
The inter-disciplinary science institute&#13;
is structured to allow students to explore&#13;
their areas of scientific interest with&#13;
experienced research scientists at&#13;
Parkside. The institute will include weekly&#13;
seminars designed to help participants&#13;
identify methods of scientific inquiry and&#13;
relate their experiences across 2- variety of&#13;
scientific disciplines.&#13;
Participants also will get practical&#13;
experience in Parkside's Instructional&#13;
Computer Center where coordination of&#13;
research. work in the laboratory with&#13;
analysis by computer methods will enable&#13;
students to rela te their research to the&#13;
most recent developments in computer&#13;
science.&#13;
The humanities institute, in addition to&#13;
individual work with members of the UMP&#13;
humanities faculty and weekly interdisciplinary&#13;
seminars, will include field&#13;
trips to professional theater productions,&#13;
musical programs and art show.&#13;
Selection of participants will be based on&#13;
academic interest, motivation, high school&#13;
performance, letters of recommendation&#13;
from high school teachers and interviews&#13;
with Parkside professors.&#13;
There is no tuition fee for the institutes&#13;
Anti·War Bills&#13;
WASHINGTON - (CPS) - Bills&#13;
modeled after the Massachusetts law&#13;
which seeks to end the war by staiing&#13;
soldiers can refuse to fight in undeclared&#13;
wars su~h as Vietnam have been in·&#13;
troduced in eight states.&#13;
Legislatures in New York, California,&#13;
Ohio, Dlinois, Rhode Island, Alaska,&#13;
Michigan, and New Jersey are considering&#13;
sta tutes which would allow soldiers from&#13;
their states to refuse to fight.&#13;
Parkside To Graduate Thirty-Eight&#13;
Parkside's first graduation will he held&#13;
at 2:00 on June 6, at which time thirtyeight&#13;
students will be eligible to receive&#13;
degrees. The program, to be held in the&#13;
concourse of Greenquist Hall, will begin&#13;
with an academic procession of the faculty&#13;
.and then the procession of degree candidates.&#13;
An address to the students is to be&#13;
presented by UW-President Fred&#13;
Harrington.&#13;
After Harrington speaks, degrees will be&#13;
presented, Of the candidates, two deserve·&#13;
special recognition; Susan Dean and&#13;
Douglas Devan, Susan Dean will graduate&#13;
from Parkside with Honors. A transfer&#13;
student from Beloit College, Mrs, Dean&#13;
has completed thirty credits in the honors&#13;
program. Since attending this university,&#13;
she has maintained a ·to gradcpoint ~IS o(&#13;
the fall semester.&#13;
Douglas Devan will graduate with&#13;
Distinction. Devan. a chemistry major. is&#13;
Parkside's rir:.ststudent to be accepted for&#13;
medical school - specifically, Madison's&#13;
medical school.&#13;
The thirty-eight students who arc&#13;
candidates for degrees from the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside arc the'&#13;
following:&#13;
Patrick L. Adamson. B.S .. malh.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Stanley C. Balinsky, B.S, math. Kenosha&#13;
George Becker, B.A., English, Kenosha&#13;
Kathleen Bergant , B.A.. Sociology,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Signe Bonady, B.A.. History, Racine&#13;
Coaches To Train&#13;
Philippine Trackmen&#13;
Track coach Bob Lawson and Athletic&#13;
Director Tom Rosandich of The University&#13;
of Wisconsin~Parkside have accepted&#13;
invitations from the Phillippine Islaods&#13;
Olympic Committee to train that country's&#13;
national track team and set up a longrange&#13;
national training program, it was&#13;
announced today.&#13;
Lawson is scheduled to leave within a&#13;
week and stay three months, while&#13;
Rosandicb will leave shortly thereafter for&#13;
a three-week stay.&#13;
Lawson will -,work directly with the&#13;
Philippine team in Manila, training it for&#13;
the Asian Games this Decemher aod&#13;
establishing training programs leading to&#13;
the Munich Olympics in 1972. Rosandich&#13;
will write a comprehensive national&#13;
training program for track and conduct&#13;
clinics for Philippine coaches who will&#13;
assemble in Manila.&#13;
Rosandich said he also hopes to finalize&#13;
details of a program whereby United&#13;
States track coaches, under Federal&#13;
sponsorship, and Phillippine coaches&#13;
would receive training at Parkside to be&#13;
used in the PhiUippines.&#13;
The invitations were extended by Jose&#13;
DeBorja, secretary of the Phillippine&#13;
Olympic Committee and chairman of&#13;
physical education at the University of the&#13;
Philippines.&#13;
No Income Tax&#13;
for Summer Jobs&#13;
WASHINGTON - (CPS) - Students&#13;
working for the summer may be entitled to&#13;
exemption from income tax witholding&#13;
under the Tax Reform Act of 1969.Forms&#13;
for claiming this exemption are available&#13;
from Internal Revenue service offices,&#13;
Any employee who had no income tax&#13;
liability last year and anticipates none this&#13;
year can use Withholding Exemption&#13;
Certificate, Form W-4E to claim the&#13;
exemption. the IRS said, For 1970,a single&#13;
person who makes less than $1725owes no&#13;
tax. This is based on the $1,100low income&#13;
allowance and a personal exemption of&#13;
$625. Anyone who qualifies can fill out the&#13;
form and give it lo his employer to claim&#13;
exemption from income lax withholding on&#13;
his wages.&#13;
Worst Banjo Band&#13;
festival on June 4 and 5 featuring "Your&#13;
UW-P will present an end-of-the-year ,....~~~~&#13;
Father's Mustache", a honky-tonk banjo&#13;
band, "where the time of your life is right&#13;
under your nose". June 5 will feature&#13;
competitive games, activities, rock bands,&#13;
and foOd.&#13;
"Your Father's Mustache" will recreate&#13;
a night club atmosphere as it apPears in&#13;
their clubs throughout the country. The&#13;
performances will take place in a large&#13;
circus tent on the Tallent hall parking lot.&#13;
They are five-piece group who entertain by&#13;
concert and audience participation. The&#13;
first of three sets will begin at 9:00 p.m. on&#13;
June 4 and in hetween sets they will show&#13;
old-time flicks.&#13;
Billed as the World's "Worst Banjo&#13;
Band", they have appeared on various&#13;
television programs such as Johnny&#13;
Carson, Ed Sullivan, Jackie Gleason, and&#13;
Mike Douglas. Admission to the beer-and,&#13;
peanut affair will be one dollar - entitling&#13;
everyone to a free garter. Beer mugs and&#13;
straw bats will also he on sale.&#13;
On Friday, June 5, such gal)les as&#13;
faculty-student softball, tugs-'o·war,&#13;
Volkswagen pushing, etc., plus rock&#13;
bands and food and beer will be featured.&#13;
.Be";'use of the special heer permit, only&#13;
Parkside students and their guests, who&#13;
must be elghtee", .will .headmitted. !D's&#13;
will be ~h""ked.· .&#13;
JUIlI Bur~~l'l'n. B.A. Art. }\c.'IIl"",ha&#13;
ttoss Bucnu. B.A. Iltslul'Y. }\c.'lh)sha&#13;
Linda I. Bulu-kc. B,A, t-:n~hsh.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Susan T. Dean, Honors. B.A.. English,&#13;
Kl'n~h~1&#13;
Patr-icia C EnAdahl. B,A. ":l1l-:lIsh.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
DouAlilS &lt;: Devan. 1&gt;1:'\1incliml. B S •&#13;
Clwlllistry. Kcuoshu&#13;
LOIS M.I(,' Prnnscn. B.A. MUSil', Cud,lhy&#13;
Hyan II Jllg~Uls, ItA. t':nghsh.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
A11(:(,'Jcuu Hildebrund. UA. ":Ill-:hsh.&#13;
Kl'll(~ha&#13;
M~u'Y Alyc(,' IhK'l'lwl, B,A. Ihsltll'Y.&#13;
Hacine&#13;
Bruthc r Haymond Kiudred. B:\,&#13;
History, Burlington&#13;
John P. Leuck, BS., Math, Kenosha&#13;
Barry r\tann. B.A., Economics. HOlt'lIIt'&#13;
Patricia Anne Nemeth. B.A. EnAhsh.&#13;
Salem&#13;
Robert 1\. Hu~c.'r:'\,B,A" lfrslm-y. Hal'lllt'&#13;
Jerome Sadowski. B.S PSYl:hnloJ,l\',&#13;
ltncinc&#13;
Peru-lope L. Schaube}. B,A, Art.&#13;
Kt.'nushi.1&#13;
Nori.lIn' Smith. B.A. Art. HaclIll'&#13;
Dun-l J. Suokko. B.S. Apphe.'d SCl(.'nn'&#13;
and Technology. xcnosbu&#13;
Hnhcr t W Wirch. B A, History,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
. Edward A. Panyk, B.A., History. Racine&#13;
Tom Kiesler, B.S., Math, l)flI(m (;,U\t'&#13;
Futher William Demus. It-A. Ifl!';lnry.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Barbara Ki ntarnukr. B.S" f\1ath&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Hoger J Hayek, !lA. Pollloc,,1 S",,·flC('.&#13;
Racine&#13;
Julie Newton, B.A., Art, HaCI"t.'&#13;
Hichard Bono(j~1I0. 13.A. lIislUI'\.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
180m Fearn, B.A., Sociology, Kenosha&#13;
Gene Halmo. B.A , Economic!'i, KCIl()!';hi.1&#13;
Wesley lIolborn. B,S,. P~ycholC)gy.&#13;
Kcn~ha&#13;
DaVid A Mor!&lt;t'n.''icn.BA . i':conomit's.&#13;
jtacmt'&#13;
Grc~ory N Ndson, B S., Llfc.'SCl&lt;.'nl'~,&#13;
Kl'nc)!';ha&#13;
Gary Grcenwood, B.A. Pohlu,'al&#13;
St:icnt'C, Kcn(~ha&#13;
The gradual Ion l"Crcmony IS opc.'O If) IIw&#13;
puhlic, Afte'r the program. lhc Unl\'t'rslt)&#13;
Lcague will be hosl'; 10 a r('l'c.'I&gt;tiHn&#13;
New Outlook&#13;
This is the lasl ISSUt:01 lhe Collegian to&#13;
be circulated this semesler Tentaltvely,&#13;
we hope to prCS&lt;.'ntlhrt.'c ISSut'S dUfln~ tht.'&#13;
summer session. As sludents whom lhe&#13;
COu.EGIAN represents, you have lhe&#13;
rightto know what our plans for the '70,'71&#13;
year include&#13;
First or all, we have changed our&#13;
organization. TnsteaA of an edilor·irrchlef&#13;
and associat~ editor. we have dl'Citk'o un&#13;
C&lt;H!ditors. Replacing Marc Colby for&#13;
major responsibility of this newspaper will&#13;
be Margie Noer and Bill Rolbiecki.&#13;
Second, the COLLEGIAN will he a&#13;
weekly paper instead of a bi-monthly. We&#13;
hope to then give you a more active&#13;
newspaper- one that's on lop of the news.&#13;
And - the COLLEGIAN won'l be the&#13;
COu.EGIAN next year. We're changing&#13;
the name to one with more up-to-date&#13;
appeal. We need a name renecting the&#13;
spirit of a new image.&#13;
With these innovations. the paper will&#13;
naturally need a large working staff.&#13;
Anyone who, for next year ,or for lhe&#13;
summer, is even ten!atively interested in&#13;
in writing, seHing advertising .&#13;
photographing, anything at all, we would'&#13;
appreciate your stopping in the office or&#13;
calling either ext 36 or 652..1177.&#13;
1 JUNE 1970&#13;
Institutes for&#13;
-H.S. Students&#13;
Institutes in science and the humanities&#13;
for high school students presently completing&#13;
their junior years are among summer programs planned at the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Parkside To Graduate Thirty-Eight&#13;
The six-week institutes beginning June&#13;
29 are designed to offer a wide range of&#13;
opportunity for capable students to pursue&#13;
special interests in the sciences, performing&#13;
arts, visual arts and literature,&#13;
according to Charles Kugel, director of the&#13;
Gifted Student Program at Parkside,.&#13;
The inter-disciplinary science institute&#13;
is structured to allow students to explore&#13;
their areas of scientific interest with&#13;
experienced research scientists at&#13;
Parkside. The institute will include weekly&#13;
seminars designed to help participants&#13;
identify methods of scientific inquiry and&#13;
relate their experiences across~ variety of&#13;
scientific disciplines.&#13;
Participants also will get practical&#13;
experience in Parkside's Instructional&#13;
Computer Center where coordination of&#13;
research. work in the laboratory with&#13;
analysis by computer methods will enable&#13;
students to relate their research to the&#13;
most recent developments in computer&#13;
science.&#13;
The humanities institute, in addition to&#13;
individual work with members of the UMP&#13;
humanities faculty and weekly interdisciplinary&#13;
seminars, will include field&#13;
trips to professional theater productions,&#13;
musical progr:ims an.d art show&#13;
Selection of participants will be based on&#13;
academic interest, motivation, high school&#13;
performance, letters of recommendation&#13;
from high school teachers and interviews&#13;
with Parkside professors.&#13;
There is no tuition fee for the institutes&#13;
Anti-War Bills&#13;
WASHINGTON - (CPS) - Bills&#13;
modeled after the Massachusetts law&#13;
which seeks to end the war by stating&#13;
soldiers can refuse to fight in undeclared&#13;
wars sw::h as Vietnam have been introduced&#13;
in eight states:&#13;
Legislatures in New York, California,&#13;
Ohio, Illinois, Rhode Island, Alaska,&#13;
Michigan, and New Jersey are considering&#13;
statutes which would allow soldiers from&#13;
their states to refuse to fight.&#13;
Parkside's first graduation will be held&#13;
at 2:00 on June 6, at which time thirtyeight&#13;
students will be eligible to receive&#13;
degrees. The program, to be held in the&#13;
concourse of Greenquist Hall, will begin&#13;
with an academic procession of the faculty&#13;
and then the procession of degree candidates.&#13;
An address to the students is to be&#13;
Ilresented by UW-President Fred&#13;
Harrington.&#13;
After Harrington speaks, degrees will be&#13;
presented. Of the candidates, two deserve·&#13;
special recognition ; Susan Dean and&#13;
Douglas Devan. Susan Dean will graduate&#13;
from Parkside with Honors. A transfer&#13;
student from Beloit College, Mrs, Dean&#13;
has completed thirty credits in the honors&#13;
program. Since attending this university,&#13;
she has maintained a -l.O grndcpoint as of&#13;
the fall semester.&#13;
Douglas Devan will graduate with&#13;
Distinction. Devan. a chemistry nmJor. is&#13;
Parkside"s fii:st student to be accepted for&#13;
medical school - specifically, Madison's&#13;
medical school.&#13;
The thirty-eight students who arl'&#13;
candidates for degrees from thl'&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside are the&#13;
following:&#13;
Patrick L. Adamson, 8 ..• math.&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Stanley C. Balinsky. B.S, math, Kenosha&#13;
George Becker. B.A .• English. Kenosha&#13;
Kathleen Bergant. B.A . Sociology,&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Signe Bonady. B.A .. History. Racine&#13;
Coaches To Train&#13;
Philippine T rackmen&#13;
Track coach Bob Lawson and Athletic&#13;
Director Tom Rosandich of The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkside have accepted&#13;
invitations from the Phillippine Islands&#13;
Olympic Committee to train that country's&#13;
national track team and set up a longrange&#13;
national training program, it was&#13;
announced today.&#13;
Lawson is scheduled to leave within a&#13;
week and stay three months, while&#13;
Rosandich will leave shortly thereafter for&#13;
a three-week stay.&#13;
Lawson will work directly with the&#13;
Philippine team in Manila, training it for&#13;
the Asian Games this December and&#13;
establishing training programs leading to&#13;
the Munich Olympics in 1972. Rosandich&#13;
will write a comprehensive national&#13;
training program for track and conduct&#13;
clinics for Philippine coaches who will&#13;
assemble in Manila.&#13;
Rosandich said he also hopes to finalize&#13;
details of a program whereby United&#13;
States track coaches, under Federal&#13;
sponsorship, and Phillippine coaches&#13;
would receive training at Parkside to be&#13;
used in the Phillippines.&#13;
The invitations were extended by Jose&#13;
DeBorja, secretary of the Phillippine&#13;
Olympic Committee and chairman of&#13;
physical education at the University of the&#13;
Philippines.&#13;
No Income Tax&#13;
for Summer Jobs&#13;
WASHINGTON - &lt;CPS) - Students&#13;
working for the summer may be entitled to&#13;
exemption from income tax witholding&#13;
under the Tax Reform Act of 1969. Forms&#13;
for claiming this exemption are available&#13;
from Internal Revenue Service offices.&#13;
Any employee who had no income tax&#13;
liability last year and anticipates none this&#13;
year can use Withholding Exemption&#13;
Certificate, Form W-4E to claim the&#13;
exemption. the JRS said For 1970, a single&#13;
person who makes less than ~1725 owes no&#13;
tax. This is based on the $1,100 low income&#13;
allowance and a per onal exemption of&#13;
$625. Anyone who qualifies can fill out the&#13;
form and give it to his employer to claim&#13;
exemption from income tax withholding on&#13;
his wages.&#13;
Worst Banio Band&#13;
UW-P will present an end-of-the-year&#13;
festival on June 4 and 5 featuring "Your&#13;
Father's Mustache", a honky-tonk banjo&#13;
band, "where the time of your life is right&#13;
under your nose". June 5 will feature&#13;
competitive games, activities, rock bands,&#13;
and food.&#13;
"Your Father's Mustache" will recreate&#13;
a night club atmosphere as it appears in&#13;
their clubs throughout the country. The&#13;
performances will take place in a large&#13;
circus tent on the Tallent hall parking lot.&#13;
They are five-piece group who entertain by&#13;
concert and audience participation. The&#13;
first of three sets will begin at 9:00 p.m. on&#13;
June 4 and in between sets they will show&#13;
old-time flicks.&#13;
Billed as the World's "Worst Banjo&#13;
Band", they have appeared on various&#13;
television programs such as Johnny&#13;
Carson, Ed Sullivan, Jackie Gleason, and&#13;
Mike Douglas. Admission to the beer-andpeanut&#13;
affair will be one dollar - entitling&#13;
everyone to a free garter. Beer mugs and&#13;
straw hats will also be on sale. On Friday, June 5, such garµes as&#13;
faculty-student softball, tugs-'o-war,&#13;
Volkswagen pushing, etc., plus rock&#13;
bands and food and beer will be featured.&#13;
.Bec~use of the special beer permit, only&#13;
Parkside students and their guests, who&#13;
in_ust be eight~µ, .will he admitted. ID's&#13;
WtlJ hf' rhP.Cked:&#13;
,)11111 Borggn•n. B /\ • ,\rt. Kl'IHJSlw&#13;
Ho.-s Blll',111 , B ,\ • 111. ton. Kt•m1. li.1&#13;
I.inda L . Buhrk(•, B :\ . 1-:nghsh.&#13;
Kl·mr.-ha&#13;
Susan T. Dean, Honors. B A., En Ii h.&#13;
Kt·mr.-ha&#13;
J&gt;atrkia ( . t-:ngd;1hl. B ,\ . t-:nghsh.&#13;
Kl•nosha&#13;
l&gt;ougla: &lt;: l&gt;t•,;111. 1&gt;1stim·rio11, BS.&#13;
Clwmistry. Kt•nosha&#13;
l,ois !\1:w Franson, B.,\ •. l11Sll', Cucl,1hy&#13;
Hyan 11 . l11gg1ns. B ,\ . 1':nghsh.&#13;
Kl'llnsha&#13;
Ahn• Jt•an llildd&gt;rand, B ,\ .. E11gl1:-h.&#13;
Kt•nosha&#13;
Mary Alyn• llt)('l"lll'l. B.,\ .. I llslory .&#13;
Hal'lllt'&#13;
Brothl•r Ha..-mond K111dn•d. B /\ •&#13;
History. Burlington&#13;
John P Leuck , B.S. 1ath, Keno ·ha&#13;
Barrv ~\;mo. B.,\ . Et·mmm1l'S, H,H'mt·&#13;
J&gt;ntril'ia ,\1111 • , '1•11wth. B.i\. 1-:11 •hsh.&#13;
Sall1lll&#13;
Holwrt /\ Hog1•rs. B ,\ . llistory. Hat·11w&#13;
,ll'l"Ollll' S.1dowi;ki, B.S l'sydwlogy.&#13;
lt;1drw&#13;
Pt•rwlnpt• L. St·haulll'l. B ,\ . Ari.&#13;
Kt•no:-.ha&#13;
Norukt• Smith, B /\ . Ari. Hacuw&#13;
l&gt;arl'I J. Suokko. B,S. ,\pplwd St'H'lll"I'&#13;
and °l'l'l'hnology. Kl'lk&gt;sha&#13;
Hoht•rt \ .. Wirl'll, B.A. llistory .&#13;
K1·nusha&#13;
Edward A. Panyk. B.A., Hi tory, Hacim• om Kie I r. B S.. ialh, Union 01 mt•&#13;
1-·athcr William lh-11111:, IL\ . llrsto ,'.&#13;
Kl'nosha&#13;
Barhara Kintamak1 , ILS,. :\lath.&#13;
Kt•nosha&#13;
Hog&lt;·r .J. llayt·k. B ,\, Poht1t"al ."l'iPlll'l',&#13;
l{Ul'ln'&#13;
.Julie , 'c\\ton. B.,\. Art, Hadrw&#13;
Hrdrnrd Bnnofi•lio. BA, ll istor~.&#13;
Km~hu&#13;
Isom F arn. BA., Socio! y, K no. ha&#13;
Ci&lt;·m· llalmo. B A • FJl"onornil:s. K1•1io. h;1&#13;
WcslPy llolborn. BS, l'sydwlogy.&#13;
Kt•no.o;ha&#13;
Da\•1d A .• \oriwr l'n, B.A .. Economit-s,&#13;
Jlal'IIW&#13;
Crl'~ory ·. , \•Ison, B.S. L1h• Sl0 i&lt;•nt:1~.&#13;
Kt·noslm&#13;
&lt;:ary Grt•cnwood , B /\ ., J&gt;ohtll':tl&#13;
St·rcnc!!, Kl·nm ha&#13;
The• gr duat1011 t·1•n•mony is 01x•n to lht•&#13;
public. Afl!•r lh • pre •ram, th&lt;' tlnin·rsity&#13;
L&lt;·agu • will I • hoslo.; to u rt'l'l'Jltion&#13;
New Outlook&#13;
This 1s th la 1 , uc 01 thP Colll •ian to&#13;
be circulated th, scm l •r Tentallvi•ly,&#13;
w&lt;· hopt.• to pr ·,·nt lhn·,• 1 ·su ~ &lt;lu1111g thl'&#13;
summer session. A tudcnu; whom th&#13;
COLLEGIA, rcpr enl , you have th&#13;
right lo know what our plan· for th '70·'71&#13;
year include&#13;
Fir t of all, we have changed our&#13;
organization. rn lean of an editor-in-&lt;:hi •f&#13;
and associate !&lt;lilor, we• ha, • &lt;k ·i&lt;hl on&#13;
co-editors. Replacing Marc Colhy for&#13;
major responsibility of this newspap r will&#13;
be Margie Noer and Bill Rolbiecki.&#13;
Second, the COLLEGIAN will b a&#13;
weekly paper instead of a bi-monthly We&#13;
hope to then give you a more active&#13;
newspaper- one that's on top of the new·.&#13;
And - the COLLEGIAN won't be the&#13;
COLLEGIAN next year. We're changing&#13;
the name to one with more up-to-date&#13;
appeal. We need a name reflecting the&#13;
spirit of a new image. With these innovations, the paper will&#13;
naturally need a large working staff.&#13;
Anyone who, for next year .or for the&#13;
summer, is even tentatively interested in&#13;
in writing, seiling advertising,&#13;
photographing, anything at all, we would•&#13;
appreciate your stopping in the office or&#13;
calling either ext. 36 or 652-4tn. &#13;
EDITORIALS&#13;
Traditional Barriers Erected&#13;
II has been a long fIrSt year for the University of WisCOlll'in-Parkside, a&#13;
year in whIch the traditional barriers of communication have been erected&#13;
~ween students and the "administration". II's been a year in which the&#13;
students have just begun the test to determine the rigidity of those barriers.&#13;
Flrsl it wa the security problem in sludent records when several students&#13;
re replaced WIth civil service people and then were not given other jobs as&#13;
promil4!d by Chancellor Wyllie.&#13;
"I TRUCTOR FIRED" read one headline, and indeed Mr. Salimans&#13;
ca had received his letter, was given no chance to resign. The logical&#13;
deduction after talki~ with various administrators was that Cacs simply did&#13;
not fll in with the "master plan" for the building of a school's reputation. Now&#13;
r ha won the SUndard Oil Distinguished Facully Award as the top&#13;
UlStruelor 01the year We seriously doubt that this will be cause for his peers to&#13;
reconsider their previOUS action.&#13;
W also have many fond memories of the campus Concerns Committee,&#13;
that group of people who hold a genuine inlerest in Parkside, but who, because&#13;
of the way their commiltee is governed by rules, regulations, and red tape,&#13;
hav been reduced to a rubber stamp-all responsible body of nice-tries. Zeta&#13;
Beta Tau, P rk Ide's first national men's social-fraternity, almost didn't get&#13;
recogrutlOD from the C because in order to be considered for membership&#13;
