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              <text>Students Rally for Peace </text>
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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>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;
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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;
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LIVE FROIt NEW YORK CITY&#13;
TIm. JJ£4 9:00 P.M. TO 1:00 A.M.&#13;
UNDER THE TENT - TALLENT HALL PARKING LOT&#13;
Man's Mind&#13;
And His ·Memory&#13;
When - and if - scientif.ic research&#13;
unlock the secrets of_ biochemical contr_ol&#13;
of man's mind and his memory, who will&#13;
decide when and how and on whom such&#13;
knowledge will be applied?·,&#13;
These were among the questions pondered&#13;
by some 200 physicians and scientists&#13;
at the final session of an international&#13;
symposium on "Biochemistry of Brain and&#13;
Memory" May 26 at The University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside. During the preceding two days, symposium&#13;
participants had heard their&#13;
distinguished colleagues from around the&#13;
world report on recent research relating&#13;
the body's biochemistry to human&#13;
memory, behavior patterns and mental&#13;
and physical health.&#13;
The social and medical implications of&#13;
such research and its potential both for&#13;
good and evil were the topics of the final&#13;
session.&#13;
Alton L. Blakeslee, science editor for the&#13;
Associated Press, explored the possible·&#13;
social consequences. Dr. Robert J. White&#13;
of Case Western Reserve University's&#13;
Department of Neurosurgery, the first to&#13;
successfully transplant the brain of an&#13;
experimental animal, spoke on the implications&#13;
of biochemical controls on&#13;
medical practice and medical ethics.&#13;
"Whom would you trust to alter you?"&#13;
Blakeslee questioned. "Who should have&#13;
the awesome responsibility to enslave my&#13;
mind, to blot out my memory of what it is&#13;
like to be a child or lover, or how to write&#13;
or how to talk, or how to think within the&#13;
limitations of my talent and experiences?"&#13;
Blakeslee warned of possible consequences&#13;
of what he termed " a wave of a&#13;
kind of anti-science !}OW abroad in the&#13;
land" in which " people tend to blame&#13;
science and technology rather than their ·&#13;
own use or abuse of the powers that&#13;
science and technology put into their&#13;
hands."&#13;
Thus, he said, people of one COlll!try&#13;
might demand an end to expermentation,&#13;
but this would not stop efforts by others&#13;
who might seek means of controlling&#13;
men's minds to use as a weapon of war.&#13;
"Might we not one day have instead of&#13;
an arms race a minds race to direct&#13;
nations' destinies?" he questioned.&#13;
"We should start thinking now how to&#13;
ensure that future biochemical control of&#13;
mind and memory is used for man's advantage,&#13;
not ~s abuse or ~s d~tructi?n,"&#13;
Blakeslee said. "For one thmg 1s certam -&#13;
man's curiosity will continue to urge him&#13;
to study himself, to solve these fundamental&#13;
mysteries of his thinking and his&#13;
remembering.&#13;
''We have already heard of the prospect&#13;
of genetic engineering to change man's&#13;
heredity, to elimina_te inherited disorders,&#13;
or to engineer a supetior human mind. We&#13;
have been apprised of the dangers if the&#13;
tinkering were put in the hands of evil&#13;
men. We have been advised to start&#13;
thinking hard, now, how to control wisely&#13;
the power to alter man's genetic makeup&#13;
when the day comes that it is possible."&#13;
Speaking on the medical implicatons of&#13;
biochemical control, Dr. White pointed out&#13;
that when pharmacological agents are&#13;
available for improving or _mo&lt;!ifying&#13;
memory and intellectual capacity, their&#13;
therapeutic use will require a reexamination,&#13;
and possible a redefinitjpn,&#13;
of ethical standards governing medical&#13;
practice.&#13;
"Particularly relevant to mental disease&#13;
and cerebral dysfunction, and consistent&#13;
with the advancing knowledge of brain&#13;
chemistry, is the capability of the&#13;
neurosurgeon to loc~te and infect into&#13;
selected portions of the human brain&#13;
specific chemical substances known to&#13;
fnodify cerebral performance," Dr. White&#13;
said. "Such techniques, combining the&#13;
ef~orts of the surgeon, psychiatrist and&#13;
scientist, may not only assist in further&#13;
~locking the mysteries of the human&#13;
mind but provide markedly improved&#13;
~erapeutic approaches to mental&#13;
disease."&#13;
A public lecture Monday night by&#13;
George W. ,Beadle, former president of the&#13;
University of Chicago who was awarded a&#13;
Nobel Prize in genetics in 1958 followed&#13;
the session on biochemistry of the nervous. system which featured five papers.&#13;
P~rticipants _in Monday afternoon's&#13;
session were Dr. Richard J. Wurtman,&#13;
Massachusetts Institute of Technology;&#13;
Bruce S.+ McEwen, Rockefeller (N.Y.)&#13;
University; Julian N. Kanfer director&#13;
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              <text>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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 PARKSIDE COLLEGIAN "FUTURE IS CERTAIN FOR UW-K CAMPUS Film Society Opens First Season The Kenosha School Board discusses future of Kenosha Campus. Independent Study Program Catching On Among the innovations that our students enjoy, "Independent Study" is written in capital letters. With good reason, because its idea is catching on, in many subjects, especially in German. For the first time this year, a program is being carried through that offers those of us who have part-time jobs or other conflicts the opportunity to earn credits outside the classroom. "We are very much encouraged to carry on this work in all our modern languages, that is also in French and Spanish," explained Dr. Walbruck who initiated this program last summer during a course he gave on the Kenosha campus. "A great many of our students interested in languages would lose out without this opportunity to do comparable work at home and get the credit they de­serve for it. Even offerings which, for the time being, are not on the list as regular classroom courses are available to our students this way," he then added. As an example, he cited the case of a housewife who could not attend regular classes during the day, but needed additional credits in German to pursue a teaching career in the future. She is now working at home with texts, illustrative ma­terials and tapes, played back on her own tape-recorder, to fulfill the requirements of this cours* which is offered each semestei under the number, German 499 Two chemistry majors, intereste&lt; in research texts available only h German right now, are pursuing the same kind of work, much t&lt; their benefit in that major. Othei students chose similar work ii their fields of music, are history and general language efficiency. As one student described the I.S program, "I would have had several conflicts without Independem Study, as it is now, I can concern trate on other classroom worl this year and continue my Germar studies at home at my own speed, It's great!" By Patrick Collins After two years of debate, it now seems certain that the Kenosha School Board will be unable to take over the Kenosha campus of the University of Wisconsin - Parkside for use as a third high school. The Kenosha building is owned jointly by the city and county of Kenosha. They have the right to evict the University by providing 90 days' notice before the end of school in June of any year. However, the Kenosha City Council recently voted to defer the matter until 1972. In view of this, School Board President Michael S. Wilk has said that he considers the matter a "dead issue." Wilk made his' comment to a COLLEGIAN reporter on Tuesday night, Oct. 28, at a regular meeting of the School Board. Efforts to gain control of the Kenosha building began two years ago when School Superintendent Donald W. Smitley wrote a letter to Chancellor Irvin Wyllie inquiring about the "estimated date that the University would be vacating the Kenosha Extension Center." Chancellor Wyllie's reply to Smitley's inquiry made reference to a news release distributed by the University. The release stated, "The University of Wisconsin will continue using the Kenosha Center for freshman-sophomore instruc­tion for at least eight years." This statement was based on facts and figures of space avail­ability to provide for student needs, and was reinforced by the fact that the use of the Kenosha and Racine Centers depended entirely on the speed with which the state provided new space for the University. Smitley also received a letter from University President Fred Harvey Harrington. This commu­nication quoted from the new campus law which said new campuses should "be built up gradually by providing at the outset for the third year, or the third and fourth years, of academic instruction," and said in effect that the Kenosha Center would be used for freshman-sophomore programs until at least 1977. Apparently still not satisfied, Smitley sent an inquiry to Mr. Walter Kohler, Chairman, Coordinating Committee for Higher Education in which he asked nearly the same questions as before. In his reply, Kohler told Smitley, "At the present time it is not known how long the two-year Center Building at Kenosha will be required for its present use, since the Building Corporation has ap-Continued on Page Three A showing of "La Dolce Vita" on Nov. 4 opened the Parkside Film Society's first season. The film, directed by Federico Fellini and starring Marcello Mastroi-anni, was presented on the Racine Campus. The Society plans to show twelve films during the 1969-70 school year. The next one will be D. W. Griffith's "The Birth of a Nation," a classic silent movie about the Civil War. It will be shown at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 18, in the Badger Room, Racine Campus. The site of future shows will al­ternate among the Racine, Kenosha, and Parkside campuses. Highlighting the remainder of the series are "The African Queen-," starring Humphrey Bo-gart and KatherineHepburn; "Kind Hearts and Coronets," with Alec Guinness; "The Blue Angel," directed by Josef von Sternberg and starring Marlene Dietrich. Other titles are "The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Runner," Piano Recital Miss Carmen Vila, Parkside's artist - in - residence, will give a piano recial at 8 p. m., Nov. 21, in the Badger Room, Racine Campus. The performance is open to the public, and there will be no admission charge. "Black Orpheus," "Sundays and Cybele," "Privilege," "Night of the Generals," "My Little Chick­adee," and "Woman of the Dunes." A donation of 25 cents is expected of students, faculty, and staff, who also must show their I.D. cards. Non-university persons will be asked to make a donation of 50 cents. The society has about thirty members. Student co-chairmen are Bill Sorensen and Patricia Dudley. Alice Iaquinta is secretary-treasurer. Faculty Advisors Marlene Dietrich in "The Blue Angel." Humphrey Bogart and Katherine Hepburn in "The African Queen." are John Pesta and Hal Stern. Some members of the group also plan to make their own movies. Interested students should contact either of the co-chairmen. &#13;
WHY TALLENT, WHY GREENQUIST? 'Octoberfest' In La Crosse Greenquist and Tallent Halls are named for men who made major contributions toward establishment of a four-year unit of The University of Wisconsin in southeastern Wisconsin. Kenneth L. Greenquist Hall is named for the Racine attorney, po­litical and civic leader who was president of the UW Board of Re­gents at the time of his death on April 5, 1968. An alumnus of the UW Law School at Madison, he was a consistent supporter of the development of a full-fledged degree-granting campus in this area, and, throughout his five years as a Re­gent, defended the University's traditions of freedom. Bernard C. Tallent Hall bears the name of the educator, administrator and civic leader who was the first director of the University of Wisconsin's two year center in Kenosha and headed its operations for 17 years until his death on Oct. 28, 1965. Dean Tallent, who held M.A. degrees in political science from the University of Kenticky and University of Wisconsin, was awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Humane Letters in 1965 University Committee Nominated Twelve faculty members have been nominated for election to the University Committee of the Faculty Senate, according to Arthur Larson, Secretary of the Faculty. The Candidates are: Dr. Leon Applebaum (Economics), Dr. Rich­ard Carrington (Speech), Dr. John Lecture and Fine Arts Committee Named Eight faculty members have been invited to serve on the university's Lecture and Fine Arts Committee. They are Surinder Datta (Life Science) and Herbert Kubly(writer in residence), who would be at-large members; Joseph Balsano (Life Science), Michael Holmes (History), and Harold Stern (French), who would comprise the subcommittee on lectures; John Murphy (Art), Harry Lantz (Mu­sic), and Donald Rintz (Speech), who would make up the subcommittee on fine arts. The Student Government must now select four student members for the group. Complete Selection of: "Text Books *Art Supplies ""Records ""Sports Wear ""Novelties ""Art Reproductions ""Sculptures BRASS CANNON COLLEGE BOOK MART 58 I I - 6th Ave. Kenosha Questions drivers ask from Carthage C ol 1 e g e for "leadership in higher education and for his outstanding community service." His interest in young people is continued through the Bernard C. Tallent Foundation, established shortly after his death, to provide scholarship grants and or loans to students attending The University of Wisconsin - Parkside. The University Board of Re­gents formally approved naming of Greenquist Hall on April 17, 1968. The Regents approved naming of Tallent Hall on Dec. 6, 1968. LaCrosse is a city in west-central Wisconsin of 47,535 quiet and peaceful people. The city's main attraction is the Mississippi River and the main industry is The Heileman Brewing Co. The city has moderate industrialization and even a campus of the Wisconsin State University. What, in this seemingly quiet and unassuming city, makes over 200,000 people visit LaCrosse every October? The answer is Octoberfest. Every year, during the first week of October, the entire city of LaCrosse goes wild. Taking a cue from an old German tradition, the people of LaCrosse set up a week of parades, carnivals, concerts, German costumes and beer. For this Festival, the city is invaded by thousands of visitors (1969 Police Estimate: 200,000) of which most are college students out for a weekend away from books, instructors and classrooms. Col­lege T-shirts seen this year proud­ly proclaimed Harvard and Hawaii as well as Drake, Illinois, Iowa, Mississippi, and college names from all over Wisconsin. And everyone, young and old, had a good time. In the center of the festival was a gigantic "beer tent" that was actually three circus tents struck close together and surrounded by an eight foot wall. It encompassed an area of about Cashion (Chemistry), Dr. Erik Forrest (Art), Dr. Walter Graffin (English), Dr. John Harbeson (Political Science), Oliver Hay ward (History), Dr. Norbert Isenberg (Chemistry), Orpheus Johnson (French), Dr. Richard Rosenberg (Economics), Dr. James Shea(Ge-ology), and Dr. Anna Maria Wil­liams (Bacteriology). Additional nominations may be approved through a petition submitted to the Nomination Committee, signed by either ten faculty members or 5% of the voting faculty, whichever is larger. Six of the individuals will then be elected by the faculty, on November 18, to three year terms. The University Committee is designed to serve as the executive committee of the Parkside Facul­ty Senate, the grievance committee for the Faculty, and the principal spokesman of Faculty viewpoints. Bylaws state that the composition of the University Committee is limited to no more than three members from any one di­vision and, eventually, one-third of the membership must be open for election every spring. The Committee to be elected will replace the present Universi­ty Committee, appointed by Chan­cellor Wyllie a year ago and con­sisting of: Dr. Leon Applebaum, Dr. Richard Carrington, Dr. Stella Gray, Dr. Norbert Isenberg, Dr. John Vozza, and Dr. James Shea, chairman. Parkside Defined A. Wisconsin law forbids hitchhikers to stand in the roadway - defined as the main traveled portion of the highway, between the curbs or shoulders. Some muni­cipalities further have, by ordi­nance, prohibited hitchhiking entirely. Also, it is unlawful for pedestrians to be on or about those highways designated as freeways. Regarding the second question, No - it is not legal for any private citizen to carry a tear gas pen. The only persons who can legally carry any kind of gas would be authorized law enforcement and military personnel, according to Sec. 164.20 of the Wisconsin Stat­utes. Parkside is a one - year - old university situated in southeastern Wisconsin. Nestled in gently rolling farmland, Parkside is surrounded by forests, prairies, and a county park. The 700 acre site became a campus on July 1, 1968 when the University of Wiscon­sin - Parkside became a real­ity. There are over 3,000 students attending classes at buildings in the near - by cities of Racine and Kenosha, as well as at the new complex on the Parkside campus. The fields of study include sci­ence, social science, humanities, education, engineering, management science and labor economics.' Students are allowed full liberty in choosing courses and fields. Counselors are always will­ing to help. Parkside came into being as a realization at the need for a ma­jor university in southeastern Wisconsin. UWP is an offspring of the mating of the two university extensions in Racine and Kenosha. Working hand in hand, UWR and UWK nursed the idea and the growth of UWP until it became an institution able to function on its own. Parkside is a seed from which will grow a major university. By 1980, it will have over 25,000 students in a multi - million dol­lar complex. The students will at­tend classes in all new buildings with up-to-date facilities. There will be adequate parking and hous­ing for the full complement of students, faculty, and visitors. Parkside is trailblazing its way into the future. It aims for new ideas and new directions in education. There are no "depart­ments" of study. By having "divisions" of study, Parkside promises to cut down on communication problems between faculty and students. The requirements are held to a minimum, allowing each student to decide what emphasis he wants to place on his education. Parkside is attempting to get away from "red tape" that bogs down many uni­versities, and is helping the student concentrate on education. Parkside does not swallow up the individual, but aids the student in being himself, and helps him in gaining his own individual education. Parkside, above all, is a dream. It is a dream of the future and a dream of the present. Park-side will always be able to look forward to bigger and better things, and yet will always be able to say how good things are at the present. Parkside is a dream of a new approach and a breath of fresh air; a dream in which we all share. 40x60 yards and contained over 20 places to tap beer, all of them in constant use. From the area came a variety of college songs and folk songs, as well as popular songs from the 30's, 40's,and50's sung by older members of the crowd. Music was supplied by men in German costumes playing tubas accordions, and bass drums. Wandering through the tents, they played for anyone and everyone's request. Those who liked other types of music gathered around young guitarists playing folk songs. When the evening's festivities are over, things slowly quiet down. The town people go home while the visitors retire to motels, to their friends house, or to the security of a sleeping bag in a park. If you get up early enough, you can count hundreds of college students sleeping peacefully in any of the many parks in LaCrosse. No one disturbed those who slept in the parks, and no one disturbed those who slept in houses. In an era when people hear of social strife, civil disobedience and the "generation gap," Octo­berfest is a good thing to hear about. During this week, when over 200,000 people squeezed into LaCrosse, there was no trouble. The only problems one encountered was getting to the front of the lines for beer. It was amazing to see total strangers and people with up to forty years in age differences walking and singing arm and arm. It was good to see everyone enjoying themselves. Octoberfest survives because it is a bridge. It is a bridge on which people meet half-way to talk to other people. It is an open forum where everyone learns. The older people learn that students are not all radicals, and students learn that older people are not ogres. Octoberfest is a bridge for the "generation gap" or any gap you can imagine. At Octoberfest, everyone is a friend. For that reason alone, Octoberfest will never die. And it is for that reason that over 200,000 people visit LaCrosse every October. • QUALITY • SATISFACTION DEEP • SAVINGS Uh ALWAYS ROCK k For You and Your Car BILL'S DEEP ROCK SERVICE STATION 2305 Racine 634-9328 THE COLLEGIAN • • • Students of Parkside Visit Our Shack of Footwear Fashion KENDALLS The "In" Place For the "In" Crowd For the "In" Shoes 8208 TWENTY-SECOND AVENUE KENOSHA. WISCONSIN TELEPHONE 652-3751 &#13;
MORE INFORMATION&#13;
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              <text>DIVISION CHAIRMEN&#13;
NAMED AT&#13;
Chairmen of the Divisions of&#13;
Science, Social Science, and Humanistic&#13;
Studies at The University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside have been&#13;
appointed for the 1969-70 academic&#13;
year.&#13;
They are Dr. Norbert Isenberg,&#13;
Science; Dr. Leon Applebaum, Social&#13;
Science and Dr. Stella Gray,&#13;
Humanistic Studies.&#13;
The appointments were made by&#13;
Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie, acting&#13;
upon advisory elections in which&#13;
Professors Isenberg, Applebaum&#13;
and Gray were nominated for the&#13;
chairmanships by their divisional&#13;
colleagues.&#13;
The three divisions are units of&#13;
Parkside's College of Science and&#13;
Society.&#13;
The three chairmen have demonstrated&#13;
that productive scholarship&#13;
and research and good teaching&#13;
go hand in hand. In addition to&#13;
having received substantial research&#13;
grants and being widely&#13;
published in their fields, each has&#13;
been formally cited by Parkside&#13;
students for their teaching abilities.&#13;
At Parkside's first honors&#13;
convocation last Spring, Professors&#13;
Isenberg and Applebaum were&#13;
named the outstanding teachers in&#13;
their divisions by the Student Government&#13;
Association, while Professor&#13;
Gray received a $500 grant&#13;
from Standard Oil Co. for "teaching&#13;
excellence" as a result of a&#13;
school-wide election.&#13;
Dr. Isenberg, a professor of&#13;
chemistry, took his Ph. D. at&#13;
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute&#13;
after completing bachelors and&#13;
masters degrees at Columbia University.&#13;
He came to the University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Madison as a postdoctoral&#13;
fellow in 1963 after serving&#13;
on the faculty of Skidmore&#13;
College, and joined the Center&#13;
System staff in Kenosha in 1964.&#13;
His research has resulted in&#13;
numerous publications in professional&#13;
journals and has been supported&#13;
by substantial grants from&#13;
the National Science Foundation,&#13;
the National Institute of Health&#13;
and the University of Wisconsin.&#13;
Last summer he presented a paper&#13;
before the Second International&#13;
Congress of Hetereocyclical&#13;
Chemistry in Montpellier, France,&#13;
after addressing the group's initial&#13;
meeting in Alubquerque.&#13;
He also has beenassociatedwith&#13;
the work done at Madison's Mc-&#13;
Ardle Memorial Laboratory in the&#13;
development of cancer-treating&#13;
agents.&#13;
A native of Germany, he is an&#13;
invited Fellow of the American&#13;
DR. ISENBERG&#13;
Institute of Chemis ry and the&#13;
American Association for the Advancement&#13;
of Science, a member&#13;
of numerous other professional&#13;
organizations and has served on&#13;
review panels for the National&#13;
Science Foundation.&#13;
Dr. Applebaum, associate professor&#13;
of Economics, received his&#13;
bachelors degree in political science&#13;
at Brooklyn College and his&#13;
masters and Ph. D. degrees in&#13;
economics at The University of&#13;
Wisconsin. He was a faculty member&#13;
at UW - Milwaukee from&#13;
1959 to 1965 and an associate&#13;
The Regents Blow It&#13;
It's not often that we take to&#13;
criticism of the University of&#13;
Wisconsin Board of Regents. Normally,&#13;
they are a fairly level-headed&#13;
group of men, who make decisions&#13;
regarding the running of the&#13;
UW system with care and all due&#13;
deliberation.&#13;
Careful deliberation was again&#13;
the keynote last Friday, when the&#13;
regents spent more than three&#13;
hours debating the merits of restoring&#13;
women's hours (for freshman&#13;
girls), and of visitation. In&#13;
the end, they restored hours after&#13;
a one year "experiment" during&#13;
which there had been none, and&#13;
tightened up on a gradual trend&#13;
towards liberalized visitation policies.&#13;
To our mind, this was&#13;
wrong.&#13;
A week prior to the meeting,&#13;
the Herald had taken the position&#13;
that the one year "experiment"&#13;
without hours has worked out well,&#13;
and no legitimate complaints could&#13;
be brought forth to dispute its&#13;
success. And sure enough, last&#13;
Friday, none were. The regents&#13;
instead gorged themselves on letters&#13;
from people around the state,&#13;
and testimony by the sanctimonius&#13;
State Council for Home and Family.&#13;
The appalling thing about it&#13;
all was that every bit of the&#13;
arguing was being done from suppositions&#13;
as to how things were,&#13;
even when presented with directly&#13;
contradictory facts.&#13;
"Most freshmen girls are from&#13;
small communities," exclaimed&#13;
Maury Pasch, presuming that they&#13;
are therefore less able to handle&#13;
themselves in "a new kind of life."&#13;
But does one enable a girl to&#13;
handle a new environment by saying&#13;
she has to be in by midnight? It&#13;
is hard to imagine a more superficial&#13;
move on the part of the&#13;
regents, which appears designed&#13;
only to sooth their consciences&#13;
and those of residents around the&#13;
state who haven't the vaguest idea&#13;
of what goes on down there in "sin&#13;
city."&#13;
"This encourages 'arrangements'"&#13;
says Pasch. If there's&#13;
one thing that will encourage 'arrangements,'&#13;
Regent Pasch, it is a&#13;
set of regulations which makes a&#13;
girl want to leave a dormitory&#13;
in favor of a place where she doe's&#13;
as she pleases.&#13;
"My vote is against the permissiveness&#13;
on this campus!" said&#13;
Regent James Nellen. Perhaps,&#13;
Mr. Nellen, but the vote in question&#13;
was on 12:00 hours for freshman&#13;
girls. As A1 C app is famous for&#13;
saying, "If you can't make it by&#13;
midnight, fella, you're not gonna&#13;
make it at all!" That's a bit uncouth&#13;
perhaps, but it should be&#13;
obvious that if a girl is going to&#13;
be permissive (or a guy, either),&#13;
she can just as easily be permissive&#13;
before 12:00.&#13;
"We're concerned about the type&#13;
of family life we have here in Wisconsin,"&#13;
said the Rev. Frederick&#13;
Gilbert of the State Council for&#13;
Home and Family, who then added&#13;
the most disgusting reference of&#13;
the afternoon, as he contended that&#13;
the "20 per cent of the students&#13;
who are from out of state are not&#13;
concerned with the type of family&#13;
life we have here." Ignore the way&#13;
other people think and live, Rev.&#13;
Gilbert, and it'll all just go away,&#13;
right?&#13;
The regents, in restoring women's&#13;
hours, and in the manner in&#13;
which they did it, have betrayed&#13;
the statutory trust placed in them&#13;
by the constitution of the State of&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
At the risk of sounding melodramatic,&#13;
this was the regent's-&#13;
"Modest Hour" with a memory.&#13;
DR. GREY&#13;
professor at Ohio State University's&#13;
College of Commerce and&#13;
Administration before returning&#13;
to the UW sys tem in 1967.&#13;
An expert in labor economics,&#13;
Dr. Applebaum has published widely&#13;
in the areas of f inancial aspects&#13;
and administration of union organizations&#13;
and the development&#13;
of voluntary health insurance. His&#13;
research has been supported by&#13;
grants from UW, Ohio State and&#13;
the Ford F oundation.&#13;
Dr. Gray, anassociate professor&#13;
of English, received her A. B.&#13;
DR. APPLEBAUM&#13;
degree from Bates College, her&#13;
M. A. from Middlebury College&#13;
and her doctorate from UW -&#13;
Madison. She taught at the University&#13;
of Richmond, the National College&#13;
of Education and at UW -&#13;
Madison before joining the Center&#13;
System faculty in Kenosha in 1958.&#13;
A popula r speaker in Southeastern&#13;
Wisconsin, she is a member&#13;
of a number of professional&#13;
associations including the Modern&#13;
Language Association and is represented&#13;
by articles in several&#13;
reference works in her field.&#13;
It is possible that we- will lose&#13;
a few friends on the Board of&#13;
Regents by running this editorial.&#13;
We hope not, of course. We hope&#13;
the regents take the criticisms&#13;
that are contained here in the spirit&#13;
in which they were intended, and&#13;
not as personal attacks. We are&#13;
trying to point up the fact that&#13;
there is considerable disagreement&#13;
with the regent action of last&#13;
Friday from all segments of the&#13;
University community. We ask that&#13;
they reconsider their decision to&#13;
reinstate hours and cut back visitation&#13;
privileges. And we make that&#13;
request with all due respect and&#13;
deference to their normally wellreasoned&#13;
approach to the operation&#13;
of this university.&#13;
And we also hope, by the way,&#13;
that students here will continue to&#13;
show themselves to be mature in&#13;
this area, and avoid stupid, pointless&#13;
demonstrations and sign&#13;
painting to intimidate the regents&#13;
into acting. It won't work. It&#13;
shouldn't work. All we can do is&#13;
reason, and- hope that it will succeed,&#13;
in the final analysis.&#13;
Reprinted with permission&#13;
from the Badger Herald&#13;
MEMO . . .&#13;
Miss Carmen Vila, Parkside's&#13;
artist - in - Residence, will play&#13;
an all - Beethoven piano recital&#13;
at 8 p. m. on Friday, December&#13;
5, in the Racine Campus Badger&#13;
Room. The program is free and&#13;
open to the public.&#13;
Miss Vila also will play a joint&#13;
program with the New York Camerata,&#13;
Affiliate Artists, on December&#13;
17. The joint concert will&#13;
be at 8 p. m. in the Racine Campus&#13;
Badger Room. This program&#13;
is free and open to the public.&#13;
Student Power Upswing&#13;
At Wis. State Universities&#13;
BY TIM BAXTER&#13;
Of The Daily Cardinal&#13;
While the Board of Regents has&#13;
taken steps away from student&#13;
self r determination, governing&#13;
bodies of other state universities&#13;
have moved toward increased&#13;
student participation in the running&#13;
of their own lives.&#13;
By reinstating women's hours&#13;
and restricting visitation against&#13;
the wishes of students, faculty and&#13;
administration, the regents have&#13;
in effect reaffirmed their absolute&#13;
power as nonstudents governing&#13;
a student body. Other state universities&#13;
have seen things differently.&#13;
At least 30 state universities&#13;
within the past year have&#13;
made innovations providing for&#13;
greater student weight in policy&#13;
matters.&#13;
Among these, Massachusetts has&#13;
been the scene of the most far&#13;
reaching action. There, the first&#13;
state law in history was passed&#13;
last August to elect one voting&#13;
student to each of the boards&#13;
of trustees of the University of&#13;
Massachusetts, Lowell Technological&#13;
Institute and Southeastern&#13;
Massachusetts University.&#13;
In Massachusetts, a student with&#13;
full power will also be elected&#13;
the Board of Trustees of State&#13;
Colleges, ruling 12 state colleges,&#13;
and to the Board of Regional Community&#13;
Colleges, responsible for&#13;
13 community colleges in the state.&#13;
Other state universities have&#13;
taken similar measures. In 1968,&#13;
the University of Kentucky provided&#13;
for a student on its governing&#13;
board. The governors of&#13;
Connecticut and Maine have appointed&#13;
students to full voting&#13;
memberships on the boards of the&#13;
University of Connecticut and the&#13;
University of Maine. Cornell University&#13;
recently named a student&#13;
with full power to its board.&#13;
The boards of the University of&#13;
Washington and the University of&#13;
Wyoming have nonvoting student&#13;
members. The president of the&#13;
University of Vermont has proposed&#13;
placing a nonvoting student&#13;
on the board of that University.&#13;
According to an Oct. 7, 1969,&#13;
circular of the Office of Institutional&#13;
Research of the National&#13;
Association of State Universities&#13;
and Land Grant Colleges,&#13;
many state universities have allowed&#13;
students to move for power&#13;
in other ways.&#13;
At the University of North Carolina,&#13;
students and faculty members&#13;
will man two disciplinary&#13;
committees to advise the chansellor&#13;
on student disruption matters.&#13;
The circular says University&#13;
of Georgia students will be&#13;
in charge of all general disciplinary&#13;
action.&#13;
Ohio University has provided&#13;
for six task forces, composed&#13;
of students, faculty and administration,&#13;
to examine university academic&#13;
priorities, budget matters,&#13;
resources, services and facilities.&#13;
Ohio also has included students&#13;
on a president's advisory council.&#13;
Other colleges with administration&#13;
advisory councils are the&#13;
City University of New York, Iowa&#13;
State University and Utah State&#13;
University.&#13;
The Office of Institutional Research&#13;
said students at Georgia&#13;
Tech helped pick their new president,&#13;
and students at the University&#13;
of California at Davis participated&#13;
in the choosing of a chan-&#13;
Continued on Page Three&#13;
Parkside - Carthag&#13;
Panels Scheduled&#13;
Form Science Conference&#13;
It's easy to relegate concern&#13;
about the draft and its vital effect&#13;
on the lives of thousands'&#13;
of young American men and their&#13;
families to the farthest corner&#13;
of one's mind —unless you happen&#13;
to be one of those young men or&#13;
those families so affected.&#13;
Whatever their age, WLIP listeners&#13;
will find value in hearing&#13;
four of these young men exchange&#13;
views on the draft, the lottery,&#13;
and their alternatives on "College&#13;
Talk - In", Saturday, Dec.&#13;
6 at 10:35 a. m. on WLIP.&#13;
Moderator of the first panel&#13;
will be John Newanschwander,&#13;
Asst. Prof, of hisory at Carthage&#13;
College and former Asst. Dean of&#13;
Adelbert College of Case Western&#13;
Reserve University.&#13;
Participating University of Wisconsin&#13;
- Parkside students will&#13;
be Guy Sturino of Kenosha (3705-&#13;
27th st.); veteran of the U. S.&#13;
Marine Corps, junior in engineering,&#13;
and. president of Kenosha&#13;
County Big Brothers; and Ray&#13;
Bohn of Racine (940 Villa St.),&#13;
junior in sociology and counselor&#13;
at the Racine Draft Information&#13;
Center.&#13;
Student panel members from&#13;
Carthage College will be Ron Atkins&#13;
of Temperance, Mich. (10051&#13;
Goff Rd.), a junior in history;&#13;
and Gary Rochau of Davenport,&#13;
Iowa, a junior in mathematics&#13;
and physics.&#13;
War Moratoriums are a direct&#13;
result of American involvement&#13;
in the Vietnam war, and are of&#13;
equally vital concern to both students&#13;
and the colleges they attend.&#13;
Purposes and effects of such moratoriums&#13;
will be the topic of the&#13;
second "College Talk-In" panel&#13;
on Dec. 13.&#13;
Moderator of "War Moratoriums&#13;
- Their Purpose and Ef-&#13;
Parkside Lacks Active&#13;
Student Government&#13;
One thing lacking at Parkside,&#13;
though not apparent to most students,&#13;
is a student government.&#13;
However, the affect of having no&#13;
functioning government is made&#13;
evident by the fact that there&#13;
has been very few social activities&#13;
since the beginning of the semester&#13;
and little or no communication&#13;
between the administration and the&#13;
students.&#13;
Most students don't realize that&#13;
a student government plays a vital&#13;
role in shaping the university into&#13;
an efficient socio-educational institution.&#13;
Essentially, all student&#13;
activities that require coordination&#13;
(dances, festivals, beer blasts,&#13;
concerts, etc.) should be a duty of&#13;
government. The government also&#13;
serves as a mediator between&#13;
the administration and the students.&#13;
In one sense, it may&#13;
present a need to the administration&#13;
(i.e. improved parking facilities).&#13;
In another sense, it has&#13;
the responsibility of explaining&#13;
the decisions or actions of the&#13;
administration to the students. The&#13;
government maintains public relations&#13;
representing the opinion&#13;
of the student body and should&#13;
have the responsibility of recognizing&#13;
clubs, providing publicity&#13;
of university events, and, in the&#13;
case of Parkside's present tricampus&#13;
arrangement, a strong&#13;
student government would provide&#13;
unity.&#13;
The future government will be&#13;
composed of three branches: executive,&#13;
legislative and judicial.&#13;
The executive is made up of the&#13;
President, Vice President, Secretary&#13;
and Treasurer with each&#13;
carrying on the typical parliamen-&#13;
Afro-American Center&#13;
Is Building A Library&#13;
Reprinted From Badger Herald&#13;
The Afro-American Center has a&#13;
library unique in two respects. It&#13;
is the only campus library with&#13;
soul. It is small, with only 400&#13;
volumes so far.&#13;
According to an employee, the&#13;
library is for blacks and other&#13;
beautiful people, and is familiar&#13;
and informal with a minimum of&#13;
Specializing in 100% Imported&#13;
Human Hair Wigs, Falls $nd&#13;
Hairpieces&#13;
JO ANN'S CHATEAU&#13;
BEAUTY &amp; WIG SALON&#13;
Jo Ann Principe, Prop.&#13;
6122 22nd Ave., Kenosha, Wis.&#13;
654.6448&#13;
feet" will be UW - Parkside's Asst.&#13;
Prof, of physics, Tom Knight, who&#13;
recently returned from the Washington,&#13;
D. C. moratorium rally.&#13;
Students representing Parkside on&#13;
the panel will be Bill Smith of&#13;
Racine (1209 Grand ave.) a junior&#13;
in sociology and counselor of the&#13;
Racine Draft Information Center;&#13;
and Mike Lofton also of Racine&#13;
(927 S. Wisconsin ave.), freshman&#13;
in psychology, veteran of the U.&#13;
S. Marine Corps, and chairman&#13;
of the "Parkside Moratorium&#13;
Committee."&#13;
Now in its seventh week, "College&#13;
Talk - In" is hosted by WLIP&#13;
News Director Jim Bradley and&#13;
heard weekly on Saturdays at 10:35&#13;
a. m.&#13;
The three higher education institutions&#13;
in Racine and Kenosha&#13;
Counties and public and private&#13;
secondary schools in theb i - county&#13;
area have formed the Kenosha-&#13;
Racine Science Conference.&#13;
The major goal of the Conference&#13;
is to provide a channel of&#13;
communication between science&#13;
teachers at the secondary&#13;
level and their colleagues at The&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside,&#13;
Dominican College and Carthage&#13;
College, according to Rich- ,&#13;
ard Bliss, science curriculum coordinator&#13;
for the Racine Unified&#13;
School District and chairman of&#13;
the Conference steering committee.&#13;
Serving on the steering committee&#13;
with Bliss are Professor Morris&#13;
Firbaugh of Parkside, Professor&#13;
Kenneth Hamm of Carthage,&#13;
Professor Gerald Buck of Dotar&#13;
y responsibilities. The legislative&#13;
branch is formed by senators&#13;
in a ratio of one per one hundred&#13;
students and one non-voting ad-,&#13;
visor per club. It must vote on&#13;
decisions, presented by the exexecutive&#13;
