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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>Parkside Collegian, Volume 1, issue 14, May 18, 1970</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
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                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</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;
Ik&#13;
LEADER&#13;
6Iou&#13;
DOWNTOWN/IENOSHA&#13;
IUoIWOOD PLAZA/BACINE&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
COLLEGIAN&#13;
Bill Rolbiecke&#13;
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;
•&#13;
(J£ OM 01 O(J/l; iJuJJlUfliauJM&#13;
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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      <name>Text</name>
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      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="97">
          <name>Issue</name>
          <description/>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61507">
              <text>Volume 1, Issue 16</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="96">
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              <text>Special Registration Issue</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="95">
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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="61518">
              <text>UWPAC124 Ranger News</text>
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            <elementText elementTextId="89840">
              <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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