one h d to have been of "good moral character."&#13;
betw n the staff members, drunken parties, and rape were the&#13;
gIven to the COLLEGIA' for not renting the newspaper space in a&#13;
hou on the Parks Ide campus. We never knew that this paper was being run&#13;
by a bunch of perverts&#13;
Iso, we all mu t remember not to speak out continuously against our&#13;
"""'ers,ty Farewell CO tMITIEE.&#13;
L '01 TIO, S IAGAZINE was given such a run-around that the group&#13;
of. tudents that tried to bring something to Parkside finally had to give up all&#13;
hope of presenting their work to you. the students of Parkside.&#13;
Student Government now has a start and it will be interesting to follow&#13;
its dev lopment We hope that the legislature will be allowed to become an&#13;
ffectJ\'e VOIce for the students, contrary to what you may see on other campu&#13;
or have seen on thi campus in the past.&#13;
II you. the students of Parkside, continue to remain in your shells and fail&#13;
to grve a damn, then it is you who will allow Parkside to fail to become a&#13;
ibly highly·rated institution and to become nothing more than Public&#13;
: hool Zero.&#13;
One bright pot - you're always supposed to include a bright spot on&#13;
&gt;our editoraal page - we did have green grass by open house!&#13;
M. H. C.&#13;
ACLU Anniversary&#13;
A birthday party to which we would extend heartfelt congratulations is a&#13;
double affair on the fiftieth anniversary of the American Civil Liberties Union&#13;
and the 86th birthday of Rodger Baldwin, who was one of a remarkable group&#13;
-the late Justice Frankfurter, Jane Addams. Helen Keller, Norman Thomas,&#13;
Clarence Darrow, Eugene Debs, Jolm Dewey - who created !be ACLU "with&#13;
thesmgle purpose of defending the whole Bill of Rights for everybody."&#13;
It IS a great and worthy purpose inviting some reflection. In its history&#13;
the ACLU has defended liberals and reactionaries, Communists and Nazis and&#13;
everything in between. Yet in providing a legal defense of individuals it was not&#13;
really defending the individuals, much less their various causes. It was&#13;
defending their rights, which are a different matter. For these rights are "for&#13;
everybody," and must be defended everywhere, in behalf of the unpopular&#13;
more than the popular, simply because the challenge to rights usually arises in&#13;
unpopular causes.&#13;
ThIS IS an old case of individual rights made early by the Founding&#13;
Fathers but often forgotten since. It has been the ACLU's task to see that rights&#13;
are remembered.&#13;
From the Sl. Louis Post-Dispatch&#13;
Invite Track Stars&#13;
To Invitational Meet&#13;
already includes live IS foot pole vaulters&#13;
and the new national prep record holder in&#13;
the shot pu~ Jesse Stuart of Glasgow. Ky.,&#13;
who has thrown 73-11",.&#13;
Dick Hustable, Nicolet high school track&#13;
coach, is the stale higb school representativP&#13;
on the Games Committee.&#13;
Su&lt; Wilconlin high school track stars&#13;
have been extended provisional invitations&#13;
to the Golden Midwest Invitabonal track&#13;
meet June t3 in Elmhunt, m., it was&#13;
announced today.&#13;
Tom RclI8ndich, alblelic director at The&#13;
UIlIVfftlty 01 Wlacons1n-Parkside and&#13;
cbairman of the Games Committee, said&#13;
IIDaJ tnvltatiOIW to meet for biIh ""hooI&#13;
IIIIion in a »Itate area depend CXIentranll&#13;
m... lIng minimum Itandarda linee&#13;
the IleId will be limited to eIIbl per evenl&#13;
"""'lnvtted 'run the ltate to date, with&#13;
IbeIr best times and the current qualifying&#13;
ltandard, are Steve Sbnzi, Menomonee&#13;
Fana orth, two-mile, 9'18.2 (9;12)' Dan&#13;
CaUl1y, MadiIUI Memonal, 880, i'S6.3&#13;
11'$31, J If Fonlund Appleton East. 220.&#13;
218 ('216): Slave Mo:nch, MenomCXIle&#13;
lOll, 08 7 I 09 6&gt; ~hke Yeager, Stanley:&#13;
\loyd. h,gb JUmp. 6-7 16;8&gt;. and Dag&#13;
lIIrIlela", lowa-Gran~ long jump 23-5&#13;
IZHI '&#13;
P"and\eh aaIcIlhe Golden Midwest field&#13;
Use Collegian&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
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Connie Petersen&#13;
John Jolicoeur&#13;
SvenTaffs&#13;
Neil Haglov&#13;
Bill Jacoby&#13;
JobnPesta&#13;
Published every two. weeks by the students of. the University of&#13;
W&#13;
. . Parksl'de' Kenosha Wisconsin, 53140. Opinions . expressed in&#13;
ISConSID- " '1 th f the U' . editorials, cartooffi, and articles are not necessa.rl,Y ,ose 0 .. mversltyof&#13;
W&#13;
. . Parksl'de its students faculty or administrators. Mailing address is Isconsm- • "., .&#13;
The Collegian, UW·Parkside, Kenosha, wisconsm, 53140. Business and&#13;
Editorial telephone number is 658-486t Ext. 24.&#13;
Volume I - No. 14M!&#13;
Ma rc H. Colby&#13;
Edilar-in-Chief&#13;
June I, 1970&#13;
Margie Noer&#13;
Associate Edilar&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Adv~rti.sjng Manager&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Teach.ln Speech&#13;
NOW SERVING&#13;
• ENCHILADAS •&#13;
COMPLETE MENU OF •&#13;
To the editor;&#13;
This is a speach I gave Tuesday, May 12&#13;
at the evening teachin. It is addressed to&#13;
those students who were active in the&#13;
rallies arid teach-in activities. I would like&#13;
for the whole student body to know of my&#13;
reelings. Thus, I submitted it for&#13;
publication in the Collegian.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Students, I have been involved in your&#13;
rallying during this past week. I have&#13;
listened to some of you some of the time.&#13;
This is what I hear YOU SAYING to me:&#13;
This country is coming apart at the&#13;
seams.&#13;
WE CARE!&#13;
And we want to do something about it.&#13;
We cannot yet vote. _&#13;
We must, then, show we care some other&#13;
way.&#13;
We are trying to influence you.&#13;
Listen to us!&#13;
Pay attention to our concerns!&#13;
Support our causes!&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Students, I hear you. I support you. You&#13;
are alive! active! Isense you care about&#13;
this country and this earth. I sense you&#13;
care more than many of my fellow faculty&#13;
do.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
I, too, deplore the war in Cambodia and&#13;
'Narn,&#13;
I, too, mourn with you over the death of&#13;
the Kent State Students.&#13;
I support you today, in your teach-in&#13;
activiti~ .&#13;
TACOS&#13;
.And. students 1have one more thing I W8ll1&#13;
to say. It is the most important thing I&#13;
have to say.&#13;
Many of you know that I am leaviDI&#13;
Parkside next month. The decision to&#13;
leave was easy for-me to make. In the&#13;
letter of resignation 1wrote a few weeb&#13;
ago to Dr. Isenberg, Chairman of the&#13;
SCience Division, L expressed that I was&#13;
leaving with no regret.&#13;
Since ~ then, though, something bas&#13;
happened around here. You have come&#13;
alive, and you have helped to awaken me.&#13;
Yesterday at the end of the Faculty&#13;
Meeting (which in reality was a FacultyStudent&#13;
Meeting), I had a new feeling. A&#13;
few of you and a few of us gathered after&#13;
that meeting. You were thanking us for our&#13;
support, we were thanking you for taking&#13;
the initiative and getting us involved. We&#13;
touched each other, we looked into eaCh&#13;
others eyes. We were no longer a groupOf&#13;
faculty and students. We were a group of&#13;
people in direct contact. That felt good to&#13;
me. You and I met for the first time, am&#13;
the depth of the feeling was expressed by&#13;
some with tears.&#13;
I felt we belonged to one community,&#13;
cared for each other. We have and can&#13;
continue to support each other and reaDy&#13;
do something together abouf ending the&#13;
Asian war.&#13;
Since this has happened, I leave&#13;
Parkside with some sadness, and with&#13;
some regret. Andif I return, it is this lIIat&#13;
will bring me back.&#13;
So, students, 1 thank you.&#13;
Myra J)owJlie&#13;
LifeSciOl\Ces&#13;
••&#13;
TAMALES&#13;
Mexkani'ood&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11&#13;
6829 39th Avenue&#13;
"AT THE SIGN OF THE CACTUS"&#13;
Phone 61&gt;1-5717.&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARRY OUT&#13;
"Mexicall food is fUll food&#13;
so Taco Killgs are fUll pla~e;';&#13;
EDITORIALS&#13;
Tra,ditionaf Barriers Erected&#13;
)&#13;
, drunk n parti , and rape were the&#13;
IA for not rentin the new paper space in a&#13;
. W n v r kn w that thi paper was being nm&#13;
by open hou e !&#13;
1. H. C.&#13;
ACLU Anniversary&#13;
m&#13;
unpopul r c&#13;
This n old case of indi\idual rights made early by the Founding&#13;
but oft n fo otten incc. ll hns been the ACLU's task to see that rights&#13;
Invite Track Stars&#13;
To Invitational Meet&#13;
d th Go d tir:Ni t field&#13;
From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch&#13;
already includes five 15 foot pole vaulters&#13;
and the new national prep record holder in&#13;
the hot put, Jesse Stuart of Glasgow. Ky.,&#13;
who has thrown 73-111~.&#13;
Dick Hustable, , 'icolet high school track&#13;
~ch, is the tale high school representa&#13;
t.ivP on the Games Committee.&#13;
Use Collegian&#13;
Classifieds&#13;
11w&#13;
LEADER&#13;
ddte&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KENOSHA&#13;
ILMWOOD PLAZA/ RACINE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
COLLEGIAN&#13;
Volume I - No. 14,t&#13;
Marc H. Colby&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
June 1, 1970 -·&#13;
MargieNoer -:-,-&#13;
Associate Editor&#13;
c· l PI s]&#13;
Bill Rolbiecke&#13;
Connie Petersen&#13;
John Jolicoeur&#13;
SvenTaffs&#13;
News Editor&#13;
Feature Editor&#13;
Business Manager&#13;
Adv~rtising Manager&#13;
Photographers&#13;
Advisor&#13;
1 eil Haglov&#13;
Bill Jacoby&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
Published every tw~ weeks by the students ~f. the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside; Kenosha, Wisconsin, 531~~- ipm10;sh e~p~ess~ in&#13;
editorials, cartoons, and articles are not necedssa.n_ yt otse oMt ~&#13;
1. mvdedrs1ty of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside, its students, faculty, or a ~mms _ra ors. a1 mg _a ress is&#13;
The Collegian, uw-Parkside, Kenosha, W1sconsm, 53140. Busmess and&#13;
Editorial telephone number is 658-4861 Ext. 24.&#13;
Teach-In Speech&#13;
To the editor:&#13;
This is a speach I gave Tuesday, May 12&#13;
at the evening teachin. It is addressed to&#13;
those students who were active in the&#13;
rallies ana teach-in activities. I would like&#13;
for the whole student body to know of my&#13;
feelings. Thus, I submitted it for&#13;
publication in the Collegian.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Students, I have been involved in your&#13;
rallying during this past week. I have&#13;
listened to some of you some of the time.&#13;
This is what I hear YOU SA YING to me:&#13;
This country is coming apart at the&#13;
seams.&#13;
WE CARE!&#13;
And we want to do something about it.&#13;
We cannot yet vote.&#13;
We must, then, show we care some other&#13;
way.&#13;
We are trying to influence you.&#13;
Listen to us!&#13;
Pay attention to our concerns!&#13;
Support our causes!&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Students, I hear you. I support you. You&#13;
are alive! active! I sense you care about&#13;
this country and this earth. I sense you&#13;
care more than many of my fellow faculty&#13;
do.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
I, too, deplore the war in Cambodia and&#13;
'Nam.&#13;
I, too, mo\ll'D with you over the death of&#13;
the Kent State Students.&#13;
I support you today, in your teach-in&#13;
activiti_es.&#13;
And, students I have one more thing I want&#13;
to say. It is the most important thing I&#13;
have to say.&#13;
Many of you know that I am leaving&#13;
Parkside next month. The decision to&#13;
leave was easy for me to make. In the&#13;
letter of resignation I wrote a few weeks&#13;
ago to Dr. Isenberg, Chairman of the&#13;
Science Division, I expressed that I was&#13;
leaving with no regret.&#13;
Since r then, though, something has&#13;
happened around here. You have come&#13;
alive, and you have helped to awaken me.&#13;
Yesterday at the end of the Faculty&#13;
Meeting (which in reality was a FacultyStudent&#13;
Meeting), I had a new feeling. A&#13;
few of you and a few of us gathered after&#13;
that meeting. You were thanking us for our&#13;
support, we were thanking you for taking&#13;
the initiative and getting us involved. We&#13;
touched each other, we looked into each&#13;
others eyes. We were no longer a group of&#13;
faculty and students. We were a group of&#13;
people in direct contact. That felt good to&#13;
me. You and I met for the first time, and&#13;
the depth of the feeling was expressed by&#13;
some with tears.&#13;
I felt we belonged to one community,&#13;
cared for each other. We have and can&#13;
continue to support each other and really&#13;
do something together abouf ending the&#13;
Asian war. Since this has happened, I leave&#13;
Parkside with some sadness, and with&#13;
some regret. And if I return, it is this that&#13;
will bring me back.&#13;
So, students, I thank you.&#13;
-&#13;
Myra Downie&#13;
Life Sciences&#13;
·NOW SERVING&#13;
TACOS • ENCHILADAS •&#13;
COMPLETE MENU OF •&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARRY 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 ,, AT THE SIGN OF THE CACTUS"&#13;
Phone 654-5717&#13;
TAMALES&#13;
• • &#13;
Man's Mind&#13;
And His :Memory&#13;
When - and if - scientific research A public lecture Monday night by&#13;
unlock the secrets of biochemical contr~1 George W. ,Beadle, former president of the&#13;
of man's mind and hIS "memory, who will Umversity of Chicago who was awarded a&#13;
deCide when and how and on whom such Nobel Prize in genetics in 1958 followed&#13;
knowledge will be applied"- , . the session ~n biochemistry of th~ nervous.&#13;
These were among the questions pon- system which featured five papers,&#13;
dered by some 200 physicians and scien- Participants in Monday afternoon's&#13;
lists at the final session of an international session were Dr. Richard J. Wurtman&#13;
symposium on "Biochemistry of Brain and Massachusetts Institute of Technology:&#13;
Memory" May 26 at The University of Bruce S.+ McEwen, Rockefeller (N.Y,)&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside.. . University; Julian N. Kanfer director&#13;
During tbe preceding two days, sym- Biochemical Research, Eunice '8. Shrive;'&#13;
posium participants had heard their Kennedy Center for Mental RetardatiOQ&#13;
distinguished colleagues from around the Research, WaverlY,Mass.; H.J. Hoffman,&#13;
world report on recent research relating Commonweath Scientific and Industrial&#13;
the body's biochemistry to human Research Organization, Sydney,&#13;
memory, behavior patterns and mental Australia; and Eric M. Shooter, Stanford&#13;
and physical health. UniverSity School of Medicine and&#13;
The social and medical implications of chairman of the session.&#13;
such research and its potential both for Participating in Tuesday morning's&#13;
good aod evil were the topics of the final session were Murray E. Jarvik, Albert&#13;
session. Einstein College of Medicine (N.Y.C.);&#13;
Alton L. Blakeslee, science editor for the Rohert E. Bowman, director, Regional&#13;
Associated Press, explored the possible" Primate Research Center, UW-Madison;&#13;
social consequences. Dr. Robert J. White Edward Glassman, University of North&#13;
of Case Western Reserve University's Carolina; Dr. Holger Hyden, director,&#13;
Department of Neurosurgery, tbe first to Institute of Neurobiology, University of&#13;
successfully transplant the brain of an Gotehorg, Sweden, and past-president of&#13;
experimental animal, spoke on the im- that university; and Bernard W. Agranoff,&#13;
plications of biochemical controls on Mental Health Research Institute,&#13;
medical practice and medical ethics. University _of Michigan, and chairman of&#13;
"Whom would you trust to alter you?" the session. -. ...&#13;
Blakeslee questioned. "Who should have At Monday afternoon's session, Wurtthe&#13;
awesome responsibility to enslave my man described studies of how certain&#13;
mind, to blot out my memory of what it is factors, such as environmental influences,&#13;
like to be a child or lover, or how to write nutrition and body hormones, modify _&#13;
or how to talk, or how to think within tbe brain functions when acting on psrticular&#13;
limitations of my talent and experiences?" nerve cells containing a special type of&#13;
Blakeslee warned of possible con- neurotransmitter for passing information&#13;
sequences of what he termed "a wave of a between connected cells. It has been&#13;
kind of anti-science !low abroad in the found, for example, that malnutrition in&#13;
land" in which "people tend to blame infants can have a long run effect on&#13;
science and technology rather than their' mental, as well as physical, development.&#13;
own use or abuse of the powers that McEwen discussed special chemical&#13;
science and technology put into their receptors in the brain which retain parhands."&#13;
ticular body hormones known to affect&#13;
ThUs, he said, people of one country neural activity and stimulate specific&#13;
might demand an end to expermentation, hehavior patterns.&#13;
but this would not stop efforts by others Kanfer described research on mice who&#13;
who might seek means of controlling experience tremors in their hindquarters,&#13;
men's minds to use as a weapon of war. associated the tremors with a deficiency of&#13;
"Might we not one day have instead of myelin coating (the casing a-round nerve&#13;
an arms race a minds race to direct cells), and discussed chemical studies&#13;
nations' destinies?" he questioned. which attempt to explain the myelin&#13;
"We should start thinking now how to deficiency.&#13;
ensure that future biochemical control of Shooter described his research in&#13;
mind and memory is used for man's ad- . breaking down into three interacting&#13;
vantage, not ~s abuse or ~s d~tructi?n," sub-units a substance produced by the&#13;
Blakeslee said. "For one thing IS certain - salivary glands and known to enhance&#13;
man's curiosity will continue to urge him growth of nerve cells.&#13;
to study himself, to solve these fun- Hoffman proposed a model explaining&#13;
damental mysteries of his thinking and his how the same nerve growth factor (NGFl&#13;
remembering. form ·the salivary glands enhances&#13;
:'We have already heard of tile prospect growth of nerve cells.&#13;
of genetic engineering to change man's At Tuesday morning's session, Jarvik&#13;
beredity, to eliminate inherited disorders, examined, and upheld, the evidence which&#13;
or to engineer a superior human mind. We underlies the role of consolidation in&#13;
have been apprised of the dangers if the memory. Consolidation theory holds that,&#13;
tinkering were put in the hands of evil following a learning experience, some&#13;
men. We have been advised to start time elapses before the experience&#13;
thinking hard, now, how to control wisely becomes established as part of the perthe&#13;
power to alter man's genetic makeup manent memory store. During this conwhen&#13;
the day comes that it is possible." .solidation time, memory is thought to be&#13;
Speaking on the medical implicatons of susceptible to disruption.&#13;
biochemical control, Dr. White pointed out The metabolism of RNA in the brain was&#13;
that when pharmacological agents are the subject of afternoon papers by&#13;
available for improving or modifying bowman and Glassman. RNA is an&#13;
memory and intellectual capacity, their essential step in translating DNA genetic&#13;
therapeutic use will require a re- code instructions for development of hfe.&#13;
examination, and possible a redefinif:!9n, In recent experiments, memory has ~n&#13;
of ethical standards governing medical transferred by taking RNA from the brain&#13;
practice. of one animal and injecting it into the brain&#13;
"Particularly relevant to mental disease of another. ~&#13;
and cerebral dysfunction, and consistent Bowman related RNA metabolism in&#13;
with the advancing knowledge of brain . various regions of the brain to different&#13;
chemistry, is the capability of the behavior experiences in rats,. whi~e&#13;
neurosurgeon to locate and infect into Glassman described RNA metabolism In&#13;
selected portions of the human brain mice during short learning experiences.&#13;
specific chemical substances known to Hyden, who was one of the originato~ of&#13;
fnOdifycerebral performance," Dr. White the idea that brain RNA plays an irnS8.1d."Such&#13;
techniques, combining the portant· role in memory. described&#13;
efforts of the surgeon, psychiatrist and research which examined the amount of a&#13;
SCientist, may not only assist in further particular protein (SIOO), which is found m&#13;
~locking the mysteries of the human certain brain nerve cells, In ~ates 00-&#13;
II11ndbut provide markedly improved dergoing training. The amount increased&#13;
~erapeutic approaches to mental and Hyden concluded that the Sioo protem&#13;
disease." in the hippocampsl nerve cells. IS&#13;
Citing the iniqueness and complexity of _ positively ~orrelated ~ith learning&#13;
tJu: human brain, in contrast to the processes which occur during the trauung.&#13;
PrImitive nervous systems of lower&#13;
mammals which bave been the subjects of&#13;
mUChof the biochemical research con-&#13;
~cted thus far, Dr. White said that&#13;
knOWledgeof the mind and memory of&#13;
man. will continue to come from investigations&#13;
on' man himself." -&#13;
.. SUCh. inves_tigation, he said, are&#13;
esPecially important in the area of&#13;
:uroChemical documentation of&#13;
torti~ns in memory and intellectual&#13;
Use Collegian&#13;
C'assifieds&#13;
Students to Perform&#13;
Two students at Parkside have been.&#13;
selected as members of an all-university&#13;
repertory tbeater company which will&#13;
perform this summer at the Madison&#13;
campus.&#13;
The two are Lucy Catlett, a freshman&#13;
from Caledonia, and Jon Chriatianaen, a&#13;
.sophomore, from Racine. Both are majon&#13;
at Parks ide and have appeared in performances&#13;
with the Parkside Players.&#13;
They were selected for the repertory&#13;
compa~ on the basis of open auditions&#13;
beld earlier this month at MadisoQ.&#13;
During the eight week summer session.&#13;
the company will present three plays,&#13;
samuel Beckett's avant garde "End&#13;
Game," David Halliwell's contemporary&#13;
"Hail Scrawdyke" and Anna Cora&#13;
Mowatt's pre-Civil War comedy&#13;
"Fashion. "&#13;
Organized as an actor training project,&#13;