branch, or by its own&#13;
members. The judicial branch&#13;
forms the student court with five&#13;
students presiding which reviews&#13;
executive and legislative actions&#13;
or decisions.&#13;
The main problem in getting the&#13;
political wheels rolling at Parkside&#13;
is that there is, at present,&#13;
no constitution thatJias beenj-atified&#13;
by the student body.&#13;
Toward the end of last year,&#13;
the old constitution underwent&#13;
much revision since the needs&#13;
of a four year university are different&#13;
from those of a two year.&#13;
But due to clerical problems, the&#13;
final format has just recently been&#13;
readied for a student ratification&#13;
in the near future.&#13;
It must be borne in mind that&#13;
a government oh a university level&#13;
is not the same as a high school&#13;
government. The university government&#13;
has greater power and can&#13;
accomplish much. Its inadequacy,&#13;
as former Senate President Jim&#13;
Madura explained, is not lack of&#13;
power nor apathy of the stu dents,&#13;
but the unawareness on the part&#13;
of the students as to what a student&#13;
government has to offer or&#13;
provide. If the students fail to&#13;
utilize their government, it cannot&#13;
fulfill its obligation to advance&#13;
the educational goals of the&#13;
university; hence, personal involvement&#13;
by each student is a&#13;
necessity if Parkside is ever to&#13;
achieve a measure of greatness.&#13;
Parkside Student Art Stolen&#13;
minican, Sister Teresa McGinniss&#13;
of St. Catherine's High School&#13;
Sister Cecilia Schulte of St. Joseph's&#13;
High School and Keith Winston&#13;
of the Kenosha Unified School&#13;
District.&#13;
The Conference will hold its initial&#13;
meeting Feb. 5 at Parkside.&#13;
The program for the dinner meeting&#13;
will include introductory remarks&#13;
by Bliss, small group meetings&#13;
in various science subject&#13;
areas chaired by university professors&#13;
and a tour of the new&#13;
UWP campus.&#13;
Subsequent meetin gs will be held&#13;
at Carthage and Dominican Colleges,&#13;
where teachers also will&#13;
have an opportunity to tour campus&#13;
facilities.&#13;
Dr. Hamburg&#13;
Addresses Bi-State&#13;
Conference&#13;
A Parkside student painting had&#13;
been displayed in the waiting room&#13;
of the Student Affairs Office on&#13;
the Kenosha Campus for approximately&#13;
two months. During the&#13;
latter part of the third week of&#13;
November the painting was stolen.&#13;
The painting, valued at $42.50,&#13;
depicted a wintery scene with evergreens,&#13;
snow and a deer smelling&#13;
an empty carton of 30-30 caliber&#13;
shells. The frame is walnut wormwood.&#13;
Jack Tucker, 5234 44th Ave.,&#13;
Kenosha, who owns the painting&#13;
would appreciate it very much&#13;
if it would be returned to his&#13;
home or to the Kenosha Art Studio,&#13;
room 104B. Jack had planned&#13;
to give the painting as a Christmas&#13;
present to a member of his&#13;
family. Whoever you are, please&#13;
help Jack have a Merry Christmas!&#13;
NO WHITE CHRISTMAS&#13;
FOR PRES. HARRINGTON&#13;
stereotypes. The main reason the&#13;
library is popular is that there&#13;
is a feeling of warmth, personal&#13;
service and a recognition of the&#13;
worth of an individual. For this&#13;
reason it is more popular, with&#13;
some students than the memorial&#13;
Library.&#13;
The person in charge is Lynette&#13;
Thompson, a music education ma-&#13;
COUNTDOWN&#13;
BOUTIQUE&#13;
Racine, Wis.&#13;
There will be no white Christmas&#13;
for UW President Fred Harrington&#13;
this year, but he's not complaining&#13;
too much.&#13;
Harrington left last week for a&#13;
two month vacation during which&#13;
he will visit Hawaii, Hong Kong,&#13;
India, and Egypt. It's his first&#13;
vacation in a year and a half,&#13;
and all his expenses will be paid&#13;
by the Danforth Foundation. They&#13;
awarded Harrington and 20 other&#13;
college presidents fellowships for&#13;
similar trips. Harrington will also&#13;
continue to draw his regular salary&#13;
from the UW while on the trip.&#13;
jor, who currently is not enr olled at&#13;
the University.&#13;
"When I got here," said the&#13;
pretty librarian from Chicago,&#13;
"the library was just a bunch of&#13;
Continued on Page Three&#13;
Harrington is now in Calcutta,&#13;
India, where he will study foreign&#13;
policy issues, and will stay there&#13;
until Dec. 21. From there he heads&#13;
for Egypt, where he'll spend&#13;
Christmas.&#13;
University Vice-President Robert&#13;
Clodius is actingpresident.&#13;
the&#13;
LEADER&#13;
store&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/RACINE&#13;
Dr. Roger Hamburg, an assistant&#13;
professor of political science&#13;
at The University of Wisconsin-&#13;
Parkside and a specialist in international&#13;
relations and Soviet&#13;
foreign policy, was among experts&#13;
invited to address the Bi - State&#13;
Slavic Conference at Columbia,&#13;
Mo.&#13;
Dr. Hamburg presented a paper&#13;
titled "Urbanization, Industrialization&#13;
and Modernization in Latin&#13;
America: Soviet Views." Dr. Hamburg's&#13;
studies of Soviet foreign&#13;
policy in relation to Latin America&#13;
have been published in several&#13;
professional journals.&#13;
Prof. Hamburg received his&#13;
bachelor's degree at the University&#13;
of Michigan, master's degree&#13;
at the University of Chicago and&#13;
Ph. D. degree at UW - Madison.&#13;
He taught at Eastern Washington&#13;
State College and Marquette University&#13;
before joining the Parkside&#13;
faculty.&#13;
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Georgetown U. Ends ROTC Program Student Power&#13;
Georgetown University, a leading&#13;
Catholic college in Washington,&#13;
D. C., severed its ties with&#13;
an army reserve unit which has&#13;
used the campus facilities free&#13;
since 1952.&#13;
In a letter to General Robert&#13;
D. Partridge, commanding officer&#13;
of the 352nd Army Civil Affairs&#13;
Reserve Unit, Father Robert J.&#13;
Henle, S.J., president of the university&#13;
said, "There is no reason&#13;
why a university should cooperate&#13;
with a reserve unit that does&#13;
not directly serve a university&#13;
purpose."&#13;
The presence of the Civil Affairs&#13;
Unit, staffed by Georgetown&#13;
students, including the Students&#13;
for a Democratic Society (SDS).&#13;
The decision to withdraw the use&#13;
of campus facilities also had the&#13;
support of the undergraduate student&#13;
government. The Catholic&#13;
Standard, a weekly Catholic newspaper&#13;
of the Archdiocese of Washington,&#13;
blasted Fr. Henle's actions.&#13;
"We find it difficult to&#13;
rationalize the ouster of the Civil&#13;
Affairs Unit, made up of men of&#13;
high professional competence in&#13;
many fields, on the grounds state&#13;
in Fr. Henle's letter," the paper&#13;
said.&#13;
"The facilities on the campus&#13;
have been made available to many&#13;
non-university related activities,&#13;
including non-campus groups assembled&#13;
to speak in opposition to&#13;
the teaching authority of the&#13;
Church. By excluding the Civil&#13;
Affairs Unit, the university has&#13;
established a principle that will&#13;
necessarily limit the activities&#13;
of many other groups. It will be&#13;
interesting to see if student pressure&#13;
on the administration cuts&#13;
both ways," the paper concluded.&#13;
Afro-American Center Library&#13;
Continued From Page Two&#13;
books."&#13;
Thanks in part to Mildred Mc-&#13;
Kiever, Durham, N. C., a graduate&#13;
student in library science, the&#13;
books have all been catalogued.&#13;
She gave Miss Thompson a crash&#13;
course in librarianship.&#13;
A quick look at the selection&#13;
convinces any guest he is in a&#13;
library meant to continue the black&#13;
revolution. The criterion for selecting&#13;
any book is that it deals&#13;
with, or was written by, black&#13;
men, Elrie Chrite, center director&#13;
noted. Present titles bear him&#13;
out. They range from "My Life&#13;
With Martin Luther King, Jr.," by&#13;
Mrs. Coretta King, widow of the&#13;
murdered civil rights leader, to&#13;
"This Is My Country Too," by&#13;
John A. Williams. There is even a&#13;
guide for soul-cooking aspirants:&#13;
"Soul Food Cookbook."&#13;
But for some time to come,&#13;
the real stopper is likely to remain&#13;
"For the Center of All the&#13;
Beautiful People," a collection&#13;
of poems by Cheryl Davis, poetin-&#13;
residence and a sophomore in&#13;
American Institutions. The librarian&#13;
hopes to stock the shelves&#13;
with magazines, academic journals,&#13;
and newspapers that have&#13;
something to do with the people&#13;
of the third world — Bl acks, Asians,&#13;
Arabs, PuertoRicans, Mexicans,&#13;
and others. Chrite and his&#13;
librarian envision the library as&#13;
a focal point for blacks on the&#13;
campus.&#13;
Continued from Page One&#13;
cellor.&#13;
Students have been named&#13;
to course and curriculum committees&#13;
at Louisiana State University.&#13;
Students will vote on 18&#13;
faculty committees at the University&#13;
of Missouri at Rolla and on&#13;
38 committees at Ohio University.&#13;
Fifteen administrative committees&#13;
at the University of Montana&#13;
will contain student members&#13;
Wisconsin regents have done&#13;
a little to increase "student participation&#13;
and communication," as&#13;
some of the regents phrase it.&#13;
The board recently adopted a resolution&#13;
introduced by Regent Bernard&#13;
Ziegler to allow WSA Pres.&#13;
David Schaefer ("the student head&#13;
most representative of the student&#13;
body," says Ziegler) to sit&#13;
with faculty and administration&#13;
representatives at regent meetings.&#13;
But Schaefer has no real or&#13;
even imaginary power, and it took&#13;
a small argument at the regents'&#13;
last meeting just to let Schaefer&#13;
speak about "hours and visitations.&#13;
The regents themselves seem&#13;
to have differing opinions about&#13;
voting students on their board.&#13;
In light of their housing decisions,&#13;
some of their opinions about student&#13;
power seem to be contradictory.&#13;
Regent Maurice B. Pasch: "I&#13;
myself would have no objection&#13;
to a student serving on the board."&#13;
Regent Robert V. Dahlstrom:&#13;
"I can't see anything against a&#13;
full student member. I think what&#13;
we've done with Mr. Schaefer indicates&#13;
a general feeling that we&#13;
want greater student participation&#13;
and communication."&#13;
Regent Mrs. Howard V. Sandin:&#13;
"I think it's a very good thing."&#13;
Regent Charles D. Gelatt: "I&#13;
don't agree with it. Students are&#13;
well enough represented by student&#13;
government bodies and the&#13;
total mass of students on campus."&#13;
Regent Dr. James W. Nellen:&#13;
"I think students should be participatory,&#13;
but not part of the Board&#13;
of Regents."&#13;
Regent Bernard C. Ziegler: "I&#13;
have strong feelings opposed to&#13;
it. I don't see any reasons for&#13;
students to bypass the administration&#13;
and faculty and leap frog&#13;
right to the regents. If we seat&#13;
students, we would have to seat&#13;
the faculty and the administration."&#13;
5712 SIXTH AVENUE&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Volume I - No. 4&#13;
5 DECEMBER 1969&#13;
Editor-in-Chief Jlm Runge&#13;
Associate Editor Perry Michalos&#13;
Business Manager Marc Colby&#13;
Director of News Services Greg Emery&#13;
Director of Special Events ' Ed Borrhardt&#13;
Director of Illustrations NeU HSV&#13;
Director of Personnel . . ....Connie Ryterske&#13;
Margie Noer Layout&#13;
Accountant Jim Croxford&#13;
Advisor John Pesta&#13;
Published every two weeks by the Students of the University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Parkside; Kenosha, Wisconsin, 53140. Opinions&#13;
expressed in editorials, cartoons, and articles are not necessarily&#13;
those of THE COLLEGIAN staff, the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside, its faculty, advisors, administrators, or students.&#13;
About Sportsfest&#13;
See your campus shatter into an&#13;
uproar of excitement this week end!&#13;
Tonight, Dec. 5 Sportsfest starts.&#13;
Here's the big deal:&#13;
TONIGHT - Put on your informal&#13;
for the "Challengers"&#13;
will burst open the Sportsfest with&#13;
a rolling Rock dance at Pet's Clubhouse,&#13;
from 9:00-12:00. General&#13;
admission $1.75, Student Association&#13;
card holder $1.00.&#13;
( TOMORROW — Saturday will be&#13;
our day of grandeur.&#13;
Volleyball will begin socking it&#13;
to us at 9:00 a. m. with a club&#13;
game. UW-Parkside v. UW-Milwaukee.&#13;
At 10:00 the 'jungle' volley&#13;
ball game will take place:&#13;
UW-P Faculty v. UW-M Faculty.&#13;
A fencing meet will serve as&#13;
a warm-up for a schedule which&#13;
will include many of the country's&#13;
strongest fencing teams. The first&#13;
meet is at 11:00 a. m. when&#13;
UW-P crosses blades with MATC,&#13;
the second is at noon when UW—P&#13;
meets the University of Chicago.&#13;
Our basketball team will take&#13;
the floor at 1:30 p. m. to meet&#13;
UW-GB in the first game of what&#13;
is expected to develop into a spirited&#13;
rivalry between the two new&#13;
UW campuses.&#13;
At the half time Korean judo&#13;
expert Byung Suh of Chicago will&#13;
be featured in a judo exhibition.&#13;
He will be pitted against Ron&#13;
Hansen of the Racine Police Departmen&#13;
and President of the Midwest&#13;
Judo Association. Suh teaches&#13;
at Parkside and holds the sixth degree&#13;
black belt, the highest teaching&#13;
degree belt in the U. S. Mark&#13;
Harris of Racine, who submitted&#13;
From the Right&#13;
THE PEOPLE AND THE WAR&#13;
by Jeffry L. Parry&#13;
On November 3, 1969, the President of the United States went before&#13;
the American people. His topic was an unpopular war, and he attempted&#13;
to spell out in clear terms America's stake in the war, our reasons&#13;
for getting involved, and the reasons why we cannot extricate ourselves&#13;
from it immediately.&#13;
The President tried to reverse a communication gap that had developed&#13;
between Washington and the people. He gave us information about the&#13;
war's progress, revealed secret documents with Viet leadership and&#13;
explained the options open to him as President. He then explained why&#13;
only one choice was acceptable. It was a logical, informative, and&#13;
statesmanlike address.&#13;
When the TV sets switched off, thousands across the nation turned&#13;
to each other and said, "See, he didn't say anything."&#13;
An examination of these people is in order. After the President&#13;
pointed out that he had made his decision and any further demonstrations&#13;
against the war would only aid North Vietnam, these people went out&#13;
November 15 and demonstrated.&#13;
Marching under the praise of North Vietnam, these people exercised&#13;
their right of f ree speech to hamper the President's hand, still believing&#13;
that they were doing their country a service.&#13;
But in Vietnam, communist raids were stepped up to show sympathy&#13;
with the American dissenters.&#13;
As the Nixon position hardens, moratorium supporters are now&#13;
moving from the area of exercise of free speech to the cloudy realm&#13;
of treason. They are lending aid and comfort to the enemy and only&#13;
hampering the safety of the GI's in Vietnam.&#13;
Moratorium supporters must realize that this is the time to lower&#13;
their voices, to rally around the President, and help win the just peace&#13;
he is dedicated to.&#13;
Any other action can only lengthen this war.&#13;
Thoughts On Darkness&#13;
Often we find ourselves in darkness.&#13;
Many times we put ourselves&#13;
there, and it is at these times&#13;
that our darkness is an abyss, a&#13;
nice comfortable hole with four&#13;
sides. There's an opening way up&#13;
at the top, but we can't see it,&#13;
and it is very nice here, because&#13;
no one will come in, except a few&#13;
brave souls, which are few and&#13;
far in between these days.&#13;
Often, however, we don't put ourselves&#13;
there. If we strain our eyes&#13;
in this darkness, we'll notice that&#13;
someone has placed us in an immense&#13;
Cathedral; we are'way back&#13;
in the corner. While we strain a&#13;
little more, we'll notice the altar&#13;
surrounded by immense windows.&#13;
So, we try to get to the altar in&#13;
the darkness; something keeps us&#13;
back in that corner! Suddenly the&#13;
sun shines through the windows;&#13;
the whole Cathedral is illumined&#13;
with bright colors, and guess what?&#13;
There are multitudinous other people&#13;
there! The darkness was so&#13;
thick we couldn't see them.&#13;
This crowd held us back from&#13;
the altar! But what we don't realize&#13;
is that, since these people are&#13;
there, we don't have to be at the&#13;
altar. Stay there - the people are&#13;
all singing. It's really a beautiful&#13;
song, because God is playing the&#13;
PROPOSED BUSSING SOLUTIONS&#13;
The Campus Bus Service Committee is considering a charge each&#13;
way for a ride on the bus, from Tallent to Greenquist.&#13;
In an analysis of bus revenue and expense we find the total revenue&#13;
of $28,715.00; $16,000.00 coming from first "and second semester&#13;
student activity fund in the tuition and $12,715.00 from faculty miles&#13;
traveled for one year at $.10 per mile.&#13;
The total expenditure is $44,587.50; $35,212.50 of which is from the&#13;
daily bus service from the run between campus for two buses, plus&#13;
$9,375.00 for two buses on the 5 hr. per day bus shuttle. Now one bus&#13;
has been removed.&#13;
The buses running between campuses are in service Monday thru&#13;
Thursday, 7:30 a.m. thru 10:30 p.m., Friday, 7:30 a.m. thru 6:00 p.m.&#13;
The shuttle buses run Monday thru Thursday, 5:15 p.m. thru 10:15 p.m.&#13;
In conversations with two bus drivers, we were told that the run&#13;
between campuses was functionless, and we tend to agree. On Nov. 25&#13;
there were only two people to take advantage of the then free bus ride in&#13;
a total of five hours.&#13;
Based on the above information and drivers report sheets, it would&#13;
be advisable to either 1) adopt the charge for the bus trip so planned;&#13;
or 2) eliminate the intercampus after 5 p. m. because of non-use by&#13;
students at night; 3) drop the intercampus bus service completely&#13;
and only keep the shuttle service from Tallent to Greenquist thereby&#13;
not only cutting the deficit but also showing a profit.&#13;
»r,X^e 1)601)16 who a.re riding the run between campuses would be&#13;
making the many who ride the shuttle service pay for the round trip.&#13;
L:fitUloftSma»rble f0r the feW t0 "&lt;&gt; &lt;hi™ege for the&#13;
"Rangers" and won the UW-p&#13;
nickname contest, will receive a&#13;
commemorative plaque.&#13;
The basketball game will feature&#13;
the debut of Parkside's newly&#13;
formed pep band, pom - pom&#13;
girls, and cheerleaders, as well&#13;
as an informal group of forty&#13;
male students who call themselves&#13;
"bleacher bums" and say they&#13;
are dedicated to noise.&#13;
Wrestling will open its season&#13;
at 3:30 p. m. when Parkside grapples&#13;
Green Bay. General admission&#13;
is $1, (all events included)&#13;
if you don't show up with your&#13;
Ranger button.&#13;
Later that night, the Coffee&#13;
House Night Club will feature&#13;
"The Goliards" from 9:00-&#13;
1:00. The trio combines the finest&#13;
folk songs of the past with the&#13;
pungent musical comments on the&#13;
world of today. Also appearing&#13;
that same night will be "The&#13;
Steve Hauer Trio."&#13;
Coach He in of the fencing team&#13;
feels that the Sportsfest Weedend&#13;
"will be a chance for my freshmen&#13;
to earn a birth." Put Milwaukee&#13;
Area Technical College&#13;
and U. of Chicago down this weekend&#13;
Parkside Fencers!&#13;
Coach Stevens of the basketball&#13;
team affirms that the&#13;
"Sportsfest" Weekend holds one&#13;
of Parksides biggest rivalrys; with&#13;
its rival, University of Wisconsin&#13;
Green Bay. Stevens declares&#13;
this weekend "is an excellent opportunity&#13;
to become acquainted&#13;
with Parkside activities and to&#13;
be able to participate and show&#13;
spirit: a time for the student body&#13;
to rally Parkside teams." Sportsfest,&#13;
Coach Stevens feels "is a&#13;
benefit to our school, considering&#13;
we are commuting and is the&#13;
only real rally point we have."&#13;
The coaches, players, and athletic&#13;
department want student support&#13;
more than anything.&#13;
From wrestling, Coach Martinez,&#13;
reports, " a school can only&#13;
improve if it starts out wrestling&#13;
some of the best; as a team&#13;
and an individual sport.'.' Any person&#13;
can wrestle, "you're not restricted&#13;
by size, and you don't&#13;
have to be big to wrestle."&#13;
organ. If you know how to listen,&#13;
you will notice that Jesus's voice&#13;
rises above the others . . .&#13;
(FB)&#13;
Questions on&#13;
Student Privacy&#13;
The question of privacy has been&#13;
in question on the Parkside Campus.&#13;
Recently many of the males&#13;
on campus received a letter from&#13;
the Department of the Navy, Marine&#13;
Corps Officer Selection Office.&#13;
The question arises as to&#13;
where they got the names and&#13;
addresses from.&#13;
When asked about the possibility&#13;
of the Marines getting names and&#13;
addresses from the school, Dean&#13;
Allen B. Dearborn, Dean of Students&#13;
at Parkside, replied, "The&#13;
school does not give any names&#13;
or addresses over and above the&#13;
"School Directory" to anyone; but&#13;
the "School Directory" is public&#13;
property. The fact that you are&#13;
going here is public but anything&#13;
else about you is confidential."&#13;
Another major point that was&#13;
made in regards to the permanent&#13;
record Dean Dearborn said,&#13;
"The only way that Parkside or&#13;
another UW school can release&#13;
information is with the written&#13;
permission of the student." Speaking for the silent majority??&#13;
World Federalists USA&#13;
The World Federalist USA have&#13;
a very simple set of objectives,&#13;
all they want to do is unite the&#13;
world. While this may seem impossible,&#13;
absurd, or at best quixotic&#13;
in these 'times that try men's&#13;
souls', when there are bloody conflicts&#13;
in the Middle East, Southern&#13;
Africa, Nigeria, Vietnam, and&#13;
even Ulster and Tibet are aflame&#13;
with the burning passions of zenophobia,&#13;
even so they are daily&#13;
closer to their goal. For over&#13;
twenty years they have been working&#13;
and organizing, sans the violence&#13;
and sensationalism so oft&#13;
used by other radical groups. Today&#13;
they can boast of organizations&#13;
in forty - seven nations, almost&#13;
1/3 of the world's sovereign states.&#13;
In nine of these nations they have&#13;
parlimentary groups, (Indira&#13;
Gandhi, prime minister of India,&#13;
is on their international board of&#13;
advisors).&#13;
Many people do not believe a&#13;
global federation is practical or&#13;
even desirable, but if they only&#13;
looked to the history of the United&#13;
States they would find much&#13;
to alay their fears and doubts.&#13;
After the Revolution, the thirteen&#13;
colonies, wanting to preserve their&#13;
newly won independence, ratified&#13;
the Articles of Confederation which&#13;
allowed each state it's own currency,&#13;
taxes, and army, with only&#13;
a weak connection to the federal&#13;
government. The government could&#13;
not force the states to acquiese to&#13;
its laws if the states did not&#13;
wish to, even in time of war.&#13;
Does the situation sound familiar?&#13;
It wasn't until eleven years&#13;
later that the Constitution was ratified,&#13;
despite the consternation of&#13;
the conservatives of the time who&#13;
were convinced their liberty was&#13;
going down the drain. Today, most&#13;
citizens of the Republic, except the&#13;
paranoid extremists, are willing&#13;
to concede the federal government&#13;
has not made them the slaves of&#13;
Big Brother.&#13;
This then is what they want,&#13;
what they strive for; a federation&#13;
of all nations, without exception.&#13;
Even with the meager&#13;
powers given it, the UN has proved&#13;
its worth. It has contained or&#13;
supressed armed conflict in such&#13;
areas as the Congo, Cyprus, and&#13;
even the Middle East until Nasser&#13;
forced a withdrawal of UN tr oops&#13;
from Egypt. UNESCO, and WHO&#13;
have saved countless people trom&#13;
premature death and have helped&#13;
them help themselves. The UN&#13;
has begun the arduous task of&#13;
slashing the Gordian knot of Aparthied&#13;
in South Africa, Rhodesia,&#13;
and Portugese Africa.&#13;
The WF/USA applauds these actions&#13;
and regrets only that more&#13;
cannot be done.&#13;
1970 will mark the twenty-fifth&#13;
anniversary of the UN. They&#13;
will be working harder than ever&#13;
to achieve their goal; "World peace&#13;
through World law."&#13;
Rollin Jansky Exhibits In Art Show&#13;
Noontime&#13;
Nightclub Bock&#13;
The New York Camerata, Affiliate&#13;
of UWP this year, will&#13;
present an informal Christmas&#13;
concert at noon in the Kenosha&#13;
Campus Lounge. ALSO, a similar&#13;
program will be presented at&#13;
noon on December 16 in the Racine&#13;
Campus Lounge. The Camerata,&#13;
a chamber music trio, will&#13;
be in the Racine-Kenosha area&#13;
during December from the seventh&#13;
through the twentieth.&#13;
Rollin Jansky, a member of the1&#13;
art faculty at UW - Parkside,&#13;
will be represented by a showing&#13;
of sculptures comprised of polyester&#13;
impregnated fiber glass castings&#13;
Dec. 8 through 23 at the UWGreen&#13;
Bay Manitowoc campus.&#13;
Much of the work in the show&#13;
is part of a series based on interconnections&#13;
of three basic modules&#13;
which take the shapes of&#13;
circles and ellipses. The modules,&#13;
Jansky says, in some cases suggest&#13;
anatomical reference to the&#13;
Dr. Balsano&#13;
Invited To&#13;
Present Paper&#13;
Dr. Joseph Balsano, an assistant&#13;
professor of life science at The&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parkside,&#13;
has been invited to present&#13;
a paper before the national meeting&#13;
of The Society for the Study&#13;
of Evolution on Dec. 29 in Boston.&#13;
He also will act as chairman&#13;
for one of the sessions at the&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Dr. Balsano's paper deals with&#13;
fish populations of the wild Amazon&#13;
Molly of eastern Mexico, which&#13;
have extra sets of Chromosomes.&#13;
The paper is based on three research&#13;
trips which Dr. Balsano&#13;
has made to eastern Mexico as&#13;
well as research interests he currently&#13;
is pursuing at Parkside.&#13;
Prof. Balsano received his undergraduate&#13;
and graduate degrees&#13;
at Marquette university and taught&#13;
at Dominican College and Marquette&#13;
before joining the UWP&#13;
faculty.&#13;
N S Exchange&#13;
The "Quiet Room" in Library&#13;
Typing Room&#13;
Library staff calls the typing&#13;
room in the Parkside Library&#13;
the "quietest room in the building."&#13;
Part of the reason is that&#13;
our free typewriter for the use&#13;
by students has not yet arrived;&#13;
invoice trouble, we are told, has&#13;
delayed delivery. But at any time&#13;
Library users may bring their&#13;
own machines, electric or manual.&#13;
This room is just at the back&#13;
of the periodicals area.&#13;
Card Catalog&#13;
Those who consult the Card&#13;
Catalog are often disconcerted to&#13;
find that the book they want is&#13;
located only with difficulty. This&#13;
A{i4&amp;k iNCYOUNG&#13;
MEN - BOYS&#13;
207 Sixth St.&#13;
Racine, Wis. 53403&#13;
Phone&#13;
633-4266&#13;
is becajise for a long period books&#13;
have arrived faster than the Library&#13;
has been able to get them&#13;
cataloged. Now, the Library has&#13;
some extra funds for cataloging&#13;
and the pace of cataloging should&#13;
increase. If you can't find what&#13;
you want, ask the Library staff&#13;
to help you. They may just give&#13;
you a hunting license to look for&#13;
yourself, but at least they can&#13;
tell you in which area success is&#13;
most probable.&#13;
Newspapers&#13;
The Library is now receiving&#13;
a list of daily newspapers, which&#13;
includes the following-&#13;
ARROW (Carthage College)&#13;
human form and in others suggest&#13;
purely mechanical forms, depending&#13;
on the manner in which they&#13;
are connected.&#13;
All of the pieces in the show&#13;
are recent works and range in size&#13;
from an 18 inch rounded cube to&#13;
a massive work about seven feet&#13;
high and a long slender form about&#13;
seven feet long.&#13;
Some of the sculptures are painted&#13;
with auto enamel spray paint&#13;
while others derive their colors&#13;
from pigmented resin which becomes&#13;
part of both the color and&#13;
the finish.&#13;
The sculptures rely principally&#13;
on form rather than color for their&#13;
effect, however, Jansky points out.&#13;
The works may be displayed later&#13;
in the Kenosha - Racine area, he&#13;
added.&#13;
Jansky received his bachelors&#13;
and masters degrees in art from&#13;
UW - Madison. He has won three&#13;
Milwaukee Journal purchase&#13;
awards for the&#13;
Collection, two&#13;
Wisconsin Union&#13;
for painting and&#13;
one for sculpture, and three cash&#13;
awards for painting from the Madison&#13;
Art Association.&#13;
Rich Kienitz &amp; Bob Borchardt&#13;
Record Review: Jefferson Airplane&#13;
The North-South Exchange Program,&#13;
in which Parkside students&#13;
may attend predominantly black&#13;
campuses during second semester,&#13;
will be discussed at noon, December&#13;
8, in Tallent Hall, Room 216.&#13;
Additional information on the exchange&#13;
program is available from&#13;
Miss Jewel Echelbarger, Student&#13;
Affairs, Kenosha.&#13;
'We are outlaws in the eyes of&#13;
America ih order to survive we&#13;
steal, cheat, lie, forge, hide, and&#13;
deal. We are obscene lawless, hideous,&#13;
dangerous, dirty, violent,&#13;
and young."&#13;
The above, a quote from "We&#13;
Can be together" on Jefferson&#13;
Airplane's new album, "Volunteers"&#13;
is an example of the metamorphesis&#13;
of a group that once&#13;
was the vanguard of a love, drug,&#13;
and music generation who now have&#13;
adopted Revolution as their theme.&#13;
Musically, the album is a success.&#13;
One look at the personnel on&#13;
the L. P., including Nicki Hopkins,&#13;
Steve Stills, Jerry Garcia,&#13;
and, of course, Jormo Kaukonen&#13;
and Jack Casaidy, will attest to&#13;
the fact. Nicki Hopkins especially&#13;
deserves recognition for his excellent&#13;
keyboard work. Fine examples&#13;
of their high caliber musicianship&#13;
can be heard in "Wooden&#13;
Ships," "We can be together,"&#13;
and "Turn my life down". By&#13;
any standards it is credible work.&#13;
Jorma's guitar lines again prove&#13;
that he is one of the most creative&#13;
musicians ever to come out of&#13;
the San Francisco rock scene.&#13;
Their musical spectrum ranges&#13;
from the down home country western&#13;
influence in "The Farm" and&#13;
"Song for all Seasons" to the&#13;
heavy, (excuse the term), sounds&#13;
of "Hey Frederick" and "We can&#13;
be together."&#13;
"Go and take a sister by her&#13;
hand.&#13;
Lead her far from this foreign&#13;
land, somewhere we might laugh&#13;
again.&#13;
"We are leaving, you don't need&#13;
us."&#13;
Paul Kanter, a supposed White&#13;
Panther, verges on the use of&#13;
violence as a means to an end,&#13;
the end being a new land which&#13;
they speak of in the above quote&#13;
from "Wooded Ships" their transport&#13;
to a youthful Utopia.&#13;
For all you Dick Clark fans,&#13;
this album gets a 12 per cent&#13;
rating because you can't frug to&#13;
it. It's for listening.&#13;
HERBERT'S&#13;
Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Jewelry Store&#13;
BADGER HERALD (Independent&#13;
UW stu dent newspaper)&#13;
CAPITAL TIMES&#13;
CHICAGO TRIBUNE&#13;
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR&#13;
CHRONICLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION&#13;
DAILY CARDINAL (Madison&#13;
paper)&#13;
KENOSHA LABOR&#13;
KENOSHA NEWS&#13;
LIGHT OF NEW YORK (Manpower&#13;
Education Institute)&#13;
MACHINIST (union paper)&#13;
MANCHESTER GUARDIAN&#13;
MILWAUKEE JOURNAL&#13;
MILWAUKEE SENTINEL&#13;
NEW YORK TIMES&#13;
NEW YORK RE VIEW OF BOOKS&#13;
PARKSIDE COLLEGIAN(" Parkside's&#13;
Student Newspaper")&#13;
RACINE JOURNAL TIMES&#13;
RACINE LABOR&#13;
RACINE SHORELINE LEADER&#13;
SPORTING NEWS&#13;
TIMES (London)&#13;
TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT&#13;
TORONTO DAILY STAR&#13;
UWM POST (Milwaukee's paper)&#13;
WALL STREET JOURNAL&#13;
WASHINGTON POS T&#13;
WISCONSIN STATE JOURNAL&#13;
Y0UI&#13;
Intranet&#13;
'.penJtW&#13;
'AGENT&#13;
INSURANCE " FIRE :&#13;
AUTO&#13;
LIFE v&#13;
LIABILITY&#13;
THEFT ,&#13;
BONDS .&#13;
BUSINESS&#13;
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MARINE&#13;
HOUSEHOLD&#13;
Long Haul Coverages&#13;
COLLISION AND BOBTAIL&#13;
INDIVIDUAL AND FLEET PLANS&#13;
LIABILITY-WORKMAN'S COMP.-&#13;
CARGO DON SPARKS INSURANCE AGENCY&#13;
ooooooooooo*&#13;
—1 ,no* pTS THE&#13;
C haparral&#13;
Under New Management&#13;
NEWLY REMODELED&#13;
• TAP BEER&#13;
• PITCHERS&#13;
• BOTTLE BEER&#13;
Tor Young Adult*&#13;
7:30 P.M. to&#13;
12:45 A.M.&#13;
Mon. thru Sat.&#13;
2 P.M. to 12:45&#13;
Sun.&#13;
5904 39th AVE.&#13;
2 mi. SoutH of' Highway&#13;
50-\test Frontage Road of&#13;
1-94&#13;
•oooooooooooooooooooooo&#13;
Your Complete "On Campus" Book and Supply Center&#13;
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORES&#13;
RACINE PARKSIDE KENOSHA&#13;
Annual pre-Christmas Book Sale Now In Progress&#13;
Books for EVERYONE in the family&#13;
We Special-Order ANY Book In Print&#13;
As A Fateless Freshman Without Committments&#13;
What can I say about The Committee?&#13;
I, a fateless freshman&#13;
without commitments, taken into&#13;
a university that doesn't actually&#13;
feel like a university; faced with&#13;
situations that, as often as not,&#13;
dissolve as situations in reality&#13;
(the symbol for the thought); asked&#13;
to form alienating opinions when&#13;
all I really want to do is survey&#13;
opinion - alienated as I am; bombarded&#13;
from above with the proverbial&#13;
command to question (my&#13;
ultimate duty) while likewise attacked&#13;
in the trenches of the classroom&#13;
by expediencies of producing&#13;
the correct answers; expected- to&#13;
be of a critical political nature,&#13;
but unwilling to experiment with&#13;
the possibility of blowing a nebulous&#13;
college future or being left&#13;
the sole supporter of a dying&#13;
cause, or, worse yet, fumbling into&#13;
place simply as an unsuspecting&#13;
lackey for self-supporting power&#13;
structures in a temporal and individually&#13;
irrelevant power struggle;&#13;
admittedly pursuing a course&#13;
down the middle of a constantly&#13;
curving and constantly dusty road&#13;
in my mind (but then, don't we&#13;
all? That is, doesn't everyone&#13;
formulate extremes but conceive&#13;
a direction somewhere near a&#13;
balanced middle regardless of&#13;
where that middle may be located&#13;
with relation to an external community?)&#13;
being able to live with&#13;
it, nothing else; troubled by demands&#13;
to assume a recognizable&#13;
and consistent identity and frustrated&#13;
by the incapability to do so&#13;
or to do so blindly, or to give&#13;
something up to do so; weak from&#13;
self-styled bloodletting and attitude&#13;
purgings; smug in roles that,&#13;
from the outside, appear to be&#13;
simple complacency while grimly&#13;
religious to an obscure, meritless,&#13;
and unphrased mystic creed which&#13;
alleges that it's sometimes harder&#13;
and nobler to be swayable than to&#13;
be of the swayed (of the convinced;&#13;
pretending to have aright to evaluate,&#13;
but denying the ultimate result&#13;
of that evaluation to anyone but&#13;
myself; find that I can't make substantial&#13;
or encompassing statements&#13;
concerning The Committee,&#13;
the Parkside institution, adminis-&#13;
About Teachers&#13;
in the "Old Days"&#13;
American Schoolteachers have&#13;
traditionally (since IchabodCrane)&#13;
gotten a lot more stick than carrot,&#13;
a condition they are trying to alter&#13;
with some success. Mrs. R. W.&#13;
Kelly of Largo reminds us of this,&#13;
sending along some notes on a 1913&#13;
teaching contract as used up in&#13;
Wisconsin.&#13;
A lady teacher got $75 a month&#13;
for eight months. That is, if she&#13;
agreed not to dress in bright&#13;
colors, not to dye her hair, not to&#13;
keep company with men, not to&#13;
ride in a carriage or automobile&#13;
with any man except her brother&#13;
or her father, to wear at least&#13;
two petticoats, not to use face&#13;
powder, mascara, or paint the&#13;
lips, not to smoke or drink, and&#13;
ncfPto loiter at ice cream stores&#13;
downtown.&#13;
Oh yes - and a couple of other&#13;
things. She was to be home between&#13;
8 p. m. and 6 a. m., unless&#13;
attending a school function. And&#13;
never leave town without the permission&#13;
of the chairman of the&#13;
board of school trustees.&#13;
Them were the good old days!&#13;
-DICK BOTHWELL&#13;
in St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times,&#13;
via Harold Gade, Racine.&#13;
trators, or any political overtones&#13;
therein sounded. My conscience&#13;
would bother me and my better&#13;
judgment would demand a redress&#13;
of grievance for propriety damage&#13;
incurred. I'm sorry. Listen, I'll&#13;
try this time if anyone is still&#13;
willing to finish the article. Please&#13;
do not do so unless prepared toi&#13;
suffer some degree of intellectual&#13;
offense and disgust. The difficulty&#13;
and confusion of writing from a&#13;
position of no bias about a subject&#13;
that actually portends to concern&#13;
me must be understood in order&#13;
to tie the preceding onto the following&#13;
and juxtapose both as an&#13;
approach to a story about The&#13;
Committee and its implications&#13;
- on Parkside, on the COLLEGIAN,&#13;
and on the directions of student&#13;
motivation.&#13;
The Committee describes itself&#13;
as "a student-community newspaper&#13;
which was originally begun&#13;
during second sempster of last&#13;
year. Clark Anderson and Jim&#13;
Koloen had co-originated the&#13;
Nickel Bag literary magazine during&#13;
the preceding semester and&#13;
came to the decision that Parkside&#13;
not only needed a student&#13;
run literary mag but also required&#13;
a political-social comment&#13;
type of newspaper for the expression&#13;
of student opinion and other&#13;
things."&#13;
The weekly newspaper has, to&#13;
date, produced somewhere in the&#13;
neighborhood of twenty-three or&#13;
twenty-four issues, spread into&#13;
two volumes. It is distributed on all&#13;
the Parkside campuses but seems&#13;
to be most widely known and read&#13;
in the Kenosha vicinity. The first&#13;
twelve issues were free and designed&#13;
to be passed along for&#13;
maximum readership. Presently&#13;
The Committee sells for a nickel.&#13;
The format may be characterized&#13;
as in the style of multi-colored,&#13;
typewritten, mimeograph.&#13;
It was disclosed during a sort of&#13;
interview with Jim Smith, John&#13;
Koloen, and Jim Koloen, that, although&#13;
The Committee has received&#13;
offers of o ffset printing by&#13;
various sources, the members feel&#13;
it most important to remain independent&#13;
of influences that could&#13;
possibly damage the established&#13;
purpose of the paper. Hence, The&#13;
Committee will remain mimeographed&#13;
until it is able to acquire&#13;
an offset press on terms that the&#13;
organization feels allows sufficient&#13;
autonomy.&#13;
I was told in the interview that,&#13;
contrary to opposite rumors, The&#13;
Committee maintains official prefunctionary&#13;
recognition from the&#13;
Campus Concerns Committee (the&#13;
same as the COLLEGIAN) however,&#13;
has had its difficulties with&#13;
University policy enforcers. Jim&#13;
Smith, retired Student Government&#13;
Association president and regular&#13;
staff writer for The Committee,&#13;
claims that the paper was well&#13;
received by the Administration&#13;
when it first came out in the&#13;
spring of 1969 and was actually&#13;
in a position to receive funds and&#13;
the backing of the University for&#13;
expansion and improvements. The&#13;
Committee seems to have fallen&#13;
from grace after the fourth issue,&#13;
however - a supposed reversal that&#13;
Smith and the Koloens attribute&#13;
in part to an obscenity printed in&#13;
an article attacking U. W. President&#13;
Fred Harrington. More recent&#13;
harassments cited had to do&#13;
with the practice of distributing&#13;
on campus and not being allowed&#13;
to sell memberships at Registration&#13;
though other non-recognized,&#13;
student groups were able to.&#13;
It was emphasized during the&#13;
interview that The Committee was&#13;
not designed and not intended to&#13;
compete with the COLLEGIAN.&#13;
Smith described the COLLEGIAN,&#13;
in terms of its function as a news&#13;
and activities reporting service to&#13;
the students of the University. The&#13;
Committee, he suggested, operates&#13;
more as an organization dedicated;&#13;
to publishing student opinion in;&#13;
hopes of catalyzing a pro-con dialogue&#13;
over issues that are relevant&#13;
to" a political dimension of the&#13;
Parkside student. The publishing&#13;
members of The Committee do not&#13;
appear to appreciate those who&#13;
would label the paper as the product&#13;
of a radical left group. Articlesby&#13;
John Beck (an avowed conservative),&#13;
Perry Michalos, the YSA,(&#13;
and Mike Schumacher, are given&#13;
as examples, not tokens, of a willingness&#13;
to print all literate viewpoints.&#13;
A fact which leads to a&#13;
consideration of the content; which&#13;
leads to the controversy.&#13;
The content of The Committee,&#13;
aside from book, movie, and record&#13;
reviews, usually has political,&#13;
"A Man For All Seasons"&#13;
One of the advantages of living&#13;
in this area is the fact that we have&#13;
some of the most professional&#13;
local theatre groups in the Midwest.&#13;
For example the Theatre&#13;
Guild of Racine, under the able&#13;
direction of Norman McPhee, is&#13;
doing a highly polished job of&#13;
"A Man for All Seasons" with&#13;
Don Kirt as Sir Thomas More,1&#13;
a man torn between his duty to&#13;
Parkside Logo Makes The Scene&#13;
Parkside's mark or "logo" is&#13;
making the scene everywhere.&#13;
When driving to or from Parkside,&#13;
it is always reassuring to be able&#13;
to identify a fellow student by his&#13;
logo. The logo, of course, being&#13;
on the bumper of the car.&#13;
The logo comes from two symbols,&#13;
thfe l etters UW and the trees&#13;
that make up our campus. The&#13;
symbols are combined together&#13;
making a symbol truly belonging&#13;
to Parkside and no one else.&#13;
Charles P. Reay, graphic design&#13;
consultant to firm of Hellmuth,&#13;
Obata and Kassabaum, created&#13;
the logo. The firm also is&#13;
in charge of seeing to the designs&#13;
of campus, signs, letterheads,&#13;
sports uniforms, publications and,&#13;
of course, identification of Parkside's&#13;
vehicles.&#13;
The first reaction to the idea&#13;
presented by Reay was not all&#13;
favorable. The logo was nicknamed&#13;
"sticks and leaves" by a few&#13;
students. Many other students considered&#13;
it freaky. Most people&#13;
connected to Parkside now, though,&#13;
have come to the conclusion that&#13;
the logo is serving its role. That&#13;
role being to give Parkside a sense&#13;
of unity and to give instant identification&#13;
within our community.&#13;
Parkside's logo will, of course,&#13;
increase in importance as does&#13;
the institution. As the years go by&#13;
more and more; things will have the&#13;
logo on them.&#13;
Let the impact of Parkside be&#13;
shown. Let us get the logo plastered&#13;
up everywhere.&#13;
his king, his God, and himself. The&#13;
play requires that most of its&#13;
characters have a wide emotional&#13;
range, which is difficult for most&#13;
amateur actors. The Guild is&#13;
blessed with such actors as Kirt,&#13;
Kar e n F r e i t a g , La d y Ma r g r e t ;&#13;
Robert Woodard, Thomas Cromwell,&#13;
More's arch-enemy; and Joanne&#13;
Nissen, More's wife; who are&#13;
^all excellent in their roles.&#13;
The tragic story of the rise&#13;
and fall of Sir Thomas is aided&#13;
by the excellent charcter acting&#13;
of people like Nick Maharas, the&#13;
blustering Duke of Norfolk; Claude&#13;
Towers, King "this is the leg of&#13;
a dancer" Henry VIII; and John&#13;
by Gob Hansen&#13;
undercurrents and deals with political&#13;
issues, whether a particular&#13;
opinion is either liberal or conservative.&#13;
Sometimes even thereviews&#13;
allude to particular political&#13;
viewpoints - as honest reviews&#13;
sometimes must. What might be&#13;
termed part of the editorial policy&#13;
explains: "The individual views&#13;
expressed in this paper reflect&#13;
only those views held by the author.&#13;
The scope and content of The Committee&#13;
is therefore entirely contingent&#13;
upon those people who contribute.&#13;
In effect, the potential of&#13;
this paper in representing p-side's&#13;
student body is limited completely&#13;
by the non-contributors."&#13;
As a defense of the possible&#13;
resulting inconsistencies in quality&#13;
arising from such a"free" policy,&#13;
the editor comments: "If one is to&#13;
oend and enforce 'editorial restrictions'&#13;
over articles then one&#13;
is not a free speech advocate.&#13;
Editorial review is in effect a&#13;
form of censorship."&#13;
And that brings it all down to&#13;
the somewhat universal question&#13;
locked in the statement: "Sure, it's&#13;
nice to have consistent quality&#13;
but, it's nicer to hear what everyone&#13;
has to say." - which both is&#13;
and isn't the rationale for censorship.&#13;
by Ed Borchordt&#13;
Burdick as the weasling Seigner&#13;
Chapuys.&#13;
Jim Yorgan provides the comic&#13;
relief in his role as the Common&#13;
Man, and is just as good as Mathew,&#13;
More's servant.&#13;
Others caught up in the vortex&#13;
of the play's action are Richard&#13;
Rich, Richard Messina; Will Roper,&#13;
Gary Chirstenson, Cardinal&#13;
Wolsey, Carl Iverson; the Archbishop&#13;
of Canterbury, Tex Wallace;&#13;
and Randy Jones and Lanni&#13;
Sanders.&#13;
The play will be performed this&#13;
Friday, Saturday at 8:15 and on&#13;
Sunday with a matinee and an&#13;
evening performance.&#13;
Downtown&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Visit the CAMPUS&#13;
CORNER for the&#13;
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FILM-tv&#13;
FARE"Lu&#13;
WHAT'S N EW&#13;
PUSSYCAT?&#13;
Story&#13;
It is difficult to define lunatic&#13;
comedy, and zany Gagman,&#13;
Wit and now Deadpan&#13;
Comic Woody Allen (author&#13;
and co-star of this frenetically&#13;
funny opus) would be&#13;
the first to admit it. Looney&#13;
comedy exists purely for itself&#13;
and the amusement it&#13;
may bring others. The plot&#13;
may be mad. The lines may&#13;
be crazy and the situations&#13;
impossible (but logical of&#13;
course). The only condition&#13;
imposed is that it add up to&#13;
merriment. In Woody's&#13;
wacky movie (with himself&#13;
spinning around dizzily in&#13;
it), a Casanova-type (Peter&#13;
O'Toole) goes to a lovelorn&#13;
psychiatrist (Peter Sellers)&#13;
for treatment and advice&#13;
while the head-shrinker in&#13;
turn begs him for counsel&#13;
a I'amour. Things happen&#13;
fast, while a bevy of beauties&#13;
jellyroll the fantastic&#13;
plot into a wildly funny and&#13;
sexy carousel— with everybody&#13;
chasing everybody&#13;
else. And in Paris!&#13;
)OOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO&#13;
Stars: Peter Sellers, Peter&#13;
O'Toole, Romy Schneider,&#13;
Capucine, Paula Prentiss,&#13;
Woody Allen&#13;
mi&#13;
PINK PANTHER&#13;
CARTOON&#13;
SUPER PINK&#13;
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PETRIFYING SPRINGS CLUBHOUSE&#13;
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VIC 'COCHISE' GODFREY—&#13;
PARKSIDE'S AA rmrmonncgr tthhoe mmoamnyr ao ossmeftns in athiA e LL-AROUND COACH&#13;
athletic department here at Parkside&#13;
is a man named Vic Godfrey.&#13;
His energy and enthusiasm&#13;
promise to add a lot to Parkside's&#13;
sports.&#13;
Born in Fort Defiance, Arizona,&#13;
he has also lived in Oklahoma,&#13;
Nebraska and South Dakota. His&#13;
educational background includes&#13;
doing undergraduate work at&#13;
North State (South Dakota) and&#13;
•graduate work at the University&#13;
of Iowa. His majors were Biology&#13;
and Physical Education.&#13;
His athletic background begins&#13;
in high school where he participated&#13;
in football, basketball and&#13;
track. In college he was in crosscountry,&#13;
wrestling and track. Here&#13;
at Parkside he is the assistant&#13;
cross - country, track and wrestling&#13;
coach. In addition, he is the&#13;
Director of Intramurals and is&#13;
trying to develop a women's track&#13;
team.&#13;
From 1963-65, Godfrey was stationed&#13;
in Indonesia as a Peace&#13;
Corps worker. He worked in the&#13;
physical fitness program there and&#13;
also coached track in Java and Timor.&#13;
He has had experience teaching&#13;
also. In Madison, Minnesota, he&#13;
taught Social Science as well as&#13;
coaching track and gymnastics. In&#13;
Watertown, South Dakota, he taught&#13;
Science and Physical Education&#13;
and coached wrestling and track.&#13;
Next semester he plans to teach&#13;
a class in wrestling techniques.&#13;
When asked why he came to&#13;
Parkside, he gave many reasons.&#13;
"It would be a new experience,&#13;
I like Parkside's philosophy, it&#13;
was a chance to work with Bob&#13;
Lawson, whom I feel is the leading&#13;
track coach in the state and&#13;
probably the country, and it was&#13;
also a chance to work with Tom&#13;
Rosandich. I've known him since&#13;
Indonesia."&#13;
If his name sounds or looks&#13;
familiar, it's because he is a regular&#13;
writer for this newspaper.&#13;
He is the writer of "Coaches&#13;
Corner." This interest in jour-&#13;
MB MAS&#13;
A COMFMUNCe CHAMPION&#13;
IN THE MILE AMO SGO TWICE,&#13;
(AMD NAIA DISTRICT660KMC)&#13;
FOR MOUTHER* STATE COUSOE,&#13;
S.MKv AND A SUCCESSFUL&#13;
PEACS CORPS TRACK COACH&#13;
m INDONESIA FOR&#13;
TWO YEARS&#13;
FORMER HEAD TRACK COACH AT&#13;
MADISON,MINN. AMO WATERTOWN,S.D&#13;
HMM* SCHOOLS, IS U.WtS.-PAAKSlOE'S&#13;
tMSTAMCC COACH ANOOIORCToa&#13;
OF MfTRAAUJRAL ATHLETICS&#13;
nalism stems from high school&#13;
where he was on the yearbook&#13;
staff for two years. He is also&#13;
Editor of TRACK TIMES, a newspaper&#13;
publiched by Tom Rosandich.&#13;
He is a perfect example of the&#13;
type of men comprising the Athletic&#13;
staff of Parkside. He knows&#13;
his work and enjoys doing it. Parkside&#13;
should benefit greatly from&#13;
him.&#13;
Parkside Rangers Defeated&#13;
By Lakeland 85 - 83&#13;
The Parkside Rangers were&#13;
tough competition for Lakeland&#13;
College before the clock ran out,&#13;
leaving an 85-83 score and the&#13;
first defeat for Coach Stephen's&#13;
cagers.&#13;
Jim Hogan and Eli Slaughter&#13;
showed their true talents though.&#13;
Slaughter led the scoring with 29&#13;
points, 21 of which were scored&#13;
Giftshirts-&#13;
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with ruffles.&#13;
Giftshirts&#13;
in crepe,&#13;
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Giftshirts&#13;
galore&#13;
from her&#13;
favorite&#13;
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^hip'r^hore&#13;
from 6.00&#13;
in sizes for every girl&#13;
INC.&#13;
5609 SIXTH AVENUE. KENOSHA. WISCONSIN 53140&#13;
LAKELAND (05)&#13;
Austin.... 1 0&#13;
Birk 2 0&#13;
Diener ... 5 3&#13;
Heck .... 5 1&#13;
HiU 1 2&#13;
Hoti .&#13;
Imme&#13;
Meyer&#13;
.11 8&#13;
. 6 2&#13;
. 2 3 .&#13;
52 19 14&#13;
PARKSIDE (83)&#13;
Hagenow .&#13;
Hogan . .&#13;
Kolar . .&#13;
Madsen .&#13;
Rick . . .&#13;
Slaughter&#13;
VanTine .&#13;
4&#13;
. 7&#13;
. 0&#13;
. 4&#13;
. 5&#13;
.14&#13;
. 1&#13;
35 13 21&#13;
I Give 'Em Helen I&#13;
The basketball season is definitely off to a smashing start. The&#13;
fact that we lost the first game is really no reason to be pessimistic&#13;
about the rest of the season. The game itself was a good one.&#13;
was surprised at how well the guys performed as a team. J im Hogan,&#13;
in particular, came off as a good player. He is quick and can lead&#13;
the team. Slaughter was the high scorer with 29 points. Hagenow&#13;
and Rick played well also. It was a tough team to beat, and even&#13;
though we couldn't overpower them, we sure gave them a run for&#13;
their money.&#13;
One face missing from the bench was Nick Perrine. He was out&#13;
with a badly sprained ankle. Let's hope he recovers soon and can&#13;
add his talents to the\team. Anyway, he looks so dejected when he's&#13;
not in the game. N ick out of action is like a fish out of water.&#13;
As far as the bus trip went, it was a good showing fo r Parkside.&#13;
About 40 out of 2,900 students came. It wasn't bad considering it&#13;
was the first game, considering it cost a dollar, considering it was&#13;
a Monday night, considering the attitude of the students towards&#13;
sports, considering the weather . . .! If this is any indication of the&#13;
turnout for the Sportsfest, December 6, I see a big F- in team support.&#13;
I see a few "Bear Buttons" around but there could be, and should&#13;
be, a lot more. I agree that the price seems rather high but it includes&#13;
admission to Sportsfest. When you think about it, it's not a&#13;
bad deal — is it? This is one way of showing school spirit and everyone&#13;
knows th is school needs it.&#13;
There's a certain coach on our athletic staff who happens to be&#13;
part Indian — Potawatomie to be exact. It may not mean much to you&#13;
but it warms my heart to see a "Blood Brother" doing well. Keep&#13;
it up Coach.&#13;
If this column seems to lean towards basketball it's because I&#13;
happen to really enjoy that sport. If there is a certain sport you'd&#13;
like to see emphasized, or if you have any comments on athletics&#13;
here at Parkside, drop me a line at Room 109, Kenosha campus. I'll&#13;
be gla d to see that it gets attention.&#13;
One last reminder about December 6: get out and back our teams!&#13;
Don't forget the grades to be issued for support. It would be great&#13;
to give an A.&#13;
in the second half. Hogan made&#13;
21 points and also showed his&#13;
leadership ability as far as setting&#13;
up team patterns. Both Hogan and&#13;
Slaughter were accredited with&#13;
turnovers but redeemed themselves&#13;
with fast movements and&#13;
good shooting.&#13;
The first half consisted of repeated&#13;
attempts to retain the lead.&#13;
Lakeland's Muskies, coached by&#13;
"Moose" Woltzen, grabbed the&#13;
final bid and left the court at halftime&#13;
with a 49-39 lead.&#13;
The only player to foul out was&#13;
Mike Madsen, a new 6-8 center.&#13;
He had done a good job by then,&#13;
scoring 12 points and grabbing&#13;
14 rebounds.&#13;
The game was lost in the f inal&#13;
seconds when Slaughter's attempt&#13;
KEN RICK — GUARD&#13;
to score failed. It wasn't a total&#13;
defeat though. The difficulty of&#13;
adjusting to new teammates and a&#13;
new coach was met with vigor on&#13;
the part of all the players. This&#13;
season will definitely provide some&#13;
interesting and exciting moments&#13;
for Parkside.&#13;
DON'T FORGET&#13;
SPORTSFEST W EEKEND&#13;
DEC. 5 &amp; 6&#13;
ROCK DANCE&#13;
"The Challengers'&#13;
ATHLETICS&#13;
Fencing&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Wrestling&#13;
COFFEE HOUSE&#13;
"The Goliards"&#13;
and&#13;
"The Steve&#13;
Haver Trio"&#13;
BUY THE WEEKEND PACKAGE&#13;
AND $AYE&#13;
Tickets Available: Student Affairs Office&#13;
All 3 Campuses&#13;
Mill'&#13;
"fabrics for&#13;
all occasions'&#13;
VOGUE&#13;
FABRICS&#13;
709 58th Street&#13;
558-8612&#13;
RANGER FENCERS MEET MTC IN&#13;
SPORTSFEST TRI-ANGULAR MEET :t ornwintr cnnrf&#13;
Ranger Wrestlers Vs. Green Bay&#13;
Fencing is a fast growing sport&#13;
at Parkside. Sportfest weekend,&#13;
Dec. 5-6, will include a big triangular&#13;
match with the Parkside&#13;
Ranger Fencers up against Milwaukee&#13;
Technical College and the&#13;
University of Chicago.&#13;
Coach Loran Hein says of MTC,&#13;
"They always seem to give us a&#13;
close match, but in the past two&#13;
years we've won 3 out of 4 matches.&#13;
The University of Chicago," tells&#13;
Coach Hein, "has lost most of&#13;
its top fencers due to graduation.&#13;
They will be using mostly freshmen&#13;
and sophomores so I will use&#13;
my freshmen against them." In&#13;
the past Parkside has beaten them&#13;
twice.&#13;
The top men, and probable starters&#13;
in foil, are Keith Herbrechtsmeier,&#13;
Grant Anderson, and Dave&#13;
Bahr. In sabre they are Robert&#13;
Orlakis, John Krumpus, and John&#13;
Zanotti. Epee starters include&#13;
Clark Anderson, Coach Hein's&#13;
"ace," and John Hanzalik, this&#13;
year's captain. The third position&#13;
(in epee is still open - the final&#13;
decision is to be announced shortly&#13;
before the match.&#13;
"My freshmen foilists," says&#13;
Heni, "are progressing the fastest&#13;
that I've ever seen in my&#13;
four years of coaching." They&#13;
are Peter Shemenske, Paul Shemenske,&#13;
A1 Locante, andDonMar-&#13;
. RANGER FENCERS ARE: 1-r Walt Breach, Dave Bahr,&#13;
|Clark Anderson, Bob Orlakis, Coach Loran Hein, John&#13;
Zanotti, and John Hanzslik.&#13;
jala. Even though Grant Anderson&#13;
is a freshman, he fenced with the&#13;
last year and has earned a position&#13;
with the team.&#13;
In the epee the freshmen are&#13;
Jerry Wielgate and Mike Bredeck.&#13;
Also working for positions in the&#13;
epee class are Bruce Bosman and&#13;
Vic Godfrey&#13;
Wait breach.&#13;
On sabre, Coach Hein is a little&#13;
short on freshman. His only new&#13;
member, at this time, is Dan&#13;
Stone.&#13;
Coach Hein is looking forward&#13;
to a very interesting and challenging&#13;
year in fencing.&#13;
Coach's Corner&#13;
The House of Apes from Kenosha&#13;
reign as the Parkside University&#13;
intramural football champs after&#13;
a tremendous struggle with the&#13;
Midnight Cowboys. A safety valued&#13;
at two points was the only difference&#13;
after 60 minutes of play&#13;
on a cold windy night at Pershing&#13;
Field.&#13;
Only the hardy braved the wintry&#13;
temperatures to cheer their favorites&#13;
on. Both teams played&#13;
the game as hard as two touch&#13;
(?) football teams can. One wonders&#13;
n the term touch isn't a&#13;
bit misleading in this case.&#13;
Twelve teams competed in the&#13;
Kenosha league and six at Racine.&#13;
Both leagues had some well matched&#13;
teams. The only criticism that&#13;
might be leveled is in the area&#13;
of forfeits. Some teams, when&#13;
they have been eliminated from&#13;
championship hopes, give up the&#13;
ship all together and neglect to&#13;
show up for any future contests.&#13;
This in effect defeats the purpose&#13;
on intramurals or any sport&#13;
for that matter. To be able to compete&#13;
is even more important than&#13;
winning because without competition&#13;
there is no winning. It is&#13;
hoped that in the future, teams and&#13;
players might take a little closer&#13;
look at their obligations and decide&#13;
if they really have the time or&#13;
interest to complete a full slate&#13;
of games. Even when the weather&#13;
does get a little cold and damp.&#13;
BUTTONS&#13;
, By this time I hope every student&#13;
at Parkside has his booster&#13;
button. If you haven't you can obtain&#13;
one for a buck from almost&#13;
any lettermen, coach, or member&#13;
of the staff. These simple little&#13;
buttons serve a means of identification&#13;
for every wearer that he&#13;
is part of Parkside, whether he&#13;
be student, staff, booster or friend.&#13;
The process of getting the people,&#13;
of this area specifically and the&#13;
(people of Wisconsin generally to&#13;
accept us with a great deal of&#13;
pride is a hard and sometimes&#13;
long process. To speed this acceptance&#13;
up we have to practice&#13;
what Indonesians call Gotong Rojong,&#13;
working together to benefit,&#13;
a common goal. A button can be&#13;
insignificant or it can be a means&#13;
of identifying people that believe&#13;
in something like a new Univer-(&#13;
sity. A University that is unique&#13;
in its philosophy and aims. It is&#13;
certain that if we as members&#13;
|Of this school don't have pride&#13;
nobody else will.&#13;
[FEDERATION XC&#13;
Coach Bob Lawsoii organized&#13;
quite a XC meet and Parkside&#13;
pulled off a first by hosting the&#13;
first Wisconsin Federation XC&#13;
meet. Races were held in five&#13;
classes including a women's and&#13;
junior class. Several top notch&#13;
runners including Tom Hoffman&#13;
of Whitewater and Bob Fitts of&#13;
Cortland, New York. Both have&#13;
won individual national championiships&#13;
in some phase of distance&#13;
running and both have represented&#13;
the United States in foreign tours.&#13;
TRACK&#13;
The season switches quickly to&#13;
track. Some of the Parkside runjners&#13;
will be journeying to Champaign,&#13;
Illinois on the 13th of December&#13;
for a Illinois Track Club&#13;
meet. Illinois has one of the largest&#13;
indoor running tracks in the&#13;
nation and also one of the finest.&#13;
It is 6 3/4 laps to the mile and&#13;
is Tartan surfaced. On th at same&#13;
day Coach Hein and his fencers will&#13;
be in the same city for the purpose&#13;
of competition. The fencers took a&#13;
little break last weekend after&#13;
being busy almost every weekend&#13;
since the beginning of school.&#13;
Parkside fencers have quite a&#13;
reputation in this part of the United&#13;
States and I hope people take the&#13;
opportunity to watch them at home&#13;
tomorrow when they fence the University&#13;
of C hicago, and Milwaukee&#13;
Area Technical School as part of&#13;
the Sports Fest at Case High&#13;
School.&#13;
WRESTLING&#13;
j Parkside's first varsity wrestling&#13;
team takes the mat tomorrow&#13;
against the Bay Badgers from&#13;
Green Bay. Green Bay wasn't'&#13;
strong last season but they are in&#13;
the middle of a good wrestling&#13;
area and it's quite likely that they&#13;
could have" picked up some good&#13;
people. The Rangers haven't much&#13;
in the way of d epth but have some&#13;
good wrestlers as evidenced by&#13;
the Takedown tournament held at&#13;
Milwaukee several days ago. Martinez'&#13;
matmen came home with four&#13;
individual champions in Bob Manley,&#13;
Jeff Jenkins, Bill Benkstein,&#13;
and Bob Schwitzer. Overall the&#13;
teams record was 25 wins, 8 losses&#13;
and 6 ties. Other teams competing&#13;
included: University of Wisconsin,&#13;
The Parkside Ranger Bear&#13;
Wrestlers will be part of the1&#13;
spotlight December 6. The wrestlers&#13;
will be sharing that light&#13;
with the Cagers, volleyball, the&#13;
fencers and the judo demonstration.&#13;
They will be wrestling our&#13;
sister rival UW - Green Bay.&#13;
Coach Vern Martinez says of&#13;
Green Bay, "They are young and&#13;
inexperienced. It should be pretty&#13;
evenly matched, with Parkside&#13;
having a slight edge. UW-GB is&#13;
pretty strong in upper (weight)&#13;
classes."&#13;
The tentative lineup, subject to&#13;
final eliminations before the&#13;
match, is: 118 lb. - to be filled;&#13;
126 lb. - John Wierzbicki, returning&#13;
letterman; 134 lb.-Robert&#13;
Manley, Freshman; 142 lb. -&#13;
Bill Tabbert, returning letterman&#13;
or Jim Shumate; 150 lb. - Jeff&#13;
Jenkins, Freshman; 158 1b.-Jeff&#13;
Benkstein, returning letterman, or&#13;
Mark Graesser; 187 lb. - Robert&#13;
Schweitzer, Freshman; 177 lb. -&#13;
Mark Barnhill, or George Sielski,&#13;
returning letterman, or Mark&#13;
Gresser; 190 lb. - to be filled&#13;
from 177 lb. class after eliminations;&#13;
Heavyweight - Paul Parika,&#13;
Freshman.&#13;
p Coach Martinez says, "We have&#13;
a young promising team this year.&#13;
We will continue to grow steadily."&#13;
The Ranger Bear Wrestlers are&#13;
grappling some very well known&#13;
schools (i.e. Northern Mich, and&#13;
Western 111.) in wrestling. Coach&#13;
Martinez feels "a school can only&#13;
improve if it starts out wrestling&#13;
some of the best. We plan to learn&#13;
from our mistakes."&#13;
The Coach and the entire&#13;
wrestling team wishes that people&#13;
would come out and see the vast&#13;
differences between collegiate&#13;
wrestling and TV wrestlinc-,&#13;
- Milwaukee, Marquette, University&#13;
of Wisconsin - Waukesha, and&#13;
i Concordia. Parkside will be dualing&#13;
UW - Milwaukee in mid-&#13;
December.&#13;
SWIMMING&#13;
The KYF is open every Friday&#13;
afternoon for Parkside students.&#13;
So far the takers have been few.&#13;
Maybe a little water polo would&#13;
stir up things over there.&#13;
SKIING&#13;
Competitive skiing is being organized&#13;
on the collegiate level in&#13;
Wisconsin by WIS A (Wisconsin Intercollegiate&#13;
Ski Association). The&#13;
Association also organizes and&#13;
works with recreational skiing in&#13;
the form of weekend trips. Both&#13;
Tom Rosandich and myself attended&#13;
one of their meetings in Milwaukee&#13;
and came away impressed&#13;
with their enthusiasm and plans.&#13;
A young man by • the name of&#13;
Holger Peterson is president of the&#13;
organization.&#13;
Holger announced two meets that&#13;
will definitely be held. The first&#13;
one will be at Wausau Mountain&#13;
on February 13-14. The second one&#13;
will be at Indianhead, Wakefield,&#13;
•Michigan on February 27, 28 and&#13;
iMarch 1. WISA along with a host&#13;
of college (s) sponsors the meet&#13;
in cooperation with the United&#13;
States Ski Association (USSA).&#13;
An organization of this type is&#13;
certainly needed in this area with&#13;
the way skiing has grown in Wisconsin.&#13;
WISA needs the support&#13;
of every college and university in&#13;
the state. We ce rtainly hope Parkside&#13;
can do its share,&#13;
JUDO&#13;
The call is out for all people&#13;
interested in judo to join Parkside's&#13;
club. The club is open to all&#13;
students, men and women, full time&#13;
and part time students, faculty and'&#13;
staff. The club will be chartered&#13;
this month. Membership will be&#13;
approximately $4. This is for&#13;
(membership in the North Central&#13;
Judo Association and the United&#13;
States Judo Association. The club&#13;
sports program will pay for the&#13;
club charter. Membership in the&#13;
club will enable the member to&#13;
compete in the state championships&#13;
next month.&#13;
VOLLEYBALL&#13;
Tomorrow, two Parkside volleyball&#13;
teams will be in action at&#13;
RANGER WRESTLERS ARE: 1-r front) row Jeff Jenkins,&#13;
Bill Tabbert, Jim Shuemate, Bob Manley, John Wierzbicki;&#13;
1-r back row Head Coach Vern Martinez, Paul Paricka, Bob&#13;
Schweitzer, George Sielski, Mark Barnhill, and Asst. Coach&#13;
Vic Godfrey.&#13;
IIW-P Coaches &amp;&#13;
UW-M Faculty&#13;
"We'll go out there and do what&#13;
we can." This is what Coach&#13;
Paul Ward says of the volleyball&#13;
game involving the Parkside athletic&#13;
staff and UWM faculty on&#13;
December 6 at the Case High School&#13;
Fieldhouse.&#13;
The Milwaukee team is "pretty&#13;
good" because they have a&#13;
set time and place to practice&#13;
weekly, according to Ward.&#13;
Heading the Ranger Bear athletic&#13;
staff team are Vern Martinez,&#13;
Director of Auxiliary Enterprises&#13;
and Head Wrestling&#13;
Coach; Dick Frecka, Head Varsity&#13;
Tennis coach and Advisor&#13;
to the Volleyball Club team (also&#13;
involved on Sportsfest weekend);&#13;
Vic Godfrey, Inter murals&#13;
Director, women's track coach,&#13;
writer for THE COLLEGIAN, and&#13;
varsity track coach; Bob Lawson,&#13;
head track coach; Paul Ward, director&#13;
of weight training, Coordinator&#13;
PE, and assistant track&#13;
coach; Jim Gibson, head soccer&#13;
coach; Tom Rosandich, Director&#13;
of A thletics.&#13;
There are 3 out of 7 players&#13;
with experience in playing competition&#13;
volleyball. Added to the&#13;
fact that they've had no practice&#13;
sessions together, this should&#13;
prove to be a very interesting&#13;
game.&#13;
"Volleyball is a fast moving,&#13;
interesting, dynamic game - as&#13;
the general population plays it,&#13;
it can be termed jungle volleyball."&#13;
According to Ward, from all indications,&#13;
the faculty game will&#13;
be of t his "jungle volleyball" type.&#13;
This game originated from a&#13;
challenge to Tom Rosandich by&#13;
a UWM staff member. It is the&#13;
first event in a long needed social&#13;
interaction between Parkside&#13;
and the other UW schools.&#13;
consin Conservation Department.&#13;
Many cubs become orphaned&#13;
through illegal hunting.&#13;
One problem not yet solved is&#13;
who will be the Bear's keeper?&#13;
A cub Bear might be easy to&#13;
control, but what happens when the&#13;
Bear becomes full grown? Any&#13;
volunteer Bear - keepers?&#13;
Case High School. The club team&#13;
will be playing the team from UWMilwaukee&#13;
and the coaches will be&#13;
playing a faculty team from the&#13;
(same school.&#13;
; Parkside's club team is looking&#13;
(better each time it plays. It should&#13;
be a good battle. The coaches are&#13;
still in the process of finding&#13;
themselves. That is finding themselves&#13;
doing the same thing twice&#13;
in a row. Great potential though.&#13;
Ranger Mascot&#13;
Named&#13;
The word is out that the Parkside&#13;
Ranger's new mascot will be&#13;
a Bear. Why a Bear? So far the&#13;
Bear has at least four things in&#13;
its favor: l)'Smokey' is the symbol&#13;
of the United States Forest Ranger&#13;
Service, 2) Black bears are native&#13;
to- Wisconsin, 3) Bears are&#13;
the largest and fiercest native&#13;
animals in Wisconsin and 4) a&#13;
live cub would be relatively easy&#13;
to obtain for a mascot.&#13;
Although our mascot is a Bear&#13;
that does not mean that we will&#13;
be known as the Parkside Bears.,&#13;
We are and will always be the&#13;
Parkside Rangers. The Bear is&#13;
merely a team mascot to rally&#13;
school support.&#13;
Some time in the near future&#13;
Parkside will try to obtain a cub&#13;
Bear, probably through the Wis</text>
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              <text>A Guy Named Suh&#13;
Remembering back to the first few weeks&#13;
of the semester, there seemed to be a&#13;
goodly number of aching, limping, black&#13;
and ulue bodies wandering around the&#13;
three campuses. No, there wasn't a dem-!&#13;
oostration or riot or rash of automobUe&#13;
accidents, just a simple, one credit course&#13;
titled "Judo - Self Defense." The instructor&#13;
is a pleasant, easy-going man&#13;
with a sixth degree red and while (black)&#13;
belt in Judo.&#13;
Byung Dae Suh (pronounced Sue) is&#13;
Parkside's resident Judo expert. His 24&#13;
years of experience dale back to his&#13;
Pollution Radio&#13;
Talks Announced&#13;
The existence, extent and grave hazards&#13;
of pollution are no longer subjects for&#13;
debate. PolIuUon is at last unanimously&#13;
recognized for the cuplrit that it is, one&#13;
of the most macabre crises threatening&#13;
the existence of nre on earth today.&#13;
Few die-hards remain who still proclaim&#13;
pollution to b~e a necessity w.hich&#13;
can co-exist with life. The current great&#13;
debate is no longer what and who pollution's&#13;
causes and offenders are, but&#13;
whether pottutlon can be overcome before&#13;
it snuffs out Ufe itself.&#13;
In an effort to examine the pollution&#13;
problem, WLIP president and general&#13;
manager WUliam E. Lipman has announced&#13;
a two-part series of panel dis ..&#13;
cuss ions on pollution, which will be heard&#13;
two consecutive Saturdays on UCollege&#13;
Talk-In."&#13;
Part one "Pcl lutton - Its Cause and&#13;
Effect on the Quality of Live," will be&#13;
heard Jan. 17. Part two. "Pollution _&#13;
Its Cure •.. the Role of Government,&#13;
Industry and the Individual," wui be heard&#13;
Jan. 24.&#13;
Moderator of the panels will be Dr.&#13;
Douglas LaF-ollette, assistant professor&#13;
of chemistry at Parkside. LaFollette is&#13;
president of the Root River restoration&#13;
council and a southeastern representative&#13;
of the Federation of American Scientists.&#13;
He frequently speaks on conservation and&#13;
pollution in this area. LaFollette received&#13;
his Ph.D. from Columbia University.&#13;
Students representing Parkside on the&#13;
panel wUl be Berry E. Jones, 5702 31st&#13;
avenue, and Alfred P. Krampert,· 7754&#13;
Seventh avenue, both of Kenosha.&#13;
Jones is a life science junior and&#13;
Krampert a special student in conservation&#13;
and ecology. Host of College Talk-In is&#13;
Jim Bradley, news director of WLIP.&#13;
Jansky to Exhibit&#13;
A show of polyester impregnated fiberglass&#13;
SCUlptures by Rollin Jansky of The&#13;
University of Wisconsin - Parks ide art&#13;
faculty w1ll be on exhibit Jan. 5 through 23&#13;
at the Fox Valley Campus of The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Green Bay.&#13;
The show was on display during December&#13;
at the UWGBManitowoc Campus.&#13;
All of the cast fiberglass SCUlptures&#13;
are recent works and many of the pieces,&#13;
shown are part of a series based on&#13;
interconnections of three basic modules&#13;
Which take the shapes of circles and&#13;
ellipses.&#13;
Some of the sculptures are painted with&#13;
auto enamel spray paint While others&#13;
derive their color from pigmented resin.&#13;
Jansky Said the works range in size&#13;
from an IS-inch rounded cube toa massive&#13;
work about seven feet high to a long slender&#13;
form about seven feet long.&#13;
Faculty Artists Exhibit&#13;
Work by two University of Wisconsin&#13;
faculty members will be featured during&#13;
January at Wustum Museum of Fine Arts,&#13;
2519 Northwestern Ave., Racine, according&#13;
to Sylvester Jerry, Wustum director.&#13;
The artists are Robert Cadezofthe UWParks&#13;
ide art faculty and 'Robert Burkert&#13;
of the UW-MUwaukee faculty.&#13;
The show opened Sunday, Jan. 4, when&#13;
Burkert presented one in the museum's&#13;
series of afternoon art lectures at 3 p.m.&#13;
The exhibit wlll hang through Jan. 25.&#13;
• • •&#13;
middle school days. He began at the age&#13;
of 12, progressing through 3 years of&#13;
middle school, 3 years of high school,&#13;
and 4 years of college. He presently&#13;
holds a sixth, degree black belt and hopes&#13;
to advance his POsition in the future.&#13;
Born and raised In Korea, Mr. Suh has&#13;
traveled to many countries and has had&#13;
varied teaching experiences. He taught in&#13;
a Korean college and has visited South&#13;
Viet Nam with a jude demonstration team.&#13;
The Army has also benefited from his&#13;
talent as an instructor. As a resident&#13;
of the United States for approximately&#13;
2 and a half years, he has taught judo at&#13;
various recreational and educational centers&#13;
in Illinois. A few of these are New&#13;
Trier B.S., University of Chicago, Northbrook&#13;
YMCA, and Great Lakes Naval&#13;
Training Center. Now, Parks ide can boast&#13;
of having this talented man to instruct the&#13;
students in the art of self-defense.&#13;
According to Mr. Suh, judo is not only a&#13;
sport based on self-defense but also a&#13;
sport based on recreation and physical&#13;
education. It takes a lot of dexterity and&#13;
stamina to participate in this sport so the&#13;
participant must be in top physical condltfon,&#13;
~,&#13;
The. United States is progressing in its&#13;
Inter-est in Judo. More and more high&#13;
schools and colleges are offering uus&#13;
course to the students, Mr. Suh wouldltke&#13;
to see Parksdie get off the ground and&#13;
build up a JUdo club and eventually have&#13;
intercollegiate competition.&#13;
Parkstde-s athletic department has recruited&#13;
many excellent physical education&#13;
instructors In order to give the athletes&#13;
and interested students a chance to learn&#13;
~tlu~ 'best;--rnrsis agarn thecase in&#13;
Judo as in track and field, basketball,&#13;
fencing, and the other sports here at&#13;
Parkside. Mr. Suh, an interesting, cordial&#13;
and dynamic man, will add greatly to&#13;
Parkside's athletic program.&#13;
9 JANUARY 1970&#13;
Scholarships'&#13;
The Racine Branch of the American&#13;
Association of _University Women has&#13;
announced that appitcattons now are being&#13;
accepted for the $400 scholarship which&#13;
AAUW awards annually to a Racine County&#13;
girl.&#13;
The scholarship award, which is based&#13;
on academic achievement and financial&#13;
need, is awarded each year to a Racine&#13;
County girl beginning her junior year at&#13;
any accredited, degree-granting college&#13;
or university the fall after the grant is&#13;
awarded.&#13;
Deadline for filing applications is Aprll&#13;
1. The .scholar-ship will be awarded at&#13;
AAUW's annual banquet in May. .&#13;
Appl1catlon blanks may be obtained&#13;
from Mrs. Dorothy C. Melvtn, 2017 N.&#13;
Green Bay Road, Racine, Wis. 53405, the&#13;
scholarship committee chairman, or from&#13;
deans or student affairs directors at a&#13;
student's college or university.&#13;
Application blanks should be returned&#13;
to Mrs. Melvin along with a transcript of&#13;
'the student-s credits for her first three&#13;
semesters or four quarters of college&#13;
work.&#13;
Soviet Policy Article&#13;
Dr. Roger Hamburg, an assistant professor&#13;
01 political science at The University&#13;
of Wisconsin-Parkslde, is the&#13;
author of an article, "Soviet Foreign&#13;
.Polfcy: The Church, The Christian Democrats&#13;
and Chile," which appears In the&#13;
current issue of the Journal of InterAmerican&#13;
Studies ,&#13;
Dr. Hamburg, a specialist in Inter-s&#13;
national relations and Soviet foreign&#13;
policy J received his bachelor's degree at&#13;
fhe University of Michigan, master's&#13;
degree at the University of Chicago, and&#13;
PhD. at UW-Madison. He-taught at Eastern&#13;
washington State College and Marquette&#13;
University before joining the Parkside&#13;
faculty.&#13;
Student Affairs Office Services&#13;
Many students are currently unaware of the various services offered by the Office&#13;
of Student AffaIrs. Listed below are some of the areas in which students may receive&#13;
service from the Student Affairs Staff. Student Affairs Offices are located on all three&#13;
campuses:&#13;
Tallent Hall - Room 203&#13;
Extension 225&#13;
Kenosha Campus.- Room 135&#13;
Extension .42, 43 or 44&#13;
Racine Campus - Main Hall 208&#13;
Extension R 24, 25, 26&#13;
Academic Planning, for inquiries such as:&#13;
Choice of courses, drop and add courses, withdrawal&#13;
Choice or change of major, referral for assignment to faculty adviser&#13;
Progress in major area&#13;
University aCfldemic requirements and regulations&#13;
Career Phmning, for inquiries such as:&#13;
Employability and/or occupational goals&#13;
Interest and ability relative to career choice&#13;
Source of occupatlonal-educatiQnal information&#13;
Planning for graduate school&#13;
Reading and Learning Skills, for concerns s~ch as:&#13;
• Improving reading and other educational skills&#13;
Difficulty In understanding textbooks, lectures, instructors&#13;
Improving ability to prepare for and take exams&#13;
Improving ability to concentrate on studies&#13;
Not enough time for study and/or recreation&#13;
Taking uninteresting courses&#13;
Improving organization of study, use of time&#13;
Personal Consultation, for concerns about:&#13;
Interpersonal relationships&#13;
Making friends, getting into actiVities&#13;
Differences between ideas and standards upheld at home and those expressed at&#13;
the University&#13;
Wanting to drop out of school, go home, or go somewhere else&#13;
Feelings of discouragement, unhappiness, nervousness or inadequacy&#13;
Sense of direction, planning personal life&#13;
Coping with problems of alcohol, drugs, etc.&#13;
StUdent Organization Consultation, for inquiries such as:&#13;
Planning, initiating and running a student organization&#13;
Regulations regarding student organizations&#13;
. Planning campus activities&#13;
Activity registration and space reservation&#13;
PubliciZing campus activities&#13;
Foreign StUdent Advising&#13;
Student Health Service&#13;
Humanities&#13;
Division&#13;
Meets&#13;
Areas coneerrung courses, Sum me r&#13;
school, and student enrollment were discussed&#13;
at the Humanities DiVision meeting&#13;
of November 10, held at Greenquist Hall. Mr" Gerald Musich, chairman of the&#13;
Humanities Curriculum Committee, inciVdtd&#13;
in his report that some leeway is&#13;
auowatae in offering courses beyond those&#13;
listed in the catalogue. Some probable.&#13;
addtttcns are:&#13;
Independent Study courses 499&#13;
Problems course in any discipline&#13;
Music course 490&#13;
Communications 210, American Rhetorical&#13;
Movements&#13;
Music 106, Symphony, 2 credits&#13;
French 318&#13;
Spanish 318&#13;
Of the present catalogue listings, 64%.&#13;
of the courses are now being taught or&#13;
offered; in some disciplines, 85%, and in&#13;
some a fewer percentage. Some discrepancies&#13;
must be straightened out in Education&#13;
certification. Errors in the Parkside&#13;
catalogue should be reported to Mr.&#13;
Musich.&#13;
Further concerns of the Curz'Iculum&#13;
Committee were:&#13;
1. .62 per cent of students enrolled are&#13;
freshmen. Only one/eighth of the total are&#13;
'junior-s and seniors. Two problems concerning&#13;
this are: a. the retention of upperctassmsa,&#13;
and (b) a possible loss of upper&#13;
claasmen when the present freshmen and&#13;
sophomores enter the junior year.&#13;