the compsny will be directed by Prof.&#13;
Jonathan Curvin, who heads the&#13;
University Theater.&#13;
HOFFMAN'S&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
discount prices&#13;
5707- 6th Ave.&#13;
Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Sweat ora tIte 9fNJl4/.ioft 90fl&#13;
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mJd-fItIJJfJtfJld UQ~.&#13;
Ali UyA Oft 4II1t at $2.00&#13;
COLLEGE BOOK MART&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
posters, booles, records, art supp'ies&#13;
hisses and catcalls are rarely heard.&#13;
WHERE&#13;
THE&#13;
TIME&#13;
OF YOUR&#13;
UFE&#13;
IS&#13;
RIGHT&#13;
UNDER&#13;
YOUR&#13;
NOSE:&#13;
YOlm&#13;
THE WORLD'S WORST BANJO&#13;
l'lTlIm Irmm&#13;
BAND&#13;
LIVE FROIt NEW YORK CITY&#13;
TIm. JJ£4 9:00 P.M. TO 1:00 A.M.&#13;
UNDER THE TENT - TALLENT HALL PARKING LOT&#13;
Man's Mind&#13;
And His ·Memory&#13;
When - and if - scientif.ic research&#13;
unlock the secrets of_ biochemical contr_ol&#13;
of man's mind and his memory, who will&#13;
decide when and how and on whom such&#13;
knowledge will be applied?·,&#13;
These were among the questions pondered&#13;
by some 200 physicians and scientists&#13;
at the final session of an international&#13;
symposium on "Biochemistry of Brain and&#13;
Memory" May 26 at The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. During the preceding two days, symposium&#13;
participants had heard their&#13;
distinguished colleagues from around the&#13;
world report on recent research relating&#13;
the body's biochemistry to human&#13;
memory, behavior patterns and mental&#13;
and physical health.&#13;
The social and medical implications of&#13;
such research and its potential both for&#13;
good and evil were the topics of the final&#13;
session.&#13;
Alton L. Blakeslee, science editor for the&#13;
Associated Press, explored the possible·&#13;
social consequences. Dr. Robert J. White&#13;
of Case Western Reserve University's&#13;
Department of Neurosurgery, the first to&#13;
successfully transplant the brain of an&#13;
experimental animal, spoke on the implications&#13;
of biochemical controls on&#13;
medical practice and medical ethics.&#13;
"Whom would you trust to alter you?"&#13;
Blakeslee questioned. "Who should have&#13;
the awesome responsibility to enslave my&#13;
mind, to blot out my memory of what it is&#13;
like to be a child or lover, or how to write&#13;
or how to talk, or how to think within the&#13;
limitations of my talent and experiences?"&#13;
Blakeslee warned of possible consequences&#13;
of what he termed " a wave of a&#13;
kind of anti-science !}OW abroad in the&#13;
land" in which " people tend to blame&#13;
science and technology rather than their ·&#13;
own use or abuse of the powers that&#13;
science and technology put into their&#13;
hands."&#13;
Thus, he said, people of one COlll!try&#13;
might demand an end to expermentation,&#13;
but this would not stop efforts by others&#13;
who might seek means of controlling&#13;
men's minds to use as a weapon of war.&#13;
"Might we not one day have instead of&#13;
an arms race a minds race to direct&#13;
nations' destinies?" he questioned.&#13;
"We should start thinking now how to&#13;
ensure that future biochemical control of&#13;
mind and memory is used for man's advantage,&#13;
not ~s abuse or ~s d~tructi?n,"&#13;
Blakeslee said. "For one thmg 1s certam -&#13;
man's curiosity will continue to urge him&#13;
to study himself, to solve these fundamental&#13;
mysteries of his thinking and his&#13;
remembering.&#13;
''We have already heard of the prospect&#13;
of genetic engineering to change man's&#13;
heredity, to elimina_te inherited disorders,&#13;
or to engineer a supetior human mind. We&#13;
have been apprised of the dangers if the&#13;
tinkering were put in the hands of evil&#13;
men. We have been advised to start&#13;
thinking hard, now, how to control wisely&#13;
the power to alter man's genetic makeup&#13;
when the day comes that it is possible."&#13;
Speaking on the medical implicatons of&#13;
biochemical control, Dr. White pointed out&#13;
that when pharmacological agents are&#13;
available for improving or _mo&lt;!ifying&#13;
memory and intellectual capacity, their&#13;
therapeutic use will require a reexamination,&#13;
and possible a redefinitjpn,&#13;
of ethical standards governing medical&#13;
practice.&#13;
"Particularly relevant to mental disease&#13;
and cerebral dysfunction, and consistent&#13;
with the advancing knowledge of brain&#13;
chemistry, is the capability of the&#13;
neurosurgeon to loc~te and infect into&#13;
selected portions of the human brain&#13;
specific chemical substances known to&#13;
fnodify cerebral performance," Dr. White&#13;
said. "Such techniques, combining the&#13;
ef~orts of the surgeon, psychiatrist and&#13;
scientist, may not only assist in further&#13;
~locking the mysteries of the human&#13;
mind but provide markedly improved&#13;
~erapeutic approaches to mental&#13;
disease."&#13;
A public lecture Monday night by&#13;
George W. ,Beadle, former president of the&#13;
University of Chicago who was awarded a&#13;
Nobel Prize in genetics in 1958 followed&#13;
the session on biochemistry of the nervous. system which featured five papers.&#13;
P~rticipants _in Monday afternoon's&#13;
session were Dr. Richard J. Wurtman,&#13;
Massachusetts Institute of Technology;&#13;
Bruce S.+ McEwen, Rockefeller (N.Y.)&#13;
University; Julian N. Kanfer director&#13;
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              <text>CAMPUS&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
The Parkside intramural galt tournament&#13;
will open on May 20 and will run&#13;
through May 23. Entries should be made to&#13;
Coach Steven Stephens at the Kenosha&#13;
Campus.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Genevieve Prevot, a student of Carmen&#13;
Vila, will playa recital at 8 p.m., May 22,&#13;
in the Racine campus Badger Room.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Three student-directed one act. plays&#13;
will be presented at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Kenosha Fine Arts Room. The program,&#13;
planned for May 22 and 23, will include&#13;
"Coterie," an original play written and&#13;
directed by Jerry Socha, "Four On a&#13;
Heath," directed by Jon Christiansen, and&#13;
"Of Missing Persons," directed by Terry&#13;
Koleman. There is an admission charge.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The Black Student Union will sponsor a&#13;
fashion show and dance at 8 p.m., May 23&#13;
in the Racine Badger Room. (Admission&#13;
charge).&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Sunday, May 24, is the day for&#13;
registration for the Parkside Symposium&#13;
on the Biochemistry of Brain and Memory.&#13;
Registration will be held from noon to 9&#13;
p.m. at Midway Motor Lodge, Kenosha.&#13;
Symposium sessions will be held May 25&#13;
and 26 in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Nobel. laureate George W. Beadle,&#13;
professor of genetics at the University of&#13;
Chicago, will present a free public lecture&#13;
on "Genetics, Intelligence, and&#13;
Education" as part of the Brain and&#13;
Memory Symposium at 8:30 p.m., May 25&#13;
in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
On Tuesday, Ma&gt;, 26 at 1:30 p.rn. in&#13;
Greenquist Hall there will be a panel&#13;
discussion of "Implications of&#13;
Biochemical Control of Mind and&#13;
Memory". Participants are Parkside&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie, Robert J. White of the&#13;
Brain Research Laboratory, Cleveland&#13;
Memorial General Hospital, and Alton L.&#13;
Blakeslee, Associated Press Science&#13;
Editor. The discussion is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
BSU 'Fashion Flair'&#13;
Come and get an insight on "soul" . We,&#13;
the Black Student Union, thank those who&#13;
made our first production, "Is It Because&#13;
I'm Black", tbe tremendous success that it&#13;
was and we NOW announce our annual&#13;
spring "Fashion Flair", Saturday, May 23,&#13;
at 7~30 p.m. in the Racine Campus&#13;
"Badger Room".&#13;
Come and take a stroll through your&#13;
mind as a young lady strolls by and winks&#13;
an eye in a short-black-silk negligee to the&#13;
theme at the "Pawn Broker" by Ramsey&#13;
Lewis.&#13;
1970&#13;
~&#13;
Students Rally for Peace&#13;
Following several days of rallies and sleep-ins, the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside held a one-day teach-in, Tuesday, May 12, with&#13;
about 650 of the 2,900 students at Parkside attending. The teach-in,&#13;
which included speakers from the Parkside faculty and several from&#13;
outside of the university, also included various workshops led by&#13;
faculty members. The topics for the workshops ranged from European&#13;
affairs to minOrity rights.&#13;
It was the tragic chain of events surrounding the events at Kent&#13;
State, Ohio, which led students at Parkside to begin a movement which&#13;
has ended as the school's first real show of solidarity.&#13;
It was after the rallies at the Racine campus that the Parkside&#13;
students approached a group of about 20 faculty members on the&#13;
feasibility of the faculty calling a one-day strike to a IIow students to&#13;
participate in the day's activities.&#13;
An emergency faculty meeting was called for and at the end the&#13;
faculty had passed the three student requests. They, in part, were:&#13;
1. Condemnation of the war in Southeast Asia and support&#13;
for the withdrawal of troops.&#13;
2. Deplorment of the use of armed police forces on college&#13;
campuses, in particular the use of armed National Guard.&#13;
3. That a one-day general strike be approved so that&#13;
discussions may be held concerning the events of the past few&#13;
weeks.&#13;
All resolutions were passed with comfortable margins, despite&#13;
efforts by some to cut out what strength the resolution may have had&#13;
when it came to the debating floor.&#13;
On Tuesday, May 12,approximately 650stude It heard speakers&#13;
give informative talks on such subjects as: 1conornic , ecology,&#13;
minority groups and how these topics were related to the war.&#13;
After the lectures, which lasted all morning, the Parkside Strike&#13;
Committee passed out free lunches and then those pre ent broke up&#13;
into the varied workshops for more detailed discussion.&#13;
Strike and teach-in leaders stated that although the turn out was&#13;
not as large as hoped for, all agreed that the day' events were worthwhile&#13;
and successful. There Was No Violence&#13;
Two Administrative Positions filled&#13;
Parkside filled two major administrative&#13;
positions when the University&#13;
Board of Regents meeting in Madison on&#13;
May 8 approved the appointment of a ViceChancellor&#13;
for Academic Affairs and a&#13;
Dean of the College of Science and Society.&#13;
Approved as Vice-Chancellor for&#13;
Academic Affairs, effective July 1, was&#13;
John S. Harris, 52, currently the Commonwealth&#13;
Professor of 'Government at&#13;
The University of Massachusetts and&#13;
founder and past head of that university's&#13;
department of government.&#13;
Approved as Dean of the College of&#13;
Science and Society, also effective July 1,&#13;
was Arthur C. MacKinney, 41, head of the&#13;
department of psychology at Iowa State&#13;
university.&#13;
Both men bring distinguisbed national&#13;
reputations of scholarship and demonstrated&#13;
administrative success to key&#13;
Parkside posts.&#13;
MacKinney will report to Harris, as will&#13;
the Dean of tbe School of Modern Industry,&#13;
Parkside's other major academic unit, the&#13;
Director of Libraries, the Director of the&#13;
Learning Center, the administrators of the&#13;
Kenosha and. Racine campuses and the&#13;
Secretary of the Faculty. . .&#13;
MacKinney will assume the principal&#13;
deanship at Parkside. Tbe College of&#13;
Science and Society is now and will continue&#13;
to be the larger of UWP's two&#13;
academic units In program, staff and&#13;
enrollment. The College consists of four&#13;
divisions - science, hwnanities, social&#13;
A. C. MIUKm"ey John Hams&#13;
science and education - whose chairmen&#13;
will report to MacKinney.&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie, in&#13;
submitting the appointments to the&#13;
Regents, said Harris, as vice-chancellor,&#13;
also will be responsible for faculty and&#13;
program development, implementation of&#13;
the campus mission, instructional innovation,&#13;
and for seeking federal and&#13;
foundation funding for Parkside's&#13;
academic proprarns. He also will assist in&#13;
representing the campus to state agencies&#13;
concerned with total institutional&#13;
development.&#13;
Wyllie said that MacKinney will be&#13;
responsible for staff recruiting and staff&#13;
,development in the College of Science and&#13;
'Society, program budgeting, review and&#13;
implementation, instructional experimentation,&#13;
and the establishment of&#13;
quality standards for the College. He also&#13;
will coordinate shared courses, programs&#13;
and staffs with the Dean of the School of&#13;
Modern Industry, and work with Harris on&#13;
all matters affecting the academic well-&#13;
(Continued on Page 3)&#13;
CAMPUS&#13;
EVENTS&#13;
The Parkside intramural golt tournament&#13;
will open on May 20 and will run&#13;
through May 23. Entries should be made to&#13;
Coach Steven Stephens at the Kenosha&#13;
Campus.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Genevieve Prevot, a student of Carmen&#13;
Vila, will play a recital at 8 p.m., May 22,&#13;
in the Racine campus Badger Room.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Three student-directed one act plays&#13;
will be presented at 7:30 p.m. in the&#13;
Kenosha Fine Arts Room. The program,&#13;
planned for May 22 and 23, will include&#13;
"Coterie," an original play written and&#13;
directed by Jerry Socha, "Four On a&#13;
Heath," directed by Jon Christiansen, and&#13;
"Of Missing Persons," directed by Terry&#13;
Koleman. There is an admission charge.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
The Black Student Union will sponsor a&#13;
fashion show and dance at 8 p.m., May 23&#13;
in the Racine Badger Room. (Admission&#13;
charge).&#13;
+ + +&#13;
Sunday, May 24, is the day for&#13;
registration for the Parkside Symposium&#13;
on the Biochemistry of Brain and Memory.&#13;
Registration will be held from noon to 9&#13;
p.m. at Midway Motor Lodge, Kenosha.&#13;
Symposium sessions will be held May 25&#13;
and 26 in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Nobel laureate George W. Beadle,&#13;
professor of genetics at the University of&#13;
Chicago, will present a free public lecture&#13;
on "Genetics, Intelligence , and&#13;
Education" as part of the Brain and&#13;
Memory Symposium at 8:30 p.m., May 25&#13;
in Greenquist Hall.&#13;
+ + +&#13;
On Tuesday, May 26 at 1:30 p.m. in&#13;
Greenquist .Hall there will be a panel&#13;
discussion of "Implications of&#13;
Biochemical Control of Mind and&#13;
Memory". Participants are Parkside&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie, Robert J. White of the&#13;
Brain Research Laboratory, Cleveland&#13;
Memorial General Hospital, and Alton L.&#13;
Blakeslee, Associated Press Science&#13;
Editor. The discussion is free and open to&#13;
the public.&#13;
BSU 'Fashion Flair'&#13;
Come and get an insight on "soul". We,&#13;
the Black Student Union, thank those who&#13;
made our first production, "Is It Because&#13;
I'm Black", the tremendous success that it&#13;
was and we NOW announce our annual&#13;
spring "Fashion Flair", Saturday, May 23,&#13;
at 7:30 p.m. in the Racine Campus&#13;
"Badger Room".&#13;
Come and take a stroll through your&#13;
mind as a young lady strolls by and winks&#13;
an eye in a short-black-silk negligee to the&#13;
theme of the "Pawn Broker" by Ramsey&#13;
Lewis.&#13;
./&#13;
There Was No Violence&#13;
Students Rally for Peace&#13;
Following several days of rallies and sleep-ins, the University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside held a one-day teach-in, Tuesday, May 12. with&#13;
about 650 of the 2,900 students at Parkside attending. Th • t a ·h-in.&#13;
which included speakers from the Parkside faculty and everal from&#13;
outside of the university, also included various work hop led by&#13;
faculty members. The topics for the workshops ranged from European&#13;
affairs to minority rights.&#13;
It was the tragic chain of events surrounding the events at Kent&#13;
State, Ohio, which led students at Parkside to begin a movement which&#13;
has ended as the school's first real show of solidarity.&#13;
It was after the rallies at the Racine campus that the Parkside&#13;
students approached a group of about 20 faculty members on the&#13;
feasibility of the faculty calling a one-day strike to allow tudcnt to&#13;
participate in the day's activities.&#13;
An emergency faculty meeting was called for and at the end the&#13;
faculty had passed the three student requests. They, in part, wer :&#13;
1. Condemnation of the war in Southeast Asia and support&#13;
for the withdrawal of troops.&#13;
2. Deplorment of the use of armed police force on colleg&#13;
campuses, in particular the use of armed National Guard.&#13;
3. That a one-day general strike be approved so that&#13;
discussions may be held concerning the events of the pa. t few&#13;
weeks.&#13;
All resolutions were passed with comfortabl • margins, d spit&lt;.!&#13;
efforts by some to cut out what strength the r solution ma ' hav ' had&#13;
when it came to the debating floor.&#13;
On Tuesday, May 12, approximately 650 ·tude· ,t • heard sp ,. k&lt;&gt;rs&#13;
give informative talks on such subjects as: &lt;. ~onomic , Pcology.&#13;
minority groups and how these topics were r lated to th war.&#13;
After the lectures, which lasted all morning, the Park. id ,. tri ke&#13;
Committee passed out free lunches a nd then thos • pr 'S ,nt hrokl• up&#13;
into the varied workshops for more detailed discu~sion.&#13;
Strike and teach-in leaders stated that although th turn out wa s&#13;
not as large as hoped for, all agreed that the day' · C\' nts \\' 'n ' worthwhile&#13;
and successful.&#13;
Two Administrative Positions Filled&#13;
Parkside filled two major ad- ministrative positions when the University&#13;
Board of Regents meeting in Madison on&#13;
May 8 approved the appointment of a ViceChancellor&#13;
for Academic Affairs and a&#13;
Dean of the College of Science and Society.&#13;
Approved as Vice-Chancellor for&#13;
Academic Affairs, effective July 1, was&#13;
John S. Harris, 52, currently the Commonwealth&#13;
Professor of ·Government at&#13;
The University of Massachusetts and&#13;
founder and past head of that university's&#13;
department of government.&#13;
Approved as Dean of the College of&#13;
Science and Society, also effective July 1,&#13;
was Arthur C. MacKinney, 41, head of the&#13;
department of psychology at Iowa State&#13;
university.&#13;
Both men bring distinguished national&#13;
reputations of scholarship and demonstrated&#13;
administrative success to key&#13;
Parkside posts. MacKinney will report to Harris, as will&#13;
the Dean of the School of Modern Industry,&#13;
Parkside's other major academic unit, the&#13;
Director of Libraries, the Director of the&#13;
Learning Center, the administrators of the&#13;
Kenosha and Racin~ campuses and the&#13;
Secretary of the Faculty. . . MacKinney will assume the principal&#13;
deanship at Parkside. The Coll~e of&#13;
Science and Society is now and will continue&#13;
to be the larger of UWP's two&#13;
academic units in program, staff and&#13;
enrollment. The College con~i~ts of fo_ur&#13;
divisions - science, humanities, social&#13;
A. C. MacKinney&#13;
science and education - whose chairmen&#13;
will report to MacKinney.&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie, in&#13;
submitting the appointments to the&#13;
Regents, said Harris, as vice-chancellor,&#13;
also will be responsible for faculty and&#13;
program development, implementation of&#13;
the campus mission, instructional innovation,&#13;
and for seeking federal and&#13;
foundation funding for Parkside's&#13;
academic proprams. He also will assist in&#13;
representing the campus to state agencies&#13;
concerned with total institutional&#13;
John Harris&#13;
development.&#13;
Wyllie said lhat MacKinnev will b&#13;
responsible for staff recruiting· and staff&#13;
development in the College of Science and&#13;
'Society, program budgeting, rE:view and&#13;
implementation, instructional experimentation,&#13;
and the establishment of&#13;
quality standards for the College. He also&#13;
will coordinate shared courses, programs&#13;
and staffs with the Dean of the School of&#13;
Modern Industry. and "'70rk with Harris on&#13;
all matters a'ffecting the academic well-&#13;
(Continued on Page 3) &#13;
Nearly 100,000&#13;
Mobilize in Washington&#13;
where several Nazi Party members were&#13;
arrested in skirmishes with anti-war&#13;
protestors.&#13;
The first police-protestor confronUition&#13;
came tate in the afternoon when police&#13;
used mace and CS gas to slop demonstrators&#13;
from rocking one of the city buses&#13;
barring entrance to Lafayette Park in&#13;
front of the White House.&#13;
There were more confrontations&#13;
throughout the evening, as Civil Disturbance&#13;
Unit police moved in with force ~n&#13;
groups of protestors sitting peacefully 10&#13;
downtown intersections. police also&#13;
cleared a street in front of the Peace Corps&#13;
where a small crowd had been ga thered&#13;
for two days to give support to the Committee&#13;
of Returned Volunteers which had&#13;
liherated a Iloor of the building Friday&#13;
morning, May 8. The liherators new a&#13;
National Liheration Front nag from the&#13;
building and banners reading "Liberation,&#13;
not Pacification".&#13;
The most serious violence, which involved&#13;
fewer than 1,000 demonstrators&#13;
whose politics did not agree with the&#13;
"Keep it Angry but Peaceful" pleas of&#13;
New Mohe, took place around DuPont&#13;
Circle and around the George Washington&#13;
University campus. A Hrevolutionary"&#13;
contingent of about 400 marched from the&#13;
University to the Circle after dark,&#13;
smashing bank, stock exchange, and&#13;
business windows as they went. Their&#13;
target was the International Association of&#13;
Police Chiefs, but they could not find the&#13;
building before police met them and&#13;
clashed at the Circle.&#13;
Later in the evening, protestors and&#13;
police again clashed at George&#13;
Washington University where demonstrators&#13;