2. They are also studying compatible&#13;
courses and anticipate similar problems&#13;
for present undergraduates, who may need&#13;
seminars for interesting appeal and needed&#13;
credits.&#13;
3. The division will decide what is&#13;
offered in summer school.&#13;
A motion was passed to form a summer-s&#13;
school-offerings committee, whose mem-·&#13;
bers will be appointed by Dr. Gray,&#13;
chairman of the Humanities Division.&#13;
It was moved, amended, and carried&#13;
that the stucent Government be requested&#13;
to select three students In the Humanities&#13;
Division, to serve with the seven faculty&#13;
members on the Curriculum Committee,&#13;
and that the Student Government officers&#13;
be asked to appoint members with any·&#13;
qualifications they regard as germane.&#13;
StUdents so appointed must establish office&#13;
hours and consult w1th students, seeking&#13;
out student opinion.&#13;
Non-voting Visitors are welcome ~&#13;
atoond the _meetings.&#13;
Juniors Must&#13;
Declare Maiors&#13;
Declaration of M a j 0 r forms have&#13;
recently been mailed to students who will&#13;
have accumulated approximately 60 or&#13;
more credits by the end of the current&#13;
semester. The purpose of declaring a&#13;
major is to initiate the students formal&#13;
referral by the various Division Offices&#13;
to a faculty adviser in the student's&#13;
major field.&#13;
StUdents who w1l1 have accumulated&#13;
approximately 60 or more credits by the&#13;
end of the current semester and did not&#13;
file the Declaration of Major forms at a&#13;
Student Affairs Office by the December&#13;
19th deadline should do so as soon as&#13;
possible.&#13;
General Degree Requirement Worksheets&#13;
and addltiona11nformatlon regarding&#13;
Elementary and Secondary Education&#13;
are available at Student Affairs Omceson&#13;
each campus. Also, education stUdents&#13;
hoping to graduate by August, 1970. should&#13;
'have contacted Mr. Elmore, Director of&#13;
Admissions in Tallent Hall, for information&#13;
on Student Teaching and Certification.&#13;
As My Guitar Gently Weeps ...&#13;
ED BORCHARDT Among the leaves and trees of Parkstdtl&#13;
By this is an obvious truth for among&#13;
This article is the result at a few days that lovely herbage are 3,000 vegetabl::&#13;
of deep depression and maudlin fantasy NLxongave us the term !18llent Majority':&#13;
brought about by the demise of the 60's. and few of us realized he 'was fight&#13;
While the ideas put forward here can be most of the nation is one immense t I&#13;
dismissed as warped, dueto the condiUons farm. ruck&#13;
surroundlrc their birth, I submit that that Wrapping things up in a nutshell Wbi&#13;
is all the more reason they be accepted. Is the fashion today as it avoids ~1l thCb&#13;
Robbed of all optimism they reflect realIty messy thinking one might say' "Tat&#13;
sans rose-colored distortions. Early in more things ch~ngeJ the more th~ sthe&#13;
Dostoevskl's career, he was interested in the same." y ay&#13;
saving the Russian Empire through reform.&#13;
After a long period of imprisonment&#13;
and punishment he believed the&#13;
peasant's belief inChrist, the Czar, and the&#13;
Eastern Church would save Russia. Fortunately,&#13;
Dostoevski died long before the&#13;
Revolution.&#13;
It has occurred to me that neither Nixon,&#13;
Agnew, Mitchell, Laird, nor Podgorny,&#13;
Breznev, Castro, or Mao are acting out&#13;
o.f a perverse sense of evn, They are doing&#13;
what they believe to be right. Beliefs are&#13;
tricky things, the more you try to force&#13;
a person to change his beliefs the more&#13;
set they become. This is one- reason for&#13;
the present world situation. Nixon and&#13;
his group are determined to save America&#13;
thefr . OWN way, even if they have to&#13;
release Agnew on the world.&#13;
This brings up another point. Mosteonfiiets&#13;
people get emotional about are unimportant.&#13;
Only three issues before us&#13;
now will still matter in twenty years;&#13;
Pollution, Population, and the Arms Race,&#13;
In the next hundred years everY other&#13;
issue being debated today will have been&#13;
forgotten long ago. By 2070 Abbe Hoffman&#13;
wUl be somebcdy-s great-grandfather,&#13;
Janis Joplln wm. replace Jenny Lind, the&#13;
ABM will be a museum piece, and human&#13;
suUerlng wID still continue.&#13;
For those of you myopic Jndividuals who&#13;
believe that this generation is destined&#13;
to rind the Holy Grall and reach the&#13;
Impossible Dream my second argument&#13;
becomes a metaphysical pin to prick your&#13;
dormant intellectUal capacities. Just as&#13;
the vast majorIty 'of issues are unimportant,&#13;
the vast majority of individuals are&#13;
un\mportant. Nobody is anybody, society&#13;
is a collection of mass ...produced elements.&#13;
Bus Shelter Scheduled&#13;
the bus schedule. At 7:30 a.m. one bus&#13;
at both Racine and Kenosha leave direct ..&#13;
ly for the other campus (they do not stop&#13;
at Tallent HaU). After that, every time&#13;
on the hour a bus wUlleave Kenosha and&#13;
Racine tor Tallent. They both leave Tallent&#13;
on the halt hoe r. There are also runs&#13;
between Tallent and Greenqutst when the&#13;
busses arrive at Tallent. At 5:00 p.m.&#13;
a third bus begtns shuttle service tJ:etween&#13;
Tallent and Gr_lst only. Finally al&#13;
10:00 p.m, the buses leave xenosna and&#13;
Racine for Talient. At Tallent they go&#13;
to Greenqutst and back to Talfent again.&#13;
Then they head back to Kenosha or ~c1ne&#13;
to be ready for another day. Now that&#13;
wasn't confus1Dg, or was .it? '&#13;
By LARRY M.A TTooN&#13;
A bus shelter "til be huUt so that some&#13;
deerH' at comfort wUl be attained when&#13;
standinl at the bus stop at Tallent Hall on&#13;
windy, cold or rainy days. The administration&#13;
rHl1zes that It is not conducive&#13;
to the health or Parkside students. Only&#13;
Tallent Han will receive a bus shelter&#13;
Ilnee the other campus buUdlncs are&#13;
near enough to the bus stops to walt inaide.&#13;
At Greenqulst the bus stop will&#13;
H cna,.ed SO that the students on the&#13;
upper and lower D revel will be abJe to&#13;
reach lbe bus easily. This is so that&#13;
another bus shelter need oot be ecut,&#13;
Anotber probJem is that or where is&#13;
Uw bul? Here In summary is ~1ca11~&#13;
Time bIs Ie.... Location&#13;
1:30 •• m, One bus at each campus (J&lt;:enosha and Racine) leaves&#13;
at 1:30 • .m. and roes directly to the other campus.&#13;
It does not slop at Tallent.&#13;
Kenosha or Racine (When bus arrives at Tallent it&#13;
makes a run to Greenquist and then back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One bus goes toKenosba,theotherto Racine.)&#13;
Raclne or Kenosha (When bus arrives at Tallent it&#13;
makes a run to Greenqulst and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One bus to Kenosha, the other to Racine.)&#13;
Racine or Kenosha (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greeoquist and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One bus goes to Kenosha, the other to Ractne.)&#13;
Kenosha or Racine (When bus arrives at Tallent it&#13;
makes a run to Greeoquist and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One bus to Kenosha, the other to Racine.)&#13;
Kenosha or Racine (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Creenqulst and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One bus to Kenosha. the other .to Raefnes)&#13;
Kenosha or Racine (Bus'alTives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greenqulst and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Talfent (One bJs to Kenosha, the other to Racine.)&#13;
K8Ilosha or Racine (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greenquist and back to Tallent.)&#13;
TaJlent (One bus to Kenosha, and one to Racine.)&#13;
Kenosha and Racine (Bus arrives atTallentandmakes&#13;
run to Greenquist and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One to Kenosha and one to Racine.)&#13;
Kenosha/Racine (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greenqutst and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One to Kenosha, the other to Racine.)&#13;
Kenosha/Racine (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greenquist and back to Tallent.)&#13;
NOTE: StarUng at 5:00 p.m. there is one bus for&#13;
shuttle service between Tallent and Greenqulst.&#13;
this bus ONLY makes runs between the tw~&#13;
bUildings.&#13;
Tallent (One to Kenosha, one to Racine.)&#13;
Kenosha and Racine (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greenqulst and back.) ~&#13;
Tallent (One to Kenosha and one to Racine.)&#13;
Kenosha/Racine (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greenqulst and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One to Kenosha and one to Racine.)&#13;
Kenosha/Racine (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greenquist and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One to Kenosha one to Racine.)&#13;
Kenosha and Racine (Bus arrives at Tallent and makes&#13;
run to Greenquist and back to Tallent.)&#13;
Tallent (One to Kenosha and one to Racine.)&#13;
KenOSha/Racine (l3us arrives at Tallent makes rWl to&#13;
Greenquist and back to Tallent and then goes to&#13;
Kenosha or Racine.)&#13;
':00 a.m.&#13;
1:30 a.m,&#13;
8:00 a.m.&#13;
g:30 a.m.&#13;
10:00a.m.&#13;
10:'0 a.m.&#13;
11:00 a.m.&#13;
11:301.m.&#13;
12:00 p.m.&#13;
12:30 e.m.&#13;
1:00 p.m,&#13;
1:30 p.m.&#13;
2:00 p.m.&#13;
2:30 p.m.&#13;
3:00 p.m.&#13;
3:30 p.m.&#13;
4:00 p.m.&#13;
4:30 p.m.&#13;
5:00 p.m.&#13;
5:30 p.m.&#13;
6:00 p.m.&#13;
.:30 p.m.&#13;
7:00 p.m.&#13;
7:30 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
8:30 p.m.&#13;
9:00 p.m.&#13;
9:30 p.m.&#13;
10:00 p.m. Last Run&#13;
A DulJ 130 Minutes'&#13;
Katherine HePburn is an estabUshed&#13;
slar of unprecedented magnitude .. What ..&#13;
e.er forced her Into this arrant movie&#13;
mut have been six rfcured and green.&#13;
Any personage to have made this movie&#13;
would need to be CObStlpated and over&#13;
eichty to dell\oer tbe retarded lines.&#13;
U any play need be written for the&#13;
screen, Edward Anhalt shOUld be the last&#13;
to do so. His script la so slow in capturing&#13;
the aUdience, that it takes two hours&#13;
and ten minutes to do $0 (playing Ume Of&#13;
the movie is about two hours and rtfteen&#13;
minutes) even thOUChthe last tive minutes&#13;
of the movie show slens ot IUe.&#13;
Somet.lme In the dull t,..o hours and ten&#13;
minut.. the audience must wonder just&#13;
who bas been mad. Is itKatherine Hep,urn&#13;
who pia,. the Madwoman or Chalilol or&#13;
is U •• the audience who P&amp;1dmoney' for&#13;
tbla IDept rarbq:e ot a clamorous Holly- w_?&#13;
WhU. KatberlDe Hepburn and the east&#13;
romp thrOUCb the streets of Parts we&#13;
reaD, wODder U we are supposed to&#13;
aec ... tbe tantuy of such a movie Could&#13;
Jou ICcept DamJ Kaye plcklnc carbage orr&#13;
'be alrftta or Paris? COuld JOU like In&#13;
Donald Pleasence's performance of a&#13;
toUet worshipper, or Yul Brynner's performance&#13;
of a bald-headed millionaire?&#13;
Such is the quality of this star-studded&#13;
piece of garbage picked out of a mUlton&#13;
dollar toilet.&#13;
The original play by Jean Glraudoux&#13;
did have pOssibility for a movie. Just&#13;
what could be lovelier than to tell a tale&#13;
about a madworpan who lives in the past&#13;
Naturally some "rich bad men" find&#13;
all uDdemeath the city of PariS and want&#13;
to excavate it. Seeirc the cruelty of the&#13;
world in these "evU men" the madwoman&#13;
Saves all of Paris. Thvrnovie version&#13;
updates, pads, and expands untU--tllere is&#13;
sometb1rc about the f4estabUshment" also&#13;
mixed In.&#13;
MOViegoers will find the mOVie Quite&#13;
complete. For those Who think- WoOd .&#13;
WUsoo's League of Nations idea Was row&#13;
lhey will have Edith Evans While gthoOOd,&#13;
who p-r • . se&#13;
..... er religious aspects will .}&#13;
John Gavin. Also for the French ove&#13;
there la Charles Boyer I the Elffel ~ded,&#13;
;;:, left over lets from "My Fair L~~:~:&#13;
but an~:::b~everything going for it,&#13;
SCHObARSHIP,S"&#13;
GRANTS&#13;
LOANS&#13;
1970-71&#13;
J'~M~&#13;
~~Ut;&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
Room 213&#13;
Final Deadline&#13;
March 1, 1970&#13;
'JJirtnncinlll.ids 'lJuUelin&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
Open Saturdays&#13;
9 A.M. to Noon&#13;
,&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
I&#13;
~928Sixtieth Street&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
YOurComplete "On Campus" Book and Supply Centel&#13;
UNI~~RS!!: ,..!.?2~STORES&#13;
'P pricepaid for used texts which wil' b .J '.&#13;
I e useu next term&#13;
Book. Jor EJlERYONE· he • W S m, ~m~&#13;
e peciel-Order ANY B k I •&#13;
00 n PrInt&#13;
l&#13;
Campus Editors Now Say What They Think&#13;
at private colleges except for small,&#13;
church-run schools, have long been able&#13;
• to print four-letter words with little outcry.&#13;
At the private schools, the controversy&#13;
has been chieny political. Believing that&#13;
the student papers did not give proper&#13;
voice to administration vtews and announcements,&#13;
several schools - Including&#13;
Boston University, Cornell and Harvard&#13;
-have founded official weekly newspapers.&#13;
Columbia, Yale, Stanford and SOuthern&#13;
California are also said to be considering&#13;
such publications.&#13;
At Harvard, a discussion-oriented student-run&#13;
paper, The Harvardlndependent,&#13;
has also risen as competition for The&#13;
Harvard Crimson, which some faculty and&#13;
students have charged with being biased&#13;
in favor of radical students.&#13;
Newspapers in conservative areas seem&#13;
to have encountered particular trouble.&#13;
The Colorado Daily, at the University of&#13;
Colorado in Boulder, 1s possibly the most&#13;
radical campus paper in the country.&#13;
Seven members of its business staff&#13;
attempted recently to moderate its tone,&#13;
but their leader was dismissed by the&#13;
editors. The daily has also incurred the&#13;
wrath of Colorado's new president, Frederick&#13;
Thieme, and now faces some competition&#13;
from a (lmoderate" semiweekly,&#13;
T he Colorado Student News. which has been&#13;
raiding its advertisers. But no formal&#13;
action has been taken against The Daily.&#13;
Nearby at the Colorado School of Mines&#13;
in Golden, the Oredigger, traditionally&#13;
among the most conservative campus&#13;
newspapers, is now edited by Jack Yeneh,&#13;
a senior from the Philippines, who has&#13;
given it a decidedlyliberaloutlookstressIng&#13;
controversy.&#13;
Mr. Yench was warned that he would&#13;
lose his post, or even be expelled from the&#13;
school, by the president, Orlo E. Childs,&#13;
after the paper repo rted the use of fourletter&#13;
words .by the school's cheerleaders.&#13;
The student-faculty Board of Publications&#13;
found nothing 'leven close to obscenity"&#13;
by Supreme Court guidelines.&#13;
1'J: suspect the r~al issue is that the&#13;
-------------&#13;
Tallent Hall Is Boarded Up&#13;
c 1969 by The New York Tfmes Co ,&#13;
Reprinted with permission In an interview. the president, Dr.&#13;
Frederick Meier, said he had acted because&#13;
the Log had failed to submit "questionable"&#13;
material to the publications&#13;
board, as specified in its policy statement.&#13;
The Cleaver article, he argued, was of&#13;
Salem, Masa.; Dec. 2-In an atmos- doubtful suitability because the college&#13;
phere of crisis, the student editors of the has a grammar school for teacher traincampus&#13;
newspapers at six of Massa- ing purposes and the article might be&#13;
chusetts" state colleges gathered here seen by the children. In addition, he said,&#13;
recently in the small cluttered office ot he belfeved it Violated state obscenity&#13;
the Salem State College Log. statutes. The police found no basis "for&#13;
They had come to organize support for action. however.&#13;
the Cycle at Fitchburg State College. The "I know nothing about the press," he&#13;
school's president had canceled an issue said, obviously weary at the controversy.&#13;
of the paper alter the printer informed him "I'm a chemist by trade."&#13;
that the issue was. to contain an article The editors believe that Dr. Meier's&#13;
by Eldridge Cleaver. the Black Panther actions are really based on fear of the&#13;
leader. The text was considered obscene state legislature, which holds the purse&#13;
by the printer and the pres ldent. strings.&#13;
The Massachusetts situation paralleled "The idea that you have to censor ever-yothers&#13;
throughout the country as college thing because some legislator may t&gt;e&#13;
newspapers seek to assert' their editorial upset is absurd " said HelenAuchterlonie&#13;
independence and venture boldly into areas' the sandY-halr~d 21-year-old editor ofth~&#13;
of social and political opinion they have Log. 'lJt's also absurd that we have to&#13;
long avoided. reduce the paper to the level of sixth&#13;
Interviews with administrations, faculty graders.&#13;
and students at more than 30 colleges "This paper is distributed for adults.&#13;
around the nation show that officially He's forgetting who this college is for _&#13;
sanctioned college papers are provoking it's not 'rcr his Iegtslators or for the&#13;
wide unhappiness among college admtn- grammar school children."&#13;
istrators and conservative students and, Last February, the Log, which receives&#13;
to a lesser extent, radical students. $11,000 a year from student fees, accused&#13;
In many cases, the papers have assumed Dr. Meier of creating an atmosphere of&#13;
activist roles, crusading against the war ; "intimidation" and "repression" and sugthe&#13;
government, social conditions, and gested he resign.&#13;
campus officials. In the process, some of While an agreement was finaIlyreached&#13;
their editors have risked jail, fines, loss to restore the Log's funds, Miss Auchterof&#13;
funds and advertising and expulsion lonie is not optimistic. "It's not going to&#13;
from their positions. get better _ the campus is ready to blow&#13;
In Hartford today. three University of up."&#13;
Hartford students went on trial on charges Meanwhile, the editor at Fitchburg, John&#13;
of criminal libel against President Nixon. Antonelli has filed suit against the colThe&#13;
charges stem from a cartoon printed lege's presfdent, James J. Hammond,&#13;
last year in the college newspaper. The charging violation of First and 14th&#13;
students face up to a year in prison if Amendment rights.&#13;
convicted on the charge, a misdemeanor. The obscenity issue appears mostprevThe&#13;
trial is expected to continue tomcr- alent~ at state-supported schools, perhaps&#13;
row in the 14th Circuit Court before Judge because they are dependent on legislatures&#13;
William S. Ewing, Jr. for their funds. Ge rre r a Hy papers&#13;
The campus "disputes vary widely, but&#13;
they usually center on the use of obscene&#13;
words and pictures or charges of undue&#13;
emphasis on the reporting of activities of&#13;
radicals.&#13;
In the Fitchburg State College case, the&#13;
article in question was an excerpt from&#13;
"Black Moochie," a novella by Mr.Cleaver.&#13;
At the meeting at Salem State the six Tallant Hall vias boarded up December&#13;
edttors all agreed to print 'the article-in"'""'"2, !969. :At least it,looks that way W&#13;
their own papers as a gesture or'defiance average passer-by who doesn't bother to&#13;
at what they felt was highhanded press look in the windows.&#13;
censorship at Fitchburg. The day betore December 1, 1969, at&#13;
There' followed six weeks of turmoil on 11:20 p.m., a Parkside physical plan"&#13;
the campuses, marked by threats of law- .man ~rashed into. the Tallant Hall doors.&#13;
sutts, countersuits, a str-tn here at Salem The rfgnt large window was also damaged.&#13;
and the closing down of three of the No injury to the driver was reported.&#13;
papers at Salem Fitchburg and Wor- The truck was reported to have a brake'&#13;
cester:' line severed and right front head light&#13;
For some time. across - the nation, broken and slight damage to the front&#13;
underground newspapers run by radical bumper. , ,&#13;
students unhappy with the viewpoint pre- Mr. Hunt, assistant DIrector of Parksented&#13;
by the official organs have been side's. Physical. Plant, said that the rear&#13;
flourishing on college campuses. door that was supposed to have been use~&#13;
Now, however, a growing number of did not always open. As a result the front&#13;
the sanctioned papers are falling into the door was utilized to bring in the supplies.&#13;
hands of activist editors and reporters. As the truck was driven toward the door~&#13;
Many of them are challenging the appro- it was found that the brakes would not&#13;
prfateness of journalistic objectivity' on operate. The truck rammed into the front&#13;
campus and they often embrace the concept doors as a result. The truck was not&#13;
of Hadvocacy journalism." .g.o.1D.g fast. but because of the weight&#13;
"Activist newspapers are catching factor a lot of damage was caused.&#13;
fire" says Nelly Jo Lee of the United The wooden structure, now bunt in Hen&#13;
Stat~s Student Press Association in Wash- of doors" has a rather permanent look.&#13;
ington. 'l"fhey are saying that there is no Mr. Hunt reassured me that it would be&#13;
such thing as objectivity and that any replaced as soon as the style of door&#13;
story is going to be somewhat subjective. Parkside uses can ~e procured. No estiThe&#13;
college press is trying to give a side mate was ava.liable, at the time as to the&#13;
that frequently isn't given in the profes- total cost of the aCCIdent.&#13;
sional press." Accidents just seem to be happening&#13;
The lines are seldom as clearly drawn in abundance. By the time you read thisas&#13;
they are here at Salem. Learning of thE!'bus wUl undoubte~IY be repaired. But&#13;
the intention to use the Cleaver article, just_in case yon didn t know. one of our&#13;
the college's 58-year-old president "di- bus engines blew up.&#13;
rected the printer not to publish the issue When one of the bus drivers was quesand&#13;
froze the Log's funds. tioned, he simply said that the age of the&#13;
Incensed, the students took a collec- bus and the general condition caused the&#13;
tion, 'found another printer and displayed blow up. As a result Parks ide students&#13;
the article proni.inently on page one. Soon now have a fifty-fifty chance of riding in&#13;
afterward the college'S publications a classy and even a comfortable bus. The&#13;
board a ~anel 0112" faculty and admin- bus is rather large and of the Grey Hound&#13;
istratlon members and eight students, type style, and is equipped with an essenunanimously&#13;
Censured the president for tional item of the road, a radio. The&#13;
"b " d Hth bus drivers seemed quite prOUd of it&#13;
an ar itrary action that Viol~,te e a nd were willing to show a student the&#13;
r~hts of the college community. general high po~ts of.1t, such as the&#13;
By ROBERT REINHOLD&#13;
Special to The New York Times&#13;
By DALE MARTIN&#13;
• QUALITY&#13;
• SATISFACTION&#13;
• SAVINGS&#13;
ALWAYS&#13;
For You and Your Car&#13;
BILL'S DEEP ROCK SERVICE STATION&#13;
2305 Racine 634-9328&#13;
plush seats and large engine compartment.&#13;
Unfortunately by the time you read this&#13;
the old 'bus will probably be repaired.&#13;
Actually, though, it Would be mote eco ...&#13;
nornical for Parkside to run the more&#13;
plush bus. The old bus ran on around 45&#13;
gallons a day, whereas the new one takes&#13;
only about 30 gallons 3: day to operate.&#13;
The average day run excluding night is&#13;
around 170 miles. Perhaps the plush bus&#13;
is the answer on how to get more students&#13;
to ride the bus. who knows?&#13;
trustees don't Uke what we are saying&#13;
about them and the scbcot.o" says Mr.&#13;
Yench.&#13;
At - the y'niverstty of Wyoming, the&#13;
Branding Iron stood out as a strongly&#13;
liberal. anliwar, pro-black on a highly&#13;
conservative campus - at least until its&#13;
editor, Phil White, resigned the other&#13;
day under fire.&#13;
In quilting, he complained billefly that&#13;
most Wyoming students were apparently&#13;
not interested in racism, t}1eVietnam war,&#13;
urban problema, drugs or prison abuses.&#13;
"There are no problems In Laramie _&#13;
everything here is perfect," he said&#13;
sarcastically. He had been accused of&#13;
mixing tact with opinion in the news columns.&#13;
On many a liberal campus, the news ..&#13;
papers reflect the prevailing student mood.&#13;
But increasingly they are encountering&#13;
competition from conservatives. At the&#13;
University of Wisconsin, one of the more&#13;
radical campuses in the Midwest, The&#13;
Daily Cardinal has some new competition,&#13;
the weekly Badger Herald. The'weekly&#13;
Is run by Pat Korten, chairman at the&#13;
conservative Young Americans for Freedom&#13;
chapter.&#13;
"This campus needed a paper that will&#13;
print unbiased news and not just radical&#13;
Views," Mr. Korten said. The Cardinal,&#13;
meanwhfje, has run afoul of the regents&#13;
over obscenities and has been forced to&#13;
pay a $6,000 rental fee for campus office&#13;
space.&#13;
A similar situation pertains at Vanderbilt&#13;
University in Nashville, where the&#13;
liberal 81-year-old Hustler is beingchalIenged&#13;
by Versus, a conservative organ&#13;
that disputes the Hustler's right to a&#13;
$14,000 college subsidy.&#13;
Some papers find themselves in the&#13;
middle of campus crossfire. At the mammoth&#13;
University of Michigan in Ann Arbor,&#13;
The Michigan Daily is under attack from&#13;
lett, right and the Women's Liberation&#13;
Movement. Radical groups believe it has&#13;
"copped out" since it was edited in 1961&#13;
by Tom Hayden, a founder at the Students&#13;
for a Democratic Society.&#13;
"fabrics for&#13;
II&#13;
." a occasions&#13;
VOGUE&#13;
FABRICS&#13;
709 58th Str_&#13;
65... 612&#13;
EARN WHILE&#13;
YOU LEARN&#13;
Of }0Urilt1 "Ju &amp;/kfialt'.&#13;
adufJlti.4i.luj 4f.4JI. 114 a &amp;/kfiAA&#13;
If.t(J~e foa'l16epaiJ&#13;
a (,Q~ft. qoa ~&#13;
1uJ~ fIfJId foa'i I.i.Iu fJJ 1ItIJ1r.t.&#13;
Stop&#13;
'Rut. 109&#13;
7.S. We'll fJtaiA foa.&#13;
EDITORIALS&#13;
A Fairy Ta'e&#13;
Once upon a time, as all fairy tales begin, there ~da\~n&#13;
livi .' a large forcst oUtSI e e&#13;
industrious wood carve I' f ~lOg f~~IOWwood carvers wanted to&#13;
big city. He and some 0 us . so they carved&#13;
contribute to thc enjoyment of their fello~~~e~nl been making&#13;
wooden figurines. Up untJ! that time they y 1 These&#13;
small ones at a high cost in man hours to t:I~~"~~~~~refore&#13;
figureS were very costly to the general pu th whole&#13;
not many were sold. Something had to be done or. e&#13;
purpose of the- figures would be lost amid the rrsmg cost of&#13;
livin~\fter many hard days of toil and blisters the wood carver&#13;
decided to visit the city to see if he could secure help from the&#13;
founding fathers. He had heard that the founding fathers were&#13;
kindly gentlemen willing to help anyone who came to them.&#13;
Armed only with thi knowledge and a strong spirit, the wood&#13;
carver went to them to ask for a small work space neare~ the&#13;
city and an allowance to alleviate some ofthe cost of the ca~vll1gs.&#13;
The- founding fathers checked their bank account and declde.d to&#13;
allow the wood carver and his friends the money they reqUIredl&#13;
to set up a business. They also checked their available space&#13;
and came up with a temporary shed near the outskirts of town in&#13;
a suburb. I&#13;
The wood carver was overjoyed with the founding fathers and&#13;
their decision. lie promiscd to make his carvings the pride of&#13;
the- city and that made the fathers very glad. Left alone, the&#13;
wood carvers did produce very good carvings and they were&#13;
gl·tting better all the time, but one day whe.n the quote for that&#13;
week came out there was a noticeahle change in the quality of the&#13;
carvings. They were considerably poorer in quality and style than&#13;
the- previous quota.&#13;
incc the founding fathers had some money in the venture&#13;
they decided to investigate. They discovered the wood carver,&#13;
much older looking and overworked, sitting at his carving bench&#13;
bemoaning his situation. When asked to elaborate, the wood&#13;
carver related this: He and his friends were so happy about&#13;
being in the city that they worked very hard at first to make all&#13;
the people proud of their carvings,allbearingthe city'S inscription.&#13;
As time wore on tempers wore out. The space allotted the&#13;
carve rs was just too small. Some of them felt they were better&#13;
off in the forest again. The wood carver knew that the space&#13;
give-n them was only temporary and he had tried to keep his little&#13;
group togvtlu-r , but now he had his own doubts about the founding •.&#13;
fathers. TIll')' were all very wise men but also a little slow in&#13;
making decisions. Unfortunatcly this was something that required&#13;
quick thinking since all those involved had a lot invested in the&#13;
venture. \\l'11. 10 make a long story short, the founding fathers&#13;
took too much Iime in making their decision and the wood carver&#13;
and his friends were forced to go back to the forest and give up&#13;
thei I' venture in town. The towns people were angry with the&#13;
fathers, and everyone was sad thatthings turned out the way they&#13;
did - that is. all except ... (but that's another story).&#13;
Form C'ub at UWP&#13;
The largest single club on campus is' forming. beginning&#13;
second semester of this school year. So far only 12 UWP&#13;
students have refused to join the Apathy Club.&#13;
When the club was first thought of, one of the founders&#13;
sIX-culated that there was the possibility of total student body&#13;
membership in the organization. If this becomes a reality this&#13;
speculator surmises the possibility exists that by fall semester&#13;
of 1970 the club will include the entire faculty.&#13;
In its investigation of the club, the COLLEGIAN noticed a&#13;
h·t'nd in the- students refusing to join the club. Of the 12 nonmembers&#13;
two arc seniors, one a junior, three sophomores and&#13;
five freshmen. This shows that students become progressively&#13;
more apathetic the longer they are in school.&#13;
Three of the students arc concerned about the war in Vietnam&#13;
and one is concerned about the war in relation to brotherhood.&#13;
Other concerns range from Agnew, although the studJj\nt is 't&#13;
'ure if he is meaningful, to the death of Paul MCCartny. Ma:k&#13;
Dodd, a freshman, IS concerned about art and tlie morbid&#13;
enVIronment such a campus created for the producti f&#13;
~ueh thi.ng while freshman Randy Reeves is also c~~c~r~:~&#13;
about thiS campus, the acbon it lacks. One student is conce d&#13;
about Chancellor Wyllie's head, another gyroscopes and :~ll&#13;
3.l1?ther,. people. One student submitted a scrap of pa rstatin&#13;
he d wl'lte his name down and non-join except he didn!";t g&#13;
gl'l Involved. want to&#13;
QUl'stions have arisen as to when the club will hold't f'&#13;
unorgal1lzed meeting. Since no member .' s .Irst&#13;
enough to non-organize One no date ha' b has been 1l1spll'ed&#13;
p . .. U J ~ een set.&#13;
re\lousl} one show-of-interest" meeti· h&#13;
." r. it didn't get an over\"hel . ng was eld. How-&#13;
, lUillg response N . .&#13;
ex-officio membe 1', Ste"e Soldber . on-p.reslding,&#13;
meeting. Only two members of ~~ c~~ucted the fIrst nOnafter&#13;
a fe-\\'mInutes C\'er"one lost. t c u attended. However,&#13;
The students . reed a . ill e:est and left.&#13;
that the} hould nO~be concte~hisd'~l~eting that.the greatest issue&#13;
Also at tlus meeting se";;al a out was CIVil rights.&#13;
zatlon vere made ,\ fe f th non-rules for the nOn-organi-&#13;
. . w 0 ese are: Members cannot particiPARKSIDE&#13;
COLLEGIAN&#13;
Volume I - No 5&#13;
9 January 1969&#13;
..••••••••••••. Jim Runge&#13;
Editor-in Chief. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . Perry Michal&#13;
Ed·t • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • os Associate 1 or . . . • . . • • • . • . .. ••••.••••••..•.• Marc Colby&#13;
Business Manager. • • • • • •. ••••• . Greg E&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • . • • mery&#13;
News Edit.or •.••••••••••••• : : : : • • • • • • • • . •• Helen S~humacher&#13;
Sports Editor. • . . . . • • • . . • . . • Ed Borchardt&#13;
Feature Editor •.•.....••.•••••• : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : • Nell Haglov&#13;
Chief Photographer .•.••.....•.. _. Margie Noer &amp; Connie Ryterske&#13;
Production Managers . . . . . . • . . • . . . . • Jim C !&#13;
• . • • . • . . . . . . . . . • rox ord&#13;
Accountant •..•... , .••....• ' . • . •• -.•• Mr. John Pest&#13;
Advisor . . . . . . . . . • . • . . . . • . • . • . . • . . • • • a&#13;
published every two weeks by the students of the University of Wisconsin·&#13;
P rkstde: Kenosha Wisconsin, 53140. Opinions expressed 111 editorials,&#13;
c:rtoons; and articies are not necessarily those of THE COLLEGIAN staff,&#13;
the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, its faculty,administrators,or students,&#13;
LETTERS to the editor&#13;
To the Editor,&#13;
What is going on with student government?&#13;
1 was a student here last year and&#13;
remember that student government at&#13;
least met then! 1 know from talking withsome&#13;
of the student senators last yea~.&#13;
that an Interim Student Government was&#13;
established last year to meet during the&#13;
summer and to organize elections for&#13;
this year. In September, I heard through&#13;
the school grape vine that PSGA President&#13;
Jim Midura disbanded Summer Interim.&#13;
I Iater "learned that Jim resigned on&#13;
doctor's orders and did not disband student&#13;
government. The PSGA president&#13;
doesn't have the power to disband student&#13;
government. It seems to me that the only&#13;
way student government could be disbanded&#13;
at all would be by student vote or&#13;
university action. I don't think that it&#13;
could even be done In these two ways.&#13;
Despite the resignation of the PSGA&#13;
president, the Vice-President, Carol Ley,&#13;
and the summer interim committee should&#13;
have had enough sense to go through&#13;
the proper channels to keep student interim&#13;
active long enough to arrange elections&#13;
for this year.&#13;
It is now well into January; this&#13;
semester ~i1l be over In a.couple of weeks&#13;
and stUl no move has been made to hold&#13;
elections for a new student government.&#13;
The elections were to have taken place&#13;
in mid-october. Do you realize What&#13;
that means? The University of Wisconsin&#13;
Parkside has been operating for almost&#13;
a full semester without the proper student&#13;
representation that all students are&#13;
entttled to. Student government - is the&#13;
s tudents ' link with the faculty and administration&#13;
in this institution and the regents&#13;
of the entire University of Wisconsin&#13;
system. No student voice in the form of&#13;
a student senate has been avatlable this&#13;
semester. The people suffering most&#13;
because of this situation are the stUdents.&#13;
I have heard rumors lately tha~someMobile&#13;
Desk&#13;
By AL KARLS&#13;
On Monday, December 8, the Racine&#13;
Campus was visited by a small truck&#13;
with the words uRacine Mobile City Desk"&#13;
and cJThe Racine Journal-Times" written&#13;
on the side. The people who came&#13;
inside of it were George Hansen, managing&#13;
Editor; Chuck D'Acquisto, a noted&#13;
photographer; Mrs. Sophie Clay rePorter.&#13;
and Chris Boultinghouse, a re~rter and;.&#13;
former stUdent at the Racine Campus. They&#13;
came to interview stUdents and got cons&#13;
iderable results.&#13;
The MobUe City Desk had its start about&#13;
four months ago. It is, as its name indicates,&#13;
a mobile desk or office that brings&#13;
the RaCine newspaper to the scene of an&#13;
event, or to a place of interest. Initially&#13;
it was started to get the paper to th~&#13;
people and also to be a shelter for people&#13;
being interViewed. Since that time it has&#13;
helped the Journal-Times show an htterest ;~l people and people's problems. It also&#13;
ows its readers to learn What other&#13;
people think.&#13;
The purpose in coming to the Racine&#13;
Campus was to find the students' OPinions&#13;
~boUt Racine's intent to sell the campus&#13;
T~UdingS to Racine Technical Institute&#13;
ey were also interested in how SUCh;&#13;
move would. affect the Parkside stUdent&#13;
one, - I think it is one of last year's&#13;
senators, is trying to get last year's&#13;
student government senators reorganized&#13;
again 10 order to plan and hold electlcq&#13;
for a student government for next semes.&#13;
ter and to offer some representation loUIe&#13;
students for the rest of this semester.&#13;
At best this student government wlll offer&#13;
only partial representationsinceanumber&#13;
of last year's senators have transferred&#13;
to other schools, but at least itis an e&amp;rt&#13;
to give the students a part of the rep""&#13;
sentation they are entitled to.&#13;
As a student at Parkside, I feel thai&#13;
the student body should support this effort&#13;
to re-establish student government on til&#13;
Parkside campuses as anoperationvehie1e&#13;
for representation of student voice w~&#13;
after all, is something that every sbIdeut&#13;
Is entitled to.&#13;
The elections for student senate sbouM&#13;
be an important and number one priorItJ&#13;
concern of every student on campus. Iam&#13;
quite sure that Miss Jewel Eehelbarger,&#13;
PSGA advisor from last year, would be&#13;
glad to hear from anyone who is at all&#13;
interested in the re-establishment of stu·&#13;
dent government here at Parkslde. SUrel,&#13;
she will be more than willing to llstl!ll&#13;
to any suggestions and ideas from the&#13;
etuoenls here at Parkside. After all, M1si&#13;
Echelbarger should be interested in tile&#13;
reorganization of the student senate stDct&#13;
she was the advisor of last year's student&#13;
senate and the summer interim.&#13;
I don't know who should get the blame&#13;
for what happened to student governmef&#13;
the student senators, the advisor, tli&#13;
administration, or the students. Each of&#13;
these could have at least TRIED to ~&#13;
something to get the Parks Ide Studert&#13;
Government Association back into operation.&#13;
What is really a shame is thai&#13;
it took this long for even a rumor J hop!&#13;
it Is more than thatc), to get.around tb8I&#13;
PSGA is being reorganized.&#13;
_Fred x. Zenowitl&#13;
from Racine. Students were almost unani·&#13;
mously against the sale and they indicated&#13;
·such a move Would hurt bQ!h Parksidea!lll&#13;
its stUdents.&#13;
It was an enjoyable experience for&#13;
everyone. The Racine paper was pleased&#13;
with the considerable student turnout, and&#13;
students were happy to be able to express&#13;
their views. But by far the happiest JDSIl&#13;
around was Chuck D'Acquisto. He was&#13;
having a field day posing and photographW&#13;
the many co-eds that turned out. Bouncl!li&#13;
around joyously and showing his best&#13;
smile to the girls, he was evidentlyhavlIt&#13;
a ball.&#13;
Dinosaur Article&#13;
An assistant professo; of English at&#13;
The University of Wisconsln-Parkside&#13;
Who has combined interests in literature&#13;
and geology throughout his academic&#13;
career is the author of an article titled&#13;
'tHitchcock's Dinosaur Tracks" in thE&#13;
current issue of AmericanQuarterly.&#13;
T~e article, by Dennis Dean, deals wltb&#13;
the mfluence of Dr. Edward Hitchcock, tbe&#13;
central figure in a 19th centurypalentologo&#13;
ical controversy, on the works of such&#13;
authors as Longfellow Melv1lle James&#13;
Russell Lowell, Olive; Wendell' HolmeS&#13;
and Thoreau. .&#13;
pate or care; no member c th'nk .-&#13;
the future because they d 'tan I ; members cannot plan for&#13;
be no regnlar meetings ~:c care and can't think; and there will&#13;
Dr. John Jenks Mas Cause m~mb.ers won't attend anyway·&#13;
if he would non-ad~ise t~e ~%mUmcaho.ns chairman. was asked&#13;
confronted with the same 'ob b. ~e S.aId he didn't care. WheP&#13;
his sail!e non-poSition. J agaIn this year. Jenks reiterated&#13;
Libraries Offer Volumes&#13;
For Those Term Papers&#13;
Are you doing research for a term&#13;
paper?&#13;
You will find sources and bibliograph_&#13;
ical aids at the Parks ide LIbrary located'&#13;
on the first ncor of Tallent Hall that you&#13;
will not find at either Kenosha or Racine&#13;
campus libraries. The libraries at the&#13;
Kenosha and Racine campuses have holdings&#13;
of about 13,000 titles each. The&#13;
main Parkslde Library has about 80,000&#13;
titles. In searching for material you will&#13;