had turned over a buss and street&#13;
barricades and set them on fire. Tear gas&#13;
permeated the campus throughout the&#13;
nighl.&#13;
aAoorox'imalely 350 persons w-ere&#13;
arrested during the day's protest", and&#13;
about 25 persons were injured, More than&#13;
100 windows were broken, according to&#13;
police who termed the violence minor.&#13;
While most of the demonstrators who&#13;
had come from as far as North Dakota and&#13;
Canada left the city immediately after the&#13;
rally and afternoon march, some stayed in&#13;
the city to lobby before Congressmen on.&#13;
Monday, May 11. Yale President Kingman&#13;
Brewster planned to lead a contingent&#13;
trom the University to the CapitoL&#13;
A~?ut 30 Congressmen and senators&#13;
participated in the Mobilzation, including&#13;
New ...York Senators Jacob Javits and&#13;
Charles Goodell. A large percenUige olthe'&#13;
demonstrators were attending their first&#13;
Washington anti-war demonstration.&#13;
WASHINGTON - (CPS) - With less&#13;
than a week's notice, nearly tOO,OOOpersoos&#13;
came together behind the White&#13;
House May 9 to demand an immediate end&#13;
to the government's war in Southeast Asia&#13;
and its war on political dissent at home.&#13;
Under blistering 90 degree heat, the&#13;
protestors heard New Mobe Director Ron&#13;
Young tell them the difference hetween&#13;
this massive mobilization and those in the&#13;
past is that "this time we realize mass&#13;
protests won't end the war". Young urged&#13;
the crowd to carry on and spread the&#13;
nationwide student strike to a more&#13;
general strike, "and we'll end the war that&#13;
way, "&#13;
Speaker alter speaker encouraged the&#13;
crowd to spread the strike, to stay or to&#13;
return to Washington to inundate Congress&#13;
with demands to cut off war funds and to&#13;
return to their communities to organize&#13;
opposition to government policies among&#13;
workers, housewives, and everyone.&#13;
Doug Miranda, a director of the New&#13;
Haven Black Panther Party, told the&#13;
throngs that he is getting tired of the&#13;
student movement looking across the&#13;
glohe for an issue when black dissidents&#13;
are being repressed in their own communities.&#13;
Miranda gave up most of his&#13;
speaking time to two whites, John Froines&#13;
of the Conspiracy 8 and Rohert Scheer,&#13;
former editor of Ramparts, to comuunucutc&#13;
to the predominantly white&#13;
crowd the need for joining with and supptlrllO~&#13;
the Black Panther Party.&#13;
There were more black people partictpating&#13;
in this protest than in previous&#13;
anti-war mobilizations, and there was&#13;
some increase in entlastasm among the&#13;
whites for allying wi' n the black radicals.&#13;
Following a three-hour rally on the&#13;
Ellipse direclly behind the White House,&#13;
for which government permission had&#13;
been granted the night before, tens of&#13;
thousands of protestors followed New&#13;
Mobe sponsored black coffins to the streets&#13;
and marched around the White House and&#13;
Lafayette Park. both of which were cordoned&#13;
0(( by a wall of municipal buses.&#13;
Some of the caskets were labeled ..."Gis",&#13;
"Black Panthers", "Kent State"&#13;
"Vietnamese", and "Cambodians", all in&#13;
reference to the government's organized&#13;
killing or these groups.&#13;
Ther~ were tense moments during the&#13;
illegal march as pollee lined up behind the&#13;
hust's dOIU1l'dtheir gas masks, But Mobe&#13;
marshalls kept the mammoth crowd&#13;
moving and temporarily prevented the&#13;
confrontation.&#13;
There were side marches to the Labor&#13;
Department by Students for a Democratic&#13;
Society and to the Justice Department&#13;
Student Strike&#13;
Hits 441 Campuses .&#13;
THE AMERICAN CAMPUS - (CPS) - Guardsmen bayonetting seven students&#13;
!he ~ahon's largest-ever student strike in and four newsmen at the University of&#13;
Its. fIrst .week affected 44t colleges and New Mexico, police using birdshot to&#13;
Universities and shut down almost 250 of break up rallies at State University of New&#13;
the~, a~ well as ~e entire California York at Buffalo and police anrl"Guardsmen&#13;
public higher educ~h~n system, carrying loaded weapons onto campuses&#13;
More than one million students, faculty .across the country.&#13;
members and administrative staff In angr):' response to government·police&#13;
members struck the week of May 4 over repression and in angry miliUince over the&#13;
the government mvas,on of Cambod,a, the invasion of Cambodia, bombing of North&#13;
continumg w~r agamst the people of Vietnam, continuation of the war in&#13;
Southeast ASia, the murders of four Vietnam, and growing repression of the&#13;
student~ at Kent State University in Ohio Black Panther Party, the strike&#13;
by Nabonal Guardsmen and, on many snowballed during the week&#13;
campuses, over government repression of Strikers are attempting to ~rganize their&#13;
POPhtthlcalpdlSSldents such as the Black communities to create a general strike in&#13;
an er arty Th '. th ti d e na on, an even a New Jersey draft&#13;
ere was violence. coast to coast and board has gone on strike.&#13;
~~~c~n~nent hpa~an.Ola and repression A national strike steering committee is&#13;
'c roug t ahonal Guardsmen to meeting May 13-15 at Yale Universt t&#13;
dolC'ns of campuses and caused panicked coordinate efforts to build th ~k 0&#13;
governors to cancel their national Every cam us on strike e S I e.&#13;
~~U~.I~~~Jovcrnors' conference this send two dJegates to Ya~,s::;e~~~ef~r~~&#13;
Much of th' '. stnke began three weeks ago.&#13;
breed of d~t;~o~~nce swa~ ,ot the new At Princeton, w~ere the strike has been&#13;
Students and oll~r gstril:.sfl~et Ui:~~~~ 100 fpercentheffecbve, a natipnal anti-draft&#13;
ROTC build'ng' d . can erence as heen called for May 19-21&#13;
I s 10 a ozen states and 10 The meerng . t '&#13;
New York smashed an Atomic Energy sponsored b ;sbe°upena the public and· is&#13;
computer. . . y man for Nabonal Draft&#13;
Government response to the strike in- ~';"':I~~~ ~U~~l. f:n&#13;
thde past week,&#13;
eluded National Guardsmen murderi .' ra car s have been&#13;
four students at Kent State universi~ turned u:nto the Union with a pledge of , more an 1,500 to come, Several draft&#13;
Student Senate&#13;
Election Results&#13;
cards also were turned in and burned at&#13;
the Washington Mobilization Ma~·k9. ha&#13;
lJozet1S of the schools on strt e ~e&#13;
been shut down for the rest of AcadeI~lIc&#13;
term although students are demandmg&#13;
the c~mpuses remain open for students. to&#13;
hold teach-ins and" to do, commumty&#13;
organizing and strike spreadmg work.&#13;
Around the nation, a sample run-down of&#13;
strike events: " .&#13;
ROTC"buildings were destroyed by fire&#13;
at the University of Kentucky, Kent State,&#13;
Washington University in Sl. LoUIS(where&#13;
students two months earlier had burned&#13;
the other ROTC building); and CaseWestern&#13;
Reserve Cleveland; Tul~nE&#13;
ROTC buildings were firebombed causms&#13;
major damage at Ohio State and OhIO&#13;
University; ROTC buildings. we~e attacked&#13;
or occupied at. Um.verslty of&#13;
Nebraska University of VirgInia, Western&#13;
minois, a~d Central Michigan. Fa~ulty at&#13;
Sl. Louis University and,Rutgers this week&#13;
voted ROTC off campus.&#13;
At least nine buildings bave been&#13;
firebombed at the University of WlSconsm,&#13;
and administration buildings have been&#13;
burned at Colorado State and SUNY&#13;
Albany. At New York University 2,~&#13;
students who had held a $100,900 ~tom1C&#13;
energy commission computer for ~ans~m&#13;
destroyed it when the ransom wasn t prod.&#13;
At the University of 30wa students&#13;
burned a classroom building; several fires&#13;
were set at East Carolina University in&#13;
Greenville. Student protestors also set&#13;
fires at the University of Michigal\, the&#13;
University of Minnesota at Duluth,&#13;
Valparaiso College in Indiana, the State&#13;
~niversity of New York at New Paltz,&#13;
Marquette University, and Concordia&#13;
"reachers College in minois.&#13;
Most of the fires were aimed at the&#13;
miliUiry on campus of the University'S&#13;
complicity with the government and&#13;
military. Strike leaders on most campuses&#13;
have asked that tbe strike not be aimed at&#13;
the campuses per se but against the&#13;
government oppressors.&#13;
Mammoth demonstrations against the&#13;
war and in support of the strike have been&#13;
held in San Diego, Los Angeles, Minneapolis&#13;
(40,000) and New York, as well as&#13;
in Washington, where almost 100,000&#13;
rallied. More than 4,000 demonstrated in&#13;
Atlanta, Georgia&gt; arid colleges in- South&#13;
Carolina experienced their first campus&#13;
yiolence ever as support grew for the&#13;
strike last week. .&#13;
The National strike communications&#13;
center at Brandeis University has set up a&#13;
ham radio network which is sending strike&#13;
information to 20 campuses.&#13;
The strike has been endorsed by the&#13;
Student National Education Association,&#13;
the student-teacher and teaching&#13;
assistants division of the National&#13;
Education Association. The government's&#13;
Camhodian policy also bas been blasted by&#13;
such varied groups as the United Auto&#13;
Workers and the Students of Int~rnational&#13;
Affairs Action Committee, an association&#13;
of students of international politics and&#13;
governments.&#13;
At Northwestern University May 7,5,000&#13;
persons met and voted unanimously to&#13;
secede from the United SUites. They wrote&#13;
a Declaration of Independence and set up&#13;
customs stations on the major highway in&#13;
Evanston, letting through only residents,&#13;
Police re-routed traffic.&#13;
On several campuses in major cities&#13;
traffic blockades have brought rush bour&#13;
traffIC to a halt. Students in New York&#13;
Uilked of a sUitewide traffic blockage, as&#13;
students at Albany and Buffalo blocked&#13;
major roads. In Washington, police used&#13;
t.ear ~s to disperse 2,000 students at&#13;
AmerIcan University who were leafletting&#13;
cars and blocking rusb hour traffic into the&#13;
safe, white suburbs.&#13;
Eulogy services were held na tionwide in&#13;
memory of the four students murdered by&#13;
Guardsmen. at Kent SUite. (The four&#13;
students were Allison Krause, 19; Sandra&#13;
Lee .Schauer, 20; Jeffrey Miller, 19; and&#13;
WIlham K. Schroeder, 19,) In Boston, at a&#13;
gathermg of 20,000 Massachusetts Go&#13;
Frances Sargent ordered the flag lowere':i&#13;
to balf sUiff in honor of the Kent SUite 4.&#13;
~.!!~SChOOI students struck in, New&#13;
or , and by .F!'day, May 8, every' higb&#13;
schoolln the CIlYwas alfected. There were&#13;
also high. school strikes in Washington and&#13;
other CItIes,&#13;
Schools in the South and Midwest which&#13;
had never e~perienced a strike or unrest&#13;
before experIenced them. The University&#13;
of Idaho went on strike, and the mayor of&#13;
the. college town of Idaho supported it The&#13;
Umverslty of North DakoUi struck and th&#13;
student government sent $1 000 ;"orth ~&#13;
buses. to Washington for' the May 09&#13;
moblhzatlOn. Three colleges in G .&#13;
struck, as did some predominantly ~f!~:&#13;
colleges such as Delaware State.&#13;
An election to choose delegates t&#13;
student constitutional congress was hel a&#13;
on May 4 and 5, 1970. The votes cast w d&#13;
Uibulated by the Elections Commilte:re&#13;
the CCC and independently by De of&#13;
Dearhorn's Office of Student Affairs :&#13;
results were the same, . e&#13;
Beverly Noble, having received the m&#13;
votes (114), will serve as prOvis,' OSl&#13;
ch . Th E t' cnal alrwoman. e xecu ive Commit&#13;
will be composed of Beverly Noble Watee&#13;
Bosman, Walter Breach, and' KaYne&#13;
Carter. !he purpose of the committee is~&#13;
set the time and place for the first meet" a&#13;
and notify delegates. Further questiIIlg&#13;
should be directed to Phillip M. Simpso~&#13;
exl. 53, Kenosha campus. at&#13;
The elected delegates are: Beverl&#13;
Noble, Wayne Bosman, Walter Brea ~&#13;
Karyn Carter, Marc Eisen, Tom Fes~ ,&#13;
John Wierzbichi, Roy Bohn, Dean Loum~'&#13;
Mary Terselic, .Jobn Koloen, Richard&#13;
Polansky, Bob Lindeman, Gerald Socha&#13;
Jack. Tucker, Tom Kreul, Douglal&#13;
Johnson, Larry Thielen, Steve Preston&#13;
Gary Adelson and Brad Davidson. '&#13;
Use Collegian Classifieds&#13;
Gov. Ronald Reagan of California c_&#13;
down the nine campuses of the University&#13;
of California and almost 140 more state&#13;
subsidized schools.&#13;
National Guardsmen occupied campuses&#13;
in Ohio, Kentucky, Maryland,&#13;
Illinois, Wisconsin, and South Carolinato&#13;
list only a few of the most publicizedI&#13;
sUites.&#13;
The strike is in its second week now,with&#13;
some campuses shut down for the rest of&#13;
the term and others struggling to keep&#13;
open. Students are talking in terms of&#13;
keeping the campuses open but without&#13;
business as usual. Community organizing&#13;
and spreading tbe strike are the goalsof&#13;
the strikers whose biggest obstacle maybe&#13;
tbe approaching summer when most&#13;
students will leave the campuses.&#13;
Already, a number of distinguishol&#13;
scholars have called for building toward a&#13;
massive fall strike, if the war is notetxled.&#13;
Led by MIT Professor of Linguist CS&#13;
Noam Chomsky and a group of Berkeley&#13;
professors, the idea is seeking support&#13;
nationwide.&#13;
At the moment, most strikers are slill&#13;
trying to build this spring's strike, whicll&#13;
began with a call by students at a rallyin&#13;
New ,Haven to support the Black Panlher&#13;
Parfy May 2 and immediately after&#13;
Nixon's announcement of his Cambodian&#13;
invasion. And many of the strikers, ledby&#13;
the Student Mobilization Committee,are&#13;
Uilking in terms of building towan!'&#13;
massive show of strength· on Memorial&#13;
Day, May 30. However, as June grows&#13;
closer, more and more strikers will decide&#13;
tbe str.ike against government poli,"&#13;
must be continued and expanded in tIJe&#13;
fall.&#13;
fJ.&#13;
.........~".&#13;
INSURANCJ&#13;
FIRE' .&#13;
....UJ&lt;)&#13;
LIFE&#13;
LIABILITY&#13;
THEFT&#13;
. BONDS&#13;
BUSINESS&#13;
.ACCIDENT&#13;
HOSPITALIzATION&#13;
MARINE'&#13;
HOUSEHOLD&#13;
Long Haul Coverages&#13;
IN_Ai: AHO·PUIT C9WIiOII- -- PIAJII&#13;
'lMIUn'-wcaalCllWl'l COllI'&#13;
DON SPARKS&#13;
-&#13;
INSURANCE" [657.5156.&#13;
II9CM S9IIt A""&#13;
Nearly 100,000&#13;
Mobilize in Washington&#13;
cards also were turned in and burned at&#13;
the Washington Mobilization Ma~ 9. h&#13;
uozens of the schools on strike a~e&#13;
Student Senate&#13;
Election Results been shut down for the rest of Acade~1c&#13;
term although students are demanding&#13;
the c~mpuses remain open for students_to&#13;
hold teach-ins and . to do community&#13;
organizing_ and strike spreading work. .&#13;
Around the nation, a sample run-down of&#13;
An election to choose delegates t&#13;
student constitutional congress was ; 1a&#13;
on May 4 and 5, 1970. The votes cast we d&#13;
tabulated by the Elections Committeeere&#13;
the CCC and independently by 1) of&#13;
Dearborn's Office of Student Affairs ;~n&#13;
results were the same. · e&#13;
where several Nazi Party members were&#13;
arrested in skirmishes with anti-war&#13;
protestors.&#13;
strike events: · . ROTC buildings were destroyed by fire&#13;
WASH!, 'GTON - (CPS) - With less&#13;
th n a week'· notice, nearly 100,000 peron&#13;
came together behind the While&#13;
Hou e :\tay 9 to demand an immediate end&#13;
to the government's war m Southeast Asia&#13;
and its war on political dissent at home.&#13;
oder blistering 90 degree heat, the&#13;
protcstors heard New :\lobe Director Ron&#13;
Young tell them the difference between&#13;
thi massive mobilization and those in the&#13;
p: st is that " this lime we realize mass&#13;
prote t won't end the war" . Young urged&#13;
th crowd to carry on and spread the&#13;
nationwide . tudent strike to a more n ral . trike, "and we'll end the war that&#13;
w y." • p kcr after speaker encouraged the&#13;
·rowd to pread the strike, to stay or to&#13;
return to Washington to inundate Congress&#13;
with d mands to cul off war funds and to&#13;
r •turn to their communities to organize&#13;
opposition to government policies among&#13;
workers, hou. ewives, and everyone.&#13;
Uoug 1iranda, a director of the New&#13;
H, vl'n Black Panther Party, told the&#13;
throng that he is getting tired of the&#13;
tud nt movement looking across the&#13;
globe for an issue when black dissidents r being repr sed in their own communities.&#13;
tiranda gave up most of his&#13;
pc king time to two whites, John Froines&#13;
or the Conspiracy 8 and Robert Scheer,&#13;
former editor of Ramparts, to communtl·alc&#13;
to the predominantly white&#13;
crowd the need for joining with and sllpporl&#13;
ini-: lht• Bluck Panther Party. Th re were more black people parltcipa&#13;
ting in this protest than in previous&#13;
anti-war mobilizations, and there was&#13;
ome increase in enti•Jsiasm among the&#13;
whites for allying wi ' n the black radicals.&#13;
Following a three-hour rally on the&#13;
Ellipse directly hehind the White House,&#13;
for which government permission had&#13;
be •n granted the night before, tens of&#13;
thousands of protestors followed New&#13;
Mob sponsored black coffins to the streets&#13;
and marchcd around the White House and&#13;
l..ufnn)ltc Park, both of which were cordoncd&#13;
off by a wall or municipal buses. Some of the caskets were labeled,. "Gis",&#13;
" Blaek Panthers" , "Kent State", "Vietnamese", and "Cambodians" , all in&#13;
reference to the government's organized&#13;
killing of thcse groups. Therr were tense moments during the&#13;
illcgnl march as Police lined up behind the&#13;
husl'S donnl'd lhl'ir gas masks. But Mobe&#13;
marshalls kept the mammoth crowd&#13;
moving and temporarily prevented the&#13;
confrontation. '&#13;
There were side marches to the Labor&#13;
D partmcnt by Students for a Democratic&#13;
Society and to the Justice Department&#13;
The first police-protestor confrontation&#13;
came late in the afternoon when police&#13;
used mace and CS gas to stop demonstrators&#13;
from rocking one of the city buses&#13;
barring entrance to Lafayette Park in&#13;
front of the White House.&#13;
There were more confrontations&#13;
throughout the evening, as Civil Disturbance&#13;
Unit police moved in with force on&#13;
groups of protestors sitting peacefully in&#13;
downtown intersections. Police also&#13;
cleared a street in front of the Peace Corps&#13;
where a small crowd had been gathered&#13;
for two days to give support to the Committee&#13;
of Returned Volunteers which had&#13;
liberated a floor of the building Friday&#13;
morning, May 8. The liberators flew a&#13;
National Liberation Front flag from the&#13;
building and banners reading "Liberation,&#13;
not Pacification" . The most serious violence, which involved&#13;
fewer than 1,000 demonstrators&#13;
whose politics did not agree with the&#13;
"Keep it Angry but Peaceful" pleas of&#13;
New Mobe, look place around DuPont&#13;
Circle and around the George Washington&#13;
University campus. A "revolutionary"&#13;
contingent of about 400 marched from the&#13;
University to the Circl~ after dark,&#13;
smashing bank, stock exchange and&#13;
business windows as they went. Their&#13;
target was the International Association of&#13;
Police Chiefs, but they could not find the&#13;
building before police met them and&#13;
clashed at the Circle.&#13;
Later in the evening, protestors and&#13;
police again clashed at George&#13;
Washington University where demonstrators&#13;
had turned over a buss and street&#13;
barricades and set them on fire. Tear gas&#13;
permeated the campus throughout the&#13;
night.&#13;
0&#13;
Approximately 350 persons were&#13;
arrested during the day's protest, and&#13;
about 25 persons were injured. More than&#13;
100 windows were broken, according to&#13;
police who termed the violence minor.&#13;
While most of the demonstrators who&#13;
had come from as far as North Dakota and&#13;
Canada left the city immediately after the&#13;
rally and afternoon march, some stayed in&#13;
the city to lobby before Congressmen on .&#13;
Monday, May 11. Yale President Kingman&#13;
Brewster planned to lead a contingent&#13;
trom the University to the Capitol.&#13;
A~~ut 30 Congressmen and senators&#13;
participated in the Mobilzation, including&#13;
New ,York Senators Jacob Javits and&#13;
Charles Goodell. A large percentage of the ·&#13;
demonstrators were attending their first&#13;
Washington anti-war demonstration.&#13;
Student Strike&#13;
at the University of Kentucky, K~nt State,&#13;
Washington University in St. Louis (where&#13;
students two months earlier had burned&#13;
the other ROTC building)' and CaseWes&#13;
tern Reserve Cleveland; Tul~nE&#13;
ROTC buildings were firebombed causu:~g&#13;
major damage at Ohi~ ~tate and Ohio&#13;
University; ROTC bwldmgs_ we~e attacked&#13;
or occupied at. U_m_vers1ty of&#13;
Nebraska University of Virg1ma, Western&#13;
Illinois, a~d Central Michigan. Fa~ulty at&#13;
St. Louis University and,Rutgers this week&#13;
voted ROTC off campus.&#13;
At least nine buildings ha~e b~n&#13;
firebombed at the University of Wisconsin,&#13;
and administration buildings have been&#13;
burned at Colorado State and SUNY&#13;
Albany. At New York University 2,~&#13;
students who had held a $100,900 11tomic&#13;
energy commission computer for ~ans~m&#13;
destroyed it when the ransom wasn t paid.&#13;
Al the University of .:.Iowa stud~nts&#13;
burned a classroom building; several fires&#13;
were set at East Carolina University in&#13;
Greenville. Student protestors also set&#13;
fires at the University of Michigan, the&#13;
University of Minnesota at Duluth,&#13;
Valparaiso College in Indiana, the State&#13;
.University of New York at New Palt~,&#13;
~arquette University, and Concordia&#13;
•Teachers College in Illinois.&#13;
Most of the fires were aimed at the&#13;
military on campus of the University's&#13;
complicity with the government and&#13;
military. Strike leaders on most campuses&#13;
have asked that the strike not be aimed at&#13;
the campuses per se but against the&#13;
government oppressors.&#13;
Mammoth demonstrations against the&#13;
war and in support of the strike have been&#13;
held in San Diego, Los Angeles, Minneapolis&#13;
(40,000) and New York, as well as&#13;
in Washington, where almost 100,000&#13;
rallied. More than 4,000 demonstrated in&#13;
Atlanta, Georgfa, arid colleges in- South&#13;
Carolina experienced their first campus&#13;
violence ever as support grew for the&#13;
strike last week. · The National strike communications&#13;
center at Brandeis University has set up a&#13;
ham radio network which is sending strike&#13;
information to 20 campuses.&#13;
The strike has been endorsed by the&#13;
Student National Education Association,&#13;
the student-teacher and teaching&#13;
assistants division of the National&#13;
Education Association. The government's&#13;
Cambodian policy also has been blasted by&#13;
such varied groups as the United Auto&#13;
Workers and the Students of Int~rnational&#13;
Affairs Action Committee, an association&#13;
of students of international politics and&#13;
governments.&#13;
At Northwestern University May 7, 5,000&#13;
persons met and voted unanimously to&#13;
secede from the United States. They wrote&#13;
a Declaration of Independence and set up&#13;
Beverly Noble, having received them&#13;
votes (114), will serve as provis· 08t&#13;
h . Th E t· iona1 c airwoman. e xecu ive Cornm·tte&#13;
will be composed of Beverly Noble w 1 e&#13;
Bosman, Walter Breach, and' K!Yne&#13;
Carter. The i;urpose of the committee · ~ set the time and {&gt;lace for the first mee~ 0&#13;
and notify delegates. Further questi mg&#13;
should be directed to Phillip M. Simpso~ns&#13;
ext. 53, Kenosha campus. at&#13;
The elected delegates are: Bever!&#13;
Noble, Wayne Bosman, Walter Brea J&#13;
Karyn Carter, Marc Eisen, Tom Fes~ '&#13;
John Wierzbichi, Roy Bohn, Dean Loum 0•&#13;
Mary Terselic, John Koloen Rich j Polansky, ~ob Lindeman, Ger~ld soc~&#13;
Jack Tucker, T9m .Kreul, Douglai&#13;
Johnson, Larry Thielen, Steve Presto&#13;
Gary Adelson and Brad Davidson. n,&#13;
Use Collegian Classifieds&#13;
Gov. Ron~ld Reagan of California closed&#13;
down the rune campuses of the University&#13;
of California and almost 140 more stat&#13;
subsidized schools. e&#13;
National Guardsmen occupied cam.&#13;
puses in Ohio, Kentucky, Maryland&#13;
Illinois, Wisconsin, and South Carolina t~&#13;
list only ~ few of the most publicized&#13;
states.&#13;
The strike is in its second week now, with&#13;
some campuses shut down for the rest of&#13;
the term and others struggling to keep&#13;
open. Students are talking in terms of&#13;
keeping the campuses open but without&#13;
business as usual. Community organizing&#13;
and spreading the strike are the goals of&#13;
the strikers whose biggest obstacle may be&#13;
the approaching summer when most&#13;
students will leave the campuses.&#13;
Already, . a number of distinguished&#13;
scholars have called for building toward a&#13;
massive fall strike, if the war'is not ended.&#13;
Led by MIT Professor of Linguist CS&#13;
Noam Chomsky and a group of Berkeley&#13;
professors, the idea is seeking support&#13;
nationwide.&#13;
At the moment, mosf strikers are still&#13;
trying to build this spring's strike, which&#13;
began with a call by students at a rally in&#13;
New ,Haven to support the Black Panther&#13;
Party May 2 and immediately after&#13;
Nixon's announcement of his Cambodian&#13;
in~vasion. And many of the strikers, led by&#13;
the Student Mobilization Committee, are&#13;
talking in terms of building toward a&#13;
massive show of strength . on Memorial&#13;
Day, May 30. However, as June grows&#13;
closer, more and more strikers will decide&#13;
the strike against government policies&#13;
must be continued and expanded in the&#13;
fall.&#13;
Hits 441 Campuses ·&#13;
customs stations on the major highway in&#13;
Evanston, letting through only residents.&#13;
Police re-routed traffic.&#13;
On several campuses in major cities&#13;
traff!c blockades have brought rush hour&#13;
traffic to a halt. Students in New York&#13;
talked of a statewide traffic blockage, as&#13;
students at Albany and Buffalo blocked&#13;
major roads. In Washington, police used&#13;
tear ~as to disperse 2,000 students at&#13;
American Uni~ersity who were leafletting&#13;
cars and blocking rush hour traffic into the&#13;
safe, white suburbs.&#13;
THE ~MERlCAN CAMPUS- (CPS&gt; - Guardsmen bayonetting seven students&#13;
'.fhe n~t,on_'s largest-ever student strike in and four newsmen at the University of&#13;
its_ ~irs_t _week affected 441 colleges and New Mexico, police using birdshot to&#13;
u01~ers1lies _and shut down _almost _250 ?f break up rallies at State University of New&#13;
the~, a_s well as ~e enl!re Cahforrua YorkatBuffaloandpoliceancfGuardsmen&#13;
publtc higher educallon system. carrying loaded weapons onto campuses&#13;
tore than one million students, faculty across the country.&#13;
m~mbers and administrative staff In angr)'. response to government-police&#13;
members struc~ the ~eek of May ~ over repression and in angry militance over the&#13;
the ~O\ernment mvas~on of Cambodia, the invasion of Cambodia, bombing of North&#13;
contmumg war against the people of Vietnam, continuation of the war in&#13;
Southeast Asia, the m~rder~ ~f four Vietnam, and growing repression of the&#13;
stud~nl~ at Kent State Uruvers1ty m Ohio Black Panther Party, the strike&#13;
by Nallo~al Guardsmen and, on ~any snowballed during the week.&#13;
ca~puses, ?ver government repression of Strikers are attempting to organize their ~~~t:~!; :~~~1dents such as the Black commu_nities to create a general strike in , 'h y._ the nation, and even a New Jersey draft&#13;
, I. ,t':C was v10l~ncc . coast to coast and board has gone on strike.&#13;
gel\ c I nmcnt pat ~n_o,a and repression A national strike steering committee is&#13;
\\h1ch _ brought Naltonal Guardsmen to meeting May 13-15 at Yale Uni ·t t&#13;
dozl'ns of rampuscs and caused panicked coordinate efforts to bu'ld thvers~k o&#13;
governors to cancel their national Every cam us on strike h I e s I e.&#13;
Hcpuhlican Governors' conference this send two dJegates to Yal:s,;heeerneatshkef~ tot&#13;
past Wt't·kend . , e 1rs&#13;
~tuch of th~ viol"n strike ~gan three weeks ago.&#13;
breed of destroyin ce s wa~r°t the new At Prmceton, where the strike has been&#13;
Students and other gstri~~ 1&#13;
~et ta;i;l~~~ ~~ rer centheffe:ive, a natipnal anti-draft&#13;
ROTC buildings in a dozen states and in T; eren~~ a_s en called for May 19-21.&#13;
'cw York smashed an Atomic Energy e m~mbg ihs ope~ to the public and-is&#13;
computer. spons~r. Y t e. Uruon for National Draft&#13;
Government response to the strike in- Opposition &lt;UNDO). In the past week,&#13;
eluded National Guardsmen murderi more ~an 6,000 draft cards have been&#13;
four students at Kent State Universi~ turned~nto the Union with a pledge of ' more an 1,500 to come. Several draft&#13;
Eulogy services were held nationwide in&#13;
memory of the four students murdered by&#13;
Guardsmen . at Kent State. (The four&#13;
students were Allison Krause, 19; Sandra&#13;
~ _Schauer, 20; Jeffrey Miller, 19; and&#13;
Wtlha~ K. Schroeder, 19.) In Boston, at a&#13;
gathermg of 20,000 Ma~sachusetts Gov.&#13;
Frances Sargent ordered the flag lowered&#13;
to ~lf staff in honor of the Kent State 4.&#13;
~-}!~school s~dents struck in ,New&#13;
or. ' and by _F.:iday, May 8, every" high&#13;
schoo~ in the city was affected. There were&#13;
also hi~h. school strikes in Washington and&#13;
other cities.&#13;
Schools in the South and Midwest which&#13;
had never e~perienced a strike or unrest&#13;
before experienced them. The University&#13;
of Idaho went on strike and the f th 11 , mayor o&#13;
e_ co ~ge town of Idaho supported it The&#13;
University of North Dakota struck and th&#13;
student government sent $1 ooo ' th e b . , wor of&#13;
us~. to. Washmgton for the May 9&#13;
mobihzabon. Three colleges in G . struck did . eorgia ' as some predominantly black&#13;
colleges such as Delaware State.&#13;
{Jp&#13;
......... 11ii1•&#13;
... .&#13;
INSURANCE&#13;
FlRE&#13;
AVJV&#13;
.LIFE.&#13;
LIABiLITY&#13;
THEFT . BONDS&#13;
BUSINESS&#13;
.ACCIDENT&#13;
HOSPITALIZATION&#13;
MARINl:&#13;
HOUSEHOLD&#13;
Long Haul Cc,verages&#13;
cowsioN AND IOITAIL&#13;
INDIVIDUAL. AND· PLIIT PLAMf&#13;
I ~-un-woaDiAN'I '"""'"&#13;
~GO&#13;
DON SPARKS&#13;
INSURANCE AGENCY&#13;
1 657-515~&#13;
5~~ &#13;
Harris and MacKinney Appointed&#13;
Continued from Page 1&#13;
h&lt;:ing of the College.&#13;
H ris went to the University of&#13;
M arachusetts in 1956 alter 10 years of&#13;
ass '1' dbI'd teaching politlca hSCI~n~eanT pu ;c C~ .&#13;
ministration at t ~ r~lve~SIIe; 0 tnninnati,&#13;
Southern ~ I or.~la, ennessee&#13;
and Wayne State Universi y.&#13;
He founded and serve~ as, administrative&#13;
head of the Univeraity of&#13;
Massachusetts department of g~~ernme~t&#13;
bet een 1956 and 1964. In recognition of his&#13;
tea;hing, research, and administrative&#13;
accomplishments he was na~~ to a&#13;
special legislative professorship In 1960,&#13;
becoming the Commonwealth Professor of&#13;
Government.&#13;
In his administrative capa~jties at&#13;
Massachusetts, he r ec rur ted .3&#13;
distinguished faculty, strengthened hIS&#13;
department's undergraduate program and&#13;
started a graduate program, and secured&#13;
and administered $531,000 of Ford&#13;
Foundation funding for a cooperative&#13;
Asian and African Studies program. involving&#13;
Amherst, Smith and Mount&#13;
Holyoke Colleges as well as&#13;
Massachusetts.&#13;
Harris also established a Professorship&#13;
in Practical Politics, inaugurated a&#13;
student internship program in&#13;
Massachusetts state government with&#13;
Ford Foundation and Carnegie Corporation&#13;
funding, directed the establishment&#13;
of an overseas branch of the&#13;
University - The Atlantic Studies Center,&#13;
in association with the University of&#13;
Freiburg (Germany) - and recently&#13;
served as consultant to Virginia State&#13;
College and Florida A and M Universi~y,&#13;
assisting these former all-Black institutions&#13;
in their efforts at quality improvement.&#13;
.&#13;
Harris has strong scholarly credentials.&#13;
His principal books are Briti~h Government&#13;
Inspection as a Dynamic Process&#13;
(HJ55&gt; and Government Patronage of the&#13;
Arts in Britain (970), ,&#13;
A native of Richmond, Va., Harris&#13;
received his B.S. in business administration&#13;
from the University of Richmond&#13;
in 1939. an M.A. in political science&#13;
"The Measures Taken"&#13;
Four communist agitators return to the&#13;
Soviet Union from a successful mission in&#13;
China and appear at their own reque~t&#13;
before a control commission, whose task It&#13;
to pass judgment on all violations of&#13;
comradely relations within the Party. One&#13;
member of the mission is absent - they&#13;
killed him. The remaining four are now&#13;
attempting to justify the killing. The&#13;
dramatize their comrade's failure: he&#13;
showed pity, he fought for justice, he&#13;
preserved his honor, he was i~patlent In&#13;
the face of misery. By giving rein to the~e&#13;
apparent Virtues, he endangered their&#13;
mission. Virtues are vices in a world of&#13;
suppression and exploitation. They.seem&#13;
to bring relief but in fact help to prese.rve&#13;
an evil system. Only one virtue is ~osslb.le&#13;
t10w- to fight for communism, which WIll&#13;
eventually allow you to be good.&#13;
So runs the text of Bertold Brecht's play,&#13;
written in 1930. It is not simply proaganda.&#13;
The specta tor is put in the position of judge&#13;
and confronted with the arguments of&#13;
Marxist dialectics. Ideas and morals are&#13;
no longer absolutes, but rather are standards&#13;
set by the rulin~ class.&#13;
As a program of the Mociern Lan?uage&#13;
Club, "The Measures Taken" will be&#13;
presented by the Thea tre of UWM on&#13;
Sunday, May 24, at 8 p.m. in the F!ne Arts&#13;
Hllom, Kenosha ...Campus. Thl~. ~erlormance&#13;
received enthusiastic cntlclsm&#13;
from the newspapers and from the Brecht&#13;
Conference in Milwaukee. The forceful&#13;
music by H. Eisler catches the mood of the&#13;
text superbly. The play is guarant~d to.be&#13;
a thrilling experience. An open diSCUSSion&#13;
will follow the performance.&#13;
Admisston is frcc.&#13;
Rosandich Chairman&#13;
Thomas Hosandich, athletic director at&#13;
UW-P has been named chairman of the&#13;
Games Committee for the second annual&#13;
Golden Midwest invitational track meet to&#13;
be held June 13, in Elmhurst, Ill.&#13;
Dick Hustable, Nicolet high school&#13;
coach, is the Wisconsin high school&#13;
representative on the Games Committee,&#13;
which will determine standards and issue&#13;
inVitations to the top high school seniors in&#13;
a 2()..statearea.&#13;
The field will be limited to eight entrants&#13;
in each event, according to Rosandich.&#13;
from the College of William and Mary in&#13;
1941,an M.S. in public administration from&#13;
Syracuse University in 1942, and a Ph.D.&#13;
fn political science from the University of&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
A Naval ollicer during World War II,&#13;
Harris is married and has two sons.&#13;
MacKinney is credited. with building a&#13;
strong department of psychology at Iowa&#13;
State University since being named. head&#13;
in 19tH. lie has been a professor at Iowa&#13;
State since 1957, and has held Visiting&#13;
lecturer and professor appointments at the&#13;
University of Michigan, University of&#13;
Minnesota and University of California,&#13;
Berkeley.&#13;
He served as chairman of the American'&#13;
Psychological Association's Commission&#13;
on Accreditation and prepared the comprehensive&#13;
1969report of that commission.&#13;
In 1964-65and 1966-67he chaired the APA&#13;
committees that developed. guidelines for&#13;
the Ph.D. and M.A. degrees in industrial'&#13;
psychology. Since 1968 he has been a&#13;
member of the Board of Examiners of the&#13;
Iowa Psychological Association. ,&#13;
His major interest as an industrial&#13;
psychologist is in the improvement of&#13;
human performance, especially of&#13;
managers, and in the' measurement of&#13;
performance. His current research on&#13;
manager performance and development&#13;
was funded in the amount of $70,000by the&#13;
Owens-Illinois Co., and is the basis for two&#13;
books by MacKinney now in progress. He&#13;
also has published numerous professional&#13;
articles and reviews and presented. invited&#13;
papers describing his research.&#13;
MacKinney has served as a&#13;
psychological consultant to General&#13;
Motors Corp., May tag Co., Iowa Power&#13;
and Light Co. and other major industries&#13;
for the past 13 years, and from 1955·57was&#13;
employed Iull-time as a research&#13;
psychologist at the General Motors Institute&#13;
in Flint, Mich.&#13;
MacKinney received his B.A. from&#13;
William Jewell College and his M.A. and&#13;
Ph.D .. degrees from the University of&#13;
Minnesota, all in psychology.&#13;
A native of Kansas City, Mo.,&#13;
MacKinney is married and the father of&#13;
two sons and a daughter.&#13;
Connie Petersen&#13;
faculty Profile&#13;
Dr. Eugene Goodman&#13;
"In defense of all the research done at Goodman felt that Parkaide&#13;
the University level, I'd like to say that we "students are very apathetic. they don:!&#13;
must understand that people aren't doins have an identity at a commuter school&#13;
it [or the promotion; they're doing.t He said, "I'd like to see students around&#13;
because they've chosen it for their live' the school more often outside or cl~sses,&#13;
work. They do research to find"out. why. This would give them more~, a feeling of&#13;
Interest is the thmg, not money, said Dr. identity With the University.&#13;
Goodman, assistant professor of life Goodman continued, "In the last fifteen&#13;
science at Parkside. years, attitudes have changed drastically&#13;
Goodman has been awarded. a National on college campuses. l1augh w~en t. look&#13;
Science Foundation grant for his work back. to being a student at the Umversity of&#13;
with "dillerentiation of cells following Bullalo, the old 'panty raid' type thing.&#13;
zygote formation." He is ~tIKlying ~e Y9Udon't see that anymore. owadays ,on&#13;
"control mechanisms of meiosis, that IS, most campuses most students could nt&#13;
why a cell divides." He explained, "If we care less about fraternaties and sorcnues.&#13;
know why a' normal cell divides, we can They're more involved _ The ge~eral&#13;
see what goes on in an abnormal cell.': student is more aware of his surroundings.&#13;
Goodman said, "There are two kinds of That's good. Unfortunately, here they&#13;
research basic and applied.. Most baSIC don't seem to want to do anything about&#13;
research'is done at the university level; it."&#13;
these are the 'whys' of research. Applied Goodman said, "University life is the&#13;
research involves applying the basics. only time you're really almost free to&#13;
This is usually done at the industrial express your ideals. After ~ou're out, the&#13;
level." hard facts of economic life put a ~topper on&#13;
Goodman was awarded $18,000 to be any ideals you have. My only gnpe IS that&#13;
used over a period of two years. After this students should be more realisuc about&#13;
time he may apply for a renewal of the changes." He asked, "How do you change&#13;
grant. He said, "The budget is limited, so things?" andexplai.ned, "I'd like to see an&#13;
much for supplies and equipment, and ~e approach for making real changes, not&#13;
university retains the right to this just talk. ..&#13;
equipment." .... •'Look at ecology. Who's gcmg to grve up&#13;
Goodman explained the fact that .It IS the barbecue of the motorcycle. I~ our&#13;
quite hard to get a grant from the Nationat cociety I wonder what would happen If the&#13;
Science Foundation." He said, "Science IS public really used pressure. The auto&#13;
undergoing such throws that it is W1- companies have responded to pressure f~r&#13;
believable. The turn-rot of masters and smaller I foreign- like cars, why not to air&#13;
Ph.D.s has become a problem." pollution free cars?" .&#13;
Goodman continued, "Too many Goodman is from Buffa.lo, N~ York. He&#13;
students are just out for the degree. attended the State University of New&#13;
They're taking courses becase they have York·Buffalo, where he earned bo~ a B.A&#13;
to. I don't think the student takes ad- and Ph.D. in biology. He worked With cell&#13;
vantage of the opportunity he has for growth and dillerentiatlon at McArdle&#13;
[earning. Students don't ask for the help 'Cancer Lab at U.W. Madison before&#13;
that professors, at least in my case, are coming to Parkside.&#13;
willing to give. Without grades, maybe d&#13;
you'd have kids that really wanted to learn Use Collegian Classifie s&#13;
somethin ."&#13;
".......--....--&#13;
....... "" ........ Ie up .... "INPfIrOwItItI .,.&#13;
thed&#13;
un_Munci&#13;
ICIt Ie lit&#13;
.......&#13;
The ChiappeHa Underground y"""""'--&#13;
Harris and MacKinney Appointed&#13;
Continued from Page 1&#13;
be.i g of the College.&#13;
: ris went to the University of&#13;
M arachusetts in 1956 after 10 years of ass . d bl" d teaching political sc1tn~e anT pu ;c C~ -&#13;
ministration at thee 1&#13;
_nf1ve~s1 1eTs o m- . ti Southern a I orma, ennessee cmna , . ·t&#13;
and Wayne State Umvers1 y.&#13;
He founded and serve~ as_ administrative&#13;
head of the Umvers1ty of&#13;
Massachusetts depart111ent of g~~ernment&#13;
bet een I956and 1964. In recogmtJon of his&#13;
tea~hing, research, and administrative&#13;
Omplishments he was named to a ace f h. · 960 s cial legislative pro essors 1p m 1 ,&#13;
:Coming the Commonwealth Professor of&#13;
Government.&#13;
In his administrative capacities at&#13;
Massachusetts, he recruited _a&#13;
distinguished faculty, strengthened his&#13;
department's undergraduate program and&#13;
started a graduate program, and secured&#13;
and administered $531,000 of F~rd&#13;
Foundation funding for_ a cooperative&#13;
Asian and African Studies prograrn involving&#13;
Amherst, Smith and Mount&#13;
Holyoke Colleges a~ well as&#13;
Massachusetts. .&#13;
Harris also established a Professorship&#13;
in Practical P~litics, inaugurated . a&#13;
student internship program in&#13;
Massachusetts state government with&#13;
Ford Foundation and Carnegie Corporation&#13;
funding, directed the establishment&#13;
of an overseas branch of the&#13;
University- The Atlantic Stu~ies ~enter,&#13;
in association with the Umvers1ty of&#13;
Freiburg &lt;Germany) - and recently&#13;
served as consultant to Virginia State&#13;
College and Florida A and M Universi~y,&#13;
assisting these former all-Bla_ck institutions&#13;
in their efforts at quality improvement.&#13;
.&#13;
Harris has strong scholarly credentials.&#13;
His principal books are Briti~h Government&#13;
Inspection as a Dyn~1mc Process&#13;
1 HJ55) and GovernlT' ,~nt Patronage of the&#13;
Arts in Britain 0970).&#13;
A native of Richmond, Va., Harris&#13;
received his B.S. in business administration&#13;
from the University of Richmond&#13;
in 1939. an M.A. in political science&#13;
"The Measures Taken"&#13;
Four co~munist agitators return to the&#13;
Soviet Union from a successful mission in&#13;
China and appear at their own reque~t&#13;
before a control commission, whose task 1t&#13;
to pass judgment on all violations of&#13;
comradely relations within the Party. One&#13;
member of the mission is absent - they&#13;
killed him. The remaining four are now&#13;
attempting to justify the kill_ing. The&#13;
dramatize their comrade's failure : he&#13;
showed pity, he fought for justi~e, ~e&#13;
preserved his honor, he was impatient m&#13;
the face of misery. By giving rein to the~e&#13;
apparent virtues, he endangered their&#13;
mission. Virtues are vices in a world of&#13;
suppression and exploitation. They .seem&#13;
to bring relief but in fact help to preserve&#13;
an evil system. Only one virtue is ~ossib_le&#13;
r1ow - to fight for communism, which will&#13;
eventually allow you lo be good.&#13;
So runs the text of Bertold Brecht's play,&#13;
written in 1930. It is not simply proaganda.&#13;
The spectator is put in the position of judge&#13;
and confronted with the arguments of&#13;
Marxist dialectics. Ideas and morals are&#13;
no longer absolutes, but rather are standards&#13;
set by the ruling class.&#13;
As a program of the Modern Lan~uage&#13;
Club, "The Measures Taken" will be&#13;
presented by the Theatre of U~M on&#13;
Sunday, May 24, at 8 p.m. in the F~ne Arts&#13;
Hoom. Kenosha, Camp~s. _Thi~ -~erforrnance&#13;
received enthusiastic cntJc1sm&#13;
from the newspapers and from the Brecht&#13;
Conference in Milwaukee. The forceful&#13;
music by H. Eisler catches the mood of the&#13;
text superbly. The play is guaranteed to_be a thrilling experience. An open d1scuss1on&#13;
will follow the performance.&#13;
Admission is free.&#13;
Rosandich Chairman&#13;
Tholllas Rosandich. athletic director al&#13;