find more aids at the Main Parkslde&#13;
Library. such as the complete NEW YORK'&#13;
TIMES INDEX, EDUCATION INDEX,&#13;
,sOCIAL SCIENCES AND HUMANITIES&#13;
INDEX, etc. Some books recommended&#13;
by faculty are avaUable only at the main&#13;
Parkside Library. -&#13;
New subscriptions now arriving at the&#13;
Parks Ide Library include - American&#13;
west c.Bulrettn of Atomic ScIentists, Antioch&#13;
Review, Cha-nging Times, Films in&#13;
Review, Arizona Highways, Commentary,&#13;
Four Quarters, Atlantic, Commonweal,&#13;
History of Political Economy, Consumer&#13;
BUlletin, Hobbies, Huntington Library&#13;
Quarterly, Jet, Wanderer, World Tennis,&#13;
Nation, Wisconsin Architect.&#13;
The Library has an informal Lost and&#13;
Found department behind the front counter.&#13;
Quite a number of gloves, purses,&#13;
car keys, books, umbrellas and other&#13;
articles have been turned in; and some&#13;
of these have not been claimed. Please&#13;
inquire if you think you have lost something.&#13;
The Library is now posting notices of&#13;
art eXhibitions, museum shows, and so&#13;
forth, on the window oppOsite the circulation&#13;
desk. Some of these items are&#13;
really significant. Take a look at them&#13;
as you come into the Library.&#13;
Users of periodicals should be sure to&#13;
ask about the microfilm cabinets. Some&#13;
periodical holdings are in microfilm form&#13;
and may be easily read on the readers&#13;
in the back room. Ask at the desk.&#13;
LIBRARY HOURS&#13;
Jan. 13 - 7:15 - 12 Midnight, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 14 - 7:15 - 12 Midnight,allcampuses&#13;
Jan. 15 - 7:15 - 12 Midnight, aU campuses&#13;
Jan. 16 - 7:15 - 12 Midnight, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 16 - 7:15 - 5:00 - all campuses&#13;
Jan. IB - 2:30 - 10:30 (Parks Ide)&#13;
Closed all day Sunday en and K)&#13;
Jan. 19 - 7:15 - 12 Midnlght,allcampuse.s&#13;
Jan. 20 - 7:15 - 12 Midnight, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 21 - 7:15 - 12 Midnight, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 22 - 7:15 .. 12 Midnlght,allcampuses&#13;
Jan. 23 .. 7:15 - 12 Midnight, all campuses&#13;
Jan 24 - 7:15 - 5:00, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 25 - Closed, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 26 - 8:00 - 4:30, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 27 - 8:00 - 4':30, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 28 - 8:00 - 4:30, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 29 - 8:00 - 4:30, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 30 - 8:00 - 4:30, all campuses&#13;
Jan. 31 - Closed, aU campuses&#13;
Feb. 1 - Closed, all campuses&#13;
Feb. 2 - Regular hours. resume.&#13;
No Style to Speak of .&#13;
By RICH KIENNITZ and&#13;
BOB BORCHARDT&#13;
Like all new groups, "Grand Funk&#13;
Railroad" has received a SUbstantial&#13;
amount of record company propaganda,&#13;
acclaiming them as 'one of the Best New&#13;
Groups of the Year.'. However, it might&#13;
be appropriate to point out that railroads&#13;
are going out of business and hopefully&#13;
the "Grand Funk" wui go down with&#13;
them. The title of this mistake is HOn&#13;
Time", but it is the opinion of these&#13;
writers that it should be changed to&#13;
"Doing Time", owing to the fact that.&#13;
the members of the group should 'get ten&#13;
years apiece .for prcst ltlon of the arts.&#13;
The album begins fhnccently enough,&#13;
with the needle circling the edge of the&#13;
d Isc, However, when it reluctantly arrives&#13;
at the first chord, it begins a seemingly&#13;
endless succession of songs that do nothing&#13;
and goonowhere.&#13;
Individually, it should be noted that&#13;
the lead singer has talent. However, the&#13;
• •&#13;
rest of the band does an excellent job&#13;
of hiding the fact. As long as he is with&#13;
this group it w1l1be hard for him to rise&#13;
above their mediocrity.&#13;
The bass player seems to have a few&#13;
ideas, but we feel that we Would be doing&#13;
him a great favor by introducinl him to&#13;
such seemingly foreign elements as F&#13;
sharp and A flat, and by enlightening&#13;
him to the fact that his instrument has&#13;
three other strings.&#13;
The lead guitarist seems to fall into&#13;
the unfortunate category of a number of&#13;
other new musicians Who sacrifice creativity&#13;
and style for speed and technique.&#13;
While speed and technique can be achieved&#13;
by' almost anyone, creativity is the true&#13;
measure of the value of an artist.&#13;
For example, a musician of the caliber&#13;
of B. B. King can do more with three well&#13;
placed notes than this guitarist does with&#13;
a thousand of his pointless flashy runs.&#13;
About all that can be said about the&#13;
drummer is that a robot could do his job&#13;
as well or better. His endless drum 5010&#13;
goes on for bars without one single new&#13;
idea or the slightest hint of an original&#13;
innovation.&#13;
It's pointless to review the songs individually&#13;
due to the fact that the difference&#13;
between them is even less than between&#13;
"Cold SweaP', and ''I've Got the Feelin' ".&#13;
As for the musical value of the lyrlcswell,&#13;
we'll let you judge for yourself by&#13;
this typical example.&#13;
"Heartbreaker,&#13;
"Can't take her ..&#13;
"Heartbreaker,&#13;
"Bringing me down".&#13;
The above is the total lyrical content&#13;
of a six minute and thirty second song.&#13;
Such concise, pOwer-packed poetry has&#13;
not seen its like since&#13;
'&lt;Roses are red,&#13;
'~iolets are blue~_&#13;
"We hate 'Grand Funk'&#13;
"and so will you."&#13;
(We just made that up-honest!)&#13;
As far as style is concerned the Grand&#13;
Funk has none to speak of. They seem io&#13;
rely on the past efforts of the Vanilla&#13;
Fudge and the Chicago blues groups,&#13;
never reaching the quality of either.&#13;
In closing, we feel that '.'The Grand&#13;
Funk Railroad" is a very appropriate&#13;
name for this group, although we feel&#13;
that there has been a slight spelling&#13;
error.&#13;
P.S. If any of you readers are unfortunate&#13;
enough to receive this album as a&#13;
Christmas present, it has one use that&#13;
we have fonnd. It. you heat the edges&#13;
and bend them up, it makes an attractive&#13;
ash tray.&#13;
Ute&#13;
LEADER&#13;
dow&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/IACINE&#13;
Moratorium&#13;
Committee&#13;
Organized&#13;
The Vietnam War Moratorium&#13;
•&#13;
Commit ..&#13;
tee of Parks ide called on all interested&#13;
students to attend an informational meet ..&#13;
ing recently. When the meeting started,&#13;
four interested people were present and&#13;
four others came in late. The person in&#13;
charge apologized for not knowing much,&#13;
and the meeting began.&#13;
The group is an independent organization&#13;
of Parkside students; It has no&#13;
national affiliation, but has co-operative&#13;
agreements with the Racine, Dominican,&#13;
Carthage and Kenosha groups. The chairman&#13;
is Mike Lofton and the faculty advisor&#13;
is Henry S. Cole.&#13;
The Parkside Vietnam War Moratorium&#13;
Committee is formed to develop participation&#13;
in a series of monthly peace actfvtties.&#13;
The committee proposes a peaceful&#13;
and legal program Which could Include&#13;
distribution of literature, setting up seminars,&#13;
raising funds, organizing marches&#13;
and petitioning. These activities will be&#13;
directed toward the ending of U.S. military&#13;
involvement in Vietnam.&#13;
The committee will encourage actfvtttes&#13;
in line with this statement of purpose but&#13;
will respect the will and conscience of&#13;
Indtvtduaj members.&#13;
The Moratorium Committee asks for&#13;
popular- support for an immediate end&#13;
to the war. Their main concern is for&#13;
school and student involvement.~not city&#13;
action. The group believes the use of the&#13;
Moratorium is the main tool toward&#13;
gaining their end .&#13;
In the plans for the future is a plan&#13;
for a Panel Discussion about the war.&#13;
The plans are tentative, but hopefully&#13;
it will occur soon. The discussion will&#13;
have both pro-and-con opinion toward the&#13;
war, and will have a question and answer&#13;
period at the end.&#13;
The membership is open to every Park ..&#13;
side student. To gain full membership and&#13;
voting privileges, a- membership fee of&#13;
50~ is charged. Membership is now estimated&#13;
at up to 30, of which 12 are very&#13;
active. Some .Parkside Committee members&#13;
are also members of one of the&#13;
other four Moratorium Committees in&#13;
the area.&#13;
The Parkside Moratortum Committee&#13;
is hoping to gain student support , It Is a&#13;
young organization and has a problem in&#13;
that not many students know about it.&#13;
Prospective members are encouraged to&#13;
come to meetings that are held on the&#13;
second and fourth Tuesday of every month&#13;
at J2:30 in the Tallent Hall Lounge. You&#13;
don't have to be a member to attend&#13;
meetings, and the Parkside Moratorium&#13;
Committee encourages new ideas and&#13;
new people.&#13;
Datta Co-authors&#13;
Cancer Article&#13;
Dr. S. P. Datta, assistant professor of&#13;
lite science at The University of Wiseonsin-Parkside,&#13;
is one of four authors of a&#13;
paper titled "Effect of Phytohaemagglutin_&#13;
in on Ehrlich Ascites Carcinoma" which&#13;
appears in the current issue of the "British&#13;
Journal of Cancer"&#13;
The Ehrlich ascites carcinoma is a&#13;
tumor which grows in the abdominal cavity&#13;
of mice"'. Phytohaemagglutinin is a plant&#13;
deriviUve whose properties include inducement&#13;
of cell diVision and clumping&#13;
of red blood cells. In this project an&#13;
extract prepared from kidney beans was&#13;
used by the group to determine its possible&#13;
role in retarding or enhancing tumor&#13;
growth. The project is related to Prof.&#13;
·Datta's current research at Parkside,&#13;
which is aimed at determining the effect&#13;
.of enVironmental stress during pregnancy'&#13;
on the development of defense mechanisms&#13;
in the offs~g. Phytohaemagglutinin is&#13;
known to enhance growth of cells involVed&#13;
in defense mechanisms. Mice are being&#13;
used in his current work as they were in&#13;
the other project.&#13;
Co-authors of the article appearing In&#13;
the British journal are Mrs. Mildred&#13;
Cerini, T. G. Ghose and J. C. Cer1ni, aU&#13;
presently at the Dalhousie University&#13;
Medical School, Halifax J Nova ScotJa,&#13;
Canada. The article reports research&#13;
conducted by the group in 1966-67 at&#13;
Monash University Medical SChOOl,Prah ..&#13;
-ran, Victoria, Australia, Where Dr. Datta&#13;
was a lecturer In 1m.munologyandgeneUcs,&#13;
Mrs. Cer1ni was a graduate student working&#13;
with Gbase, and her husband a graduate&#13;
atudent workiac with Datta.&#13;
WE PAY&#13;
CASH FOR&#13;
USED&#13;
BOOKS&#13;
BRASS&#13;
CANNON&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
BOOK&#13;
MART&#13;
581'.6th Ave. Kenosha&#13;
Experienced&#13;
Key Punch Operators&#13;
Part time for students&#13;
Salary $2.00 per hour and up&#13;
Students Discuss&#13;
Right to Beer&#13;
If a young man is consfde red mature&#13;
enough to handle a gun and fight for&#13;
IIis country, should he also be considered&#13;
not only mature enough tu vote, but also&#13;
mature enough to handle e mug of beer?&#13;
That question has practically become an&#13;
Arue rfcan cliche.&#13;
Although his right to drink beer may&#13;
not be as vital an issue to today-s college&#13;
student 35 his right to vote, it is, nevertheless,&#13;
an issue Which affects him personally&#13;
and Which he feels entttled to&#13;
decide for himself.&#13;
When, where, and Whether students&#13;
should be allowed access to beer - these&#13;
are the questions facing not only college&#13;
students and administrators, but also law&#13;
enforcement officers and the communtty;&#13;
at-large. Thus, "Uniform Beer Age _&#13;
Teen Beer Bars - and Beer on Campus"&#13;
will be the over-all subject considered by&#13;
"College Talk-In" panelists Saturday&#13;
(Jan. 10) at 10:35 a.m. on WLIP (95.1 fill).&#13;
Moderator of the panel w1ll be Daniel&#13;
Jurkovic, Carthage College assistant professor&#13;
of political sc lence who received&#13;
his A.M. degree from the University of&#13;
Minnesota. Student panelists representing&#13;
Carthage will be Kenoshans Frank Maxwell&#13;
(5216 - 35th Ave.), junior in speech&#13;
and theater arts; and Jim Drago (7935 _&#13;
39th Ave.), recent Carthage graduate in&#13;
POlitical science and history.&#13;
Kenosha student panelists representing&#13;
The University of Wiscollsin-Parkside&#13;
will be Richard A. Langer (G8l8 _ 31st&#13;
Ave.), senior ill geography and former&#13;
acting president of Parkside's Circle K&#13;
Chrbj and Andrew B. SchmeUing (42~ _ 43rd&#13;
St.), junior in sociology.&#13;
WLIP's News Director, Jim Bradley,&#13;
serves as IICollege Talk-In" host.&#13;
Contact:&#13;
Dr. Leon Applebau m&#13;
319 Greenquist Hall Ext. 316&#13;
GIVE 'EM HELEN&#13;
d II oment or even 0&#13;
The old cliche "There's never a u&#13;
ne&#13;
";,ven newspapers and&#13;
r st for th wicked" applies to evtZ~e ~oticed, this paper has&#13;
r porters. As you may or r:;a~~obecause of various reasons;&#13;
been delayed In being PU~ eChristmas vacation and other&#13;
re-organJ~atlon of the stan, ese roblems stop the&#13;
ml cellaneous excuses. AlthO.ug~e: ressPonward. This poses&#13;
pr ssea, time and athletic acu1~ h Psit I am the only sports&#13;
a special problem for me. As a~. ~ direy and his "Coach'S&#13;
r porter on this paper. Wedohav~ ICso~e reporting, plus the&#13;
Corner" and other coaches ~olng t 0 I am very grateful&#13;
D1r ctor of ews ervices dOingsome, 0e time out from their&#13;
and Ind bted to these ge~erous ~e~ ~hOs: paper. This is a fine&#13;
cuvtue in order towrlteanartic e or t1 "cricket" WhatI'm&#13;
g ture on their part but it isn't exac ~ rts enth'usiasts who&#13;
tt mptlng to say is HEr! iz: s~ewrfte a small article on&#13;
wouldbe willing to atten ao . r Journalism major,&#13;
them. 11 doesn't have t~ be ':ti~~:: s~nse of school spirit.&#13;
Ju t omcon with a lItt e am I . fits are fantastic.) If&#13;
(Th hour arc great and the frlnghtehbe;t e of the "Collegian"&#13;
you chip m ,contact me throug eo c&#13;
- room 109 or Ext. ~4 In Kenosha. This is your paper. team is&#13;
To t back to the ubject at hand- basketball. Our&#13;
moving now. .\l1lt took was a little time. It could be compared to&#13;
c ron 11 wint r morning - slow to start but once.It gets go~~&#13;
it r il" g s \\ e've got our regular heroes like JIm Hogan .&#13;
, • . hi ·th theIr Ell I hter who seem to keep the basket SWlS ng Wl&#13;
r pc tl\ 4.9 and 26 point averages. Thenwehave our centers&#13;
ho rab r hound and dunk shots like MIke ~a~sen, third&#13;
hi b t corer, and Ed VanTine whoscored the WI~ng b.asket&#13;
In Ib me alnst Ripon.The rest ofthe team is dOlOgtheIr Job&#13;
but th y could use ome more spark. The thing I can't ~et over&#13;
i th r t number of turnovers in each game. It reml~ds me&#13;
of th num r of interceptions in the Penn State-MISSOUrigame&#13;
I I w k. I believe It was a total of !&#13;
I hate 10 r -open an old woundbut let's discuss the Sports.-&#13;
f t spectacle. It was better than last season's attendance but It&#13;
could still be Improved. I've asked some of the people involved&#13;
with 'portsfest what they thoughtofthe crowd. Most of them were&#13;
sali fled considering the all-important football game played that&#13;
afternoon. I felt that there could have'been a much larger crowd&#13;
o I wouldgrade It C, but since most of the athletes were satlsfled,&#13;
l'U rate ItB-.lt's not badbut it could be improved. See what&#13;
you can do ahout It.&#13;
I received a response on last issue's column asking for&#13;
uggested topics. The sport asked ahout was jogging so I got a&#13;
weat swt for Christmas (fromSantaClaus, ofcourse) and began&#13;
a program of Jogging. I'll let you know more on the sport and&#13;
on howI'm doing in the next issue - if I'm still alive!&#13;
~~e--&#13;
Rangers Favored&#13;
O,er Milton Five&#13;
ParkakSe wUl be faVOred to exteod its&#13;
wlnnIrw streak to nv. saturday nJiht wben&#13;
lb. ~nc.ra boet YUtOft Col1@Ce at Racine&#13;
Cu lleldbaua. (8 p.m.).&#13;
Milton, ortetnally picked as a contender&#13;
IJI tbe Gat .... , Coo.terence, ls 5.bou1der~&#13;
• Ilv. lime 101'" streal and ls 1-7 tor the&#13;
N'UOft. Parulde's 4-3 mark ls DOt the&#13;
ollly baala lor I.. be.... lavored. The&#13;
Ran fa t Dominlean, a learn which&#13;
&lt;_rtel )lUloo, by 18 pOln .. and display&#13;
COMldtorablymo~ aplomb In loalng&#13;
by a total of 119. pOln .. to three teams&#13;
.. bleb tUU, outttlatanced WUtoo_ Carth-&#13;
, 1A.Uland aDd UW-Cnl!n Bay.&#13;
senior I~t rman Ron Grovesleen, a&#13;
8-0 IUUd averqlrc 18.5 POlnts, and Skip&#13;
o rbruner, Goo" tOf"1l'a.rdwith a 13.3&#13;
.1' rae., a r. the WUdcata' greatest&#13;
thrata. Croy tMa is tH thlnt leading&#13;
aeonr ID MUtea blator7, whUe Ober ..&#13;
b r. _ of coach K... (Red) Ober.&#13;
b " IMdI: the WUrlcata lD rebounc1l.Qc&#13;
•• Ila .. me.&#13;
Otber pf'Obabl MUton .tarters are&#13;
It_ DIck Holm aDd lre8Iunan Bred&#13;
Peck, _ 8-4. up troat and Juolor rual'd&#13;
Do..u Goecke, 8-1.&#13;
Pa ....... COUll 8t.. , Stephens is eaPHtild&#13;
10 coaater with his usual ttye ot '-J 1:11Sla&lt;&gt;cbter aDd 6-I BIll Kolar at&#13;
to...... , .... II1IIa IIad.MD at c-.rter and&#13;
"11 hITIa aDd 5-10 Jim HOC~ at -,... ..- will be !be lint lor Parulde&#13;
... IlK. 10. _ tile Ilallc abaded&#13;
......n_17.". KU.CIIl _&#13;
Hollda7 tcuraamet at Carroll a-a.&#13;
.... ulde W..... up lor loat time&#13;
, Jlartac floe _ In DIn. do,. befo ..&#13;
J&#13;
IM..,... fbi' ...... r exams. The&#13;
W .... t La"1aad To.ada, IIiCbt&#13;
at Case betore embarklng -on a northern&#13;
swing againstSt.Jolm's UnIversity, Northland.&#13;
College and Lakehead University at&#13;
Port Arthur, OntarIo, Jan. 9, 10 and 12,&#13;
Slaughter and Hogan, Parkslde's scoring&#13;
twins, are averaging 26 and 24.9 through&#13;
the tirst seven games. Slaughter has hit an&#13;
amazing 81 ot 135 field goal attempts for&#13;
an even 60 percent, whUe Hogan 15exactly&#13;
50 percent on 59 of 118. Hogan has made&#13;
2'7 straight free throws and has a 56 ot 62&#13;
tor the season.&#13;
As a leam, the Rangers are shooting a&#13;
scorching 52 percent whUe averaging 92&#13;
points per game. They have given up 85 a&#13;
contest.&#13;
Parkside scorlng:&#13;
fg It pls. Slaughter 81 20 182 Hocan&#13;
Madsen 59 56 174&#13;
KoJar 32 14 78&#13;
18 19 55 Perrine 17 6 40 Rick&#13;
VanTine 14 7 35&#13;
13 4 30 Hacenow&#13;
While 13 I 27&#13;
5 2 12 Bredeck&#13;
Harris 2 2 6&#13;
I 0 2 Johnson 1 0 2 Totals 256 131 643 0pp. Totals 242 112 596&#13;
FIFTH LOSS&#13;
Somehow the w th&#13;
tbe basketball t ea er seemed to affect&#13;
ttfth loss at the:m as It acquired Its&#13;
"Moose" Walt ,season by boWing to&#13;
the Racine C zen s Muskles 106-86 at&#13;
day, Jim Hoc:e&#13;
FieldhOUse last Tues ..&#13;
seven field Coal:U COOl,Shooting only&#13;
Ell SlaUChter manag&#13;
a&#13;
: 3&#13;
tw2&#13;
0tree-throws.&#13;
pOints but had&#13;
Corner&#13;
Vic Godfrey&#13;
Have an Ear for News?&#13;
We Can Use You!&#13;
COLLEGIAN&#13;
Room 109', Ext. 24&#13;
r&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
Coach's&#13;
thingS in this world I&#13;
There are many of those thIngs&#13;
can't underst3..?d laegn~I~~~reapproPriat1ng&#13;
Is the Wlsconsm h larshlps&#13;
all ot the 280 athletic tuition sc 0&#13;
to ;:d~~nknow athletics at the Mad~~~&#13;
, eds help but there'S no nee&#13;
cam&#13;
p&#13;
u:1l n~hat water into a rusty bucket.&#13;
po~~say that the whole situation is unf~~&#13;
is being a little redundant but why sho t&#13;
one school be tavored this way. Wha&#13;
makes them more deserving than- Parkside&#13;
Milwaukee or Green Bay?&#13;
It:s not that we wanted all 280 SChola~~&#13;
hi to ourselves. We certainly wou&#13;
:aJ: been satisfied with the 40 that were&#13;
originally allocated for ParksIde.ActuaUy&#13;
we would be happy with any number&#13;
because that would be more than we have&#13;
nO;~rsonallY I feel that we would get mo~e.&#13;
mileage and do a better job with the aid&#13;
that Madison has. At least we might get&#13;
some' of the Wisconsin athletes that find&#13;
greener areas elsewhere.&#13;
SKIING&#13;
In the last issue some space was devoted&#13;
to the Wisconsin Inter-collegiate SkIing&#13;
Association More Information has come&#13;
in. The W.I.S.A. racing schedule tor 1970&#13;
is as tollows: Jan. 17 - Wilmot Bowl Cup&#13;
at Wilmot; Feb. 1 - WlntergreenCupRace&#13;
at Spring Green, Wisconsin; Feb. 8 - Little&#13;
Switzerland, Slinger; Feb. 14-15 - Wausau&#13;
Mt. Wausau; and Feb. 28-Mar. 1 -Indianhead&#13;
at Bessemer, Michigan. The last&#13;
race Is the W.I.S.A. championships.&#13;
There are several race requirements:&#13;
A- A team must race in at least three&#13;
m'eets in order to qualify for a statewide&#13;
standing. B:· The best three scores out&#13;
of the five meets wIll count towards the&#13;
final scoring. You are therefore allowed&#13;
two complete throwouts (the scores at two&#13;
meets; not individual scores) or you may&#13;
select not to attend two meets (your&#13;
choice). C: It is mandatory that your team&#13;
race at Indlanhead. This meet cannot&#13;
count as a throwout. The meet is the TriState&#13;
Championship, and also determines&#13;
the Wisconsin Collegiate ChampionshIp.&#13;
0: Each team consIsts of five racers&#13;
maximum. The highest three scores per&#13;
racer will count towards the team score.&#13;
Therefore, two thtx&gt;wouts are permitted,&#13;
or a school may select to race only three&#13;
'racers. E: All racers have to register at&#13;
the registration desk as W.I.S.A. racers&#13;
and show proof of Club affiliation, and&#13;
must meet the requirements of the WISAI&#13;
USSA race regulations.&#13;
It there are people on this campus&#13;
Interested In competitive skiing this oftice&#13;
would like to know about them. We would&#13;
like to form a competitive ski club.&#13;
As was mentioned before WISA Is also&#13;
interested in recreational skUng. Wedon't&#13;
seem to have, on campus, any club promoting&#13;
sid trips, but Holger Peterson of the&#13;
club at Marquette has invited us to join&#13;
them. They do ask that the varIous clubs&#13;
take turns hosting a ski weekend but&#13;
maybe we can be waived until we have an&#13;
active club.&#13;
An example of a ski trip planned was&#13;
the trip planned over Christmas vacation&#13;
to Thunder Bay in Canada. The bus left&#13;
trorn MUwaukee on December 26 and returned&#13;
on the 31st. The cost was $49 and&#13;
that inclUded lift tiCkets, translX&gt;rtation&#13;
and lodging.&#13;
a little trouble holdIng on to the ball.&#13;
The whole game was one of "catCh_&#13;
up" baIl. Lakeland grabbed a 15 point&#13;
lead In the first ten minutes of play&#13;
and kept .the lead all the way. It wasn't&#13;
really a tight game.&#13;
Steve Hagenow had a gOOdnight, though.&#13;
He grabbed 20 rebounds and made 15&#13;
POints. He shows sIgns ot promIse.&#13;
The game should have been a revenge&#13;
game tor liS. Parkside's first defeat ot&#13;
the season was at the hands ot Lakeland&#13;
in a two point loss, 83-85. It sounded as&#13;
though ~akeland wanted revenge on ParksIde&#13;
the way the notse went. The spIrit&#13;
ot cheering doesn't seem to have reached&#13;
the Ranger fansj there was more en":&#13;
thuslasm comIng trom the Muskle bench&#13;
than trom the tans Who came to see the&#13;
home team.&#13;
(Continued on,fOllowIng page)&#13;
....&#13;
BUTTONS&#13;
The sale of the buttons will continue to&#13;
the Dominican Game which wnt be PlaYed&#13;
at Salem Central. The Salem Central&#13;
Lettermen's club under the direction at&#13;
Dorm Grams is sellIng the buttons to&#13;
help support athletics at Parkside. A&#13;
decal is also being sold for $10. This&#13;
decal comes with a season pass. This&#13;
decal wnt look good on someone's car&#13;
wtndow or store window. This is the&#13;
beggar'S way of raising money torathletlcs&#13;
but when the state legislature Won't&#13;
help????????&#13;
PHYSICAL EDUCATION CLASSES&#13;
There will be some new phYsical ed:uca..&#13;
lion classes added next semester One of&#13;
these wIll be a badminton class which Wlli&#13;
be scheduled at 'r'remper in the evening.&#13;
Byung Dae Suh will be joInlng the staff&#13;
full time so the judo, karate, and self&#13;
defense offerblgs will be expanded. Mr.&#13;
Suh will also work in gymnastfcs ,&#13;
A hunter safety certificate/Shooting&#13;
Sports class wIll be conducted. This Will&#13;
be i first in the state. Other Classes&#13;
include: Fencing I Low OrganIzed Games,&#13;
'aquatics, Weight TraIning., BowUng/Colf,&#13;
gymnastics, Wrestling/Track and FIeld,&#13;
Volleyball/Soccer, Fencing/Softball, SkiIng,&#13;
First Aid, and Modern Dance.&#13;
XC SKIING&#13;
There is another phase of skiing that&#13;
too few people know about. We've been&#13;
talking about Alpine skiing. This is the&#13;
glamour side of the sport. Cross country&#13;
skiing Is Nordic. It is a sport that takes&#13;
a high level of physical conditionIng-or, to&#13;
put It another way, it 1s a way to condition&#13;
oneself and to maintain that condition.&#13;
The Office of Athletics Is inthe process&#13;
of developing XC trails. around the campus&#13;
(with the cooperation. of the Phys1cal&#13;
Plant) and skis have been ordered. All&#13;
students and staff are invited to find out&#13;
what U Is all about.&#13;
SPORTS FEST&#13;
The all-sports day was an enjoyable&#13;
occasIon. At least it was enjoyed by most&#13;
although the day could have been brighter&#13;
with a win 1n basketball. The Rangers are&#13;
an exciting team to watch and show plenty&#13;
.of promise. Coach Stephens and the team&#13;
can probably put up wIth a narrow 108s&#13;
once or twice, but three times in a row?&#13;
·It's just too hard on the ulcer, or at least&#13;
on the ulcer that Is developing, Besidesf&#13;
how long can one go Without sleep?&#13;
The wrestlers showed some talant. The&#13;
four pins in successIon were exciting.&#13;
W~ tInally got our 118 pounder in the&#13;
form of Larry Griffin. Now we need a 126&#13;
and 191 pounder. It's stUI not too late.&#13;
The fencers domInated "their part.of the&#13;
show wIth goad wins over the U.ofChicago&#13;
and Milwaukee Tech. That is one team we&#13;
don't have to worry about too mUCh.&#13;
In volleyball, both the faculty and club&#13;
teams showed promise in winning one&#13;
game apiece from the faculty team of&#13;
UWM. UWM has already extended an&#13;
inVitation for sometime after the New&#13;
Year for a rematch.&#13;
Compliments should also be extended&#13;
to the Porn Porn girls tor their part in the&#13;
show and to the Judo people. The Office&#13;
of StUdent Affairs more than dicltheirpart&#13;
in adding to the weekend activities. They&#13;
have some very capable people and are&#13;
working hard to provide activities for the&#13;
students of Parks ide.&#13;
Af~fe'IN~&#13;
YOUNG MEN - BOYS&#13;
207 Sixth St.&#13;
Racine, Wi., 53403&#13;
Phone&#13;
633-4266&#13;
'Sterile Cuckoo'&#13;
Liza MirmelU wm emerge this season as&#13;
the AU Macgraw of last season. Miss&#13;
Mlrtnelll's new and first movie of renown&#13;
is "The Sterile Cuckoov, It is one ot those&#13;
cheap budget sudden ending movies with&#13;
something to say, or at least I think it has&#13;
something to say.&#13;
Some audiences will 'think Lfza-s performance&#13;
a run through of a Carol Burnette&#13;
caricature. Others wtll find a warm funny&#13;
character who wanted to be loved. Nevertheless&#13;
hew you take Ltza Minelli's performance&#13;
wUl determine your feeling&#13;
for "The Sterile Cuckoo."&#13;
The screenplay by AlvlnSargentdoesnJt&#13;
seem very lnt~st1ng without Liza&#13;
MinnelU. It teUs of a couple who meet,&#13;
fall in love, fall in bed, and then fall out.&#13;
Most of the action is set on a New England&#13;
College Campus where Pookie and Jerry&#13;
attend as freshmen.&#13;
Together they make. an ideal combination.&#13;
He likes bJtterfiles~d she hates&#13;
weirdos. (A weirdo to Pookle is anyone who blends into the crowd.) When the&#13;
lights turn out, together they find as much&#13;
in common as ''he'' rabbits and "she"&#13;
rabbits.&#13;
After passing Easter vacation In his&#13;
dorm, Pookie the "tomato" an'C.1Jerry the&#13;
/Wlbookworm" break up their understand-&#13;
·ing. Of course she rides off in her&#13;
:seventy-five dollar Volkswagen'into the&#13;
sunset. But this is not the end, the script&#13;
calls for a deep meaning abrupt ending&#13;
which will leave the audience totally&#13;
frustrated, and the sixty year old housewife&#13;
looking for her shoes.&#13;
Liza Minnelli and Wendel Burton give&#13;
excellent performances as the couple who&#13;
sin on Sunday. Even 11 the context of '-The&#13;
Sterile Cuckoo" is second rate, Liza.&#13;
MiDnelli wl1l be assured of an Oscar&#13;
nomtnatton, but "The sterile Cuckoo" as&#13;
fUm will rot in its tin can.&#13;
Basketball&#13;
Continued&#13;
One not of humor in the dreary night&#13;
was a bad calIon the part of the ref.&#13;
Near the end of the game, a call went&#13;
out over the speaker to the owner of&#13;
a car with the license number C40-l32&#13;
to please move his car. Who should get&#13;
a surprised look on his face but the&#13;
referee. Technical anyone?&#13;
This week-end, the Rangers go on&#13;
tour to Minnesota, NortherD: Wisconsin&#13;
and Canada. They miss' out on a_..1ew&#13;
days rof school but they 'can atone for&#13;
it with a victory or two or- three. It's&#13;
cold up north OOt maybe the team wlll&#13;
warm up and show its real power.&#13;
PARKSlDE (86)&#13;
Kolar&#13;
Slaughter&#13;
Madsen&#13;
Hogan&#13;
Perrine&#13;
Rick&#13;
Hagenow&#13;
White&#13;
Tolals&#13;
Ig fI pi&#13;
2 3 1&#13;
15 2 2&#13;
1 0 2&#13;
7 2 5&#13;
3 1 3&#13;
3 1 3&#13;
6 3 2&#13;
001&#13;
37 12 16&#13;
LAKELAND (106)&#13;
Ig II pi&#13;
Imme 4 0 1&#13;
HI1l 10 1 3&#13;
Hotz 9 1 1&#13;
Heck 7 1 3&#13;
Meyer 9 11 3&#13;
Diener 5 0 2&#13;
Auslln 2 0 0&#13;
Totals 46 14 13&#13;
Halfllrne: Lakeland 55, Parkslde 36&#13;
FTM: Lakeland 8, Parkside 8&#13;
JVs: Lakeland 103, Parkslde 94&#13;
international printing week&#13;
-,&#13;
~&#13;
%-~-rz:&#13;
HAVE A HAPPY EXAM TIME!&#13;
A Collegian Public Service Message.&#13;
5 led U.iversity Population Symposium Featu'res&#13;
Advisory Group Experts on Problems, Trends&#13;
A representative of the Ford pnunda- Health and Human Development, Washing- Detection and Community Outre h&#13;
t ton, a Green Bay pltyslclan. two protes- ton, D.C., and Dr. E. H. Storey, dean of PaneHsts, in addition to the spea~: ",&#13;
sors and two students of The University the College of creauve Communication, will be Dr. Green. Dr. Harlley Mrs,&#13;
of Wisconsin-Green Bay have been added UWGB. _ Estel, and Mr-Lang hltn, Dr. Kaufm'an W~I~&#13;
to the roster of speakers and paneltsts Daytime sessions on Jan. 9, which begin serve as chairman of the Saturday&#13;
who wlJl participate In a symposium on at 9:30 a.m., wlJl present an analysiso! sion and moderator of the pan~l sea,&#13;
population problems to be presented Jan. the present population crisis and Its Saturday session will meet at the I~cThe&#13;
9-10 by the UWGB College of Human manUestatlons In contemporary iir e. hall of the Environmental Sciences b I~re&#13;
Biology. speakers and their topics Include Dr. Ing on the Main Campus. U d.&#13;
According to an announcement by Dr. 'paeuber , "population Outlook in Asia"; Registration Infortnatton and pr&#13;
John R. Beaton, dean of the 'college, Dr. Gyorgy, "Malnutrltlou Is a Problem brochures are avalldble from the o;f~nl&#13;
Robert T. McLaughlin of the Ford Faun- of Ecology"j Dr. Storey. "The Leisure of the College of Human Biology at UWGCI?&#13;
dation has been named as principal speak- Explosion"; and Dr. Abrahamson, "EfJ&#13;
A nominal one-day registration fee hB.&#13;
e r for the dinner meeting Jan. 9 at the tects of pollution on population Growth". been arranged for the Saturday session as&#13;
Beaumont Motor Inn. He wUl address the After the formal presentations, the day's&#13;
symposium on the tcctc, "FertUHy Re- speakers will serve as the nucleus for a&#13;
ducUOn: Can Voluntary Approaches see- d tscussion panel that will also include&#13;
ceed?" McLaughlin is program officer Greenwood and be moderated by Dr.&#13;
for the international diviSion of the Pcun- Alex Doberenz, assistant dean of the&#13;
dation's omee of Population in Washing- College of Human Biology and a member&#13;
ton, D.C. and a former staff member of' of 'the conference planning committee.&#13;
the Agency for International oevelopment Friday sessions, all scheduled at the&#13;
in Bogota, Colombia. Beaumont Motor Inn, will conclude with&#13;
Dr. Jeremy GreenoftheWebsterCl1nlc, the dinner meeting at 7 p.m,&#13;
Dr. Ruth Hartley and Or. William Kaut- Participants on Jan, 10 will present&#13;
man of the UWGBfaculty and two sopho- some alternatives to meeting the populamore&#13;
students, Sharon Estel and David lion crisis. The Saturday session opens&#13;
Greenwood, will join adlstinguishedgrouP. at 8:30 a.m, and adjournS at 12:30 p.m~&#13;
of scientists and social scientists from Speakers will be Dr. Combs, HThe Role&#13;
outside the state as panelists during the of the Federal Government in population&#13;
Friday and Saturday sessions. Dr, Hartley ;~e=s~e~a~rc~h~'~' ,~a~n~d~D~r~.~p~i~o~n:.., ~'~'p::re~g~n~a~n~c2:Y_================:&#13;
is chairman of the concentration ingrowth&#13;
and development and Dr. Kaufman is a&#13;
professor of biology in the College of&#13;
Human Biology.&#13;
"Population Growth: Crisis and Challenge"&#13;
is the theme of the conference&#13;
for which reglstralion is open to th~&#13;
general public. Other speakers at the&#13;
meeting will include Dr. Paul Gyergy,&#13;
of the University of PennsylvanIa reputed&#13;
to be the '&lt;father of nutrition" inAmerica&#13;
on the basis of his research on vitamins'&#13;
Dr. Irene B. Taeuber, visiting profes~&#13;
sor of international economics at Johns&#13;
Hopkins University and senior research&#13;
demographer in the Office of Population&#13;
Studies at Princeton University; two medical&#13;
doctors, Dr. Dean E. Abrahamson of&#13;
the faculty of the School of MedIcine&#13;
tjntversity ot J\.1innesota, and Dr. Ronald&#13;
Pion, director otllie DepartmentofFamUy&#13;
Planning and Sex Education, University O:f&#13;
Washington School of Medicine' Dr J W&#13;
Combs, Jr" of the Center for 'poP~la'tlo~&#13;
Research. National Institute of Child&#13;
The faculty has elected three repreSft\(ative.s&#13;
from Social Science, two from&#13;
Science aM one trom Kuma0..L5ticStudies&#13;
as members at the flrst elected Parkslde&#13;
University Committee.&#13;
This committee, perhaps me of lhe most&#13;
lnOuentlal on camp,ls,hu a wide varletyof&#13;
tunctlOlUl ranc1nl: from advising the Chancellor&#13;
on polley matters at ececem to the&#13;
faculty to sett1nc agendaB for faculty&#13;
Senate meetlncs.&#13;
It also acts as faculty rrievance committee&#13;
and can investlCate anythlJC at&#13;
ParUlde related educaUon.lts cha1rman&#13;
18 • member ot the nine-man, all-VolversUy&#13;
at Wisconsin Faculty Council and .&#13;
the UniveraUy Faculty Assembly which&#13;
baa approximately seventy members. includlnC&#13;
Fred Harrinrton, President of the&#13;
UniversUyot Wlaconstn.&#13;
Elected for three-year terms were&#13;
Norbert lsenberc (professor. chemistry)&#13;
and James Shea (Associate Protessor&#13;
earth SCience); for two-year terms Leo~&#13;
Applebaum CAssoclate Professor: economlca)&#13;
and Richard Carrington (Assistant&#13;
Professor, economics) and John&#13;
Harbeson (,\sslstant Professor, political&#13;
science); for one-year terms,OUverHayward&#13;
&lt;Asslal&amp;nt Protessor, history) and&#13;
Richard Carrlncton (Assistant professor,&#13;
communications). At the first meeting of&#13;
the CommIttee. Or. Shea was reelected&#13;
C~lrman; Or. Carrington was elected&#13;
a!ternate delecate to the Faculty CouncU'&#13;
and Or. Harbeson was elected Secretary:&#13;
From the Right&#13;
OUR GOALS FOR THE 70's&#13;
By JEFF PARRY&#13;
~n this new decade, most of us UWP&#13;
students will be graduat.tne. marrying,&#13;
and c:hoosirc our 11ttle cubby-hole In&#13;
society Where we wUl remain untO we die&#13;
The f ct that tbis picture is so abhor:&#13;
rent to many of us says something about&#13;
modern socIety. The truth Is that It is&#13;
hard to (E't enthusied about laking one's&#13;
place In t eo American Culture.&#13;
The winds of chance have elevated us to&#13;
new heights unmatched in the history of&#13;
man, yet war, hunger, pestilence and&#13;
pollution all 11e unsol\led at our feet.&#13;
Th1S is the supreme Irony. Standing on&#13;
the planets, we gaze back on the earth&#13;
and faU to solve the problems that consume&#13;
our socIety.&#13;
Why? Young people have the answer&#13;
We have turned from the true values of&#13;
IUe to artUlciaJ gods. Democracy, communlsmJ&#13;
money have replaced man's origInal&#13;
goals: peace, harmony and happiness.&#13;
Instead of loving our brother, we kill him&#13;
because he disagrees with us.&#13;
As the peace symbol comeS of age&#13;
let we yourc people take it up as 00;&#13;
banneri as we resign ourselves to taking&#13;
our place In society, let us make that&#13;
society, let us make that society a better'&#13;
the best, place on -earth. '&#13;
The torch of leadership is passl~ Into&#13;
our hands. If we remember to love f1rst&#13;
not to doubt; U we live In peace becaus~&#13;
we disavow war. then when this decade&#13;
closes our dread and dismay will have&#13;
turned to years of triumph.&#13;
fI;&#13;
"......."-&#13;
I SURANCE&#13;
FIRE&#13;
AUTO&#13;
UFE&#13;
lIABIUTY&#13;
THen&#13;
BONDS&#13;
BUSINESS&#13;
ACCIDENT&#13;
'iOSPITAlIZATION&#13;
MARINE&#13;
HOUSEHOLD&#13;
LOftS Haul Cayerages&#13;
em' a I AIL&#13;
UAIIU1'Y_.&#13;
--&#13;
-&#13;
m'en COIIP .......&#13;
~&#13;
DON SPARKS&#13;
INSURANCE AGINCY I 657·5156 I&#13;
........ AYI.&#13;
HERBERT'S&#13;
Kenosha's Largest&#13;
Jewelry StOf'e&#13;
It', Brandt's for the Fine,t in Sound Equipment&#13;
Solly. PalI__ lc .nc1 G.E.&#13;
Record Players•. Radios.&#13;
Tape Recorders and TV&#13;
All Record, and Tapes at Racine's Lowe,t Prices Alway,&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS ~ 511 lIAI,' STRElT&#13;
I I, , " , til' n! ;.1r.llI.lIlC'll )1\\1.11 f&#13;
freedom now now now&#13;
colorS and h&#13;
, opes 10 Zip Ihe&#13;
disapprOving&#13;
eye&#13;
.he&#13;
"Jl under cI&#13;
/I.. groun&#13;
;!~~&#13;
it3~iJ': Itf tit&#13;
__r ...... __...:~J ~"" - --&#13;
..&#13;
The Chiapp tt . e a Underground&#13;
a&#13;
'·"olut' '&#13;
fO".'Y&#13;
dig it l live&#13;
the underground is the fulure you you you&#13;
bring bread</text>
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                <text>Parkside Collegian, Volume 1, issue 5, January 9, 1970</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
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            <elementTextContainer>
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              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="59619">
                <text> Student publications</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="59620">
                <text> University of Wisconsin-Parkside--Newspapers</text>
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                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="59625">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>Regents OK $17,000 for&#13;
Public Information Director&#13;
MADISON — A director of public information&#13;
and publications was appointed&#13;
Friday for the Parkside campus of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin only after several&#13;
regents questioned the appointment.&#13;
Approved on a 5-4 roll call vote was&#13;
Bruce Weston who will receive $17,000&#13;
annually.&#13;
Opposition was led by Regent F. J.&#13;
Pelisek, Whitefish Bay, who questioned&#13;
paying any publications man $17,000.&#13;
Parkside Chancellor Irvin G. Wyllie said&#13;
his campus was the only one in the system&#13;
without a public information officer. It was&#13;
noted that the new campus at Green Bay&#13;
has staff in this area.&#13;
"The question is, are there enough&#13;
duties to keep him busy," said Regent&#13;
President James Nellen.&#13;
Defending Wyllie's recommended appointment&#13;
was Mrs. Howard Sandin,&#13;
Ashland. She said there was a need for&#13;
good public relations for the Parkside&#13;
campus, but Nellen asked what Weston&#13;
would do. Mrs. Sandin explained that&#13;
Weston would be expected to write&#13;
articles for newspapers telling the good&#13;
points about the new campus.&#13;
Nellen was unmoved.&#13;