UW-P has been named chairman of the&#13;
Garnes Committee for the second annual&#13;
Golden Midwest invitational track meet to&#13;
be held June 13 in Elmhurst, Ill.&#13;
Dick Hustabie, Nicolet high school&#13;
coach, is the Wisconsin high school&#13;
representative on the Games Committee,&#13;
Which will determine standards and issue&#13;
invitations to the top high school seniors in a 20-state area.&#13;
The field will be limited to eight entrants&#13;
in each event, according to Rosandich.&#13;
from the College of William and Mary in&#13;
1941, an M.S. in public administration from&#13;
Syracuse University in 1942, and a Ph D.&#13;
fn political science from the University of&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
A Naval officer during World War II,&#13;
Harris is married and has two sons.&#13;
MacKinney is credited with building a&#13;
strong department of psychology at Iowa&#13;
State University since being named head&#13;
in 1967. Ile has been a professor at Iowa&#13;
State since 1957, and has held visiting&#13;
lecturer and professor appointments at the&#13;
University of Michigan, University of&#13;
Minnesota and University of California,&#13;
Berkeley.&#13;
He served as chairman of the American&#13;
Psychological Association's Commission&#13;
on Accreditation and prepared the comprehensive&#13;
1969 report of that commission.·&#13;
In 1964-65 and 1966-67 he chaired the APA&#13;
committees that developed guidelines for&#13;
the Ph.D. and M.A. degrees in industrial&#13;
psychology. Since 1968 he has been a&#13;
member of the Board of Examiners of the&#13;
Iowa Psychological Association.&#13;
His major interest as an industrial&#13;
psychologist is in the improvement of&#13;
human performance, especially of&#13;
managers, and in the measurement of&#13;
performance. His current research on&#13;
manager performance and development&#13;
was funded in the amount of $70,000 by the&#13;
Owens-Illinois Co., and is the basis for two&#13;
books by MacKinney now in progress. He&#13;
also has published numerous professional&#13;
articles and reviews and presented invited&#13;
papers describing his research.&#13;
MacKinney has served as a&#13;
psychological consultant to General&#13;
Motors Corp., Maytag Co., Iowa Power&#13;
and Light Co. and other major industries&#13;
for the past 13 years, and from 1955-57 was&#13;
employed full-time as a research&#13;
psychologist at the General Motors Institute&#13;
in Flint, Mich.&#13;
MacKinney received his B.A. from&#13;
William Jewell Cl)Jlege and his M.A. and&#13;
Ph.D .. degrees from the University of&#13;
Minnesota, all in psychology.&#13;
A native of Kansas City, Mo. ,&#13;
MacKinney is married and the father of&#13;
two sons and a daughter.&#13;
Connie Petersen&#13;
Faculty Profile&#13;
Dr. Evgene Goodman&#13;
"In defense of all the re earch done at Goodman f •It that. Park 1d,&#13;
the Uruversitv level I'd like to ay that we "student are v ry apathetic. they don t&#13;
must understand th1&#13;
at people aren't doiru&gt; have an identity at a commu r &lt;·hool."&#13;
1t for the promotion , they're doing 1l He said, "I'd lik to t~denlS around&#13;
because they've chosen it for their live· the school mor oft n outside of 1~&#13;
work. They do research to find out_ why. Thi would giv the~ mo~ o~. a f 1mg f&#13;
Interest 1s the thing, not mone) ." :aid Dr. identity with th mventy.&#13;
Goodman, assistant profes or of life Goodman continu •d, ''In th 1, l ~fl n&#13;
science at Parkside year , attitud have changed dra Ucall&#13;
Goodman has been awarded a , 'ational on college campu . I laugh w~ •n I_ look&#13;
Science Foundation grant for his work back to being a tudenl at th_e m,· rstt! of&#13;
with "differentiation of cells following Buffalo, th old 'panty raid' type Oun&#13;
zygote formation." He i ~tu_dying t!1e Y9t1 don't that an mor . : 'owaday ,on "control mechanisms of me1os1s that 1s, mo t campu. most tud n could nt&#13;
why a cell divides." He explained. ''If we care I a bou1 fr~termti&lt;' and orortll .&#13;
know why a· normal cell divides, we ca~ They're more involved . Tl g ~ernl&#13;
see what goes on in an abnormal cell. . -tud nt i. mor • war of h1 11rround1ng .&#13;
Goodman said, "There are two kind ?f That'· good. nfortw1at ly, h r th&#13;
research, basic and applied . • lost basic don' t sc •m to want to do nythmg • bout&#13;
research is done at the university level; it." .&#13;
these are the 'whys' of research. Applied Goodman ·aid, " niver ity hf i th&#13;
research involves applying the basic . only time you're really nlm t fr to&#13;
This is usually done at the industrial e. pre. your ideal. . ft r &gt;:ou'r out, th&#13;
level." hard facts of economiclif put a . toi,pc.r n&#13;
Goodman was awarded $18,000 to be any ideals you have. 1y only g~1~ 1 that&#13;
used over a period of two years. After thi student . should be mor renh tic about&#13;
time he may apply for a re~e~·al_ of the changes." He a k~, ''H~""; do you chang&#13;
grant. He said, "The budget 1s hm1ted, o thing '? ' and expla1_ned, I d hke lo an&#13;
much for supplies and equipment, and t~e approach for making r al chan , not&#13;
university retains the right to this ju t talk. .&#13;
eqwpmen · t . " . . "Look at ecology · Who' going lo give up 1 Goodman explained the fact that "1t 1s the barbecue of the motorcycl . ~ our&#13;
quite hard to get a grant fro'? the Natio~I coci~ty I wonder what would happen if the&#13;
Science Foundation." He said, "Science 1s pubhc really used pr ur . The auto&#13;
undergoing such throws that it is un- companie haver ·ponded lo pr ur f~r&#13;
believable. The turn-out of master and mailer, foreign-lik cars, why not to air&#13;
Ph.D.s has become a problem." pollution free cars'? " • , .&#13;
Goodman continued. "Too many Goodman i from Buffa_lo , w "\ ork.,H&#13;
students are just out for the degree. attended the late mvers1t ' of&#13;
They're taking courses becase they have York-Buffalo, wher h arned bo~ a B.A&#13;
to. 1 don't think the student takes ad- and Ph.D. in bi?logy. 1:f _worked with c II&#13;
vantage of the opportunity he has for growth and d1fferent!allon ~t t rdl&#13;
learning. Students don't ask for the help ·cancer L h at . .W. lad1 on b fo&#13;
that professors, at lea t in my case, are coming to Park 1de.&#13;
willing to give. Without grades, maybe d&#13;
you'dhavekidsthatreallywantedtolearn Use Collegian C/assijie S&#13;
somethin . "&#13;
colon and •h•pes ,. zap the di&#13;
hpprovf"I eye&#13;
thed unwMund&#13;
,. "'re.a,.&#13;
the . und.,.round is the futu,. you you you&#13;
S712 SlXTK AVINUI&#13;
The Chiappetta Underground &#13;
EDITORIALS&#13;
To Be Vi'as Prof&#13;
U\\ President Fred H. Harnngton made what may be one of his last&#13;
public appearances at Parkslde's recent campus dedication. Harrington's&#13;
nnounc:l'd resillnalion had been planned for several months and will become&#13;
,'Ifectl\(' ne tlall On Oct. t. he will begin work as a Vilas professor of History&#13;
t the .Iad.soo campus.&#13;
\\e leel every student at UW-P should be made aware that it was through&#13;
the e/lort of Fred Harrington and others such as Kenneth Greenquist and&#13;
Bernard Tall ent that a teur-year extension of the t:niversit)' of Wisconsin was&#13;
c t bh hed In southeastern WiSConsin Harrington assumed the post of UW&#13;
.. tdent In 1962 Irom th .. start of that career he worked to fulfill the formauon&#13;
01 l W Parkside&#13;
Fa'se Impression&#13;
I. tor one, had a lalsc rmpressron 01 the Iaculty and administration. I&#13;
though) to m 1/ these lIuys are mature, intel ligent. level-headed human&#13;
I ,n' to I&lt;hom I 0\.C my re peer. On Monday, lay II, Ifound oull was wrong.&#13;
That I ll'lllt) enate meeting wa . without a doubt the most unorganized,&#13;
ircu I,lrt" 1',,' ,'" r S('t'O I will try to reconstruct what went on. First,&#13;
tud,'n, b the llrac,ow g nerosrty 01 the Iaculty, were granted the freedom&#13;
10 peak, 0 rne hOI&lt;began I&lt;Ith Inlormal short talks by students on Ihe recent&#13;
~ '" of ('amhndla Kent" 'atlOnal Guard, and the one-day leach-in strike.&#13;
I hIS I~.. t 01 Ih&lt;' m'~'lIng r n smoothl) and commanded a round of applause&#13;
Irom lh uudlt'nt.·c&#13;
IIll'n ,t was lun lim,' The lloor was turned over to laculty members -&#13;
\\ ho Int~lto th,' h,:st 01 their ability 10 vote on three resolutions. Mter two and a&#13;
Ii"U hour 01 dellberahon on I&lt;hether to vote on re , lor to end discussion on&#13;
d h t on r 2 or to d,vid' res 2 or to throw out parliamentary procedure all&#13;
to !'lll"r Illey Illlraculously p"s. cd every resoluhon \Thank the Lord for&#13;
It \I I&#13;
Imu t ay that th women's league or the Boy Scouls could teach those&#13;
1111 I,ts and Ih ecretary of the laculty a lew things.&#13;
Twinges of Conscience&#13;
fn Ih" J"l.t le\\ (l.1Y.· Parkslde has seen the birth of a social conscience.&#13;
Ih' ,'onst'Il'nn' IS hr,'dlrom the mother of violence. We now know the price&#13;
th"I'"I1\,'r. 'III'S must pay for this conscience: four students died at Kent Slale,&#13;
dnd man~ morC'rna) die in other schools.&#13;
Some refer 10 the'e deaths as sensaless wasle of human life, bul all&#13;
kllllll~ ,Ire ·,'n 'less From the blood of those who have died at Kenl and in&#13;
t. mbotha 3nd \'lctnam, comes the realization that violence can louch anyone.&#13;
II.. ,..tha I " .. mlLst put a stop not only to the achon of the National. not only to&#13;
"on "d..fen·e of Ireedom" taclics, bul also to all violence in any form.&#13;
Th" t" Ing.'s of consc,ence Ihat were expressed by students and faculty&#13;
on" nahon"llevel must not be suppressed, Rallies deploring violence must be&#13;
,'onlmuro '" a 1001 to mnuence the President's defense policies. The "silent&#13;
I1hlJOrlly" musl he conk,cted and won O\'er to the idea of "peace now".&#13;
We are no" cry mg. "Give peace a chance." We must continue lhis cry&#13;
unt,l It has thaI chance.&#13;
~&#13;
......., ... --&#13;
COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
IWish to thank OUrIriends. relatives and&#13;
~I&amp;hbon lor their cards. gifts and calls,&#13;
wh"~ I was a patient 10 the hosp,tal and&#13;
"'c~ J ~tumed hom~. Also. I thank&#13;
Rtvtrand Rath for h,s frl~ndly vls,ls&#13;
Joho Thompson&#13;
Living in Madison this summer'? Su~nmer&#13;
apt. for 1-5. S225mo. 454W. Mifflin. Next&#13;
MIIOIOC.. op. 2 blks to campus. Call 654-&#13;
7276 In Kenosha.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
COLLEGIAN&#13;
•&#13;
Member&#13;
of&#13;
ITn:to&#13;
volume 12 - NO, 131&#13;
Bill Rolbiecke&#13;
Connie Petersen&#13;
John Jolicoeur&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Neil Haglov&#13;
Bill Jacoby&#13;
John Pesta&#13;
hi' h d everv two weeks by the students of the University f Pu IS e, . 3140 0" 0&#13;
· . P: kside : Kenosha Wisconsm, ,5 . ptmons expressed . wisconsm- ar , .' 'I h . rn ~". . I arloons and articles are not necessari y t ose of the Umversity r&#13;
t:ullOrl3 S, c' d .. t t M '1' 0&#13;
· .' Parks"de its students' faculty, or a nums fa ors. 31 mg address' WlsconSIn- , , .' IS&#13;
The Collegian, uW-Parkside, Kenosha, WISCOnSin, 53140. Business and&#13;
Editorial telephone number is 658-4861 Ext. 24.&#13;
r"'i0~'~-"'~W~LL,l)Jl, \.J£'REGl&gt;N~A e.~IN(;-·\&#13;
. 150.000 of OUR.BO'l'~"'! ~&#13;
"'.T.""",A!.ID W~ KNOW THAT ~&#13;
THOSE flN,E VII':TNA~~SE fDlJ(S "'=,..--,&#13;
.wI kk ",VI'NTu.AkkY BE' ABkl'&#13;
TO,JH, HANDJJ'"rH~IRoWfJ WAR.&#13;
l,\~, BI,lT J-ET HANO' as:&#13;
WARNe:D HII" ,HIS IS BY&#13;
NO ME.AN AN INulTA ~&#13;
io oS" P Lt r\\£;\ .&#13;
1-'-_..1--= 1&#13;
•&#13;
Marc H. Colby&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
May t8, t970&#13;
Margie Noer&#13;
Associate Editor&#13;
News Editor&#13;
I:"'eature Editor&#13;
BUSiness Mana'T&#13;
Ad tisi ger ver tsmg Mana ger&#13;
Photographers&#13;
AdVisor&#13;
What Is Cambodia?&#13;
By nAVE BAllR&#13;
What is Cambo9ia? Itis the boiling point&#13;
of frustration and a catalyst for involvrnent.&#13;
What has it done? It killed five Kent&#13;
students and gave birth to consciences in&#13;
ttlOusands of student.s. laborers,&#13;
professionals, and Parkside. More&#13;
specifically it gave rise to our Teach In.&#13;
For the henefit of 88 percenl 01 the&#13;
Parksidors who missed it, I would like to&#13;
explain why a rninorty, including those pro&#13;
and con, look upon this day as being the&#13;
inaugaration of Parkside as a University.&#13;
A.week ago, several individuals got&#13;
together with a common goal and several&#13;
individual ways of reaching it. This goal,&#13;
in geperal, was to get the students,&#13;
faculty and administration to take a&#13;
stafld on pertinent national issues as one&#13;
body. Due to lack of organization, they&#13;
almost hlew it - hut they stuck to itaod&#13;
succeeded. Apparently to most the end&#13;
result was the Teach In, but its not.&#13;
The Teach In is the first step in a Peace&#13;
Movement. By calling off classes, in~&#13;
struetors in all fields of study and war&#13;
vetera.ns were in a situation where they&#13;
could mform general public and students&#13;
on the .issues in their respective fields. This&#13;
made It possible for anyone to learn about&#13;
the P?liti_cal, social, historical,&#13;
economlc.al, moral, ethical, and&#13;
psychological facts and realities of the war&#13;
Issue. Be~ween the lecture -sessions on&#13;
t~~se tOP.les, students and faculty Par~&#13;
t1clpated m ~orkshops where they readily&#13;
excha~ged Ideas (something new for&#13;
Parks!de!.L Parkside has stood up and&#13;
laken Its ~lrst ~tep, however can we walk?-&#13;
Over ftfty stUdent and' faculty- hav~&#13;
made statements and posed questions in a&#13;
polllhat was taken of those who witnessed&#13;
the !each In. Many are concerned with&#13;
taCtiCS.StUdent leaders and faculty ha&#13;
condemned violenceas an initial eonditi~~&#13;
for ~he movement. Immediate&#13;
procedures deal with informing Parkside&#13;
students and the public 'about the war and&#13;
how we can work toward ending it - there&#13;
are effective ways and I hope you realize&#13;
this. I can't tell you i'n detail what is beq;&#13;
_done, because several specialized gt'(qlI&#13;
will be organized, but while they will be&#13;
working co:operation with each&#13;
other, they will not be one huge&#13;
organization complex. Some of the ap-&#13;
.proaches are direct confr.ontationwith the&#13;
.public and trade unions, writing forthe&#13;
Newspapers in Racine, Kenosha aoo&#13;
ParK'side and getting citizens to write to&#13;
their congressmen and senators. While&#13;
doing this, however, we must remem~&#13;
that it is a combination of individual&#13;
opinions that we want out in the opE!!&#13;
ralher than that of a pressure group.&#13;
Everyone is right. From an ethicalpoint&#13;
of view, a person cannot be actingwrong if&#13;
he acts according to what he bellev.. is&#13;
right. If a person cannot see what is right&#13;
or wrong he is right by not taking a stand.&#13;
To- be effective we must accept an&#13;
opinions. We need everyone, especiallYCUI'&#13;
opposition, for they supply us with tbe&#13;
prohlem in its entirely from a viewp01llt&#13;
t.hat we cannot Clearly visualize.&#13;
tIw&#13;
LEADER&#13;
WM&#13;
1l0WNTOWN/KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD pLAZA/lACINI&#13;
· COMPUTE-A-DATE&#13;
Wisconsin's largest&#13;
. co"!puter dating service.&#13;
Write' 312 E W' . Mii . ISconsln Ave.,&#13;
waukee, Wis. 53202&#13;
Call 414-271-8311&#13;
(24-hr ans .&#13;
"TO .' werlng service)&#13;
FIND THE PER FEeT DATE OR MATE"&#13;
EDITORIALS&#13;
To Se Vilas Prof&#13;
• out · could teach those&#13;
nu ht&#13;
Twinges of Conscience n the birth of a -ocial conscience.&#13;
J1m Hllget's cartoon&#13;
..&#13;
CLASSIFIEDS&#13;
Living in 1adison this summer? Su'.nmer&#13;
apt. for 1-5. $225 mo 454 W •11·rn· N 1 fff · · " m. ext I !n Co-op. 2 blks to campus. Call 654-&#13;
7276 m Kenosha .&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
COLLEGIAN&#13;
volume 12 - No. 13 1&#13;
Marc H. Colby&#13;
Editor-in-Chief&#13;
May 18, 1970&#13;
Margie Noer&#13;
Associate Editor&#13;
Member&#13;
of&#13;
IC IPIJ:J&#13;
Bill Rolbiecke&#13;
Connie Petersen&#13;
John Jolicoeur&#13;
Sven Taffs&#13;
Neil Haglov&#13;
News Editor&#13;
1:eature Editor&#13;
Business Mana . Advertising Mana!;er ger&#13;
Photographers BIii Jacoby John Pesta Advisor&#13;
P bl. h d every two weeks by the students of the University f U IS e . . 3140 Q . . 0 . . P· ksi·de· Kenosha W1sconsm, 5 . pm10ns expressed . Wisconsin- ar · ' . in&#13;
d&#13;
.&#13;
1 . ls cartoons and articles are not necessarily those of the University f e I ona ' ' d . . t t M . . o Wisconsi'n-Parkside, its students, faculty, or a _mm1s _ra ors. a1hng address is&#13;
The Collegian, uw-Parksi~e, Kenosha, Wisconsin, 53140. Business and&#13;
Editorial telephone number is 658-4861 Ext. 24.&#13;
W[LL, u~. w~'Rf. G-DNt-1A BRIN&amp; \&#13;
150.000 OF OUR. BOY~ H()MI{ j&#13;
.,~~"T .. A ....... MJo w~ KNOW THAT&#13;
,,, THOSE F'"IN,E Vl~JNAl"\ESE. fDW&lt;S&#13;
,WI 1-..h EV'f;'NTUAt.-1...Y BE- ABI-.ETO,Lltl,&#13;
HA®W::-1fH::IR O\JEJ WAR,&#13;
U.H, BlAi J..1:T HANOI 8~&#13;
WARNS:D THAr, 1ftlS IS BY&#13;
~o MEAN AN INVl~A -~&#13;
ro :s-r, P u ::f\-\£:;\ · . '-'--'---=~ I ~&#13;
What Is Cambodia?&#13;
By DAVE BAHR /&#13;
What is Cambopia? It is the boiling point&#13;
of frustration and a catalyst for involvment.&#13;
&#13;
What has it done? It killed five Kent&#13;
students and gave birth to consciences in&#13;
thousands of students, laborers,&#13;
professionals, and Parkside. More&#13;
specifically it gave rise to our Teach In.&#13;
For the benefit of 88 percent of the&#13;
l'arksidcrs who missed it, I would like to&#13;
explain why a minorty, including those pro&#13;
and con, look upon this day as being the&#13;
ina~garation of Parkside as a University.&#13;
A week ago, several individuals got&#13;
together with a common goal and several&#13;
individual ways of reaching it. This goal,&#13;
in ge_neral, was to get the students,&#13;
laeully and administration to take a&#13;
sta~d on pertinent national issues as one&#13;
body . Due to lack of organization, they&#13;
almost blew it - but they stuck to it and&#13;
succeeded. Apparently to most the end&#13;
result was the Teach In, but its not.&#13;
The Teach In is the first step in a Peace&#13;
l\lovement. By calling off classes instructors&#13;
in all fields of study and' war&#13;
vetera_ns were in a situation where they&#13;
could mform general public and students&#13;
on the _issues in their respective fields. This&#13;
made ,t possible for anyone to learn about&#13;
the political, social, historical,&#13;
cconom1c_al, moral, ethical, and&#13;
psychological facts and realities of the war&#13;
issue. Be~ween the lecture sessions on&#13;
t~~se top.1cs, students and faculty parllc1pated&#13;
m Workshops where they readily&#13;
excha~ge,d ideas (something new for&#13;
Parks~de .L Parkside has stood up and&#13;
taken its ~1rst step, however can we walk~&#13;
for the movement. Immediate&#13;
procedures deal with informing Parkside&#13;
students and the public ·about the war and&#13;
how we can work toward ending it-there&#13;
are effective ways and I hope you realize&#13;
this. I can't tell you in detail what is being&#13;
done, because several specialized groups&#13;
~ill be organiz_ed, but while they will be&#13;
working co-operation with each&#13;
other, they will not be one huge&#13;
organization complex. Some of the ap-&#13;
. proaches are direct confr.ontation with the&#13;
public and trade unions, writing for the&#13;
Newspapers in Racine, Kenosha and&#13;
Park's1de and getting citizens to write lo&#13;
their congressmen and senators. While&#13;
doing this, however, we must remember&#13;
that it is a combination of individual&#13;
opinions that we want out in the open&#13;
rather than that of a pressure group.&#13;
Everyone is right. From an ethical point&#13;
of view, a person cannot be acting wrong if&#13;
he acts according to what he believes is&#13;
right. If a person cannot see what is right&#13;
or wrong he is right by not taking a stand&#13;
To- be effective we must accept all&#13;
opinions. We need everyone, especially our&#13;
opposition, for they supply us with the&#13;
problem in its entirety from a viewpoint&#13;
that we cannot clearly visualize.&#13;
tlw&#13;
L.EADER&#13;
d&lt;M&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KENOSHA I&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/RACINE&#13;
Over fifty student and 'faculty hav~&#13;
made statements and posed questions in a&#13;
poll that was taken of those who witnessed&#13;
the _Teach In. Many are concerned with&#13;
tacllcs. Student leaders and faculty have&#13;
condemned violence.as an initial condition&#13;
r: C -------i . OMPUTE-A-DATE&#13;
Wisconsin's largest&#13;
. computer dating service.&#13;
Wrate· 312 E w· . - Mii · 1scons1 n Ave.,&#13;
Waukee, Wis. 53202&#13;
Call 414-271-8311&#13;
(24-hr ans · .. · wer1 ng service) TO FINO THE p ERFECT DA TE OR MA TE" &#13;
Ski Trip to France&#13;
The Parkside Ski-Rangers and Group&#13;
Travel Associates of Chicago are announcing&#13;
a ski trip to France during the&#13;
semester break in 1971.&#13;
All students, faculty and staff along with&#13;
their families are eligible for the trip to&#13;
Chamonix, which is famous for MontBlanc.&#13;
Chamonix is located in the French Alps&#13;
along the borders of Switzerland and Italy.&#13;
This trip is especially designed for skiiers,&#13;
but because of the incomparable scenery&#13;
and the low cost of the trip, those who wish&#13;
to go as tourists only are welcome.&#13;
Cost for the Air France 747 from Chicago&#13;
and an apartment for eight nights is only&#13;
$259 plus $15 tax. Lift tickets amount to&#13;
$3.50per day and food can he prepared in&#13;
one's own apartment. .-&#13;
Group Travel has been working with the&#13;
Hoofers from Madison the past 3 years and&#13;
are working with the Wisconsin State&#13;
University schools on a ski trip for the next&#13;
season.&#13;
The Parkaide trip will also include U~-&#13;
Milwaukee, Green Bay, and extensl~n&#13;
centers of the University of Wisconsm&#13;
system.&#13;
Special ski races will be run at the&#13;
Review&#13;
Jl Jt ~U4JJJt Jim ~1Jult?&#13;
NOW SERVING&#13;
TACOS • ENCHILADAS • TAMALES&#13;
COMPLETE MENU OF •&#13;
~exkan~ood&#13;
"Boom, boom, boom. Hit it again; hit it&#13;
again," said Melvin KOOK. vice president&#13;
of the Black Student Union and emcee of&#13;
their production, "Is It Because I'm&#13;
Black?" And BSU hit it again. and again.&#13;
and again. They had something to say. and&#13;
despite technical difficulties with the&#13;
microphones and record player, they said&#13;