UW President Fred H. Harrington said&#13;
that a public information officer is more&#13;
than an article writer. He must advise the&#13;
chancellor on the possible public reaction&#13;
to various activities. Harrington added&#13;
that the Parkside Campus also needs&#13;
national attention.&#13;
Pelisek noted that there are a number of&#13;
public information people in central adFree&#13;
Burgers&#13;
Free cheeseburgers will be awarded by&#13;
McDonald's to students for each "A" on&#13;
their reoort cards twice in 1970: at the&#13;
conclusion of the first term in late January&#13;
or early February; and also in Jufte.&#13;
The cheeseburgers will be awarded for&#13;
all final "A's" for each term and will apply&#13;
to junior high, high school and college&#13;
students.&#13;
ministration. He suggested that Wyllie&#13;
turn to them for assistance. Harrington&#13;
explained that the central administration&#13;
at Madison wasn't available on a day-today&#13;
basis. He noted that in Madison that&#13;
the chancellor has an information staff as&#13;
well as several of the separate colleges on&#13;
the campus.&#13;
Pelisek, a Milwaukee lawyer, shook his&#13;
head.&#13;
Wyllie explained that Weston also would&#13;
be active in the fund raising area as well as&#13;
handling alumni relations. "He is going to&#13;
be very busy," Wyllie said.&#13;
(Reprinted with permission from the&#13;
Kenosha News.)&#13;
WILLIAMS TO WINTER&#13;
IN NORTH CAROLINA&#13;
Ronald E. Williams, 26, a University of&#13;
Wisconsin-Parkside sophomore, is one of&#13;
ten students from UW campuses selected&#13;
to participate in a North-South Exchange&#13;
program in which they will attend second&#13;
semester classes at predominantly Negro&#13;
institutions in the South.&#13;
Williams, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul&#13;
M. Williams of 2808 Northwestern Ave.,&#13;
Racine, will attend North Carolina Central&#13;
University at Durham. He plans to take&#13;
courses in business and economics, his&#13;
majors at Parkside, as well as Negro&#13;
history at the Carolina school. Academic&#13;
credits acquired during the exchange&#13;
semester are transferable to the students'&#13;
"home" campus.&#13;
He was selected for the program on the&#13;
basis of a written application and a personal&#13;
interview with a selection committee&#13;
including UWP faculty members,&#13;
representatives of the Student Affairs&#13;
Office and three students, Mary Johnson&#13;
and James Croxford of Kenosha, who were&#13;
selected for the program last year, and&#13;
Pat Spring, who was one of four Racine&#13;
students who participated in the 1968&#13;
exchange.&#13;
Williams, an Air Force veteran, said he&#13;
is looking forward to returning to North&#13;
Carolina, where he worked with retarded&#13;
children as a psychiatric aide before&#13;
deciding to complete his education.&#13;
Sponsors say the program is designed as&#13;
both an inter-racial and inter-cultural&#13;
experience intended to expand students'&#13;
personal horizons, stimulate intellectual&#13;
growth and afford individual students an&#13;
opportunity to contribute in a personal&#13;
way to solution of major contemporary&#13;
problems.&#13;
Miss Racine&#13;
Pageant&#13;
February 1&#13;
Is the next Miss Racine a student ai&#13;
Parkside? Maybe. If you are between the&#13;
ages of 18 and 28 and single, you might be&#13;
the next Miss Racine. Sound interesting?&#13;
Well, if you want to find out more about it,&#13;
why not attent the Miss America Tea thai&#13;
will be held Feb. 1st at 2 p.m. at the&#13;
Johnsons Wax cafeteria. The guests at the&#13;
tea will include Miss Racine for 1969,&#13;
Karen Fitzgerald, the producer and&#13;
director for this year, Mrs. Mary Lou&#13;
Gross, the mayor of the city, Kenneth&#13;
Huck, the executive chairman for this&#13;
year's pageant, Mr. John Dolister, and the&#13;
field representative for the Miss Wisconsin&#13;
pageant, Mr. Larry Stein. The purpose of&#13;
the tea is to acquaint all interested girls&#13;
with the Miss Racine pageant that will be&#13;
held April 18th and what is involved in&#13;
putting on the pageant along with all the&#13;
benefits to both the girls in the pageant and&#13;
to the city. Part of the show will be&#13;
seen April 18th will be performed at the&#13;
tea. Interested girls who can't make the&#13;
tea are invited to attend the first rehearsal&#13;
on Feb. 4th at 7:30 p.m. at theV.F.W. Club&#13;
in Racine which is located on Main St.&#13;
The M.C. for this year's tea is Mr. Allen&#13;
Moore, who is program director at WRAC&#13;
AM and FM.&#13;
Library Threatens&#13;
—Take N ote&#13;
Students who have lost books or incurred&#13;
library fines totaling $5 or more have until&#13;
January 24 to improve their standing with&#13;
the Library. Thereafter their case will be&#13;
brought to the attention of the bursar and&#13;
their grades or transcripts to other institutions&#13;
will be held up until their affairs&#13;
are regularized. A book is considered lost&#13;
when it is more than two months overdue&#13;
(i.e., from November 15). Other students&#13;
whose shortcomings with respect to the&#13;
Library are less drastic are earnestly&#13;
requested to bring back overdue materials&#13;
and pay their fines by January 24 in order&#13;
that the records may be cleared up. When&#13;
materials continue to be overdue and fines&#13;
remain unpaid, borrowing privileges may&#13;
be withdrawn.&#13;
University Students&#13;
Challenge Business World&#13;
Five UW students recently appeared on&#13;
a panel before a group of Madison industrial&#13;
writers to give their views on the&#13;
world of business they soon will join. This&#13;
candid observation of society provides the&#13;
cover story in the January issue of&#13;
Wisconsin Alumnus magazine.&#13;
The establishment took some knocks,&#13;
but it also received praise. Their views&#13;
concerning the free enterprise system;&#13;
protest; reactionary legislation against&#13;
the university; and their opinions of the&#13;
student's image in the media provide an&#13;
interesting examination of attitudes in the&#13;
"now" generation.&#13;
The panel included: Elizabeth Allen, a&#13;
senior in journalism from Chippewa Falls;&#13;
James Jorgensen, a senior business major&#13;
from Racine; Pat Korten, a senior in&#13;
political science from Thiensville, and&#13;
editor of a campus newspaper, the Badger&#13;
Herald; Steve Reiner, a senior history&#13;
major from New York City and editor of&#13;
the Daily Cardinal; and Jay Walters, a&#13;
senior in nuclear engineering from&#13;
Wausau. Here are some of their views.&#13;
On Protest. Reiner, who jokingly&#13;
described himself as an out-of-state&#13;
agitator, said: "I don't agree that protest&#13;
is negative. I think that many of the&#13;
elements of student protest are really&#13;
concerned with saving some of our basic&#13;
liberties instead of trying to destroy facets&#13;
of American life. But many of the&#13;
government's activities and policies&#13;
within the last several years, in many&#13;
peoples' minds, run counter to the&#13;
freedoms, enunciated when our country&#13;
was being started."&#13;
Walters confirmed: "When 15,000 people&#13;
march on the capitol in Madison in a very&#13;
cold rain to protest the war in Vietnam,&#13;
they aren't saying that they get a big kick&#13;
out of walking in the rain and being antiAmerican.&#13;
They're saying that maybe this&#13;
war is hurting us... It's a very bad thing, I&#13;
think, when people high in the government&#13;
equate protest with anti-Americanism,&#13;
because it can be one of the most constructive&#13;
things that this country is ever&#13;
going to see." ..«»«• „&#13;
On Business. Jorgensen said: To turn&#13;
me on I've got to have a company who s&#13;
not going to be penny-pinching from the&#13;
moment I start interviewing with them.&#13;
Reiner said: "I've got to have a job of&#13;
which I can be proud, in which I can see&#13;
results- and one in which I can have&#13;
responsibility." Kroten added: "Don't put&#13;
so much concentration on wages that you&#13;
exclude the qualities of the job you're&#13;
offering us." ...&#13;
On government and industry. Jorgensen:&#13;
"It's ridiculous that every time&#13;
business does something it's because they&#13;
got pushed into it. You open the hood of&#13;
your new car now, and oh! you've got&#13;
instructions on how your new antipollution&#13;
device works. But they didn't&#13;
want to put it there; somebody forced&#13;
them."&#13;
Walters: "Technical progress is not a&#13;
benefit in and of itself: it must serve as a&#13;
means to a better life. A more efficient&#13;
power source is not of good in itself if it is&#13;
going to further pollute the atmosphere;&#13;
nor is a new superhighway if it destroys a&#13;
thousand acres of virgin forestland."&#13;
On students' image in the press. Miss&#13;
Allen: "In school, we're taught to be very&#13;
idealistic. You write things the way you&#13;
see them. During the welfare protestors&#13;
take over of the legislature last fall, I saw&#13;
faults on both sides. I wrote it as I s aw it&#13;
for (a state newspaper) and it was edited&#13;
out. It's one of those things that the&#13;
younger generation will have to cope with .&#13;
. . you can't condemn."&#13;
Jorgensen: "The only time that the&#13;
university gets on Walter Cronkite is when&#13;
the tear gas bomb goes off behind Bascom&#13;
hall. So what do you expect people to think&#13;
of Wisconsin? I don't blame the news&#13;
media, because how many papers are you&#13;
going to sell with the headline, '35,000&#13;
students go to class today'?"&#13;
Reiner: "The whipping boy (for the&#13;
state) is the university, and the university's&#13;
whipping boy is the student&#13;
protestors."&#13;
Korten: "The press can tell the whole&#13;
stor y , but p e o p le w i l l o n ly rea d part of it. .&#13;
. People's built-in prejudices, if they are&#13;
strong enough, will override what's&#13;
written."&#13;
On reactionary legislation against the&#13;
university. Reiner observed: "I think it's a&#13;
very easy cop-out to say — 'If you're going&#13;
to demonstrate, if you're going to be activists,&#13;
you're going to cause this rightwing&#13;
reaction and you deserve it.' Yes,&#13;
these measures were caused to a great&#13;
degree by student activism . . . I don't&#13;
think that activism is a just cause of these&#13;
measures, nor do I think that's a reason to&#13;
forbit it — just because you're going to&#13;
have people who are going to over react."&#13;
Korten: "I think there are altogether too&#13;
many students at the university who&#13;
consider themselves experts on&#13;
everything; who make decisions which&#13;
never give consideration to some of the&#13;
more serious consequences; which pay no&#13;
attention to responsibility."&#13;
Wisconsin Alumnus magazine is a&#13;
monthly publication of the 30,000 members&#13;
of the UW (Madison campus) alumni&#13;
association. &#13;
Humanities Division Announces New Courses&#13;
The Humanities division will be offering&#13;
several new eourses which are of an interdisciplinary&#13;
or an innovalional nature.&#13;
The Art faculty is currently considering&#13;
adding a course in photography to its&#13;
program and in the meantime will exIHTiment&#13;
with a limited amount of&#13;
photography work in section 2 of its 222&#13;
course, "Two Dimensional Visual Art".&#13;
And Mr. Hol/.bog will again offer his&#13;
"Modern Man and His Visual Knvironment"&#13;
course.&#13;
Communications has devised a new&#13;
course entitled "American Rhetorical,&#13;
Movements: Revolutions, Campaigns,&#13;
Confrontations." Taught by Dr. Hemmcr,&#13;
the course will look at the role public&#13;
addresses have played in selected&#13;
American controversies and will provide&#13;
practice in analyzing rhetorical&#13;
movements. In addition, two drama&#13;
courses in the English listings will be offered&#13;
from the perspective of Communications&#13;
instructors. Dr. Rintz will be&#13;
teaching Knglish 205: '^Restoration and&#13;
18th Century Drama", while Miss Baxter&#13;
will offer Knglish 415, a course in 20th&#13;
Century Drama, particularly Kuropean&#13;
drama.&#13;
In Knglish, attention has to be called to a&#13;
three credit seminar, mistakenly numbered&#13;
499 in the timetable, for the fact that&#13;
this course is required of all English&#13;
majors was inadvertently omitted from&#13;
the catalog. This semester the seminar&#13;
will lx&gt; con ducted by Mr. Dean and will"&#13;
concern itself with the problems of&#13;
research and methodology. Since the&#13;
seminar will involve advanced work in&#13;
literature students who enroll in it will&#13;
normally be those who are in their last two&#13;
or three semesters of work. Other English&#13;
courses providing a new or an interdisciplinary&#13;
approach are "History of&#13;
the English Language", to be taught by&#13;
Mr. Dilligan; "Children's Literature";&#13;
and "Darwin and His Cultural Influence",&#13;
offered by Mr. Dean. The Darwin course&#13;
might be of interest to students of other&#13;
divisions as well as Humanities students&#13;
for it will concern itself with biological and&#13;
social thought of the 19th century as well&#13;
as with topics such as racism and imperialism.&#13;
&#13;
The French program includes some new&#13;
literature courses, while flexibility&#13;
remains the keynote of the German offerings.&#13;
In German independent study is&#13;
promoted and students may also earn&#13;
some credit by examination.&#13;
Humanities 200, the first divisional&#13;
course that is not attached to any one&#13;
discipline, will be given this spring. The&#13;
course will cover four periods of American&#13;
cultural history and will look at&#13;
representative paintings, poetry, fiction or&#13;
prose, written history, and aesthetic&#13;
theory in each of the periods, the aim being&#13;
to show how all these arts and disciplines&#13;
had similar concerns in each given period.&#13;
The Music faculty will follow up this&#13;
semester's opera course, which involved&#13;
attending the Chicago Lyric Opera, with a&#13;
symphony course this spring. The course&#13;
number is 106 a nd Miss James is the instructor.&#13;
.&#13;
Philosophy adds several courses to its&#13;
offerings, including one in contemporary&#13;
religious thought, a course which makes&#13;
use of the fact that Mr. Schrader's Harvard&#13;
dissertation was on Paul Tillich.&#13;
And Spanish follows up its course in the&#13;
civilization and culture of Spain with one in&#13;
the civilization and culture of Latin&#13;
America. Mrs. Carrington is the instructor.&#13;
&#13;
Students may also want to know that the&#13;
Humanities Division is compiling a booklet&#13;
of course descriptions to be placed in the&#13;
various Student Affairs offices, the main&#13;
offices of the center buildings, and the&#13;
various libraries. The booklet will list the&#13;
required readings, where applicable, of&#13;
each course.&#13;
Infracurriculum Notes, Springe&#13;
Information about courses&#13;
All of the new courses of all departments&#13;
are being facilitated this quarter through&#13;
SS 222. Seminars on Incubation in&#13;
Education, as follows:&#13;
SS 222a, What Is What? An exploration of&#13;
what this question means personally. (Mr.&#13;
Rogo)&#13;
SS 222b, Sociological Perspectives of&#13;
Phenomenological Ornithology. An&#13;
examination of the most fleeting interrelationships&#13;
in the field. (Mr. Hobird)&#13;
SS 222c, The Physical Properties of&#13;
Spacelessness. A probe of the grave issues&#13;
surrounding what surrounds us. (Mr.&#13;
I)iggsl ro u- • A SS 222(1, The Literature of Symbiosis. An&#13;
interdisciplinary, interpersonal, free-style&#13;
experiment in the Making of Living&#13;
Literature by Living through the Making.&#13;
(Miss Cope)&#13;
SS 222c. T he Experience and Limits of&#13;
Homosexuality as a Potential Educational&#13;
Force. After an initial experiential exploration,&#13;
the course will be arrested. (Dr.&#13;
Bigge)&#13;
SS 222f, U nlearning Workshop. Aims to&#13;
undo hangups. (Mrs. Lethe)&#13;
SS 222g, Body Massage. May earn up to&#13;
10 credits in physical science, depending&#13;
on time and energy. (Miss Proluvies)&#13;
SS 222h, Toward a Radical Analysis of&#13;
Radical Ideologies. This seminar will&#13;
afford ample opportunity for individuals to&#13;
function as individuals in a group action&#13;
setting. (Mr. Radishes)&#13;
Pollution Stressed in&#13;
Science Division Offerings&#13;
The Parkside Science Division is&#13;
planning to offer two courses to students&#13;
this coming semester which will directly&#13;
deal with environmental pollution. The&#13;
courses. Earth Science 103 and Meterology&#13;
440. will be instructed by Professor Hank&#13;
Cole and will focus on Environmental&#13;
Problems. The courses have been broken&#13;
down in order to deal with the following:&#13;
Kiirlli Science 103; Experimental&#13;
Semester. The entire course will center&#13;
around environmental problems such as&#13;
air and water pollution, ecological consequences&#13;
of urban and industrial&#13;
development, pesticides in the environment.&#13;
etc. The course will deal with&#13;
the importance and magnitude of environmental&#13;
problems and seek to explore&#13;
the scientif ic concepts necessary for a full&#13;
appreciation of the problems. The course&#13;
is a five credit lab course. Lab will include&#13;
trips to sewage treatment and water&#13;
treatment plants, power plants, and a&#13;
weekend field trip to Chicago-Gary for a&#13;
guided pollution tour. Each student will be&#13;
required to do a lab project involving local&#13;
environmental problems.&#13;
Meterology 440; Meterology has nothing&#13;
to do with meteorites. It is the study of the&#13;
atmosphere and its motions, weather and&#13;
climate. This semester the course will deal&#13;
Prediction of weather and Air pollution. It&#13;
is hoped the course will provide information&#13;
that will enable the student to&#13;
understand the forces that influence daily&#13;
weather and the fundamental tools used by&#13;
forecasters. Satellite movies and up to the&#13;
"minute" weather maps will be used.&#13;
Secondly, several aspects of air pollution&#13;
will be discussed including sources, effects&#13;
on public health and its relationship to&#13;
atmospheric conditions. Lab projects will&#13;
enable the student to focus on his own&#13;
thing.&#13;
• QUALITY K.&#13;
• SATISFACTION&#13;
• SAVINGS mtm&#13;
ALWAYS&#13;
For You and Your Car&#13;
ROCK A&#13;
BILL'S DEEP ROCK S ERVICE STATION&#13;
2305 Racine 634-9328&#13;
SS 222i, Landmarks of Western&#13;
Degenerature IX: The Dynamic Age and&#13;
Beyond. Rapid reading of suddenly written&#13;
works from a moment ago to the quick&#13;
almost. (Dr. Nunc)&#13;
SS 222 j. Beneath Criticism. An&#13;
examination of the archetypal assumptions&#13;
that underlie all unconscious&#13;
assumptions about consciousness. (Mr.&#13;
Yuk) _&#13;
SS 222k, Level III Seminar: Your Bag Is&#13;
My Bag. Students are invited to do their&#13;
thing. Available for credit in humanities&#13;
and social sciences; also may be used for&#13;
the first-year program and for field credit;&#13;
or may instead even be used for elective&#13;
credit. (Miss Panomnium)&#13;
Student-Initiated Courses (SICs)&#13;
Proposals for full-credit SICs are due not&#13;
later than the end of the quarter in which&#13;
credit has been earned. Proposals for&#13;
reduced-credit SICs (fewer than 5 credits)&#13;
are due promptly after that.&#13;
Study Opportunities at Other Schools&#13;
For students who want to study,&#13;
correspondence courses at any number of&#13;
state universities are as handy as the&#13;
nearest envelope and a 6-cent stamp.&#13;
Level III Seminars&#13;
Level III General Education Seminars in&#13;
spring quarter include the following:&#13;
X 412a, Sad, Sad. Sad&#13;
X 412b, Mad, Mad, Mad&#13;
X 412c, Bad, Bad, Bad&#13;
X 412d, Fad, Fad, Fad&#13;
X 412e, Glad, Glad, Glad&#13;
X 412f, Had, Had, Had&#13;
These six seminars will be given by a&#13;
committee.&#13;
Instructors have the option of limiting&#13;
enrollment in each seminar to 85 students&#13;
each. If a Level III seminar is overenrolled,&#13;
priority will be given to faculty&#13;
wives. The prerequisites to Level III&#13;
General Education Seminars are 4 incomplete&#13;
courses, 8 late withdrawals, 12&#13;
approved petitions for exceptions, not&#13;
more than 1 denied petition, 2 withdrawals,&#13;
3 readmissions, 6 interim&#13;
vacations, and current in absentia status.&#13;
A senior should not register for a seminar&#13;
that has a controlling discipline.&#13;
Seniors may also fulfill their Seminar&#13;
requirement in practically any other way&#13;
they please.&#13;
The Remedial Program in English Prose&#13;
The tutor, Mrs. Duncan, will notify faculty&#13;
members who need to do more work in&#13;
writing and arrange for individual conferences.&#13;
Anyone who has not yet passed&#13;
his English skills examination is required&#13;
to enroll in a course that requires substantial&#13;
writing and to work with the tutor.&#13;
Contracts will not be renewed for people&#13;
who have not satisfied the requirement. lit&#13;
a nomtenured faculty member fails the&#13;
Continuous Writing Check, he is pet&#13;
eligible for tenure until he satisfies, the&#13;
tutor that his writing meets the standards&#13;
of written work. Tenured faculty members&#13;
may not, and therefore do not, fail the&#13;
Continuous Writing Check.&#13;
Students are reminded of their&#13;
obligations to insist on good writing from&#13;
the faculty, to read faculty prose&#13;
critically, and to report any substandard&#13;
writing to the Registrar at the earliest&#13;
opportunity.&#13;
The Remedial Program in Mathematics&#13;
In order to make this program more&#13;
congruent with the increasing deertiphasis&#13;
on proficiency in the exact&#13;
sciences, it is hereby discontinued. '&#13;
—Reprinted from "Antioch Notes" by&#13;
permission of Antioch College.&#13;
LibraryTQulletia&#13;
Important notice&#13;
to social science faculty:&#13;
The Library is now receiving&#13;
CURRENT CONTENTSBEHAVIORAL&#13;
SCIENCES.&#13;
Student employment opportunities:&#13;
(1) at Racine Campus Library, night work&#13;
for a male sophomore or junior;&#13;
(2) at the main Parkside Library desk.&#13;
The n ew Library exhibition is by&#13;
Mrs. Marjorie Richards and&#13;
Mrs. Lois Bergeson of the Catalog Dept.,&#13;
entitled The Age of Aquarius.&#13;
A RUT miaMiiM&#13;
||OMKiCM0 welcome&#13;
» m n mm here&#13;
CHARGE YOUR TEXTS?&#13;
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COLLEGE BOOK MART &amp; welcome&#13;
here&#13;
5811 - 6th Ave. Kenosh a &#13;
It's Brandt's for the Finest in Sound Equipment&#13;
Sony, Panasonic and G.E.&#13;
Record Players, Radios,&#13;
Tape Recorders and TV&#13;
All Records and Tapes at Racine's Lowest Prices Always&#13;
BRANDT'S DISTRIBUTORS&#13;
512 M AliJ ST REET D0WNT01&#13;
0;i I '-i; '.M IS; side nl Mn iuiine.nt Siiuai e DISCOUNT HOUST&#13;
NORTHWESTERN&#13;
TO HOST&#13;
"TEACH-OUT"&#13;
ON ENVIRONMENT&#13;
Students and faculty members from The&#13;
University of Wiseonsin-Parkside and&#13;
Dominican College will join representatives&#13;
from other mid-western schools for&#13;
an all-night "Environmental Teach-Out"&#13;
aimed at exploring some of the major&#13;
ecological issues of t he 70s on Friday, Jan.&#13;
2:5, at Northwestern University, Evanston,&#13;
III.&#13;
The group will travel to the "TeachOut",&#13;
scheduled for 7 p.m. to 6 a.m., by&#13;
charter bus.&#13;
The "Teach-Out" will begin with a series&#13;
of talks on such topics as air and watei&#13;
pollution, the population explosion,&#13;
depreciation of natural resources and&#13;
danger of pesticides by a number ol&#13;
distinguished scientists and politicians.&#13;
Among the speakersj Paul Ehrlich&#13;
nationally-known expert on population and&#13;
author of "The Population Bomb"; Barry&#13;
Commoner, a noted ecologist and an official&#13;
of the St. Louis-based Committee for&#13;
Environmental Information; Illinois&#13;
Attorney General William Scott, Jr., a&#13;
crusader against industrial pollution; and&#13;
Senatorial Candidate Adlai Stevenson, 111,&#13;
who has made environmental factors an&#13;
issue in his campaign.&#13;
Folk singer Tom Paxton will lead an&#13;
environmental sing-out at midnight and a&#13;
series of "crash courses" in environmental&#13;
problems will conclude the&#13;
all-night session.&#13;
According to Roy Bohn, 5137 Birch Creek&#13;
Lane, Racine, Chairman of the newly&#13;
organized Parkside Students for a Clean&#13;
Environment, "We are faced with a crisis&#13;
in which our very survival is at stake. The&#13;
70s must be a decade in which we dedicate&#13;
ourselves to saving the environment which&#13;
we have spent past decades destroying."&#13;
Bohn urged community members,&#13;
teachers and college and high school&#13;
students to attend the Teach-Out. He said&#13;
information on the bus trip, which will be&#13;
supervised by Parkside and Dominican&#13;
faculty members, is available from the&#13;
Main Office at Parkside's Racine Campus.&#13;
Prairie or Tundra?&#13;
FOLLOW RANGER' BASKETBALL ON THE ROAD&#13;
UW-PARKSIDE&#13;
VS.&#13;
UW-GREEN BAY&#13;
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1 4&#13;
Game Time: 1:30 P.M.&#13;
BROWN COUNTY ARENA&#13;
GREEN BAY, WIS.&#13;
Reservation Deadline Feb. 11 — St udent Affairs Office — All Campuses&#13;
Business as Usual fo r C CC Up Your F ees?&#13;
University of Wisconsin administration&#13;
reports tuition and fees will probably go up&#13;
again in 1970-71, possibly to $469 for state&#13;
residents and $1,884 for non residents.&#13;
SPECI AL B O OST ER BUS&#13;
Leaves Tallent Hall at 9:30 A.M.&#13;
Round Trip: Just $2.00&#13;
Game Adm: $1.00 a t the Door&#13;
At the December meeting of the Campus&#13;
Concerns Committee (CCC) some of the&#13;
topics for discussion were replacing Bob&#13;
Manley (student) on CCC because of his&#13;
inactivity, recognition of clubs and&#13;
organizations, careful examination of the&#13;
Collegian's financial standing, attempts to&#13;
set policy as to the activities of clubs and&#13;
organizations, setting up "written"&#13;
communications with all organizations&#13;
and appointing a liaison to the faculty&#13;
senate.&#13;
The chairman, Philip Simpson (Political&#13;
Science), called the meeting to order at&#13;
4:00 p.m. Reading and correction of the&#13;
minutes followed.&#13;
Dr. Esser's (Life Science) status as a&#13;
faculty member was discussed and he was&#13;
pardoned -for not attending any of the&#13;
previous meetings for excuses presented.&#13;
Bob Manley, one of the five sflidents&#13;
representing the 3,000 students at&#13;
Parkside, has not attended any of this&#13;
year's CCC meetings. The possibilities of a&#13;
replacement were talked over and a letter&#13;
was to be sent to the Chancellor asking for&#13;
a replacement.&#13;
Subcommittee report from Dr. James&#13;
Brokaw (Psychology) included the&#13;
following organizations . . . the Vietnam&#13;
Moratorium Committee, the only club&#13;
fulfilling "satisfactory" requirements and&#13;
recommended for immediate passage.&#13;
The other clubs, including The Collegian,&#13;
Black Student Union, Film Society, Young&#13;
Dems, Jewish Student Union, and The&#13;
Committee all lacked a "complete source&#13;
of funds statement." The young Dems and&#13;
Jewish Student Union also lacked a consituation&#13;
or statement of parliamentary&#13;
procedure.&#13;
, Brokaw made a motion that . . . "We&#13;
accept all clubs contingent upon fulfilling&#13;
satisfactory, forms." The motion failed&#13;
tyith the vote of 6 -3. This motion led into a&#13;
discussion of the inadequate forms clubs&#13;
have to file for recognition ^ mothing was&#13;
decided.&#13;
Gerald Musich (English) then proposed&#13;
formal recognition of Vietnam&#13;
Moratorium Committee which was passed&#13;
unanimously.&#13;
; The Film Society's funds were discussed&#13;
and found to be adequate and they also&#13;
were passed unanimously.&#13;
Next up for discussion was The Committee.&#13;
Their source of funds were&#13;
questioned because of their statement of&#13;
"selling papers for a nickel." Chairman&#13;
Simpson said "they are a casual&#13;
organization" and have no need to have a&#13;
complex bookkeeping system. They were&#13;
passed for recognition unanimously.&#13;
Musich then asked "Can The Committee&#13;
Put out the Nickel Bag" since it was not&#13;
stated in the purpose of the organization.&#13;
Steve Stevens (Physical Education)&#13;
answered, "Leave the ' guidelines&#13;
loose." ...&#13;
Stevens then proposed a statement of&#13;
purpose stating that . . . "recognition of&#13;
student organizations'gives them broad&#13;
relative powers to conduct business unless&#13;
an issue is raised with this committee&#13;
(CCC)."&#13;
Musich questioned the constitutionality&#13;
and Bill Niebuhr (Student Affairs) said&#13;
they should stick close to the organizations&#13;
statement of purpose. The motion was&#13;
defeated 7-2.&#13;
Musich is to phrase a resolution in&#13;
regard to the scope of structures for&#13;
student organizations.&#13;
The Collegian was entertained for&#13;
recognition by Chairman Simpson.&#13;
Stevens moved and Joseph Hemmer&#13;
(Communications) seconded the motion.&#13;
The question of The Collegian's funds and&#13;
constitution were raised. A spokesman for&#13;
the Collegian answered all' questions.&#13;
Continued provisional recognition was&#13;
given until the next meeting. &#13;
E D I T O R I A L S&#13;
Excuses, Excuses, Excuses&#13;
In an age of modern transportation, speedy communications, and intradepartmental&#13;
mail, one cannot help but wonder why Parkside is always late.&#13;
First students had to put up with the absence of their catalogue, then it was the&#13;
inconvenience of not having a telephone directory; Madison received theirs&#13;
later and Milwaukee got theirs sooner.&#13;
Congratulations are now to be given — or rather, should it be Laugh-In s&#13;
"Flying Fickel Finger of Fate" award — to the group of people lor their superquick&#13;
job of placing class schedule into the hands of the students.&#13;
Before we go on, let's take a look at some of the problems encountered in&#13;
the production of our newly arrived schedule. .&#13;
First-, our faculty failed to turn in their parts of the information which&#13;
concerned the offering of classes and who will be teaching them. Give out witn&#13;
one finger.&#13;
Second, Mr. Vogt who is our administrator in charge of facilities avocation,&#13;
unfortunately is the only man with the knowledge concerning which&#13;
class gets what space. Mr. Vogt took ill and the timetable was delayed another&#13;
three days. Excused.&#13;
Third, the timetable was not delivered to the print shop until the day&#13;
before Christmas vacation, and, since the printer is known not to work on&#13;
holidays, we the students come up with another week of delays. There are two&#13;
fingers given out.&#13;
Fourth, and hold on to your hats for this one, when it was finally finished&#13;
we experienced another delay when the people in the mail room refused to&#13;
work on stapling together the schedule because they didn't have an electric&#13;
stapler to use. I think two fingers for each employee is in order here.&#13;
Finally, congratulations to you the student for showing your patience in&#13;
waiting for your timetable and good luck to you with your registration and the&#13;
coming semester.&#13;
The final score: four fingers, one congratulation and one excuse.&#13;
Under the Plastic Dome&#13;
—Fred Hampton&#13;
"The successful revolutionary is a statesman, the unsuccessful one a&#13;
criminal." (Erich Fromm, Escape From Freedom, p. 285) The present&#13;
statesmen of the U. $. A. continue their genocide against the Black Panther&#13;
Party and Black people in general. Our future statesmen are continually&#13;
murdered in cold blood by those who will one day be known as our criminals.&#13;
From the latter group, Mitchell, Daley and company seem to have&#13;
borrowed a phrase from the oil companies (for which they stand) by extending&#13;
the no-knock privilege to narcs and other gestapo members. I know all about&#13;
the search warrant from Herr Judge, but, who appointed Herr Judge? or got&#13;
him elected? Yes, they used high octane ammunition super chareed with&#13;
blackmanhate for greater accuracy. The assassins were probably&#13;
reprimanded later about the eight who stayed alive. Just one more chapter in&#13;
the great American RMN-"lower our voices" dialogue. Perhaps they used&#13;
silencers to adhere to the policy of quietness. This policy is nothing new to&#13;
white America. A racist wants you to lower your voice so he doesn't have to&#13;
hear about his victims. An imperialist says arm the government against the&#13;
people to keep them quiet (so things don't get too Rocky?). War mongers tell us&#13;
to whisper dissent against war and genocide. Malcolm always did talk about&#13;
confusing the oppressor with the victim. The oppressor has announced to Black&#13;
Panthers that if they continue to talk, then death, the ultimate repression, will&#13;
be imposed. So, Pig Nation answered once again the cry of liberation and&#13;
justice with the most frequent recourse — the rebuttal of Rat-tat-tat-tat.&#13;
John Brown went down as a madman for being responsible for the deaths&#13;
of six men. Lincoln was responsible for one-hundred thousand times that&#13;
number and became a folk hero. People even like Muskie because he looks like&#13;
Lincoln. The army might get Lt. Calley for the crimes they committed. It's&#13;
even possible that the hertchmen who did the recent job in Chicago might have&#13;
punishment exacted against them; in order to exculpate the greater guilty&#13;
group.&#13;
Most of the witnesses at the conspiracy trial were government infiltrators&#13;
while our allies were being prosecuted. It's important to keep&#13;
cognizant of who the real conspiracy was and is, when our turn as statesmen&#13;
comes up.&#13;
The assassination of Fred Hampton made me ever more aware of my&#13;
white skin privilege; I felt more than ever that if I were black it very possibly&#13;
could have been me. I got sick thinking about how apart we are when ft is so&#13;
crucial now to be together to stop the slavery and murder called law and order.&#13;
Bickering and factionalism provides nourishment for the reactionary mentality&#13;
that wants us to turn against one another, who further isolate black&#13;
people from white people by implementing different systems of punishment for&#13;
black and white radicals. The vast right wing is kicking, killing, and incarcerating&#13;
us while we're bickering with each other over various degrees of&#13;
revolutionary purity.. Aren't we helping to lengthen the time that Bobby Seale&#13;
Huey Newton and John Sinclair have to stay in jail, by wasting our time&#13;
lighting among ourselves. Face it, we're too weak to be so divided The&#13;
coalition forged (albeit imposed on them) by the Conspiracy 8 in Chicago&#13;
should be a model for all of us. They know that an enemy of your enemv can&#13;
easily be your ally, even potential comrade. Could anyone imagine'Tom&#13;
Jay den standing up and telling Bobby Seale that his demands to defend himself&#13;
vvere essentially reformist? If the Conspiracy could win by popular demand&#13;
and Conspiracy-like coalitions could be made permanent, then racism and&#13;
imperialism better start to run (or hide in an oil well). Reactionaries feed on&#13;
our antagonisms as a minimum daily requirement nutrient. We have to make&#13;
them suiter this peculiar malnutrition so they can no longer get awav with&#13;
murdor. (Reprinted from Daily Cardinal)&#13;
Art Show??&#13;
The staff of The Collegian feels strongly that Tallent Hall should reverse its&#13;
sis:? sssr ,ho ah dopar,mc,it ,,ui -&#13;
(&gt;t&#13;
£&#13;
This should be done for several reasons: First. Greenquist is. of course eentralb&#13;
X'' i'X™'work'*' ° """""""" "&#13;
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.end * haVi&#13;
"&#13;
S ,0 '•»&gt;' * •*** «» a!&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
COLLEGIAN r&#13;
Volume I - No. 6&#13;
2G Janu ary 19G9&#13;
Perry Michalos&#13;
Editor-in Chief • Greg Emery&#13;
News Editor Borchardt&#13;
Feature Editor ' " Helen Schumacher&#13;
Sports Editor * * Marc Co„&#13;
Business Manager Nell H '&#13;
Chief Photographer Margie Noer&#13;
Production Manager John Jollcuer&#13;
Accountant Mr&gt; John p&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Published every two weeks by the students of the University of WisconsinParkside;&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin, 53140. J^COLLEGu)?^'"&#13;
cartoons, and articles are not necessarily those of THE COLLEGIAN stall,&#13;
the University of Wtsconsin-Parkslde, Its faculty, administrators, or students.&#13;
Working College Students&#13;
Still E xpected To Do Chores&#13;
By Dr. Joyce Brothers&#13;
Reprinted with permission from the&#13;
Kenosha News.&#13;
Dear Dr. Brothers: I am 19 and a&#13;
sophomore at a local college. 1 have to live&#13;
at home to save money and also have a&#13;
part-time job. I am the oldest of four&#13;
children so I have always helped a lot&#13;
around the house. Buy my mother can't&#13;
seem to understand that I must spend a lot&#13;
of time studying now. She says I'm not&#13;
helping enough and makes a fuss if I'm&#13;
late getting back from school. I'm a&#13;
nervous wreck with all this fighting and&#13;
bickering. — A.M.&#13;
Basic Difficulties&#13;
Dear Miss M.: While being able to live at&#13;
home may mean the difference between&#13;
college or no college, the commuter&#13;
college student has to cope \yith certain&#13;
disadvantages.&#13;
Making friends and becoming involved&#13;
in college life requires deliberate effort&#13;
Resident students have the advantages of&#13;
time and proximity; they are simply&#13;
together more in the dormitories, in the&#13;
dining halls or in the study areas.&#13;
Even if the commuting student is able to&#13;
make friends and participate in college&#13;
activities, she must return home to her&#13;
family every night. She is still regarded as&#13;
a family member and expected to participate&#13;
in family activities and help with&#13;
with the chores. Her parents are likely to&#13;
continue to take an active interest in her&#13;
health, her friends, the way she spends her&#13;
money, where she goes, and her bedtime.&#13;
The resident student is removed from&#13;
this solicitousness. Although initially the&#13;
parents may try to exert control and influence&#13;
to the same extent that they did&#13;
when she lived at home, eventually they&#13;
become resigned to her new independence.&#13;
Break for the better&#13;
The commuter student passes from high&#13;
school to college without any symbolic&#13;
change in status. The child who goes awav&#13;
to college is fortunate in that his or her&#13;
departure is a definite, understandable&#13;
break with the home.&#13;
The commuter student must continue to&#13;
struggle for independence and self identity&#13;
within the confining bonds of the family&#13;
life. Usually, she receives all or part of h is&#13;
financial support from her parents, in&#13;
frequent, small doles. The student away&#13;
from her home may be equally financially&#13;
dependent on parents, but distance makes&#13;
the tie of wallet to outstretched hand less&#13;
obvious.&#13;
Parents who have never attended&#13;
college may have trouble realizing the&#13;
pressures that are on the commuting&#13;
college student. They may be upset if the&#13;
student seems to be developing attitudes&#13;
different than their own.&#13;
They may question the value of&#13;
education. They may find it hard to believe&#13;
that their child is "working" when he is&#13;
reading a novel for a literature course.&#13;
Mother May Feel Resentment&#13;
More basically, there may be an unconscious&#13;
resentment of the child. Even&#13;
though the parents may admit the importance&#13;
of a college education for the&#13;
child's future, they may emotionally feel&#13;
rejected and slighted by the child's&#13;
willingness to pass them by as models for&#13;
adulthood.&#13;
Your mother may have ambivalent&#13;
feelings about your opportunities. She may&#13;
dislike the thought that you are going to be&#13;
better than she. better in the sense of more&#13;
educated. While she is stuck with the&#13;
responsibilities of a house and family, you&#13;
are preparing to leave her world.&#13;
This envy may be partly the cause of the&#13;
friction between you and her. It is natural&#13;