it.&#13;
A skit called "The opening of the mail"&#13;
hit"'the confiscation of a student's mail,&#13;
ending with the question, "Is it because&#13;
I'm Black?" Another skit, "The classroom&#13;
situation," dealt with indoctrination in&#13;
education. BSU "hit it again" by portraying&#13;
what they considered the typical&#13;
Parkside professor who was completely&#13;
unconcerned with the student's appeal for&#13;
a relevent education. The acting class in&#13;
the skit were to read plays by authors like&#13;
Shakespeare rather than what they fell&#13;
was pertinent to their lives. They revolted.&#13;
A third skit dealt with joh opportunity for&#13;
the Black race. A black man with a degree&#13;
in aeroscience applied for a job and was&#13;
offered a managerial position ...in the&#13;
custodial department. "Is it because I'm&#13;
Black? asked the job applicant. Boom,&#13;
boom, boom, and BSU hit it again.&#13;
Although the acting in the skits did&#13;
portray some individual talent, the real&#13;
talent was displayed in the music of the&#13;
Greater Mount Eagle Baptist Church&#13;
Youth Choir, directed by a Mr. Montgomery.&#13;
Their songs included "Praise&#13;
Gnd From Whom All Blessings Flow,"&#13;
"Down By the Riverside," "This Is the&#13;
Day That the Lord Has Made." "Oh Happy&#13;
Day," and "He Holds the Power of the&#13;
World in His Hands." The choir came on&#13;
clear, strong, and rhythmic, featuring two&#13;
fine soloists.&#13;
BSU also included poetry readings in its&#13;
program. Tony Chapman, a BSU member&#13;
who was raised in the ghetto of North&#13;
Chicago read his poem, "The Primitive."&#13;
Ruth Me Donough, another BSUmember,&#13;
also read her own poetry. The readings&#13;
were quite good.. the poetry itself good&#13;
enough too. But they were followed by a&#13;
man in a class by himself. He was Rocky&#13;
Taylor, a student from UW.l\1. whose&#13;
Machias at Conference&#13;
Hert;) Show Reviewed&#13;
By DALE MARTIN Ruth Jackson of Ra~ine did an untitled&#13;
The Hero Show was held May 3-16 at the pamting of a person who appeared to be&#13;
CollegeBook Mart in Kenosha. They have from. aroun~ 18th century America. The&#13;
a gallery in the basement. The Hero Show face IS done 10 browns and White, much in&#13;
contained paintings by artists and the real face colors. The face is excellently&#13;
students of John Goray. The show was done. The painting falls down I think&#13;
represented by more than thirty artists. because. the portrait has' no ha~kgrOUnd:&#13;
The thing that impressed me most was the Just white canvas. The artist also made&#13;
fact that although thirty artists were ope shoulder longer than the other, just to&#13;
represented they all bad basically the fill space.&#13;
same style. The influence of the teacher My favorite painting was one of "T.R."&#13;
seemed quite evident, although I have not by Mary Zi~lke. The face portrays T.R. 's&#13;
seen any of his work. big grm. This painting is done in almost a&#13;
Thebasicstylewasthatofrelllism. Most psychadelic manner. The hair is bright&#13;
of the artists seemed to he trying for the red. The colors create a strong movement&#13;
most perfect face, form wise, as they within the face.&#13;
could. The forms of the faces were Carolyn Maosen did a painting of "John&#13;
realistic, the colors they used were usually Kennedy". The face was a perfect copy of&#13;
bright yellows, purples or greens. The any photo, except it was blue green.&#13;
faces were realistic but were painted in Another of my favorites was by Carol&#13;
unlife-like colors. Ameghe. Her painting was called "Buffy&#13;
The show represented little in the line of . St. Marie". The painting showed Buffy&#13;
action. Almost all the paintings were sitting down playing the guitar. The colors&#13;
portraits of people they considered used were pinks and purples. The artist&#13;
famous. Winston Churchill, Ike, Hitler, ~.inted in a stained glass window style,&#13;
Buffy Saint Marie and a hippy were among minus the black bars. This painting won&#13;
the more famous of the faces. first prize' at the show.&#13;
I studied some of the paintings in detail Lorraine Buss did a painting of "Einand&#13;
will mention a few of them. stein" in addition to "Sitting Bull". I&#13;
From Burlington; John Walton painted thought that it was the best as far as ex-&#13;
"A Russian General". He used bright pression goes. The face was dark blue and&#13;
mixtures of color, especially bright light blue with shades hlue white. The use&#13;
yellows and greens. The face has very of shadowing produced a 3D effect. The&#13;
powerful eyes that seem to be staring at mustache and hair are white with splashes&#13;
the' looker. The general wears a coat of blue.&#13;
covered with many medals. Lorretha E. Orgen did a painting called&#13;
Lorraine Buss did a painting called "Broadway Joe". He is shown with a&#13;
"Sitting Bull". This portrait captures a foothall in his hand. His eyes are looking&#13;
mood of fear and resignation. The head- for a receiver. His hair is curly, a ZOITO&#13;
hand goes to the-edge of the canvas and is type.&#13;
well colored as they blend perfectly. Peggy Boson's hero painting was a hippy&#13;
"Hitler" by Nancy Christensen is done girl, called "Hippy". Her painting won an&#13;
in a comic book style. He is painted with honorable mention. The girl had long&#13;
strong green shadows and black lines. The flowing hair. The background repeated the&#13;
face gives one a feeling of Hitler looking at hair movements. '--&#13;
the world as his domain. The background Mary Zielke also did a painting of Hitler.&#13;
is dark green. It was untitled. The painting is very&#13;
"Victory-Peace" hy Tim Anger is strong. Hiller's hand is pointed at the&#13;
supposed to be a painting of Churchill. The viewer. The hand is enlarged. The&#13;
face is a big purple clown-like thing. He is painting remmcrs one of an Uncle Sam&#13;
smoking a green cigar. The finger nails poster.&#13;
are dark green. Churchill is giving the All in all I enjoyed the show and hope to&#13;
peace sigh with a hand far too small in see more in the future. The Kenoshaproportion&#13;
to the face. The fingers are stiff Racine area is in need of some place where&#13;
and rigid. student work can be viewed. The op-&#13;
"Ausie" by Bev Palacek shows a young portunity to show a painting is a great&#13;
man in uniform. The face is a blue green incentive to the production of more works.&#13;
face and is smiling. His coat is a bright&#13;
blue. The artist has achieved a great deal&#13;
of movement with color. The nose I&#13;
thought to be a weak point as it was too&#13;
straight and rigid looking.&#13;
conclusion of the trip, with awards being&#13;
furnished by Group Travel. The last night&#13;
will be spent in Paris before returning to&#13;
Parkside,&#13;
Persons interested ....in spending next&#13;
year's semester break in France and&#13;
Switzerland should contact officers of the&#13;
Ski-Rangers, headed by president Jim&#13;
DeBerge or Sports Club Director Vic&#13;
Gndfrey.&#13;
Look for further announcements along&#13;
with special showing of movies showing&#13;
the luxury apartments and the gorgeous.&#13;
setting of the French Alps.&#13;
Morton Nachlas, an associate professor&#13;
of sociology at the University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
has recently returned from the&#13;
36th annual meeting of the Groves Con·&#13;
ference on Marriage and the Family at&#13;
Winston-salem, N.C., where he acted as&#13;
recorder for a seminar on "Religion in&#13;
Family Policy."&#13;
The Groves conference is made up of&#13;
marriage and family specialists.&#13;
Youthpower&#13;
"Mexican food is fun food • • •&#13;
so Taco Kings are fun places"&#13;
Youth power will hold its registration&#13;
and Clinic at the University of Wisconsin&#13;
_ Parkside, Racine campus on saturday,&#13;
.May 23. The registration and clinic will&#13;
operate continually from 9:30 a.m. to noon&#13;
for youths aged 16-21.&#13;
The Clinic will feature a training session&#13;
for young people looking for summer&#13;
work. It will also give an opportunity for&#13;
those who were signed up last year to reregister.&#13;
Those who attend clinics will be&#13;
given first job opportunities.&#13;
This summer in Racine, youth power&#13;
will be open June 2 tnrough June 6 from&#13;
3:00--5:00 p.m. From June 8 through&#13;
August 2ll, youth power will be open 9:00&#13;
a.m. to 4:00 p.m. The office will again be&#13;
located in the Main Lake Building, room&#13;
317, 425 Main Street. Telephone numbers&#13;
are 1j37-5461and 637-5822.&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARRY OUT&#13;
• QUALITY&#13;
• SATISFACTION&#13;
_SAVINGS&#13;
ALWAYS&#13;
For Yoli and Your car&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11&#13;
682.9 39th Avenue&#13;
poetry included "My Black Woman." "A&#13;
Walk In Space." and ··Black Trash:'&#13;
The feeling that he put into reading the&#13;
poetry left the audience completely&#13;
captivated, his sound effect amused them,&#13;
and the thoughts behind the poelry touched&#13;
them ..&#13;
BSU's solution to the problems that they&#13;
presented in "Is It Because I'm Black'!"&#13;
was given in the concluding comment or&#13;
their program; ·'We're not going to build&#13;
America; we're going to tear America&#13;
down."&#13;
HOFFMAN'S&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
discount prices&#13;
5707- 6th Ave.&#13;
Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Open Saturdays&#13;
9 A.M. to Noon&#13;
For Your' Convenience&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FRE.£ CHECKI NG&#13;
4CCOUNTS TO STUDENTS&#13;
AND RETIREES&#13;
3928 Sixtieth StTeet&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
• •&#13;
dill'S DEEP ROCK SERVICE STATION&#13;
2305 Racine 634-9328&#13;
HAT 'I1tI SIGN O' 'I1tI CACTUS·&#13;
.P1I_ fl56.5117&#13;
Herc;, Show Reviewed&#13;
By DALE MARTIN&#13;
The Hero Show was held May 3-16 at the&#13;
College Book Mart in Kenosha. They have&#13;
a gallery in the basement. The Hero Show&#13;
contained paintings by artists and the&#13;
students of John Goray. The show was&#13;
represented by more than thirty artists.&#13;
The thing that impressed me most was the&#13;
fact that although thirty artists were&#13;
represented they all l;iad basically the&#13;
same style. The influence of the teacher&#13;
seemed quite evident, although I have not&#13;
seen any of his work.&#13;
The basic style was that of rectlism. Most&#13;
of the artists seemed to be trying for the&#13;
most perfect face, form wise, as they&#13;
could. The forms of the faces were&#13;
realistic, the colors they used were usually&#13;
bright yellows, purples or greens. The&#13;
faces were realistic but were painted in&#13;
unlife-like colors. The show represented little in the line of&#13;
action. Almost all the paintings were&#13;
portraits of people they considered&#13;
famous. Winston Churchill, Ike, Hitler,&#13;
Buffy Saint Marie and a hippy were among&#13;
the more famous of the faces.&#13;
I studied some of the paintings in detail&#13;
and will mention a few of them.&#13;
From Burlington,· John Walton painted&#13;
"A Russian General". He used bright&#13;
mixtures of color, especially bright&#13;
yellows and greens. The face has very&#13;
powerful eyes that seem to be staring at&#13;
the looker. The general wears a coat&#13;
covered with many medals.&#13;
_Lorraine Buss did a painting called&#13;
"Sitting Bull". This portrait captures a&#13;
mood of fear and resignation. The headband&#13;
goes to the- edge of the canvas and is&#13;
well colored as they blend perfectly.&#13;
"Hitler" by Nancy Christensen is done&#13;
in a comic book style. He is painted with&#13;
strong green shadows and black lines. The&#13;
face gives one a feeling of Hitler looking at&#13;
the world as his domain. The background&#13;
is dark green.&#13;
"Victory-Peace" by Tim Anger is&#13;
supposed to be a painting of Churchill. The&#13;
face is a big purple clown-like thing. He is&#13;
smoking a green cigar. The finger nails&#13;
are dark green. Churchill is giving the&#13;
peace sigh with a hand far too small in&#13;
proportion to the face. The fingers are stiff&#13;
and rigid.&#13;
"Ausie" by Bev Palacek shows a young&#13;
man in uniform. The face is a blue green&#13;
face and is smiling. His coat is a bright&#13;
blue. The artist has achieved a great deal&#13;
of movement with color. The nose I&#13;
thought to be a weak point as it was too&#13;
straight and rigid looking.&#13;
Ski Trip to Fra nee&#13;
The Parkside Ski-Rangers and Group&#13;
Travel Associates of Chicago are announcing&#13;
a ski trip to France during the&#13;
semester break in 1971.&#13;
All students, faculty and staff along with&#13;
their families are eligible for the trip to&#13;
Chamonix, which is famous for MontBlanc.&#13;
&#13;
Chamonix is located in the Frencll Alps&#13;
along the borders of Switzerland and Italy.&#13;
This trip is especially designed for skiiers,&#13;
but because of the incomparable scenery&#13;
and the low cost of the trip, those who wish&#13;
to go as tourists only are welcome.&#13;
Cost for the Air France 747 from Chicago&#13;
and an apartment for eight nights is only&#13;
$259 plus $15 tax. Lift tickets amount to&#13;
$3.50 per day and food can be prepared in&#13;
one's own apartment. _&#13;
Group Travel has been working with the&#13;
Roofers from Madison the past 3 years and&#13;
are working with the Wisconsin State&#13;
University schools on a ski trip for the next&#13;
season.&#13;
The Parkside trip will also mclude U~-&#13;
Milwaukee, Green Bay, and extens1~n&#13;
centers of the University of Wisconsm&#13;
system.&#13;
Special ski races will be run at the&#13;
• QUALITY&#13;
• SATISFACTION&#13;
• SAVINGS&#13;
ALWAYS&#13;
1:lu~h Jackson of Ra~ine did an untitled&#13;
pamtmg of a person who appeared to be&#13;
from_ around 18th century America. The&#13;
face is done in browns and white, much in&#13;
real face colors. The face is excellently&#13;
done. The painting falls down, 1 think,&#13;
~cause_ the portrait has no background,&#13;
JUSt white canvas. The artist also made&#13;
ope shoulder longer than the other, just to&#13;
fill space.&#13;
My favorite painting was one of "T.R."&#13;
br M~ry Zielke. The face portrays T.R.'s&#13;
big grm. This painting is done in almost a&#13;
psychadelic manner. The hair is bright&#13;
red. The colors create a strong movement&#13;
within the face.&#13;
Carolyn Maosen did a painting of "John&#13;
Kennedy". The face was a perfect copy of&#13;
any photo, except it was blue green.&#13;
Another of my favorites was by Carol&#13;
Ameghe. Her painting was called "Buffy&#13;
S~ .. Marie". The painting showed Buffy&#13;
sitting down playing the guitar. The colors&#13;
used were pinks and purples. The artist&#13;
W.in~d in a stained glass window style,&#13;
minus the black bars. This painting won&#13;
first prize· at the show.&#13;
Lorraine Buss did. a painting of "Einstein"&#13;
in addition to "Sitting Bull". I&#13;
thought that it was the best as far as expression&#13;
goes. The face was dark blue and&#13;
light blue with shades blue white. The use&#13;
of shadowing produced a 3D effect. The&#13;
mustache and hair are white with splashes&#13;
of blue.&#13;
Lorretha E. Orgen did a painting called&#13;
"Broadway Joe". He is shown with a&#13;
football in his hand. His eyes are looking&#13;
for a receiver. His hair is curly, a Zorro&#13;
type.&#13;
Peggy Bozon's hero painting was a hippy&#13;
girl, called "Hippy". Her painting won an&#13;
honorable mention. The girl had long&#13;
flowing hair. The background repeated the&#13;
hair movements. ....._ Mary Zielke also did a painting of Hitler.&#13;
It was untitled. The painting is very&#13;
strong. Hitler's hand is pointed at the&#13;
viewer. The hand is enlarged. The&#13;
painting remincts one or an Uncle Sam&#13;
poster.&#13;
All in all I enjoyed the show and hope to&#13;
see more in the future. The KenoshaRacine&#13;
area is in need of some place where&#13;
student work can be viewed. The opportunity&#13;
to show a painting is a great&#13;
incentive to the production of more works.&#13;
conclusion of the trip, with awards being&#13;
furnished by Group Travel. The last night&#13;
will be spent in Paris before returning to&#13;
Parkside.&#13;
Persons interested- in spending next&#13;
year's semester break in France and&#13;
Switzerland should contact officers of the&#13;
Ski-Rangers, headed by president Jim&#13;
DeBerge or Sports Club Director Vic&#13;
Godfrey.&#13;
Look for further announcements along&#13;
with special showing of movies showing&#13;
the luxury apartments and the gorgeous&#13;
setting of the French Alps.&#13;
Youthpower&#13;
Youth power will hold its registration&#13;
and Clinic at the University of Wisconsin&#13;
- Parkside, Racine campus on Saturday, · May 23. The registration and clinic will&#13;
operate continually from 9:30 a.m. to noon&#13;
for youths aged 16-21.&#13;
The Clinic will feature a training session&#13;
for young people looking for summer&#13;
work. It will also give an opportunity for&#13;
those who were signed up last year to reregister.&#13;
Those who attend clinics will be&#13;
given first job opportunities. This summer in Racine, youth power&#13;
will be open June 2 tl}rough June 6 from&#13;
3:00-5:00 p.m. From June 8 through&#13;
August 2~ youth power will be open 9:00&#13;
a.m. to 4:00 p.m. The office will again be&#13;
located in the Main Lake Building, room&#13;
317, 425 Main Street. Telephone numbers&#13;
.arP 1337-5461 and 637-5822.&#13;
For You and Your Car&#13;
SILL'S DEEP ROCK SERVICE STATION&#13;
2305 Racine 634-9328&#13;
Review&#13;
3, 3t ~fhJJ.Ut 3',n ~l.adt?&#13;
"Boom, boom, boom. Hit it again: hit it&#13;
again," said Melvin Knox. vice president&#13;
of the Black Student Union and emcee of&#13;
their production, "Is It Because l'm&#13;
Black?" And BSU hit it again, and again.&#13;
and again. They had something to ay. and&#13;
oespite technical difficulties with the&#13;
microphones and record player, they ,aid&#13;
it.&#13;
A skit called "The opening of the mail"&#13;
hit 'the confiscation of a student's mail,&#13;
ending with the question, "Is it becau e&#13;
I'm Black? " Another skit, "The classroom&#13;
situation," dealt with indoctrination in&#13;
education. BSU "hit it again" by portraying&#13;
what they considered the typical&#13;
Parkside professor who was completely&#13;
unconcerned with the student's appeal for&#13;
a relevent education. The acting class in&#13;
the skit were to read plays by authors like&#13;
Shakespeare rather than what they felt&#13;
was pertinent to their lives. They re\'olled.&#13;
A third skit dealt with job opportunity for&#13;
the Black race. A black man with a degree&#13;
in aeroscience applied for a job and was&#13;
offered a managerial position ... in the&#13;
custodial department. "Is it because I'm&#13;
Black? asked the Job applicant. Boom,&#13;
boom, boom, and BSU hit it again.&#13;
Although the acting in the skits did&#13;
portray some individual talent, the real&#13;
talent was displayed in the music of the&#13;
Greater Mount Eagle Baptist Church&#13;
Youth Choir, directed by a Mr. Montgomery.&#13;
Their songs included "Praise&#13;
God From Whom All Blessings Flow,"&#13;
"Down By the Riverside," "This Is the&#13;
Day That the Lord Has ~tade," •·oh Happy&#13;
Day," and "He Holds the Power of the&#13;
World in His Hands." The choir came on&#13;
clear, strong, and rhythmic, featuring two&#13;
fine soloists. BSU also included poetry readings in its&#13;
program. Tony Chapman, a BSU member&#13;
who was raised in the g~etto of , 'orth&#13;
Chicago read his poem. "The Primitive."&#13;
Ruth McDonough, another BSUmember, also read her own poetry. The reading&#13;
were quite good., the poetry itself good&#13;
enough too. But they were followed by a&#13;
man in a class by himself. He v.as Rocky&#13;
Taylor, a studertt from UW.M. whose&#13;
Na chla s at Conference&#13;
Morton Nachlas, an associate profe. sor&#13;
of sociology at the University of Wi. consinParkside,&#13;
has recently returned from the&#13;
36th annual meeting of the Groves Conference&#13;
on Marriage and the Family at&#13;
Winston-Salem, N.C., where he acted a"&#13;
recorder for a seminar on "Religion in&#13;
Family Policy."&#13;
The Groves conference is made up of&#13;
marriage and family specialists.&#13;
poetry included '':\1y Bl ck Woman," "A&#13;
Walk in ·pace." and "Bl ck Tr h."&#13;
The feeling that he put into reading the&#13;
po try left the audience completely&#13;
captivated, hi·. ound effect amu ed them,&#13;
and the though behind the po try touched&#13;
them, ·&#13;
BS ' solution to the problem that they&#13;
presented in "I It Becau e I'm Black?"&#13;
wa gi\'en in the concluding comment of&#13;
their program: "We're not going to build&#13;
America : we're going to tear America&#13;
down."&#13;
HOFFMAN'S&#13;
RECORDS&#13;
discount prices&#13;
S707-6th Ave.&#13;
Downtown Kenosha&#13;
Open Soturdoys&#13;
9 A.M. to Noon&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
FR£.E CHECK I NG&#13;
ACCOUNTS TO STUD NTS&#13;
AND RETIREES&#13;
8928. ixti th tT .t&#13;
Ktn ha&#13;
NOW SERVING&#13;
TACOS • ENCHILADAS • TAMALES&#13;
COMPLETE MENU OF.&#13;
DINE INSIDE&#13;
OR&#13;
CARRY OUT&#13;
"Mexican lood is lun lood • • .&#13;
so Taco Kings are fun places"&#13;
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK FROM 11&#13;
6829 39th Avenue&#13;
HAT THE SIGN OF THE CACTUS"&#13;
Phone 654-5'117&#13;
• • &#13;
Students&#13;
Strike for&#13;
Peace&#13;
---&#13;
Students&#13;
Strike for&#13;
Peace &#13;
Humanities Course Offered This Summer&#13;
During the summer session, the&#13;
Humanities division will be offering a new&#13;
interdisciplinary divisional course which&#13;
is not attached to any specific discipline.&#13;
In the catalogue, the course is listed. as.&#13;
Humanities 300, Studies in Comparative&#13;
Literature.&#13;
The course will be conducted by Mr.&#13;
Huyssen and its tentative sUbjec~ is the&#13;
father-son conflict and the generallan gap&#13;
in European iiterature. Its purpose i!'; to&#13;
trace the historical development of the&#13;
generation gap in various. period~ of&#13;
European literature, thus trymg to give a&#13;
broader horizon to our own historical&#13;
situation which mayor may not be quite as&#13;
unique as one is frequently led to believe.&#13;
Reading lists are available at Mr.&#13;
Huyssen's office CKenosha235, Monday,&#13;
Tuesday and Friday from 2:00-3:00) and&#13;
at the Student Affairs offices on all three&#13;
campuses.&#13;
Cacs Wins&#13;
Final results have been tabulated and&#13;