for there to be some tension between a&#13;
mother and her maturing daughter; your&#13;
current situation has probably&#13;
exaggerated this tension.&#13;
Experienced&#13;
Key Punch Operator&#13;
Part time for students&#13;
Salary $2.00 per hour and u&#13;
Cont act:&#13;
Dr . L eon A p pl eb aum&#13;
319 Greenquist Hall E x t. 3&#13;
Have an Ear for News?&#13;
We C an U s e You!&#13;
COLLEGIAN&#13;
Room 109, Ex t. 2 4 , Konosh &#13;
First Semester at Parkside&#13;
As a final examination an instructor in&#13;
the English faculty gave his freshman&#13;
class a "self-examination". He asked&#13;
them to write personal letters in which&#13;
they evaluated their first semester at&#13;
Parkside and discussed how the experience&#13;
has affected them. Here are some&#13;
excerpts from their letters:&#13;
Dear Sir,&#13;
First of all, I would say that Parkside&#13;
exists mainly as a set of buildings and not&#13;
as a coordinated institute of higher learning&#13;
(if that's possible). Putting it simply,&#13;
there's too much apathy. Most students&#13;
seem to regard Parkside as a place where&#13;
you go for five or six hours, three or four&#13;
days a week, and that's it. The school itself&#13;
conducts few, if any, social activities (i.e.,&#13;
dances, mixers, etc.). In fact, there isn't&#13;
even a place where more than 150 to 250&#13;
students can gather at the same time&#13;
unless they get a local gym.&#13;
You've probably heard this before, but&#13;
Parkside is just like a sophisticated high&#13;
school. College life is non-existent. Most&#13;
kids still live with their parents and do the&#13;
same things they did in high school.&#13;
Now I realize that some people are hard&#13;
up for cash and can't go away to school.&#13;
Here the administration should recognize&#13;
the problem and try to deal with it. How&#13;
about building a student union at the&#13;
Parkside Campus? With room for eight to&#13;
ten hundred students, at least the students&#13;
would get together more.&#13;
Another problem is that of student&#13;
government. There just isn't any.&#13;
Anything done about this would be&#13;
beneficial. At least it would start the&#13;
students thinking about this.&#13;
Finally, Racii\e and Kenosha have&#13;
historically been involved in a feud to see&#13;
which is the better of the two. Racine&#13;
points to its larger population. Kenosha&#13;
claims it has less pollution. All this&#13;
haggling can go on and on. But Parkside&#13;
wasn't built for Racine or Kenosha. It was&#13;
built for both together. Students from both&#13;
cities should be able to get together at the&#13;
Parkside Campus and share their experiences&#13;
and feelings, but this can't be&#13;
done because there isn't any room to meet.&#13;
Supposedly, there is going to be a library&#13;
and a fieldhouse built at the Campus, but&#13;
this is still in the talking stage, and apparently&#13;
it will stay that way for five or six&#13;
more years. Apparently we're going to&#13;
continue having a Racine Parkside as well&#13;
as a Kenosha Parkside for a few more&#13;
years.&#13;
There is one positive thing that I can&#13;
honestly say about Parkside. And as you&#13;
can probably figure out. this positive thing&#13;
is completely accidental. Most of the&#13;
teachers here are new. and they haven't&#13;
had a chance to build up t he prejudices and&#13;
hang-ups that many veteran teachers&#13;
have.&#13;
That's just about it. Parkside has to&#13;
increase student participation. Students&#13;
have to become more involved. The only&#13;
ones who'll be able to correct .the present&#13;
situation are the students and administrators&#13;
themselves.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
A.K.&#13;
Dear Sir,&#13;
During this first semester of college I&#13;
have learned that one must open his mind&#13;
to all the world around. This I found is not&#13;
only true about thinking but also the&#13;
natural things that surround us .... I can&#13;
now see things differently. Instead of just&#13;
looking at something, I now try to figure&#13;
out just why and how it got there.&#13;
To my amazement I found out from one&#13;
teacher that it is bad to take a class where&#13;
the teacher just talks and the students just&#13;
sit there and take notes. I had one such&#13;
class. The teacher said that he thinks there&#13;
is a great advantage to the way he teaches.&#13;
I must say, now, as the semester comes to&#13;
a close, I found the first teacher to be right.&#13;
I remember and have learned so much&#13;
more in the classes where the students&#13;
were able to participate . . .&#13;
Yours truly,&#13;
SC.&#13;
Dear Sir,&#13;
... I would like to comment on the way&#13;
that the high school system prepares you&#13;
for college. I don't think that this system&#13;
devotes enough time, or puts enough&#13;
emphasis on college required courses. I&#13;
think a person should be expected to take a&#13;
language, maybe even find out in the&#13;
sophomore year if he wishes to attend&#13;
college, then make it a requirement. This&#13;
would greatly ease the strain on college&#13;
professors. They could use the time spent&#13;
on introductory courses for more advanced&#13;
work ...&#13;
. . . T h e i d e a o f s e t t i n g d e g r e e&#13;
requirements is one qf the best policies&#13;
which the college systems instituted. It&#13;
helps you to evaluate yourself, and to find&#13;
fields other than your major which you can&#13;
explore . . .&#13;
In college, I found more freedom to&#13;
express myself. The rules of college life&#13;
are not as binding as (lie high school&#13;
system. There is more freedom to learn.&#13;
You can feel as though, when you answer,&#13;
you won't be put down. Everyone has the&#13;
right to his own opinion and can express it .&#13;
Sineerelv.&#13;
J. II.&#13;
Dear Sir.&#13;
This first semester has really made me&#13;
think. College is so unlike high school that&#13;
it scares a person at first, until they make&#13;
up their mipds to settle down and work or&#13;
flunk out. There is no one to push ou y along&#13;
land tell you repeatedly you had better&#13;
study. If a person never got anything out of&#13;
college, he at least learns how to think . . .&#13;
Yours&#13;
D.K.&#13;
Dear Sir,&#13;
This, my first semester of college, was&#13;
an enjoyable one. I came here with the&#13;
idea that college was going to be new and&#13;
different. It was new and different, but not&#13;
new and different enough. I can give the&#13;
same old reason why: Parkside is still a&#13;
local college, a glorified high school, the&#13;
same faces, nothing changes, \ believe&#13;
things did change. I changed.&#13;
I became aware. I observed. I learned.&#13;
For the first time I enjoyed learning. I&#13;
became interested in school. I believe this&#13;
is due to the teachers. The difference&#13;
between high school teachers and collegeteachers&#13;
is tremendous. I suppose it's&#13;
because college teachers know what&#13;
they're talking about. __&#13;
One thing that bugged me about this&#13;
school was the students' indifference. That&#13;
again could be due to the fact that&#13;
Parkside is a local college, and, given a&#13;
few years, that feeling will change. Well,&#13;
that's not good enough. Students have to&#13;
start to change or it will never change.&#13;
Some of us guys at school have started a&#13;
fraternity (against the better judgement of&#13;
some people). That might seem insignificant,&#13;
but it's a start. Even if it's a&#13;
failure, it has brought some of the students&#13;
together . . .&#13;
Yours,&#13;
D.B.&#13;
Dear Sir,&#13;
. . . I think the pressures of being in&#13;
college are high, and sometimes they can&#13;
really get a person down. But I think that&#13;
going to a commuter college such as&#13;
Parkside, the pressures are bound to be&#13;
high. Many of our friends are going away&#13;
to school, and you're liv ing at home. Many&#13;
times a part-time job adds a little more&#13;
weight. 1 really think that college&#13;
anywhere will offer a number of pressures&#13;
due to the importance of hard study. But&#13;
living at home adds a few more. ..&#13;
Sineerelv vours.&#13;
' ('.It.&#13;
Dear Sir.&#13;
Since this is my first year of college. I&#13;
guess I am supposed to feel an extreme&#13;
and sharp contrast with high school. The&#13;
classes are better in respect to content and&#13;
approach. By this I mean, not as much&#13;
time is spent on trivial issues, and the&#13;
material is not pounded into your head.&#13;
I do not feel the complete and final break&#13;
with high school yet. Perhaps this is&#13;
lxicause on my way home every day. I pass&#13;
it. Parkside seems to be quite void of a&#13;
campus "atmosphere", but 1 think that&#13;
this will come with time. The thing I have&#13;
enjoyed the most is the freedom. The idea&#13;
of having part of the day free serves as an&#13;
incentive (at least to me) during a long&#13;
class . . .&#13;
Yours,&#13;
W.C.&#13;
Dear Sir.&#13;
Now that first semester is completed, I&#13;
feel that college life, here at Parkside. is&#13;
probably much different from college life&#13;
out of town. A small commuter university,&#13;
such as Parkside, is very limiting. It does&#13;
not enable the students to receive a wide&#13;
range of subjects. 1 don't mean to sound as&#13;
if I think the university is poorly run; I&#13;
understand the college is new and one&#13;
can't expect every type of subject there is.&#13;
There are also many other limitations to&#13;
the student who g«x's to college in his own&#13;
home town. Living at home can always&#13;
cause difficulties because everyone at&#13;
home doesn't realize that the student has a&#13;
lot of studying to do. The parents are&#13;
always hollering because the beds aren't&#13;
made, the dishes aren't washed, the floor&#13;
isn't vacuumed, etc. Also, it's kind ol hard&#13;
if the student puts in eight to twelve hours&#13;
a week at a part-t ime job...&#13;
1 feel that within a few years the&#13;
university will have grown, and Kenosha&#13;
will be booming as a college town.. .&#13;
Sincerely vours,&#13;
P.S.&#13;
THE CA SSETTE REVOL UTION&#13;
By BILL ROLBIECKI&#13;
If you're in the market for a stereo&#13;
system, take time to consider the up&#13;
coming trend; the Stereo CassettQ. For&#13;
those of you who aren't familiar with this&#13;
tape format here's a brief rundown. Instead&#13;
of the standard seven inch reel to&#13;
reel tape recorder, the cassette uses a&#13;
miniaturized version. Two tiny spools of&#13;
tape are housed in a plastic case&#13;
measuring %" by 2M&gt;" by 4"; to visualize,&#13;
two cassettes are equivalent to one&#13;
cigarette pack. In operation you place the&#13;
cassette in the machine, press a button and&#13;
presto! — stereo music. There are some&#13;
interesting facts concerning tape which&#13;
will surprise many of you. Oxide magnetic&#13;
tape is the highest form of stereo fidelity in&#13;
use today. Also, records are originally cut&#13;
from professional tape machines.&#13;
Looking at the record, it has been in&#13;
existence now for over half a century, and&#13;
the way modern technology moves today a&#13;
system fifty years old has just about run&#13;
its course. Of course the buying of a stereo&#13;
system is ultimately your choice.. Bqt to&#13;
notice the real difference between records&#13;
and tapes you have to conduct a serious&#13;
comparison. I've constructed a little&#13;
comparison to help you make your musical&#13;
decision.&#13;
Records are steeped in tradition and&#13;
you've been brought up in a world&#13;
revolving around records. When you were&#13;
a bit younger you probably bought and&#13;
traded 45's, then sat with your portable&#13;
record player and grooved to bubble gum&#13;
music. As you became older you purchased&#13;
a few albums, got a little more&#13;
earnest and have probably arrived where&#13;
you are now. It was also fun to read and&#13;
look at the colorful cover-jackets. So on e&#13;
point for you, you have tradition. But from&#13;
here on in it's all cassette. With a record&#13;
one slip of a finger and you have just&#13;
ruined a $398 record album. Or how about&#13;
those good old records — sort of fuzzy?&#13;
This seldom happens with a cassette. The&#13;
250th play of the cassette will sound just as&#13;
good as the first time you played it, and as&#13;
far as scratching and ruining the tape of&#13;
the cassette is highly improbable, for the&#13;
tape is inclosed in its plastic case, never to&#13;
be touched by human hands; even in its&#13;
production it was never touched. How&#13;
about listening for an extended amount ol&#13;
time? the limit for a record player is six&#13;
record albums stacked on top of each&#13;
other. And saying that each side of a&#13;
record album is twenty minutes in length,&#13;
it is possible to listen to two hours of&#13;
uninterrupted music. But if you wish to&#13;
play the other side of the record albums&#13;
you would have to get up and turn over the&#13;
record every twenty minutes . Now, with a&#13;
cassette it is possible to play up to twelve&#13;
hours of uninterrupted music, that's both&#13;
sides of twenty albums without touching&#13;
the machine. To some people this feature&#13;
doesn't hold much weight. But for entertaining&#13;
guests at a party or simply for&#13;
hours of uninterrupted background music&#13;
the cassette is ideal and cannot be&#13;
overrated. Of course the price of all the&#13;
units themselves are ranging in prices as&#13;
record player units, but the cassettes&#13;
themselves are much cheaper. The 90&#13;
minute cassette costs about $2.50, that s&#13;
two albums worth of music. This works out&#13;
to one-third the cost per record album. As&#13;
far as sound quality, I challenge anyone to&#13;
let me hear the difference.&#13;
NOW&#13;
[_ [T'S THE&#13;
haparral&#13;
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2 Miles South of Highway 50&#13;
West Frontage Road of 1-94&#13;
n&#13;
COMPUTE-A-DATE&#13;
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computer dating service.&#13;
For forms Write: 312 E. Wisconsin Ave.,&#13;
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Call 414-271-8311&#13;
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581 1 - 6th Ave. Kenosha &#13;
TE N W H EEL D RIVE . . .&#13;
By BOB BORCHARDT&#13;
and RICH KIENITZ&#13;
In light of our last review, or "Grand&#13;
Funk Railroad," which no doubt shocked&#13;
the musical world and sent the group's&#13;
members into exile somewhere in the&#13;
jungles of South America, it seems appropriate&#13;
that we now repair the damage&#13;
done to the recording industry and,&#13;
through the massive circulation of this&#13;
paper, shoot them straight Jo the top of the&#13;
roekpile. So be it.&#13;
Ten Wheel Drive is a study at both ends&#13;
of a spectrum. It ranges from screaming&#13;
sledgehammer choruses to verses phrased&#13;
like a cat walking over broken glass. One&#13;
minute they can be playing a "Turn-thatthing-down-you'll-be-deaf-before-you'retwenty,"&#13;
type arrangement, complete&#13;
with five big horns moving everything&#13;
along, and in the next cut switch to a&#13;
beautifully articulate and sensitive neoclassical&#13;
both done with equal artistry.&#13;
Two elements of the group stand out on&#13;
the album, the combination of the two&#13;
allowing them their high degree of versatility.&#13;
One is the horn section (bone,&#13;
three trumpets and alto) which equals that&#13;
of any rock group out, including BS&amp;T and&#13;
Chicago; the other is the voice of Genya&#13;
Ravan, which very prophetically speaks&#13;
for itself. Upon hearing Miss Ravan, the&#13;
first thing that comes to mind is the obviously&#13;
and seemingly invited comparison&#13;
to Joplin; and while there is only one&#13;
Janis, Miss Ravan is remarkably close to&#13;
her in style. She whispers, builds, shouts,&#13;
screams, soars and falls, and she pulls you&#13;
right along with her, every inch. No tricks.&#13;
Nothing superfancy. Just straightforward,&#13;
honest emotion. Good. c&#13;
'ff&#13;
n ra&#13;
.&#13;
Un'^&#13;
Listen to something like ''&#13;
T,g ™?&#13;
e&#13;
'than a&#13;
she can sing like that for more than a&#13;
minute borders on niasoch&#13;
'&#13;
s&#13;
.™\ t ever&#13;
The horns are five of the best tnai i&#13;
paid union dues. Individually °&#13;
ut&#13;
some impressive improvisation -&#13;
something that is sorely lacking in othe&#13;
brass sections except f°&#13;
r&#13;
.&#13;
of cOU^e&#13;
e&#13;
'&#13;
Lipsius &amp; Co. But it is as a scction that they&#13;
reach their peak. I suppose it is someth ng&#13;
about the whole being greater than the&#13;
sum of its parts, but whatever it is, there s&#13;
a certain X factor that keeps hem&#13;
together from 6-8 t o 5-4, n ever losing the&#13;
smallest part'of a 64th notj Maybe that s&#13;
what professionalism is. They re at home&#13;
with anything from funky bump-and-gnnd&#13;
to artistic chorales, and it's good to see&#13;
these guys get some recognition for it.&#13;
So if you've got four bucks lying around,&#13;
and you already have found out that the&#13;
new Beatle album is cancelled. Ten Wheel&#13;
Drive is a pretty good investment. And it&#13;
you have even more bread you can drive to&#13;
Chicago and hear them at Lollies at the&#13;
end of the month, which would also prove&#13;
worthwhile.&#13;
Publishes Book&#13;
Professor Robert J. Dilligan, a member&#13;
of the English faculty at The University of&#13;
Wisconsin • P arkside. is senior author of a&#13;
book, "A Concordance to the English&#13;
Poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins," just&#13;
published by The University of W iscoasin&#13;
Press.&#13;
Associate author of the volume is&#13;
Professor Todd K. Bender of the UWMadison&#13;
English department.&#13;
The book is a computer-aided concordance&#13;
(an alphabetical list of all the&#13;
important words of a book or author, with&#13;
references to the passage in which they&#13;
occur) of Hopkins, a Victorian poet and&#13;
Jesuit priest. The British poet, who lived&#13;
from 1844 to 1889. is often regarded as the&#13;
first modern poet and is cited for his influence&#13;
on such later poets as Eliot and&#13;
Pound.&#13;
Dilligan, whose special fields of interest&#13;
arc Victorian and romantic literature, also&#13;
used a computer in preparation of his UW&#13;
doctoral dissertation, a computer-aided&#13;
analysis of poetic meter.&#13;
Dilligan joined the Parkside faculty last&#13;
fall. Prior to his doctoral studies, he was&#13;
on the faculty of Mary Washington College&#13;
of the University of Virginia.&#13;
Ed Borchardt&#13;
Faculty Profile: Loren Hein&#13;
Although Mr. Hein does not believe in&#13;
astrology at all, he would be surprised at&#13;
the similarities between himself and his&#13;
sign, Aries. (Even I w as surprised I wa s&#13;
sure he was a Gemini). The two main&#13;
qualities of Aries, the Ram, are persistence&#13;
and a violent temper. This temper&#13;
has Ix'on forged into what Dostoevski once&#13;
called, "the chill razor's edge of reason."&#13;
Both the above qualities have played a&#13;
great part in his career as a fencer and as&#13;
a mathematician.&#13;
Better known as a fencer, Mr. Hein is a&#13;
highly qualified instructor of mathematics&#13;
and attended such schools as Milton&#13;
College, Knox College, and the University&#13;
of Missouri. His introduction to fencing&#13;
came while he was teaching at St. John's&#13;
Military Academy, when lie agreed to be&#13;
the faculty supervisor to a group of boys&#13;
who wanted to start a fencing club. Of the&#13;
80 boys who started out, only a handful&#13;
stayed with it through the year. Mr. Hein&#13;
proved to be an able student. After fencing&#13;
only two years he was able to place eighth&#13;
out of 86 contestants in a Midwestern&#13;
tournament. The shock of this good news&#13;
may have proved too much for his instructor,&#13;
who had a fatal heart attack that&#13;
night.&#13;
When I a sked Mr. Hein why people took&#13;
up fencing, he told me that its long history&#13;
and great difficulty give it snob appeal.&#13;
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POLLUTION&#13;
By Doug La Follette&#13;
In the name of progress, man has&#13;
poisoned his planet. There's no question&#13;
now that this is true. The only question is:&#13;
can we stop before it's too late.&#13;
All across the world, from the smokefilled&#13;
air of cities like Milwaukee, dying&#13;
lakes like Erie, ana once lovely streams&#13;
like the Rock River, pollution is&#13;
everywhere destroying our environment&#13;
with smoke, sewage, smog, detergents and&#13;
noise, together forming one of the greatest&#13;
problems of our age — the pollution of our&#13;
planet. With indifference we have been&#13;
dumping waste into our rivers and lakes,&#13;
fouling the air we breathe, damaging the&#13;
soil, and disregarding the severely limited&#13;
natural resources of man.&#13;
There is a very faint ray of optimism in&#13;
the entire problem. It appears that many&#13;
Americans are beginning to wake up from&#13;
their unconcerned attitudes toward&#13;
pollution. A recent Gallup Poll indicated&#13;
that almost 75 p er cent of the American&#13;
people would be willing to pay higher taxes&#13;
to fight the pollution battles. Most&#13;
everyone talked to considered air and&#13;
water pollution a major United States&#13;
problem that must be combatted now.&#13;
Pollution takes many forms and has&#13;
many names. Some of the most important&#13;
are air pollution, water pollution, solid&#13;
waste disposal, thermal pollution, and&#13;
noise pollution.&#13;
There is no wav to escape the presence&#13;
of air pollution. Each one of us breathes&#13;
polluted air, thirty-five pounds per day,&#13;
which causes serious damage to our&#13;
respiratory system. Day after day the thin&#13;
layer of air that surrounds our earth is&#13;
mixed with smoke and soot from tens of&#13;
thousands of industrial smokestacks and&#13;
incinerators, and with the deadly fumes&#13;
from millions of automobiles, busses and&#13;
trucks, spewing exhaust and lead particles&#13;
into the air. Sixty per cent of all air&#13;
pollution comes from motor vehicles&#13;
alone. At the present time there are 110&#13;
million exhaust pipes spewing 500,000 tons&#13;
of contamination into the air each day. In&#13;
1965 the Public Health Service reported air&#13;
pollution to be a major health hazard in 300&#13;
American cities where 43 m illion people&#13;
live. There are, for example, twice as&#13;
many deaths from lung cancer in&#13;
metropolitan cities than in rural areas.&#13;
Living in cities can be equated to smoking&#13;
a certain number of cigarettes per day.&#13;
For example, living in Detroit, Michigan,&#13;
is equivalent to smoking 37 cigarettes a&#13;
day, in Birmingham, Alabama, equivalent&#13;
to 50 in one day. The breathing of all this&#13;
polluted air in our environment can be&#13;
directly related to the serious increase in&#13;
lung cnacer and heart failure, another of&#13;
our major medical problems. Solving our&#13;
air pollution problems is going to be expensive.&#13;
Estimates made recently indicate&#13;
that three billion dollars per year will have&#13;
to be invested in the next decade to put air&#13;
pollution on a manageable basis. That's&#13;
not an unrealistic figure, but we must do it&#13;
— Now. However, in contrast, last year the&#13;
United States government only spent 85&#13;
million dollars on appropriations to get rid&#13;
of air pollution. At the same time we spent&#13;
350 million dollars to discover new* methods&#13;
for chemical and biological warfare.&#13;
This is a serious example of one of our&#13;
misplaced priorities at the present time.&#13;
People living close to Lake Erie, Lake&#13;
Michigan, or any of the smaller lakes or&#13;
streams of our nation do not need to be&#13;
reminded of the serious state of water&#13;
pollution. Just last summer the Cayuga&#13;
River caught fire and burned and could not&#13;
be extinguished. The Cayuga River runs&#13;
into Lake Erie in Cleveland and it and&#13;
some other rivers are now classified as&#13;
fire hazards because of the pollution by oil&#13;
and chemicals poured into them by industry.&#13;
The Root River isn't burning yet,&#13;
but its pollution must be stopped now if we&#13;
plan to save it for future generations. The&#13;
war against water pollution is mainly a&#13;
battle to control and purify a flood of&#13;
municipal sewage and industrial wastes.&#13;
However, we face a growing number of&#13;
other problems which must be fought in&#13;
connection with water pollution, such as&#13;
poorly designed and overburdened&#13;
household septic tanks. Ships and pleasure&#13;
craft are continually discharging raw&#13;
sewage into the lakes and waters around&#13;
our recreational areas, and pesticides and&#13;
weed killers and other new chemicals are&#13;
"fabrics for&#13;
all occasions"&#13;
being introduced into our lakes and&#13;
streams, threatening our fish and wildlife&#13;
and often even public health. Everyone&#13;
has heard, and the experts all seem to&#13;
agree, that Lake Erie may well be dead&#13;
and beyond saving. Lake Michigan is close&#13;
behind. If we fail to act soon, Lake&#13;
Michigan may also die and will be much,&#13;
much harder to bring back to life. The&#13;
water in Lake Erie is replaced every three&#13;
years, but that in Lake Michigan, which is.&#13;
far deeper, requires 100 years, and yet&#13;
thirty-five cities and forty industries on the&#13;
southern part of Lake Michigan alone are&#13;
dumping human sewage, acids, oil, dust,&#13;
amonia, chemicals and detergents into the&#13;
lake in a rapidly increasing quantity.&#13;
• he problems of water pollution and&#13;
other types of pollution are special in one&#13;
certain way: we do know the solutions to&#13;
them; we can solve the problems if we&#13;
decide to spend the time and money to do&#13;
so. Many of man's problems are not yet&#13;
solvable, yet we know the scientific answers&#13;
to most all of our pollution&#13;
problems. However, to solve the water&#13;
pollution problem in this nation will cost&#13;
money, and in Washington the federal&#13;
commitment is not being met. In 1968, 450&#13;
million dollars was authorized by&#13;
Congress for water pollution control.&#13;
However, on&lt;y 200 million dollars was&#13;
appropriated. In 1969, 700 million dollars&#13;
was authorized but less than one-third of&#13;
that was ever appropriated. Recent&#13;
figures indicate that 2.2 billion dollars in&#13;
federal aid has been requested for application&#13;
by cities to build effective&#13;
municipal waste treatment plants. These&#13;
plants are needed to eliminate one of the&#13;
most serious problems of water pollution,&#13;
and our ever-increasing population makes&#13;
the need for these systems immediate.&#13;
However, for 1970 the administration in&#13;
Washington originally proposed only&#13;
spending 214 million dollars of the&#13;
authorized one billion for sewage treatment&#13;
plants.&#13;
Here again, where'the answer always&#13;
seems to be in dollars (and the need for&#13;
dollars to fight the destruction and&#13;
pollution of our environment is a must in&#13;
the 1970's), I believe all Americans must&#13;
ask one vitally important question. What&#13;
are to be our priorities? Is going to Mars&#13;
by 1975 or building a supersonic transport&#13;
plane or pouring billions of dollars into&#13;
useless defense weapons more important&#13;
than attempting to save our own planet&#13;
from its destruction by man as we pollute&#13;
our way towards extinction? My answer to&#13;
this question is No!, for I believe that a&#13;
serious commitment backed up by the&#13;
Federal government with a willingness to&#13;
provide the funds to fight water and air&#13;
pollution must be undertaken now if the&#13;
young people of today are going to have a&#13;
world in which to live.&#13;
Another major area of pollution&#13;
requiring immediate attention is that of&#13;
getting rid of the solid waste that is&#13;
produced by our affluent society. Each one&#13;
of us throws out 5.3 pounds of solid waste&#13;
per day. or 2,000 pounds per year. In total&#13;
this is enough to make a mountain a city&#13;
block wide and several miles high. And&#13;
what's more, this amount of solid garbage&#13;
will triple in the next ten years. What are&#13;
we to do with all our garbage? Bury it,&#13;
burn it, throw it in the oceans and lakes?&#13;
Where can we sweep it under the rug or&#13;
into our environment so it won't come back&#13;
to haunt us in the years to come? Answers&#13;
to this problem are not easy, but&#13;
there are many things we could begin&#13;
to do even now if we are willing to&#13;
face the seriousness of this crisis. We must&#13;
build efficient incinerators to burn our&#13;
garbage without polluting the atmosphere,&#13;
and we must properly prepare our garbege&#13;
before it's buried in land fills so it will not&#13;
catch fire and burn below ground, creating&#13;
a serious air pollution problem. Lastly,&#13;
and most importantly of all, we must as&#13;
individuals and as a society commit&#13;
ourselves to the finding of new and better&#13;
solutions to these and other problems of&#13;
pollution. At the moment, for example,&#13;
non-returnable bottles and plastics are one&#13;
of the biggest headaches of waste disposal.&#13;
We must ask the question, do we, for&#13;
example, really need non-returnable&#13;
bottles? Is the job of taking the bottles&#13;
back to the store too much to sacrifice in&#13;
order to help save our environment?&#13;
Sometimes, in the name of progress, we&#13;
have moved so far so fast that our planet&#13;
has suffered in many cases often beyond&#13;
the&#13;
LEADER&#13;
bto&gt;ie&#13;
DOWNTOWN/KENOSHA&#13;
ELMWOOD PLAZA/RACINE&#13;
repair. Every year in the United States our&#13;
technology produces 7 million scrap cars&#13;
20 million tons of waste paper, 48 b illion&#13;
cans, 26 b illion bottles, 3 billion tons of&#13;
waste rock and paper material and 50&#13;
trillion gallons of hot water. Whatever the&#13;
solution to this problem is, it must be found&#13;
soon and will no doubt mean a sacrifice by&#13;
each and every one of us in time and&#13;
convenience and dollars.&#13;
'&#13;
ast point I think it important to&#13;
make has to do with laws and law enforcement&#13;
in the area off»ollution control.&#13;
Too often, in fact I might even say in all&#13;
cases, industries and individuals are far&#13;
too slow to move in the cgntrol of pollution&#13;
until they are forced by existing laws and&#13;
the passage of new laws. I want to relate a&#13;
story about one of the earliest laws I know&#13;
of involving air pollution. In the year 1309&#13;
A.D. an Aztec Indian was found guilty of&#13;
burning charcoal in what is now Mexico&#13;
City. For this offense of air pollution, the&#13;
emperor ordered the man hanged in the&#13;
town square for fouling his neighbor's air.&#13;
Six and a half centuries later we might&#13;
well wish for a return of such strong enforcement&#13;
laws on air pollution. Mexico&#13;
City, Los Angeles, Chicago, London, not to&#13;
mention dozens and dozens of smaller&#13;
cities are facing air pollution problems&#13;
that seem insolvable. I don't mean to say&#13;
that man should be hanged for polluting&#13;
his air. I do believe that we must begin now&#13;
KContinued on Page 8)&#13;
Open Saturdays&#13;
9 A.M. to Noon&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
American&#13;
State&#13;
Bank&#13;
3928 Sixtieth Street&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
VOGUE&#13;
FABRICS&#13;
709 58th Street&#13;
458-8412&#13;
, y&#13;
andantes&#13;
one of Canada's best&#13;
back by request&#13;
admission&#13;
$1.50 all others&#13;
Saturday, february 7&#13;
dancing 9:00 to 12:00&#13;
petrifying springs&#13;
clubhouse — highways a &amp; 31 &#13;
Registration Information&#13;
Dr. S. P. Datta, an assistant professor of Parkside's "mouse house" are shown&#13;
life science at the University of Wisconsin- above with one of the tiny tenants of the&#13;
Parkside, and Anthony Kombol, a student research facility, which has a 3,000 mouse&#13;
from Racine who assists with care of the capacity. The mice, all from genetically&#13;
300 mice which presently populate identical inbred strains, are used for&#13;
scientific experimentation.&#13;
University O ffers&#13;
Student Health S ervice&#13;
By Edith Isenberg, RN&#13;
A student's health has an important&#13;
relationship to his success in his&#13;
educational endeavor.&#13;
II a student is ill or generally in poor&#13;
health, he will find it difficult to attend&#13;
class and learn effectively. Also, he will be&#13;
unable to take advantage of the many&#13;
college activities which offer a unique&#13;
opportunity for personal growth, change,&#13;
and discovery.&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
recognizes its responsibility to provide for&#13;
the physical and emotional health of its&#13;
students and wishes to assist them in&#13;
maintaining and obtaining optimum&#13;
physical and mental health.&#13;
Presently, plans are under way for a&#13;
Student Health Service and the college&#13;
Right t o Diss ent&#13;
Is Sub ject of&#13;
'College Talk-In'&#13;
Frequently being tested today in our&#13;
courts, legislatures and on our college&#13;
campuses, are the constitutional limits&#13;
and-or guarantees of the rights of freedom&#13;
of speech, assembly, dissent, protest,&#13;
petition, and due process of law. The thin&#13;
line distinguishing peaceful protest from&#13;
unlawful disruption is often open to interpretation&#13;
and is often a matter of intent.&#13;
In recent months, a number of college&#13;
campuses across the nation have been the&#13;
focal point of demonstrations of both the&#13;
violent and non-violent type, and&#13;
Wisconsin was no exception. As a result, a&#13;
joint committee of the Wisconsin&#13;
Assembly and Senate was formed last&#13;
year to study campus disruptions in&#13;
Wisconsin and to make recommendations&#13;
regarding its findings.&#13;
Published last fall, those findings&#13;
resulted in the proposal of several pieces&#13;
of legislation from both houses. By the&#13;
time the legislature had adjourned in midJanuary,&#13;
most of these bills had either&#13;
died in committee or on the Senate or&#13;
Assembly floors. Two of them, however,&#13;
did pass both houses, and are currently&#13;
awaiting the governor's signature.&#13;
In an effort to examine the nature, intent,&#13;
and ramifications of these bills, "The&#13;
Right to Dissent - in Light of Bills Pending&#13;
in the Wisconsin Legislature" will be the&#13;
subject of "College Talk-in" at 10:35 a.m..&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 31.&#13;
Moderator of the panel on dissent (heard&#13;
on WLIP, 95.1 fm) will be Eric Olson,&#13;
Associate Professor of political science at&#13;
Carthage College. Olson also serves on the&#13;
Kenosha County Board of Supervisors, and&#13;
is actively involved in the state and local&#13;
Republican Party.&#13;
Student panelists representing the&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside will be&#13;
Todd Munson of Racine (4640 S. Green Bay&#13;
Rd.), junior in sociology and chairman of&#13;
the Parkside Young Democrats; and&#13;
Kathy Schulzof Racine 11245 Superior St.).&#13;
freshman in political science, and participant&#13;
in UW-Parkside war&#13;
moratoriums.&#13;
community is invited to contact me, Mrs.&#13;
E. Isenberg, RN, Student Health Nurse,&#13;
Room 239, Tallent Hall, with ideas and&#13;
suggestions. Please watch The Collegian&#13;
for further developments.&#13;
Is Foreign Aid&#13;
A Dirty Word?&#13;
Friday evening, January 23, at 8 p.m., at&#13;
the Golden Rondelle. corner of Fourteenth&#13;
Street and Howe Street, Racine, LeRoy S.&#13;
Wehrle of the Brookings Institution,&#13;
Washington, D.C., will speak on the subject,&#13;
"Is Foreign Aid a Dirty Word?"&#13;
Wehrle received his doctorate degree in&#13;
economics from Yale University. He&#13;
served as economist for the Council of&#13;
Economic Advisors in the Executive Office&#13;
of the President. In 1967 he was appointed&#13;
Deputy Assistant Administrator of&#13;
the Agency for International Development's&#13;
Vietnam Bureau. Before leaving&#13;
Saigon, he was presented the Agency's&#13;
highest citation, the Distinguished Honor&#13;
Award.&#13;
The supporting organizations for the&#13;
Cornelia G. Freeman Memorial Lectures&#13;
are the League of Women Voters of&#13;
Racine, World Federalists of Racine and&#13;
Kenosha, University of Wisconsin Extension,&#13;
Mayor's Committee for the United&#13;
Nations. Mrs. Freeman contributed&#13;
greatly to the civic life of our community&#13;
during the thirty years she lived in Racine.&#13;
Through many activities she worked to&#13;
encourage increased citizen participation&#13;
in government and community affairs.&#13;
Reservations should be made in^dvance&#13;
at the Golden Rondelle (632-1681) in&#13;
Racine.&#13;
POLLUTION&#13;
(Continued from Page 7)&#13;
to pass and enforce serious laws on&#13;
pollution control for individuals and industry.&#13;
I would, for example, be in favor of&#13;
the air pollution laws that the state of New&#13;
Jersey has recently instituted which fines&#13;
industrial, polluters ten, fifteen or twenty&#13;
thousand dollars per offense if they are&#13;
found polluting our atmosphere. These&#13;
fines are being used and the air pollution in&#13;
New Jersey is beginning to level off or&#13;
even drop in some areas.&#13;
The same think. I think, should apply to&#13;
industrial concerns that pollute our lakes&#13;
and waters in this nation. These laws must&#13;
be uniform in all states (or better yet have&#13;
Federal laws) to remove the possibility of&#13;
large industrial polluters from moving or&#13;
threatening to move when forced to&#13;
comply with anti-pollution laws. Only&#13;
through this combination of proper laws&#13;
law enforcement, and a commitment on&#13;
the part ol the individual and government&#13;
in terms ot energy and money can our&#13;
pollution problems be brought under&#13;
control.&#13;
Each year a new species of animal is&#13;
added to the list of those becoming extinct.&#13;
Man, in his arrogance, appears to think we&#13;
can escape joining that list. The evidence&#13;
however, is overwhelming that it is much',&#13;
much later than we realize.&#13;
U W -Parkside registration will be; held in&#13;
Greenquist Hall January&#13;
students should be&#13;
U^ew anTJe^teS&#13;
1&#13;
' students wilf be&#13;
photographed for identification purposes&#13;
as a condition of registration.&#13;
Do Not Report Before Your Schedul&#13;
Time.&#13;
Wednesday, January 28&#13;
Continuing students with 24 or more&#13;
credit hours will report on We&#13;
j&#13;
,&#13;
"&#13;
esd&#13;
?y;&#13;
January 28, according to the following&#13;
schedule:&#13;
S — 8:30 a.m. - 9:30 a.m.&#13;
T-Z — 9:30 a.m. - 10:30 a.m.&#13;
A-D — 10:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m.&#13;
E-J — 1:00 p.m. - 2:p.m.&#13;
K-M — 2:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.&#13;
N-R — 3:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.&#13;
Continuing students with more than 24&#13;
credits who are unable to register during&#13;
the day on Wednesday may register&#13;
Wednesday night between 6:30 p.m. and&#13;
8:30 p.m. or any of the scheduled times&#13;
thereafter.+&#13;
Thursday, January 29&#13;
Continuing students with less than 24&#13;
credits will report on Thursday, January&#13;
29, according to the following schedule:&#13;
S — 8:30 a.m. - 9:30 a.m.&#13;
T-Z — 9:30 a.m. - 10:30 a.m.&#13;
A-D — 10:30 a.m. - 11:30 a.m.&#13;
E-J — 1:00 p.m. - 2:00 p.m.&#13;
K-M — 2:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.&#13;
N-R — 3:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.&#13;
Continuing students with less than 24&#13;
credits who are unable to register during&#13;
the day on Thursday may register&#13;
Thursday night between 6:30 p.m. and 8:30&#13;
p.m.. or any of the scheduled times&#13;
thereafter. 4-&#13;
Friday, January 30&#13;
Those students who were not registered&#13;
at UW-Parkside during the fall semester&#13;
should report to Greenquist Hall on&#13;
Friday, January 30, according to the&#13;
following schedule:&#13;
A-J — 8:30 a.m. - 10:30 a.m.&#13;
K-R 10:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m.&#13;
S-Z — 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m.&#13;
+ Those students unable to register on&#13;
Wednesday or Thursday may register on&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Late registration will be held in Tallent&#13;
Hall on February 2 and 3 from 8:00 a.m. to&#13;
8:30 p.m.&#13;
Program changes may not be made&#13;
before February 4.&#13;
Wednesday or Thursday night — J anuary&#13;
28. 29, 1970&#13;
Part time Adult 6tudents carrying eight&#13;
(8) or less credits may register either&#13;
night from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.&#13;
Tuition payment due date&#13;
Full Time Students (12 or more credits)&#13;
February 6, 1970.&#13;
Part Time Students, February 13, 1970&#13;
Where to Pay Tuition&#13;
Tuition may be paid during registration&#13;
at Greenquist Hall or at the Bursar's&#13;
Office, Room 201 Tallent Hall. Office hours&#13;
are 7:45 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. and 12:30 p.m&#13;
to 4:30 p.m. daily During the first two&#13;
weeks of classes the office will be open&#13;
evenings Monday through Thursday, 6:30&#13;
p.m. to 9:30 p.m.&#13;
Checks should be made payable to:&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside.&#13;
Tuition paid by mail should be addressed&#13;
to:&#13;
University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
Bursar's Office, Tallent Hall&#13;
Wood Road&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin 53140&#13;
Late Payment Fee&#13;
Tuition paid after the due date is subject&#13;
to the late payment fee. A late penalty of&#13;
(5.00 per week is charged to a maximum of&#13;
$15.00 for part time students, and $29.00 for&#13;
full time students. Invoices are sent out&#13;
only on overdue tuitions.&#13;
Refunds&#13;
Students who formally withdraw from&#13;
the University will receive: 100 per cent&#13;
during the first week; 80 per cent during&#13;
the second week; 60 per cent during the&#13;
third and fourth weeks; 40 per cent during&#13;
the fifth and sixth weeks; 20 per cent&#13;
during the seventh and eighth weeks.&#13;
No refunds after the eighth week.&#13;
Refunds for reduction of credits will be&#13;
based on the above schedule. These&#13;
refunds will not be processed until after&#13;
the sixth week of classes.&#13;
Unpaid students who withdraw after the&#13;
first week of school will be billed for&#13;
partial tuition based on the refund schedule&#13;
above jind are subject to late payment&#13;
fines which accrue at the rate of $5.00 per&#13;
week up to the formal withdrawal date or&#13;
to the maximum charge for a full or part&#13;
time student.&#13;
Financial Aid Recipients&#13;
Financial aid checks will be available to&#13;
pay fees at the Bursar's table during&#13;
registration at Greenquist Hall.&#13;
Hello Borbro!&#13;
Goodbye Dolly&#13;
By JEAN PAUL&#13;
"Hello Dolly!" is the movie musical at&#13;
its height as proved by the twenty some&#13;
million dollars poured into the production&#13;
Everything has the sparkle of a Sunday&#13;
smile put over a Monday morning.&#13;
Everything is titanic, including Barbara&#13;
Streisand's fingernails.&#13;
No angle of "Hello Dolly" has been&#13;
overlooked since Ernest Lehman wrote the&#13;
screenplay. All the dialogue has been&#13;
expanded and padded until what was a&#13;
handsome simple styled musical on&#13;
Broadway has become an emmense&#13;
bulky, towering and voluminous experience&#13;
on film. An example is&#13;
Streisand s parade scene in which she is&#13;
passed by as hundreds of extras trample&#13;
on her face on her face while Tony Pastors&#13;
ooked on Poor Mr. Lehman was busy&#13;
inflating his script when Miss Streisand&#13;
needed padding up front.&#13;
II M iss Streisand seems miscast and you&#13;
don t notice, you will notice Michael&#13;
h1? ?u C°&#13;
rne,iul He seems Perfectly&#13;
adept for the role, except for his English&#13;
accent making Cornelius a double&#13;
character — one, the small town boy of&#13;
\ onkers which the script calk for a 1&#13;
two, an English waif out of "Ha f a Six&#13;
pence" which the script doesn't !L?i 7&#13;
Monday morning SUnday Smi&#13;
'&#13;
C&#13;
"&#13;
n&#13;
^toUy"&#13;
6 is^a gr^at^ Broadway&#13;
creatively when directed by Gower&#13;
Champion. Now on film, everything is&#13;
enlarged until the audience finds one joke&#13;
in every fifteen minutes of dialogue.&#13;
.Since vocal response is little, set&#13;
designer John DeCuir keeps the eyeballs&#13;
moving. Every scene is so expansive that&#13;
it takes (ive minutes just to digest the&#13;
exquisite sets, which means the audience&#13;
missed the actors' lines. Mr. DeCuire's&#13;
sets are so fantastic that he's assured a&#13;
walk up to the "Oscar" this year.&#13;
While the cameras were photographing&#13;
Mr DeCuir's sets. Mr. Kelly the director&#13;
and Mr. Kidd the choreographer must&#13;
have been watching prints of "Half a&#13;
Sixpence" in slow motion. In fact I think&#13;
they stole the dance routines from "Sixpence"&#13;
but forgot to put the steps together.&#13;
When Mr. Kidd exposes the audience to a&#13;
dance number, his dancers become tip&#13;
toed jack-in-the-boxcs with mechanical&#13;
limbs that fly into every inch of the movie&#13;
screen. Mr. Kidd should try cohesion witt&#13;
his next dance assignment; at least he will&#13;
save a few broken necks, mainly his.&#13;
Of course Irene Sharaff doesn't do a bac&#13;
job covering Miss Streisand's neck. Hct&#13;
costume designing for "Dolly" was a&#13;
massive job which she accomplished witr&#13;
ner rare skill. As Miss Sharaff knows fron&#13;
the "Funny Girl" movie, it takes a lot 0&#13;
material to work with Miss Streisand.&#13;
Though "Hello Dolly" has many bat&#13;
qualities, one does feel that all the won&#13;
gone into "Dolly" has not been wasted&#13;
I here are some funny lines and situation:&#13;
which smooth over the rough points. J&#13;
us&#13;
the spectacle leaves the audience with 1&#13;
good feeling. Truely I was entertained aru&#13;
I had enjoyed most of the movie since tfo&#13;
grandiose and spectacle can charm an,&#13;
eye. </text>
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                <text>Parkside Collegian, Volume 1, issue 6, January 26, 1970</text>
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            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="59635">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
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              <text>PARKSIDE i UV&#13;
COLLEGIAN "n&#13;
Parkside Gets&#13;
Medical Attention&#13;
Regents&#13;
Warn&#13;
Kellett&#13;
The board of regents today warned it&#13;
would not sit by and see the Parkside and&#13;
Green Bay campuses stripped from the&#13;
University of Wisconsin.&#13;
The board, reacting to a reported&#13;
proposal of the Kellett commission on&#13;
sducation, supported a board of visitors&#13;
recommendation that the new campuses&#13;
remain in the University of Wisconsin.&#13;
Regent Charles Gelatt, LaCrosse, said&#13;
le was the "minority of one" in supportingtransfer&#13;
of the new campuses to the board&#13;
af regents of the Wisconsin State&#13;
Universities.&#13;
Gelatt contended that the new campuses&#13;
would dilute the quality and effort of the&#13;
University of Wisconsin.&#13;
UW President Fred H. Harrington interjected&#13;
that Gelatt was a minority of&#13;
'exactly one." There are 10 members of&#13;
the UW board of regents.&#13;
Discussion of the proposal came after&#13;
the board of visitors assailed the proposed&#13;
Kellett recommendation to take the new&#13;
campuses and the center system from the&#13;
University.&#13;
No formal regent action was taken, but&#13;
the board indicated its firm stand for the&#13;
status quo.&#13;
Regent Gordon Walker, Racine, told the&#13;
ooard of visitors: "We want to assure you&#13;
that this majority won't be a silent&#13;
majority."&#13;
The regents indicated they would further&#13;
iiscuss the Kellett proposals which are&#13;
now tentatively scheduled to go to Gov.&#13;
Knowles on March 2. Regent Jack Pilisek,&#13;
Whitefish Bay, noted the Kellett recommendations&#13;
in March will only be "tentative."&#13;
He noted the commission expects&#13;
a full summer of discussion on the&#13;
proposals before drafting a final report&#13;
and recommendations for the 1971&#13;
legislature.&#13;
Richard Cates, Madison, a member of&#13;
the board of visitors, warned that the&#13;
Kellett recommendations would have an&#13;
affect "on the attitudes and spirit of&#13;
people" at the new campusses.&#13;
Cates said board of visitors had found "a&#13;
lot of people who are trying to accomplish&#13;
something that is quite unusual."&#13;
Douglas LaFollette Tuesday&#13;
declared his candidacy for the&#13;
Democratic nomination for congress&#13;
in the first district.&#13;
Strong Donation&#13;
Regents of the University of Wisconsin&#13;
Friday accepted a gift of scientific&#13;
periodicals valued at $1,700 for the&#13;
University of, Wisconsin-Parkside Library&#13;
Donor of the 110 volumes, principally in&#13;
the fields of bacteriology, nutrition and&#13;
public health, is Professor Dorothy H.&#13;
Strong of the UW-Madison department of&#13;
foods and nutrition.&#13;
Professor Strong, who will retire in&#13;
June, previously donated another group of&#13;
publications in related fields to the&#13;
Parkside Library. The initial gift was&#13;
valued at $700.&#13;
Study A brood&#13;
Michigan State University is offering&#13;
credit courses in England, Spain, France,&#13;
Austria, Norway and Japan during the&#13;
summer of 1970, the MSU Office of&#13;
Overseas Study announced today.&#13;
It is also offering noncredit language&#13;
courses in France, Germany, Switzerland,&#13;
Spain and Italy.&#13;
The credit courses are open to&#13;
sophomores, juniors, seniors and graduate&#13;
students. They offer American students an&#13;
opportunity to continue their university&#13;
education, while investigating the culture&#13;
and getting to know the people of one or&#13;
more countries.&#13;
Sophomores may study social science or&#13;
the history of western man in London;&#13;
juniors, political science in London, and&#13;
seniors may continue German in Vienna,&#13;
French in Paris or Spanish in Barcelona.&#13;
Graduate students may pursue comparative&#13;
education in Tokyo or comparative&#13;
social work in Oslo.&#13;
All are taught by MSU faculty, experienced&#13;
in the country involved. The&#13;
students are housed on a university&#13;
campus with an American resident adviser.&#13;
&#13;
The noncredit language courses include&#13;
German in Cologne; French in Paris or&#13;
Lausanne, Switzerland; Spanish in Barcelona&#13;
or Madrid, and Italian in Florence.&#13;
Because an effort is made to immerse the&#13;
student in the culture, as well as to increase&#13;
his fluency in the language, he is&#13;
taught by a native instructor, and, except&#13;
in Paris, housed with a native family.&#13;
Cost of the summer program varies&#13;
from $800 to $1,000 for transportation,&#13;
room, board and tuition during the school&#13;
term. Each student has three-day&#13;
weekends and a ten-day period at the&#13;
conclusion of the term for independent&#13;
travel.&#13;
Additional information may be obtained&#13;
by contacting the MSU Office of Overseas&#13;
Study, 108 Center for International&#13;
Programs, MSU, East Lansing, telephone&#13;
517-353-8921.&#13;
Area Schools&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside's&#13;
division of education sent its first group of&#13;
students as practice teachers to the Racine&#13;
and Kenosha Unified School Districts&#13;
during this semester.&#13;
A total of about 30 students took part in&#13;
the program with approximately half&#13;
teaching in each district, according to&#13;
John F. Elmore, Director of Admissions.&#13;
About 15 students will be practice teaching&#13;
in elementary schools with the remainder&#13;
in secondary schools in the areas of social&#13;
studies, mathematics, chemistry, biology,&#13;
art and music.&#13;
Students will be assigned to a licensed&#13;
teacher in a district school as well as a&#13;
university supervisor who will work with&#13;
them in developing teaching skills and&#13;
provide written evaluations of their performance.&#13;
&#13;
Candidates for educational certification&#13;
at Parkside have an option of practice&#13;
teaching full days for eight weeks or half&#13;
days for 16 weeks, Elmore said. They&#13;
receive eight college credits under either&#13;
program, he added.&#13;
Elmore said that most of the student&#13;
teachers will either receive their degrees&#13;
W. Medical School.&#13;
Bus Schedule&#13;
Revised&#13;
. . . Again&#13;
7:30 a.m.&#13;
Leaves Kenosha-Arrives Racine 7:55&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Leaves Racine-Arrives Kenosha 7:55&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Tallent to Greenquist Continuous&#13;
Daytime Shuttle.&#13;
8:00 a.m.&#13;
Kenosha bus arrives Tallent Hall-8:15&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Shuttles continuously until-8:30 a.m.&#13;
Racine bus arrives Tallent hall-8:18&#13;
a.m.&#13;
Shuttles continuously until-8:30 a.m.&#13;
Invaded&#13;
at the end of the second semester or will&#13;
complete requirements for educational&#13;
certification by the end of summer session.&#13;
Elmore also announced that UWParkside&#13;
has been accepted into membership&#13;
in the Wisconsin Improvement&#13;
Program (WIP) which works to promote&#13;
educational cooperation and to develop&#13;
placement programs for interns in&#13;
Wisconsin public schools. Other members&#13;
of WIP are UW-Madison, UW-Green Bay,&#13;
eight of the Wisconsin State Universities&#13;
and two private institutions.&#13;
Elmore said Parkside expects to place&#13;
its first intern teachers in area schools&#13;
next fall.^&#13;
Under the internship program, student&#13;
teachers work full time in the schools for a&#13;
full semester carrying about three-fifths of&#13;
a normal teaching load and receiving&#13;
compensation equal to about 25 per cent of&#13;
the average starting salary for a teacher&#13;
with a B. A. degree and no experience.&#13;
(Student tqachers not in the internship&#13;
program receive no pay.) Intern teachers&#13;
also are assigned to licensed teachers in&#13;
the schools as well as to university&#13;
supervisors.&#13;
The Parkside Pre-Meds began the&#13;
second semester with a trip on January 30&#13;
to the U. W. Medical School in Madison.&#13;
Fifteen students left the Tallent Hall&#13;
parking lot at 7:30 A.M. for a day of tours&#13;
and informal meetings with some of the&#13;
Medical School faculty members.&#13;
Dr. Anna M. Williams, pre-med advisor&#13;
at Parkside, gave a morning tour covering&#13;
the Medical Library, the McArdle&#13;
Laboratory for Cancer Research, cancer&#13;
wards in the hospital, and the Radiology&#13;
Department.&#13;
The use of chemotherapy and radiation&#13;
in the treatment of cancer was explained&#13;
to the students. They then had lunch and&#13;
discussions with three Medical School&#13;
professors and a recent medical graduate&#13;
now interning at University Hospitals.&#13;
After lunch, a medical student showed&#13;
the Parkside students the classrooms,&#13;
laboratories and recreational rooms for&#13;
medical students. He also discussed the&#13;
type of work that a medical student would&#13;
do during the four years of medical school.&#13;
Dr. Robert Coye, Director of Admissions,&#13;
and Dr. Donald Korst, who is in&#13;
charge of the training the U. W. medical&#13;
students receive at other Madison&#13;
hospitals, then talked to the students and&#13;
answered their questions.&#13;
The tours were of special interest to&#13;
senior Douglas Devan, who has been accepted&#13;
into the fall, 1970 class of the U. W.&#13;
Medical School. Other students on the trip&#13;
were Charles Folabit, Judy Geist, Gary&#13;
Hartnell, Tim Higgins, Bill Jeranek, Paul&#13;
Ketarkus, Marty Mathieson, Ulf Munlzing,&#13;
Olivia Moreno, Curtis Sahakian, Edward&#13;
Scruggs, Margaret Schumacher, Betty&#13;
Vogt and John Werwie.&#13;
9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.&#13;
Leaves Kenosha on the Hour&#13;
Leaves Racine on the Hour&#13;
Leaves Tallent Hall to Greenquist16&#13;
minutes after the hour&#13;
21 minutes after the hour&#13;
26 minutes after the hour&#13;
Leaves Greenquist Hall to Tallent20&#13;
minutes after the hour&#13;
25 minutes after the hour&#13;
29 minutes after the hour&#13;
Leaves Tallent Hall to Racine and&#13;
Kenosha&#13;
On the half hour.&#13;
5:00 p.m.&#13;
Extra bus for continuous shuttle&#13;
Last bus for Racine and Kenosha from&#13;
Tallent Hall&#13;
9:50 p.m.&#13;
Last bus for Racine and Kenosha from&#13;
Tallent Hall (Fridays only)&#13;
4:30 p.m.&#13;
Chancellor I. G. Wyllie observed the&#13;
2,646 students at registration. A&#13;
smooth operation. &#13;
E D I T O R I A L S&#13;
WSU-Parlcside - NEVER!&#13;
A man by the name of William Kellett has a plan — a plan which, if&#13;
placed in operation, would turn the Parkside and Green Bay campuses over to&#13;
the State University system. Kellett is the Chairman of the Governor's Commission&#13;
on Education which will recommend stripping Parkside and Green&#13;
Bay from the University of Wisconsin.&#13;
We suppose a possible analogy could be drawn Irom this with its being&#13;
like moving from a penthouse on top of the John Hancock Building in Chicago&#13;
to a one room apartment in the Milwaukee inner city. Not only would UWP and&#13;
GB suffer economically from such a move, but remember tor a second the&#13;
difference in stature between a degree from the University ot Wisconsin and&#13;
one from Stout State — not much of a comparison.&#13;
UW President Fred H. Harrington has predicted that the UW board of&#13;
regents will respond publicly to the statement before the Kellett commission&#13;
makes its final report to the Governor. Let's hope someone makes a statement&#13;
and puts an end to the silly thoughts floating from the capital. Speaking of&#13;
floating, Kellett may have been "floating trial balloons" on the transfer of the&#13;
campuses, but it seems unfair not to let the University involved a chance to&#13;
respond to these bags of hot air before or during the time when our governor&#13;
receives the report.&#13;
In the words of Eugene McPhee, director of the Wisconsin State&#13;
University system, we "hope it's a harmonious discussion," even though the&#13;
plan itself is as ridiculous as a transfer of control of the United States back to&#13;
that of the people of the United States.&#13;
Representation without Representation&#13;
The Collegian staff is dissatisfied with the choices of student&#13;
representation on the campus concerns committee (CCC) for a number of&#13;
reasons.&#13;
First, the Chancellor was given a list, drawn up by student government&#13;
last year, to make the choices from. That list included six names and two&#13;
alternatives for those positions. Talking with a number of student senators&#13;
from last year, they can remember very well the hours making up that list.&#13;
What happened to it — no one knows.&#13;
. Second, if, perchance, this list was lost, damaged, spindled or mutilated,&#13;
why not chose from the list of student leaders that went on the StudentFaculty&#13;
Workshop". These students are the nucleus of leaders of the school.&#13;
Those people who are still at Parkside are: Ed Borchardt, Peter Habetler,&#13;
Greg Emery, Doug Johnson, Neil Haglov, John Koloen, Barb Krai, Kris&#13;
Lukauskas, Jim Runge, Jim Madura, John Romano, Constance Rytei ske, Rick&#13;
Sereno, Pat Spring, Kathy Stellato and Mary Terselic. Every one of these&#13;
people, with the exception of one or two, was outspoken last year (68-69), and&#13;
any one of them would be a better choice than most of the student members we&#13;
now have on CCC. Just to show how interested one student was, Bob Manley&#13;
has only attended one in six meetings. Is this the voice you want? The Collegian&#13;
staff doesn't.&#13;
Third, it would be apparent to anyone observing CCC that the faculty&#13;
does most of the talking while three out of the five representatives just sit and&#13;
nod their "silent majority" heads yes. While it may be true that Parkside is a&#13;
charter member of the Apathy Club, this should not deny those of us who want&#13;
a strong voice in the "most powerful committee" on campus, that much&#13;
needed voice. Barb Krai, Bob Manley and Sue Siewert arethe students denying&#13;
us that voice. In a typical situation one faculty member will say something and&#13;
they nod their "silent majority" heads yes .. . thirty seconds later they will be&#13;
nodding their heads in agreement to another faculty member who directly&#13;
contradicts the first.&#13;
We are not saying we should be vocal on every matter arising, but&#13;
they've got to stand up and take an active part since all human beings do have&#13;
opinions on all subjects. At least say something so people can see where you&#13;
stand on the given topic, right or wrong, you have the duty to say it.&#13;
Please, use OUR voice before WE lose it.&#13;
PARKSIDE&#13;
COLLEGIAN&#13;
i r&#13;
Volume I - No. 7&#13;
9 February 1970&#13;
Marc Colby&#13;
Editor-in-Chief '!!!.'.! GreS Emery&#13;
News Editor Ed Borchardt&#13;
Feature Editor ' Helen Schumacher&#13;
Sports Editor John Jolicoeur&#13;
Business Manager Neil Ha&#13;
e&#13;
lov&#13;
Chief Photographer ! ! Margie Noer&#13;
Production Manager Mr* John Pesta&#13;
Advisor&#13;
Published every twc.wee*i by the&#13;
Parkside; Kenosha,&#13;
Wlscons™' pp„„arilv those of THE COLLEGIAN staff,&#13;
the *University o^Wis cons in- Parkside, its faculty, administrators, or students.&#13;
WE Are the Free People&#13;
Science has been advancing the idea of artificial insemination human&#13;
embryo and raising the embryo outside the womb. The process would be much&#13;
like that described in "Brave New World ; pre-packaged life.&#13;
Critics of this method base their objections on the inhumanity of the&#13;
system, it is too precise, too scientific, too cold. Something about this strictly&#13;
regimented method of procreation seems inhuman and forbodes an era of&#13;
stricUy regimented human society. This is not the first step towards a brave&#13;
"&#13;
eW Trdancyls'reaOy'the o nly time we are perfectly free. Babies eat when&#13;
they want, express any emotion or desire they feel and have basically total&#13;
freedom of mobility. Only later does pre-packaged life appear.&#13;
Starting with kindergarten, the child is taught when to play, eat, sing,&#13;
think etc. He is being trained to live by opening packages. For instance, the&#13;
alphabet is the largest package a child can open. Memorized by any rate the&#13;
alphabet contains so much prepared thought it is capable of eliminating&#13;
thought entirely, and it often does. Learning to read is the first step humans&#13;
take to following the basic tenant of Fuckercandlism: "All sensation must be&#13;
vicarious". As a child grows he opens other packages; television, radio,&#13;
movies, newspapers, fashions, all of these pre-packaged elements are&#13;
essentially forms of pre-packaged life. Turn a knob, exchange a coin and with&#13;
no creative effort on your part you are entertained or instructed. Your ideas&#13;
are supplied by the nation's top thinkers, you can listen or dance to any of&#13;
thirty-seven million musical groups, your God is supplied gratis by the Gideon&#13;
Bible Society in conjunction with Pope Paul and the World Council ol Churches,&#13;
gown by Bill Bias.&#13;
By the time of high school graduation nine out of ten people are able to&#13;
continue their existence by opening packages; they have forgotten that they&#13;
have the potential not only to open packages but to make their own packages.&#13;
College is the last chance most people have of learning to make packages but&#13;
few take advantage of this fact. Campuses like Madison have so many&#13;
packages available that they give the impression that kids on that campus&#13;
really have freedom when it is actually a cardboard concentration camp.&#13;
Parkside, on the other hand, has next to no packages; we are the free people.&#13;
For you see, Parkside is in infancy, the state of greatest general freedom. Now&#13;
is the time to start making packages, even though some ham-headed administrators&#13;
can present some problems.&#13;
LETTERS to t he e ditor&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Time was when I thought being an adult&#13;
was a bowl of cherries. I looked up at;&#13;
everyone and thought what a marvelous&#13;
thing it would be to be able to look&#13;
everyone in the eye. Every teacher I ever&#13;
had in public schools expected me to act in&#13;
an "adult manner." They sometimes even&#13;
regarded me as angelic because the "big&#13;
bad hammer of discipline," always&#13;
hanging over my head was too much for&#13;
me to bear. Well, here I am at the&#13;
University of Wis.-Parkside in the good old&#13;
(quotecommacough) "adult" world. My&#13;
wishes, of course, would be that every&#13;
aspect of my relations with people be that&#13;
bowl of cherries it was supposed to be and&#13;
that there was a magic age at which&#13;
everything immediately turned out right.&#13;
Setting my aims this high, the other day I&#13;
sat down to class. A few minutes prior to&#13;
that class I overheard another conversation&#13;
taking place between a man and&#13;
a woman who were maliciously insulting a&#13;
third party who was also not supposed to&#13;
hear but did. After getting all upset, which&#13;
I shouldn't have done, I quietly reaffirmed&#13;
my position that this was adult behavior&#13;
and that all the maliciousness in the world&#13;
could only be traced to previous&#13;
generations. In other words, I was taught&#13;
to be brutal.&#13;
Is it unfair to ask of mankind, why he&#13;
wishes to destroy his neighbor? Or are the&#13;
pressures of living so demanding as to&#13;
need someone to kick and to maime for a&#13;
lifetime?&#13;
. There is still hope, there is a youth, and a&#13;
youth following that and a youth following&#13;
that and on and on into eternity will man&#13;
live. Some day he will discover a pot of&#13;
gold at the end of a rainbow, and he will&#13;
gather the fruits of wisdom. I know I'm&#13;
being unjust to the millions of people who&#13;
think the times are good but better times&#13;
are always coming and man's desires may&#13;
never be fulfilled.&#13;
Anonymous&#13;
Blast . . .&#13;
Counterblast&#13;
"The time has come, the Walrus said,&#13;
"To talk of many things,&#13;
"Of shoes and ships and sealing wax,&#13;
"Of cabbages and kings."&#13;
B—CB is a new feature in the Collegian&#13;
designed to serve serve as a tabloid lectern&#13;
from which any student may voice an idea,&#13;
opinion, call to the barricades, or polemic&#13;
on any subject he or she wishes. If you take&#13;
the time to write it down in readable&#13;
English, we'll print it.&#13;
I had asked (challenged is more the&#13;
word, really) Messer's Smith and Koloen&#13;
to write the first article for this column,&#13;
but their usual plethoric sense of literary&#13;
indignation seems to have failed them.&#13;
If you are interested in submitting&#13;
something, please bring it to the Collegian&#13;
office, Room 109 in Kenosha. As always, no&#13;
names will be printed if you would rather&#13;
we didn't.&#13;
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thru the&#13;
Kitchen Window&#13;
By ED BORCHARDT&#13;
During this first half of this century&#13;
films and theater followed Oscar Wilde's&#13;
dictum that "Life Mirrors Art". Show biz&#13;
was to give a means of escape for Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. North America. The movies of people&#13;
like Fred Astaire became dreams that&#13;
money could buy.&#13;
Beginning in the late '50's, a new style&#13;
became popular. Life was not to mirror&#13;
art, life became art. This is the style in&#13;
which Arnold Weshner wrote "The Kitchen",&#13;
playing at the Performing Arts&#13;
Center. The play presents a day in the life&#13;
of a popular London restaurant, the&#13;
Trivoli. Weshner is highly qualified to&#13;
write on this subject, since he had worked&#13;
in kitchens in London and Paris&#13;
previously. As do many plays, the story of&#13;
"The Kitchen" unfolds rather than&#13;
following a plot.&#13;
While watching this play, one senses that&#13;
this is a world haunted by fear, confusion,&#13;
and falsities. Working under the strain of&#13;
the kitchen the characters are robbed&#13;
slowly of all humanity and never notice it.&#13;
Friendships-hatreds are founded and&#13;
forgotten. The young Peter is the only one&#13;
to notice this change but it's too late, even&#13;
for him. Peter decries the inability of his&#13;
co-workers to dream but wheh they and&#13;
him tell them his dream, what he would do&#13;
if the Trivoli were to disappear, he finds he&#13;
has lost the one thing that makes man&#13;
great.&#13;
Thus this play is not just a study of interface&#13;
within a small group, it is a&#13;
microcosm devised to show us what is&#13;
happening to modern man. For us&#13;
McLuhan would say, it is the job of the&#13;
artist to exist ahead of his time in order to&#13;
show us what will happen.&#13;
Chemical Invasion&#13;
of Oceans by Man&#13;
Dr. Goldberg is Professor of Chemistry&#13;
at the Scripps Institution of&#13;
Oceanography, LaJolla, California. He has&#13;
his B. S. degree from California and Ph. D.&#13;
degree from the University of Chicago. Dr.&#13;
Goldberg has been associated with Scripps&#13;
for twenty years. His research has been in&#13;
geochemistry of marine waters, marine&#13;
sedimentation, meteoritics and radio&#13;
T H&#13;
A N K&#13;
S&#13;
BRASS&#13;
CANNON&#13;
COLLEGE&#13;
BOOK&#13;
MART&#13;
5811 » 8th Ave. Kenosha&#13;
chemistry.&#13;
The lecture, one of a series in the&#13;
Distinguished Lecture Series, is sponsored&#13;
by University Extension and the AllUniversity&#13;
of Wisconsin Sea Grant&#13;
Program. Faculty, students and the public&#13;
are invited without charge.&#13;
It will be given Wednesday afternoon,&#13;
February 18, 1970, at 3:30 p.m. in the&#13;
auditorium of Wisconsin Center, 702&#13;
Langdon Street. The lecture also will be&#13;
broadcast on ETN at a small number of&#13;
locations. Arrangements have been made&#13;
for concurrent slide presentations and for&#13;
audience questions at Green Bay,&#13;
Milwaukee and Parkside. At other campus&#13;
locations, contact your local Extension&#13;
office.&#13;
For further information, contact: Dr. E.&#13;
C. Gasiorkiewicz, University of WisconsinParkside,&#13;
Kenosha, Wisconsin. Telephone&#13;
414-658-4861.&#13;
Library Mags, Etc.&#13;
New magazines are beginning to come in&#13;
with the new year. Some are old standbys:&#13;
"College English", "Harper's", "Fortune",&#13;
"Ramparts", and "Scientific&#13;
American". Some are more esoteric: "Le&#13;
Figaro Litteraire", "Pravda", "Vnesh&#13;
Torgovlia". A very useful item is&#13;
"Editorial Reserach reports". Small&#13;
newspapers subscribe to it to get&#13;
backgrounds for their editorials.&#13;
A new record player will shortly be&#13;
available in the main Parkside Library.&#13;
From the Right&#13;
By JEFF&#13;
The query is again being raised, "Where&#13;
is Parkside's student government?"&#13;
The truth be known, no such thing has&#13;
ever existed in this University. What&#13;
functioned under the title mostly concerned&#13;
itself with social activities, and had&#13;
a dismal record of resignations and&#13;
depleted membership.&#13;
As a growing young institution, Parkside&#13;
requires a strong, elected body to&#13;
represent the students. We pay for this&#13;
place, indeed, we are the University. To&#13;
have no say in its operation is idiocy.&#13;
STUDENT GOVERNMENT.&#13;
.ANYONE?&#13;
PARRY&#13;
The administration should expect us to&#13;
take an active interest in the running of&#13;
our school, and we should take up this&#13;
responsibility. The administration is there&#13;
for just that purpose; to administer our&#13;
school. It should be done not in spite of the&#13;
student body, but in accordance with it.&#13;
Curiously, one may hear at every turn&#13;
complaints of one kind or another about&#13;
the school. With an effective body voicing&#13;
these complaints we can lay the foundation&#13;
for a University responsive to the students'&#13;
wishes.&#13;
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GIVE 'EM H ELEN&#13;
Before I dig into my discussion on jogging, I'd like to say a thing or two&#13;
about the recent incident concerning a number of basketball players&#13;
suspended for training violations. It really annoys me when something like this&#13;
happens. Coach Stephens is a very understanding man, so the offense must&#13;
have been serious to warrant such drastic action. The whole purpose of&#13;
training rules are to keep the athlete in top condition so he can play his best.&#13;
Once an athlete becomes a member of a team, he voluntarily accepts these&#13;
regulations and is on his honor to obey them. In my mind, there is no rhyme or&#13;
reason to break training. It is a definite sign of immaturity and can only result&#13;
in the lessening of teamwork.&#13;
I've learned of the story and most of the details and I don't see any&#13;
reason for publicizing them. Speaking as a fan, I'm sorry to see it happen. My&#13;
sympathy to the players involved because I know how much they enjoyed the&#13;
sport, but when someone goes back on his word, he deserves any and all&#13;
punishment dished out. My compliments to Coach for having the courage of his&#13;
convictions in suspending the players even at the risk of a drastic decline in&#13;
victories. And finally, my best wishes to the rest of the team for pulling through&#13;
and showing this university the kind of stuff our athletes are made of.&#13;
Now, to the jogging. WOW! It really makes a difference in physical as&#13;
well as mental fitness. I began on January 1 with a program of 15 minutes each&#13;
day. Seeing as how I wasn't in tip-top shape, I ran two blocks and walked one.&#13;
After a while, I went to three for one. There's a trick to breathing, too. I read&#13;
somewhere that you should breathe in for four steps, hold it for four and&#13;
breathe out for four. I found that this type of breathing exercise prevents or at&#13;
least lessens fatigue at the end of the run. I've tried to keep a regular program&#13;
but there were a few days when the weather got down below zero and it was&#13;
highly recommended that one did not place one's well-being in danger by entering&#13;
the cold unnecessarily. In other words, don't go out or you'll get frostbit!&#13;
It's been a wild experience. I've discovered muscles I didn't know I had&#13;
(my apologies to Dr. Esser). And I woke up my lazy ones. For you girls who are&#13;
regular readers of this column, jogging isn't an exclusively masculine sport. In&#13;
fact, it helps to trim off those extra pounds and shape those sagging muscles. It&#13;
is a very small sacrifice to make when you consider the outcome. Get your&#13;
boyfriends to get out and run with you. Chances are that if you're out of shape&#13;
he is, too.&#13;
JOGGERS OF THE WORLD, UNITE!&#13;
Parkside Hosts M eet&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
will host the first Midwest Intercollegiate&#13;
Women's Fencing Championship next&#13;
Spring, it was announced today.&#13;
The meet, which has been sanctioned by&#13;
the American Fencing League of America&#13;
and the NCAA, will be held Apr. 25 at Case&#13;
high school fieldhouse in Racine.&#13;
More than 200 women fecners, including&#13;
a team from Parkside, are expected to&#13;
represent collegiate institutions from an&#13;
18-state area.&#13;
Parkside fencing coach Loran Hein and&#13;
Michigan State coach Charles Schmitter&#13;
are co-chairmen of the event, with Hein&#13;
serving as meet director.&#13;
The meet in Racine reflects Parkside's&#13;
growing stature in collegiate fencing.&#13;
Hein's freshman and sophomore men's&#13;
team received national attention with a&#13;
third place finish and an individual title in&#13;
the Great Lakes Invitational at Notre&#13;
Dame last season. This year, with its first&#13;
junior class, the Parkside varsity will&#13;
fence such opponents as Nebraska,&#13;
Minnesota, Missouri, Kansas, Air Force,&#13;
Colorado, Iowa, Indiana, Notre Dame,&#13;
Illinois, Michigan State and Wisconsin.&#13;
Senators Elected&#13;
The University of Wisconsin-Parkside&#13;
faculty has elected five colleagues to fill&#13;
vacancies on the 14-member Faculty&#13;
Senate, the legislative body of the UWP&#13;
faculty.&#13;
DeLuca's&#13;
HEAVENLY FRENCH&#13;
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RACINE&#13;
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S P E C I A L T Y:&#13;
L O NG HAIR ST Y L I N G - CUTTING&#13;
Crown your beauty&#13;
with a lovely&#13;
new hair style.&#13;
Open Saturdays&#13;
9 A.M. to Noon&#13;
For Your Convenience&#13;
Vic Godfrey&#13;
Coach's Corner&#13;
Several days ago, Parkside was&#13;
privileged to have as its guest the world&#13;
famous track coach, Arthur Lydiard of&#13;
New Zealand. Much has been written&#13;
about this man and he has written so those&#13;
people familiar with him had certain&#13;
expectation^.&#13;
None had reason to be disappointed. He&#13;
came on even stronger than many expected.&#13;
Lydiard is a dynamic man with&#13;
unbounded energy.&#13;
Lydiard became known throughout the&#13;
irack and fitness world in 1960 when two of&#13;
his athletes won gold medals in the Rome&#13;
Olympics. From there several of his&#13;
'black-shirted Kiwis' went on to set&#13;
numerous world records.&#13;
JUDO&#13;
Mr. Suh has joined the athletic staff full&#13;
time this semester. A variety of judo&#13;
classes are offered as well as karate. All&#13;
interested in forming a judo club should&#13;
nnritart him or the Office of Athletics.&#13;
WEIGHT TRAINING&#13;
Two universal gyms have just arrived&#13;
and have been installed in the Kenosha&#13;
weight room in the basement of the&#13;
Kenosha campus. These machines coupled&#13;
with the Olympic weight lifting sets&#13;
already there gives Parkside one of the&#13;
best weight training set upis in University&#13;
circles.&#13;
FENCING&#13;
Coach Loren Hein's chargers ran up 12&#13;
straight victories against the best competition&#13;
available before bowing to the Air&#13;
Force Academy 15-12. It should be noted&#13;
that the Academy has a victory string of 41&#13;
consecutive bouts. If one has to be beat it is&#13;
nice to be beat by the best.&#13;
WOMEN'S TRACK&#13;
Parkside had a fledgling team last fall&#13;
with just one meet scheduled. Several&#13;
indoor meets have been run and a schedule&#13;
is being planned for this spring.&#13;
Next fall a full scale XC schedule will be&#13;
run as well as an indoor and outdoor track&#13;
program. Several girls from track clubs in&#13;
Mid-America have expressed an interest&#13;
in the program being developed at this&#13;
school.&#13;
There are only a few colleges in the&#13;
country offering a full fledged women's&#13;
program. Parkside is getting in on the&#13;
ground floor and should be able to develop&#13;
one of the better programs in the land.&#13;
If there are girls on campus at the&#13;
present time who are interested they&#13;
should contact the Athletic Office immediately.&#13;
Track is not just a spring sport&#13;
as so many people believe.&#13;
It should be noted that Mary Libal,&#13;
Parkside's one woman track team, is&#13;
incapacitated at the present.&#13;
the&#13;
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Trip includes:&#13;
Round trip transportation, lodging (Montreal lodge), two breakfasts, one&#13;
dinner, two days lift tickets (including night skiing Sat.), two free lessons for&#13;
beginners, apres ski party with ski films, soda, beer, popcorn, etc., and use&#13;
of lodge facilities including fireplace lounge, pool tables, juke box, etc. Ski&#13;
rentals available at special rate for entire weekend: $5.00 for woods; $7.00&#13;
for metals.&#13;
Cost of trip: $40.00 — registered guest&#13;
$29.50 — Parkside student&#13;
$19.50 — activity card holder.&#13;
Reservations now being taken at the office of student affairs (all campuses).&#13;
Deadline Feb. 27. $10.00 non-refundable deposit required. Bus limit 40. </text>
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            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="59641">
                <text>Newspaper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="59642">
                <text>Kenosha, Wisconsin</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="59643">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="59644">
                <text>University of Wisconsin-Parkside</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="59645">
                <text>The Board of Regents of the University Wisconsin System</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