verified for the Faculty Award Selection.&#13;
After almost five hours of ballot counting&#13;
and many other hours of calculating&#13;
ratios, the Steering Committee would like&#13;
to announce the winner of the election.&#13;
The election was remarkable for the&#13;
heavy voting turn-out. Fifty per cent of the&#13;
students turned out to vote, despite the&#13;
confusion of the first day of balloting.&#13;
Those teachers who received over&#13;
twenty per cent of the votes cast by the&#13;
students in their classes are listed below in&#13;
alphabetical order.&#13;
Mr. Paul Beyer, Mr. Eberhard Buser.&#13;
Dr. Paul Ciotola, Dr. Dennis Dean, Mr.&#13;
Darrell Douglas, Mr. Stanely Gruenwald,&#13;
Mr. Oliver Hayward, Mr. Loran Hein, Dr.&#13;
Joseph Hemmer, Mr. Charles Holzbog,&#13;
Dr. Carl Lindner, Dr. Peter Martin, Dr.&#13;
Albert May, Mrs. Ethel Roberts. Mr.&#13;
James Ward, Dr. Anna Marie Williams.&#13;
Honorable mentions are given to Mrs.&#13;
Irene Kraemer, who received 44.6 per&#13;
cent, and Dr. Eugene Gasiorkiewicz who&#13;
received 44.4 per cent of the voles cast by&#13;
the students In their classes.&#13;
'The Steer-ing Committee and the&#13;
students of Parkside would like to&#13;
congratulate the winner of lhe Standard&#13;
Oil of Indiana Distinguished Faculty&#13;
Award, Mr. Salimans Cacs, who received&#13;
58.8 per cent of the votes cast by the&#13;
students in his classes. The award and&#13;
check for $1.000 will be presented 10 Mr&#13;
Cacs at the Commencement ceremonies.&#13;
June 6. 1970.&#13;
Daytime Classes&#13;
The Business majors were reported as&#13;
being disturbed on two important issues&#13;
when confrontiag chancellor Irving C&#13;
Wyllie.&#13;
The first Issue was one or 100 per cent&#13;
night classes being held in the business&#13;
field. The second. the students were&#13;
disturbed at the alarming number of ad&#13;
hoc faculty members who they thought&#13;
weren 't getting the job done. A petition&#13;
was raised and to date has over 150&#13;
signatures.&#13;
Chancellor Wyllie in response to the&#13;
disturbed students said action would be&#13;
taken. Full time facilty would be hired&#13;
Mr. Wylie was reported as trying to&#13;
maintain a SO-50 or better ratio of davnight&#13;
classes in the business field and &lt;in&#13;
80-20 day-night ratio over all.&#13;
Is Parkside falling shorl of its mission,&#13;
"Parkside is geared to the Southeastern&#13;
Indus! rial area."&#13;
Attention Students:&#13;
Summer Employment&#13;
Start your own career in a fast growing business. Unlimited&#13;
prestige in expanding market, To learn more about this un·&#13;
used business opportunity of the future, see below:&#13;
DATE: Tuesday, May 19 DATE: Tuesday, May 19&#13;
PLACE: Greenquist Hall PLACE: Kenosha Campus&#13;
OR&#13;
TIME: 12:30to 2:30 P.M, TIME: 3:00 to 5:00 P.M.&#13;
ROOM: 0·107 ROOM: 136&#13;
SfIIW Oul tltt fWAQ./i,()/t f4{J&#13;
fit ()U 01 OIJA, iJfuJfU(JilJuJUJ,&#13;
miJJ-fIf.IJ.ItIfiAld 4fII~.&#13;
If 11 4iy.4 O/t 4IJ1t at $2.00&#13;
COLLEGE BOOK MART&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
posters, books, records, art supplies&#13;
Humanities Course Offered This Summer&#13;
During the summer session, the&#13;
Humanities division will be offering a new&#13;
interdisciplinary divisional cour~e _w~ich&#13;
is not attached to any specific d1sc1phne.&#13;
In the catalogue, the course is listed . as&#13;
Humanities 300, Studies in Comparative&#13;
Literature. The course will be conducted by Mr.&#13;
Huyssen and its tentative subject is the&#13;
father-son conflict and the generation gap&#13;
in European ~iterature. Its purpose ic; to&#13;
trace the historical development of the&#13;
generation gap in various. period_s of&#13;
European literature, thus trymg t? g1~e a&#13;
broader horizon to our own historica l&#13;
situation which may or may not be quite as&#13;
unique as one is frequently led to believe.&#13;
Reading lists are available at Mr.&#13;
Huyssen's office &lt;Kenosha 235, Monday,&#13;
Tuesday and Friday from 2:00-3:00 ) and&#13;
at the Student Affairs offices on all three&#13;
campuses.&#13;
Cacs Wins&#13;
Fina l results have been tabulated and&#13;
verified for the Faculty Award Selection.&#13;
After almost five hours of ballot counting&#13;
and many other hours of calculating&#13;
ratios, the Steering Committee would like&#13;
to announce the winner of the election.&#13;
The election was remarkable for the&#13;
heavy voting turn-out. Fifty per cent of the&#13;
students turned out to vote, despite the&#13;
confusion of the first day of balloting.&#13;
Those teachers who received over&#13;
twenty per cent of the votes cast by the&#13;
students in their classes are listed below in&#13;
alphabetical order.&#13;
Mr. Paul Beyer, Mr. Eberhard Buser.&#13;
Dr. Paul Ciotola, Dr. Dennis Dean, Mr.&#13;
Darrell Douglas, Mr. Stanely Gruenwald,&#13;
Mr. Oliver Hayward, Mr. Loran Hein, Dr.&#13;
Joseph Hemmer, Mr. Charles Holzbog,&#13;
Dr. Carl Lindner, Dr. Peter Martin. Dr.&#13;
i\lbert May, Mrs. Ethel Roberts. Mr.&#13;
James Ward, Dr. Anna .'.\tarie Williams.&#13;
Honorable mentions are given to Mrs.&#13;
Irene Kraemer, who recei,·ed 44.6 per&#13;
cent, and Dr. Eugene Gasiorkiewicz who&#13;
received 44.4 per cent of the votes cast by&#13;
the students in their classes.&#13;
The Steering Committee and the&#13;
students of Parkside would like to&#13;
congratulate the winner of the Standard&#13;
Oil of Indiana Distinguished Faculty&#13;
Award, :\tr. Salimans Cacs, who rccci\"ed&#13;
58.8 per cent of the votes ca ·t by th&#13;
tudents in hi · class ·. TI1c award and&#13;
check for 1.000 will b presl•ntl'd to .'.\Ir.&#13;
Cacs at the Commencement ceremonil' . .&#13;
June 6. 1970.&#13;
Daytime Classes&#13;
The Business major · Wl're rcporlL'd as&#13;
being disturbed on two important I u&#13;
when confronliRg chancellor Jn•ing C&#13;
Wyllie.&#13;
The first i's ue was one of too pl'I' cent&#13;
night cla. ses bt•ing lwld in thl' businc&#13;
field . The econd , ttw stud1•11t \\Cre&#13;
disturbed at the alarming numhl'r of ad&#13;
hoc faculty members who they thought&#13;
weren't getting the job dorw. ,\ p~Ution&#13;
was rais&lt;'d and to date ha 0H·r 150&#13;
signatures.&#13;
Chancellor Wylli in re ponsc to lh"&#13;
disturh&lt;'d tudC'nt aid al'tion would he&#13;
taken. Full tinw fac1lt y would I hired&#13;
~tr Wyhl' was n·portcd a trying to&#13;
maintain 50 50 or bcllcr ratio or dav&#13;
night cla es in !he bu incs field and ~n&#13;
80-20 day-night ratio owr all.&#13;
ls Parkside falling .hort of ii m1 1011 .&#13;
"Park idc i gear d to th Southca h•m&#13;
lndu. trial area."&#13;
Attention Students:&#13;
-&#13;
Summer Employment&#13;
Start your own career in a fast growing business. Unli mited&#13;
prestige in expanding market. To learn more about this unused&#13;
business opportunity of the future, see below :&#13;
DATE : Tuesday, May 19 DATE : Tuesday, May 19&#13;
PLACE: Greenquist Hall PLACE: Kenosha Campus&#13;
0~&#13;
TIME: 12 :30 to 2:30 P.M. TIME : 3:00 to 5:00 P.M.&#13;
ROOM: 0-107 ROOM: 136&#13;
S flJut oui, t/t.t 9f.NA41i.11,i 9a.p&#13;
iJ£ Otte o/ Oflll, utUJMfliAJJIJfJ.4&#13;
miJJ-fltlllfNJled 41/J~. I&#13;
All 4if-', Oft 4111.e at $2.00&#13;
COLLEGE BOOK MART&#13;
DOWNTOWN KENOSHA&#13;
poster~ books, records, art supplies &#13;
Sport TIMES&#13;
Park Ide' Inaugural salling team&#13;
f1nlShod...,.,nd In 1M Wlulew.ler S~&#13;
R.g.n. bohond UW·M.dison. Th.&#13;
Park ldon .clually liod MadisCln poinl·&#13;
wlR bull .. 1 on lhe basis lhal Madison had&#13;
won more r.eeI bolWeen 1M Iwo schools&#13;
WSU Whit.wattr and WSU·Oshkosh&#13;
(IDished wllhe four sc:hooI .... 11a MIke&#13;
Pohar. Jerry Ruffolo. K.rl Kishline and&#13;
ra Buchan. all 01 Kencoha. erewed 1M&#13;
flYing JUDlOrs used lor 1M compelilion&#13;
Each crew had to sail II r.ces oyer 1M&#13;
Gold Cup course The regalia w.s held&#13;
anIer lhe .... plces 01 1M WISCOnsinInlercol~I.le&#13;
SAlhng Associ.lion&#13;
P rk do will bo .... lng on vari oes&#13;
reg.lla Ihroughwl 1M umrner.&#13;
\\0 E!' TR CK&#13;
larv Llhal Green Bay sophomore.&#13;
b me the WI con m Women's Inler&#13;
oI1egiai champion In the 100and 44ll&#13;
IIer urn of 11~ and 59 9 earned her the&#13;
1I1le I RIver Fall r nlly Other placers&#13;
from P rk id • Worn"" Tr.ck leam were&#13;
Trudy Iluehr ns In 1M hurdles. Jack'e&#13;
So: h" rm In lh soIlhalllhrow and the 880&#13;
rrlay leam of Buthren • J •• n Gergen.&#13;
RoMI ~.ppers and Whal&#13;
I,hal also look two IlrslS In 1M 100and&#13;
-HI) I the LaCToue InVllallonal a week&#13;
""lor&#13;
n.!\;( I. 'G&#13;
Kellh Herbrechlsmeier f,nl hod ...,.,nd&#13;
In lhe Amaleur Fencing League 01&#13;
merlC champIonshIps In SI LWls This&#13;
quahh h,m lor 1M nalional Cham·&#13;
ponslllps In , 'ew York thi summer.&#13;
wt:IGHTLIFTI. G&#13;
Mark Graliller (123) and Jim Shuemale&#13;
CI~) hOI ht'd third and fwrlh respeclively&#13;
,n 1M allonal Collegiale Pow... hlling&#13;
champIonships al Easl Lansong.&#13;
Granger's lol.1 lill was 760 pounds.&#13;
comonKon hfls 01 170 on lbe bonch press,&#13;
:160 onlhe squal lolland 300 onthe dead hIt.&#13;
Shuemale had a lola I of 895 with 230, 280&#13;
al and 385 doad hft. Joe Sielski also&#13;
compelt'd but d,d not place In the 165pound&#13;
cia w,lh a 1.050lotal.&#13;
II.G&#13;
Karl IJekowsld. a U S Army soccer and&#13;
ling sial'. w,ll attend Park ide next year&#13;
ljrkwskl"as a member or the .S team&#13;
1AhlCh competed in the Biathlon world&#13;
champ,onsh,ps on:-Oorwaylast March. He&#13;
"as al 0 pickt'd lor the 1969AIl·service&#13;
Alpme . 'ordlC' and cross country skiing&#13;
teams plus ""'OK chn&lt;en on the 1969All·&#13;
Alaskan soccer learn,&#13;
To Attend UWP&#13;
J,m Ir~'add.n of Walerford high&#13;
'hool \\1$(00510'5 class B cross countn:&#13;
champion thi season, has signed a lette-r&#13;
of ,nlenl 10 aUend Parkslde. UWP tracl.&#13;
and cross countn coach Bob Lawson&#13;
:.nnounced .&#13;
. kFadden. \\ho was undefeated in cross&#13;
f;OUnlr) as a senior. also is expected to be&#13;
among the fa\'orltes in the mile or twomile&#13;
10 this 'prlOg's cia B stale track&#13;
meet tle .. as fifth In the mile in last year's&#13;
tate meet 10 ... 30 6&#13;
John langlOIS, star guard on Durand&#13;
high school's state tow-nament team the&#13;
pol t two )fars, has signed a letter of IOtent&#13;
10 attNld The University of Wisconsin -&#13;
ParkSlde on lall. UMP basketball coach S'" e Slephens aMwnced loday&#13;
LanglOIS averaged 21 poonls per game&#13;
and a hoof record 10 assists in leading&#13;
Durand to a 2-43record and a final ranking&#13;
of .'0 3 among small schools. He was&#13;
namt'd to AIl·M,ddle Border conference&#13;
and All ~orlhweslern Wasconsin first&#13;
l('al11~ ~hh\ aukrc Sentinel All-State&#13;
Tournament first team, and special&#13;
menlloo AlI- late&#13;
Langl"'s earned 12 high school leuers.&#13;
oncludong three on baskelball as Durand&#13;
"""I 64-13 He averaged 16 poinls on this&#13;
year's state tournament despite being&#13;
hamperod by an ankle onjury sufler&lt;'d on&#13;
lhe secl ionals&#13;
Although r.-9, LanglOIS plays laller&#13;
lwea... of an exceptional 3O-inchvertical&#13;
JUmp. according 10 hIS hIgh school coach&#13;
Alan Ormson&#13;
The University of Wisconsin center for&#13;
lhe.ler ..... arch in Madison has one of lbe&#13;
I collechons 01 primary research&#13;
malt'f'lal on the entertamment industry in&#13;
lhe counlry&#13;
AmLETlC BANQUET&#13;
Parkside's athletic banquet and dinner&#13;
dance was a booming success. For the first&#13;
bme lhe awards banquel was taken away&#13;
from 1M campus. A good crowd of&#13;
alhletes. faculty, administration, parents,&#13;
businessmen. friends and coaches attended&#13;
at the Bristol Oaks Country Club.&#13;
Jolut Hanzalik won the wtstanding&#13;
alhlele's plaque 10mark the second year in&#13;
a row thai 1M award has gone to a fencer.&#13;
Other athletes to receive plaques for being&#13;
outslanding in their sports were Mike&#13;
Genrette. soccer; Don Knaack in crOSS&#13;
.... ntry and track;. Jim Hogan. basketball.&#13;
Bill Benkslein. wrestling: Leil&#13;
Gullormsen, golf; and Cal Kaplin, tennis.&#13;
Speaking of banquets, Ihe Racine&#13;
bowling league had their annual banquet&#13;
at the YMCA. Dave Rallle and Ke,th&#13;
McGilsky walked away with high game&#13;
and high series trophies. Ronie Habriga&#13;
"on the trophy for the outstanding female&#13;
bowler&#13;
11\1GOLF&#13;
1MGolf Tournamenl begins Wednesday.&#13;
May 20.The course is 18holes, and will be&#13;
shol althe Petrifying'Springs Golf Course.&#13;
Entry blanks may be oblained Irom Coach&#13;
Sieve Stephens al the Kenosha campus.&#13;
SCores musl bo allesled and returned by&#13;
Monday. May 25.&#13;
HOCKEY&#13;
Bill Weslerluod and Marc Helfrich are&#13;
busy gelling an ice hockey team together.&#13;
There is lalk of a club hockey league thaI&#13;
will be playing al the Wilson Park&#13;
Recreation Center in Milwaukee. Schools&#13;
that ha\'e been mentioned as possibilities&#13;
for fieldinK a team include UWMilwaukee,&#13;
. Milwaukee School of&#13;
Engineering, Carthage, Dominican,&#13;
Marquelle and Parkside. Hockey, of&#13;
........ presenls cerlain problems. The&#13;
cost is high for club sporls, uniforms and&#13;
equipment are expensive, as is ice time.&#13;
Club members musl be prepared 10 help&#13;
construct an outdoor ice fink, as well as&#13;
provide most of their own uniforms. If,&#13;
after a probationary period of two years,&#13;
the team has proved to be successful from&#13;
the slandpoint of active participation and&#13;
active studenlleadership, lhe club will be&#13;
eligible for more rinancing Irom the Office&#13;
of Athletics.&#13;
JUDO CLUB&#13;
The Judo Club meets at 7:30 on Monday&#13;
and Wednesday nighls at lhe Kenosha&#13;
Campus under the direction of Mr. Suh ...&#13;
Theintramural tennis tournament is being&#13;
played under the direction of Coach Dick&#13;
Frecka&#13;
Variety Show&#13;
"Moods '70 was the theme for the annual&#13;
benefit variety show sponsored by the&#13;
Parkside student chapter of the Music&#13;
Educators National Conference (MENC).&#13;
The show included several numbers by,&#13;
the Parkside Slage Band directed by Prof.&#13;
George Reynolds and by the Parkside&#13;
Chorale directed by Prof. J. Marvin&#13;
Pollard&#13;
Vocal soloists were Chris Jenkins&#13;
IKenosha), Joe Gauchel lRacinel, Rick&#13;
Karabetsos (Kenosha l, and Dolores&#13;
Breugenzer (Kenosha) and a folk duet was&#13;
presented by Nancy Ivanoski (Racine)&#13;
and Charlie Jones (Racine&gt;. Instrumental&#13;
soloists included Richard Froemming&#13;
IKenosha). guilarist. and John Sladky&#13;
IRacine), who played an original piano&#13;
solo. Se\'eral skits were also performed.&#13;
Douglas Johnson (Racineldirected the&#13;
show assisted by Susan HayCOak Creek).&#13;
Nick Angotti (Kenosha l was the emcee.&#13;
Proceeds are used for scholarships for&#13;
Parkside music students.&#13;
Use&#13;
Collegian&#13;
Want&#13;
Ads&#13;
801l8ANt', CAL.IFORNIA'S&#13;
PAUL WARDWHO&#13;
HAS COACHED AT WMI""£Il&#13;
(O'W..) M.S·1CAL.WESTEANU.(sNrf ..... )&#13;
AND PO~NO STATS{OCHoN), 18 '&#13;
u.w.·PAAKSIOE S PM"1S. EO. COOIlOINAToI&#13;
AHD ASSISTAHTTRACk~&#13;
UWP Fencers to New York&#13;
Parkside's fencers again slashed their&#13;
way to national prominence ~n81. Louis. on&#13;
May 2 and 3 in the Amerlcan Fencmg&#13;
League's Midwest championships.&#13;
Juniors Keith Herbrechtsmeier and&#13;
Clark Anderson and freshman Grant&#13;
Anderson qualified for the national AFL&#13;
championship in New York in July.&#13;
Herbrechlsmeier was second in foil and&#13;
Clark Anderson fourth in epee, while&#13;
Grant won the boys under 19 title in epee&#13;
and placed fourth in the same category in&#13;
foil.&#13;
Herbrechtsmeier lost a fence.oCf to&#13;
veteran Toqy Zambolas for the foiltiU. in&#13;
a field of 40 which included the top&#13;
collegiate and veteran fencers in the&#13;
Midwest. Herbrechlsmeler had won the&#13;
slate foil tiUe last week.&#13;
Among Clark Anderson's victims in a 35-&#13;
man field was NCAA epee champion John&#13;
Nadas-Of Case Western Reserve, whowas&#13;
seventh and missed qualifying for !be&#13;
nationals.&#13;
College Men &amp; Women&#13;
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT&#13;
Plus Cash Scholarship&#13;
Contact Mr. Harold Grellinger&#13;
JENSEN'S. GIFT STORE&#13;
3313 Washington Road&#13;
or Phone 637-1286&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORES,&#13;
RACINE. PARISSIDE KENOSHA&#13;
We will start buying b~oks May 28&#13;
GET CASH&#13;
FOR YOUR BOOKS&#13;
Get the Best Price&#13;
Possible for Your Books&#13;
SELL THEM rON CAMP-US'&#13;
Sport TIMES&#13;
To Attend UWP&#13;
nILETIC B . 'Q ET&#13;
Par ide' athletic banquet and dinner&#13;
dance ·a a booming ucces . For the first&#13;
time the award-- banquet was taken away&#13;
from the campus. A good crowd of&#13;
athl tes, faculty, administration, parents,&#13;
bu in men, friends and coaches attended&#13;
al the Bristol Oaks Country Club.&#13;
John Hanzalik won the outstanding&#13;
athl t • plaque to mark the second year in&#13;
row that the award has gone to a fencer.&#13;
O her thletes to receive plaques for being&#13;
outstandin in their ports were , 1ike&#13;
G nr tt , occer; Don Knaack in cross&#13;
country and track;. Jim Hogan, baske~-&#13;
b:111, B111 Ben ·tein, wre ·tling, ~1£&#13;
uttorm n. golf, and Cal Kaplin, ten~1s.&#13;
p king of banquets, the Racine&#13;
v.ling I agu h d their annual banq~t&#13;
t th Y I \ Da\' Rattle and Keith&#13;
tcGII wal ed away v.ith high game&#13;
d hi h ri trophies. Honie Habriga&#13;
\lion the trophy for the outstanding female&#13;
bov.l r.&#13;
H K \'&#13;
B111 W terlund nd tare Helfrich are&#13;
bu y tting an Ice hockey team together.&#13;
Th re i talk of a club hockey league that&#13;
v.ill be pla)ing at the Wilson Park&#13;
R r ation Center in 1ilwaukee. Schools&#13;
that have been mentioned as possibilities&#13;
for fieldinR a team include UWlllw&#13;
uk •• lilwaukee chool of&#13;
Engln ring, Carthage, Dominican,&#13;
tarqu tte and Parkside. Hockey, of&#13;
cours . pr ent certain problems. The&#13;
t i high for club ports, uniforms and&#13;
equipment are expensive, as is ice time.&#13;
Club members must be prepared to help&#13;
construct an outdoor ice rink as well as&#13;
provide most of their own uniforms. If,&#13;
after a probationary period of two years,&#13;
the team has proved to be successful from&#13;
the tandpoint of active participation and&#13;
active. tudent leadership. the club will be&#13;
ligible for more financing from the Office&#13;
or Athletic .&#13;
JUD CL B&#13;
The Judo Club meets at 7:30 on londay&#13;
and Wednesday nights at the Kenosha&#13;
Campus under the direction of Mr. Suh ...&#13;
The intramural tennis tournament is being&#13;
played under the direction of Coach Dick&#13;
Frecka.&#13;
Variety Show&#13;
"Moods '70 was the theme for the annual&#13;
benefit variety how sponsored by the&#13;
Park ·ide tudent chapter of the Music&#13;
Educator·. 'ational Conference (ME. 'Cl.&#13;
The hO\\ included several numbers bv&#13;
the Park. ide tag Band directed by Proi.'&#13;
George Reynolds and by the Parkside&#13;
Chorale directed bv Prof J. Marvin&#13;
Pollard ·&#13;
\'ocal oloi ·ts were Chris Jenkins&#13;
&lt;Ken hal, Joe Gauche! (Racine), Rick&#13;
Karabetsos ( Kenosha l. and Dolores&#13;
Breugenzer (Kenosha) and a folk duet was&#13;
pr . ented by 'ancy h'anoski (Racine)&#13;
and C'harlie Jones (Racine). Instrumental&#13;
·oloi t included Richard Froemming&#13;
&lt;Kenosha), guitarist. and John Sladky&#13;
!Racine&gt;. who played an original piano&#13;
olo , everal skits were also performed.&#13;
Dougla · Johnson Racine)directed the&#13;
·how a· i. ted by Susan Haye Oak Creek) .&#13;
. 'ick Angotti 1Kenosha l was the emcee.&#13;
Proceeds are u ed for scholarships for&#13;
Park ·ide music students.&#13;
Use&#13;
Collegian&#13;
Want&#13;
Ads&#13;
DIRECTOR OF&#13;
WEI GUT TRAINING,&#13;
ANO WEIGMTCOACU, '&#13;
HE IS A WORLD&#13;
CLASS -.tU.VV&#13;
WEIGftT LIFTER&#13;
80A8ANK, CAUFORNIA'S • '&#13;
PAIJLWARo - WHO HAS COAC:MED AT w,nn,ai.&#13;
(CAL-) M,S,1CAL.WESTERM U.(SANoiffo)&#13;
AND POi:tTLAN D STATii (O.UGoNJ, IS '&#13;
u.w.·PAAl&lt;SIOE'S PM"/$ . ED. c:ootlOINATOI&#13;
AHO ASSIS TANTT'RACkOOAcM&#13;
UWP Fencers to New York&#13;
Parkside's fencers again slashed their&#13;
way to national prominence in St. Louis on&#13;
May 2 and 3 in the American Fencing&#13;
League's Midwest championships.&#13;
Juniors Keith Herbrechtsmeier and&#13;
Clark Anderson and freshman Grant&#13;
Anderson qualified for the national AFL&#13;
championship in New York in July.&#13;
Herbrechtsmeier was second in foil and&#13;
Clark Anderson fourth in epee, while&#13;
Grant won the boys under 19 title in epee&#13;
and placed fourth in the same category in&#13;
foil.&#13;
Herbrechtsmeier lost a fence-off to&#13;
veteran To[!y Zambolas for the foil title in&#13;
a field of 40 which. included the top&#13;
collegiate and veteran fencers in the&#13;
Midwest. Herbrechtsmeier had won the&#13;
state foil title last week.&#13;
I&#13;
Among Clark Anderson's victims in a 35-&#13;
man field was NCAA epee champion John&#13;
Nadas-0f Case Western Reserve, who was&#13;
seventh and missed qualifying for the&#13;
nationals.&#13;
College Men &amp; VVomen&#13;
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT&#13;
Plus Cash Scholarship&#13;
Contact Mr. Harold Grellinger&#13;
JENSEN'S. GIFT STORE&#13;
3313 Washington Road&#13;
or Phone 637-1286.&#13;
GET CASH&#13;
FOR YOUR BOOKS&#13;
Get the Best Price&#13;
Possible for Your· Books&#13;
SELL THEM fQN CAMPUS'&#13;
UNIVERSITY&#13;
BOOK STORES&#13;
RACINE , PARKSIDE KENOSHA&#13;
We will start buying b~olcs May 28 </text>
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                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="59717">
                <text>Student newspaper of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, Wis.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="59718">
                <text>College student newspapers and periodicals</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="59719">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="59720">
                <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="59721">
                <text>Newspaper</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="59722">
                <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="59723">
                <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="59724">
                <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="59725">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
